Category Archives: Politics

Michelle, Michelle, how does your garden grow…….

Who knew, with silver bells and cockle shells and ravenous squirrels all in a row.  Just when you think the Obama farce hit it’s low bottom mark for cynical publicity stunts, today’s news cycle churns out sad tales of Michelle’s Potemkin garden project rotting on the vine, so to speak – here, here and here.   A perfect tableau for the phoniness that is the Obamas – it’s all one sad, trashy tale of lies, pandering, pathos and to quote one of the biggest liars in America, none other than Bill Clinton, “it’s the biggest fairy tale I’ve ever seen”…..

While many people plant vegetable gardens out of a love for gardening, understanding the basics of gardening, the basics of how to survive if the power goes out and basically to have some simple plans in place of what to do, when life’s little emergencies happen should be common sense, but instead we’ve got an entire society geared toward waiting for the government to take us by the hand and fix everything.  Before I turn this into a meandering rant, let me just say, I am so sick of these people and their never ending staged political posturing.  Her garden serves as just another one of their lame stage props – nothing more, and as one of those dwindling oddities, known as “taxpayers”, I sure would love to know how much Michelle’s organic garden costs us each year???   Not to worry though, because no matter the fiscal calamities, these self-anointed demigods will still have their faithful at the ready to shovel more s**t (because they sure won’t get their hands dirty)!

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“Watch them flourish and fall”?

The indefatigable Justin posted two links on my October Daily Chat.  The first article, from the Foreign Policy Institute,“The Crisis Of American Conservatism: Inherent Contradictions And The End Of The Road”, delves into a lengthy history of American conservatism and ends with suggesting that unless and until American conservatism can get a buy-in from a large segment of American women (particularly white women), who largely remain independent, but see issues through a gender-focused lense, it will become continually harder for conservatives to win national elections.  The second article, “Is Max Hastings right?  Will America shut down for REAL?”, from a British perspective on American politics, comes from David Duff’s blog, Duff and Nonsense and offers many excellent historical parallels to consider too.

Here are some links from Malcolm Pollack’s blog worth a look:

Some pictures of a deserted Detroit library (Malcolm notes the books are safe from looters – go figure).

Patrick J. Buchanan article, “Is Red State America Seceding?”, which brings the cultural divide in America into clear focus, not with some fancy psychological mumbo-jumbo, but simply by geography.  That old saying that demographics is destiny, does sure seem to hold true.

Mark Steyn’s take on “public lands” vs. King Obama’s decrees”

Hopefully, today I can write something original about the sorry state of America – still mulling over all these disturbing optics and since we live in a media-driven culture, which images makes it on the airwaves, regardless of  veracity,  propels our culture.  Ever wonder why these leftists running this cuckoo’s nest so zealously try to create “narratives” and “composite characters”, well there you have it – they know that he who controls the media controls the people…….. even in America now.  Why, you might ask or even how could this be in a Republic founded to promote individual liberty……….. to quote Justin again, “anyway in whole cloth it’s a very long complicated story (1937 to now)”, definitely time to recite the Rudyard Kipling poem.

“The Gods of the Copybook Headings”

AS I PASS through my incarnations in every age and race,
I make my proper prostrations to the Gods of the Market Place.
Peering through reverent fingers I watch them flourish and fall,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings, I notice, outlast them all.

We were living in trees when they met us. They showed us each in turn
That Water would certainly wet us, as Fire would certainly burn:
But we found them lacking in Uplift, Vision and Breadth of Mind,
So we left them to teach the Gorillas while we followed the March of Mankind.

We moved as the Spirit listed. They never altered their pace,
Being neither cloud nor wind-borne like the Gods of the Market Place,
But they always caught up with our progress, and presently word would come
That a tribe had been wiped off its icefield, or the lights had gone out in Rome.

With the Hopes that our World is built on they were utterly out of touch,
They denied that the Moon was Stilton; they denied she was even Dutch;
They denied that Wishes were Horses; they denied that a Pig had Wings;
So we worshipped the Gods of the Market Who promised these beautiful things.

When the Cambrian measures were forming, They promised perpetual peace.
They swore, if we gave them our weapons, that the wars of the tribes would cease.
But when we disarmed They sold us and delivered us bound to our foe,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: “Stick to the Devil you know.”

On the first Feminian Sandstones we were promised the Fuller Life
(Which started by loving our neighbour and ended by loving his wife)
Till our women had no more children and the men lost reason and faith,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: “The Wages of Sin is Death.”

In the Carboniferous Epoch we were promised abundance for all,
By robbing selected Peter to pay for collective Paul;
But, though we had plenty of money, there was nothing our money could buy,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: “If you don’t work you die.”

Then the Gods of the Market tumbled, and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew
And the hearts of the meanest were humbled and began to believe it was true
That All is not Gold that Glitters, and Two and Two make Four
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings limped up to explain it once more.

As it will be in the future, it was at the birth of Man
There are only four things certain since Social Progress began.
That the Dog returns to his Vomit and the Sow returns to her Mire,
And the burnt Fool’s bandaged finger goes wabbling back to the Fire;

And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins
When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins,
As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will burn,
The Gods of the Copybook Headings with terror and slaughter return!

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Filed under American History, Culture Wars, Politics, The Constitution

Requiem for America? (No way, no how and not as long as we can fight!!!)

I enjoy chatting with all you guys on my blog, but it’s so wonderful to have another female voice here and judging by Minta’s comments in two days, odds are she’s going to become one of those in my “treasured friend” category:-)  So, Minta this post is going to start with quoting you again.  Here is the poem Minta posted, which reminds her of America:

“Who Has Known Heights”— Mary Brent Whiteside

Who has known heights and depths shall not again
Know peace-not as the calm heart knows
Low, ivied walls; a garden close;
An though he tread the humble ways of men
He shall not speak the common tongue again.

Who has known heights shall bear forevermore
An incommunicable thing
That hurts his heart, as if a wing
Beat at the portal, challenging;
And yet—lured by the gleam his vision wore—
Who once has trodden stars seeks peace no more.

Gladius emailed one of his “rants”, as he calls them, about the state of America and the GOP’s complete failure to find a message to inspire Americans and counter the left’s relentless surge toward a socialistic demise.  As an editorial comment, this is one of his milder rants, lol:

The problem with all of this talk about how BHOzo is killing the country is that the message is lost on the low information citizens who never read a newspaper, listen to news radio or see any internet news that doesn’t come with Huffington Post when they open their email. If information was all we needed, the invention of Google would have ushered in a state of utopia. We have to touch the heart with a good message. With 47% of the country on some form of government life support, they don’t care that the good, hard-working segment of the nation is suffering. The conservative right is not getting the message out with clear, concise sound bites that can be picked up in 140 characters or less. Being right won’t change anything until we learn how to communicate with that low information pack of ignorant 20, 30 and 40 somethings. Our national Republican leadership team (dare I call them leaders) is partly responsible for killing this country due to their own intransigence and ignorance of getting out the message. Hire a left liberal, Madison Avenue PR firm, for goodness sake, if that’s what it takes to get out the message. They will do anything for money!
 
So there, I’m off my soap box.
Both of the above views strike almost a”requiem for the dead” mood, but I’m not ready to concede defeat yet.  As long as we can still think freely, there is hope.  Saving our Republic won’t come from the politicians, of that I feel certain.  President Obama and company keep accelerating the burn rate, fueling this out of control incineration of any sort of fiscal constraints and the GOP, by and large, can’t even muster a bucket brigade to attempt to quell the flames.  When it comes to disaster metaphors, perhaps sandbagging, town by town, when the Mississippi floods provides a better approach – saving America one town at a time.  It all starts with working hard to save yourself and your family, then helping your neighbors,  and moving on to your community from there.
  Certainly, trying to wrestle control of the GOP from the hands of the likes of  Mitch McConnell, Lindsey Graham,  John McCain would offer a stronger national platform, from which to propel more responsive and responsible federal governance, but truly unless and until, our states start pushing federalism, rather than being wimpy supplicants to the ever-burgeoning federal bureaucracy,  don’t expect much to change.
  So many things frustrate and disgust me about American culture, but we’ve got such a wealth of talent here and despite all the dire catastrophes Washington creates,  accepting defeat isn’t an option.  Actually Obamacare may be the federal catastrophe that awakens the rebellion against Washington, that mobilizes that needed  grassroots effort.  No one in America will be able to avoid the Obamacare disaster, not individually or our businesses.  One can hardly miss the rumblings in Obama’s kingdom with his sinking poll numbers, truly horrible optics of pitting federal power against WWII vets trying to visit their long overdue memorial  and disgusting theatrical talking points offensive his nincompoops keep launching.  These idiots live by their poll numbers and today’s number should give them pause – 60% say fire every member of Congress and Obama hit his lowest poll number yet – 37% approval.
    As a child, I remember a trip to Williamsburg, VA and my awe at standing in the very room where Patrick Henry gave his speech.  I gazed around in wonder as the tour guide told us, right here is where he took his stand:
“Give me Liberty or give me Death”
Gladius is right, having a strong voice would help, but still,  we aren’t dead yet:-)

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G. Murphy Donovan: “The Decline and Fall of National Security”

With the advent of the internet, many common sense understandings about copyright protections and acceptable usage of other writers’ works seem to have flown out the window.  Many times I’ve been tempted to just post entire articles or pictures from other websites, but my “following the rules” nature caused me to hesitate.  Stratfor authorizes reprinting their articles, so I took the liberty of posting that, but I’ll continue writing my  rather boring little pieces about great articles and offering a link.  Here’s another very insightful piece by none other than the amazing G. Murphy Donovan (GMD), in which he cuts through the trendy strategic claptrap and hones in on strategic ground truth and our national security  demise (from The American Thinker, “The Decline and Fall of National Security”).  GMD chronicles the American intelligence demise coupled with the rampant politicization of our top military brass.  I would add one other factor to his list – the complete collapse of a shared national security viewpoint among our two main political parties and amongst our populace.  Many days reading or watching the news, it sure looks like each side views the opposing domestic political party as the main national security threat rather than any foreign entity.  From biblical times to today, that old adage that a house divided cannot long stand presages our demise, unless we can find a way to fix our foundational damage and rebuild a more sound structure – tall order with the fractured polity and populace in America presently.

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George Friedman offers excellent analysis on the Government Shutdown

Gladius sent this excellent George Friedman piece from today’s Stratfor, which offers the best explanation I’ve come across on how we’ve gotten to this sad state of political affairs in America:

The Roots of the Government Shutdown
Geopolitical Weekly
Tuesday, October 8, 2013 – 04:04 Print Text Size
Stratfor

By George Friedman

In general, Stratfor deals with U.S. domestic politics only to the extent that it affects international affairs. Certainly, this topic has been argued and analyzed extensively. Nevertheless, the shutdown of the American government is a topic that must be understood from our point of view, because it raises the issue of whether the leading global power is involved in a political crisis so profound that it is both losing its internal cohesion and the capacity to govern. If that were so, it would mean the United States would not be able to act in global affairs, and that in turn would mean that the international system would undergo a profound change. I am not interested in the debate over who is right. I am, however, interested in the question of what caused this shutdown, and ultimately what it tells us about the U.S. capacity to act.

That is one reason to address it. A broader reason to address it is to understand why the leading global power has entered a period when rhetoric has turned into increasingly dysfunctional actions. The shutdown of the government has thus far not disrupted American life as a whole, although it has certainly disrupted the lives of some dramatically.

It originated in a political dispute. U.S. President Barack Obama proposed and Congress approved a massive set of changes in U.S. health care. These changes were upheld in court after legal challenges. There appears to be significant opposition to this legislation according to polls, but the legislation’s opponents in Congress lack the ability to repeal it and override a presidential veto. Therefore, opponents attached amendments to legislation funding government operations, and basically said that legislation would only be passed if implementation of health care reform were blocked or at least delayed. Opponents of health care reform had enough power to block legislation on funding the government. Proponents of health care reform refused to abandon their commitment for reform, and therefore the legislation to fund the government failed and the government shut down.
Shutdowns and Shifts in the U.S. Political System

Similar shutdowns happened during the 1990s, and I am not prepared to say that divisions in our society have never been so deep or partisanship so powerful. I’ve written in the past pointing out that political vituperation has been common in the United States since its founding. Certainly nothing today compares to what was said during the Civil War, and public incivility during the Vietnam War was at least as intense.

What has changed over time is the impact of this incivility on the ability of the government to function. Consider the substantial threat that the United States might refuse to pay the debts it has incurred by consent of Congress and presidents past and present. In private life, refusal to pay debts when one can pay them is fairly serious. Though this is no less serious in public life, this outcome in the coming weeks seems conceivable. It is not partisanship, but the consequences of partisanship on the operation of the government that appear to have changed. The trend is not new, but it is intensifying. Where did it start?

From where I sit, there was a massive shift in the 1970s in how the American political system operates. Prior to then, candidate selection was based on delegates to national conventions, and the delegates to conventions were selected through a combination of state conventions and some primaries. Political bosses controlled the selection of state convention delegates, and therefore the bosses controlled the delegates to the national convention — and that meant that these bosses controlled the national conventions.

There was ample opportunity for corruption in this system, of course. The state party bosses were interested in enhancing their own security and power, and that was achieved by patronage, but they were not particularly ideological. By backing someone likely to be elected, they would get to appoint postmasters and judges and maybe even Cabinet secretaries. They used the carrot of patronage and the stick of reprisals for those who didn’t follow the bosses’ line. And they certainly were interested in money in exchange for championing business interests. They were ideological to the extent to which their broad constituencies were, and were prepared to change with them. But their eyes were on the mood of the main constituencies, not smaller ones. These were not men given to principled passion, and the dissident movements of the 1960s accordingly held men like Chicago’s Richard J. Daley responsible for repressing their movements.

The reformers wanted to break the hold of the party bosses over the system and open it to dissent, something party bosses disliked. The reformers did so by widely replacing state conventions with primary systems. This severely limited the power of state and county chairmen, who could no longer handpick candidates. These people no longer controlled their parties as much as presided over them.

Political parties ceased being built around patronage systems, but rather around the ability to raise money. Money, not the bosses’ power, became the center of gravity of the political system, and those who could raise money became the power brokers. More important, those who were willing to donate became candidates’ main constituency. The paradox of the reforms was that in breaking the power of the bosses, money became more rather than less important in the selection of candidates. Money has always been central to American politics. There has never been a time when it didn’t matter. But with the decline of political bosses, factors other than money were eliminated.

Through the next decade, reformers tried to get control over money. Though they had gotten rid of the bosses, getting money out of politics proved daunting. This put power in the hands of business, which by hook or crook, Citizens United or not, was going to pursue its interests through the political system. But in general its interests were fairly narrow and were not particularly ideological. Where before business gave to party bosses, it now donated to candidates and political action committees. Of course, if this route were closed down, still another route would be found. The candidates need money, businesses need to protect their political interests. Fortunately, most businessmen’s imagination stops at money, limiting the damage they can do.
An Unexpected Consequence

There was, however, an unexpected consequence. The reformers’ vision was that the fall of the bosses would open the door to broad democratic participation. But the fact was that the American people did not care nearly as much about politics as the reformers thought they ought to. Participation in presidential primaries was frequently well below 50 percent, and in state and local elections, it was far lower.

For most Americans, private life is more important than public life. There is only so much time and energy available, the issues are arcane and rarely involve things that will change ordinary citizens’ lives much, and there is little broad-based ideological passion. Citizens frequently don’t know or care who their congressman is, let alone who their state senator is. They care about schools and roads and taxes, and so long as those are functioning reasonably well, they are content.

This greatly frustrated the reformers. They cared deeply about politics, and believed that everyone should, too. But in the country our founders bequeathed us, it was expected that most people would concern themselves with private things. And in fact they do: They do not vote in primaries or even in general elections.

The primaries were left to the minority who cared. At the beginning, these were people who felt strongly about particular issues: corporate greed, the environment, war, abortion, taxes, and so on. Over time, these particular issues congealed into ideology. An ideology differs from issue-oriented matters in that ideology is a package of issues. On the right, low taxes and hostility to abortion frequently are linked. On the left, corporate greed and war are frequently linked. Eventually, a bond is created showing that apparently disparate issues are in fact part of the same package.

Particular issues meld to form ideological factions. The ideological factions take common positions on a wide range of issues. The factions are relatively small minorities, but their power is vastly magnified by the primary system. Ideologues care because ideologies contain an apocalyptic element: If something is not done soon, the argument goes, catastrophe will ensue. The majority might well feel some unease regarding particular topics, and some may feel disaster is afoot, but they do not share the ideologue’s belief that redemption can come from the political process.

This in part might be because of a sense of helplessness, and in part it might reflect a deeper sophistication about how the world really works, but either way, this type of person doesn’t vote in primaries. But ideologues do. Perhaps not all do, and not everyone who votes is an ideologue, but it is ideology that generates a great deal of the energy that contributes to our political process. And it is ideology that, for example, links the deep and genuine passion over abortion to other issues.

A candidate in either party does not need the votes of the majority of registered voters. He needs the votes of the majority of voters who will show up. In the past model, voters showed up because, say, they got their job on the highway crew from the county boss, and they had to appear at the polls if they wanted to keep it. Those days are gone. Now, people show up because of their passionate belief in a particular ideology, and money is spent convincing them that a candidate shares their passionate commitment.

After raising the funds by convincing primary voters of their ideological commitment, the general election can turn into a race between two ideological packages. The winner will only be re-elected if primary voters see him as having been sufficiently loyal to their ideology while in office.
Bosses vs. Ideology

Bosses were corrupt, and in that corruption they were moderate through indifference. Contemporary politicians — not all of them but enough of them — live within a framework of ideology where accommodation is the epitome of lacking principle. If you believe deeply in something, then how can you compromise on it? And if everything you believe in derives from an ideology where every issue is a matter of principle, and ideology clashes with ideology, then how can anyone fold his cards? You can’t go back to voters who believe that you have betrayed them and expect to be re-elected.

In the 20th century, the boss system selected such presidents as Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower and John Kennedy. I was struck at how a self-evidently corrupt and undemocratic system would have selected such impressive candidates (albeit along with Warren Harding and other less impressive ones). The system should not have worked, but on the whole, it worked better than we might have imagined. I leave to others to judge how these compare to post-reform candidates like Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush or Barack Obama.

There is a vast difference between principle and ideology. Principles are core values that do not dictate every action on every subject, but guide you in some way. Ideology as an explanation of how the world works is comprehensive and compelling. Most presidents find that governing requires principles, but won’t allow ideology. But it is the senators and particularly the congressmen — who run in districts where perhaps 20 percent of eligible voters vote in primaries, most of them ideologues — who are forced away from principle and toward ideology.

All political systems are flawed and all political reforms have unexpected and frequently unwelcome consequences. In the end, a political system must be judged on the results that it brings. When we look at those elected under the old system, it is difficult to argue that reforms have vastly improved the leadership stock. The argument is frequently made that this is because of the pernicious effect of money or the media on the system. I would argue that the problem is that the current system magnifies the importance of the ideologues such that current political outcomes increasingly do not reflect the public will, and that this is happening at an accelerated pace.

It is not ideology that is the problem. It is the overrepresentation of ideologues in the voting booth. Most Americans are not ideologues, and therefore the reformist model has turned out to be as unrepresentative as the political boss system was. This isn’t the ideologues fault; they are merely doing what they believe. But most voters are indifferent. Where the bosses used to share the public’s lack of expectation of great things from politics, there is no one prepared to limit the role of ideology. There is no way to get people to vote, and the reforms that led to a universally used primary system have put elections that most people don’t participate in at center stage.

Each faction is deeply committed to its beliefs, and feels it would be corrupt to abandon them. Even if it means closing the government, even if it means defaulting on debt, ideology is a demanding mistress who permits no other lovers. Anyone who reads this will recognize his enemy at work. I, however, am holding everyone responsible, from left to right — and especially the indifferent center. I hold myself accountable as well: I have no idea what I could do to help change matters, but I am sure there is something.

Editor’s Note: An earlier version of this column misstated the first name of 1960s-era mayor, Richard J. Daley.
Send us your thoughts on this report.
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Reprinting or republication of this report on websites is authorized by prominently displaying the following sentence, including the hyperlink to Stratfor, at the beginning or end of the report.
“The Roots of the Government Shutdown is republished with permission of Stratfor.”

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General Hayden, what a laugh…

With time for only a few lines before heading to work, first I want to complain that when I click on my blog link, after signing in, it doesn’t take me to my blog. I end up stuck on the My Reader page. Had to take a circuitous route to even get here. Now on to something of a political nature, well, somewhat. I am sure most people have seen the rather dry, Mr. Professor type, former CIA director, General Michael Hayden on TV. He’s always appeared so studious and methodical.  Imagine my surprise at finding out he has quite a wicked sense of humor (not really).  Reading Bryan Preston’s short piece over at PJ Media sent just a slight chill down my spine (nothing like the 47º weather Justin mentioned yesterday, but still a slight ripple).  General Hayden, joked about how in his darker moments, recently, he’d thought of nominating Edward Snowden, the infamous leaker, to another list other than the Human Rights list that has nominated him for an award, alluding to Obama’s drone strike list.  With disquieting reports on the likes of Janet Napolitano’s wild list-making, where she listed former soldiers as likely terrorist and the penchant for this administration to add people to their assorted watch lists with little (no)  fact-checking, I missed the humor.  And now we have Obama’s mad bomber, John Brennan, actually running the CIA.  Yikes, how does one find out if they’ve made one of the enemies lists in this administration?  Or is it time to look at purchasing an Acme version of a home missile defense system……..

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Fast forward through this fiscal crisis, pleaseeeeeeeeeee

Decisions, decisions, what Obama disaster to respond to first…………  ackkkkkkk not enough first responders in the whole country to cope with his epic proportion catastrophes.  Here he goes again with another “scorched earth” offensive, where he’ll find some guts to stand up for “fiscal responsibility” – make sure he keeps soldiers paid, granny from being tossed over the cliff and little American Bobby need not fear when he holds up his bowl for more government gruel, with sad eyes, begging, “Please Sir, I want some more.”  Oh my God, this pathetic rerun sure gets old and some of us haven’t recovered yet from the sequestration debacle.   As if that Dickens imagery isn’t enough, Obama and his team of photo-op propagandists surely have a Tiny Tim, ready to hobble before the cameras, smile adoringly at President Obama and proclaim, “God bless us, every one, but especially you President Obama, for giving me affordable health care……….”

And where are the Republicans?    Oh yeah, they’re still rattling around dragging the chains, unto perpetuity, being characterized as evil, greedy, only concerned for the rich.  Instead of unifying and mounting their own offensive or even defending themselves, their default position seems to be to form a circular firing squad and open fire.

No wonder most Americans avert their eyes and are watching Duck Dynasty (except for me, as I assiduously avoid reality TV).  I’m stuck watching the Military channel and watching old war footage, because even my beloved History channel joined the “reality TV” bandwagon, with no history, but I can learn about truck drivers in Alaska or how some pawn shop folks make their living.  Can’t we just fast forward and skip this fiscal crisis, since we all know how it ends?

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A strong tonic for America

From across the pond another American serves up some apple pie baked with some very tart apples.  Just last week it was Gennifer Flowers dishing up her own spicy sauce with reminiscences of the love of her life, Bill Clinton in the UK’s Daily Mail  (my blog post here) and then this morning with my first sip of coffee, there’s a rambling American Pie recipe to fix American journalism by none other than, Seymour Hersh, the controversial Pulitzer Prize winning American journalist, in the UK’s The Guardian (the same paper that broke the Edward Snowden saga). You can read the full recipe here.  Beware the British are coming, rofl.

Hersh derides the state of American journalism and while I’ve not agreed with many of his conclusions on various stories over the years, the one thing I do admire about Hersh is that he does his own legwork, whereas it seems like the vast majority of American journalists these days are lazy slugs, who rely upon pooled information, or even worse, they cut and paste from across the internet gathering their “facts” from many dubious sources.  Sadly, our government often seems to do the same thing, as evidenced by John Kerry using the disgraced Syrian expert, Elizabeth O’Bagy’s, reporting on the disposition of Syrian rebel forces rather than intelligence from our intelligence agencies.  And it appeared to me that her map became the accepted “official” lay of the land, making me chuckle.  Long ago, in Grenada, my husband returned with tourist maps of Grenada, that they picked up at the zoo and the legend on that map highlighted useful facts about Grenada, as our elite troopers fought hut by hut , like the population of Grenada, highlighting it’s an island of “warm and friendly people”……….  Yes, Ms O’Bagy’s map is probably just as useful at determining the lay of the land in Syria.

Love him or hate him, Seymour Hersh ends with a strong tonic for fixing part of what’s wrong with America in this Guardian story: “The republic’s in trouble, we lie about everything, lying has become the staple.” And he implores journalists to do something about it.

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John McCain staff requirement – just be a liar….

If you lie about your academic credentials, don’t divulge that you’re the political director for a lobbying group advocating for the Syrian rebels, but you’re cute in a Monica Lewinsky sort of way, not to worry, you may be just the candidate to work for Senator John McCain…..  Bryan Preston at PJ Media reports that John McCain has hired Elizabeth O’Bagy as a legislative assistant in his office.  Who says character counts in Washington DC.?  The more you lie and display a total disregard for possessing any shred of personal integrity, the faster you advance.   To offer a reminder, Ms O’Bagy worked for the Syrian Emergency Task Force, which for some insane reason our State Department funds and this group also escorted John McCain in Syria and took him around to meet all the “moderate” rebel fighters on his little media stunt trip earlier this year.  The SETF leader, whom Preston helpfully shows a photo of with John McCain in Syria, is a Palestinian activist, who supports Hamas.  Who cares right?

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The epitome of macho manliness?

Oh no, I read this article about Putin’s American fans (interesting piece here at the National Journal) and then wondered, do I harbor a crush/unwarranted admiration for Vlad ???  Pssst, the article comes with more great Putin photos too;-)  After all of a ten seconds reflection, with previous posts like my “Putin By A Mile”, well, sheepishly I admit – I just might.   From a female perspective, it’s not that he’s a poster pin-up kind of handsome, with his lack of height and receding hairline, but he exudes machismo to the nth degree, with those bulging muscles and manly poses, frequently with a gun in hand and a large animal carcass beside him.  When you juxtapose President Obama with his bumbling  PC circuitous ramblings and his most daring golf poses, Putin evokes a grudging admiration in me.   I would want this kind of man beside me when facing a dangerous adversary.    He makes me yearn for a strong American leader, whom could and would take a stand and not waver.  Perhaps, it’s not so much what all Putin is, but obviously, so glaringly  what Obama is not……

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