Monthly Archives: November 2013

The War on Human Nature by Victor Davis Hanson

For nations as for individuals, pretending self-interest doesn’t exist is perilous.

If Americans receive essentially zero interest on their passbook accounts, are they more or less likely to save? If they do save, are they more or less likely to rush into the stock market seeking any return over 1 percent? And will that desperation make stock offerings more or less accountable? Are zero-interest-earning savers in their 60s more or less likely to stay on their jobs? If the former, will that more or less retard employment of younger others?

On matters of borrowing, do serial discussions about forgiving credit-card debt, student-loan debt, and mortgage debt encourage more Americans to borrow what they cannot pay back? Does the idea of forgiving debt persuade struggling American consumers that they must continue to meet their debt obligations and make timely interest and principal payments? Do people assume that they must be meticulous in making their payments so as to ensure that others need not be?

Does a president’s expression of racial solidarity with a figure of similar race involved in an ongoing civil or criminal court case lessen racial tensions? Does such editorializing serve to remind Americans that the law and politics are two separate spheres, or that the accused is assumed innocent until proven guilty?

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Complete text linked here.


An interview with British Member of European Parliament Daniel Hannan

Bullish on the Anglosphere despite impending defaults and revolt-worthy tax levels.

In a wide-ranging interview with Blaze Books in connection with his newest title, Inventing Freedom: How the English-Speaking Peoples Made the Modern World, outspoken British MEP Daniel Hannan provided his insights on American exceptionalism, Western governmental defaults, why he is bullish on the West in spite of such defaults, and a whole host of other topics. Below is our interview, conducted via email. The interview has been slightly edited for clarity.

What would you say to critics who argue that there are strong bedrock principles that have come from cultures outside the Anglosphere (or to paraphrase the President, that he believes “in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism”)?

Hannan: The President was right about one thing. Most Brits do indeed believe in British exceptionalism. But here’s the thing: we define it in almost exactly the same way that Americans do theirs. We believe it resides in certain values and institutions, such as the rule of law, free contract, secure property, jury trials, personal liberty, regular elections, habeas corpus, and uncensored newspapers. In Greece, as in pretty much the rest of the world, people expect – indeed demand – far more intervention from the state. That’s why they’re in the mess they’re in. Come to think of it, maybe it wasn’t a coincidence that the President, back in 2009, cited Greece in that answer: with a $17 trillion national debt, he seems pretty keen on taking America in that direction.

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Complete text linked here.


Duke Rape Accuser Got 160 TV News Stories on Accusation, 3 on Murder Conviction

Last Friday, Nov. 22, Crystal Mangum, the false Duke-rape accuser, was convicted by a jury of second-degree murder – she had stabbed her boyfriend – and sentenced to 14 years in prison.

When Crystal Mangum falsely accused several Duke lacrosse players of rape in 2006, there were 160 major television news stories in the first five days after the players were arrested, but in 2013, when Mangum was convicted of murder and sentenced to 14 years in prison, there were only 3 major television news stories, a difference in coverage of 5,233%.

When the Duke lacrosse-rape story broke in March/April 2006, it was huge news, garnering massive, widespread coverage by the networks ABC, CBS, and NBC, as well as by FOX, CNN and MSNBC, and the print press, such as USA Today, New York Times and Washington Post.

Basically, the story was that members of the Duke lacrosse team had a party on March 13, 2006 at an off-campus house where two strippers had been hired to perform – one of them was Crystal Mangum, then 27 years old. At some point there were some verbal exchanges between Mangum and some persons at the party. Mangum left with the other stripper and later that evening/early morning Mangum told police she had been raped.

The story was explosive and politically correct: privileged white lacrosse players at a prestigious college rape underprivileged young black woman. As events developed, three lacrosse players were eventually arrested and charged; the Duke lacrosse coach, Mike Pressler, received threatening phone calls and was forced by Duke to resign; the president of Duke University, Richard Brodhead, suspended the entire lacrosse team for the season; liberal Duke faculty members, the “Group of 88,” signed an advertisement in the Duke Chronicle that reportedly suggested the rape claims were true; the initial prosecutor, Mike Nifong, was disbarred for his misconduct and convicted of criminal contempt; all charges against the 3 players – Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans – were dropped.

Although the rape claims by Mangum were totally false, she was not charged with a crime.

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Reclaim America Now protest outside the White House, Nov. 19, 2013 (Video)

Featuring George Washington, Joseph Farah, Richard Mack, Pat Boone, Alan Keyes and more.


Rod Liddle: The truths you can’t tell in today’s Britain

Politicians used to have to apologise when they lied. Now it’s the opposite

My memory gets addled sometimes, so maybe I’m wrong about this. But didn’t it used to be the case that when politicians were caught out lying, they made some sort of shame-faced apology to the nation and begged for our forgiveness? I’m sure that was it, you know. So if I’m right, to judge by the case of our Attorney General, Dominic Grieve, things have turned precisely 180 degrees. Mr Grieve has just offered a full and unqualified apology for having told the truth. I thought that politicians were meant to do that — tell the truth?

And what an apology. In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Mr Grieve said the following: ‘We have minority communities in this country which come from backgrounds where corruption is endemic. It is something as politicians we have to wake up to.’ Asked by the interviewer if he meant the Pakistani community in particular, Mr Grieve said that he did. Although he added that the whole blame should not be laid at the door of any single community. Cue, then, a fugue of idiocy which eventually led to the absurd apology.

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Complete text linked here.


Cher refuses to celebrate Thanksgiving, calls it ‘beginning of a great crime’

I got you babe…

There is evidence that British military officials considered infecting Native Americans with smallpox-infected blankets during the French and Indian War, though it is unclear if they actually carried out the cruel plan. Still, when even a Daily Kos diarist is getting tired of the “Thanksgiving genocide narrative,” it’s probably time to give it a rest.

Original source.


Welcome to the Wacky World of “Hate Crimes”

Did you know that the people of Lexington, Kentucky are 26 times more likely than the people of Chicago to commit hate crimes? And that neither Miami nor Atlanta had a single hate crime in 2012.

Welcome to the wacky world of Hate Crime Statistics, 2012, brought to you by the Department of Justice. This is Eric Holder’s never-never land, where Hispanics are victims of hundreds of hate crimes every year, but never commit a single one themselves, and where even gambling, prostitution, auto theft, and weapons violations can be counted as “hate crimes.”

Hard to believe? Your government issues this claptrap report every year, to a fanfare of press-releases and much pious reflection on whether we are winning or losing the war on “hate.” Not even the feds usually publish stuff this absurd.

You can read the full analysis here.

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Custer Battlefield – 50th Anniversary

Original footage: Buffalo Bill, Custer’s and Native American veterans at Custer battlefield, 50th anniversary of Little Bighorn, 1926.


Complete Classic Movie: Miracle on 34th Street (1947)

Stars: Maureen O’Hara, John Payne, Edmund Gwenn, Gene Lockhart, Natalie Wood, Porter Hall, William Frawley, Jerome Cowan, Philip Tonge. When a nice old man who claims to be Santa Claus is institutionalized as insane, a young lawyer decides to defend him by arguing in court that he is the real thing.

Click here to watch Miracle on 34th Street.

Buchanan: Obama “Was Going To Be For Progressives What Reagan Was For Conservatives” (Video)

You know, Barack Obama promised he was going to be a transformational president. He was going to be for progressives what Ronald Reagan was for conservatives. And we now see that his basic program, his legacy program, his great achievement is becoming increasingly a great disaster and a great failure. So I think it is not only again the president that’s got a problem, it is the philosophy of the Democratic party and I don’t know whenever again a president will attempt this kind of great leap forward with government.

DANA PERINO, HOST: What are the consequences at all that the Obama administration pays for botching the rollout of the president’s signature program?

PAT BUCHANAN: By now, Dana, it’s been two months and as Churchill once said, the rubble is beginning to bounce. One after another, after another of these stories is adding to the public’s dissatisfaction with what Obamacare is producing, their distrust of government. And I don’t think this is going to stop, because even if you have the Obamacare website up there at 100%, you mean the other people losing their health care and hospitals and doctors, all the rest, that is going through to the new year.

Original source.