From Grumpy Old Fart in a comment:
Affirmative Action is, and always has been, the political equivalent of insisting that Tiger Woods use the women’s tee because he’s black.
Can I get an “AMEN!”?
And read the rest of the comment. Spot-on.
The Smallest Minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities. – Ayn Rand
From Grumpy Old Fart in a comment:
Affirmative Action is, and always has been, the political equivalent of insisting that Tiger Woods use the women’s tee because he’s black.
Can I get an “AMEN!”?
And read the rest of the comment. Spot-on.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6ImP-gJvas?rel=0]
I may be giving you filler, but it’s QUALITY filler.
…like, pollen.
I feel another Überpost coming on. I think this one will be pretty long. Content will be light in the interim. The Free Ice Cream Machine is set to “LOW.”
Piers Morgan’s grudging admission:
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKO8A285Rr0?rel=0]
Post title comes from one of the comments to the video.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79o2zDv7WuA?rel=0]
James Kaleda explains that the proposed NJ Gun Bills will not save any lives but will endanger them. He is ejected by Committee Chair Senator Norcross. This took place at the NJ Senate gun control hearings in Trenton on April 30, 2013.
As the Geekwitha.45 puts it, “The dark and fascist state of New Jersey.”
Edited to add this:
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWHgUE9AD4s?rel=0]
So the Chicago Tribune posts an op-ed on Wednesday, Obama and overreach: Americans see evidence of truth-shading, arrogance and intrusion.
First, let me check the definition of the word “overreach“:
1: to reach above or beyond : overtop
2: to defeat (oneself) by seeking to do or gain too much
3: to get the better of especially in dealing and bargaining and typically by unscrupulous or crafty methods
I think they were going for definition 2, but NOT. And “truth-shading” is a polite way of saying “lying.” Let us fisk:
•Multiple White House claims about Washington’s handling of the murderous raid in Benghazi stand exposed as false.
•Internal Revenue Service officials admit a worse-by-the-day scandal that appalls fair-minded Americans.
•The U.S. Department of Justice scrambles to explain its clandestine collection of records on work and personal telephone lines that The Associated Press says are used by more than 100 of its journalists.
In reaction, the White House blames political opponents, disavows ownership or pleads ignorance.
Like this:
And this:

And, edited to add this:

Hard as it may be, then, set aside your own politics and ask yourself which of these Monday statements rings truer:
“The whole issue of talking points, frankly, throughout this process has been a sideshow. … And suddenly, three days ago, this gets spun up as if there’s something new to the story. There’s no ‘there’ there.”
— President Barack Obama, dismissing congressional scrutiny of his and his subordinates’ statements about Benghazi as a “political circus”
“Americans should take notice that top Obama administration officials increasingly see themselves as above the law and emboldened by the belief that they don’t have to answer to anyone.”
— House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa
IOW:
For now, many among us would take Option 2. With each of these troubling disclosures, the Obama administration finds itself reacting to appearances of overreach, of arrogance, of determination to dodge its embarrassments rather than to take ownership of them.
“Many among us” only in Chicago. In the rest of flyover country, it’s about 100%.
We don’t expect unanimity of agreement on this. On each of these controversies, though, even some of the president’s most loyal supporters — from Capitol Hill to the liberal commentariat to Main Streets across the land — are questioning the government’s conduct on his watch. That turnabout either angers or amuses opponents inclined to ask the supporters, “Where have you been?”
Or “Where were you before the election?” Mostly directed at the MEDIA.
At each of these turns, the Obama administration has looked manipulative, defensive and peevish. In one sense those aren’t startling reactions; they’re vulnerabilities for any White House that, like this one, wants an image of moral righteousness, honesty and transparency.
Taken together, though, these controversies project a less flattering image of truth-shading, hubris and intrusion. In the week of humiliating disclosures that started with last Wednesday’s congressional hearing on Benghazi, Americans haven’t seen the administration exhibit … one shred of humility:
•The White House and State Department have taken vague responsibility for Benghazi mistakes, but neither has produced answers to the most crucial questions, starting with:
Who, exactly, had rejected repeated requests for security upgrades from U.S. officials in Libya? Who, exactly, decided not to attempt a military rescue, an F-16 flyover, a NATO or other allied reaction, something, during the eight-hour assault? Who, exactly, let the task of informing the American people deteriorate into an orgy of tail-covering and lies? And why, exactly, does the president’s spokesman still mislead Americans by suggesting that the Central Intelligence Agency, rather than the State Department or White House, drove that process — essentially blaming CIA staffers who did the typing rather than blaming administration officials who told them what to type?
I’ll let Attorney General address those questions:
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fCF_LiS4l4?rel=0]
•The IRS’ disclosure that it had inordinately targeted conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status was astonishing. No more astonishing, though, than Tuesday’s news that the IRS allegedly gave nonpublic information about nine of those groups to ProPublica, an investigative journalism organization.
Obama called the early disclosures outrageous and vowed to learn “exactly what happened on this.” The president would have better served himself and his administration, though, by acknowledging the shriekingly obvious: If IRS officials were trying to hinder conservative groups that opposed Obama, that means high-level federal officials were trying to steer the Nov. 6 election to the president. There was no such candor from the president or, Tuesday, from his spokesman.
•Americans thus far know less about the Justice Department’s grab of AP staffers’ phone records. But here, too, many of those Americans can’t help but ask if all the president’s men and women stay up late, trying to look intrusive.
The question they ought to be asking is whether this is Standard Operating Procedure for government entities. I have no illusions that this kind of behavior began with Obama’s administration – they’re just less competent at it.
By the AP’s account, Justice subjected the organization to an unprecedented invasion of its news-gathering operations. The evident goal: to identify the government source(s) of a May 2012 AP story about a CIA operation in Yemen that had stopped an al-Qaida plot to bomb a U.S.-bound airplane.
Once again, a question raised by the Benghazi debacle resonates loudly: As the 2012 presidential election approached, were some federal officials overstepping bounds to shore up the president’s campaign claim that, as he said at the Democratic National Convention, “al-Qaida is on the path to defeat”?
The easiest way for the president and his White House to further that rising suspicion — we emphasize that it’s thus far unproven — is to demonstrate three things to his newly energized foes and to his friends who didn’t expect this sort of conduct: that his subordinates will end their egregious stonewalling on Benghazi, will pursue the IRS scandal as high as it goes and will demand full disclosure of whether his Justice Department scrupulously followed the law in its pursuit of journalists’ phone records.
Um, excuse me, but what about Fast & Furious? Can we pursue that scandal “as high as it goes” and “demand full disclosure” of his Justice Department?
Until the president makes and keeps those three assurances, he’ll continue to make Issa’s accusation ring true: This administration looks guilty of overreach — of believing it is above the law.
The administration looks guilty, but not of “overreach.”
Where, one wonders, did “anyone at the IRS that was involved in this” get the idea that it was a good thing to do? Were they just going to drop it on the porch, like a cat bringing home a dead sparrow, and hope they would be praised by He Who Wieldeth the Opener of Cans?
It’s possible, but it’s not the way to bet. I leave the implications (for now) as an exercise for the reader.
Sorry about the pause in blogging, but I took my grandson to see Iron Man 3 last night.
So, photographic evidence of Bill Whittle’s appearance in Tucson on Tuesday:

Bill at the podium

Bill and local talk-radio host James T. Harris.

Bill and me.
As I said, the man does give a helluva speech, and afterward he took questions as “Mr. Virtual President.” I asked him why Thomas Sowell had never been made Secretary of the Treasury. Bill’s answer: “Because about thirty seconds after confirmation, the Fed would cease to exist.”
Edited to add this five minute segment of Bill’s speech – how to sell freedom, wealth creation and virtue to college students:
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FplAk8zzOCI?rel=0]
Where they now have some cops foot-patrolling carrying honest-to-jeebus assault rifles:
Bedfordshire town suffers nine shootings in four month crime wave Police say armed patrols in place for ‘foreseeable future’ to deter violence Officers with guns and dogs will also be increasing searches to find weapons With a heavily-armed policeman guarding the playground, assault rifle at the ready, it could be the scene of a terror alert.
In fact, this is a routine patrol just yards from a suburban primary school.
The show of force is designed to calm residents of an estate plagued by gang shootings.
In the past four months there have been nine gun-related incidents in Luton linked to the Marsh Farm and Lewsey Farm estates.
In the latest, a 16-year-old boy was shot in the back early on Saturday morning. He may never walk again.
The violence has left law-abiding families so terrified they welcome the patrols, even if they risk scaring children.
Faye Bell, 37, a mother of two, said: ‘The armed police might seem heavy-handed to some people but to us they are hugely reassuring.
‘It’s very sad that it has come to this but we need the police to be armed so they can protect our kids.’
The officers, with a dog unit, have been patrolling the estate near the rundown Purley shopping centre all week.
Marsh Farm residents told the Daily Mail yesterday that the armed patrols had given them the confidence to go outside.
Shannon Read, 17, said: ‘I don’t really come out of my house at all so it’s reassuring to know these patrols are here.
‘I knew the lad who got shot on Saturday so it has been even more terrifying recently.’
Darren Putney, 46, added: ‘Some of the children on the way to school or in the play area look frightened.
‘But the police need to make their presence known.’
The officers carry Heckler and Koch G36C assault rifles with 5.56mm calibre ammunition that can pierce body armour.

But those are only good for spray-firing from the hip and gunning down large numbers of people!! How is that gun control working out for you, again? And what about these people’s right to “freedom from fear”? I thought the “strictest control of firearms” was supposed to protect them, not Bobbies carrying assault rifles.
(h/t to expat Phil B. from New Zealand via email.)
In a rare political post on his anime blog Chizumatic, Steven opines on the media’s reaction to the current Washington scandals in See no Evil. My only disagreement with Steven comes from this excerpt:
So even though we’re increasingly uncomfortable acting as a shill for the government instead of as an opposing force, the way we always thought the press was supposed to be, …
The press doesn’t take that position. The press has an administrative control bias that is decidedly Leftist in slant. They’re an “opposing force” only when the wrong people are in charge, or are doing something that the New York Times editors don’t agree with. The rest of the time they see their job as conveying the divine grace of government to the laypeople of the public.
Other than that, spot-on.
Perhaps now someone in addition to Sharyl Atkisson of ABCNNBCBS will do some actual reporting.