Buttle’s World regretfully predicts that Yale will be the site of another massacre. The school is volunteering for it. Why else would they be laying the groundwork?
And here you thought college folk was smart.
Buttle’s World regretfully predicts that Yale will be the site of another massacre. The school is volunteering for it. Why else would they be laying the groundwork?
And here you thought college folk was smart.
How else can one describe “doctors” who perform partial birth abortions, especially after reading Andy McCarthy’s gut-wrenching post?
I wonder. Are there any people out there in favor of partial birth abortion and also supportive of the CIA’s terrorist interrogation techniques? I rather doubt it. It seems there’s a huge amount of cognitive dissonance among the left’s non-thinkers.
I don’t know much about Fred Thompson, but this blog post darn near wins me over in one fell swoop.
Whenever I’ve seen one of those “Gun-free Zone” signs, especially outside of a school filled with our youngest and most vulnerable citizens, I’ve always wondered exactly who these signs are directed at. Obviously, they don’t mean much to the sort of man who murdered 32 people just a few days ago.
I may not like many of GM’s cars, but I rather like their president. He told the loons at the so-called “Union of Concerned Scientists” (Just savor for a moment how “concern” and “science” can possibly fit together) to put up or shut up.
“This is a challenge I want to put out to people who think they have a solution, and are so much smarter than we are,” Lutz told the Wall Street Journal. “Let them come and see us. If the technology were readily and easily available, what on earth would our motive be for withholding it?”
Maybe they’re getting comfy with Shari’a, and their Navy may be full of wimps, but they sure as hell aren’t going to put up with littering.
No, not for President. That would be silly.
But as an Anti-BS Crusader, he gets the nod.
Over at TCS Daily they ask the musical question, Didn’t any of you guys go to Sunday School?
The part I didn’t know is that Ismail is the “preferred” spelling of Ishmael in the Muslim world. Oh – and that Mohammed did a little rewrite on the Abraham story.
I said that most of the victims in Virginia died like sheep. Steyn says it better. The real danger is passivity.
Point one: They’re not “children.” The students at Virginia Tech were grown women and — if you’ll forgive the expression — men. They would be regarded as adults by any other society in the history of our planet. Granted, we live in a selectively infantilized culture where twentysomethings are “children” if they’re serving in the Third Infantry Division in Ramadi but grown-ups making rational choices if they drop to the broadloom in President Clinton’s Oval Office. Nonetheless, it’s deeply damaging to portray fit fully formed adults as children who need to be protected. We should be raising them to understand that there will be moments in life when you need to protect yourself — and, in a “horrible” world, there may come moments when you have to choose between protecting yourself or others. It is a poor reflection on us that, in those first critical seconds where one has to make a decision, only an elderly Holocaust survivor, Professor Librescu, understood instinctively the obligation to act.
Point two: The cost of a “protected” society of eternal “children” is too high. Every December 6th, my own unmanned Dominion lowers its flags to half-mast and tries to saddle Canadian manhood in general with the blame for the “Montreal massacre,” the 14 female students of the Ecole Polytechnique murdered by Marc Lepine (born Gamil Gharbi, the son of an Algerian Muslim wife-beater, though you’d never know that from the press coverage).
Tammy Bruce exposes how the Lefties destroy dissenters.
Pay particular attention to how she used to move “news” stories when she ran NOW in LA.
Of course the (as yet unnamed) shooter is directly responsible for the tragic deaths in Virginia today. But all of the numbskulls who voted against this bill last year are accessories to the crime. I hope they all have their noses rubbed in it. Kudos to Drudge for finding that article and making the connection.
Del. Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah County, now has a sad, bloody “I told you so”.
You better think!
I’m becoming more convinced every day that the most important thing kids could learn in school is critical thinking. But it’s the one thing they’re pretty much guaranteed not to learn there. The day you can think, really think, under your own steam, is the day you free yourself from the man behind the curtain. If you can think, you’ll realize that most of what you learn in school is a house of cards, and that most of the teachers don’t know how to think.
With a boatload of evidence of the perils of diseased thinking, enter the blog with the great name, Eject! Eject! Eject!. Read part two of Seeing the Unseen. There’s a link to part one there, which is also worth a look. But at least read all of part two.
I’m looking forward to part three.
I guess she showed him. Nothing like a firm retort to put a murderous thug in his place!
but it’s worth it anyway. Hat tip: Mom.
One day a florist goes to a barber for a haircut. Afterwards, he asked about his bill and the barber replies: “I’m sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I’m doing community service this week”. The florist is pleased and leaves the shop. The next morning, there are a dozen roses waiting for the barber at his door.
Later, a cop comes in for a haircut, and when he goes to pay his bill, the barber again replies: “I’m sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I’m doing community service this week.” The cop is happy and leaves the shop. Next morning when the barber goes to open up there is a thank you card and a dozen donuts waiting for him at his door.
Later, a bartender comes in for a haircut, and when he goes to pay his bill, the barber again replies: “I’m sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I’m doing community service this week.” The bartender is happy and leaves the shop. Next morning when the barber goes to open up there is a thank you card, a 12 Pak of Bud and a bottle of Jagermeister.
Later a Republican comes in for a haircut, and when he goes to pay his bill the barber again replies: “I’m sorry, I cannot take money from you; I’m doing community service this week.” The Republican is very happy and leaves the shop. Next morning when the barber goes to open, there is a thank you card and a dozen books such as “How to Improve Your Business” and “Becoming More Successful.”
Then a Democrat comes in for a haircut, and when he goes to pay his bill the barber again replies: “I’m sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I’m doing community service this week.” The Democrat is very happy and leaves the shop. The next morning when the barber goes to open up…
…there are a dozen Democrats lined up waiting for a free haircut!
What would happen if Joshua Bell set up to play his Strad in a Washington, D.C. metro station?
I like to think that I would have stopped to listen. But I was fortunate to grow up near San Francisco in the 70’s when some street musicians were actually members of the symphony on a lark. SF had some very good street music in its day.
Nothing about government bureaucrats walking blindly, deafly by is surprising. But reading how a government “computer expert” was buying lotto tickets makes paying taxes even more painful than it is now.
It’s a sad commentary on the rampant innumeracy and lack of critical thinking skills in our nation that lotteries, astrologers, chiropractors, accupuncturists, and a laundry list of pseudo-sciences thrive – let alone exist.
We need to teach skepticism to our kids. The schools won’t do it.
And we also need to make sure that, even if they don’t know who Josuah Bell is, they recognize unusual beauty when it hits them.
You can be a pasty-faced wimp from an impotent European power who gets a vacation in Iran followed by book contracts, or you can be a Marine.
Pretty much parallels the choice presented by our culture right now.
It could save your life.
Update:
Well, it may save your life or it may not. As for what’s in the above link, it was pretty clear that the body armor is what really saved his life. The truth about the ill-fated iPod is almost as funny, though. Gives you an idea how intense a fire fight must be. Body armor or no, I can’t imagine being shot and not noticing.
I still think it was wonderful of the Apple employees who got together to get him a replacement unit, especially since it was an HP branded iPod.
I’m not the only one who thinks it’s over. So does an ex-Brit, John Derbyshire.
I have been reading the recorded remarks of some of the British sailors and marines. The more I read, the worse it looks—for Britain, I mean, now plainly in its last days as a nation.
Derb wonders what a patriotic Englishman would think of all this.
Embarrassing? You bet. Back in the early 1990s, I served in HMS Cornwall, from which the 15 captives were operating, and so understand a little bit about this. I’ve also spent time in captivity myself, in Zimbabwe, and have been interrogated by insurgents in Iraq and so have some limited insight into what is like to be held against one’s will.
Am I the only one who finds the conduct of the 15 on camera cringeworthy? Of course, you have to do what you are told when you are a prisoner. When your life is in peril, it is sensible to accede wholeheartedly to every demand.
Update:
Here’s a take from a retired US Army Colonel, Jack Jacobs.
VDH makes the case that the recent kidnapping is a sign of weakness from the mullahcracy, a brazen attempt to get somebody, anybody, to bomb them. What to make of that?
Namely that the country’s leadership is in deep political trouble. The Iranian government is desperate to provoke the West to win back friends in the Islamic world, and to quell growing unrest at home. Subsidizing food and gas, providing billions for terrorists and building nukes all cost money at a time when the state-run Iranian economy is in shambles.
Gas prices are up, oil revenues are down, and the natives are restless. Let’s hope the collapse comes before Tel Aviv glows in the dark.
A mom in a minivan got assaulted by a Critical Mass mob in San Francisco.
“It seemed like they were using their bikes as weapons,” Ferrando said. One of the bikers then threw his bike — shattering the rear window and terrifying the young girls inside.
All the while, Ferrando was screaming, “There are children in this car! There are children in this car!”
She had the presence of mind to dial 911 on her cell phone — and within minutes, the squad of motorcycle cops who were assigned to keep an eye on the ride descended on the scene.
Let’s all act surprised that the cops claim they can do nothing about this fine San Francisco traddition. Hell, even Oakland got some control over weekend cruising.
Note the mayor’s weasle-worded support for the mob. That tells the whole story.
As for reaction from City Hall, Mayor Gavin Newsom said such acts of violence — if true — “only serve to undermine the worthwhile message of Critical Mass, which is to raise the awareness of bike transportation issues.”
I like San Francisco. I really do. But the inmates are running the asylum.
Nice, if amazing, to see something like this on the MSM. Kudos to ABC for recognizing Bert Brady as their Person of the Week.
Over at Iraq The Model Omar tells of the terrifying ordeal of having American troops search his house.
Ah, you got wireless! I should bring my laptop too next time I come here, one of the soldiers joked.
on counter-insurgency grew up reading Lawrence of Arabia.
When he was just 12, his father — a philosophy professor — gave him a copy of Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom, which he has carried ever since. “It’s fairly battered now!” he laughs. “I do believe we can learn a great deal from him.”