Climategate and the ‘Green’ Pimps

December 4, 2009 at 2:06 am | Posted in Cultural, Education, Social politics | 1 Comment
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The eco-bubble has popped. Political pop-science has been uncovered for the fraud that it is through the discovery of the CRU’s email exchanges at the University of East Anglia. (Read them for yourself here.) Amidst this disturbing find is a deafening walk down the hall of media silence where the only sound heard is the faint repetitious rhythm of the endless ‘Bush-lied’ drum.

“It’s now been 13 days since the story hit the news and despite network censors, the Climate-gate scandal is turning up the heat on global warming advocates. What started as a drizzle of stories in The New York Times and Washington Post is growing into an Internet flood that is sweeping along traditional news outlets from CNN to NPR. But  morning and evening news shows on ABC, CBS and NBC have remained absolutely silent. Both ABC and CBS’s Web sites have covered the issue — standard practice when networks want to bury a story but pretend otherwise. The only mention of the scandal actually on those networks was on ABC’s Sunday morning talk show: “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.” That’s all.” -Dan Gainor, Climate-Gate Heats Up But Mainstream Media Ignore Firestorm, FOXNews.com

The green media’s little pet topic has a massive tumor and they are virtually ignoring it.  The hard sciences have been raped by post-modern hippies and those desperate to get a good grant feeding frenzy.

“For years, global warming and its advocates have been the public face of hard science. Most people could not name three other subjects they would associate with the work of serious scientists. This was it. The public was told repeatedly that something called “the scientific community” had affirmed the science beneath this inquiry.” -Daniel Henninger, Climategate: Science is Dying, The Wallstreet Journal, p.A21

The public has been purposely misled so that agendas can be legitimized and funds horded.  Al Gore and President Obama should both have their Nobel Prizes revoked and be made to hold a joint press conference in Alaska with former governor Palin presiding over the event asking them questions while Michael Moore films it. What an inconvenient moment that would be.

The editor of the National Post wrote in a recent article, “In my previous post on Climategate I blithely said that nothing in the climate science email dump surprised me much. Having waded more deeply over the weekend I take that back.  The closed-mindedness of these supposed men of science, their willingness to go to any lengths to defend a preconceived message, is surprising even to me. The stink of intellectual corruption is overpowering.”

A fantastic documentary narrated by Ben Stein called Expelled became the number one documentary of 2008. It exposed the expulsion of truth from our institutes of higher learning via the blackballing of intelligent design teaching.  That film was routinely  mocked and ridiculed by leftists as being nothing more than propaganda. However, everything in that film related to how so-called intellectuals hide, twist and dismiss information is true and this latest Climategate scandal is even more proof of that trend.

I pray more people wake up to these charlatan’s trick bag and vote accordingly.  And don’t think that Gore has stopped his nonsensical ‘green’ circus either, he hasn’t.  In fact, he just delivered a speech to over a thousand folks at the Allstream Centre in Toronto. These ‘green’ pimps will never listen to reason and must simply be put out like a rabid hedgehog found in your kitchen at 4 a.m. during deer season.  They have canned diatribes linked to anything but the truth.

We don’t need no environmental taxation. Nor hyper-agendas thought control.  Give us sensible conservationist discussions or go find someone else to molest for our carbon footprint is huge and where know where to put it.

Thou Shall Not Steal – Student Kills Intruder

September 25, 2009 at 2:56 am | Posted in Cultural, Social politics | Leave a comment
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samurai swordJohn Pontolillo, a junior chemistry student attending Johns Hopkins University killed Donald D. Rice, a 49 yr old habitual offender who had just been released from jail, when he was caught crouching behind a counter in a garage behind the student’s off-campus home.

Anthony Guglielmi said, “Around 1:20 a.m., the student heard noises behind the home and noticed a door to the garage was open, he grabbed the sword and confronted the intruder…, the suspect lunged at him, kind of forced the kid against the wall, and he struck him with the sword.” Rice’s left hand was just about cut clean off and he suffered a severe cut to his upper body.

Two lessons can be learned from this event:

1)      Make sure you are armed and if you choose to have a blade handy, make sure it is sharp and know how to use it effectively.

2)      If you decide to rob someone you just might get killed.

Now, here is some bad advice from Susan Boswell, the dean of student life at John Hopkins.  She advises against self-defense by saying, “If you ever suspect that there is a prowler in your residence or on your property, call 911 immediately, experts advise that you do not attempt to confront the intruder, but rather secure yourself in a locked area until police arrive.”

Mark Bainter, commenting on Boswell’s advice said, “Good advice, IF the police even get there and IF they get there before he leaves…and IF the intruder doesn’t hear the sirens and decide to make this a hostage situation… and if the police sharpshooters don’t accidentally shoot you by “mistake” while trying to “negotiate” his surrender.”

He makes a good point.  Being ready at all times to defend your home, family and property is a good and noble cause. Many policemen and women do a fine job, but sometimes delays in action will cost you your own life.

More information on the story: Md student swordsman didn’t mean to kill, Student kills intruder with sword

The Minimum Wage and Other Silly Teenage Entrapments

September 8, 2009 at 5:32 am | Posted in Cultural, Education, Social politics | Leave a comment

teen remoteThis is an excellent article entitled “Generation Sloth” by Jeffrey A. Tucker.

I’ve reprinted it here in its entirety. Read it and think.  Think about the future in this country for your children. Think about the future that is being eroded daily.  If we continue on certain old paths we just might get lost when the shift in the road comes.

It’s Labor Day, but there’s nothing to celebrate.

On July 24 this year, the government raised the minimum wage to $7.25, which is another way of saying that unemployment is mandatory for anyone who is otherwise willing to work for less. You have no freedom to negotiate or lower the price for your service. You are either already valuable at this rate or you are out of the game.

Here is how it works. I’ve never been good at shaping pizza dough by hand, throwing it up in the air the way those guys do, so it would certainly cost more for any pizza joint to hire me at that high rate than I could bring them in revenue. I would be a sure money loser. As a result, the government has made it effectively illegal for me to attempt this kind of work.

This is done to help me, so they say.

This predicament is no longer isolated to a small sliver of the population that no one cares about, namely people who dabble in second careers (such as the pizza example) and the poorest of the poor. Now the problem is culture wide, so perhaps someone will start to get interested in its causes and consequences.

August data show that more than a quarter of teenagers looking for work cannot find employment at the existing wage floor. Many have just stopped trying. The teen unemployment rate is nearly three times the national rate and it is four times the rate of skilled and experienced workers over the age of 55.

This is the highest rate ever recorded in the United States. The data have only been kept since 1948, but we can be quite sure that never in US history have so many teens been so alienated from gainful employment and work experience.

These are the years in which young people learn valuable skills and ethics that they will carry with them until they die. At work, they meet a great variety of people and have to learn to deal cooperatively with different temperaments and personalities. They learn how to do things they do not really want to do and they also discover the relationship between work and reward. They gain their first experience with independent use of money — acquiring and spending — and how to calibrate the relationship between the two.

These are skills people draw on forever. They are far more important to their future than is the main activity taking up their time: sitting at school desks.

This portends terrible things for the future of the American workforce. People dumped on the labor market after college will be even more worthless than they are already.

And when I read that the “stimulus package” includes funding for job training for teens as a way of addressing this problem, I couldn’t stop laughing: government-funded job training has a long record of being a full-employment program for tax-funded job trainers but otherwise amounting to a big nothing.

Interestingly, there is a corresponding trend affecting those who are getting their first jobs out of college. It turns out that half of college graduates under the age of 25 are working in jobs that require no college education at all. Think of Starbucks, the Gap, Target, and the like. Not that there is anything wrong with these jobs. But here’s the thing: these positions used to be held by young people before they finished college (which is in turn devoting itself to remedial education on the basics).

Do you see what is happening here? The minimum wage, subsidized college loans, child work laws, and other interventions are conspiring to prolong adolescence as long as possible — to the point that these young adults are seeing as much as a full decade of life experience pretty well stolen from them.

And there are no signs that this will change once the recession ends; after the last recession, youth unemployment never recovered its losses.

Why are we not seeing the Million Teen March on Washington? Not everyone understands what is happening or why. I doubt that 1 in 100 teens would consider that the minimum wage is what is keeping them unemployed. And the college grads themselves are pretty well befuddled as to why the great promise of future riches if they “stay in school” is not panning out. Rather than be angry at government, most of these kids are merely cynical and dependent on periodic parental bailouts.

College students themselves lack work experience so they don’t have a realistic understanding of what the work world requires of them. They major in “management” and imagine that, with this fabulous degree, they will possess the right to earn big bucks by bossing people around. A degree in “communications” will get them on Fox News. An “urban planning” degree will provide the opportunity — nay, the right — to build cities and highway systems.

Then the day of graduation comes and reality hits hard. There is no one who wants what they know, and, in fact, they know very little that makes them useful. Their resumes are barren, without a single professional reference or anything that is connected to the real world. All they really know is how to vegetate in class and socialize with peers on nights and weekends.

For example, I’ve been personally shocked at the lack of basic software skills that college grads have. There is hardly any professional position anywhere that doesn’t require some facility with software and technology. Is this not common knowledge? I guess not: people are continuing to graduate today with no more technical skills than it takes to manage a Facebook page.

As for work ethics and the ability to add value to an enterprise (versus merely serving their own interests), forget it: generation sloth knows nothing about this.

It’s probably not their fault.

Aside from the economic costs, the biggest cost is to the human character. It encourages the worst possible value system during the critical years in which character is shaped. Our country is caging people up for a quarter of their lives in government holding tanks and then dumping them on a cold, cruel world for which they are not prepared.

It’s true that this trend began back in the 1930s, when FDR decided that he could help the unemployment problem by making it illegal for young teens to work (unless, of course, they are child actors like Shirley Temple). That’s like losing weight by rigging the scale to lie to you. Ever since, federal law has tightened and tightened to the point that nearly the entire teenage population is being barred from the division of labor and otherwise told nothing about what it requires to be part of it down the line.

I end on an optimistic note and not merely because it is customary. The digital age is providing ever more opportunities for people to make their own way in this world, outside the old definition of formalized work. The government closes doors. The market, incredibly and fortuitously, keeps opening them.

Thoughts on Big Government

September 6, 2009 at 2:02 am | Posted in Cultural, Social politics | Leave a comment

fatnessMy father worked for the federal hospital system for thirty-eight years. I saw firsthand the mountains of wasteful spending, inefficient use of resources and the hiring of minorities being used as some sort of litmus test of racial victory. After all, if you hire minorities that automatically means they are actually qualified for the work, right? And if they show themselves to be bad employees it should be rather simple to replace them, right? That is true only if you live in a fantasy camp world where the IRS actually gives you refunds when you don’t even ask for the confiscated salary back.

If you had a team headed for the Olympics and you put a 350 lb sprinter as your lead runner in the 50 yard race you can rest assured that you won’t be popping any champagne corks in the winner’s circle. And what if you decided to solve the problem by searching for another 350 lb sprinter to take over in that spot? After failing to win again and coming in last place yet again, do you think that you would finally understand that the problem you have is not that you picked the wrong 350 lb sprinter to be on your team, but rather that 350 lb people do not make good sprinters? If you were competing in Kyoto at the international Sumo championships you would have made the right choice, but sprinters by their very nature must be thin and, of course, fast. The same is true with social systems. The bigger they are the worse they run.

Living in the post-Katrina haze has shown me the exact same principle. It has been the churches and non-profit organizations that have run swiftly and efficiently in the urban aftermath, not FEMA. I am grateful for the federal assistance, but the overweight sprinter eats too much of her help packages and shows up late and overtired if she even makes it to the right house at all. The rampant nonsense of big, bloated bureaucracies is a matter of public record so why do people still look to her as their panacea?

It’s easy to cry, ‘stupidity!’ but I think it something much deeper and insidious. People like big government because it appeals to their lack of discipline and promises to unburden their lives. Big government seduces us into thinking that free is good even when we pay more for it and she likes to convince us that this time she really will go on a diet.

Standing Up Against Domestic Foes

August 23, 2009 at 6:34 pm | Posted in Cultural, Social politics, Videos | 1 Comment

This is just beautiful to see. A real American with truth and honor and determination instead of a whining liberal socialistic anti-American agenda who wouldn’t know the Constitution if it were to jump up and wrap their rights in a wet blanket.

It is important that people realize that our elected officials work for US, not themselves.  It is refreshing to see citizens standing up against domestic tyranny brought to us in the name of ‘hope’ and ‘change’.  Make no mistake about it, unless we do stand up for our Constitutional rights and truth, we WILL lose our freedoms. Unfortunately, we already have under both parties.

A Complete Conniption Fit

August 8, 2009 at 5:32 pm | Posted in Cultural, Humor, Social politics, Strangeness, Videos | Leave a comment

If only citizens would have these kinds of reactions to the fascist movements of Obamalini and his ilk when they take over private industry, put the likes of Al Franken in office, refuse to cough up legitimate birth certificates, and attempt to ramrod an absolute disaster like Obamacare into the heart of our nation.

And they wonder why we should spank children.

Sotomayor Defecates on the Constitution

June 16, 2009 at 3:34 pm | Posted in Cultural, Social politics, Videos | Leave a comment

Let’s take a basic civics lesson.

The United States Constitution establishes a Separation of Powers devised by the framers of our government to accomplish one primary thing: to prevent the majority from ruling with an iron fist. [This is known as an oligarchy]  Because of what the framers experienced with tyrannical Britain, they did not want any one branch of government to be given too much power.  As a result, our Constitution has a shared system of power controlled by Checks and Balances.

sotomayorThe Judiciary branch of the United States Government has the power to try federal cases and interpret the laws of the nation in those cases and the power to declare any law or executive act unconstitutional. They do not make laws or formulate policy; they interpret it.  (The Legislative branch makes law.)

This is very basic and very simple; and yet, in our day, particularly ignored by activist judges who have apparently decided that the Constitution has more of a roll as a Charmin liner than as arbiter of law. With that in mind, take a look at this video (see below) and observe how disrespectful and nonchalantly Judge Sotomayor comments on the proper role of the Judiciary.

Three factors are plain here. One, most Americans have no clue about what this clip is referring to since they spend more time on Facebook and wobamomayoratching CNN then they do actually reading the Constitution even once. Secondly, it shows quite clearly the arrogance of liberals who hate our Constitution with great passion and can’t wait to turn us into a socio-commie hippie village. And thirdly, this entire nomination shows us how once again, just as in the election of Obama to the highest seat in our nation; people are more interested in ethnic victory and gender empowerment than they are about qualification and character.  Who cares if she is Puerto Rican and female when she should be living in a socialist country not the United States? As with the President, too many vote with emotion rather than sense.

Worldwide Singing

June 2, 2009 at 11:41 am | Posted in 18824304, Cultural, Social politics, Videos | Leave a comment

I was shown this series of video songs put together by Mark Johnson in an attempt to bring peace to the world through coming together in song. As he puts it, “We can do a lot more for this world, if we work together than we ever can apart.”  Take a look/listen to this video song.

The music is great and well-known. So, too, are the other songs at their web page – Playing For Change. My only criticism is this. What change exactly does he want? These movements all sound great and wonderful but are always void of the truth.  Is Johnson wanting Jihadists and pacifistic Buddhist monks to hold hands and sing “Row, row, row your boat” thinking that then they’ll see the error of their ways?  Is a song going to ‘do a lot more for this world’ ? And if so, do what for this world?  Who determines the goals? There’s a whole lot of presuppositions there.  Nice songs. Misdirected energies.  More feelgoodisms evaporating in the air. But they have some cool tunes. Check em out.

BUY BLACK, JACK!

May 15, 2009 at 7:26 pm | Posted in Cultural, Humor, Social politics, Strangeness | 1 Comment

buy blackWell the racial crisis in America has finally been solved! No, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson have not become the Chocolate Messiah’s new ambassadors of benevolence; instead, we have been asked to BUY BLACK.

The Empowerment Experiment is now at hand. Yes, that’s right instead of only buying things from a white owned business which became the trade of choice in the 1950’s, people are now asked to only buy their goods from black-owned businesses. This is a major step forward in race relations, not to mention a clear and concrete way of telling the world that we are indeed color-blind!

According to their website, “The Empowerment Experiment exists because we are not doing enough to support Black business.” Yes I agree. It’s been far too long that the Koreans and Chinese have had the corner on the market in business. Those hard working orientals have enough support, it’s time for us to go black.  The Japanese have sushi and automobiles so they’ll be just fine and the Hispanic community, of course, has more yard businesses, maid services, home-remodeling and taqueria work to last another eon.  So forget about them. And don’t even get me started with the Vietnamese, they practically own the pedicure world. And Native Americans? Can you say “Reservation gaming” ! ?

Maggie Anderson, one of the movement’s founders, said in  Fox News interview , “It’s like, my people have been here 400 years and we don’t even have a Walgreens to show for it.” New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin was ecstatic about the plea for social justice, “This is better than a chocolate city! I think I might weep with glee.”

Let’s circle the wagons and buy black, Jack! It is the least we can do to understand the African-American experience.


Binghamton Cries Out

April 5, 2009 at 9:33 pm | Posted in Cultural, Social politics | Leave a comment
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wong-murdererIn Binghamton, New York, at 10:30 a.m., Jiverly Wong, a forty-one year old out-of-work Asian citizen from an ethnically Chinese family living in Vietnam decided to murder. Wrapped in a bulletproof vest and armed with a .45 and 9mm handgun, Wong entered the American Civic Association building and began to shoot without a word according to witnesses.  In a silent rage he began ending lives at will in what would end up being the death of thirteen unarmed civilians. And what was his motivation? Someone had mocked him for speaking poor English and he was angry about losing his job. In interviews with co-workers and others that knew him, Wong apparently had made threats in the past that involved violent reactions.  Did he have a wife? No. Any children to feed? No. He was living with his parents.

The immigration center visitors and workers scattered to closets and the boiler room to escape Wong’s evil assault until SWAT teams could arrive.  Then he ended his own life as a murderous coward.

All of his weapons were registered legally proving once again that gun laws do not stop criminals from committing crimes any more than laws against drunkenness stop people from inebriation. We need laws just like we need locks, but ultimately men who seek and destroy as they have done for thousands of years will continue to do so despite the best legislation.

Wong could have easily entered the building wielding two twenty inch machetes severing limb and life.  He could have walked in with a homemade bomb and blown the office to smithereens. He chose handguns. What made him murder was the wickedness of his heart, not the choice of his weapon. Nor did any ban or restriction stop him.

Sadly, the vacuous responses flow from those who should be leading rather than offering up fodder-filled clichés. Yes, this event was heart-wrenching and our hearts and prayers should go out to the victim’s families and friends who must now deal with the grief and heartache that comes with such misery and intent.  However, they need real answers and civic protection not more rhetoric.

For example, this is part of what President Obama had to say about the Binghamton killings, “We have to guard against the senseless violence that this tragedy represents…” I doubt seriously that he means had the victims all had ballet-shooterstheir own self-protection weapons, perhaps someone could have taken this devil out before the body count reached double digits.  A cry for more gun control is nothing more than a cry to idiocy and purposed victimization for disarming citizens is no protection against evildoers. If you aren’t convinced, see Kennesaw, Georgia where each head of household is required by law to own and maintain a firearm for self-protection and defense of property – their per-capita crime rate has remained essentially static (and low) since 1983. Criminals don’t like raping, robbing, abducting, or otherwise attempting to assault those who are armed.  Imagine that.

If sensibility reigned in our land, this is what the AP story we read online should sound like:

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP) -The gunman, who entered the building at about 10:30 a.m. local time, had two handguns and body armor, the Press & Sun-Bulletin said, citing Mayor Matthew Ryan. He barricaded a back door with his car and walked in through the front, AP said.

Fifteen people took refuge in a closet and 26 fled to the boiler room, the newspaper said, yet six of those taking refuge were armed with their own weapons. Governor Patterson said that had it not been for the ability of these brave citizens to carry handguns more than just one would have died. The assailant, an unknown Asian man, was pronounced dead at 10:50 a.m. after being shot six times by his potential victims.

Spokesperson for the American Civic Association Angela Leach commented publicly that she could not fathom what drove Wong to do what he did.  I can.  Evil exists in the hearts of men and it is the job and duty of our government to serve and protect us from such wickedness.  I pray that the politico towers gain simple wisdom.

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