The comparison of Obama’s “PR” efforts to reach the needed constituencies (like low information voters) harkens back to early Soviet propaganda programs to reach, quoting from, “This Has All Happened Before…”, a Sonny Bunch’s editorial at The Washington Free Beacon, “acquaint the population with the laws and regulations of the Soviet government”. The similarities Bunch notes leave no room for argument, as it seems as if the very same people wrote both programs. Yes, yes of course President Obama’s supporters will cry racist, fearmonger, hater, but the direct parallel cant’ be argued away with facts and by this President’s very own accounting of his life in his two books, all of his mentors, like Frank Marshall Davis, were far-left radicals and Marxists, with nary a politically moderate voice amongst the crowd.
Category Archives: Politics
How to fend for their young
This post will be one of those nostalgic trips down memory lane about my family again, so I’ll warn you up front and you can abandon it quickly if you’re looking for straight politics. G. Murphy Donovan’s childhood story, “The Cranberry Rumble”, which I mentioned a few days ago, sent me down memory lane thinking about holiday meals. I couldn’t think of one where anything remarkable happened like the Thanksgiving in his story. Our family holiday meals were relentlessly boring and I remember when I was young we would go to my maternal grandmother’s for Christmas, but we spent Thanksgiving at home with our immediate family. In my grandmother’s small kitchen, the table could not hold the families of aunts, uncles, cousins, etc, so my grandmother set the table for the children first. The adults got us corralled and seated, where we ate our fill and then went outside to play. Any family get-together ran the same course, where the adults made sure to fix the children’s plates first and get them seated and fed. Children came first in my family.
My mother, whose birthday fell on Veteran’s Day, passed away in 2001 and she served as the shining example of an independent spirit for American womanhood, long before feminism ever came along to enthrall the whining female masses demanding “female empowerment”. My Mom never considered herself a feminist and she found their selfish, endless carping repugnant, yet she could put almost any of them to shame with her ability to handle manual labor, domestic tasks, juggle a nursing career and six kids with never a complaint or expectation of help from anyone. She knew the best way to be an independent person is to be self-reliant. She worked harder than any person I have ever met. Mom loved to fix things and she repaired everything from our TV set when it went on the blink to chipped china, to all our many scrapes and more serious injuries. On top of all that she was a superb cook and baker, kept the house immaculate, insisted on rules and routine more efficiently than a drill sergeant, yet found time to be our most faithful cheerleader and moral support when we needed it most. The kitchen table, or wherever families gather for meals, serves as the civilizational center, around the globe and my Mom, like generations of mothers before, knew this instinctively.
My oldest sister always veered toward gourmet type cooking, leading to many bumping of heads in our small kitchen at holiday time, where my Mom insisted on traditional PA Dutch food and my oldest sister would argue and plead for us to expand our culinary horizons. Mom let her bake some different desserts occasionally and she excelled at making things like braided loaves of bread and fancy rolls, but the rest of us liked plain old store-bought brown and serve rolls best. My next older sister avoided the kitchen, except to eat and she rarely got roped into any part of cooking any meal. She had a knack for breaking any small appliance she touched, so it was best to exclude her from the kitchen work space. Odd thing that somehow she perfected making pie dough and became the family’s best pie baker in adulthood, despite being a less than great cook (one of her signature dishes was veal parmigiana – frozen breaded veal patties smothered with overcooked spaghetti, jarred sauce and Parmesan cheese from the green shaker, tossed in a casserole dish and baked). My biggest contribution to any meal was to be the reliable, food prep person – just tell me how small you want the vegetables, chopped, diced, minced and I will happily cut away. Oh, you want someone to stand there and stir that pot non-stop until it reaches a full boil, that’s a job for me. I follow instructions well and any tedious task in the kitchen suits me perfectly. My youngest sister could be relied upon to help with any task too and she served as the one to smooth over the personality clashes that inevitability arose with so many strong personalities working in such a confined space.
As I thought about holiday meals, none stuck out in my memory, but a very ordinary meal popped into my mind. My youngest sister possesses one of the calmest, most agreeable personalities imaginable. Unlike me, who loved to get on my soapbox about any issue I felt strongly about and also had a penchant for allowing my cousin, Randy, next door to goad me into doing things where I knew I would get in trouble. The usual taunt, “you’re too scared to do X, Y or Z!” led to my declarations that I wasn’t scared, whereupon I’d charge forward with whatever the dare was. One time he picked up some crumpled, old pack of chewing tobacco at our small local ball field that looked like it had been in that parking area for years. Randy told me that he knew I was too scared to try it and of course I took a wad and chewed it. I might note, he didn’t try it. My sister (the less than great cook one, who also became a state trooper), ever the reliable narc, couldn’t run fast enough to tell Mom what I had done. I had beat her into the house and raced in the bathroom to rinse out my mouth, but Mom came charging in there and there I stood with brown tobacco juice dribbling down my face. I lied and told Mom I hadn’t done it and learned that brazen lying wasn’t the way to go with her.
I got into trouble frequently by allowing Randy to use that same, “you’re too scared” tactic and my narc sister got into plenty of trouble too, but my youngest sister had the most pristine character and she never did anything wrong. We all adored her, because what’s not to adore about someone who is always nice, always kind, always good. So imagine our shock when the perfect child revolts at of all places the supper table, sitting right next to Pop. It was an ordinary supper and Pop always ate way too much bread with his meals and he liked to slather butter and either strawberry jam or grape jelly on his bread. We all talked a lot at the supper table, so when Pop scolded my youngest sister, you could have heard a pin drop in the kitchen that night. There sat my youngest sister, defiantly arguing with Pop that the reason she put a large glob of grape jelly on her potatoes was because she had asked for the butter more than once and no one listened to her. Pop told her that she had to sit there and eat those potatoes. Who knew that underneath that calm, lurked a pretty impressive temper. My youngest sister is retired from the Air Force and served in Afghanistan in the early years, shortly before her retirement. Several years ago, through the family grapevine, I heard that the local pastor was making political commentary about GWB and the war stuff and that Sunday, my nephew had insisted they sit way up front in church. My serene sister got up and walked right out of church in the midst of the sermon that morning. My kids were shocked when they heard this, but I knew that underneath that calm is a strong well of righteous anger.
My three sisters rank as a very talented group of women who have had successful careers, pursue many hobbies and can be expected to do the unexpected. For the past few years, they decided that Thanksgiving will be the traditional holiday meal and during that get together they vote on a foreign country, which will be the themed cuisine for Christmas dinner that year. Then they research that ethnic cuisine and decide on which dishes to make. They had Chinese Christmas dinner one year and I sure wish I lived closer and could have been there for that one. Had my Mom been around for this new Christmas tradition, I feel certain she would have liked the idea, although Pop would have reacted like he did when he came to Fort Bragg to visit one time and we took my parents to a Japanese restaurant. Pop only ate a few bites before deciding he didn’t like Japanese food and as we were leaving that restaurant Pop asked my husband, “Are there any steakhouses in this town?” When my parents visited us in Germany, my Pop decided after his first German meal that he didn’t like German food, which struck me as bizarre considering he was PA Dutch and ate German food his entire life. So, as we traveled around Germany, all meals had to be planned around finding American fast food places or eating on a US military installation. My Mom loved trying different types of food and exploring new places. She once told me she wouldn’t mind getting on a plane and going anywhere in the world, because wherever she ended up she’d find something interesting.
At holiday time it’s common to reach back into those nostalgic childhood memories of holidays gone by, but I feel fortunate for having enough good memories of my parents and childhood to warm me any day of the year. The other day my youngest sister emailed me to remark upon Mom’s birthday and she said it best, “Nearly everyday there is something that I wish I could ask her advice about or share with her. She was a very wise person. She was good at helping us pick ourselves back up, dusting us off and making us try again.” So many people today won’t even try the first time, let alone try again when they stumble or fail.
We had the first cooler days this past week here in this Southern state where I now live. Over the years when visiting, my Mom angrily talked about how many young mothers she saw around the Army who didn’t have the sense to properly dress their children for the weather. I had morphed into my Mom, as I had to bite my tongue more than once as I saw young Moms bundled up in winter coats and boots with babies in the shopping carts – with not even socks on the babies’ feet or jackets on them. Hooray for liberating women from the bounds of motherhood – I am sure your children (if they survive infancy) will be so proud of you…. I find it doubtful these kids will be remembering their Moms, like my siblings and I remember our Mom.
Now for the political commentary, my youngest daughter lives in another state and she decided she wanted to be a “Big Sister” in that program. Her “little” adores her, but earlier this year my daughter and son-in-law moved to another city. My daughter’s “little” called her a few days ago to tell her that her step-dad is in jail for beating her. The teacher saw the bruises and called the police. This girl’s prize mother has a few kids with this piece of garbage and is pregnant. Last year when my daughter brought her “little” to her home to bake cookies, the “little’s” mother came over too and she waxed on about how she’d like to bake cookies at her house, but she doesn’t have cookie sheets. My daughter gave her the very nice cookie sheets I bought the year before. After many adventures with the “little’s” family, like the cockroach infestation that had my daughter wondering if she should call child protective services, now there’s this one. My daughter called me distressed, because her “little” told her this isn’t the first time he’s beaten her. Last year at Christmas when my daughter gave her “little” a Christmas present, this girl unwrapped the present carefully. She told my daughter she wanted to keep the wrapping paper and rewrap that present, so she would have a present to open on Christmas morning, because her loser parents didn’t have money to get the things they had put on layaway at a store. Whenever you hear about a child like this “little”, rest assured there’s a litany of abuses, neglect and trail of tears that follows.
Bad family situations aren’t something new, but despite more information, more opportunities for women, more material wealth, our ability to do the basics, like feed our kids properly and shelter them from the cold, seem beyond the grasp of way too many American mothers. In the mix of all this female empowerment claptrap, there’s a glaring absence of something that most mothers used to know – how to fend for their young. If my daughter’s “little” were a rarity it would still be sad, but behind all those impersonal statistics on children in America, are way too many in situations like hers or worse. Those politically in tune feminist mouthpieces won’t be there to take in any of these children falling through the cracks, nor do they see them as they travel among the elite “educating” women on women’s rights. Laura Bush, a kind-hearted woman, attended an event at Georgetown, along with Hillary Clinton, America’s premiere champion of women and children, and John Kerry yesterday to talk about women’s rights in Afghanistan. It’s sure easier to focus on the plight of women and children in some far off country than to peek beneath the surface and see so many American children in need. Civilization begins with the family gathered together to share meals – if we fail at that simple task, we can’t possibly survive. You want to rescue America, try to teach young men and women to be responsible parents and for crying out loud, sit down together and share meals, not just during the holidays, but throughout the entire year.
************************************************************************************************************
And in regards to women in Afghanistan, hello, President Obama is pretty much handing that country back to the Taliban and the drug warlords when we pull-out, so having Hillary and John Kerry lamenting the plight of Afghan women seems hypocritical in the extreme. So besides being clueless on how to bake cookies, Hillary’s also not even very good at understanding foreign policy either. Laura Bush means well, but the political situation we leave on the ground there will erase most, if not all, of the gains made by Afghan women. John Kerry, well who knows why he showed up at Georgetown for this event and depending on which way the political winds blow, he can reliably be for or against any political situation or cause. He’s a man for all political seasons. Now, that I got all that off of my chest, I can think about my Thanksgiving menu.
Filed under Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest, Politics, Uncategorized
Long live the king
Who knew that we now live under the divine right of kings. President Obama, who sees the Constitution as a pesky nuisance to his transformation of America, announced his fixes for his less than, Affordable Health Care Act. He blubbered along yesterday stating he will make some alterations to the law, butttttttttt he doesn’t have the authority to rewrite, suspend or pick and choose which parts of a law to execute. Or maybe in the new transformed America he does…….. (here)
Filed under Politics
A must read on America’s nuclear arsenal by Matthew Kroenig
Foreign Policy magazine offers this lengthy article written by associate professor and international relations field chair of Georgetown University’s Department of Government, Matthew Kroenig, on nuclear disarmament and the many myths about nuclear strategic concerns, that certainly offers an analysis that runs counter to the usual nuclear issues commentary. (Foreign Policy article here and Kroenig’s website here)
And now to harken back to a libertybelle blog post on this issue, “Global Zero: Another Nothing-Burger Plan”, from June 18, 2013. At last, I’m not a lone voice in the wilderness, happy day:-)
Filed under Foreign Policy, Military, Politics
“Honor your commitment”……… so sayeth Bill Clinton (it is, what it is)
What can be more entertaining than watching Bill Clinton wax on about honoring a commitment….. Always the dedicated political strategist to promote the wife he so loves and is so dedicated to, Bill Clinton spoke out against President Obama’s cavalier disregard for his promise that Americans would be able to keep their healthcare insurance under Obamacare. Yes, the former president, with an eye toward distancing he and his beloved wife from the giant sinkhole that is swallowing up President Obama’s second term, signature legislation, his legacy and maybe even other Democratic electoral aspirations too spoke up about keeping your word. “My, my, don’t lie” is the new Clinton political mantra…… The Clintons turned moralists, what a joke. (story here and video here)
WebMD receives $4.8 million to educate doctors on Obamacare
Writing about the stories that the mainstream press buries us in is not my usual choice of topic to write about, but here’s just a small part of the insidious way in which accepting large sums of money from the government can create an impression of a conflict of interest and harm a company’s reputation. WebMD enjoys a reputation as an unbiased honest provider of healthcare information. With the advent of the internet, like millions of other people, I utilize online medical information websites or as my youngest daughter says, “Everyone tries to be a google doctor.” WebMD is one of my favorite medical information websites, up until now that is. The Washington Times reports that WebMD received a $4.8 million dollar contract from the federal government “to teach doctors about Obamacare”, after WebMD ran several positive articles about Obamacare before the actual launch of the Affordable Care Act. (story here)
Eggs Benedict
Where do we go from here with our incoherent foreign policies? Under this President no single foreign policy position articulating American interests clearly and unambiguously exists, but many hazy, wisps float about, with little focus or strategic sense and as soon as you try to shine the harsh light of reality on them, into thin air they vanish. To change course requires a degree of introspection that probably lies beyond the egocentric political mouthpieces in either of our political parties and it certainly, based on the past 4+ years, presents a challenge well beyond the most overrated politician in American history, whose foreign affairs and strategic thinking abilities fall well below a level required for commanding U.S. Armed Forces and deciding the weighty issues facing our republic in decline.
Here we are, more than a decade into military engagements, in an ever more hostile Muslim world, and yet this President can’t seem to forge together any semblance of a strategically sound path forward. Certainly it’s true that he inherited a misguided, American adventuristic policy from his predecessor, but rather than coming up with some organized, collaborative exit strategy with our Iraqi and Afghan partners, this egomaniac decided to just fold completely on the ground, while simultaneously embarking on an unchecked drone war.
All those reliable wailers on war crimes and American torture during the two GWB terms fell strangely silent, which screams loudly that they were nothing but political ideologues above all else. Where are all the protestors about an out of control executive branch that escalated a drone war into many countries beyond the geographical confines of any traditionally accepted sense of a “battlefield”?
Nightwatch, the excellent intelligence analysis site pointed out some important considerations regarding President Obama’s escalated drone war in the November 7,2013 edition (report here), referring to the selection of the Pakistani-Taliban’s new leader, Mullah Fazlullah:
“Fazlullah’s election signifies rejection of Prime Minister Sharif’s peace overture. It also highlights a degenerative leadership pattern resulting from the US program of leadership decapitation. First, there is always someone waiting for the chance to be leader. Second, the new leaders are less experienced and wise than the men they replace. Third, the new generation of leaders is more extreme and theologically rigid than its predecessors. Finally, the new leaders tend to be unknown to intelligence relative to their predecessors. Decapitation is not a permanent solution to an insurgency or an uprising.”
How the American public ever went along with such an unethical program where the executive branch operates its own hit list and we silently allow even American citizens to be summarily executed based on “secret” files compiled by the executive branch, with no trial or due process, but only the President and his CIA director seeming to decide who lives and who dies and why. That a 16-year-old American kid was executed by a drone strike and the mainstream press yawned and took a pass on seriously investigating and reporting this shows how unreliable and politically motivated our “free press” really is.
Now that we’ve set the precedent for international lawlessness regarding our drone war, that fat chicken has come home to roost for this President and his CIA kill list organizer, John Brennan, as they now uneasily watch as 87 countries possess drone technology. Since President Obama set the international standard of striking with no respect to sovereignty or international norms, and his policy is a huge pile of scrambled policy eggs (Washington Times report here). He can run around flapping his wings, but he’s literally cut off his own head when it comes to moral force and setting a standard for others to follow. You know, it’s only fitting that this President will be the prime casualty of his own drone policy, decapitating his own leadership ability more than any terrorists. Scrambled, over easy, nah more like eggs Benedict, a traitor to our American values.
Filed under Foreign Policy, Military, Politics, The Media
Alas, Babylon by Kinnison
We are guilty of not paying attention.
It’s our fault.
We got wrapped up in our lives, in our own personal problems, and we let the men and women we sent off to Washington and the state capitals stray off of the straight and narrow path and get the idea that they run our states and the country. They don’t. We do; at least we are supposed to, in this representative republic. But we have not been paying attention.
While we were working hard and building homes and raising families they were feathering their own nests at our expense, and the country’s.
Show me a Senator who has served more than two terms in Washington who is not a millionaire.
Show me a Representative who has served more than a decade in Washington that is not a millionaire.
Show me a President who does not leave the White House a millionaire. The days of a Harry Truman, who left his second term in the White House, got in the family car with Bess, and drove himself back to Independence, Missouri, to move back into his mother-on-law’s house are long gone.
Power corrupts, and for that it uses money.
The days of men and women who went to mayor’s officers, statehouses or Washington determined to try their best to faithfully represent their constituents back home, to lead this nation in the paths of righteousness, and who had character and principles, are long gone. Now we have whole families, generation after generation, who spend their working lives in “public service”, who consider elected office “the family business”. We have had our fill of the Roosevelts, the Kennedys, the Rockefellers, the Bayhs, the Bushes, the Tafts, the Cuomos, the Gores, the Sununus, the Udalls, the Dodds, the Longs, the Landrieus, the Murkowskis, the Daleys, the Clintons…
This nation was born in fire, it fought a bloody 8-year revolution to get shet of a dictatorial king and a hereditary aristocracy, but we have finally come back around to our own domestic royalty who have special privileges and are not like us.
There was a time when this nation, conceived in liberty, was a shining beacon on a hill for the rest of the world. Most of the people of the world admired us and for many their goal was to come here and be a part of our national story, to raise their children here in the land of liberty and plenty, where hard work could build a home and no one had to be afraid. Now our government monitors all of our phone calls and our emails, violating our privacy in the name of “security”. Ben Franklin once said, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”
Now our so-called President openly boasts about how good he is at having armed drones kill people in countries with which we are not at war. A few hundred innocent women and children are the price he is willing to pay to terminate individuals, even unindicted, untried American citizens, who are on his enemies list.
I am not a dumb guy. I have an advanced degree. I wore my nation’s uniform proudly for more than 22 years, and spent more than 8 years overseas in her name, guarding it from afar. I taught U.S. History and Government for 17 years, I understand our governmental system. I used to believe in it. Now, more and more, I am ashamed of it, and I see no hope for it and us.
Our elected representatives knowingly ignore our wishes and assume that they know better than we what is good for us. That is not American, and in fact bears a strong resemblance to the Marxist concept of a “Vanguard of the Revolution”, a special group of elite leaders who should lead the ignorant “narod” (That’s what the Russians called their peasants; nowadays we refer to them as “low-information voters”…) to a better life.
We live in the last days of Rome. Or Babylon…
(The above piece was written by Kinnison, an American patriot, whom I’ll simply call another one of the good guys still left in America. Thanks for allowing me to post this on my blog!)
Filed under Culture Wars, Politics, The Constitution
Political party identification be damned
G. Murphy Donovan posted another excellent article, “Rent Seeking and Other Blood Sports”, at The American Thinker the other day. Real life intruded on my time, so excuse me for lagging behind on the blogging. Real life versus politics in my own very mundane life isn’t even a choice really, because for me gabbing about politics here is more like a hobby and having a few readers is a gift I never expected to receive. Once again thanks for your time. This difference between how I embark on blogging and how many others approach it, struck me recently when I ventured onto a blog, where a genuine question about a stereotype of Tea Party folks as “despising constitutional principles” led me to question this. Polls were cited, I was castigated as being a Fox viewer, all with the intent to discredit my opinion as next to worthless and maybe it is. GMD’s article made me think of this difference between those who take themselves very seriously and people like me, just ordinary Americans, who watch in disgust and dismay as our country teeters ever closer to collapse. Now, the issue on that other blog was about whether we need a new Pledge of Allegiance or no pledge and all I could think about are the millions of Americans struggling to survive, raise their kids in this crappy economy and hope there’s some future worth inheriting from us and these folks on this blog, who tout all their academic and career credentials are worrying about whether we keep the Pledge of Allegiance. I got lectured and dismissed, which is fine, but really GMD highlighted the real problems, where we are failing large segments of the population, especially way too many children and the mentally ill.
One more comment about that other blog (which shall remain nameless, because maybe they do have great solutions that I failed to see), but the way in which my simple question led to automatic stereotyping of me as an idiot Fox viewer/Tea Party sympathizer irked the hell out of me. And here my last lengthy response (because I can’t just leave well enough alone) went as follows:
“The trick is not to mark groups’ opinions as “not worth talking to”, because finding solutions to our country’s problems will require pulling along as many people and they come with widely divergent views. Every team is built by finding some common ground, so it’s an inclusive process and that’s how to begin uniting America.
Our problems are much deeper than whether we have a pledge of allegiance. We’ve got so many people so keen to stereotype based on perceived political groupings, that we’ve lost touch at looking at all Americans as individuals with lots of potential strengths, ideas, skills sets, etc. that might be useful.
I won’t be posting here again, so you can put me into whatever group you choose – just place me as far away from your elitist snobbery as possible. I haven’t heard one solution yet here, just who you think shouldn’t be listened to based on your stereotyping. How on earth you think you can fix what’s wrong when you start off writing off entire large segments of America is beyond ridiculous – “Oh you stupid person, you don’t understand the Constitution, so your comment doesn’t count!”, “Oh you must be a Tea Party member, because you asked why this thread says they despise constitutional principles or you’re dreaded Fox viewer or something – you’re just not smart enough to post here among the enlightened few!”
The Constitution was written with a mechanism for change – to add or repeal amendments – suggesting such a change does not make one despise the Constitution – it’s the exact mechanism that follows constitutional principles. The founders also, in their infinite wisdom, made it a steep hurdle to make such changes – thankfully. And no, I never supported repealing the 14th Amendment, I never joined a Tea Party, I watch Fox news, MSNBC and CNN, because I like to compare coverage, mostly I read as many newspapers online as I can, I oppose capital punishment and drone strikes ( except maybe in a declared war and under tight controls), so I am not sure what that makes me. Maybe when you’ve decided amongst your chosen few, you can let us ordinary Americans know and show us the way. I spent most of my life as a homemaker – I talk to just about everyone and I try to learn as much about what they think, what they’ve done, so I know who they are. I don’t discount anyone.”
Now of course my views were cited as utopian and wrong, on pulling as many people along as possible, with the factual statistic on the very small percentage of rebels who launched the American Revolution, (but of course they worked damned hard to up that percentage quickly). This behavior pattern of wiping the floor with other people, by quickly stereotyping them into convenient political boxes is the problem of thinking in terms of factions and not of people. At the end this blogger lectured me about resorting to name-calling when from his first response to my honest question he discarded me as a “Tea Party sympathizer/Fox viewer”, making whatever I had to say worthless. The further elaboration was that the Tea Party is made up of angry old white people, who are racists and can’t accept a black President. This entire attempt to find out why he stated the Tea Party despises constitutional principles ended with this lame stereotype. More breaking down America into rabid political factions. And while all these factions keep throwing gasoline to keep these fires burning out of control, the rest of us, ordinary Americans sit here hoping the wind doesn’t send the flames in our direction and closer still to the flames are all those who are least able to beat back the flames – those living in poverty, especially children and the infirm. Factions and political party identification be damned, since 2008 the group of those not able to find a path to upward financial mobility keeps increasing, as does the number of children and the infirm, who need help.
You can’t unite a country if you constantly work to discount and marginalize large segments of it. We’ve either got to find a way to reach some middle ground on some very existential problems or we will crumble. And we’ve got to welcome everyone to the table, put some of the rabid politics aside and find our talents and strengths and rebuild the American team. GMD’s article presented our failure as a society, one that we prefer to talk about in abstract terms, but he knows each one is a life, not a political talking point. We all need to remember that beyond the political flame-throwing are real lives left in ashes.
Filed under Culture Wars, Pet Peeves, Politics
Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should
Here’s a must read opinion piece, A Judgment on Intelligence, at The American Thinker on the latest spying brouhaha over the US eavesdropping on Angela Merkel’s cellphone. The author, Herbert E. Meyer, begins, “Despite everything you’ve gleaned from spy novels and movies, the most important raw material for a successful intelligence service isn’t information; it’s judgment.” From there he elaborates on that very issue of judgment.
Filed under Foreign Policy, Politics, The Media