Friday, November 30, 2012

The UN is an ideological sewer that ought not to exist - or at least get our tax money - today's edition

The General Assembly votes to upgrade Palestine's status to that of nonmember observer state.

Yasser Arafat is surely looking up from Hell and smiling.

The next bubble to burst: higher education

There is a crisis in the newly nationalized student loan behemoth.  Default rates are at record levels.

So the regime proposes to - you guessed it - bail it out.  With what?  Does this happen regardless of whether we go over the fiscal cliff?

The grim, relentless march of the prosperity haters

That's the sound of jackboots tromping by that you hear.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar shuts down the 100-year-old Drakes Bay Oyster Company.

Today's exhibit of the advanced state of our cultural rot

The media mocking of Angus T. Jones.

Well there is actually another exhibit, discussed in the Brent Bozell column linked above: the advertising industry deliberately seeking out "bad boys" (and girls) to sell products.

Remarkable clarity at week's end

Count LITD in with the range of pundits - from Rush to Krauthammer - that say what absolutely is called for is for Pubs to step completely away from the table.  We're dealing with out-and-out wackos.

Kimberly Strassel at the WSJ distills the utter unseriousness of the FHers:

How to put this tax-and-more-spending offer in perspective? It is far in excess of what the Democrats asked for in last year's debt-limit standoff—when the political configuration in Washington was exactly the same. It is far more than the president's own Democratic Senate has ever been able to pass, even with a filibuster-proof majority. It is far more than the president himself campaigned on this year.

I was none too keen about Boehner's early-November mutterings about "revenue" being "on the table," but at least he put Pubs on record as having tried one last time to arrive at something at least minimally serious:

Within two days of the election, Mr. Boehner had offered an enormous compromise, committing the GOP to provide new tax revenue, through limits on deductions for the wealthy. Mr. Obama campaigned on making "the rich" pay more—and that is exactly what Mr. Boehner agreed to give him.
All that was left for the president to do was accept this peace offering, pair it with necessary spending cuts, and take credit for averting a crisis. Mr. Obama has instead spent the past weeks campaigning for tax-rate hikes. He wants the revenue, but collected only the way he chooses. And on the basis of that ideological insistence alone, the nation is much closer to a crisis. 

So, yeah, the way to proceed is to quit answering the phone when it's a Freedom-Hater calling, and then go on a PR mega-blitz, letting the American people know that the MEC and Harry Reid are holding a gun to America's head because they perceive an opportunity to destroy the Republican party.


Memo to black Americans: refuse to be a human shield for the FHer regime

I haven't done a lot on this blog concerning the racialization of the overall political climate in America, primarily because it all seems so juvenile to me that I hoped it would go away and relieve me of my embarrassment for the left side of the American populace.

But it doesn't go away.  In fact, it reaches new levels of ridiculousness, as demonstrated by its red-herring use in the attempt to get at the reason for Susan Rice's disingenuousness in the Benghazi debacle.  (Adding further irony to this is the fact that Rice wrote for her senior thesis at Stanford a lamentation on the whiteness and Eurocentricity of the way US history is taught in American educational institutions overall.  I dunno; her family seems to have comfortably assimilated into overall American society; her father was a Federal Reserve governor, and her mother was VP of Control Data Processing.  And Rice herself was at Stanford.)

What is needed is a way to get people whose demographic categorization could qualify them for aggrieved-group status to see that the Freedom-Haters engage in identity politics to use them as human shields.  It's very clear that the Benghazi situation is a huge issue that may even involve treasonous activity.   Yet there is no faster way to obscure that elephant in the room than to shift the subject to conjecture about bigotry on the part of people who have never previously been accused of such a thing.

Same with the bandying about of the term "middle class" in the fiscal-cliff battle.  In fact, the middle class is more than the regime's human shield; it is its hostage.  The Most Equal Comrade is holding a gun to middle-class America's head because he has an opportunity to destroy the Republican party.

All of us - "the masses" - are mere fodder for the utterly mad aims of the post-American left.

Beware:  The more they realize we are on to them, the more sinister their methods of fighting back will be.

State-level governance: a crucial front in the twilight struggle for America's soul

Two more states - Michigan and Arizona - give the big-thumbs-down to FHer-care exchanges.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Now, that's what we've been looking for!

Mitch McConnell, speaking on the Senate floor, gives big thumbs-down to any tax rate hike.

Money lines:

We’re insisting on keeping tax rates where they are, first and foremost, to protect jobs and because we don’t think government needs the money in the first place.” 

"Their aim isn’t job creation. They’re interested in wealth destruction.”


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

The chilling power of the FHer propaganda machine - and the utter failure of Pubs to articulate the case for freedom

We have indeed become a nation of cattle - lining up at the corral chute with blank stares on our faces.

New WaPo / ABC poll shows most Americans want to see tax increases on the most successful among us and don't want entitlement reform even discussed in fiscal-cliff negotiations.  Ass-backwards from what needs to happen if we are to avoid national ruin.

It's a Greece world.


The political is indeed personal

This stinks so bad.  So bad.

One of my alma maters, Butler University - my master's degree in history is from there - has a political science professor who has instructed her students in her class syllabus to purge any American-ness, whiteness, maleness or heterosexuality from the perspectives they take when writing papers or essay answers on exams.

The linked article about this doesn't mention the professor by name, but as soon as I find out, I'll update this post.

I do know that the dean of liberal arts, Jay Howard, is on board with her stance.  Says it challenges the students or some such dog vomit.

I know Howard personally.  For several years he was a sociology professor at IUPUC, where I am an adjunct lecturer.  He was even interim campus chancellor for a time.  I was on good terms with him professionally, but I knew he read my opinion column in the local paper and always sensed that it was a factor in our relations.  I also knew that he leaned left.  (He was involved in local Democrat politics.)  It seems he's now in the catbird seat, able to endorse and empower this kind of poison and happily accelerate the momentum with which our culture decomposes.

Have you thought about it this way?

The $16 trillion figure we hear for the national debt is alarming indeed.  The real picture, though, is far more grim.  That's because the liabilities of Medicare and Social Security aren't included in the government's balance sheet.  Why not?  Maybe because we'd then see that we are actually on the hook for $86.8 trillion.

Whew!  That's a lot of obligation.  How are we gonna climb out from under it?  Well, consider the numbers and see if you can come up with an answer:

When the accrued expenses of the government's entitlement programs are counted, it becomes clear that to collect enough tax revenue just to avoid going deeper into debt would require over $8 trillion in tax collections annually. That is the total of the average annual accrued liabilities of just the two largest entitlement programs, plus the annual cash deficit.
Nothing like that $8 trillion amount is available for the IRS to target. According to the most recent tax data, all individuals filing tax returns in America and earning more than $66,193 per year have a total adjusted gross income of $5.1 trillion. In 2006, when corporate taxable income peaked before the recession, all corporations in the U.S. had total income for tax purposes of $1.6 trillion. That comes to $6.7 trillion available to tax from these individuals and corporations under existing tax laws.
In short, if the government confiscated the entire adjusted gross income of these American taxpayers, plus all of the corporate taxable income in the year before the recession, it wouldn't be nearly enough to fund the over $8 trillion per year in the growth of U.S. liabilities. Some public officials and pundits claim we can dig our way out through tax increases on upper-income earners, or even all taxpayers. In reality, that would amount to bailing out the Pacific Ocean with a teaspoon. Only by addressing these unsustainable spending commitments can the nation's debt and deficit problems be solved.

The tax increase that the MEC and Harry Reid are insisting on has nothing to do with addressing this nation's fiscal crisis.  Nothing.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Didn't clear up anything

Senators McCain, Ayotte and Graham say that their meeting with Susan Rice today didn't enhance their  understanding of why she trotted out the video-protest meme on five talk shows.

Hey, MEC, how's that unclenched fist working out for ya?

Further conclusive proof that Iran is working on a nuclear arsenal - a very powerful nuclear arsenal.

Per AP:

Iranian scientists have run computer simulations for a nuclear weapon that would produce more than triple the explosive force of the World War II bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, according to a diagram obtained by The Associated Press.
The diagram was leaked by officials from a country critical of Iran's atomic program to bolster their arguments that Iran's nuclear program must be halted before it produces a weapon. The officials provided the diagram only on condition that they and their country not be named.
The International Atomic Energy Agency — the Vienna-based U.N. nuclear watchdog — reported last year that it had obtained diagrams indicating that Iran was calculating the "nuclear explosive yield" of potential weapons. A senior diplomat who is considered neutral on the issue confirmed that the graph obtained by the AP was indeed one of those cited by the IAEA in that report. He spoke only on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue.
The IAEA report mentioning the diagrams last year did not give details of what they showed. But the diagram seen by the AP shows a bell curve — with variables of time in micro-seconds, and power and energy both in kilotons — the traditional measurement of the energy output, and hence the destructive power of nuclear weapons. The curve peaks at just above 50 kilotons at around 2 microseconds, reflecting the full force of the weapon being modeled.
The bomb that the United States dropped on Hiroshima in Japan during World War II, in comparison, had a force of about 15 kilotons. Modern nuclear weapons have yields hundreds of times higher than that.

Now it's up to $2.6 trillion


That's the latest - sixth - upward revision of the cost over ten years to taxpayers of Freedom-Hater-care.

How I would love to know the exact number of Americans who understand what this means, who have been paying even a minimal degree of attention.  It seems to me those who don't - and maybe I don't want to see that percentage laid out in all its horrifying specificity - fall into two categories: those who immerse themselves in circumscribed concerns ranging from the laudible (family, career) to the fluffy (sports, hobbies, pop music), and those who are leftist activists, who do indeed pay enough attention to know that there is still a force out there trying to stop this madness, and react with that "It's-a-done-deal-so-keep-your-hands-off-my-health-care" ignorance that is currently prevailing in our apparently doomed society.

This war gets tougher to wage by the day.  Of course, that's annoying, but it's not a deterrence.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Is it impossible to do what's necessary to save America?

I've been thinking about the noise one is hearing today in the media about an ostensibly growing number of Congressional Pubs who are caving to various degrees on the role of taxation in averting the fiscal cliff.  My thought process is taking the form of a dialogue in my head, as is often the case when I ponder something.  I can picture some kind of east-coast wonk, maybe even someone who is supposed to be one of my people - a Bill Kristol, perhaps - feeling like he is comfortably successful in refuting my insistence on principle - namely, the principle that a person's money is his or hers, not a football in a Capitol Hill scrimmage.  Here's how the snippet went that began when I was washing dishes a few minutes ago.

Me: Any talk about revenue is way, way premature.  Certainly tax rate increases, but even preoccupying ourselves with loopholes.  Save that for a discussion on overall tax reform.  Of course, we know that tax hikes would be ridiculously inadequate for addressing our debt / deficit situation, and they would, no matter what Warren Buffett says, cause economic contraction.  The problem is that if one does indeed get truly serious and put on the table, as Pennsylvania Avenue types like to say, the stuff that most needs to be on the table - moving the big three entitlements toward privatization, letting FHer-care die on the vine for lack of funding, and dismantling whole cabinet-level departments and agencies - one is dismissed as a crank, a wacko.

Beltway Wonk: Okay, I will not call you a crank, but I will flatly state that it is a cold, hard fact that it is a certainty that those items will not get an airing at any fiscal cliff negotiations.  For one thing, many people of public and private influence honestly, whether mistakenly or correctly, believe such programs, departments and agencies do significant good. Secondly, there are thousands of entrenched career bureaucrats that have a keen self-interest involved.  They will not sit idly by and see the plug pulled on their livelihoods.  Thirdly, yes, unbridled conservatism has been marginalized in Washington.

Me:  But none of these people are idiots.  They know that we know that they have at least glancingly been exposed to the study findings  - CBO, Ernst & Young - showing the futility and indeed the harmfulness of tax increases.

BWW: Yes, they have, which compels them to be all the craftier in sticking to talking points, glossing over inconsistencies in their worldview, and dealing in platitudes whenever possible.

Me: So you're saying it's impossible to do what's necessary to save America.  If that's so, we have indeed passed the tipping point.

Re: the current outbreak of Reasonable Gentleman Syndrome among Pub Senators

Saxby Chambliss and Lindsey Graham are either being disingenuous in order to dress up their zeal to be liked inside the Beltway, or they have never seen the CBO numbers on the utter ineffectiveness of a tax hike on "the rich" or Ernst & Young report outlining the economic damage that the tax penalty on which the Most Equal Comrade insists would do.

These paragraphs from Red State's Daniel Horowitz's piece about (my boldface for emphasis) it ought to be trumpeted from every media outlet without relent:

Saxby’s comments are quite instructive for conservatives as we confront a Republican Party that is committed to capitulation.  This imbroglio over the fiscal cliff was never about the budget – spending or revenue.  It is about the fundamental role of government in a Constitutional Republic that inherently restrains the size of government.  As such, even if raising taxes on the rich would be fair (it’s not; they already pay 37% of the income taxes), and even if it would be economically prudent; it is the wrong thing to do.  Any additional revenue would be used to grow the size of government at a time when it needs to be cut in half.  On this core issue, Republicans like Chambliss and Graham side with Democrats.  We side with the Constitution.
That’s why this has never been about Norquist and his tax pledge.  If Democrats would genuinely agree to a deal that would wind down the welfare and entitlement programs and eliminate full departments of the executive branch, conservatives would reluctantly go along with some form of revenue increases.  Raising taxes is unfair and counterintuitive, but if that is what it would take to get Democrats to come onboard with our efforts to shrink government, then it would be a deal worth making.

The Freedom-Haters' new gotcha question

In the just-concluded election cycle it was about pregnancy and rape.  Now it's "How old do you think the Earth is?"

I've never cared much for GQ anyway.  It is the ultimate embodiment of self-congratulatory metrosexualism and shallow materialism.

Shawn Mitchell at Townhall does a good job conjecturing the circumstances under which the question in its Marco Rubio interview was crafted:

 the premeditated bad faith of an upscale publication. The random question is untethered  from public policy, from issues in the US Senate, or measures Rubio might pursue. It arose from a singular goal unrelated to reporting current events: GQ wanted to conjure a killer question, something that might damage a popular potential GOP presidential candidate.  It’s easy to imagine the query came from a group brainstorm over lunch: “Think, people…how can we trip him?!”

I also like the reply Mitchell says he would have given the magazine:

Our best science says the earth is 4.5 billion years old. I don’t have a good reason to question that. I don’t know what a “day” is in the account of Creation. But I do believe in a God of miracles and mysteries. So I’m not going to scratch your inquisitional itch by denouncing anyone’s literal belief in the biblical account.
Does that trouble you? Why? I accept the laws of science and physics, and I admire the people who work to understand and reveal them. If, as a public official, I propose to substitute prayer for research, Bible verses for nuclear codes, or religious rites for rigorous testing, then, you can get concerned. 
But until that point, the faith I hold somewhere in my mind and heart is between me and my God. If you want to force me to sign a loyalty oath denying it, you can go to Hell, figuratively speaking. 

Sunday, November 25, 2012

The mosquitos that carry Reasonable Gentleman Syndrome

Establishment Pub consultants.  Rush lays into two of the worst, Mike Murphy and Steve Schmitt, with due vehemence.

We conservatives truly do not care what anybody's age,color or gender is, or the population density where they reside.  We care about immutable truths and principles that demonstrate themselves to be true no matter what course society takes.

Society presently seems to be taking a course that will necessitate rediscovering those principles the hard way.  Eventually, when the madness gets egregious enough, people will wake up to the fact that what we have been pointing to is an easier way to go about understanding them.

Didn't we just go through this about 20 months ago?

Egypt in chaos.  Riots in Tahrir Square.  Judges calling the president's power grab unconstitutional.  Egyptian stock market plunging.

Oh, wait.  That's what's occurring right now.

I sure hope the post-American overlords and their propaganda machine will now cool it with that Morsi-is-a-worthy-statesman crud now.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

The H-word Creature, Morsi, and the eleventh-hour Band-Aid

Paul Mirengoff at Power Line on why Hillary Clinton - and whoever else played a role in bringing about this ceasefire - was engaged in an exercise in absurdity.

Apropos Morsi's characterization yesterday, you wanna talk farce . . .

Have you paused to consider what the economic impact of the tax increase the MEC is insisting on would be?

The Most Economic Comrade, as has been noted on this blog, is blackmailing America.  He swears he'll veto any plan for avoiding the Fiscal Cliff that does not involve a tax increase on America's most successful.

How stupid does he think you are?  Surely he knows all you have to do is click your mouse a few times and you have the Heritage Foundation's / Ernst & Young's numbers for the resultant economic damage available for citing.

It would result in the following:

• Unemployment would rise 0.5 percent, which translates to 710,000 fewer jobs...

• Real after-tax wages would fall by 1.8 percent...

• GDP would fall by 1.3 percent...

• Capital stock and investment would drop by 1.4 percent and 2.4 percent, respectively

So you have to ask yourself, how is this rapidly accelerating decline not deliberate?


This is what a ceasefire is to a jihadist regime

Hamas calls the truce a "victory," says Israel "failed in all its goals."  Gaza celebrates by firing guns into the air.

Latest developments in the ongoing jihad

Terrorist bus bombing in Tel Aviv.  21 injured.

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri says his organization "blesses" the attack.

2 dead, 2 injured in massive blast near US embassy in Kabul.  The perp was armed with a gun, grenade and vest.

We already know one thing that's gonna get sequestered: Christianity

US District Judge Joe Heaton says that Hobby Lobby can't get out of the HHS mandate that private businesses have to provide insurance coverage for drugs that exterminate embryonic Americans.

His line of reasoning is getting way too much traction in post-American society.  It goes like this: the business in question is not an explicitly religious organization.  Indeed, it exists for a decidedly secular purpose: making money.

This dangerous blurring of the lines between what constitutes an entity comprised of citizens freely associating with each other and the realm of the state's purview is becoming a precedent.  If a person's faith really means anything, he must be free to have it inform his conduct in all areas of his life.

There is no right to health care, but there is a right to worship God in a biblically informed way, which means adhering to those principles in all situations.

That Judge Heaton is not capable of thinking this through to that truth does not speak well for our current juncture.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

What the "religion of peace" thinks of puppies and 87-year-old Swedish women

This.http://vinienco.com/2012/11/20/87-year-old-woman-savagely-beaten-saving-puppy-immigrants/

Here's how Egyptian president and Muslim Brotherhood bigwig Morsi characterizes the just-reached ceasefire

Says, "The farce of Israeli aggression against Gaza will end on Tuesday."

Yessir, there's one neutral broker.

Hillary Clinton, Resolution 16/18, national sovereignty and your basic right to freedom of speech

You need to read up on the "Istanbul Process."  The H-word Creature and the head of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation held a summit in July 2011 to commit the US to a partnership supporting a UN  resolution that would make UN member countries pass laws circumscribing freedom of expression.

Now, we're sending State Department personnel to an OIC gathering that will further refine the degree of that circumscribing.

How to begin to counter the commercialization of holidays

Remarking on the commercialization of holidays is a bit tricky for an opinion writer.  Avoiding the lapse into banality requires some discernment.  The observation that ours is an overwhelmingly materialistic culture is not exactly original.
In fact, that it gets made so perennially attests to the fact that it remains unresolved.  In fact, the insinuation of the term "Black Friday" into our seasonal lexicon, and the metastasizing of that day into the evening of Thanksgiving marks the confirmation of its ridiculousness.
As we can see by what's happened to our culture in the last forty years, when regard for the family unit shifts even modestly from veneration to neglect, civic association and community soon follow as fading institutions.  Technology does its part to assist.  Since smartphones have become an extension of the human anatomy, we barely occupy the same physical space anymore.
Consider this use of the term "dead time":

Bill Tancer, the general manager of global retail for Experian, sees it as a confluence of sophisticated retailing and consumer boredom, thanks to the swelling population of cyber-deal surfers on Thanksgiving. He’s been following for the past decade a growing group of restless consumers who turn to the Internet for entertainment and holiday shopping on the holiday. From 2003 to 2011, the No. 1 online shopping day has been Thanksgiving, according to his findings. Last year was the first that the so-called Cyber Monday, the Monday after the holiday, eclipsed Thanksgiving Day in online sales.
It makes sense then for retailers to just open the doors. They wouldn’t if we didn’t walk through them. . . 

“I don’t know if it’s stealing our time from us, since consumers have shown a strong interest in searching for those deals and making purchases on Thanksgiving,” he says. “There’s a lot of dead time while that turkey is in the oven. It’s a good time to shop.” 

Dead  time.  So much for leaning back on the couch, taking in the aromas wafting from the kitchen, catching up with cousins and nephews, watching parades on television, or perhaps reflecting on the depth of one's gratitude.

Libertarians, of course, take a "leave-those-consumers-alone" approach.  Their rabid scouring of deals and sales harms neither your person nor property, so it's none of your business.

And that stance, of course, abets the leftist mocking of the conservative struggle to preserve that which made western civilization uniquely great.  The taunt is that our championing of pure economic freedom runs smack dab, like a cruise ship into an iceberg, into our cherishing of traditions steeped in God and family.

Which gets us back to the point that cannot be hammered home enough:  We can't dispense with any of the three pillars of our worldview.  A free-market economy, a foreign policy based on what history tells us about human nature, and, most relevant here, an understanding that Western civilization uniquely blesses humankind precisely because of its Judeo-Christian foundation, are each and all essential.

From the John Adams quote ""Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other," to the modern-day work of the Acton Institute and the Ethics and Public Policy Center, this little flame of truth has kept flickering, no matter how stiff the winds of obscuration or dark the night of distraction.

The first step in countering the Black-Friday-ization of our society is to choose not to participate - indeed, to choose to gather dear ones in your home and sufficiently entice them to remain there in conscious fellowship with your joy - and your cooking.  Beyond that, it's having this arrow in your polemical quiver: The point of the truly conservative worldview is to keep meaning front and center in our moment-to-moment existence.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Thank God for the Iron Dome



The jihadists' rockets are flying over Tel Aviv and Jerusalem now.

Andrew McCarthy at NRO says that that the worldwide Islamist movement in all its forms now feels emboldened on a new level to lay waste to Western civilization.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Didn't take him long to choose sides

Egyptian president Morsi proclaims Israel the aggressor in its current conflict with Hamas and intends to travel to Gaza tomorrow.

The latest idea that is so bad one wonders if it's some kind of joke from a regime that offers nothing but

Neo-neocon reminds us of the Vietnam-era reasons why the floating of John Kerry's name as possible second-term SecDef is wacky in the extreme.

She could have included the 1985 trip he and Iowa Senator Tom Harkin took to Nicaragua to meet with Sandinista comandante Daniel Ortega, and how Kerry came back and told the Washington Post "They just want peace."

Or his remark in one of the 2004 presidential debates in which he said the US ought to have to "pass a global test" to defend its interests.


It's on purpose - today's edition

Per the Census Bureau, 16 percent of Americans now live in poverty.

We're next

Europe is officially in a recession again.

The regime is cool with letting us see the fruits of planned decline, now that the election is over

Per the Department of Labor, jobless claims have risen by 78,000 - yes, you read that right - in the week since the overlords secured their tyranny.  Pennsylvania and Ohio hardest hit.

Blackmailing the nation that just elected him to a second term

The MEC's presser yesterday removed any doubt what his hill to die on is: tax increases on the most successful Americans.  Never mind that the $66 billion raised over ten years by such a confiscation would be dwarfed by the kinds of deficits - over $1 trillion a year - we've been running since the MEC became our overlord.

What's going on here is cultural at its root.  The idea is to reinforce the meme that most Americans want to see "the wealthy" taxed more.  It's raw class warfare.  The only reason for doing it that is of any use to anybody is the gratification that the Freedom-Haters can gin up among the indoctrinated for seeing those more successful get it stuck to them.  It is one of the Left's most effective tools in its great societal leveling enterprise.

It will also cause small business to pull in their horns even more than they are currently doing.  In short, it doesn't avert the fiscal cliff.  It merely aggrandizes the Most Equal Comrade, and there is probably nothing in the world more important to him.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

In case you wondered if Israel was going to answer those Hamas rocket attacks . . .

They're answering big-time.  Zapping facilities where the Iran-supplied missiles are stored.  Zapping Hamas military leader Ahmed Jabri in his car.

Stay safe, House of David, and make their rubble bounce.

The enemy's opening salvo in the latest battle of this war

The MEC's opening position in fiscal-cliff negotiations with the House is $1.6 trillion in new taxes over the next ten years.  Memo to John Boehner: time to go into go-to-Hell mode.

The secession movement - the LITD take

It's growing, you might even say exploding.  While it's obviously not going to lead to a mass splintering of the United States in the next six months, it's hardly an easily dismissed frivolity.  Why hasn't something like this ever followed a presidential election before?  The sense that the nature of this country has been irreversibly altered is pervasive.  Those of us who love freedom and who cherished American greatness do not intend to suck it up and move on.  Who knows what forms of resistance this might morph into?  LITD certainly doesn't care to venture a guess, but since the alternative is surrender and submission, you can be sure that other expression of our seriousness will manifest themselves as the second term of the most frightening figure in our nation's history unfolds.

The reason Petraeus testified that Benghazi was about a video

Charles Krauthammer goes there.  The ugly truth is that the general was counting on the regime to protect his image, legacy, career and marriage, but, you see, his usefulness quotient went way down about ten after eleven on the night of November 6.

Another one down the chute.

It's not a serious conference, it's a sewer of freedom-hatred

The guest list for the regime's fiscal cliff summit reads like - well, like a list you'd expect from our overlords.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Who's gonna make your Twinkie?

Hostess Brands is closing bakeries in Seattle, St. Louis and Cincinnati. 

One time when it would have been a delight to have been mistaken

It is with no pleasure that LITD acknowledges that it was exactly right about something crucial to the prospects for America and the West.

Mitt Romney was another awful Republican presdential candidate.  If one goes back through the archives here, a softening of tone about the man and an increase in the tone of hope and confidence is discernible.  Did I, in my heart, know it amounted to whistling past the graveyard?

The candidate who asserted that climate change was real and that human activity was a cause, the man who said he would allow automatic increases in the minimum wage, the man who said that the Most Equal Comrade was "a good guy" who was just "in over his head" was yet another terminal case of Reasonable Gentleman Syndrome - like John McCain, like both Bushes, like Bob Dole.  Like Richard "We're-all-Keynsians-now" Nixon.

There are many in our party who say it's time to get over the obsession with Dutch, but a glaringly front-and-center question still hasn't been answered:  How did the only real conservative president we've ever had win two landslides when the cultural and political landscape were already nearly as debased as they are now?  The left hated him with at least as much vehemence as it has ginned up for subsequent presidential - and vice presidential - candidates.  Cultural rot was well underway by the 1980s.  His presidency coincided with the rise to stardom of Michale Jackson, Prince and Madonna - three of the most narcissistic, indeed, solipsistic, artistically derivative, aesthetically perverted figures American popular culture has ever produced.  Reagan had a worldwide Communist empire breathing down his neck.  Shortly after his first election, the economy went sharply from bad to worse for several months.

It's not rocket science.  He stood for clarity.  He had the three pillars of conservativism - free-market economics, a foreign policy based on what history tells us about human nature, and an understanding that Western civilization, with its Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman foundation, was a unique blessing to humankind - firmly in his mind.

Maybe the cultural climate now is such that it really would be impossible to do well in primaries let alone a general election if one spoke plain truths about taxes, government bloat and the actual definition of the term "family."  Maybe proposing elimination of the capital-gains tax and the income tax, proposing elimination of the Departments of Education, Energy, Health and Human Services and Agriculture would be universally derided as crackpot.  Maybe pointing out that maleness and femaleness are fundamentally different ways of being human (indeed, of being a member of any species) would get the same reaction as the ramblings of a psychotic with voices in his head.

But I don't think so.  There are still plenty of us who understand all of the above to be true and right.  We have been driven underground, but we're in touch with each other.  I'm meeting one for coffee tomorrow morning, and a couple for wine tomorrow evening.

The value I place on clarity has taken a quantum leap recently.  As with so many medicines, it's a little bitter going down, but it begins to alleviate the symptoms of civilizational death every time it's administered.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Bill Kristol, the ultimate Beltway Bubble pseudo-rightie

The Weekly Standard editor is in the advanced stages of Reasonable Gentleman Syndrome, going on record as saying Congressional Pubs ought to acquiesce in the matter of higher taxes on the most successful Americans.  He's willing to portray it as a scenario in which House Pubs are cornered and that their only way toward any wiggle room is compromise on avoiding the fiscal cliff.

What the hell do we need somebody like this for?

Just too smelly

Nice Deb offers a roundup of links to various observations on the timing of the Petraeus resignation.  So many angles, so many considerations.

One big question: Will the sex angle and its attendant juiciness - according to the NYT, she was an exemplary family woman who doted over her kids and made candlelight dinner for the whole tribe most nights, but according to other sources pretty much stalked the general and threw herself at him - bring more focus to the Benghazi scandal or obscure it?

25 of 'em

That's how many rockets Gaza terrorists have fired into Israel today.

Another nugget of information that would have been useful for the public to have before the election

Food stamp usage surges to highest level in a one-year period ever.

The poisoned collective mind of the post-American masses

Twitter is full of attacks on companies that are instituting or considering hiring freezes or cuts in workers' hours on the assumption that such moves are out of spite rather than economic necessity.  That's because those so tweeting don't know their asses from hot rocks.  They have no concept of rational economic behavior.  All they see is an endless gravy train.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The odds that it's all still a coincidence are shrinking

Really, I've been trying to refrain from ascribing any tinfoil-hat implications to the timing of Petreaus's announcement of his affair, what with his Congressional testimony about Benghazi scheduled for next Thursday that now ain't gonna happen (until he gets subpoenaed) , but now, on the heels of that comes the sudden and without-fanfare resignation of Lt. General Mark Herling, commander of US Army Europe, who oversaw our bases in Sicily.

I'm picking up an odor.

The enemy ratchets up the war on normal-people energy a notch

Interior Department announces that it is closing off 1.6 million acres of federal land in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming to oil shale extraction.

Friday, November 9, 2012

The kind of prayer that will become all too frequent

Read the from-the-soul-and-gut prayer of the CEO of Murray Energy before he announces to 54 employees of the company's American Coal subsidiary.

We have chosen decline.  We have chose n madness.  Millions of good people will suffer the impact of what we have chosen.

The face of our enemy

Newsweek only has a few more print editions to go, s oI suppose that's why it sinks to new depths of shamelessness in that time frame, as evidenced by the cover of the current issue.

This war ain't over, Freedom-Haters.  Your current victory is far from final.  You had better watch your back.  We live on, and we fight on.

Taxation and the fiscal cliff: the lines are drawn

There's nothing surprising about this, but it does revive one's warrior spirit. The Most Equal Comrade says once again that a tax increase on the few remaining successful Americans has to be part of any deal to avert the fiscal cliff that he signs.
And Boehner and McConnell are on record in post-election statements as being adamant that that ain't gonna happen.
So, as I said the other day, we go over the fiscal clif in either scenario.  Pub leaders on the Hill adhere to their principles no matter what kind of dog vomit is hurled at them and the Freedom-Haters quit even talking about any avoidance measures.  Pub leaders get weak knees and acquiesce to this class-envy grandstanding gesture, small-business owners say, "Well, there's no uncertainty now, but now we know we're in for a confiscation-fest.  The hell with it.  We'll shrink our operations rather than expand them."
So the blackmail is on.  No, not "game of chicken."  That term has the implication of moral equivalence  to it.  This is about tyranny vs. freedom, as everything that happens in Washington and whatever we are to call this post-American country will be for the foreseeable future.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Portrait of an emboldened America-destroyer

Harry Reid says he has a mandate to raise taxes.

Yet more layoff announcements

Vestas Wind Systems (This one is another green outfit subsidized with your tax dollars)

Harper Collins (nearly 200 "family-sustaining" jobs)

Hawker Beechcraft (about 410 jobs)


Convenient timing if you're a Freedom-Hater

Iran fired at a US drone - on November 1.

It's on purpose - today's edition

MacDonald's sales drop for the first time in a decade.

Another essential-reading, says-it-all column

George Weigel today at NRO.

The American culture war has been markedly intensified, as those who booed God, celebrated an unfettered abortion license, canonized Sandra Fluke, and sacramentalized sodomy at the Democratic National Convention will have been emboldened to advance the cause of lifestyle libertinism through coercive state power, thus deepening the danger of what a noted Bavarian theologian calls the “dictatorship of relativism.”


And:

 a recovery of American greatness — cultural, political, economic, diplomatic, and military greatness — was not the driving theme of the Romney campaign. Not knowing Mitt Romney personally, I can’t say whether this obviously decent and successful man simply lacked the understanding necessary to make the case for true American renewal, as distinct from the faux hope-and-change mantra that had seduced so many in 2008. But whatever Romney’s personal inclinations, many Republican campaign managers and consultants always seemed afraid of scaring the horses. Obama would be beaten, they insisted, on grounds of competence, not by a campaign that called the country to recognize that it need not settle for mediocrity, a campaign that summoned America to new heights of achievement.
The themes for such a campaign were not difficult to imagine; they could have been built around a recasting of FDR’s four freedoms. Freedom of religion: No government bureaucrat in Washington is going to tell your religious community how to conduct its affairs. Freedom from fear: A Romney administration will not tolerate the burning of American embassies and the torture and murder of our diplomats by the thugs of al-Qaeda and their jihadist allies. Freedom for excellence and accomplishment: Unshackling American ingenuity from the restraints of government interference will unleash new wealth-creating and wealth-distributing energies, even as that liberation empowers the poor to lead lives of self-responsibility through honest and dignified work. And freedom from unpayable debt: Your children and grandchildren must not be buried beneath a sludge pile of extravagance sluicing out of a national capital (and an administration) addicted to throwing oceans of money at problems. 

Would it have worked? Who knows? But the issues would have been sharpened; the fake issues (“war on women,” “tax breaks for the rich,” etc.) might have been marginalized; and a lot more energy — real political energy, not just energies bent on denying Obama a second term — might have been unleashed. 

As night follows day - today's edition

Twitchy has a very long list of tweets from small business owners who are laying off people because FHer-care is now a done deal.


Boeing announces massive defense-contract-related layoffs.


Michelle Malkin's column about these and even more instances.

It's interesting.  Last Friday I attended an economic-outlook breakfast sponsored by our local Chamber of Commerce.  It was a panel discussion of four professors from Indiana University's Kelley School of Business.  Each one looked at a particular level of the economic scene.  One focused on the global scope, one on financial markets, one on the statewide (Indiana) level, and one on the city's outlook.  While certain aspects of their assessments varied from one another, the common theme that was reiterated throughout the hour was the atmosphere of uncertainty brought on by the looming fiscal cliff.

It seems that now that the picture is clearer, we see how the nation's ostensible engine of prosperity is responding.

Let's look at what we've become before we think we know what to do about it

The other day, I quoted at length from a piece by Daren Jonescu at The American Thinker.  He has another essential one up today.  And, again, do read the entire thing, but here are some money paragraphs that warrant their own further dissemination:

America is not a center-right country, whatever that means.  It is -- notwithstanding its still-sane minority (which includes almost everyone reading this) -- a socialist-leaning nation that lags behind the rest of the progressive world only due to a slight residual guilt complex regarding all that old Constitution stuff.  The events of the past couple of days suggest that even that little bugaboo has now been largely overcome by the majority, for whom most inhibitions about accepting their chains -- and chaining their neighbors -- are now gone.

And:

"Mitt Romney was only the nominee because of a thin primary field."  Phooey.  He was the nominee because the entire GOP establishment threw everything it had at all the other candidates, in order to guarantee that it would get the candidate most likely to succumb to their advice and direction.  As of September 2012, Romney was the only candidate left in the primary field whom no one had ever described as a conservative, let alone a constitutionalist.  That, in short, is why he was the nominee.
(3) "Republicans need a candidate who can appeal to moderates."  See point 1 above.  Appealing to moderates means apologizing to voters for not being quite as forward-looking as Barack Obama.  It is to set oneself up as the inferior choice.  It is to presume that the moderates are with the Democrat candidate by default, and must be peeled off by stealth.


And:

This election was the last chance to spare America the final degradation of ceasing to be a constitutional republic altogether.  That battle has now been lost.  The things most needed now are clarity and forthrightness.  The danger most imminent now is that, having forsaken the principles of liberty, the nation will simply forget that those principles ever existed.
That, my friends, is the America of November 2012.

Unless we fully grasp what's going on, our steps forward will be inadequate



As you no doubt assume, I've been thinking about where to start in on assessing all that has occurred this week, and its various levels of impact.
I'll say something here, knowing it can easily be taken out of context and used to bite me in the tail end.    The risk is worth it, though, because it needs to be said, and much constructive elaboration can actually ensue.  It is that much so-called analysis from the same old wonky white guys (and one white gal of note, Ann Coulter) still fails to grasp the level of cultural sickness that has made for the America of November 2012.  There are, of course, the spectacularly wrong prognosticators, ranging from Michael Barone to Dick Morris to Rush Limbaugh, who now, with one more gaze into their crystal balls, draw the brilliantly original conclusion that conservatives are now outnumbered.   But I'm also a little frustrated even with the likes of Victor Davis Hanson.  All he has to say is that the election left the landscape in Washington much as it was.  Not a word about an emboldened FHer base, executive fiat, the thug machine surrounding the MEC, or the spot, that is to say situation amounting to blackmail, in which the Pub-dominated House, finds itself.  Or the consequences - that is, the inevitability of the fiscal cliff.  (If Pubs resist tax increases during the lame-duck session, FHers have all the ammunition they need to blame them for said cliff; if they acquiesce, we go over the cliff anyway.)

What I've pasted below is a reader comment underneath the unsigned editorial at NRO today, in which that magazine's editors do what they can to get the biggest-possible-picture take on what Tuesday's electoral rout means.  The reader, who calls himself WisdomVision, does a far better job of explaining our current juncture than the editors.  In fact, better than any pundit's observation I've yet seen.

So many bad, bad things, it is hard to begin to sort them out. Our beloved country has made a tragic error. The resilience and character of the American people is not what it once was. The majority of our countrymen prefer regulation and easy subsidy now. The phrase, "Greatest Generation" seems quaint and antique now; the phrase, "Wisdom of the Founders" seems oddly racist.

When the GOP thinks about attracting unmarried women in the future, it should remember that this group is growing extremely fast. And the reason it is growing so fast is because so many young women are rejecting marriage. A pastor I know in a large California parish told me he has not seen one case, in 8 years, of a young couple coming to the church and saying, "We're in love and we want to get married." It's all half-brothers and shacking up and serial live-ins and ruined children. The GOP will never be able to match the democrats when it comes to freebies for unmarried women, or for anyone else. And our efforts to emphasize "traditional family values" (another sincere effort, now translated as hate speech by most of America) have utterly failed.

When the young woman asked the candidates what they would do to correct the fact that women are paid 72 cents on the dollar of what men make, both candidates accepted her premise. Both knew it was a lie, one of those statistical "facts" that drive sane people crazy. But both knew they were in a promising contest, and no liberal is ever going to lose a promising contest with anyone. And so I wish the GOP luck bringing these voters into our fold.

The American people heard about the HHS mandate and yawned. They know nothing about the (again, hear the quaintness) phrase, "religious liberty," but they know everything about Dancing with the Stars. The once-mighty coalitions of Catholics, evangelicals, Mormons, and mainline Protestant churches made tiny sounds, inaudible really, like mice with asthma. Soon gay marriage will be guaranteed by US law, and Catholic churches who do not agree to preside over ceremonies where men marry men will be closed. The church is going to pay a price, then, for their timidity in fighting religious oppression in 2012. I wish my fellow conservatives all the luck in the world on this matter as well.

Conservatives, properly, worry about the high percentage of Americans that pay no income taxes. I wish them luck in attracting voters from the millions of citizens who pay no income taxes today, by making the argument they really should pay something. I would also encourage them to look at the numbers of people paying no taxes overall, but also by ethnic group. They are going to find out the people who voted against them in the highest concentrations Tuesday, have the highest rates of paying no income tax, and also the highest rates of government subsidy. Educate this group, my fellow Reaganites, on voting Republican, because they will show you the virtue of adding you to the rolls of taxpayers, and removing you from the roles of subsidy. Good luck on this quest my friends.

We are entering a period of steep national decline. The incredible virtues that made America what it was are fading away and can never be recovered. Virtually every conservative hero since the Revolution has warned this day would come if we continued doing bad things, but strangely, now that it is here, even National Review cannot recognize it.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

As the Senate is confirmed to remain Freedom-Hater and Mitt's path narrows

The principles remain true even if this country has decided to ignore them.

Western civilization is done for.

So very late in the day

Daren Jonescu at The American Thinker captures the essence of what today is all about: It's a referendum on civilization.

I've yet to see a more perfectly distilled explanation of why FHer-care is so poisonous:

Government health care is a perfect microcosm of what real oppression will look like on a daily basis, an important and constantly needed reminder for people still hoping to preserve the idea of freedom in their own country.  Those whose air has at least been perfumed with the (dissipating) vapors of genuine liberty all their lives can easily regard oppression as more foreign and strange than it really is.  The natural tendency among citizens of "the land of the free" to identify tyranny primarily with the nightmare world of Kristallnacht or the Ukrainian forced famine has facilitated the efforts of freedom's enemies to push America onto its current collision course with the more quotidian brutalities of "soft" oppression. 
Or why "compromise" is simply unworkable in our current climate:

Treating leftist authoritarianism as one side of the nation's healthy political debate is by definition a violation of the American founding.  Socialism cannot be put into practice to any degree without violating the Declaration's primary rights and the Constitution's delineations of the role of government.  By allowing leftist policy to metastasize through all branches of the federal government for generations, a large portion of the population -- including, sadly, many who see themselves as conservatives -- have unwittingly forsaken most of what America, as a philosophical idea, stands for.
Or why the current ridicule with which the defense of liberty is treated marks a grim juncture:

If the American majority finally comes to absorb the view, already accepted as policy by the Department of Homeland Security, that "reverence of individual liberty" and "suspicion of centralized federal authority" are indicators of an antisocial threat, then there will literally be nowhere left on Earth where one is allowed to love freedom without ostracism, or worse.  There will be nowhere left on Earth where Jefferson, Madison, or Washington may speak or be spoken of without ridicule.

His metaphor for America's current situation is spot-on:

A man is hanging from a cliff, with only his fingers still gripping solid rock.  The prevailing impetus is all downward, but the man continues to dangle in one place as long as that grip holds out.  If he lets go, however, his fall will be short and decisive. 
Modern civilization is that man.  America is his final, desperate grip.  On November 6, 2012, that man will either be left alone to continue his brave, heartbreaking struggle for another day, or a boot will come down on his fingers.


The entire piece is well worth your time.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Friday, November 2, 2012

LITD cedes the floor to the Las Vegas Journal-Review

File this one under "Couldn't have said it  better myself."  The MEC's foreign policy failures make him utterly unsuited to be Commander in Chief, and his economic policies are a disaster, too.

The further revelations do no make this look any better

The regime did not convene the one group of people who are charged with knowing what resources are  available throughout the government in a moment of terrorism-related crisis.

This is per CBS. Even the MSM must now acknowledge the extent of this fiasco.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

The MEC's not messianic, but he sure makes messes

Former Libyan prime minister Mahmoud Jibril says that the way the MEC regime went about facilitating the ouster of Ghaddafi and then basically ending its involvement left a power vacuum that resulted in - well, what we are now witnessing.

Benghazi: Our guys had been extremely concerned for some time

They held an emergency meeting a month before the Set. 11 attack to discuss the al-Qaeda training activity in the city and the vulnerability of the consulate - and send a top-secret cable about it to the State Department.

The overlords were perfectly willing to let these guys be sitting ducks, so as not to disrupt the meme that the MEC had vanquished al-Qaeda.

And then they - that would be the MEC, the H-word Creature, Susan Rice, Jay Carney and Leon Panetta - were perfectly willing to lie to you, to me, and to the dead guys' parents.