photo by Pat J Dooley Photography
Sunday, May 28, 2017
Friday, May 26, 2017
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
The Manchester jihad attack
Victim in Manchester: eight-year-old Saffie Roussos
photo from Religion of Peace website
Being a Tea Party person, I subscribe
to the three core values:
Fiscal responsibility
Limited
government
Free markets
Those values are under attack by
ISIS and jihadists who have declared war on all infidels, such as us. The
Manchester suicide bombing is only the latest in the continuing jihad against
Western Civilization.
And to hear the official government
responses, the UK (and Germany and France and Sweden and . . . ) are still
playing defense. That guarantees one result: more terror attacks. As usual, Mark
Steyn nails it in his “Dangerous Woman Meets Danger Man” column:
Angela Merkel pronounced the attack
"incomprehensible". But she can't be that uncomprehending, can she?
Our declared enemies are perfectly straightforward in their stated goals, and
their actions are consistent with their words. They select their targets with
some care. . . .
the arithmetic is not difficult: Poland and Hungary and
Slovakia do not have Islamic terrorism because they have very little Islam.
France and Germany and Belgium admit more and more Islam, and thus more and
more terrorism.
. . .
Few of us have gotten
things as disastrously wrong as May and Merkel and Hollande and an entire
generation of European political leaders who insist that remorseless
incremental Islamization is both unstoppable and manageable. It is neither -
and, for the sake of the dead of last night's carnage and for those of the next
one, it is necessary to face that honestly.
Theresa May's statement in
Downing Street is said by my old friends at The
Spectator to be "defiant", but what
she is defying is not terrorism but reality. So too for all the exhausted
accessories of defiance chic: candles, teddy bears, hashtags, the pitiful
passive rote gestures that acknowledge atrocity without addressing it - like
the Eloi in H G Wells' Time
Machine, too evolved to resist the Morlocks.
. . .
If Mrs May or Frau Merkel
has a happier ending, I'd be interested to hear it. If not, it is necessary not
to carry on, but to change, and soon - before it's too late.
The rest of his column is here.
# # #
Labels:
Angela Merkel,
Germany,
ISIS,
jihad,
Manchester,
Mark Steyn,
Tea Party,
Theresa May
Sunday, May 21, 2017
Trump Derangement Syndrome behavior
cartoon credit here
So many of my friends and relatives
seem to live rational lives, yet when it comes to politics, their emotions take
over. That makes it next to impossible to apply critical thinking to a discussion
of issues of concern. But it’s not a new phenomenon.
Paul Murphy just published a column at
the American Thinker website, provocatively titled “Democrats in the Cesspits of Despair.” He goes into the theory of cognitive dissonance and applies it to
what we’ve seen with Bush or Palin Derangement Syndrome, and now, Trump
Derangement Syndrome.
Murphy’s analysis won’t make hard left
liberals (and that’s most of the media) more honest or less destructive, but at
least it explains the behaviour. (Another article on the related topic of “The
Obama Cult” is here).
Anyway, here are a few take-aways from
Murphy’s column (and the entire article is here):
When Leon Festinger and his associates undertook the work leading
to their widely misunderstood and maligned theory of cognitive dissonance,
their ultimate goal was to understand how forty million decent Germans and tens
of millions in the rest of Europe could so enthusiastically support Nazi
methods -- and it's their research on how cult members react to the unequivocal
disproof of some central belief that's important today -- because the increasing
calls among Democrats for violence shows
that same process at work here as in Germany of the 1930s.
In brief, what happens when events disprove a cult's major belief
is that some adherents drop out; a majority first reshape their vision of
reality to accommodate both their belief and an edited version of reality and
then either gradually fade out of the cult or double down on their efforts to
find confirmatory opinion by compromising others; and, a few set out to force
others to act as if the belief stands unchallenged.
. . .
The key elements that have to be in place for the true believers
to slide toward dishonesty and violence are personal commitment to the belief,
undeniable disproof, and enough rationality for the person to know that the
belief has been disproven.
That two of these are in place with the Trump victory deniers is
obvious: most of the journalists and others now attacking Trump in particular
and Republicans in general have overwhelming and long term commitments to the
progressive cause. This despite the fact that every major attempt to act on
those beliefs, whether by Uncle Joe, Chairman Mao, the Kim Dynasty in North
Korea, or that great
hero and champion of the poor, Hugo
Chavez, has turned into a murderous regime corrupting everyone and everything it
touched.
. . .
Thus the behavioral explanation for the fact that conservatives
will generally accept electoral defeat gracefully whereas Democrats eagerly
embrace hypocrisy, corruption, dishonesty and even violence to continue the
fight by any means necessary is simply this: reality supports conservative
belief, but pushes leftists down the slippery slope to the insanity of Trump
derangement syndrome. Reality forces them to continually choose between
recognizing the emptiness and historical absurdity of their core beliefs or
holding themselves hostage to those beliefs by escalating their commitment, no
matter what foul means may be required to make reality conform to their
fantasy.
# # #
Saturday, May 20, 2017
Anti-Trump Media Bias chart
ZeroHedge has a report (via Heat Street) on the Harvard University study of media bias with
respect to the Trump administration. Here’s
one of the three charts from the report:
Click here for the chart comparing the media's current tone to that of the three previous administrations. The report concludes:
Trump
has repeatedly claimed that his treatment by the media is unprecedented in its
hostility.
This
study suggests that, at least when it comes to recent history, he’s right.
# # #
Labels:
anti-Trump,
CNN,
Harvard,
Heat Street,
media bias,
ZeroHedge
Thursday, May 18, 2017
Trump Derangement Syndrome
art credit: Buzzie
James Delingpole
reports on his and Melanie Phillips’ debate with two journalists
who suffer from Anti-Trump Derangement Syndrome. His headline reads
# # #
Wednesday, May 17, 2017
Who's crazy?
Glenn McCoy’s cartoon at Townhall succinctly illustrates the past two (lengthy) blog posts here and here.
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