Author Topic: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces  (Read 844908 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1500 on: December 10, 2015, 10:02:42 AM »
Looks interesting.  I just ordered it.



ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1503 on: December 20, 2015, 08:17:45 PM »
Rush is so brilliant at expressing his thoughts.  He definitely does have a talent from God.  He verbalizes the thoughts and feelings of millions.

Yet the left has somewhat succeeded in marginalizing him.

DougMacG

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces, 2015, worst year ever
« Reply #1504 on: December 24, 2015, 07:26:06 AM »
Dave Barry, Miami Herald, Pulitzer Prize winner, argues that 2015 was worse than 1347 when the Bubonic Plague killed much of humanity and backs it up with facts mixed with humor including a month by month recap starting with January when the biggest story on earth was the below regulation air pressure of a Tom Brady football.

http://www.miamiherald.com/living/liv-columns-blogs/dave-barry/article51119880.html

Body-by-Guinness

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The Riot Racket
« Reply #1505 on: December 27, 2015, 12:53:36 PM »
Old racial shill payouts beget current urban landscape, san the improvements promised.

http://www.city-journal.org/2015/25_4_riots.html

Crafty_Dog

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About the NSA spying on Congress
« Reply #1506 on: January 07, 2016, 03:31:41 PM »
Elected officials and leaders of the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) must maintain the integrity of America’s vast intelligence enterprise as a lawful, neutral, independent and fair arbiter of facts. Recent news that the Obama White House obtained intelligence containing private conversations of members of Congress and American Jewish organizations from the National Security Agency (NSA) suggests the integrity of our intelligence agencies have been undermined.


The heads of the 17 organizations in the IC oversee a massive foreign data collection network that produces sensitive information on adversaries and allies.


It is an awesome capability for good, but it poses a threat to free society if exploited for political purposes.


The prospect of the White House – or any political element – using one of these agencies to mine information on members of Congress and U.S. citizens is frightening and criminal. So it is of grave concern to learn that the administration allegedly permitted the National Security Agency (NSA) to monitor American communications between the Israeli prime minister and U.S. Congressmen and members of Jewish organizations during the sensitive domestic political debate on the Iran nuclear agreement.


Lawmakers must respond quickly. This is about the NSA potentially violating constitutionally protected civil liberties.
The rules are clear. When the electronic communications of U.S. citizens are inadvertently swept up, which happens frequently, the NSA is required to immediately minimize them.


First, it needs to identify the phone number associated with the person and cease monitoring it. Second, any reference to the individual in collected data must be eliminated.


And there are special NSA rules if information about the discussions or communications of members of Congress is collected. Under NSA rules, this information is supposed to be destroyed unless the NSA Director issues a waiver to collect and disseminate this information because of a compelling foreign intelligence reason.


The administration likely failed on all of these counts. It apparently looked the other way and didn’t implement long established safeguards. That is why this issue is so serious.


The government can only retain content on Americans when it contains national security implications and must obtain a court warrant if it wants to maintain surveillance on an American person. Israel’s prime minister has no protections.
More to the point, this alleged surveillance was never about national security. The White House wanted to learn the strategies that opponents of the Iran nuclear agreement would use to attack the president’s political agenda.


Congress should demand a full accounting, which should not take long. The NSA has all of the information lawmakers need at its fingertips.


Here are seven questions that the administration needs to answer about the continued monitoring of U.S. persons by the NSA.

1.   Exactly how many and specifically which Americans were monitored?
2.   On which members of Congress did the NSA spy?
3.   How many conversations were collected and what did they disclose?
4.   Who within the IC knew about the ongoing and intentional collection of American communications with the Israeli prime minister? Did NSA Director Mike Rogers know? Who approved it?
5.   Who within the White House knew of this collection and who knew of its content? Did they attempt to stop this collection once they became aware that it was possibly illegal?
6.   How did the NSA justify and rationalize providing the White House with intelligence on the private conversations by members of Congress and American Jewish organizayions? At what security level was the information transferred to the White House?
7.   Did this surveillance practice extend to any other intelligence agencies?
8.   
There needs to be a full public accounting.


This is not an isolated instance of IC negligence. CENTCOM is under investigation for cooking the intelligence on the threat from ISIS.


Both are serious violations of the public trust, but the NSA case is potentially so egregious that it threatens the very credibility of the IC. Whether conservative, progressive, Republican, Democrat or Libertarian, all Americans fear the immense capability of government to target them. A proportional reaction is required because it extends to the very heart of constitutionally guaranteed protections.


I strongly disagreed with Edward Snowden’s actions and the substance of his allegations, but the NSA might have fulfilled his predictions that the government would unleash the IC capabilities for unlawful domestic purposes.


Speaker
Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)

Crafty_Dog

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Body-by-Guinness

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Piss on People Skills
« Reply #1508 on: January 08, 2016, 10:38:04 AM »

ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1509 on: January 10, 2016, 08:09:05 PM »
Some of the "top" choices for a woman for the $10 dollar bill:

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/women-10-dollar-bill-candidates

Every one is basically not so much a champion for America as a champion for liberal causes.

Maybe we could have bills for liberals and bills for the rest of us.

Well what else would one expect from the most leftist President and his socialist appointees?




« Last Edit: January 10, 2016, 08:12:46 PM by ccp »

G M

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1510 on: January 10, 2016, 08:42:44 PM »
We need separate countries.


Some of the "top" choices for a woman for the $10 dollar bill:

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/women-10-dollar-bill-candidates

Every one is basically not so much a champion for America as a champion for liberal causes.

Maybe we could have bills for liberals and bills for the rest of us.

Well what else would one expect from the most leftist President and his socialist appointees?






ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1511 on: January 15, 2016, 06:49:05 AM »
I saw most of the debate last night. 

My biggest concern was when some candidates were asked about how they would solve the national debt and social security debts everyone but one sidestepped the issues.

I don't recall Christy commenting on the debt but he does have a plan to save social security one trillion. 

To me this is the largest threat to the US.   The progressive debt problems.   And no one (except for the one exception) even answered the questions and both moderators who were otherwise, I felt did a good job, pressed for answers.   

Indeed every candidate on that stage should have been forced to deal with those 2 issues.

 

Body-by-Guinness

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Which Side of the Spectrum is the Most Simpleminded?
« Reply #1512 on: January 15, 2016, 04:43:52 PM »
Those of a liberal persuasion were snickering a couple years back over psychological surveys that claimed to demonstrate conservatives are more simpleminded than liberals. Someone has taken a deeper look at the survey techniques and resulting data:

http://reason.com/archives/2016/01/15/liberals-are-simple-minded


DDF

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1514 on: January 18, 2016, 08:06:37 AM »
http://www.nationalreview.com/campaign-spot/386305/key-demographic-americas-wrong-information-voters-jim-geraghty

I'm less concerned about the impact of technology and far more concerned by the rise of stupidity in this country. We are becoming Idiocracy more and more every day.

https://www.yahoo.com/music/powerball-reimbursement-fund-page-created-235504618.html?soc_src=social-sh&soc_trk=fb

http://www.ifc.com/shows/comedy-bang-bang/blog/2015/03/10-things-idiocracy-got-right-about-the-future

When I was a boy, my father threw a head of cabbage at my head so hard it exploded, because I had failed to feed the animals. Right or wrong, I never forgot to feed the animals again.

Now.... we have Americans who, waste their money and start pages like this... all because we quit exploding heads of cabbage....

Is it any wonder? Goes hand in hand with Common Core schooling.

God help us.

objectivist1

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Nation That Gave Us The Magna Carta Is Dead...
« Reply #1515 on: January 20, 2016, 05:30:38 AM »
Geller: The Nation That Gave the World the Magna Carta Is Dead

by PAMELA GELLER January 18, 2016

The British Parliament on Monday debated whether or not to ban Donald Trump from the country for the crime of saying that in light of jihad terrorist attacks, there should be a temporary moratorium on Muslim immigration into the U.S.

I did not expect for one moment that the Brits would ban the U.S. presidential candidate who may very well be the next President of the United States. A nation whose national self-esteem (or what’s left of it) is rooted deeply in its place in history would be infamous for having banned the leader of its closest ally, the one that saved her from the Nazi onslaught.

On the other hand, maybe they will ban Trump. After all, the British government banned me from entering the country for standing up against jihad terror. To ban Trump for calling for a temporary moratorium on Muslim immigration would just be more of the same. The British government, egged on by the left, seems determined to silence any and every voice against jihad terror and Islamization. The consequences for Britain will be catastrophic.

According to documents released in our lawsuit against the British government under the Duty of Candor, my support for Israel was also cited as grounds for the ban. An official in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office wrote that the dossier that the government had assembled as the case for banning me was “particularly citing pro-Israeli views.” If supporting Israel can get you banned from Britain, opposing the unrestricted entry of Muslims (including jihad terrorists) into the U.S. certainly can.

In not allowing me into the country solely because of our true and accurate statements about Islam and support of Israel, the British government was behaving like a de facto Islamic state.

By the time my ban was officially announced, however, the Home Office had scrubbed the material about it being because I was pro-Israel. The British government explicitly stated that I was banned because my presence was “not conducive to the public good” and that I represented a “threat to security of our society.” What were the criteria? CNN “journalist” Mona Eltahawy was soon afterward scheduled to speak in the UK at a women’s conference sponsored by two sharia-compliant media orgs, Reuters and the New York Times. Yet Mona Eltahawy was arrested after attacking a complete stranger in the New York subway and defacing our American Freedom Defense Initiative pro-Israel ad. Is that acceptable behavior and conducive to the public good? The British government apparently thinks so. They also let a notorious Muslim Brotherhood leader take refuge in London, and readily admit preachers of jihad terror.

The Home Office also cited security concerns – that is, if I were admitted, Muslims might riot, and rather than keep the Muslims rioting, they banned me. As Laura Rosen Cohen says, “security concerns” are the new “shut up.” My real crime was my principled dedication to freedom. I am a human rights activist dedicated to freedom of speech, freedom of conscience and individual rights for all before the law. I fiercely oppose violence and the persecution and oppression of minorities under supremacist law. I deplore violence and work for the preservation of freedom of speech to avoid violent conflict. I have never been convicted of any crime. I have never been arrested. I became a writer and activist in the wake of 9/11. For this, I am banned from Britain. I shed no tears. I am banned from Mecca, too.

Things have not improved in the two and a half years since I was banned. Monday’s Parliamentary “debate” was more like a clown contest, with Islamic apologists competing to see which one could out-bootlick Britain’s Islamic supremacists.

Why did this once great country agree to hold such a debate in the first place? Now in the birthplace of the principle of the freedom of speech, holding opinions that are unpopular with the elites can get you banned from the country. Apparently over 500,000 people signed a petition demanding that Trump be banned. Mind you, another petition calling for a halt to the massive Muslim migration into the United Kingdom gained a similar number of signers, but there was no Parliamentary debate, or any significant political discussion, of that one.

Where also is the Parliamentary debate about the hundreds of thousands, possibly as many as a million, young British girls who were brutalized by Muslim rape gangs? These girls were sacrificed on the altar of Islamic supremacism. For years these little British girls went to the authorities about these Muslim child sex trafficking gangs and the authorities did nothing for fear of appearing “Islamophobic” or racist. But they sprang into action and banned me when they heard I would be laying a wreath at the site of the Lee Rigby beheading on Armed Services Day.

What’s bitterly ironic is that Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron, a lapdog of Islamic supremacists, has just called on immigrants to learn English within two-and-a-half years of arriving in Britain, or face deportation. If Trump had said that, the British left would be working up another petition denouncing him. Will Cameron be banned from the country?

The nation that gave the world the Magna Carta is dead.

"You have enemies?  Good.  That means that you have stood up for something, sometime in your life." - Winston Churchill.

Crafty_Dog

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Reality bitch slaps Thomas Friedman
« Reply #1516 on: January 20, 2016, 11:40:04 AM »
ZURICH — Just get me talking about the world today and I can pretty well ruin any dinner party. I don’t mean to, but I find it hard not to look around and wonder whether the recent turmoil in international markets isn’t just the product of tremors but rather of seismic shifts in the foundational pillars of the global system, with highly unpredictable consequences.

What if a bunch of eras are ending all at once?

What if we’re at the end of the 30-plus-year era of high growth in China, and therefore China’s ability to fuel global growth through its imports, exports and purchases of commodities will be much less frothy and reliable in the future?
Thomas L. Friedman


“Now that this debt bubble is unwinding, growth in China is going offline,” Michael Pento, president of Pento Portfolio Strategies, wrote on CNBC.com last week. “The renminbi’s falling value, cascading Shanghai equity prices (down 40 percent since June 2014) and plummeting rail freight volumes (down 10.5 percent year over year) all clearly illustrate that China is not growing at the promulgated 7 percent, but rather isn’t growing at all. The problem is that China accounted for 34 percent of global growth, and the nation’s multiplier effect on emerging markets takes that number to over 50 percent.”

What if the $100-a-barrel oil price era is over and all these countries whose economies were directly or indirectly propped up by those prices will have to learn to grow the old-fashioned way — by making goods and services others want to buy? Thanks to steady technological advances in America for fracking, horizontal drilling and using big data to identify deposits, OPEC’s pricing power has disappeared. Countries that have set their budgets based on $80- to $100-a-barrel oil will find themselves vastly underfunded just when their populations — in places like Iran, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Indonesia and Venezuela — have surged.

What if average is over for countries? During the Cold War you could be an average, newly independent state with artificial borders drawn by colonial powers. There were two superpowers ready to throw foreign aid at you, educate your kids in America or Moscow, build up your armed forces and security services and buy your crummy manufactured exports or commodities.

But what if the rise of robots, software and automation mean that these countries can’t rely on manufacturing to create mass labor anymore, that the products they can make and sell can’t compete with Chinese goods, that climate change is pressuring their ecosystems and that neither Russia nor America wants to have anything to do with them because all either wins is a bill?

Many of these frail, artificial states don’t correspond to any ethnic, cultural, linguistic or demographic realities. They are caravan homes in a trailer park — built on slabs of concrete without real foundations or basements — and what you’re seeing today with the acceleration of technology, climate change stresses and globalization is the equivalent of a tornado going through a trailer park. Some of these states are just falling apart, and many of their people are now trying to cross the Mediterranean — to escape their world of disorder and get into the world of order, particularly the European Union.

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But what if the E.U. era is over? Reuters reported this week that Germany is telling other E.U. countries that if they don’t prevent the influx of more refugees into Europe from the Mediterranean and “relieve Berlin of the lonely task of housing refugees, Germany could shut its doors.” Some Germans even want a border fence. One senior conservative was quoted as saying, “If you build a fence, it’s the end of Europe as we know it.”

What if the era of Iranian isolation is over, just as the Arab system is collapsing and the two-state solution between Israelis and Palestinians is history? How will all those molecules interact?
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And what if all this is happening when the two-party system in America seems to be getting most of its energy from the far left and the far right? Bernie Sanders’s platform is that we can solve our most onerous economic problems if we just tax “The Man” more. Donald Trump and Ted Cruz are running on the theme that they are “The Man” — the strongman — who can magically fix everything.

What if our 2016 election ends up being between a socialist and a borderline fascist — ideas that died in 1989 and 1945 respectively?
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And what if all of this is happening at a time when our government’s ability to stimulate the economy through either monetary or fiscal policy is constrained? Unless we go to negative interest rates, the best the Fed can do now is rescind the tiny rate hike made in December. Meanwhile, after all the vital government spending to stimulate demand after the 2008 crisis, there is no consensus in the country for another big round.

These what-ifs constitute the real policy landscape that will confront the next president. But here’s the worst “what if”: What if we’re having a presidential election but no one is even asking these questions, let alone “what if” all of these tectonic plates move at once? How will we generate growth, jobs, security and resilience?

There’s still an opportunity for someone to lead by asking, and answering, all of these “what ifs,” but that time is quickly coming to an end, just like the last dinner party I ruined.

ccp

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Ever wonder how so many young people could
« Reply #1517 on: January 20, 2016, 01:53:56 PM »
vote for an avowed communist like the Bern, just read this:

http://www.fox5ny.com/news/77757485-story

They will learn soon enough what the cost of freedom means.

DDF

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Re: Ever wonder how so many young people could
« Reply #1518 on: January 20, 2016, 02:04:06 PM »
vote for an avowed communist like the Bern, just read this:

http://www.fox5ny.com/news/77757485-story

They will learn soon enough what the cost of freedom means.

I read that earlier today. It isn't surprising. Kids and others don't know jack squat. People congratulating the DPRK because they got nukes.... people more concerned about pharmaceutical marijuana.... the list goes on and on....

It justifies rule through power and not law....otherwise, you have a bunch of people like these, voting for a bunch of Obamas and Clintons, when they couldn't name a sitting or former supreme court justice to save their lives.... and in the end, the stupid are so many, that you get their interpretation of the law.

Just round them up, put them in their own pasture of a country within the US, where they can't hurt anyone other than themselves, let them get high, pat each other on the ass and tell each other how great their Birkenstocks look, and discuss worthless degrees in Liberal Arts... and basically do themselves in.... just build a moat around it first, filled with saltwater crocs.

Works for me.

Rant over.

ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1519 on: January 21, 2016, 09:08:18 AM »
Of course the (C)rats are out in force making this into a national political issue against the Republican governor.  I have not heard that while 8,000 plus were "exposed" only 45 or so have tested positive elevated lead levels.   I don't hear Hillary saying that Brock refused to declare a state of emergency as requested by the Governor.  While this warrants and immediate reaction, cause for concern, and study, this is not the disaster the Dems want to make this out to.  Here we go with the class actions.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2016/01/19/michigan-flint-water-contamination/78996052/
« Last Edit: January 21, 2016, 09:15:12 AM by ccp »

G M

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1520 on: January 21, 2016, 09:10:34 AM »
Of course the (C)rats are out in force making this into a national political issue against the Republican governor.  I have not heard that while 8,000 plus were "exposed" only 45 or so have tested positive elevated lead levels.   I don't hear Hillary saying that Brock refused to declare a state of emergency as requested by the Governor.  While this warrants and immediate reaction, cause for concern, study this is not the disaster the Dems want to make this out to.  Here we go with the class actions.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2016/01/19/michigan-flint-water-contamination/78996052/

http://hotair.com/archives/2016/01/19/epa-chief-we-did-our-job-in-the-flint-water-disaster/

The same level of service you've come to expect!

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1521 on: January 21, 2016, 11:44:15 AM »
Wrong thread for this gents.  Perhaps Political Economics or Bureaucracy in Action or , , , but not this thread.

Body-by-Guinness

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The Constitution Shouldn't be Celebrated
« Reply #1522 on: January 24, 2016, 03:14:32 PM »
A heterodox examination of the history of the American constitution from a libertarian perspective:


MARC:  Moved to the American Creed/Constitution thread.
« Last Edit: January 25, 2016, 09:32:21 AM by Crafty_Dog »

ccp

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Islamophobia
« Reply #1526 on: February 08, 2016, 07:23:22 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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Noonan: The Court, like the country, needs balance
« Reply #1528 on: February 19, 2016, 10:22:44 AM »
The Court, Like the Country, Needs Balance
It would be wise for the president to change his mind on a nomination to replace Justice Scalia.
By Peggy Noonan
Feb. 18, 2016 7:14 p.m. ET
910 COMMENTS

The president has every right to nominate a successor to Justice Antonin Scalia. He shouldn’t, but he has the right by law and precedent.

The reasons he shouldn’t spring from facts particular to the moment and having to do with what Justice Scalia symbolized.

In a 50/50 country, one that suffers deep ideological divisions and is constantly at its own throat, Justice Scalia stood, for that half of the country that is more or less conservative, for wisdom, permanence, enduring structures and understandings. That he was brilliant, witty and penetrating in his thought goes without saying. He was also brave, with that exhausting kind of courage that has to do with swimming each day against the tide. Here is Justice Scalia as prophet, dissenting in 1992’s sweeping abortion decision, Planned Parenthood v Casey: “Its length, and what might be called its epic tone, suggest that its authors believe they are bringing to an end a troublesome era in the history of our Nation and of our Court. . . . [But] by foreclosing all democratic outlet for the deep passions this issue arouses, by banishing the issue from the political forum that gives all participants, even the losers, the satisfaction of a fair hearing and an honest fight, by continuing the imposition of a rigid national rule instead of allowing for regional differences, the Court merely prolongs and intensifies the anguish.”

It did; it has.

Here is the end of his dissent in Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 decision on same-sex marriage: “Hubris is sometimes defined as o’erweening pride; and pride, we know, goeth before a fall. . . . With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them—with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court—we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.”

By “we” he meant the people, not the court.

Conservatives—again, half the country, maybe more—took succor from his bracing 30-year presence on the bench. The country, and the court too, benefited: With his fierce dissents Scalia helped people accept decisions with which they disagreed. At least our view was spoken. At least it’s respected by someone!

Our divided country has been stumbling along for decades with a split court. We have grown used to the phrase, “In a 5-4 decision.” Half the country probably thinks high-court decisions are by definition 5-4.

The court in our time has both expanded its role and loosened its intellectual standards. It pronounces now on every facet of life in America—on our religious life, on abortion and marriage, on guns and immigration. At the same time members of the court have grown used to approaching issues based on their personal vision of what is desirable public policy. Scalia famously didn’t think his preferences were the issue; what the law says is the issue.

Justice is supposed to be blind, impartial. It is not supposed to be about politics and brute power. But we all know that is what it is now about. As Hugh Hewitt wrote this week in the Washington Examiner, the court “has assumed power never intended it by the Framers, but it is what it is and there is no going back.”

Which is why the issue of Scalia’s replacement is so consequential.

When the court is roughly balanced, 5-4, the public is allowed to assume some rough approximation of justice will occur—that something that looks like justice will be handed down. There will be chafing and disappointments. ObamaCare will be upheld. Yay! Boo! Gay marriage will be instituted across the land. Yay! Boo!

The closeness of the vote suggests both sides got heard. The closeness contributes to an air of credibility. That credibility helps people accept the court’s rulings.

When the balance of the court tips too much one way, it invites people to see injustice and bully politics. It invites unease and protest.

That in turn will produce another crack in the system—and in public respect for the system. This divided nation does not need more cracks and strains.

What to do? The closest you can come to public peace in resolving the question of Scalia’s replacement is to take a step wholly unusual, even unprecedented, and let the American people make the decision themselves, this year, with their 2016 presidential vote.

Maybe that election will produce a progressive Democratic president. That president will choose as progressive a nominee as the Senate will accept.

Maybe that election will produce a conservative Republican president. That president will choose as conservative a nominee as the Senate will accept.

Either way half the country will be half happy, half unhappy, but the country will have chosen. That they made the decision will allow people to accept the outcome more easily—either a real change in the ideological makeup of the court, or a court whose rough and not always predictable balance has been preserved.

We take a swerve or stay where we are. But it will be the people who swerved or stayed.

For President Obama to leave the Scalia replacement to the next president would be an act of prudence and democratic courtesy. He of course says he will put a nominee forward. What a thing it would be if he changed his mind.

The Republican Senate has every right by law and precedent to block his nominee. They moved quickly after Scalia’s death, and with startling unanimity, to announce they would do so. This had the virtue of clarity and the defect of aggression. Still, their ultimate stand is right.

It should be noted there’s no reason to believe leaving it to the people will guarantee conservative outcomes.

I close with a thought about an aspect of modern leftism that is part of the context here.

There is something increasingly unappeasable in the left. This is something conservatives and others have come to fear, that progressives now accept no limits. We can’t just have court-ordered legalized abortion across the land, we have to have it up to the point of birth, and taxpayers have to pay for it. It’s not enough to win same-sex marriage, you’ve got to personally approve of it and if you publicly resist you’ll be ruined. It’s not enough that we have publicly funded contraceptives, the nuns have to provide them.

This unappeasable spirit always turns to the courts to have its way.

If progressives were wise they would step back, accept their victories, take a breath and turn to the idea of solidifying gains, of heroic patience, of being peaceable.

Don’t make them bake the cake. Don’t make them accept the progressive replacement for Scalia. Leave the nuns alone.

Progressives have no idea how fragile it all is. That’s why they feel free to be unappeasable. They don’t know what they’re grinding down.

They think America has endless give. But America is composed of humans, and they do not have endless give.

Isn’t that what we’re seeing this year in the political realm? That they don’t have endless give? And we’ll be seeing more of it.

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ Why the Sanders Trump voters?
« Reply #1529 on: February 19, 2016, 07:33:31 PM »

By Daniel J. Arbess
Feb. 19, 2016 6:31 p.m. ET
86 COMMENTS

B ernie Sanders, the 74-year-old self-described democratic socialist, is surprising even himself with his primary-season success against Hillary Clinton, fueled by a staggering 83% majority of the under-30 vote in New Hampshire and 84% in the Iowa caucuses.

As this newspaper reported on Tuesday, voters in the millennial bracket, 18- to 34-year-olds, will for the first time equal the baby-boomer share of the electorate, at 31%. These young voters appear to be falling headlong for the Vermont senator’s plaintive narrative of economic “unfairness.” His throwaway prescriptions for redistributing income and wealth are being echoed by an increasingly nervous Mrs. Clinton—despite such policies’ having been jettisoned during her husband’s administration in the 1990s.

Then again, Republican front-runner Donald Trump’s vague promises that he will “make America great again” aren’t much more comforting—except to the masses of Americans responding to his populist diatribes against free trade and immigrants. He too scored well with the young in New Hampshire, though, winning 38% of the 18-29 support, more than double his closest competitor for that group, Ted Cruz, at 17%.

These young voters seem not to realize that the economic policies they find so resonant are the least likely to promote the growth and the social mobility they desire. They deserve to be lead from the discredited backwater of equalizing outcomes, forward with policies that instead help eliminate barriers frustrating their access to opportunities.

The millennials can’t be faulted for being anxious about their economic prospects. They are coming of age in the weakest economy in generations. The underemployment rate (measuring those working a job for which they’re overqualified and underpaid) for young adults below age 30 is 60%. The overall employment-to-population ratio of 77.4% for those in the prime-of-working-life 25-54 age bracket translates into 1.5 million jobs below the 20-year average.

The college graduate living in his parents’ basement and working a marginal job to service a student loan is by now an archetype of the Obama era. And while the headline unemployment numbers are down, and the administration congratulates itself on a tepid “recovery” that was almost exclusively dependent on Fed-engineered financial-asset inflation, there is every reason to be skeptical about the health of the labor market. The labor-participation rate languishes at its lowest level in 40 years, and credit creation, government and private investment aren’t faring much better.

Both Democrats and some Republicans keep blaming it all on “Wall Street” (Bernie Sanders’s all-purpose boogeyman) for “getting away with murder” (Donald Trump on hedge funds). Don’t they realize that the financial markets are the lubricant of the entire economy—that Wall Street’s capacity to provide liquidity and to broker capital is the lifeblood of American companies? History will probably judge the misguided post-crisis regulations like Dodd-Frank and retribution against Wall Street to have sown the seeds of the next financial crisis. For now, the vilification of Wall Street in the presidential campaign is irresponsible.

The sluggish growth of jobs and the economy has a lot more to do with the transitioning from American manufacturing and services to information technology than with the 2008 financial crisis and its supposed perpetrators. And the Fed alone can’t do much more to promote its employment-and-inflation mandates.

Why? Because the economy is facing complex structural headwinds for both: Artificial intelligence and self-learning algorithms are efficiency-creating and cost-reducing, and soon they will be displacing service professionals and Ph.Ds just as they have factory workers. The Bank of England projects that 45% of jobs done by people in the U.K. will eventually be performed by robots. ArkInvest expects the U.S. to shed 75 million jobs in the next two decades.

And yes, the new tech-economy wealth is increasingly concentrating in the hands of relatively few innovators and financiers, leaving the middle class and its consumer demand lagging behind. What is the appropriate role of government in redressing this?

Why wouldn’t young voters want “free stuff” paid for by the rich, as the Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton narrative promises? Because the no-free-lunch axiom is still true: Mr. Sanders’s socialized education, health care and other policies would cost up to $20 trillion, according to analysts, requiring tax collections to increase up to 47%. And have we not at least learned from the collapse and dismantling of socialism over the past quarter century that governments lack the incentives and resources to effectively allocate and manage capital in the microeconomy? The eldest of the millennials were in elementary school when the Soviet Union collapsed, so they might be forgiven for their unfamiliarity with the failure of socialist economics. But Bernie Sanders was the mayor of Burlington, Vt., and Hillary Clinton the first lady of Arkansas—what’s their excuse for revanchist economics?

The economic culture of the U.S. is different than that of any country in the world. Americans have always admired each other’s economic success and striven for the chance to achieve it for themselves—by building, not taking the wealth from their neighbors’ pockets. Donald Trump is unabashedly proud of his success—no wonder he’s so popular. As a political leader, though, he needs to up his economic game quickly from “There’s going to be a bubble popping” and “Nobody can solve it like me.”

Real solutions demand real leadership, not polarizing Twitter -length rhetoric. An America-appropriate policy response to the inequality challenge needs to be focused on equalizing opportunities, not outcomes. At the very least, removing barriers to social mobility will require tax, regulatory and educational reforms to give people the qualifications and liberty to improve their lives in the new economy.

At this point in the presidential campaign, all the ideas for stimulating growth are coming from the Republican side: Marco Rubio has discussed the transformational challenges of the tech economy, and he has proposed alternatives to traditional campus-based higher education (online college and flexible vocational training); innovative student-loan programs; and corporate tax and regulatory reforms. Jeb Bush and John Kasich are also reform-minded, including promoting initiatives to ease the burden on small businesses that power job growth.

Yet millennials, who would most benefit from a real economic recovery, replacing the false one of the past several years, so far seem intent on voting against their interests. There is still hope. We’re moving past the peak of the “authenticity” phase of the campaign cycle, when voters unfamiliar with the field of candidates are initially drawn simply to candidates who seem willing to bluntly speak their minds. John Kasich’s strong performance in New Hampshire might herald the transition to a more constructive phase, when voters—including millennials—are readier to listen to a more nuanced, realistic economic message. If not, today’s young voters may not like the world they inherit, and members of the aging generation risk eventually finding themselves short of the Social Security benefits they thought they had coming.

Mr. Arbess, the founder of Xerion Investments, is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and co-founder of No Labels, promoting political bipartisanship.

Crafty_Dog

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VDH: Weimar America
« Reply #1530 on: February 25, 2016, 12:18:18 PM »

G M

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Re: VDH: Weimar America
« Reply #1531 on: February 25, 2016, 02:32:39 PM »

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Noonan: The Rise of the Unprotected
« Reply #1532 on: February 26, 2016, 09:06:14 AM »
 By Peggy Noonan
Feb. 25, 2016 8:02 p.m. ET
895 COMMENTS

We’re in a funny moment. Those who do politics for a living, some of them quite brilliant, are struggling to comprehend the central fact of the Republican primary race, while regular people have already absorbed what has happened and is happening. Journalists and politicos have been sharing schemes for how Marco parlays a victory out of winning nowhere, or Ted roars back, or Kasich has to finish second in Ohio. But in my experience any nonpolitical person on the street, when asked who will win, not only knows but gets a look as if you’re teasing him. Trump, they say.

I had such a conversation again Tuesday with a friend who repairs shoes in a shop on Lexington Avenue. Jimmy asked me, conversationally, what was going to happen. I deflected and asked who he thinks is going to win. “Troomp!” He’s a very nice man, an elderly, old-school Italian-American, but I saw impatience flick across his face: Aren’t you supposed to know these things?

In America now only normal people are capable of seeing the obvious.

But actually that’s been true for a while, and is how we got in the position we’re in.

Last October I wrote of the five stages of Trump, based on the Kübler-Ross stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. Most of the professionals I know are stuck somewhere between four and five.

But I keep thinking of how Donald Trump got to be the very likely Republican nominee. There are many answers and reasons, but my thoughts keep revolving around the idea of protection. It is a theme that has been something of a preoccupation in this space over the years, but I think I am seeing it now grow into an overall political dynamic throughout the West.

There are the protected and the unprotected. The protected make public policy. The unprotected live in it. The unprotected are starting to push back, powerfully.

The protected are the accomplished, the secure, the successful—those who have power or access to it. They are protected from much of the roughness of the world. More to the point, they are protected from the world they have created. Again, they make public policy and have for some time.

I want to call them the elite to load the rhetorical dice, but let’s stick with the protected.

They are figures in government, politics and media. They live in nice neighborhoods, safe ones. Their families function, their kids go to good schools, they’ve got some money. All of these things tend to isolate them, or provide buffers. Some of them—in Washington it is important officials in the executive branch or on the Hill; in Brussels, significant figures in the European Union—literally have their own security details.

Because they are protected they feel they can do pretty much anything, impose any reality. They’re insulated from many of the effects of their own decisions.

One issue obviously roiling the U.S. and western Europe is immigration. It is THE issue of the moment, a real and concrete one but also a symbolic one: It stands for all the distance between governments and their citizens.

It is of course the issue that made Donald Trump.

Britain will probably leave the European Union over it. In truth immigration is one front in that battle, but it is the most salient because of the European refugee crisis and the failure of the protected class to address it realistically and in a way that offers safety to the unprotected.

If you are an unprotected American—one with limited resources and negligible access to power—you have absorbed some lessons from the past 20 years’ experience of illegal immigration. You know the Democrats won’t protect you and the Republicans won’t help you. Both parties refused to control the border. The Republicans were afraid of being called illiberal, racist, of losing a demographic for a generation. The Democrats wanted to keep the issue alive to use it as a wedge against the Republicans and to establish themselves as owners of the Hispanic vote.

Many Americans suffered from illegal immigration—its impact on labor markets, financial costs, crime, the sense that the rule of law was collapsing. But the protected did fine—more workers at lower wages. No effect of illegal immigration was likely to hurt them personally.

It was good for the protected. But the unprotected watched and saw. They realized the protected were not looking out for them, and they inferred that they were not looking out for the country, either.

The unprotected came to think they owed the establishment—another word for the protected—nothing, no particular loyalty, no old allegiance.

Mr. Trump came from that.

Similarly in Europe, citizens on the ground in member nations came to see the EU apparatus as a racket—an elite that operated in splendid isolation, looking after its own while looking down on the people.

In Germany the incident that tipped public opinion against the Chancellor Angela Merkel’s liberal refugee policy happened on New Year’s Eve in the public square of Cologne. Packs of men said to be recent migrants groped and molested groups of young women. It was called a clash of cultures, and it was that, but it was also wholly predictable if any policy maker had cared to think about it. And it was not the protected who were the victims—not a daughter of EU officials or members of the Bundestag. It was middle- and working-class girls—the unprotected, who didn’t even immediately protest what had happened to them. They must have understood that in the general scheme of things they’re nobodies.

What marks this political moment, in Europe and the U.S., is the rise of the unprotected. It is the rise of people who don’t have all that much against those who’ve been given many blessings and seem to believe they have them not because they’re fortunate but because they’re better.

You see the dynamic in many spheres. In Hollywood, as we still call it, where they make our rough culture, they are careful to protect their own children from its ill effects. In places with failing schools, they choose not to help them through the school liberation movement—charter schools, choice, etc.—because they fear to go up against the most reactionary professional group in America, the teachers unions. They let the public schools flounder. But their children go to the best private schools.

This is a terrible feature of our age—that we are governed by protected people who don’t seem to care that much about their unprotected fellow citizens.

And a country really can’t continue this way.

In wise governments the top is attentive to the realities of the lives of normal people, and careful about their anxieties. That’s more or less how America used to be. There didn’t seem to be so much distance between the top and the bottom.

Now is seems the attitude of the top half is: You’re on your own. Get with the program, little racist.

Social philosophers are always saying the underclass must re-moralize. Maybe it is the overclass that must re-moralize.

I don’t know if the protected see how serious this moment is, or their role in it.

ccp

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Pacs sound like scams and cons
« Reply #1533 on: March 04, 2016, 09:59:44 AM »
OK new pac now wants to recruit Paul Ryan now for President.  A lot of people taking big salaries from these PACs..  They are opportunists for sure.  And a bunch of suckers jumping right in:

http://www.rollcall.com/news/super_pac_outside_spending_chiefs_make_big_bucks-230166-1.html

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Re: Pacs sound like scams and cons
« Reply #1534 on: March 04, 2016, 11:39:49 AM »
"new pac now wants to recruit Paul Ryan now for President." 

Paul Ryan isn't going to be the President but his policy proposals might be what becomes policy IF we could win the Senate AND the Presidency with a mandate.

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1535 on: March 04, 2016, 01:10:39 PM »
"Paul Ryan isn't going to be the President"

That is right.  So why is there a pac trying to rally him to run?

These last minute desperation moves by establishment types is not helping ( and I don't want to hear these very same people suggest there is no "establishment" - they know who and what we mean)

I can only conclude that the people behind these pacs are con artists taking money from people who have money.

None of this helps the right.


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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1536 on: March 04, 2016, 01:18:06 PM »
Gents:

Wrong thread for the last three posts.  They belong in the 2016 thread.

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more on PACS
« Reply #1538 on: March 08, 2016, 11:05:02 AM »

DougMacG

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Re: more on PACS
« Reply #1539 on: March 08, 2016, 01:43:27 PM »
Maybe they have hurt Republicans, not helped:
http://www.newsweek.com/dark-money-boomerang-republican-party-434499?rx=us

Yes the PACs have been all negative on Republicans, doing the work for Democrats.

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1540 on: March 08, 2016, 07:20:46 PM »
IIRC Newsweek was bought for exactly ONE DOLLAR by Dick Harman of Harman Electronics and husband of my Dem congressional opponent in 1992 Jane Harman.

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1541 on: March 09, 2016, 05:31:57 AM »
IIRC Newsweek was bought for exactly ONE DOLLAR by Dick Harman of Harman Electronics and husband of my Dem congressional opponent in 1992 Jane Harman.


Overpaid.

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Repurposing Europe
« Reply #1542 on: March 09, 2016, 09:13:51 AM »

DDF

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1543 on: March 16, 2016, 07:21:37 PM »
So....

Facebook blocks me today....

I admit that I'm not the most social person.

My crime? Posting that I support having a military dictatorship as my preferred form of government..... almost verbatim...

They then take the added step of asking my significant other if she "really knows me?"

Facebook police.... I have to laugh. They should come to my house uninvited in the middle of the night, break in, and check.

Why am I saying this here?

You can do whatever you want as long as it is in line with what the "progressives" agree with, and granted, Zuckerberg can run his business as he sees fit.... unlike a liberal college youth.... I actually know a little about my line of thinking....and am not a hypocrite that hasn't thought this out.

Their reaction however, did nothing to change my mind. It only reinforced what I was already thinking.

Trump is a narcissist.... no doubt about it.... but if we're just going to shut up the Klan (I detest them personally) in Fullerton, shut down Trump rallies in Chicago.... and now don't dare say you prefer something that doesn't have a murderous lawyerly hag from Chicago posted firmly at the head of it.....

Then let's just shut things up all the way....

Thank my Christian God that I didn't ask the Facebook "investigator" to make me a wedding cake.

Rant over.

« Last Edit: March 16, 2016, 07:38:59 PM by DDF »

G M

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1544 on: March 16, 2016, 07:26:22 PM »
Social media is a bad idea, especially if you are in law enforcement.

DDF

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1545 on: March 16, 2016, 07:37:30 PM »
Social media is a bad idea, especially if you are in law enforcement.

You're absolutely correct of course, and I know it.... just hard to resist sometimes.... liberals.... (with the noteable exception of those in the Tribe)..... I'll never understand them.

ccp

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1546 on: March 25, 2016, 08:44:32 AM »
It just strikes me as such a sad commentary about the distrust we have of our politicians that the timing of announcing that 2 Americans died just hours after Bamster gets back to tht US from his exotic vacation was *politically* timed, even if just a coincidence:

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/03/25/state-department-reveals-american-deaths-in-brussels-hours-before-obama-returns-to-united-states/

ccp

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Duh. Why is minimum wage so low?
« Reply #1547 on: March 28, 2016, 05:38:36 AM »
Anybody see a connection between the two newspaper articles.   I agree.  We should allow everyone in the world to move in AND we should guarantee them a minimum wage twice as high:

http://www.nj.com/opinion/index.ssf/2016/03/njs_expensive_so_why_is_the_minimum_wage_so_low_ed.html

http://www.nj.com/opinion/index.ssf/2016/03/njs_expensive_so_why_is_the_minimum_wage_so_low_ed.html

My only question as always remains unanswered.  What about the people who either came here legally or were born here?

Should we just continue to move out of the state?  Once Christie is out of office we are doomed.

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Re: Political Rants & interesting thought pieces
« Reply #1549 on: April 06, 2016, 01:56:21 PM »
Interesting exchange.  Yelling at Rick Scott because she can't get Obamacare while she is a "stay at home" mom and sitting at Starbucks with her laptop presumably drinking $5 coffee.

This is classic of what we are all up against in this country. 


http://www.miamiherald.com/news/state/florida/article70240692.html