Saturday, April 7, 2018

Why this heartland Trump supporter refuses to contribute to Roger Stone's defense fund.

In an April 7 essay, an anonymous Gateway Pundit "Assistant Editor" asked readers to contribute to a Roger Stone defense fund. A link to it was included. 

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2018/04/roger-stone-needs-your-help-under-fire-by-far-left-media-and-shadowy-liberal-operatives/

The unnamed writer urged against Stone's litigious and assuredly disagreeable adversaries, and appealed to ground-level Trump supporters' self interest:


Some of you in the Republican Party and conservative movement do not like Roger Stone...[But] if they can destroy a man like Stone, who has never been afraid of brutal trench warfare, how easily can they destroy and silence you?

But the enemy of my political enemies is not necessarily my friend. The Gateway Pundit's attempt to pass off Roger Stone as a figure deserving of average Trump backers' sympathy and sponsorship is insulting. Essentially, common folks Stone has a history of slurring were pressed to provide for his courtroom bankroll.

Stone has of late been visible in several venues upon which I generally rely for information and perspective, including the Tucker Carlson Tonight and Hannity programs, and sites like Infowars, Breitbart, and the afore-cited Gateway Pundit. [Full disclosure: I have previously submitted essays to those last three.] 

Given the uncritical reception and even flattering accord Stone has enjoyed from them, I understand they are not without fault. Heartland Americans' interests may not be theirs. I take them with a grain of salt.


Below is an excerpt from my new book Ideas Afoot. It is followed by additional thoughts on ethics and morality. Also explored is the promise of the populist Trump Revolution for whose electoral triumph millions of common Americans, including myself, worked and in whch we today take pride.




The velveteen mountebank
Candidate Trump was certainly not a hardscrabble everyman plucked from on-the-road poverty. But he did offer the same stirring quality as Frank Capra's classic cinema John Doe character, evoking national pride and citizen unity in shared struggles.

Wonderfully evident in the ongoing American grassroots-vs-Deep State, Trump Revolution is the vitality of the common man's independence and individuality.


(Remember, though, messengers are human and can prove weaker than their messages. As a general rule, it is better to advocate the cause rather than any single spokesman, lest it suffer should a figurehead stumble.)


During his campaign, Trump told rallies that, as president, he could draw on effective operatives "some of whom are nice people, others you wouldn't want to have dinner with." One would hope his firmest values and attitudes more closely match those of his heartland voters than the sickening ones held by onetime advisor Roger Stone.


Stone has a considerable background in the national electoral world. He is a decades-spanning strategist whose earliest orthodox political work was with Richard Nixon. His subsequent positions included ones with Bob Dole and Ronald Reagan.


He knows well the ways of politics, of national campaigning, and is doubtless a skilled operative. But today, he seems to pursue self-promotion ahead of any other interest. And his current visibility on otherwise recommendable stages Alex Jones' Infowars and Sean Hannity's Fox News program disturbs. 


Sophie Gilbert captured Stone well in her May 11, 2017 Atlantic 

review of Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone:

With his dandyish chalkstripe suits, his aggressively manicured hairstyles, and his Nixon tattoo, Stone, as the New Yorker writer Jeffrey Toobin memorably puts it in the film, is the 'sinister Forrest Gump of politics, who just happens to show up in the background every time there's a constitutional crisis or a major scandal.'


Now in his 60s, Gilbert later notes, sporting bowties, suspenders, and an overbearing air of insoucience, Stone resembles no one so much as a senior Pee Wee Herman. He stokes the caricature of the mustache-twirling plutocrat, being interviewed in an opulent dining room next to a three-olive martini, where he expounds on 'Stone's Rules,' one-sentence aphorisms like, 'It's better to be infamous than not to be famous at all,' and 'One man's dirty trick is another man's civil political action.'


Following Trump's very narrow (four points) second place finish in Iowa's February 2016 caucus, the candidate was both gracious and appreciative of the hard work of his Hawkeye State supporters.


"My experience in Iowa was a great one," he tweeted, the day after. "I started out with all of the experts saying I couldn't do well there and ended up in second place. Nice."


Also, that day: "I will be talking about my wonderful experience in Iowa and the simultaneous unfair treatment by the media - later in New Hampshire. Big crowd."


But the class demonstrated by Trump was not shown by Stone.


"Iowa hicks choose wrong, consistent with their history," was how he tweet-slammed Iowa voters, once the state's caucus results had been counted.


(A lifelong Iowan who'd caucused for Trump, touted his candidacy in several state newspapers, and backed him in the general, I took Stone's slurring personally.) 


Stone's freely voiced contempt for the common man was much closer to Hillary Clinton's "deplorables" slur than to candidate Trump's impassioned declarations of affinity with average folks.


In August 2015, the Trump campaign had announced its firing of Stone: "Mr. Trump fired Roger Stone last night. We have a tremendously successful campaign and Roger wanted to use the campaign for his own personal publicity," a statement read.


The Machiavellian fop maintained it was he who had chosen to sever relations. But Stone's subsequent promoting on Trump's Twitter feed of a show he hoped to launch was in keeping with the campaign's complaint that he had exploited his association with Trump for personal aggrandizement. 


Trump remarked of Stone: "[H]e likes to get a lot of publicity for himself."


The affectedly prim libertine's post-2016 Iowa Caucus demeaning of voters did have fetid precedents, one of which I'll detail, here.


"Hicks in Iowa shouldn't pick next president" was an October 12, 2011 essay Stone penned for his Stone Zone site. "I don't know why we should abrogate our right to choose the next president to a bunch of hayseeds because of some quaint notion that 'they should be first," he sneered.


That conflicts resoundingly with Trump's assurances to 2016 Iowa campaign crowds that he supported maintaining the state's first-in-the-nation status.


Also among Stone's 2011 complaints: Iowans are "stout [that one describes me] and a lot of them smoke;" Iowa restaurant food is "awful" ("one cannot possibly find edible linguine in white clam sauce," he sniffed); and the state's hoteliers raise room charges for what he claimed Iowans regarded as "them Jew-boy reporters from New York." 


That last (untrue, of course) assertion that Iowans typically harbor nasty, antisemitic attitudes was not attributed to any actual resident. It sprang instead from Stone's own sour prejudice against blue collar heartland Americans.


Again, Stone's pinky-aloft bias reminded of Hillary's favoring of a sissified persuasion that reviles regular citizens.  


In an August 2016 private tweet to a colleague, Julian Assange denied Stone's assertion that he had communicated with the Wikileaks founder and had advance knowledge of related activity. "Stone is a bullshitter. Trying to a) imply that he knows anything b) that he contributed to our hard work."


In 2017, Stone claimed credit for arranging Trump's pre-second Hillary debate appearance with Juanita Broaddrick, Kathy Shelton, Kathleen Willey, and Paula Jones.


Broaddrick shot back in a tweet that Stone "had no part in my appearing at second debate. I have never met or talked with Stone."


A May14, 2017 Gateway Pundit piece related this revelatory exchange from the Netflix film:


STONE: Sometimes, you confuse me with a Stephen Colbert character I sometimes play called 'Roger Stone.'"


INTERVIEWER: "What's the difference?"


STONE: "You'll have to figure that out."


"Politics with me isn't theater," the accessorized profligate once bragged to the Weekly Standard's Matt Labash. "It's performance art. Sometimes, for its own sake." ("Roger Stone, Political Animal" Labash / Weekly Standard November 5, 2007)

Underhanded gamesmanship does not advance the public interest, but only opportunistically pretends at decent intentions. 


Believing in something pure and bigger than oneself is not naive. It is, instead, the basis for every worthy undertaking from the drafting of the Constitution to the present-day resurgence of patriotic populism. 


When 2016 candidate Trump had spoken of "people you wouldn't want to have dinner with," I didn't know who he meant. But that was then.



-----



I understand Stone once remarked that "Nothing's on the level." I hope to never be that unmitigatedly cynical, that devoid of faith. (As we Iowans know, belief is a far piece from gullibility and naivete.) For millions of Trump advocates like myself, there can be truth, goodness, and a something of much greater import than oneself. A positiveness to which wise men hold firm.


Comes now the question: "Of what moment are salutary ideas lest put into practice, lest one's ballot choice is victorious and then in a position to implement them?"


That basically endorses the 'ends justify the means' argument. It assumes that right cannot triumph alone, and requires wrong's scurrilous service. 


Of course, a superior philosophy can carry the electoral day without employing fraudulence and grubbiness. Otherwise: 'What does it gain a man..?'


That good and bad have ever conflicted is no cause to surrender. I will not be contributing to Roger Stone.


Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Roger Stone, dumb out loud



Following his very narrow (four points) second place Iowa finish, Donald Trump was both gracious and appreciative of the hard work of his Hawkeye State supporters.

"My experience in Iowa was a great one," he tweeted, the day after. "I started out with all of the experts saying I couldn't do well there and ended up in second place. Nice."

Also, the same day: "I will be talking about my wonderful experience in Iowa and the simultaneous unfair treatment by the media - later in New Hampshire. Big crowd."

But the class demonstrated by Trump was not shown by former Trump advisor, now ubiquitous cable news irritant Roger Stone. 

"Iowa hicks choose wrong, consistent with their history," was how Stone tweet-slurred Iowa voters once caucus results had been tallied.

Let's now cast our gaze backward.

In August 2015, the Trump campaign had announced its firing of Stone:

"Mr. Trump fired Roger Stone last night. We have a tremendously successful campaign and Roger wanted to use the campaign for his own personal publicity," a statement read.

(Stone maintained that it was he who had chosen to sever relations. But his recent promoting on Trump's Twitter feed of a show the dispatched advisor hopes to launch is in keeping with the campaign's complaint that Stone was exploiting Trump for personal publicity.)

Roger Stone does have a fetid history of half-witted smears, stereotypical brickbats, and imbecilic observations, only a few of which I'll detail, here.

A 10/12/2011 essay Stone penned for his Stone Zone site, "Hicks in Iowa shouldn't pick next president," decried the state's ethnic homogeneity. "I don't know why we should abrogate our right to choose the next president to a bunch of hayseeds because of some quaint notion that 'they should be first,'" he sneered.

That would conflict resoundingly with Trump's recent assurances to Iowa crowds that, as president, he would ensure the state retained first-in-the-nation status.

Also among Stone's 2011 complaints: Iowans are "stout and a lot of them smoke;" Iowa restaurant food is "awful" ("one cannot possibly find edible linguine in white clam sauce," Stone sniffed, perhaps holding a pinky in the air); and the state's hoteliers jack up room charges for "them Jew-boy reporters from New York." 

That last inference of nasty antisemitic attitude was, of course, not attributed to any actual Iowan. It sprang instead from Stone's own distasteful fancying. Make of that what you will. It is what passes for wit in the ugly world of Roger Stone's brain.

(The prejudice Stone expresses -- against average Americans/Iowans and for upscale, metropolitan sensibilities reminds forcefully of the Clinton/Sanders liberal bias against traditionalism and in favor of a sissified progressivism that reviles the established and common.)

Now, all that having been said, here's a point worth remark: Roger Stone has a considerable background in national political campaigns. And he might in some circumstances be an effective operative.

I recall that Trump often tells crowds he would, as president, draw on the talents of acquaintances "some of whom are nice people, others are nasty people you wouldn't want to have dinner with."

Roger Stone - table for one.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Roger Stone, trash-tongued bridge burner?

Note: While I'm critical here of various news sites (to which I've submitted writings) and Fox News programs, I patronize all regularly and generally endorse them. But honesty is the best critical policy. And I think friends should be able to speak frankly, even when it's unflattering.

Following the sad death of Barbara Bush, Fresno State Associate Professor Randa Jarrar tweeted: "Either you are against these pieces of shit [the Bush family] and their genocidal ways or you're part of the problem. That's actually how simple this is. I'm happy the witch is dead, can't wait for the rest of her family to fall to their demise the way 1.5 million Iraqis have. byyyeeeeeeee."

Jarrar posted other, related vileness, and claimed her Fresno State tenure protected her from sanction. Controversy ensued. Fresno State distanced itself from Jarrar's horrible remarks (though rather feebly), and independent news media sites like Breitbart, Infowars, and Gateway Pundit published critical coverage of her nastiness.

Some observers called for Jarrar's firing. I would not, for this reason: She'd (presumably) expressed her admittedly foul sentiments in private time and not with Fresno State facility. Unless her attitude can be established as impacting negatively on job performance, professional sanction should not even enter into this matter.

But, considered as a moral issue, the bug-eyed Jarrar's spittle-flecked malevolence is undeniably reprehensible. Judging by her tweets, she seems proud of her calculatedly repulsive nature, and eager to cavort in bestial aspect for public consideration.

At issue here is not whether critical comments can be made. Of course they can. But declaring them publicly in the immediate hours following a person's death is poor taste, indeed, and underscores the given speaker's low character.

Associate Professor Jarrar was not alone in reveling in Barbara Bush's passing, or contriving disgusting commentary.

Appearing on Alex Jones's Infowars, Roger Stone declared: "I understand I'm going to take a lot of crap for speaking the truth about Barbara Bush. She was a mean-spirited, vindictive drunk. She is ascending [sic] into Hell, right now. She's not going to Heaven. She was a bad person." 

(Stone makes decisions about afterlife disposition?)

As noted above, Gateway Pundit and Breitbart had run pieces denouncing Jarrar. But they were conspicuously silent regarding fellow traveler Stone. Of course, Infowars gave Stone a passthough it, too, had been critical of the Fresno State associate professor.

I get that some people spew provocative, outlandish rhetoric purposefully, their true ambition being not the communication of serious thinking, but merely attracting career-stoking attention and ginning up controversy. 

Stone was once of more legitimate stature in political circles. But he is now reduced to garish theatricalism on the internet, and that's both sorrowful and, given the revolting content of his Barbara Bush vilification, contemptible.

Roger Stone sometimes turns up on Fox News, particularly as a guest of the Hannity and Tucker Carlson Tonight programs. Whether Stone's Infowars remarks about Barbara Bush cause the producers of those shows to withhold future invitations from him remains to be seen.

(As a rule, no one should be barred from appearing on programs to comment on random subjects because of unrelated opinions expressed, elsewhere. But if those opinions are so distasteful they hang like a dark cloud over other efforts, credibility suffers.)

When Stone has appeared on their shows, Carlson and Hannity have seemed sympathetic to him, treating him with the uncritical regard afforded an instrumental confederate. Carlson is a serious thinker and generally rugged debater with no time for provocateurs or charlatans. He frequently disarms such and bears in for the argumentative kill. It's great fun to watch.

The visibility of Roger Stone reflects adversely on all of us in the populist revolution against anti-Constitution progressivism and globalism. Our movement must seem clownish to onlookers, when someone like Stone takes the stage. 

I wish his performing wasn't given oxygen by persons who should take their responsibilities, and our cause, more seriously.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

CNN's laughing rape enthusiasts 
by DC Larson



David Gergen may be thankful few watch CNN's Erin Burnett Outfront.

During a recent appearance on that program, the clay-footed Beltway dinosaur wheezed his usual tedious twaddle. But then, his disgusting inclination threw off its ebony cloak. 

Remarking on the possibility of Roger Stone serving time, Gergen said: "Roger Stone must also worry that if he goes there -- you know, he's seen as something of a dandy -- will he be physically safe? Will he be subject to rape? There must be a lot of things going through his mind."

And also through the twisted sludge-tunnels of Gergen's fetid imagination, it would seem.

"This is the second time a CNN leftist has planted the seed of Stone's prison rape in the public's mind," reminded Breitbart's John Nolte.

In January, CNN host Jake Tapper and guest Jen Psaki (formerly an Obama advisor) joked together, on camera, about Stone being a victim of prison rape.



"No one's going to cry if Roger Stone goes to jail, or when he goes to jail," chirped Psaki. 

"He might like it," Tapper creepily speculated.

"He might," Psaki laughed.

Nolte noted another who recently made light of potential Stone assaults was creaky Never-Trumper and Commentary writer John Podhoretz. Podhoretz infamously tweeted that "The thing is, given his proclivities, Stone would enjoy prison."



Podhoretz later deleted that tweet. But a screenshot was captured, and yet more proof of mainstream political commentators' real-world sickness was thereby preserved.

The hideousness of Gergen's apparent enthusiasm for rape had been preceded by his wretchedness of other nature. Also on CNN, Gergen once defended late Senator Robert Byrd against charges of racism. That Byrd had in earlier years recruited members to the violent Ku Klux Klan, and in later times voiced related unpleasantness, gave Gergen no pause.

(In 2004, Alex Jones confronted Gergen about the Bohemian Grove,  an 'occultish' annual gathering at which unclothed elites romped and that the obsequious White House advisor attended. Caught-out scoundrel Gergen's near-teary declamations are deliciously risable.)

Gergen was previously an adviser to Presidents Ford, Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and Clinton. And, like Tapper, Psaki, and Podhoretz, he exemplifies an elite that regards moral matters like sexual assault and race hatred as mere tactical devices, ones to be grabbed up or tossed away however suits momentary imperative.

Shakespeare warned of opportunistic, cretinous counselors who burrowed deeply inside chambers of influence. And those vermin of centuries ago doubtless have contemporary counterparts, some as nearby as cable television or fast-shrinking newspapers.

They plot deviousness against the people, and whisper dark ambitions into the ears of those who wield authority. They author (or, at least, claim to) bland, New York Times bestsellers few real people completely read. 

And they loll and chuckle in shadowy banquet halls, giving one another plaques and praises without genuine significance, and for which they had done nothing that advanced genuine public interest.

They are the full opposites of high-minded, principled statesmen every country desperately needs but rarely actually receives.

Since American voters booted the Democrat Party from the White House and rallied beneath Trump's banner, that party's stalwarts have been exposed as charlatans of miserable description. Whereas they once inveighed against slurring people for skin color, sex, or girth, they now freely rail against "white men" and attack the president as "obese." 

Newspaper doodlers like Steve Benson, David Horsey, and Andy Marlette seem unashamed to daily rise as the bigots against whom their sort once railed, depicting President Trump in monstrously exaggerated and unflattering aspects. 

Yes, I grasp the point of caricature. But the malicious scrawlings rendered by them and their inky ilk are more puerile smears than reasoned opinion expression.

Liberals including late night host Stephen Colbert, and those at Saturday Night Live and the New York Times, freely framed criticism of President Trump's dealings with Putin as anti-gay accusations. That sort of thing was once beyond the liberal pale. But it no longer is.

And now, sadly, we can add anti-Trump media figures' rush to threaten ideological adversaries with sexual assault (in the #MeToo moment).

I have my own reasons for disliking Roger Stone. I've written of them at length, before. (Several examples are collected here.) But I would never suggest, as some now horribly do, that Stone suffer perverted physical attack.

That CNN has repeatedly ballyhooed that moral ugliness, from Gergen, Tapper, and Psaki, speaks uncharitably about owner Jeff Zucker's heart.

Friday, April 27, 2018

Breitbart skewers CNN's Jim Acosta for anti-'deplorables' bias, but silent about same of colleague Roger Stone


           Stone makes a television appearance after being kicked off the Donald Trump campaign.


On Friday, April 27, Breitbart ran a piece critical of the insufferable Jim Acosta, White House correspondent for Fake News CNN. 

Acosta, it seems, reckons his surest path to professional ascension and celebrity among the bomb-chucking Resistance lies in making a spectacle of himself as a Trump take down-commando.  

He bellows personal attacks in questions' clothing, including at plainly inappropriate moments like the Easter Egg event for children the president hosted on the White House lawn. 

The smoothly logical Breitbart analysis, neatly assembled by John Nolte, concerns Acosta's recent Variety interview. Nolte quoted a Washington Times relation of Acosta's words to Variety: 

The problem is that people around the country don't know it's [Trump's presentation] an act. They're not in on the act, and they take what he says very seriously, and they take attacks from Sean Spicer and Sarah Sanders and what they do to us on a daily basis very seriously. They don't have all their faculties in some cases -- their elevator might not hit all floors. My concern is that a journalist is going to be hurt one of these days.

(Though attacks on Trump supporters were documented during and after the historic, barnstorming campaign, Acosta seems unconcerned that high-volume press hatred of Trump might encourage that violence.)

After his words were published widely and had inspired condemnation, Acosta claimed they referenced only effects Trump's media broadsides might have on select listeners, and did not implicate all of his backers. 

Perhaps. In fairness, he had cited a former and a current White House press secretary, lending possible plausibility to his defense.

But Nolte carefully dissected Acosta's interview remarks, and concluded "If Acosta wants to claim he misspoke at the end, fine. Even so, there is no getting around the fact that he opens this part of the interview clearly insulting 'people around the country' as rubes who can't see through Trump's act."

http://www.breitbart.com/big-journalism/2018/04/26/fact-check-jim-acostas-phony-claim-he-did-not-insult-trump-voters/

But one need not travel far from Breitbart to find such derision for common Americans.

Breitbart has published numerous writings by veteran 'dirty trickster' campaign strategist and unpleasant gadly Roger Stone. (To this day, the mainstream media persists in characterizing Stone as a 'Trump associate,' though the campaign fired Stone years ago for using it to seek publicity for himself.)

Stone has a history of slurring the common man who makes up the Trump Revolution. Over the years, in postings on his Stone Zone site, he has derided Iowans as hicks and hayseeds. 

As exposed in his Stone Zone words, his priorities and sensibilities are much closer to I'm With Her than Make America Great Again. He sounded more like one of the coastal elitists who assaulted the average folks Trump Revolution than someone who genuinely had its adherents' home interests at heart.

Iowa is too white, Stone lamented, also alleging with no evidence that the average Iowan is anti-Semitic. Its residents were stout (I am) and smoked. Too, its largely agricultural economy is not representative of a nation with a growing technological sector. 

http://stonezone.com/article.php?id=457

Majorities of Iowa voters had endorsed Obama in 2008 and 2012, as had voters across the country. And its 2016 general election support of Trump by some 10 percentage points also showed a state very much in line with national thinking, Stone's erroneous estimation notwithstanding.

Though Stone's untrue and hateful rhetoric was philosophically harmonious with the bigotry of CNN'sAcosta, it never prompted Breitbart to take his contributions off the site, or cut its tie to him. 

If Breitbart ever ran a piece critical of Stone's haughty prejudice, I never saw it -- and I'm a regular and otherwise appreciative reader of the site. (Disclosure: I not only like Breitbart, but have submitted writings to the site. None were picked up.)

Stone also enjoys uncritical spotlighting by Infowars and Gateway Pundit, sites ostensibly sympathetic to the Trump Revolution. 

Fox News figures Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity, whose programs are otherwise rewarding, feature Stone as a guest commentator. Alex Jones and Milo favor him. Their doing so calls into question their own regard for the common people who put Trump in the White House.

I get that someone's having a wrong opinion on one topic doesn't invalidate their every other position, doesn't alone discredit them as a person, and that they might have valuable insights to offer on other subjects.

But my enemy's enemy is not necessarily my friend. And I do question the integrity of sites and television hosts who give Stone a pass on his anti-common man bigotry.


DC Larson's essays championing the Trump campaign ran in numerous Iowa newspapers. He is an author, blogger, and freelance writer whose byline has appeared in Daily Caller, American Thinker, USA Today, and elsewhere. His latest book is Ideas Afoot (Bromley Street Press).

Monday, March 18, 2019

Viewers beware: FNC hires 'regretful' Donna Brazile  



So, the Fox News Channel has hired former Democratic National Committee chair Donna Brazile to offer commentary. 

I can't imagine a news channel retaining infamous dissembler Roger Stone as a commentator. The foppish career trickster made a name for himself by muddying electoral campaign waters with vulgar stuntery. 

No channel that respected its audience would foist the velveteen mountebank on it. And though Brazile lacks Stone's lengthy history of chicanery, I'm prompted to put her in his category. 

Here's why: 

Prior to a 2016 CNN presidential debate, Brazile gave debate questions to Hillary Clinton. 

Brazile initially denied she had helped Clinton cheat. She even claimed victimhood, declaring to then-FNC host Megyn Kelly: "As a Christian woman, I know about persecution." 

Somehow, though, Brazile was ignorant of the Ninth Commandment's admonition against lying. And of Proverbs 6: 16-19, which instruct that a "lying tongue" is something the Lord "strongly dislikes."

Brazile was dropped by CNN, which claimed to be "completely uncomfortable with what we have learned about her interactions with the Clinton campaign while she was a CNN contributor."

Eventually, she did admit guilt. 

"My job was to make all our Democrat candidates look good and I worked closely with both campaigns to make that happen. But sending those [debate question-containing] emails was a mistake I'll forever regret." Brazile wrote in a 2017 Time essay.

And now, Fox News execs are giving her a second chance. As per old jailhouse movies, they may also have given her a new suit and a $10 bill.

In the biblical spirit, of course, we should be forgiving of Brazile's transgression. But remaining wary nonetheless is just common sensical. 

"There's an audience on Fox News that doesn't hear enough from Democrats. We have to engage that audience and show Americans of every stripe what we stand for rather than retreat into our 'safe spaces' where we simply agree with each other," Brazile wrote in a statement that addressed her FNC hiring. 

I appreciate exposure to perspectives from across the spectrum. I seek them out, daily. Sound ideas can come from anywhere. And listening to a variety of voices enriches our own knowledge and understanding.

I wouldn't ever want to hear just one side. I prefer to hear all, and make my own judgement. You never really know what's over the hill until you've looked. 

But I believe FNC's employ of Brazile can be thought if a part with the channel's apparent inclination to placate PC liberals. While evident in previous times, that disturbing phenomenon has perhaps increased following the DNC's announcement it would not partner with the channel to present a primary debate.

Judge Jeanine Pirro was recently sanctioned by FNC for criticism of Rep. Ilhan Omar, At one point in on-air commentary, Pirro had wondered whether Omar's hijab might indicate Sharia sympathy.

Pirro was tweet-smeared by FNC behind-the-camera staffer Hufsa Kamal, an associate producer of Special Report with Bret Baier. 

"@JudgeJeanine can you stop spreading this false narrative that somehow Muslims hate America or women who wear a hijab aren't American enough? You have Muslims working at the same network you do, including myself. K thx."

That Pirro had said exactly none of the things alleged by Kamal in her ugly tweet didn't deter the fake news-mongerer.

The general tone of much Fox News programming is, at best, suspicious of President Trump and unsympathetic to regular Americans' interests. Each weekend, Arthel Neville and Leland Vittert shamelessly parade anti-Trump sensibilities.

"Were @FoxNews weekend anchors, @ArthelNeville and @LelandVittert, trained at CNN prior to their ratings collapse? In any event, that's where they should be working, along with their lowest-rated anchor, Shepard Smith," tweeted President Trump, Sunday.

That same day, another example leapt up: Chris Wallace tried to get away with deceptively editing a statement from the New Zealand shooter, that President Trump be portrayed unflatteringly. Fortunately, White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney immediately foiled Wallace's underhanded bid.

Other FNC personalities inclined against America's president include Judge Andrew Napolitano, the afore-mentioned Shepard Smith, and Neil Cavuto. 

A good way to establish which Fox personalities liberal speech-stiflers consider politically oppositional is to review which ones they urge be boycotted. Hannity, Calson, Pirro -- yes. Wallace, Neville and Vittert, Napolitano, Smith, Cavuto  -- no. 

Nor does action against Brazille seem likely. FNC execs appear by their own actions to be more concerned with the opinions of the channel's detractors than the viewers that made them successful. 

How long until the (not very) conservative Fox News Channel features an openly transsexual host? 

Friday, March 30, 2018

DC Larson's Ideas Afoot 




(Ordering info at bottom)


Ideas Afoot is my latest and sixth book. Its 86 pages are densely packed with intellectual fiber, lively wit, and declarative voice. In it, I champion traditional American Constitutional values like free speech, presumption of innocence, and national sovereignty. 

I also address larger topics of contemporary significance: Patriotism, ideological tolerance, news media fairness, 'whole cloth' life philosophy, philosophical evolution, illegal immigration, and cultural integrity. 

Ideas Afoot subjects include intellectual liberty; biblical and secular rights affirmations; the Southern Poverty Law Center's grifting; Hollywood bigotry; the failed 2016 Hillary Clinton campaign's contempt for the common man; Norman Lear's despoiling of comedy television; the Nazi-enabling past of George Soros; dirty trickster Roger Stone's elitism; and increasing agitations against our National Anthem and Confederate and American flags.  


Here's a brief author bio:

DC Larson gained practical political knowledge through decades of education and activism across the ideological spectrum. In 2015 and 2016, he advocated Donald Trump's historic campaign in several Iowa newspapers. But before that, in 2000, he helped found the Iowa Green Party and served in 2004 as Iowa coordinator for independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader.  

Today a pro-Trump online activist, he is also a retro science fiction novelist, political and rock and roll blogger, and commentator whose freelance credits include Daily Caller, American Thinker, USA Today, Goldmine, No Depression, and others.



Ideas Afoot chapters:

1 - To think, to speak, to be
2 - Anger and principle coexistent
3 - The confidence man in the mailbox
4 -  Avuncular estimations
5 - The chauffeured agitator who spoiled American comedy  television
6 - Hillary's snoot society / Hollywood at powdery remove
7 - The sinister styles of news fakery
8 - The velveteen mountebank
9 - Never Forget this about George Soros
10 - Biology shall not be moved
11 - Aggressions confronted



Paperback, $10 check or money order

DC Larson
322 E. Louise St.
Waterloo, Iowa 50703


Kindle, $2.99


Saturday, December 16, 2023

Racial discrimination not 'progressive,' always wrong        




"We all bleed the red blood of patriots," Donald Trump once emphasized of America's racially-diverse citizenry. He would lead America forward into fairness for all.

But for years, ignoring the 45th president's heartfelt declaration, Democrats both elected and of grassroots precincts have deceitfully accused him and those of us in the patriotic MAGA popular upswell  of harboring racial animus. That they have repeatedly lodged that odious lie in hopes of realizing electoral gain is beyond reasonable disputation. 

They aren't good people.

Situationally posturing as opponents of morally despicable racist ideologies, such liberals are now conspicuously silent on the internationally-reported pro-segregation views of Boston's unrepentant racist Mayor Michelle Wu.

An obvious example is that of CNN's reprehensible Jake Tapper. The consistently rebarbative fake-news host has habitually (and without offering cause that could withstand serious scrutiny) assailed Trump on racial grounds. 

To my knowledge -- and I just conducted online research -- neither he nor his ethically-shoddy employer have accorded racist Democrat Wu the castigation and denunciation she abundantly merits. 

(It should not go unrecalled that liberal Tapper once 'joked' in a broadcast that Trump-supporter Roger Stone "might enjoy" being raped in prison. Being that his repulsive quip was carried by CNN, no known professional consequences ensued.)

Racial bigotry and its practical applications are always wicked. They uniformly lack logical basis. Racism deserves equally vigiorous condemnation every time it rises, and in whatever circumstance it does so. 

A currently faddish fancy holds that racial discrimination against White Americans is a rational counter to historic injustices. That foul notion has given persons like Boston's Michelle Wu, who were predisposed to bigotry, encouragement to champion it publicly.

In 2023, progressive Democrats (especially wet-eared and campus-mobbing ones) advocate selective racism, just as increasing numbers of them feel emboldened to rail openly against Jews and Israel, and in support of Palestinian voter-sanctioned Hamas terrorists.  

It should be stressed, of course, that not every rank-and-file Democrat clings to racism. To suggest that would be foolish and unfair. But many do seem to. And their partisan fellows apparently find that acceptable.


Wednesday, May 2, 2018

DC Larson's Ideas Afoot 




(Ordering info at bottom)


Ideas Afoot is my latest and sixth book. Its 86 pages are densely packed with intellectual fiber, lively wit, and declarative voice. In it, I champion traditional American Constitutional values like free speech, presumption of innocence, and national sovereignty. 

I also address larger topics of contemporary significance: Patriotism, ideological tolerance, news media fairness, 'whole cloth' life philosophy, philosophical evolution, illegal immigration, and cultural integrity. 

Ideas Afoot subjects include intellectual liberty; biblical and secular rights affirmations; the Southern Poverty Law Center's grifting; Hollywood bigotry; the failed 2016 Hillary Clinton campaign's contempt for the common man; Norman Lear's despoiling of comedy television; the Nazi-enabling past of George Soros; dirty trickster Roger Stone's elitism; and increasing agitations against our National Anthem and Confederate and American flags.  


Here's a brief author bio:

DC Larson gained practical political knowledge through decades of education and activism across the ideological spectrum. In 2015 and 2016, he advocated Donald Trump's historic campaign in several Iowa newspapers. But before that, in 2000, he helped found the Iowa Green Party and served in 2004 as Iowa coordinator for independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader.  

Today a pro-Trump online activist, he is also a retro science fiction novelist, political and rock and roll blogger, and commentator whose freelance credits include Daily CallerAmerican ThinkerUSA TodayGoldmineNo Depression, and others.



Ideas Afoot chapters:

1 - To think, to speak, to be
2 - Anger and principle coexistent
3 - The confidence man in the mailbox
4 -  Avuncular estimations
5 - The chauffeured agitator who spoiled American comedy  television
6 - Hillary's snoot society / Hollywood at powdery remove
7 - The sinister styles of news fakery
8 - The velveteen mountebank
9 - Never Forget this about George Soros
10 - Biology shall not be moved
11 - Aggressions confronted



Paperback, $10 check or money order

DC Larson
322 E. Louise St.
Waterloo, Iowa 50703


Kindle, $2.99

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