Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Echoed elitism
Florida Democrat gubernatorial nominee Andrew Gillum hits the ground slurring

Not satisfied running only a hit piece on Florida Republican senator and gubernatorial nominee Ron DeSantis, The Hill on Wednesday accompanied it with a video clip of a recent CNN interview with Andrew Gillum. 

Gillum, the Democrat nominee for Florida governor, said Desantis and President Trump are "scraping from the bottom of the barrel" in attracting support.

Gillum expressed the same hostility toward regular American voters that Hillary did with her notorious "Basket of Deplorables" slur.

When casting general election ballots, Floridians should remember Gillum's disdain for them and vote accordingly.
Daytime destroyer  
Shepard Smith of Fox News preaches that old-time anti-Catholic bigotry                                                                665 words


The horrible reality of sexual assaults perpetrated by some Catholic Church officials and an alleged cover up whose ties, some say, reach the Vatican itself, must be thoroughly addressed. And appropriate criminal punishments must be swiftly meted out to all established as culpable.

The welfare of victims and proper redress for their grievances belong uppermost in our thoughts. That must include ousting from positions of church authority anyone implicated in either despicable predatory criminal behavior or the attempted cover up.

And yes, that would include Pope Francis, himself. For the Catholic Church to return to the general honor and respectability it once merited, complete top-down housecleaning is not only appropriate, but imperative. 

Nothing less would be acceptable for any desiring to again place full trust in all hierarchical church levels. 



Sadly, some prominent voices care not for victims. Instead, they exploit the tragic situation as a way to parade old bigotry in contemporary raiment.

Last month, Fox News Channel host Shepard Smith addressed the horrible reality. But his was a hateful, destructive ambition.

Smith has a history of slurs against the Catholic Church and its flock. In this latest foul instance, he told his viewers that "where I come from" corporations shielding executives from accountability for abuses of office are "sued out of existence." And he asked rhetorically why that should not also be the fate of the Catholic Church.

The Catholic Church itself "sued out of existence?" That was Smith's expressed desire.

Bigotry against Catholics has endured throughout American history. Not too many decades ago, the Ku Klux Klan propagandized against Catholics. Whenever a baby was born into an Irish Catholic family, once went the KKK line, a pistol was buried and a map to it drawn. That way, on the eventual day of the mythically intended, Vatican-led takeover of America, Irish Catholic kids could grab their maps, dig up their pistols, and join the revolution.

More recent illustrations of bigotry aimed at Catholics are the hysterical reactions to the presidential candidacies of Al Smith in 1928 and John F. Kennedy in 1960. And in a 2017 example, Judiciary Committee member Democrat Senator Diane Feinstein charged "the dogma lives loudly, within you" to Trump-supported Catholic nominee Judge Amy Barrett.

After wandering for decades, I last year returned to the Catholic Church into which I was baptized in 1959. As a rule, I don't think religious faith should be used as a cudgel against others. That isn't a legitimate application of it. Besides, I've got too many flaws of my own to attend to.

But as a loyal Roman Catholic, I certainly can defend my faith. And I can fiercely oppose bigots like Smith who would foolishly try to bury it.

I know the Catholic Church to be the one true and apostolic church, a manifestation of the Christian community Jesus established. Its earliest administration was accorded by Him to apostle Peter, as we are told by Matthew 16:18.

Only fools would believe a holy institution so mighty and favored by God could be diminished in 2018 by the uncovered crimes of mere mortals, even those of high position.

That which is all good endures everlastingly with indomitable force. It is invincible, hardly weakened by the sins of men. For believers, certainty of its universal integrity is not given pause by temporal trespass.

Just as the world's most learned scholar is no more than a speck beside God's wisdom and omniscience, so is earthly measuring insufficient for condemning the Catholic Church He instituted for our salvational benefit.

The late Bishop Fulton Sheen advised persons exploring churchly options to:

"Look for the Church which is accused of having a devil, as Our Lord was accused of being possessed by Beelzebub, the Prince of Devils. Look for the Church which, in seasons of bigotry, men say must be destroyed..."

Shepard Smith's "sued out of existence" is only a lawyerly way of calling for the destruction of the Catholic Church bigots have always sought.

Friday, August 24, 2018

AP writer David Bauder: Yay for racist South African government, boo to Tucker Carlson's exposing it



It's a human truth so basic and widely understood that reiterating it shouldn't be necessary. Punishing individuals who have not themselves committed crimes, but share immutable characteristics with actual offenders, is wrong. It is wrong, logically, and it is wrong, morally.

Who doesn't grasp that?

David Bauder is an Associated Press television writer. In a recent AP article, he hurled brickbats at Fox News host Tucker Carlson for condemning presently looming South African government racist policies. 




"Carlson argued against a proposal that would allow the South African government to seize some white-owned agricultural land, part of an effort to address inequities left over from apartheid," wrote Bauder, as if such racist confiscatory assaults would be heroic.

A government taking land from people who had not stolen it, and giving it to people from whom it had not been stolen -- that's the left's beloved notion of 'restorative justice' based on group membership and not individual responsibility. 

The AP writer's attempt to justify race-based governmental policies as legitimate steps in redressing historical grievances does dirt to the equality faith.

It is not unthinkable that many persons who participated (as did I) in the anti-apartheid movement of the 1980s and '90s feel they have a moral investment in current South African governmental affairs. After all, they helped bring down prior injustice and enabled today's leaders to assume standing. To a degree, they own this.

For that reason, perhaps, they refuse to criticize terrible contemporary policies, despite those being essentially identical to ones against which they previously rallied. 

In his initial segment on this, Carlson may have misstated a point or two. But that's a meager quibble. His presentation was an overwhelmingly sound statement of unvarying contempt for racism and vigorous belief in fair treatment for all under civilized societies' laws.

To Bauder's credit, he did include a couple of Carlson quotes. The FNC host delivered pithy truisms the AP writer should have learned from: 

"This is an appeal to universal principles that protect all racial groups that are true regardless of people's skin color. We don't mete out justice based on what people look like."

And:

"It's confusing to me why it's controversial to say that it's wrong to mete out punishment on the basis of ethnicity. It doesn't matter who it's happening to. It's just wrong. I don't know why many of our journalists defend that. It says a lot about them and it's upsetting."

This hideous embrace of racism-as-policy-justification is of a piece with the currently faddish philosophies that America is an illegitimate concept; white men are genetically evil; rights of the accused are as nothing when contrasted with the welfare of supposed victims (all of whom are to be uncritically believed, their accounts never tested by inquiry); disputatious voices are to quashed by any means necessary; and democracy is to be respected only when electoral outcomes benefit one's preferred lot.

Bauder revealed something very ugly about his thinking in the final paragraph. "Fox News Channel's prime-time audience is 91% white, according to the Nielsen company. It's 69% white at MSNBC, and 57% at CNN." 

Judging news outlets by their viewers' hues, and not by observable journalistic standards? 

To some, only skin color matters, whether in public policy or media analysis.


Thursday, August 23, 2018

It's right to say her name,
because we are all Mollie Tibbetts



Here in Iowa, we were horrified by the murder of college student Mollie Tibbetts. Millions nationwide share our determination that remedial public safety interest steps be taken to protect American citizens. 

President Trump and other elected leaders are devoting deserved attention to this. Their words and efforts are heartening. At long last, real and needed actions may be undertaken.

But not all that followed the Mollie Tibbetts tragedy has been positive.

England's Daily Mail reports that a second cousin of the late Tibbetts recently unleashed a Twitter tirade aimed at Candace Owens (and, by extension, all others who oppose illegal immigration and support President Trump). 

Owens had specifically cited the Iowa killing in her denunciation of open-borders advocates' hypocritical rhetoric.

Here's why referring to Mollie Tibbetts is proper, and why those seeking to stifle our doing so are both wrong and deleterious to American interests.

Members of a society have legitimate cause to speak of terrible crimes. General issues with which citizenries must deal are made up by individual circumstances. No one can reasonably claim familial association confers upon them special authority to stifle public conversation. 

Shutting down opposing voices is presently voguish among jack-booted agents of  the anti-Trump 'resistance,' but no free man need concern himself with the inclinations of would-be oppressors.

The Constitution guarantees our right to free speech. Open discussion of laws and government policies is to be encouraged in democratic society. It's one way we theoretically exercise control over civil government.

Attempts to shut down important dialogue, even when pursued by a crime-victim's relative, serve no positive, larger-picture cause.

Mollie Tibbett's murder was monstrous. But not explicitly citing it in common-sense challenging of policies that made it possible would be wrong. 

No longer theoretical abstractions, those policies have a face. Let's deal with them.
Behind clownish son lurks true villain
Denver's Jordan and Mayor Michael Hancock spectacle


                               

Now internationally viral is the below video of a smirking and laughing Jordan Hancock, son of Denver's Mayor Michael Hancock, cursing a policeman and berating him with anti-gay slurs. The officer had pulled Hancock over for speeding 65 mph in a 40 mph zone. 

Reportedly, officers also discovered he'd been driving with a suspended license.

Denver 7 ABC affiliate report: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4obCt-l7Z4

Two officers were suspended after the incriminating video was released to the press. The mayor, one suspects, abused the power of his office to give cover to his miserable progeny.

The incident occurred last March. Jordan Hancock was driving his father's vehicle, boasted of his familial tie to city government, and threatened the officer with retaliatory firing.

In 2015, the same Jordan Hancock was involved in a Fort Collins drive-by shooting. The Denver Post reported at the time he "mislead investigators after the shooting. Hancock declined to speak to a Denver Post reporter when contacted about the case..." 

(As seen in the above video, Jordan again wordlessly fled reporters covering this new assault.)

There are two possible explanations for Jordan Hancock's attacks on police and refusals to cooperate with them. One is that he is simply not particularly bright or mature. Stupid people do stupid things.

But another explanation, this one far more dire, may account for his egregious crime: There is reason to suspect Jordan learned his contempt for American law officers from his office-holding father. 

The Hancock household may be one in which lip-curled contempt for law and order is passed down by the mayor, himself.



Earlier, Mayor Hancock defiantly refused to allow Denver's police to assist the men and women of ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), who defend American citizens against human and drug trafficking, as well as other despicable crimes perpetrated by some illegal immigrants. 

A January 3 AP article noted ICE Director Thomas Homan told Fox News interviewer Neil Cavuto that the Department of Justice should file charges against sanctuary cities' officials, and that federal funds should be withheld from such outlaw jurisdictions.

"We've got to start charging some of these politicians with crimes," Homan said.

Mayor Hancock's office responded with a defiant statement reported in a Denver Post article

"In Denver, we stand firmly for the ideals of inclusion, acceptance, and opportunity, and no threat will ever make us waver from that. We won't let the hate and wrong-thinking of others divide us or our city, and we will continue taking steps that reassure residents that we have their backs as the White House continues to use bravado and bluster as substitutes for real solutions."

Mayor Hancock, as reflected by that wording, seems to class as "hate and wrong-thinking" Americans maintaining citizenship standards, and our duly authorized police officers enforcing democratically enacted laws. 

The disregard for and hostility toward law and order of which Denver's mayor boasts (and that his son acts out) have no legitimate place in a civilized society. They are of a part with the anti-American bigotry that inspires Antifa and the general "Resistance' to oppose democratic elections, burn cities, shut down speakers, and defy President Trump at every turn and in every manner imaginable.

The Hancock father and son are actors in a detestable horror show.

The Post itself wrote: 

"In September [2017], 63 people living in the Denver area were apprehended by federal immigration authorities in 'Operation Safe City'...the agency said the operation specifically took place in cities where ICE deportation officers are not allowed access to jails to interview people and in jurisdictions in which ICE detainers are not honored."

(Here in Iowa, we are presently dealing with the tragic murder of Mollie Tibbetts, allegedly at the hands of someone in America illegally. That suspected killer's criminal residency in our country would have enjoyed the reprehensible Mayor Hancock's sanction.)

Unfortunately, the Denver mayor's exploitation of legitimate law enforcement officers didn't end with his effective abetting of definitionally criminal illegal immigrants. In 2017, he admitted to repeatedly sexually harassing a Denver police officer, Leslie Branch-Wise. 



Hancock, though, objected to the "sexual harassment" designation. And in that, we see another illustration of the haughty Hancock disdain for the rules of society; not only did the mayor assume his authority granted him latitude to prey on a subordinate, but also felt he could override objective criminal terminology when it benefited him.

So, it seems young Jordan felt emboldened to vent his anti-police bigotry by a belief that proximity to power would shield him from the lawful punishment you or I would surely suffer, were we in his circumstance.

Jordan Hancock is a crude and buffoonish example of the presumed 'above the law' attitude authority breeds in the lowest among us. 

But Mayor Michael Hancock indulges his own bigotry against police subtly and with unctiousness. Because of that, he poses a far greater peril to the safety of Denver's citizens, and to the very concept of law and order in a civilized society. 

By misusing his authority to favor illegal immigrants over Denver's lawful citizens, Mayor Hancock perpetrates a deadly corrosiveness beside which the scofflaw antics of his loosely-wrapped son Jordan are merely rebarbative.

Sunday, August 19, 2018

Molester's mouthpiece  
Houston attorney Lisa K. Andrews helps rapist doctor evade jail                           



Attorney Lisa K. Andrews. Houston Chronicle photo.

In 1975, then-Arkansas attorney Hillary Clinton crafted a scheme that enabled 41 year-old Thomas Alfred Taylor to escape punishment for the brutal rape of 12 year-old Kathy Shelton.

Audio recordings made years later captured Hillary laughing at the memory.

Houston bottom-feeding barrister Lisa K. Shelton was reported to have engineered a similarly despicable courtroom plot. A predatory sexual deviant in medical drag, Dr. Shafeeq Sheikh, was tried and convicted for his monstrous 2013 rape of a drugged, helpless patient in Houston's Ben Taub General Hospital. 


                            Convicted rapist Shafeeq Sheikh

At Andrews' courtroom urging, Sheikh was last week given no jail time for his stomach-turning offense, but merely probation. His license to practice medicine was suspended.

Reporters covering the case observed Shafeeq and family members celebrating afterward with a picnic on courtroom grounds.

Shyster Andrews paraded before jurors "sexy" Instagram photos of her client Shafeeq's assault victim; the photos had been disseminated online by the victim herself as part of a previous modeling job.

"He made a mistake, but he didn't sexually assault her," was the jaw-dropping claim Shafeeq's legal protector Andrews offered jurors. "Here, we have this Latina woman with her fake boobs that came on to this little, nerdy middle-aged guy, and he lost his mind."

Huffpost termed it a "bizarre, racist defense." 

"Women like this really and truly are the weakest links," tweeted one anonymous poster. Another said simply: "There's a special place in hell for attorney Lisa Andrews."

Unsurprisingly, a message the present writer sent Andrews seeking her perspective was not answered. She may wish this horrible episode and her sickening role in it will fade from public attention.

It is not known if she is laughing at the memory.


Thursday, August 16, 2018

Trump's truth: 'Fake' news is Americans' enemy





(On Thursday morning, 300+ newspapers ran editorials attacking President Trump's criticism of Fake News. In support of our president, I'm offering this counter essay.)

In his electric remarks before the 2017 Conservative Political Action conference, President Trump highlighted a pivotal, definitional qualifier establishment commentators generally pretend to not notice.

"In covering my comments, the dishonest media did not explain that I called the 'fake' news the enemy of the people - the 'fake' news. They dropped off the word 'fake,' And all of a sudden, the story became 'the media is the enemy.' They take the word 'fake' out...I'm not against the media. I'm not against the press. I don't mind bad stories if I deserve them...But I am only against the fake news media or press. They have to leave that word...There are some great reporters around. They're talented, they're honest as the day is long. But there are some terrible, dishonest people, and they do a tremendous disservice to our country and to our people...They get upset when we call out their fake stories. They say that we can't criticize their fake coverage because of the First Amendment. And I love the First Amendment. Nobody loves it more than me. Nobody. I mean, who uses it more than me?"


When commentators misrepresent his words as referencing the entire journalistic enterprise, they underscore his point. By refusing to acknowledge the crucial distinction, journalists essentially throw arms about Fake News's shoulders, claim it as a legitimate free press component, and declare that to call out the improper former is to necessarily imperil the proper latter.

When candidate Trump assailed the mainstream news media's unrelenting and falsity-freighted crusade against him, his sprawling base roared its understanding.

An October, 2017 Detroit Free Press report was headlined "Donald Trump's 'fake news' claims are real, say 46% of voters in Morning Consult / Politico poll." 

The Knight Foundation Trust, Media, and Democracy initiative published on January 15, 2018 a poll Knight had conducted in conjunction with Gallup. A release on that poll, which had included some 19,000 respondents, summarized its findings: 

"[M]ost Americans believe it is now harder to be well-informed and to determine which news is accurate. They increasingly perceive the media as biased and struggle to identify objective news sources. They believe the media continue to have a critical role in our democracy, but are not very positive about how the media are fulfilling that role."

Last May, the results of a study by the Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy were issued. After monitoring the New York TimesWall Street JournalWashington Post, and the newscasts (not talk shows) of Fox, CNN, CBS, and NBC during Trump's first 100 days in office, they reported coverage of him was 93% negative.

Byron York, in Real Clear Politics, observed "The coverage of some news stations was so negative, according to the Harvard study, that it seems hard to argue the coverage was anywhere near a neutral presentation of facts."


Ideally, when reporters confront officials at news conferences, they represent us, and ask probing questions on our behalf; questions whose full, honest answers we who would direct democratic government must have.


To whatever extent that laudable ideal might once have been reality, though, it has in recent decades been strangled. Brash trumpeting of the supposed superiority of authoritarian elites has become the mainstream media standard.

Since the populist Trump Revolution threatened status quo sensibilities, its adherents were often ridiculed as unlettered and oafish, if not detrimental to refined society. Toward that scurrilous end, reporters, on-air talking heads, editors, columnists, producers, analysts, and even cartoonists were pressed into monotonously impious service.

Dodgy news partisans typically portray themselves in the revered tradition of storied muckrakers. Beaming with self-congratulation, they hail theirs as an endeavor without whose hawk-eyed watchfulness and unflinching analyses the public would fall prey to bureaucratic and commercial manipulations.


Stirring indeed are romantic tales of dogged reporters rope-swinging into darkened-windows planning lairs of swinish barons of high finance and unscrupulous agents of dominion, and of an ethically unimpeachable investigative press ripping away pretenses of propriety, bravely speaking truth to power, and advocating for rank-and-file citizens who would otherwise lack meaningful access to ensconced prominence.


Don't be mislead by such mawkish fancy spinning. Inky dirt-doers have a mission, and it is not objective reporting. That partisan predominence and the crushing of opposing factions be realized, they promulgate slants, deceptively incomplete renditions, even shouted deceits.  


Print and electronic press outlets miss no opportunity to smear the popular movement headed by President Trump to wrest back control of America from backstairs overlords who desire its recreation as a faceless, effete component of grim globalist machinery. 


Regular assaults on Trump and his average-citizen base are effected in manners sometimes insidious, but in other episodes, jarringly bold. Regardless of visibility or volume, though, the clear message is that the desires of elites alone should determine our shared future. The well-being and wishes of rank-and-file Americans are of less import than the ideological fancies of upper-crust popinjays in gated demenses.

Recondite media poohbahs and bylined perpetrators do not share average Americans' values. Daily, they promote a reptilian ideology of control. 

We the people are dismissed by media-perched bigots who reek of elitist prejudice. We are falsely classed as racists, sexists, xenophobes, or whatever other lurid sobriquet might be handy.


In order to best chart our country's course, citizens require objective accounting of essential information. Our effective participation in the political process is sabotaged by skewed reportage and commentary. 


Rather than penning high-hat editorials, mainstream scribes who are not honest enough to admit systemic crimes are perpetrated by their fellows should hang low their heads. The first step in overcoming a problem is admitting you have one, but the authors of today's defensive editorials appear unwilling to seek better health.


Trump was right. The 'fake' news is our enemy.



(This essay was adapted from my 2017 book That a Man Can Again Stand Up and my 2018 Ideas Afoot.) 

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Mommy's Aging Monster            
Social Distortion's Mike Ness under the influence of Trump Derangement Syndrome           

In the '70s, I read of then-Alice Cooper manager Shep Gordon opining that Frank Sinatra had punched a motorist purely for publicity reasons.

'You think Sinatra does it because he thinks some guy needs to be pounded in the mouth? He does it to get into the straight press, which is a lot harder to do than getting into the music press.'

Many faded entertainment personalities see garish, public opposition to President Trump and America as a cheap ticket to revived currency in popular conversation. I won't assemble a corroborative list; doing so would feed their Frankensteins, so to speak, which I'll not do.

But one recent illustration I will note is Social Distortion singer Mike Ness. He reportedly leapt from a stage to brutally beat a ticket-buying fan who objected to the singer's lengthy, between song diatribe against President Trump and America. 

The fan, one Tim Hildebrand, had reportedly responded to the unrequested lecture by shouting that he'd paid for music, not a political rant. And he raised a finger in silent protest through two songs.

The Trump-supporting fan was said to have been restrained by other concert attendees or band security while Ness pummeled him. Hildebrand, per reports, suffered two black eyes, a split lip, a concussion, and a nearly knocked out tooth.

A local CBS affiliate observed: "Hildebrand says he grew up listening to the band's music and was excited to attend one of their shows, but never thought he'd leave bloody and bruised at the hands of a famous musician."

Hildebrand filed a police report and is contemplating legal action. Presumably, that could include not only Ness, but the entire band, its management, promoters, and the venue, itself -- including any security personnel who allowed Ness to assault the paying Social Distortion fan.

Perhaps the largely past-tense Ness was, as Gordon observed of Sinatra, seeking fresh press attention that would resuscitate a career in its final season. Or, there may be a more sinister explanation for his vicious crime. (Most likely, some from Column A, some from Column B.)

Early in life, Mike Ness may actually have been the fractious bad seed he claimed in "Mommy's Little Monster." I neither know nor care. The reality is that rebelliousness is today merely a posture he cultivates to hawk product. 

A comfortably affluent pretender nearing AARP age, in recent years he's sought attention by recording solo discs covering far superior classics from Sun Records and other truly important sources. The combination only underscored his relative pedestrianism.

I've always agreed with Johnny Ramone's position that fun, lowbrow-culture punk rock was despoiled by whiny Californians and English bands feigning rebelliousness while polluting amphetemine rock'n'roll of NYC origin with tedious, liberal sloganeering.

As Ness may or may not understand, you can't be a rebel once your side has become the mainstream. It's everywhere one turns: government, business, entertainment, journalism, education. Only days ago, CNN's Chris Cuomo proclaimed to viewers "not all punches are equal" while defending Antifa attacks on Trump supporters as reflecting noble passion.

In 2018, Ness has become a profiting component of a system that dominates as surely as did the one against whose alleged injustices and inequities he once railed. 

The Trump Revolution is a fundamentally patriotic reaction to decades of government indifference to the people's legitimate wants and needs. That entrenched system concerned itself at every turn with the vested predilections of anti-freedom globalists. 

The Trump Revolution is today's counter culture, having kicked over polite political society's table in a manner as invigorating and inspirational as 1975's The Dictators Go Girl Crazy, 1976's
Ramones, and the Johnny Thunders Heartbreakers' 1977 L.A.M.F. 

Cantakerous Mike Ness, yesterday's late-night sidewalk insubordinate, now merely lurches as Maxine Waters' Willing Executioner.

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

A Kickstarter page raised $613,000 for a Ruth Bader Ginsberg action figure.

Pull the string, and it falls asleep.

Monday, August 13, 2018

Big Tech vs free speech                       



In 2009, Ralph Nader (for whom I long ago worked), published Only the Super Rich Can Save Us.

But today, far from saving Americans, some of that class have reportedly colluded in secret to stifle our voices. Politically conservative figures like Milo, Dennis Prager, Alex Jones /
Infowars, Laura LoomerMike Cernovich, and recently Gavin McInnes and the Proud Boys have suffered social media and other internet silencings by the biased barons of Big Tech.

Those important speakers have been effectively stifled from presenting news information and promulgating ideological and cultural opinions by scheming, anti-freedom conspiracists said to include Larry Page (CEO of Google parent Alphabet), Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook), and Jack Dorsey (Twitter). 

Also implicated have been Apple, Youtube, Spotify, Disqus, Pinterest, LinkdIn, and others. Infowars just reported it has also been banned by Vimeo and ad platform Criteo.

"The mass brigading of Infowars began after CNN started a lobbying campaign attempting to have us shot down by social media giants," wrote Paul Joseph Watson of Infowars, on Monday.

In a Saturday Infowars article also by Watson, free speech authority Professor Noam Chomsky and inventer/encryption expert Louis Parry -- not fans of Alex Jones and Infowars -- were adamant that Silicon Valley's choreographed elimination program targeting political perspectives disliked by CEOs pose real and population-wide perils.

"The real story about marginalization of opinion and information is, as always, radically different, and undiscussed," Chomsky said.
"Free speech is free speech and multinational cabals must be checked," Parry stressed. "Particularly when their monopoly corporate decisions lead to the reduction of our free speech rights...Multinational corporations with no duty or loyalty to anyone have set out to collectively undermine the free speech rights of us all...Who do these hidden rulers of the world think they are to form this kind of cabal?”
The injury to communicative interests goes far beyond particular internet voices. Also necessarily wronged are millions of potential listeners. Only last Friday, the Gateway Pundit reported an Alex Jones video posted to Youtube by Gab's Andrew Torba had been deleted by that site.

In a tweet about the quashing, Youtube commentator Mark Dice quipped: "Looks like if you include 'Alex Jones' in the title of your Youtube livestream, it will automatically be shut down and your channel issued a community guideline strike. #Orwellian."

Because this Big Tech conspiracy practically benefits the Democrat Party by impeding conservatives' speech liberties and potential attitude-impacting outreach, it may well constitute an 'in kind contribution' of massive and election-altering proportion. 

The phenomenon of unelected private business chieftains effectively stomping on citizens' throats has a parallel in recent history: 

Traditionally, the American town square was a place where every man, regardless of view, could express his ideas in whatever words he pleased. But the 1970s brought privately-owned shopping malls, contained and regulated 'town square' environments where citizens' speech could be either approved for dissemination or denied that by corporate interests with their own values and not beholden to Constitutional guarantees.

Defenders of the contemporary Big Tech political ideas clampdown argue that -- as private entities, like shopping malls -- social media companies are entitled to set their own standards. While the First Amendment prevents the government from censoring citizen expression, they point out, it does not prohibit private actions within businesses.

But in 2018, the internet basically is the public communications sphere. Its unique capacity for information access and conversational transmission linking millions of Americans across great geographic distances and effecting our electoral process and civil government sets it distinctly apart from strip malls of local influence.

In a Sunday Breitbart piece, Gavin McInnes predicted Big Tech bannings will not only increase, but claim BreitbartFox News, and other conservative news and perspectives outlets. And he called for White House intervention.

"Trump has to stand up and say 'This is not the free market, this is collusion with the DNC and big business and Big Tech, and this is illegal, that's un-American, that's not acceptable.'...We can't have the DNC deciding how big companies will behave. That's fascism."


My name now appears on political 'List of the Damned'





I just got a greater understanding, and on a personal level, of ideological opponents' impulse to sling unwarranted slurs in place of considered arguments.  

Iowa's Waterloo Courier newspaper on Monday published a guest column of mine: "Times' Jeong and Dems' anti-police passion." In it, I decried liberals' enthusiasm for illegal immigration, stated personal convictions, and offered praise for law enforcement officers. I also quoted President Trump on those subjects.

"Law enforcement agencies like ICE are necessary components of civilized, democratic societies," I argued. "They uphold statutes enacted by officials whom citizens elect. Our voices are heard through this process...Ours is not an anarchic nation in which everyone picks the laws they'll honor, ignoring others as persuasions dictate."

Basically, mine was a textbook recitation of the sort civics class students once understood. (That is, when schools had civics classes.) Certainly, nothing radical or controversial.

But within hours of the newspaper posting my guest column online, an anonymous commenter essentially compared me to a Nazi ("SEIG!"). And he/she termed me a "fascist" who was merely parroting the president.

Of course, exploiting those concepts to attack Americans of conventional, traditional beliefs minimizes their enormity, inhumanity, and unique loathsomeness.

I found it odd, being falsely criticized for lacking individual perspective by an effectively masked miscreant who flung brickbats and not reasoned arguments in drive-by manner. But such seems the sorry condition of political messaging from some quarters.

Vile epithets like those misapplied to me have been lodged at voices of greater repute, including Tucker Carlson, Milo, Alex Jones, most everyone at Breitbart, and even President Trump.

I now find myself on that same political-bigotry inspired 'List of the Damned.' 
Iowa newspaper runs DC Larson blog essay re NYT's Sarah Jeong, Democrats' anti-police fever, Trump law enforcement support





Tags: Jeong, New York Times, Trump, ICE, law, illegal immigration, police, Antifa, Black Lives Matter, Pelosi, Schumer, Waters, Ocasio-Cortez, Reynolds, ACLU, MS-13.


https://wcfcourier.com/opinion/columnists/guest_columnists/times-jeong-and-dems-anti-police-passion/article_e8a04b7e-6605-5af2-bb5a-7055c5b63b80.html

Sunday, August 12, 2018

The girl who cried N-word

"Turning on the man who helped create her brand, fund her venture, and gave her a top White House job for personal gain is very disloyal. A racist, by definition, would not give a strong black woman the time, nor the opportunity. Most people know what's up here."
- Former Trump campaign spokeswoman Katrina Pierson, Aug. 10 tweet. 





News readers will recall that last year, fired advisor Omarosa Manigault Newman had to be escorted off the Trump White House grounds. 

Unfortunately, the woman scorned is back. New book in clawed hand, she is attempting to re-navigate her wobbly-wheeled smear-jalopy, despite its previous and ignominious crashes.

But by now, everyone is wise to her racket.

She recently told The Guardian that the president uses the N-word in private, and that mysterious tapes are lying about somewhere that document his doing so.

The damning reels she spoke of sound like the ones Hollywood has-been Tom Arnold mouth-foams about. But if such tapes were actual, they certainly would have surfaced by now to great spotlighting by political oppugners and the pavlovian antagonistic media. 

Certainly, tapes would have blown up the campaign, when Never Trumpers were in full, wrathful seethe.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders issued a statement in response to the N-word charge Omarosa made: "It's sad that a disgruntled former White House employee is trying to profit off these false attacks, and even worse that the media would now give her a platform, after not taking her seriously when she had only positive things to say about the president during her time in the administration."

President Trump put it more succinctly when asked by a reporter during a Bikers For Trump event: "Lowlife. She's a lowlife."

In her book, Omarosa reportedly claims only to have heard of the tapes' existence. But in at least one promotional interview, she changed her recollection and alleged to have heard a recording, herself. 

Too, she raised a totally new claim: that Trump's alleged N-word use had also been heard by pollster Frank Luntz.

Luntz wasted no time dismissing Omarosa's assertion. Per The Hill, he tweeted: "I'm in @Omarosa's book on page 149. She claims to have heard from someone who heard from me that I heard Trump use the N-word. Not only is this flat-out false (I've never heard such a thing), but Omarosa didn't even make an effort to call or email me to verify. Very shoddy work."

To be blunt, Omarosa owes her professional everything to Donald Trump. He gave her sorely needed spotlight on The Apprentice, later fueled her commercial ventures, and retained her as White House adviser. 

For a December 12, 2016 Hollywood Reporter guest column ("Omarosa: I'm black, female, and Donald Trump is my friend"), she told writer Seth Abramovitch: "In my experiences with him, he has only been professional. I am aware of the perceptions. But he is open-minded: He does not judge people on their gender or race. He judges them on their ability to do the job."

Earlier that year, after Omarosa was named the Trump campaign's director of African American outreach, she was publicly criticized by film director/militant midget * Spike Lee. 

She responded in a July USA Today interview. "I am proud to serve in that role," she said. "It is a very difficult time for our country, but the good thing I know is that I know Donald Trump as a friend. I know his heart...And I know what he can do in this role...Donald Trump is focused on improving the conditions of African-Americans in this country."

(Indeed, recent glowing reports reveal black unemployment numbers have never been lower than they are, now.)

This is certainly not Omarosa's first time making the rancid N-word claim. Indeed, her related fulminations coincide with brand-building ventures such as this new book, television interviews, and the program of her own she used to claim various producers were offering her, but that never materialized.

Following her 2004 Apprentice firing by host Trump, Omarosa 
made the press rounds, including ABC's The View. She alleged her fellow contestants had subjected her to racist slurs like the N-word. They and show producer Mark Burnett were flabbergasted, denying anything of the sort had ever taken place.

Interviewed by MSNBC's Lester Holt, contestant Ereka Vetrini said "The N-word was never uttered on the show. It doesn't exist in my vocabulary. None of the other contestants said that, either...If we did say it, that would make television. That's good TV. And if anyone did say it, why didn't she bring it up then, not six weeks later?"

Vetrini passed a lie detector test conducted in 2004 on the Howard Stern Show. TV newsmagazine Extra! reported Omarosa refused to answer questions pertaining to Vetrini's test, abruptly walking away from a reporter. And she fled a subsequent Jimmy Kimmel Show appearance after spotting on set a lie detector intended for a different show skit.

Omarosa may possess various attributes. But as her sorry record attests, integrity seems absent from their number. She presumably had some skills from which President Trump felt his administration could benefit. But in hindsight, hiring her was not one of his sounder decisions.

Perhaps some who truly have suffered the detestable N-word slur feel an instinctive moral obligation to stand with Omarosa. They may believe her garish indictments despite her offering nothing in the way of evidence. They might feel her fight is their fight.

But the plausible is not ipso facto actual. And legitimate grievances are diminished and their validity cheapened when unprincipled charlatans abuse the sympathies of good people, that they might profit, personally. 

It is an ugly truth that once in awhile, a person rises who is so bereft of decency and conscience that they exploit weighty matters of consequence to entire cultures. So selfish are they, that they care not about the tremendous damage their grotesque escapades leave behind. 

Those individuals, Omarosa being one example, are beneath contempt.


* A fondly recalled James Evans/John Amos epithet.




Big Tech vs free speech                       


In 2009, Ralph Nader (for whom I long ago worked), published Only the Super Rich Can Save Us.

But today, far from saving Americans, some of that class have reportedly colluded in secret to stifle our voices. Politically conservative figures like Milo, Dennis Prager, Alex Jones/Infowars, Laura LoomerMike Cernovich, and recently Gavin McInnes and the Proud Boys have suffered social media and other internet silencings by the biased barons of Big Tech.

Those important speakers have been effectively stifled from presenting news presentations and promulgating ideological and cultural opinions by scheming, anti-freedom conspiracists said to include Larry Page (CEO of Google parent Alphabet), Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook), and Jack Dorsey (Twitter). 

Also implicated have been Apple, Youtube, Spotify, Disqus, Pinterest, LinkdIn, and others. Infowars just reported it has also been banned by Vimeo and ad platform Criteo.

"The mass brigading of Infowars began after CNN started a lobbying campaign attempting to have us shot down by social media giants," wrote Paul Joseph Watson of Infowars, on Monday.

In a Saturday Infowars article also by Watson, free speech authority Professor Noam Chomsky and inventer/encryption expert Louis Parry -- not fans of Alex Jones and Infowars -- were adamant that Silicon Valley's choreographed elimination program targeting political perspectives disliked by CEOs pose real and population-wide perils.


"The real story about marginalization of opinion and information is, as always, radically different, and undiscussed," Chomsky said.


"Free speech is free speech and multinational cabals must be checked," Parry stressed. "Particularly when their monopoly corporate decisions lead to the reduction of our free speech rights...Multinational corporations with no duty or loyalty to anyone have set out to collectively undermine the free speech rights of us all

Who do these hidden rulers of the world think they are to form this kind of cabal?”

The injury to communicative interests goes far beyond particular internet voices. Also necessarily wronged are millions of potential listeners. Only last Friday, the Gateway Pundit reported an Alex Jones video posted to Youtube by Gab's Andrew Torba had been deleted by that site.

In a tweet about the quashing, Youtube commentator Mark Dice quipped: "Looks like if you include 'Alex Jones' in the title of your Youtube livestream, it will automatically be shut down and your channel issued a community guideline strike. #Orwellian."

Because this Big Tech conspiracy practically benefits the Democrat Party by impeding conservatives' speech liberties and potential attitude-impacting outreach, it may well constitute an 'in kind contribution' of massive and election-altering proportion. 

The phenomenon of unelected private business chieftains effectively stomping on citizens' throats has a parallel in recent history: 

Traditionally, the American town square was a place where every man, regardless of view, could express his ideas in whatever words he pleased. But the 1970s brought privately-owned shopping malls, contained and regulated 'town square' environments where citizens' speech could be either approved for dissemination or denied that by corporate interests with their own values and not beholden to Constitutional guarantees.

Defenders of the contemporary Big Tech political ideas clampdown argue that -- as private entities, like shopping malls -- social media companies are entitled to set their own standards. While the First Amendment prevents the government from censoring citizen expression, they point out, it does not prohibit private actions within businesses.

But in 2018, the internet basically is the public communications sphere. Its unique capacity for information access and conversational transmission linking millions of Americans across great geographic distances and effecting our electoral process and civil government sets it distinctly apart from strip malls of local influence.

In a Sunday Breitbart piece, Gavin McInnes predicted Big Tech bannings will not only increase, but claim Breitbart, Fox News, and other conservative news and perspectives outlets. And he called for White House intervention.

"Trump has to stand up and say 'This is not the free market, this is collusion with the DNC and big business and Big Tech, and this is illegal, that's un-American, that's not acceptable.'...We can't have the DNC deciding how big companies will behave. That's fascism."




Saturday, August 11, 2018

Love of America noble     



Los Angeles CBS affiliate KCAL reported this month that Atlanta's Neighborhood Charter School students will no longer recite the Pledge of Allegiance each morning.

"Over the past couple of years, it has become increasingly obvious that more and more of our community were choosing to not stand and/or recite the pledge," Elementary Campus President Lara Zelski told the Atlanta Journal Constitution. 

In a release, the school claimed the move was meant to promote a "fully inclusive and connected community."

If the peculiar notion that in overt division a citizenry can feel unified strikes you as foolish, you are correct. But be warned: From absurdness can sprout serious menace.

Of course, "forced" patriotism is wrong. To coerce another to profess it or any other belief is contrary to the American ideal of individualism over regulated collectivism. And it would, at best, produce insincerity of no practical worth.

But pride in our nation should already thrive boldly in the hearts of all men. Rightly, Americans are proud of our superior values, founding principles, accomplishments that have in numerous manners bettered the world, and our country's enduring inspiration to men everywhere.

America's culture has many authors, but in the end it is a solitary work. Our people may have diverse backgrounds, but here, we are one. Mess with one of us, and you're messing with all of us.

America has defeated perils around the globe, from Nazism to Communism. And we will defeat radical Islam. Many families cherish mantle-piece framed photos of earlier generations' members who fought and suffered to keep freedom's blazing torch aloft for the world to see. 

And many today have sons or daughters wearing the uniform. They know of America's greatness because they live it, every day.

Being an American isn't some abstract concept found in old, stem-winding speeches and mossbacked library tomes. It's as alive and relevant as a brass band marching down Main Street in a July Fourth parade, a kid first encountering the noble poetry of our inspirational Declaration of Independence, or the whole family turning out to welcome a son or daughter returning from defending our land, overseas.

But since the 1950s, left-wing voices have preached that the very concept of "un-Americanism" is a foul denial of men's ideological liberty. In a self-proclaimed "land of the free," they charge, any assertion of single, identifiable national orthodoxy is counterintuitive.

Americanism is cast as a bigotry, a toxin in philosophical league with Joseph McCarthy; during his eponymous era, it is taught, innocents were denied employ and decent lives due only to niche ideological bents.

Such fractious propaganda to one side, though, "Americanism" is a sound and robust faith, one with certain silhouette. It has definite qualities and parameters.

Our Constitution lays out our intended national character. In it can easily be located a host of sterling sentiments and grand principles. Anyone wondering what Americanism is must start by consulting that historic document.

Respect for the democratic process and duly enacted laws are also deep in Americanism's marrow. As are judicial fairness, responsible social order, and respecting the rights and liberties of others, even those with whom you might disagree.

"Un-Americanism," then, would be persuasions and agitations counter to our Constitution's formulae. 

In America, yes, freedom includes the option of believing and expressing contrary ideas. Even challenging our sovereignty, principles, and most prized values. 

But no matter how rancorous our disagreements of the day, never lose sight of the Divine providence from which we all magnificently profit. Thomas Jefferson put it well:

"My God! What little do my countrymen know what precious blessings they are in possession of, and which no other people on Earth enjoy!"

If only that were taught in schools.

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