“This is slavery, not to speak one's thought.” ― Euripides, The Phoenician Women
Monday, August 05, 2019
To Stop Mass Shootings, Read The Califano Report
The August 2000 Califano "Report of the United States Postal Service Commission on a Safe and Secure Workplace" is a good example of Washington actually working in a bipartisan manner to solve a serious problem with practical solutions.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/to-stop-mass-shootings-read-the-califano-report-joseph-califano-e-fuller-torre-1564958768
Labels:
"gun free zones",
Califano Report,
El Paso mass shooting,
going postal,
gun control,
massacre,
United States Postal Service,
workplace violence
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Rats! President Trump Exposes Baltimore's Collapse
Bernie criticized capitalism in Baltimore; Obama criticized racism. Trump criticized Baltimore's elected officials for conditions in their city. Why is that wrong?
Read the whole thing at The Latest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/rats-president-trump-exposes-baltimore-collapse-donald-trump-elijah-cummings-b-1564431157
Labels:
Baltimore,
Bernie Sanders,
CityLab,
Donald Trump,
Elijah Cummings,
Johns Hopkins University,
Obama
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Boris Johnson and the Apotheosis of New York
The family history of incoming British Prime Minister Boris Johnson illustrates Israel Zangwill's message in "The Melting Pot," his play about New York of the 1900s: "America is God's Crucible, the great Melting-Pot where all the races of Europe are melting and reforming... Germans and Frenchmen, Irishmen and Englishmen, Jews and Russians – into the Crucible with you all! God is making the American."
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/boris-johnson-apotheosis-new-york-boris-johnson-donald-trump-new-1563993377
Labels:
Boris Johnson,
Donald Trump,
England,
FDR,
New York,
Winston Churchill
Thursday, July 18, 2019
Pelosi's Choice
Speaker Nancy Pelosi's choice to side with her radical freshman against President Trump reveals that she was not forced to condemn him, because he offered an opportunity for "triangulation" which could have provided her with Republican support in Congress to marginalize the extremists.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/pelosi-choice-trump-pelosi-tweets-1563390787
Labels:
Angela Davis,
Barack Obama,
Bill Clinton,
Communist Party,
Democratic Party,
Donald Trump,
Gus Hall,
Nancy Pelosi,
radical,
Reverend Wright,
Sister Souljah
Tuesday, July 16, 2019
THE DESPICABLE FOUR VS. THE USA...
Dethroning Nancy Pelosi?
By Agustin Blazquez
© 2019 ABIP
The Democrat Party began abandoning our foundations in favor of a foreign ideology contrary to the US Constitution in the 1960s, and for that reason is in big trouble today.
As Barack Hussein Obama campaigned for 2008 elections, he obviously felt it was safe to reveal his plan for a “fundamental transformation“ of our nation. But, he didn't answer the question: What would it transform into?
Now the answer to that question is more than evident, as we watch the shameless transformation of the Democrat Party after the 2016 Presidential elections.
The radical, socialist Left is very much in charge, perhaps without the full knowledge of the American public.
“The ends justifies the means” is their norm, with no limits.
However, people who escaped from socialist and communist systems know the crimes that they perpetrate once the Left takes power.
So expect anything from these fanatic radicals that are causing havoc now. They are taking over the USA, to the detriment of the people.
Americans in 2018 elected these despicable four characters, who now are acting with more power than the Constitution contemplated giving to House freshmen.
They have overcome the Speaker of the House. What else could Nancy Pelosi do after they implied she was a racist? Side with President Trump, who defended her?
So how can other Democrats--who may still view themselves as “moderates”--face this hijacking of the party?
So far, the rest have been silent, if not going along with these four jumping jacks.
After his confrontation with these four despicable radicals, President Trump told them to go home.
They replied with much-repeated accusations of “racism” repeated to death since the Obama Administration.
I personally think that these four out-of-line characters should step down and they should be sent to Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea or Vietnam.
Not for vacations.
But to see how citizens of those countries live, in order to experience the same hardships and misery of the unfortunate residents of socialist hellholes.
This would be so they might personally experience what socialised health care really means... as well as other socialist programs that those four despicable want to impose on the American people.
I hope in doing so they might finally come to appreciate the freedoms they are currently able to enjoy in the U.S.A.
Labels:
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
Ayanna Presley,
Communism,
Cuba,
Donald Trump,
Ilhan Omar,
Nancy Pelosi,
North Korea,
Rashida Talib,
Socialism,
Venezuela,
Vietnam
Friday, July 12, 2019
US State Department Promotes Trump-Hater on Facebook
The US Embassy in Tashkent's decision to promote World Cup champion Megan Rapinoe's personal views, rather than her athletic achievement, is an offensive political attack on the Trump Administration.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/us-state-department-promotes-trump-hater-facebook-women-amp-039-s-world-cup-mega-1562952418
Labels:
Megan Rapinoe,
President Trump,
Tashkent,
US State Department,
Uzbekistan,
Womens' World Cup Championship
Tuesday, July 09, 2019
In Honor of the July 11, 2019 White House Social Media Summit...
Here's a blast from the past--an account of a 2002 conference at the National Press Club about the future of Weblogs, that I published in The Idler, my predecessor to this blog, still available thanks to The Wayback Machine at Archive.org:
(www.the-idler.com)
"Read All About It In The Idler"
15 July 2002
Inside the Blogosphere: The Weblog Phenomenon
By Laurence Jarvik
Pyra Labs' Blogger Website
It was rewarding to google 'bloggers accounts of The Idler's June 28th panel at the National Press Club: "Inside the Blogosphere: The Weblog Phenomenon."
While it was naturally disappointing that Glenn Reynolds and James Lileks cancelled due to thunderstorms, airlines, and scratched flights, it was gratifying that they wrote about their experience in their blogs, because that is the Blogosphere in action -- self-referential, self-reflexive, self-analytical, self-correcting, universal, instaneous, decentralized, emotional, rational, and available for continuous updating, response, and review. It shows the strength of the Blogosphere as a network of responses.
In the words of William Quick's January, 2002 posting on DailyPundit:
"I PROPOSE A NAME for the intellectual cyberspace we bloggers occupy: the Blogosphere. Simple enough; the root word is logos, from the Greek meaning, variously: In pre-Socratic philosophy, the principle governing the cosmos, the source of this principle, or human reasoning about the cosmos; Among the Sophists, the topics of rational argument or the arguments themselves. .."
The idea was pretty simple: Bring some prominent 'bloggers to Washington to meet the press face-to-face, in a way that would cut through a lot of the hype around blogging. After reading a New York Times story in which technically oriented 'bloggers denounced politically outspoken newcomers like Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds, (one that Reynolds had linked to) we thought it would be useful for Washington, DC based journalists to have first-hand exposure to the people behind the blogs.
So, the first invitation was to Reynolds, perhaps the best-known 'blogger since September 11th, and the internet's biggest phenomenon, at least for the chattering classes, since the emergence of Matt Drudge or Jim Romenesko. He agreed to fly to Washington for the day, and we planned the panel around him.
To complement Reynolds, we picked some blogs linked on his site: James Lileks , Mickey Kaus and James Taranto were invited.
We asked James Taranto, of "Best of the Web" on the Wall Street Journal's OpinionJournal.com for one reason: it was a link of his site that first led us to discover Instapundit.
Through a link on Instapundit, we found John Hiler's MicroContentNews.com. He had been writing at length on the history of the blogging,. He agreed to attend, and were grateful that there would be a tech person on the panel to answer any questions of a computer programming nature. (Ironically, it turned out that James Taranto of "Best of the Web," whom we had thought of as a New York intellectual, was in fact an Arizonan who had studied computer programming.)
We had hoped the panel would go beyond politics, taking the discussion to a higher level. It seemed to us that blogging was a very significant cultural phenomenon, perhaps as significant as the development of printing. By making the web easy to use as a mechanism to distribute print, by cutting the cost of production and distribution to essentially zero, blogging fundamentally would alter the relationship among writers, readers, and yes, the middlemen and women who were traditionally the printers, publishers, and editors.
Initially, blogs were for technical people, or for diaries and personal expression, but they rapidly grew into a serious phenomeon, filling in the gaps left by an established media unwilling or perhaps unable to deal with situations that did not fit into their corporate and/or ideological "deep structures."
Yet despite their independence on one level, on another, the blogs were epiphenomena. They depended on the mainstream media, at least for some of their content. After all, Glenn Reynolds and other bloggers operate at a "meta" level, where articles and essays are discussed, examined, refuted, and sometimes mocked.
So we also invited Doug Mclennan of Artsjournal.com, Dennis Loy Johnson of Mobylives.com, and Alice Goldfarb Marquis, a contributor to The Idler. They were not only involved in web publications, but were cultural critics as well, who could put the weblog in a cultural context that had been missing from a great deal of the journalistic coverage.
Although some bloggers complained that there was not enough political talk (a strange complaint, as audience members were free to raise political issues during the hour-and-a-half of spirited discussion following the presentations), we were delighted that the discussion went way beyond politics -- and that there was a lot of debate about the meaning of weblogs in a larger context, looking at a bigger picture.
For example, when we saw James Lilek's account of his airport troubles, right before the event, it seemed that if nothing else, his invitation had resulted in documentation of early 21st-Century American travel, an artifact sure to of interest to anthropologists, sociologists, historians, and perhaps even archaeologists of the not-too-distant future. Likewise, when Glenn Reynolds posted his flight cancellation notice it was disappointing, while simultaneously evidence of the utility of Blogosphere. For as a result, we had a new term: "Lileks-ed."
The 'bloggers who attend could not fail to note their disappointment at Reynolds and Lileks' non-appearances in their coverage. It was almost as if Madonna and Britney had failed to show, such was the sighing... And yet the room remained full after the announcment was made. There were 40 seats, and some were standing. For 3 hours. At the end, several wanted to stay, though we had to leave the room.
Of the some 40 people in the John Peter Zenger Room of the National Press Club, at least a dozen had signed in as 'bloggers. How many bloggers were there who had not signed in, one does not know.
And in their own accounts, responses read as far away as Brazil, there was a lot to think about. On Journalismo Digital, Elisabete Barbosa wrote that she had seen panelist John Hiler's story in Microcontent News. Arnold Kling's essay at TechCentralStation was cited on Romenesko's MediaNews. (Kling had another article about the event on Corante's website, John Hiler's publisher.) And in best Blogosphere fashion, 'bloggers linked to one another on blogs such as Tleeves, Combustible Boy (with photos), Tres Producers, WOIFM, i330, Geistbear, and Rosenblog.
Interestingly, what we considered a sympathetic discussion of 'blogging from Alice Marquis clearly upset the 'bloggers the most, as one can see from their published accounts. Perhaps it was her attack on "boosterism."
Yet, contra some of the offended bloggers, she made excellent analytical points, not simply bon mots about "link-stained wretches" and "bloggorhea."
Marquis most telling comparison was to the revolution wrought by Marcel Duchamp, who turned the art-world on its head through his display of "readymades." Just as photography forever changed painting, so did Duchamp's challenge to the artistic powers-that-be. Although discussion of Duchamp's urinal appeared to be taken as an insult by some in the audience, Marquis' comparison was actually a compliment to the medium.
Weblogs are to newspapers, radio, and television stations as the salon de refuses was to the French Academy; or Duchamp to the previous generation of painters in New York, before the Armory show. The blogs are part of a revolutionary moment in American culture. Democratic, heartfelt, and fun.
Likewise, while some 'bloggers carp that Doug McLennan and Dennis Loy Johnson are not true 'bloggers (yet if their sites are not 'blogs in at least one dimension -- logs on the web, with commentary -- what are they?), the speakers had a keen understanding of what 'blogs are and what they have the potential to become.
McLennan pointed out that Weblogs have what establishment media no longer have, the passion, point-of-view, and personal sensibility that generate true engagement with the public. "Who wants to read passionless stories?" he asked, noting that the best bloggers could be seen in the same light as great columnists. He suggested that 'blogging rips away the "veil of objectivity" surrounding much establishment media, that weblogs reveal there are more than two sides to any story, that there are multiple sides, and multiple perspectives, making the world a much more interesting place, where the blogger makes personal sense of information. He also pointed out that a lot of stuff on the web was B.S.
And while Johnson disagreed about the objectivity issue, saying he tries to be objective in his work, he came up with perhaps the best line of the day, when during the question and answer session he recalled the advice of an ex-hippie: "Don't burn out, man. Pace yourself." That is the issue facing all 'bloggers, how to keep going, day in and day out, with a flood of thoughts, feelings, inspirations, and expression. Johnson's advice: take a break.
John Hiler's commentary on the "dark side of blogging" was insightful as well. The dangers of "pouring gasoline on the ego" that comes from instantaneous publication to a worldwide audience, the need to consider blogging a form of addiction, were thought-provoking.
And of course, last but certainly not least, James Taranto made an important point just by his presence. He gets paid for doing a weblog! By a big company! And it gets readers for the company! Not only that he helps other weblogs -- like Instapundit -- when he directs his thousands of regular readers to their sites. His computer programmer to paid 'blogger story was inspirational, to say the least. Not to mention his contribution to the debate over the future of newspapers. Taranto noted that TV didn't kill of radio, and radio didn't kill off newspapers. So, weblogs won't kill off newspapers either (you can't read a weblog on the toilet, he noted with dry wit). But in comparing weblogs to radio and television, Taranto seizes on precisely the point made by Marquis (also perceived as a critic by the 'bloggers in the crowd): This is a new medium, with new potential. For blogs are a new form of moveable type, and the internet the most dramatic development since Gutenberg.
Moveable type, in the words of former New Yorker critic Mimi Kramer, "...only much more moveable."
(www.the-idler.com)
"Read All About It In The Idler"
15 July 2002
Inside the Blogosphere: The Weblog Phenomenon
By Laurence Jarvik
Pyra Labs' Blogger Website
It was rewarding to google 'bloggers accounts of The Idler's June 28th panel at the National Press Club: "Inside the Blogosphere: The Weblog Phenomenon."
While it was naturally disappointing that Glenn Reynolds and James Lileks cancelled due to thunderstorms, airlines, and scratched flights, it was gratifying that they wrote about their experience in their blogs, because that is the Blogosphere in action -- self-referential, self-reflexive, self-analytical, self-correcting, universal, instaneous, decentralized, emotional, rational, and available for continuous updating, response, and review. It shows the strength of the Blogosphere as a network of responses.
In the words of William Quick's January, 2002 posting on DailyPundit:
"I PROPOSE A NAME for the intellectual cyberspace we bloggers occupy: the Blogosphere. Simple enough; the root word is logos, from the Greek meaning, variously: In pre-Socratic philosophy, the principle governing the cosmos, the source of this principle, or human reasoning about the cosmos; Among the Sophists, the topics of rational argument or the arguments themselves. .."
The idea was pretty simple: Bring some prominent 'bloggers to Washington to meet the press face-to-face, in a way that would cut through a lot of the hype around blogging. After reading a New York Times story in which technically oriented 'bloggers denounced politically outspoken newcomers like Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds, (one that Reynolds had linked to) we thought it would be useful for Washington, DC based journalists to have first-hand exposure to the people behind the blogs.
So, the first invitation was to Reynolds, perhaps the best-known 'blogger since September 11th, and the internet's biggest phenomenon, at least for the chattering classes, since the emergence of Matt Drudge or Jim Romenesko. He agreed to fly to Washington for the day, and we planned the panel around him.
To complement Reynolds, we picked some blogs linked on his site: James Lileks , Mickey Kaus and James Taranto were invited.
We asked James Taranto, of "Best of the Web" on the Wall Street Journal's OpinionJournal.com for one reason: it was a link of his site that first led us to discover Instapundit.
Through a link on Instapundit, we found John Hiler's MicroContentNews.com. He had been writing at length on the history of the blogging,. He agreed to attend, and were grateful that there would be a tech person on the panel to answer any questions of a computer programming nature. (Ironically, it turned out that James Taranto of "Best of the Web," whom we had thought of as a New York intellectual, was in fact an Arizonan who had studied computer programming.)
We had hoped the panel would go beyond politics, taking the discussion to a higher level. It seemed to us that blogging was a very significant cultural phenomenon, perhaps as significant as the development of printing. By making the web easy to use as a mechanism to distribute print, by cutting the cost of production and distribution to essentially zero, blogging fundamentally would alter the relationship among writers, readers, and yes, the middlemen and women who were traditionally the printers, publishers, and editors.
Initially, blogs were for technical people, or for diaries and personal expression, but they rapidly grew into a serious phenomeon, filling in the gaps left by an established media unwilling or perhaps unable to deal with situations that did not fit into their corporate and/or ideological "deep structures."
Yet despite their independence on one level, on another, the blogs were epiphenomena. They depended on the mainstream media, at least for some of their content. After all, Glenn Reynolds and other bloggers operate at a "meta" level, where articles and essays are discussed, examined, refuted, and sometimes mocked.
So we also invited Doug Mclennan of Artsjournal.com, Dennis Loy Johnson of Mobylives.com, and Alice Goldfarb Marquis, a contributor to The Idler. They were not only involved in web publications, but were cultural critics as well, who could put the weblog in a cultural context that had been missing from a great deal of the journalistic coverage.
Although some bloggers complained that there was not enough political talk (a strange complaint, as audience members were free to raise political issues during the hour-and-a-half of spirited discussion following the presentations), we were delighted that the discussion went way beyond politics -- and that there was a lot of debate about the meaning of weblogs in a larger context, looking at a bigger picture.
For example, when we saw James Lilek's account of his airport troubles, right before the event, it seemed that if nothing else, his invitation had resulted in documentation of early 21st-Century American travel, an artifact sure to of interest to anthropologists, sociologists, historians, and perhaps even archaeologists of the not-too-distant future. Likewise, when Glenn Reynolds posted his flight cancellation notice it was disappointing, while simultaneously evidence of the utility of Blogosphere. For as a result, we had a new term: "Lileks-ed."
The 'bloggers who attend could not fail to note their disappointment at Reynolds and Lileks' non-appearances in their coverage. It was almost as if Madonna and Britney had failed to show, such was the sighing... And yet the room remained full after the announcment was made. There were 40 seats, and some were standing. For 3 hours. At the end, several wanted to stay, though we had to leave the room.
Of the some 40 people in the John Peter Zenger Room of the National Press Club, at least a dozen had signed in as 'bloggers. How many bloggers were there who had not signed in, one does not know.
And in their own accounts, responses read as far away as Brazil, there was a lot to think about. On Journalismo Digital, Elisabete Barbosa wrote that she had seen panelist John Hiler's story in Microcontent News. Arnold Kling's essay at TechCentralStation was cited on Romenesko's MediaNews. (Kling had another article about the event on Corante's website, John Hiler's publisher.) And in best Blogosphere fashion, 'bloggers linked to one another on blogs such as Tleeves, Combustible Boy (with photos), Tres Producers, WOIFM, i330, Geistbear, and Rosenblog.
Interestingly, what we considered a sympathetic discussion of 'blogging from Alice Marquis clearly upset the 'bloggers the most, as one can see from their published accounts. Perhaps it was her attack on "boosterism."
Yet, contra some of the offended bloggers, she made excellent analytical points, not simply bon mots about "link-stained wretches" and "bloggorhea."
Marquis most telling comparison was to the revolution wrought by Marcel Duchamp, who turned the art-world on its head through his display of "readymades." Just as photography forever changed painting, so did Duchamp's challenge to the artistic powers-that-be. Although discussion of Duchamp's urinal appeared to be taken as an insult by some in the audience, Marquis' comparison was actually a compliment to the medium.
Weblogs are to newspapers, radio, and television stations as the salon de refuses was to the French Academy; or Duchamp to the previous generation of painters in New York, before the Armory show. The blogs are part of a revolutionary moment in American culture. Democratic, heartfelt, and fun.
Likewise, while some 'bloggers carp that Doug McLennan and Dennis Loy Johnson are not true 'bloggers (yet if their sites are not 'blogs in at least one dimension -- logs on the web, with commentary -- what are they?), the speakers had a keen understanding of what 'blogs are and what they have the potential to become.
McLennan pointed out that Weblogs have what establishment media no longer have, the passion, point-of-view, and personal sensibility that generate true engagement with the public. "Who wants to read passionless stories?" he asked, noting that the best bloggers could be seen in the same light as great columnists. He suggested that 'blogging rips away the "veil of objectivity" surrounding much establishment media, that weblogs reveal there are more than two sides to any story, that there are multiple sides, and multiple perspectives, making the world a much more interesting place, where the blogger makes personal sense of information. He also pointed out that a lot of stuff on the web was B.S.
And while Johnson disagreed about the objectivity issue, saying he tries to be objective in his work, he came up with perhaps the best line of the day, when during the question and answer session he recalled the advice of an ex-hippie: "Don't burn out, man. Pace yourself." That is the issue facing all 'bloggers, how to keep going, day in and day out, with a flood of thoughts, feelings, inspirations, and expression. Johnson's advice: take a break.
John Hiler's commentary on the "dark side of blogging" was insightful as well. The dangers of "pouring gasoline on the ego" that comes from instantaneous publication to a worldwide audience, the need to consider blogging a form of addiction, were thought-provoking.
And of course, last but certainly not least, James Taranto made an important point just by his presence. He gets paid for doing a weblog! By a big company! And it gets readers for the company! Not only that he helps other weblogs -- like Instapundit -- when he directs his thousands of regular readers to their sites. His computer programmer to paid 'blogger story was inspirational, to say the least. Not to mention his contribution to the debate over the future of newspapers. Taranto noted that TV didn't kill of radio, and radio didn't kill off newspapers. So, weblogs won't kill off newspapers either (you can't read a weblog on the toilet, he noted with dry wit). But in comparing weblogs to radio and television, Taranto seizes on precisely the point made by Marquis (also perceived as a critic by the 'bloggers in the crowd): This is a new medium, with new potential. For blogs are a new form of moveable type, and the internet the most dramatic development since Gutenberg.
Moveable type, in the words of former New Yorker critic Mimi Kramer, "...only much more moveable."
Labels:
Artsjournal.com,
Dennis Loy Johnson,
Doug McLennan,
Glenn Reynolds,
James Lileks,
James Taranto,
John Hiler,
Mickey Kaus,
White House Social Media Summit
Sunday, July 07, 2019
President Trump's July 4th Victory Through Air Power
White House Photo by Andrea Hanks |
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/president-trump-july-4th-victory-through-air-power-donald-trump-us-military-indep-1562499581
Labels:
Air Force,
Army,
Battle Hymn of the Republic,
Blue Angels,
Coast Guard,
Dunford,
Independence Day,
Jefferson,
Joint Chiefs,
July 4th,
Lincoln,
MacArthur,
Marines,
Navy,
Trump,
Washington
Monday, July 01, 2019
When is a Journalist Not a "Journalist?" When Antifa Attacks.
Journalistic reactions-- or lack thereof-- to Antifa's brutal attack on Andy Ngo in Portland have cast a stain on the reputation of the New York Times.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/q-when-journalist-not-journalist-a-when-antifa-attacks-antifa-journalism-new-york-tim-1561995420
Labels:
Antifa,
Hitchens,
Journalism,
Khashoggi,
New York Times,
Ochs,
The Nation
Monday, June 24, 2019
Hiroshima & Nagasaki's Lesson for the G-20 Summit
The lesson to the G-20 in Osaka could not be clearer. Nuclear weapons are good for more than deterrence. They can win wars, end aggression, and remake once-belligerent societies into peaceful, prosperous, and cooperative members of the family of nations.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/hiroshima-nagasaki-lesson-g-20-summit-hiroshima-nagasaki-iran-1561386685
Labels:
Afghanistan,
Atomic bomb,
G-20,
Hiroshima,
Iran,
Iraq,
Muslim Brotherhood,
Nagasaki,
Osaka,
peace,
Putin,
reconstruction,
Trump,
Xi
Saturday, June 22, 2019
President Trump's Iran Bombing Cancellation Was Reaganesque
President Trump has set the stage for restoration of the Weinberger Doctrine, after both Bush and Obama administrations applied crackpot theories to their use of military force, such as "winning hearts and minds" or "leading from behind."
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/president-trump-iran-bombing-cancellation-was-reaganesque-reagan-weinberger-doctrine-bei-1561149907
Labels:
Beirut,
bombing,
Iran,
Marine Barracks,
Reagan,
Trump,
Weinberger Doctrine
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Glenn Harlan Reynolds v Social Media
In his new Insta-Book SOCIAL MEDIA UPHEAVAL, University of Tennessee law professor, internet entrepreneur, webmaster, blogger, author, and pundit Glenn Harlan Reynolds has come forward to suggest a needed path to escape our current imprisonment in the Social Media Matrix.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/glenn-harlan-reynolds-social-media-matrix-facebook-twitter-1560884295
Labels:
Antitrust,
Dorsey,
Facebook,
Glenn Reynolds,
Google,
Instapundit,
Pichai,
Sandberg,
Social Media,
The Matrix,
Twitter,
YouTube,
Zuckerberg
Monday, June 17, 2019
A Visit to Tokyo's Sempo Museum
If you ever happen to find yourself in downtown Tokyo, try to drop by the Sempo Museum for a few moments to pay tribute to the modest and courageous Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese diplomat who saved the lives of thousands of Jewish refugees fleeing Hitler during the second World War.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/a-visit-tokyo-sempo-museum-holocaust-refugees-japan-1560796650
David Horowitz's Reflections on Mortality and Faith
The book "Mortality and Faith" isn't really about politics; rather it is an almost Proustian stream-of-consciousness meditation on age and the meaning of life...
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/david-horowitz-reflections-mortality-faith-david-horowitz-shakespeare-pro-1560717810
Labels:
Black Panthers,
Communism,
David Horowitz,
Existentialism,
Faith,
Morality,
Proust,
Saul Bellow,
Shakespeare
Saturday, June 15, 2019
Peter Miller: An American Printmaker in Japan
On a recent trip to Japan, I met Peter Miller, a master printmaker living and working in Kamakura, Japan, who shares his enchantment with people through black-and-white prints which blend Japanese aesthetics with American sensibility.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/peter-miller-an-american-printmaker-japan-japan-ansel-adams-hokusai-1560531104
Labels:
Ansel Adams,
Berkeley,
Columbia,
Daniel Bell,
Hokusai,
Japan,
Japanese Prints,
Nathan Glazer,
Photogravure,
Printmaking,
Sociology,
Stanford
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Teresa May's Resignation: Good Riddance to Old Rubbish!
If you want to know what America might have looked like had Hillary Clinton won the 2016 election, it probably would have looked a lot like Teresa May's Britain...
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/teresa-may-resignation-good-riddance-old-rubbish-teresa-may-donald-trump-christ-1558715336
Labels:
Ariana Grande,
Brexit,
Donald Trump,
Grenfell Tower,
Manchester Arena,
Michael Savage,
Pamela Geller,
Robert Spencer,
Teresa May,
Terrorism,
Westminster
Saturday, May 18, 2019
Bill Donohue's "Common Sense Catholicism" Challenges Politically Correct Dogma
In under 300 lively pages, Catholic League President Bill Donahue protests today's PC Establishment with the same vigor Luther's ninety-five theses did the Catholic hierarchy of his day. These theses take the form of six chapters, an introduction, and a conclusion--all devoted to direct confrontation with the corrosive ideology of Political Correctness that dominates American society.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/bill-donohue-common-sense-catholicism-challenges-politically-correct-dogma-political-correctness-feminism-1558115628
Labels:
AIDS,
Bill Donahue,
Catholic Church,
Catholic League,
Common Sense,
Feminism,
Homosexuality,
Moral Virtue,
Political Correctness,
Sexual Revolution,
Slavery
Sunday, May 12, 2019
Moscow Meeting May Break Venezuelan, North Korean & Ukrainian Stalemates
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (l) greeting Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (r) in Finland in July. |
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/moscow-meeting-may-break-venezuelan-north-korean-ukrainian-stalemates-putin-trump-venezuela-1557606660
Labels:
Donald Trump,
Islamic Fundamentalism,
Mike Pompeo,
North Korea,
Russia,
Sergei Lavrov,
Terrorism,
Ukraine,
Venezuela,
Vladimir Putin
Thursday, May 02, 2019
Investigate Links Between Neo-Nazis & Islamic Terrorists Following Poway Chabad Shooting
The horrific attempted massacre at Chabad of Poway on the last day of Passover, April 27th, raises questions about possible links between Neo-Nazi and Islamic Fundamentalist terrorism that must be investigated by the Trump Administration.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/investigate-links-between-neo-nazis-islamic-fundamentalists-after-poway-chabad-shooting-terrorism-anti-semitism-neo-na-1556805911
Saturday, April 27, 2019
Blood of American Sri Lanka Easter Bombing Victims Cries Out for Vengeance
Dieter Kowalski |
Kieran Shafritz de Zoysa |
Amelie & Daniel Linsey |
ISIS's Easter terrorist atrocity in Sri Lanka reveals the failure of America's "Global War on Terrorism," declared after 9/11/2001. Instead of toothless State Department "condemnations," the US government must order swift and terrible punitive expeditions -- like President Reagan's 1986 Libyan bombing campaign or President Clinton's attack on Yugoslavia.
Read the whole thing at TheLatest.com: https://thelatest.com/tlt/blood-american-sri-lanka-easter-bombing-victims-cries-out-vengeance-islamic-terrorism-sri-lanka-is-1556306849
Labels:
9/11,
ISIS,
Mike Pompeo,
Sri Lanka,
Terrorism,
Travel Warnings,
Trump Administration,
US State Department
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