Distilled to His Elemental Essence

Our beloved country, freedom’s last redoubt, civilization’s only power capable of resisting the advancing tide of barbarism, keep of Castle Earth, is seriously contemplating elevating to the presidency Barack Obama, an effete academic weakling, a messianic soothsayer, perfervid followers in tow, who believes America’s collective soul is broken and that He has been called to mend it, a caricature Euro Statist whose voting record and public utterances reflect passionate belief in all the discredited far leftist critiques of America (and their attendant fixes), a dreamy naïf with a permanently adolescent world view born of lifelong refusal to work in the real world, a thinly disguised leftist revolutionary who for decades eagerly immersed himself in a vile crowd of crypto-Marxists, quislings, racists, domestic terrorists, and antisemites, and who now simply says, calm as you please, he never really shared their views, a twenty-eight carat tyro whose resume of accomplishments would fit neatly on the back of a Visa card, a man whose scary wife (whom the candidate himself seems to fear) dislikes the country that has showered her with great good fortune. – James Edmund Pennington at American Thinker from “Obama and his Next Goal”

Touché, sir. Touché! If there were any justice in this world, that would leave a livid mark.

Via Van der Leun

Memes and Monkeyspheres

Memes and Monkeyspheres

Another bit of linkery. LabRat has penned a fascinating post over at Atomic Nerds, Parasite memes and monkeyspheres, that I strongly urge you to go read.

Quite a mind between that woman’s ears. Excerpt:

For the most part, it barely even matters if they work or not, as people tend to discard or ignore ideas the moment they become inconvenient; a bad meme is only a serious disadvantage to the host if it leads to some more traditionally Darwinian end, like standing in front of an Israeli bulldozer and expecting it to stop for the righteousness of your cause. Seen through the prism of history, really bad memes seem to be much more reliably fatal for everyone else. Stalin, after all, lived to 74.

Another excerpt from that post will be Quote of the Day for Friday.

Go. Read. Think.

A Promise

I heard on the radio, as I was driving home for lunch, that John McCain “hasn’t ruled out” NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg as a VP pick. Newsmax reports the same:

Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting John McCain praised New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg during a visit to the Big Apple and hinted that Bloomberg could be considered as a possible running mate.

Bloomberg is leaving office next year due to term limits and has been rumored to be mulling a run for governor in New York. Asked about that speculation, McCain told the New York Post:

“Do I think he could serve the state of New York and the country well? Of course.”

When asked about the possibility of Bloomberg, an Independent, running as the GOP’s vice presidential candidate, McCain refused to rule it out, saying: “We don’t talk about our vice-presidential possibilities. But he added: “I appreciate Mayor Bloomberg enormously and the great job he’s done as mayor.”

As Newsmax’s Insider Report disclosed last week, a source close to the mayor told an interviewer that after a recent breakfast meeting between McCain and Bloomberg, the mayor was on McCain’s “short list” for the vice presidential slot.

Here’s my promise:

If McCain picks BloomingIdiot for VP, I will cast my vote for Bob Barr.

That is all.

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

Politicians seldom if ever get [into public office] by merit alone, at least in democratic states. Sometimes, to be sure, it happens, but only by a kind of miracle. They are chosen normally for quite different reasons, the chief of which is simply their power to impress and enchant the intellectually underprivileged….Will any of them venture to tell the plain truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about the situation of the country, foreign or domestic? Will any of them refrain from promises that he knows he can’t fulfill – that no human being could fulfill? Will any of them utter a word, however obvious, that will alarm or alienate any of the huge pack of morons who cluster at the public trough, wallowing in the pap that grows thinner and thinner, hoping against hope? Answer: maybe for a few weeks at the start…. But not after the issue is fairly joined, and the struggle is on in earnest…. They will all promise every man, woman and child in the country whatever he, she or it wants. They’ll all be roving the land looking for chances to make the rich poor, to remedy the irremediable, to succor the unsuccorable, to unscramble the unscrambleable, to dephlogisticate the undephlogisticable. They will all be curing warts by saying words over them, and paying off the national debt with money no one will have to earn. When one of them demonstrates that twice two is five, another will prove that it is six, six and a half, ten, twenty, n. In brief, they will divest themselves from their character as sensible, candid and truthful men, and simply become candidates for office, bent only on collaring votes. They will all know by then, even supposing that some of them don’t know it now, that votes are collared under democracy, not by talking sense but by talking nonsense, and they will apply themselves to the job with a hearty yo-heave-ho. Most of them, before the uproar is over, will actually convince themselves. The winner will be whoever promises the most with the least probability of delivering anything. – H.L. Mencken

What concerns me, this time around, is what an ObamaNation might actually deliver.

I shudder to think.

This Sounds Promising

Bill Whittle has posted again. I don’t check on him daily any more, just once every couple of weeks. His latest post is dated June 3, so I’m not that far behind.

He says his latest hiatus has been due to the writing of a screenplay, but that in the mean time he has also written some essays (in his head) soon to be posted. With respect to the screenplay, I hope he sells it, retains creative control, and makes a freaking fortune off of it.

With respect to his essays, I’m most eagerly awaiting those:

THE REPUBLIC OF EMOTION — How schools and modern teaching methods prepare us to be a society of self-centered crybabies without a clue as to how to think critically and act like adults.
LIFEBOAT — immigration and why the Melting Pot whips the Mosaic hands down and twice on Sunday.
THE END OF THE WORLD AS WE KNOW IT — The long-promised Global Warming essay, less about the science and more about the aneurism of politics and control that gives a very big lever to some very bad people.
THE WEIGHT OF OUR SKINS — A look at race, now that the Great Uniter has healed my soul.
THE PLAGUE — Civilizations rise and fall, and the pattern is always the same. Why? I think I may have an idea. And there may be a way around it.

“The Republic of Emotion” piece sounds like a bookend for The George Orwell Daycare Center. I very much look forward to seeing what he has to say on the subject. Same too for “The Plague.” That topic concerns me greatly. Hell, I want to read ’em all.

Welcome back, Bill. We’ve missed ya!

Got 48 Minutes

Got 48 Minutes?

If you do, I strongly urge you to watch this YouTube video:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjALf12PAWc&hl=en&w=425&h=344]

Yes, I know, it’s Naomi Wolf, author of The Beauty Myth: How Images of Beauty are Used Against Women and she was AlGore’s instructor on how to be an “Alpha Male” during the 2000 election cycle. She is also the author of The End of America: A Letter of Warning To A Young Patriot, and this video is on that topic.

It is an enlightening piece.

Ms. Wolf notes that there are ten characteristics of open societies that are sliding down the slope towards totalitarianism, using Russia, Nazi Germany, and Fascist Italy as her examples. Those 10 steps are:

  1. A hyped internal or external threat
  2. Secret prisons and torture of prisoners, sometimes with military tribunals
  3. The creation of a paramilitary force
  4. Surveillance of the general population
  5. Arbitrary detainment
  6. Infiltration of perceived opposition groups
  7. The targeting of key individuals
  8. Restraint of the press
  9. The recasting of criticism as espionage, and dissent as treason
  10. Subversion of the Rule of Law or the imposition of martial law

After watching her presentation, I understand better the fears of what most of us call the moonbat-left.

She’s not alone in seeing the building blocks of totalitarianism. The GeekWithA.45 long ago waved the warning flag:

We, who studied the shape and form of the machines of freedom and oppression, have looked around us, and are utterly dumbfounded by what we see.

We see first that the machinery of freedom and Liberty is badly broken. Parts that are supposed to govern and limit each other no longer do so with any reliability.

We examine the creaking and groaning structure, and note that critical timbers have been moved from one place to another, that some parts are entirely missing, and others are no longer recognizable under the wadded layers of spit and duct tape. Other, entirely new subsystems, foreign to the original design, have been added on, bolted at awkward angles.

We know the tools and mechanisms of oppression when we see them. We’ve studied them in depth, and their existence on our shores, in our times, offends us deeply. We can see the stirrings of malevolence, and we take stock of the damage they’ve caused over so much time.

Others pass by without a second look, with no alarm or hue and cry, as if they are blind, as if they don’t understand what they see before their very eyes. We want to shake them, to grasp their heads and turn their faces, shouting, “LOOK! Do you see what this thing is? Do you see how it might be put to use? Do you know what can happen if this thing becomes fully assembled and activated?”

Some, to be certain, see these things, and perceive the danger. Many of these, their minds and judgments clouded, act as if they had appeared new and pristine, and proceed to lay all of the blame, 100% of it, at the feet of the current administration, judges and legislators, not stopping to think that such malignity does not appear de-novo, and all at once.

It is human, after all, to assign blame for such things as the evidence of ill intention and malign design, and sometimes it is just to do so. We remind ourselves though, that it isn’t always the case, and that evil can also emerge unbidden from the sum of vectors, rather than the charting of a course.

Such sickness as this grows over time, years and decades. It accretes in lightless corners and in broad daylight in places where self-deception, man’s oldest enemy carries the day.

Alone, and in small groups, we sit in the shade and think, to find clarity. Some of the forms we see are plain as day, and others are ambiguous. We know that it is human nature to see patterns in the stars, to connect the dots. Often, the patterns we see are real, and sometimes, they are just constellations. We pause and check each bit of history, one at a time. We know that we cannot afford to be wrong.

The original machine designers warned us of this. They knew that the temptation would always be there, and they sternly warned us that assembling such machines, even with the best of intention was to court a cascading disaster.

But what Naomi Wolf neglects to include in her list of necessary ingredients for totalitarianism are the crucial ones, ones I’m not at all surprised she missed.

She’s right, the building blocks are all there. There is indeed cause for concern, even fear. But the two necessary ingredients she missed have been remarkably well described by others. The first by Eric Hoffer is a populace well prepared for a mass movement:

When people are ripe for a mass movement, they are usually ripe for any effective movement, and not solely for one with any particular doctrine or program.

And what group best fits that description?

The second is described by Jonah Goldberg in his definition of fascism:

Fascism is a religion of the state. It assumes the organic unity of the body politic and longs for a national leader attuned to the will of the people.

“A leader attuned to the will of the people.” Naomi Wolf cites Russia, Germany, and Italy as her examples of states that descend from what she calls “openness” into totalitarianism. But what she fails to note is that each had a strong, charismatic, and popular leader – Stalin, Hitler, and Mussolini. She tries to portray G.W. Bush as such a leader, but the very idea is laughable. The same can be said for John McCain.

But The Obamessiah?

Yes, the Right has constructed many of the mechanisms of oppression, she’s correct. But she’s wrong if she believes that only the Right would put all the pieces together and use the resulting machine. Jonah Goldberg’s entire book is an explanation of how the Left has systematically redefined and mischaracterized Fascism as a right-wing phenomenon. Instead it is, as he explains in great detail, national socialism as opposed to international socialism.

At least she admits to understanding what the Second Amendment is really for.

Watch the video. Think about what she says (and what she doesn’t.)

I expect to see a LOT of comments to this post.

23 Is Old Enough

23 Is Old Enough

Old enough to own a firearm. Old enough to get a CCW permit. But not in Manhattan. And not if you attend Columbia University. No, in that case you have no option but to rely on the State for your protection.

And the State failed a 23 year old woman, a student at Columbia and resident of Manhattan. And, like Linda Riss, she has no legal recourse against the state for that failure to protect.

Bad things happen to good people, but read what she had to endure:

Over many torturous hours, she had been repeatedly raped, sodomized and forced to perform oral sex, a prosecutor told a jury on Thursday. The accused, Robert A. Williams, 31, had doused the woman’s face and body with boiling water and bleach, forced her to swallow handfuls of pills and to chase them with beer, sealed her mouth with glue, and bound her wrists and legs with shoelaces, cords and duct tape, said the prosecutor, Ann P. Prunty. And now, Ms. Prunty said, he was asking the woman to gouge out her own eyes with a pair of scissors.

And so the woman, sitting on the floor of her studio apartment in Hamilton Heights and holding a pair of scissors between her knees — the blade pointing toward her face — tried to stop the suffering. She lowered her face to the blade, but turned her head at the last moment, trying to stab herself in the neck instead of her eyes.

The scissors slipped from her grasp, the suicide attempt failed, and the woman suffered several more hours of torture, Ms. Prunty said.

But wait, there’s more.

The woman survived the nearly 19-hour ordeal, which ended, Ms. Prunty said, when she used a fire started by Mr. Williams to burn the cords that secured her wrists to a futon.

Mr. Williams went on trial Thursday in State Supreme Court in Manhattan, where he faces 71 criminal counts, including attempted murder, rape, arson and assault. If convicted, he could spend the rest of his life in prison.

Could but probably won’t. Here’s his previous rap sheet:

Mr. Williams, who was homeless at the time of his arrest about a week later at the scene of a burglary in Queens, has a lengthy police record dating to his childhood, the authorities have said.

He was charged in a murder as a juvenile, though the outcome of that case is sealed, a law enforcement official said, and he spent eight years in prison for an attempted-murder conviction in 1996.

Why was this guy even on the street?

Here’s how he got her:

On the night of the attack, the victim, a month from graduating with a master’s degree, was at Columbia, putting the final touches on her résumé for a job fair the next day, Ms. Prunty said. When she arrived at her apartment building, she got on the elevator and found Mr. Williams inside, Ms. Prunty said. She rode with him to her floor, and could hear him follow her as she navigated the long L-shaped hallway to her apartment.

As the woman entered her apartment, Ms. Prunty said, Mr. Williams asked her if she knew where a Mrs. Evans lived. The woman stopped to answer.

“Her kind moment of hesitation would cost her,” Ms. Prunty said.

Mr. Williams forced his way into the apartment, Ms. Prunty said, put the woman in a chokehold, and slapped her cellphone from her hand. Mr. Williams slammed the door behind him, and “her Friday the 13th nightmare began,” Ms. Prunty said.

The anti-gun people tell victims to “give their attacker what they want.” He wanted her body. He wanted her to gouge out her own eyes. Instead, she attempted to end her own life.

How can anyone believe that it is morally superior to submit to a rapist rather than carry a gun and have at least the chance to shoot the bastard?

This could be you, your sister, daughter, wife, mother. Please, take a “Refuse to be a Victim” course. Learn how to spot the danger signs. Learn how to protect yourself, even if you are unable to be armed. Don’t let anything like this happen to you, or someone you love. No one should have to endure this. No one should have to deal with its consequences.

Bias? What Bias?

First, CafePress rejects two of Tam’s quite humorous artworks. I disagree, but it’s a business, and they can do pretty much what they want.

But CNN? CNN is ostensibly a news service – one that prides itself on its “objectivity” and “fairness.”

It’s time to bring up my favorite media quote again. Unfortunately, Dianne Sawyer is not a CNN reporter:

“You know, I wanted to sit on a jury once and I was taken off the jury. And the judge said to me, ‘Can, you know, can you tell the truth and be fair?’ And I said, ‘That’s what journalists do.’ And everybody in the courtroom laughed. It was the most hurtful moment I think I’ve ever had.” – Diane Sawyer, Good Morning America, 7/12/07

(Application of the ClueBat™ is seldom painless.) But the point holds true nonetheless.

Now Ravenwood has discovered a bit of bias at CNN’s apparel store. Go look.