I think the vast majority of people don’t feel the need to work above a subsistence level and that those of us who do are the mutants. – The Right to Go to Hell
Tag: QotD
Quote of the Day – Stephen Green Edition
Quote of the Day – 4/11/13
Frankly, I don’t know what it is about California, but we seem to have a strange urge to elect really obnoxious women to high office. I’m not bragging, you understand, but no other state, including Maine, even comes close. When it comes to sending left-wing dingbats to Washington, we’re Number One. There’s no getting around the fact that the last time anyone saw the likes of Barbara Boxer, Dianne Feinstein, Maxine Waters, and Nancy Pelosi, they were stirring a cauldron when the curtain went up on “Macbeth”. The four of them are like jackasses who happen to possess the gift of blab. You don’t know if you should condemn them for their stupidity or simply marvel at their ability to form words.
Quote of the Day
When we were young of course we always wanted to change the world, and thought we could.
But now I think we’re smart enough to know we’re only here to help the neighborhood – Rick Danko
Quote of the Day – Totalitarianism Edition
Inspired by a comment on my previous post, I went looking into Jean-Francois Revel and his book Last Exit to Utopia: The Survival of Socialism in a Post-Soviet Era. In a Wall Street Journal review of that book, I found this, the QotD:
The totalitarian phenomenon is not to be understood without making an allowance for the thesis that some important part of every society consists of people who actively want tyranny: either to exercise it themselves or — much more mysteriously — to submit to it. – Jean-Francois Revel
Calls for aggressive disarmament of the American public ring that alarm bell emphatically.
Discuss.
Quote of the Day – Thomas Sowell Redux
In keeping with the previous post, this from Thomas Sowell’s Townhall January 2013 piece, The Role of Educators:
Schools were once thought of as places where a society’s knowledge and experience were passed on to the younger generation. But, about a hundred years ago, Professor John Dewey of Columbia University came up with a very different conception of education — one that has spread through American schools of education, and even influenced education in countries overseas.
John Dewey saw the role of the teacher, not as a transmitter of a society’s culture to the young, but as an agent of change — someone strategically placed, with an opportunity to condition students to want a different kind of society.
A century later, we are seeing schools across America indoctrinating students to believe in all sorts of politically correct notions. The history that is taught in too many of our schools is a history that emphasizes everything that has gone bad, or can be made to look bad, in America — and that gives little, if any, attention to the great achievements of this country.
If you think that is an exaggeration, get a copy of “A People’s History of the United States” by Howard Zinn and read it. As someone who used to read translations of official Communist newspapers in the days of the Soviet Union, I know that those papers’ attempts to degrade the United States did not sink quite as low as Howard Zinn’s book.
That book has sold millions of copies, poisoning the minds of millions of students in schools and colleges against their own country. But this book is one of many things that enable teachers to think of themselves as “agents of change,” without having the slightest accountability for whether that change turns out to be for the better or for the worse — or, indeed, utterly catastrophic.
Quote of the Day
New one on me:
Newsheimers, the media affliction by which you just can’t recall what you previously reported. Especially when it concerns Democrats.
Heh™
Quote of the Day – Gunnie Edition
Paraphrased because I can’t find the actual quote at the moment, but seen elsewhere:
Handguns put holes in bodies.
Rifles put holes through bodies.
Shotguns, at the proper range and with the proper load, remove significant portions of bodies and splatter those portions all over the ground.
I’m advised that quote is from Clint Smith, President and Director of Thunder Ranch. And I think that’s a pretty fair assessment.
Quote of the Day – Jay Hafemeister Edition
Responding on Facebook to this Redstate story about Seattle’s firearm and ammunition tax neither improving revenue nor reducing gun violence in that city:
Gun Control isn’t supposed to reduce crime. It’s only supposed to reduce gun owners.
See also this.
Quote of the Day – Daniel Greenfield Edition
Daniel Greenfield, Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, aka “Sultan Knish” has a piece up on Frontpage Mag entitled The Civil War is Here. QotD:
We can have a system of government based around the Constitution with democratically elected representatives. Or we can have one based on the ideological principles of the left in which all laws and processes, including elections and the Constitution, are fig leaves for enforcing social justice.
But we cannot have both.
Some civil wars happen when a political conflict can’t be resolved at the political level. The really bad ones happen when an irresolvable political conflict combines with an irresolvable cultural conflict.
That is what we have now.
The left has made it clear that it will not accept the lawful authority of our system of government. It will not accept the outcome of elections. It will not accept these things because they are at odds with its ideology and because they represent the will of large portions of the country whom they despise.
The question is what comes next.
Yes it is.
RTWT.