Monday, December 6, 2010
Why do the open-border crowd lie so much?
IN WATCHING A recent House committee hearing on illegal immigration I am amazed at the open-border crowd’s (i.e., mostly Democrats) steadfast, complete commitment to deceptive terms of debate.
Imagine this conversation:
YOU: I think it’s terrible how lax the police and courts are about enforcing our laws against rape. Women are being victimized every day, but rarely is any perpetrator prosecuted. They seem to have the policy of giving accused perps the benefit of the doubt. If a guy says “well she was asking for it” or “she was wearing a tight skirt,” they drop the charges. We need to make them enforce the law and prosecute these people!
OTHER GUY: Why are you anti-sex? Sex is a wonderful expression of love between people who care about each other.
YOU: Huh? I was talking about rape.
OTHER GUY: This anti-sex, anti-male bigotry must stop. Sex is what built our nation. It is a built-in, natural human drive. Men are people too. Why do you hate men?
YOU: Have you even heard a single word I’ve said? I am not talking about consensual sex. I am talking about rape -- criminal sexual assault. It is against the law.
OTHER GUY: It is unrealistic to stop people from having sex. Sex is what America is all about! My grandparents had sex – that’s why I’m here.
YOU: Sigh.
The above is an exact analog of the liberal debating tactic about illegal immigration: Always shift the subject to *legal* immigrants, particularly those in the days of yore. Evoke images of Ellis Island and Lady Liberty. Which of course has nothing to do with the subject of uncontrolled, unknown millions--including potentially thousands of violent criminals-- stealing across the border illegally.
I've concluded the leading folks on that side of the debate have no intention whatever of arguing honestly. It is impossible to hold a civil discourse with parties whose first and last words on the matter are lies and smears.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
War: the national religion
TODAY WAS THE Autumn War Festival, which saw America suffused in the only religious worship allowed in public nowadays: the familiar round of parades and ceremonies and salutes and misty-eyed sentimentalism and flag-waving trumpeting War as the force that gives us Meaning, that makes us a Great Nation.
The observances pander especially to the Greatest Generation, who -- as we of the Lesser Generations are incessantly reminded -- saved us all in World War II.
We are told that it's America's endless war-making that "give us the freedom to celebrate all the other holidays." People circulate chain emails such as the following:
Miller's words are't entirely untrue. The freedom of the united States of America was secured by soldiers -- in 1781, with the surrender of Cornwallis and his army at Yorktown, and again in 1814 with the follow-up victory against Britain.
The observances pander especially to the Greatest Generation, who -- as we of the Lesser Generations are incessantly reminded -- saved us all in World War II.
We are told that it's America's endless war-making that "give us the freedom to celebrate all the other holidays." People circulate chain emails such as the following:
It is the soldier, not the reporter who has given us the freedom of the press.(Sen. Zell Miller, D-GA, at the Republican National Convention in 2004)
It is the soldier, not the poet, who has given us the freedom of speech.
It is the soldier, not the campus organizer, who gives us the freedom to demonstrate.
It is the soldier, not the lawyer, who has given us the right to a fair trial.
It is the soldier who salutes the flag, who serves under the flag, and whose coffin is draped by the flag, who allows the protester to burn the flag.
Miller's words are't entirely untrue. The freedom of the united States of America was secured by soldiers -- in 1781, with the surrender of Cornwallis and his army at Yorktown, and again in 1814 with the follow-up victory against Britain.
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Mad at the world
THE CRAZIES ARE AT IT again, standing on the street corner muttering threats to imaginary enemies who, they say, are "defying the world." Reaching in their pants and waving their missiles around in public.
The mental patients who have taken over the asylum wish to convince us normal peace-loving folk that we are the ones with the problem.
The mental patients who have taken over the asylum wish to convince us normal peace-loving folk that we are the ones with the problem.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
I'm cookin up some new flavas
YEAH, I KNOW it's been quiet around here. Not for lack of ideas--just for lack of time. It's just the usual thing, spreading myself too thin.
Monday, July 26, 2010
Bob Herbert column on Shirley Sherrod issue offers stunning picture of racial hypocrisy
NEW YORK TIMES columnist Bob Herbert's comments on the Shirley Sherrod flap are enlightening, if only to illustrate the depths of hypocrisy in the racialist agenda of Herbert, the NAALCP, and the rest of the liberal black establishment.
Pronounced Herbert:
"While racial discrimination is overwhelmingly directed against black people in the U.S., much of the nation and the media are poised to go berserk over the most specious allegations of racism against whites."
Perhaps in some other solar system — but on planet Earth, allegations of racism against whites by blacks or other minorities rarely receive significant mainstream media coverage, if any.
Pronounced Herbert:
"While racial discrimination is overwhelmingly directed against black people in the U.S., much of the nation and the media are poised to go berserk over the most specious allegations of racism against whites."
Perhaps in some other solar system — but on planet Earth, allegations of racism against whites by blacks or other minorities rarely receive significant mainstream media coverage, if any.
Friday, May 21, 2010
Skip Gates controversy
OBAMA WAS RIGHT: This cop was stupid. How do you get to be a sergeant and you can't tell the difference between a homeowner and a burglar? Even after he presents a picture ID?
Second, what kind of policing is it to arrest someone simply because he wants to be left alone in his own home -- whether or not he says something rude to you? Being annoying or rude is not against any law. You can't use "disorderly conduct" as a catchall to arrest people simply because somebody looked at you crosseyed. After ID was produced, this officer had no case. He shoulda shut up, turned around and locomoted himself in the opposite direction. However, by then it seemed it became a cop ego thing and he had to show the man who was boss. (Actually sarge, Professor Gates, as a taxpayer, is your boss.) This is where it turned from cop-investigating-possible-crime to asshole-with-badge-harrassing-citizen.
Even in the radio call, which has been released, the cop acknowledged he'd seen ID from Gates but requested dispatch to "keep the cars coming" because Gates was "uncooperative." In other words, Gates didn't lie down and give the officer a shoe-shine with his tongue?
Again: Cops don't have the right to respond to hurt feelings with force and arrest.
Even if Gates did verbally overreact, it is a citizen's right. For a cop to return a verbal insult is unprofessional. But when a cop in addition uses force and arrest to respond to a mere verbal insult he has moved from unprofessional to oppressive and illegal.
Yes, policing is a tough job. But if you're the type to cry and stamp your feet because someone yelled at you, you belong in a nursery school, not on a police force.
Second, what kind of policing is it to arrest someone simply because he wants to be left alone in his own home -- whether or not he says something rude to you? Being annoying or rude is not against any law. You can't use "disorderly conduct" as a catchall to arrest people simply because somebody looked at you crosseyed. After ID was produced, this officer had no case. He shoulda shut up, turned around and locomoted himself in the opposite direction. However, by then it seemed it became a cop ego thing and he had to show the man who was boss. (Actually sarge, Professor Gates, as a taxpayer, is your boss.) This is where it turned from cop-investigating-possible-crime to asshole-with-badge-harrassing-citizen.
Even in the radio call, which has been released, the cop acknowledged he'd seen ID from Gates but requested dispatch to "keep the cars coming" because Gates was "uncooperative." In other words, Gates didn't lie down and give the officer a shoe-shine with his tongue?
Again: Cops don't have the right to respond to hurt feelings with force and arrest.
Even if Gates did verbally overreact, it is a citizen's right. For a cop to return a verbal insult is unprofessional. But when a cop in addition uses force and arrest to respond to a mere verbal insult he has moved from unprofessional to oppressive and illegal.
Yes, policing is a tough job. But if you're the type to cry and stamp your feet because someone yelled at you, you belong in a nursery school, not on a police force.
A flashback to bash hacks
SINCE IT'S ABOUT TIME for another Bilderberg meeting, I thought I'd include this oldie that I wrote back in late 2008, but was too busy to actually post on a blog.
YEAH -- citizen journalism unnerves the establishment.
I'm watching a New York University panel discussion about the future of the media. Sitting on the panel are luminaries such as New York Times managing editor Jill Abramson and former "CBS Evening News" anchor Dan Rather, as well as journalism professor Jay Rosen.
In the Q&A session, a young college-age guy comes up and asks Rather about an on-air remark he made on September 11, 2001, that the collapsing World Trade Center 7 looked like it had been deliberately destroyed by well-placed dynamite."
"Do you still hold the belief ... that there were bombs in the building ... [that they were] in your words, taken down by 'well-placed dynamite'?" the guy asked.
YEAH -- citizen journalism unnerves the establishment.
I'm watching a New York University panel discussion about the future of the media. Sitting on the panel are luminaries such as New York Times managing editor Jill Abramson and former "CBS Evening News" anchor Dan Rather, as well as journalism professor Jay Rosen.
In the Q&A session, a young college-age guy comes up and asks Rather about an on-air remark he made on September 11, 2001, that the collapsing World Trade Center 7 looked like it had been deliberately destroyed by well-placed dynamite."
"Do you still hold the belief ... that there were bombs in the building ... [that they were] in your words, taken down by 'well-placed dynamite'?" the guy asked.
Let's trap the libertarian with an irrelevant question about Civil Rights-era legislation.
WHY DIDN'T NPR ALSO ask Rand Paul, "so when did you stop beating your wife?" just to show where they were really coming from?
For the sake of argument, let’s imagine that this issue really were relevant in the year 2010. Let's imagine the Civil Rights Act were actually up for debate. Let’s imagine the Congress somehow were to repeal it. Who actually believes that in the year 2010, we would revert to Jim Crow? Who actually believes (especially in these hard times) that white businesses would voluntarily drive away customers--both blacks and whites--by reinstating segregation?
I don't, because I'm not a paranoid.
For the sake of argument, let’s imagine that this issue really were relevant in the year 2010. Let's imagine the Civil Rights Act were actually up for debate. Let’s imagine the Congress somehow were to repeal it. Who actually believes that in the year 2010, we would revert to Jim Crow? Who actually believes (especially in these hard times) that white businesses would voluntarily drive away customers--both blacks and whites--by reinstating segregation?
I don't, because I'm not a paranoid.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
"Frame" is the name of the game
Note: the links in the article are old; find most of the links in updated form at the end.
A FEDERAL JUDGE last week ordered nine members of the Hutaree militia released on bond until their trial, on the grounds that they were neither a danger to the community nor a flight risk.
This, despite the highly publicized April arrest and indictment in which the government claimed the Hutaree were fomenting a dire plot to assassinate cops and judges and bring down the government with weapons of mass destruction.
Evidently U.S. District Judge Victoria Roberts did not share the fears of the FBI and federal prosecutors who brought the case. Is the judge crazy? Suicidal? (Remember, these Hutarees allegedly were going to kill judges.) Or is it simply that the prosecution had no actual evidence for their lurid charges?
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Dems re-igniting the Culture War
IN PROTESTING THE Obama Health Kontrol regime that descended upon America March 21 -- as well as the tacky culture-and-race-war the Obama forces are fomenting to distract from the real issues -- Mark Steyn, guesting for Rush Limbaugh on April 30, got it right when he diagnosed the Democratic/"progressive" modus operandi.
"'You can do what you want with all your bodily parts and stick 'em anwhere you want to stick 'em, and that way you won't notice all the other rights we're rolling back on everything else."
"'You can do what you want with all your bodily parts and stick 'em anwhere you want to stick 'em, and that way you won't notice all the other rights we're rolling back on everything else."
Monday, March 22, 2010
YES! I TOO AM AGAINST HEALTH!
I'M ALSO AGAINST REFORM!
Well at least that's how the Establishment frames the debate. "At last, Congress has given us health." "Obama has signed reform into law."
RIDICULOUS. This bill is about neither health nor reform. It is further centralization of power and wealth within the already-cartelized medical-pharmaceutical-industrial-governmental complex. It is a triumph of the Privilege Sector, which is Big Government fused with Big Business. In reality, it is corporatism: the corporate state.
Oh, and that reminds me of something the kindly Mr. Mussonlini once said. "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power."
Well at least that's how the Establishment frames the debate. "At last, Congress has given us health." "Obama has signed reform into law."
RIDICULOUS. This bill is about neither health nor reform. It is further centralization of power and wealth within the already-cartelized medical-pharmaceutical-industrial-governmental complex. It is a triumph of the Privilege Sector, which is Big Government fused with Big Business. In reality, it is corporatism: the corporate state.
Oh, and that reminds me of something the kindly Mr. Mussonlini once said. "Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power."
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Patriot is the new hip
KUDOS TO SPIN for finally taking notice of a real grassroots movement. No, I don't mean the Republican party hacks who have glommed onto the Tea Party idea because they recognize one last opportunity to keep the sheep from bolting the Republican pen. I mean the artists and activist types referred to in the Spin piece, the types who were there pre-Fox, the original Ron Paul Tea Partyers, the real heart and soul of the freedom movement. Liberty is hip again and the mainstream just caught on. The original American Revolution was, after all, led by the young men and women.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
The whole schmizole: Massa outs
bipartisan corruption in Washington
AS IF READING FROM ONE script, the punditoblogocracy wants to skewer Eric Massa. We’re used to pundits and talk show hosts – and even supposed straight news reportage – condemning the accused without the benefit of trial, or without any evidence at all. We’re used to comedians seizing on any goofy story for yuks. It amuses us to see some public figure caught in some version or another of "so when did you stop beating your wife?" But why the seeming unanimous viciousness against the former Congressman accused of sexually harrassing a male staffer? How are people who weren’t anywhere near the situation so sure that the accusation of an ex-staffer must be true?
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Meteorologist and Weather Channel founder
weighs in on "global warming"
JOHN COLEMAN COMMENTS on what he calls a "six legged monster."
Sunday, September 13, 2009
The cult of Obama ?
There most definitely is a cult around Obama, but it was made possible by the
Cult of the Presidency,
which long precedes Obama.
The political establishment in this country has been cultivating an imperial aura and power for the executive for a long, long time. Our country seems to be run by literal royalists. Why do you think we're so bombarded by propaganda about British royalty, for instance? Closer to home, how many mentions of "American royalty" or "American dynasty" or "American aristocracy" did you hear surrounding the death of Ted Kennedy?
Cult of the Presidency,
which long precedes Obama.
The political establishment in this country has been cultivating an imperial aura and power for the executive for a long, long time. Our country seems to be run by literal royalists. Why do you think we're so bombarded by propaganda about British royalty, for instance? Closer to home, how many mentions of "American royalty" or "American dynasty" or "American aristocracy" did you hear surrounding the death of Ted Kennedy?
Friday, September 11, 2009
The Cliff's Notes version of what really happened on 9/11
A CONVERSATION FROM the Alex Jones show, 9/1/08 (second hour, minutes :14-:20):
Speaking of the Boeing E-4B airplane mentioned above as having been present over Washington shortly after the Pentagon attack, this post from an aviation forum at Airliners.net explains that airplane's function:
TOM IN CALIFORNIA: I just want to bring another layer to 9/11 that I think you'd be very interested in. I was a professional airline pilot for twelve years. I have over 10,000 hours of flight time, all the licenses, airline transport license, et cetera. I was 747-400 captain for two years for a comnpany called Atlas. Prior to that I flew the seven-three-seven as a captain for seven years. ... Back in ... 2003 ...
ALEX: They put the remote control takeover chip in it.
TOM: Of cour -- well -- I'll split hairs even further, sir. If you look at the amateur video of the seven-six-seven-dash-two-hundred-series aircraft that did hit, that pod that's on the bottom, that's called a radome. That's manufactured by Martin Marietta. It's been manufactured here in the United States for 37 years. Exclusively used by the U.S. military to fly Air Force drones. Clearly --
ALEX: A control pod.
TOM: Clearly, that is used only to radio-control aircraft and hide an antennae. There are no civilian airplanes that have that pod, period, I challenge anybody to go out --
ALEX: Well look at the E4B's over New York and D.C. as the attacks happen -- and then after they happen, when all air traffic is shut down -- with the command pod on top and the American flag on back -- those are the doomsday planes.
TOM: And I wanna tell you something. When I looked at the amateur video I came across that white seven-four-seven-dash-one-hundred series, and I go, What the hell is that? There's no end number on this airplane, it's flying in an orbital pattern, and as we all know, that airplane was present on that day.
In a nanosecond I said, "Wait a minute, that's a flying platform where they radio-control these airplanes. One more piece of information, if I may. And that is, if anybody even has half a brain -- all your listeners do, thank God, but the peple I talk to who are sheeple -- and I say to them look! It's right in front of your face. You say a seven-five-seven-dash-two-hundred series hit the Pentagon. Where is the debris field? Where are the body parts? Where are the two ten-thousand-pound CFF [?] engines?
ALEX: Hey, on National Geographic they say those giant engines wouldn't even hurt the facade. Wouldn't even knock a window out.
TOM: That's exactly my point. They're not gonna bore through six feet of concrete and rebar. They're gonna -- they have breakaway bolts, just like when the airplane hit the Hudson and the #2 engine tore off on that Airbus A-310. They're meant to break away from the engine pylon for an engine fire. This is known for Airbus, Boeing, doesn't matter.
ALEX: Let me ask you a question. What would one of those giant engines, weighing I don't know how many tons, do at 550 miles an hour smashing into a concrete face?
TOM: First of all, to go 550 miles per hour in an airplane and ... for me --
ALEX: TO hold it down on the ground, is that impossible?
TOM: To hold at 60 feet and try and hit a building, that would be very, very difficult. You'd have to be an extremely skilled pilot. And secondly, you're not gonna be able to fly that fast because of air compression. So that's another bogus point about it.
[Skipping some misunderstandings between Alex and Tom regarding air compression]
TOM: The smoking gun is that there's no debris field. That's the bottom line -- there's nothing there. And then when I tell people, I say look, there's nothing there because a missile hit it.
Just one more point, if I may. I was present the day of and the day after -- I was based in JFK -- when TWA Flight 800 got shot down by a Navy missile. That was the buzz. I talked to an American Airlines flight crew that was landing on the two-five complex there and saw the frickin' thing get shot out of the sky.
ALEX: They've interviewed a hundred, and I think eighty-seven, members of the military that said yeah, we were runnin' a drill for a missile test that night.
TOM: Of course. There's an area called Area One-Oh-Five 80 miles northeast -- you can see it on any aeronautical chart. This is where they were doing that. They were shooting that out of a Polaris submarine ... the primary form of tracking was a radar signature. The second was a heat-seeking signature and that primary piece of equipment in that failed,
and that's when it tracked and locked onto that seven-four-seven-dash 200 series airplane, and, and, they saw molten metal on, on, bodies in that plane, I heard this the next day, and I heard, two days afterwards --
ALEX: They had investigators sneak in -- they later sent 'em to prison --and got samples and it had explosives residue. General Benton K. Partin, former head of Air Force weapons development, said it was a continuous rod warhead missile.
TOM: Exactly ... you hit the nail on the head. I read this, gosh, 10 years ago. There was a gentlemen wrote a book who worked for Aviation and Space Technology, [who] was a 20 year reporter, and simply, he said, 'this stinks.' He had an insider go in and take a piece off the back of seat #33F. And he took that to an independent lab, had it analyzed, and found that 99 percent of the exhaust gases on the back of that piece of material matched a
matched a certain Navy missile. And then he sent that, of course, to one of the major news agencies and they intercepted it and boom -- he was in jail that same day. So there it is.
ALEX: Absolutely, continuous-rod warhead. When they put the plane back together you
could see where it hit. All right, thank you so much, sir. Interesting points. Fits in with all the intel we have. Yeah, the first plane, the evidence shows, was a drone on the [World Trade Center] towers as well.
Speaking of the Boeing E-4B airplane mentioned above as having been present over Washington shortly after the Pentagon attack, this post from an aviation forum at Airliners.net explains that airplane's function:
From: KBGRbillT
Date: Wed Feb 9 2005
First things first, the E-4B doesn't follow AF1 [Air Force One] anywhere. It follows the President. If I remember correct from my days at Offutt AFB it is required to be within an hours time of the president stateside or overseas. The humped radome on top of the fuselage houses an antenna for the Milstar Satellite communication system. The aircraft is not allocated for the VP anymore than the Pres. or his cabinet, it is an airborne operations center with the ability to control DoD assets from the air. These aircraft are NOT airborne 24/7/365, in fact as most spotters can attest, they sit on alert 90% of the time at airports which fringe the Presidents location. Command and control capabilities of the E-4B mirror and/or exceed that of AF1. AF1 was put into service in Sept. of 1990 and was fully capable of controlling the Nuclear Triad assets immediately, no future 'upgrades' were required to bring it up to this status. The only capability upgrades it has received is newer better equipment (as it becomes available) than that which was installed when delivered to the USAF.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Phony populism driving pseudo-Tea Party movement
WHEN THE PEOPLE once in every great while awaken to realize they're being bent over and royally screwed, they start to wake up -- as we're doing in this depression marked by giant giveaways to Wall Street and foreign banks. But the Establishment long ago learned how to co-opt popular outrage. Thus the wave of faux-populism washing over the Establishment media of late. Derivatives traders rant about how the "little guy" is being screwed over, and talk of starting a new "Tea Party," an idea stolen from supporters of true populist and patriot Ron Paul. Establishment neocon multimillionaire radio ranters like Michael Savage, Glenn Beck and others, as if on cue, are now suddenly sounding like are all suddenly sounding like Alex Jones, warning of ominous conspiracy everywyere. Except in their narrowly written script, it's purely an Obama/liberal consipracy. Never mind that Obama and the Dems are only continuing the same globalist/collectivist/militarist policies advanced by Bush Jr. --and Clinton, and Bush Sr., and Reagan... To hear it from these guys, the Republic and economy just started crumbling the second Obama raised his right hand and took the oath. No, we've been crumbling for quite some time, and this has been a bipartisan achievement.
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