Showing posts with label Progressive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Progressive. Show all posts

Monday, May 10, 2021

A Common Thread?


“The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history”             George Orwell

“Keep people from their history and they are easily  controlled.”         Karl Marx

“We can and must write in a language which sows among the masses hate, revulsion, and scorn toward those who disagree with us.”           Vladimir Lenin

“If the Revolution has the right to destroy bridges and art monuments whenever necessary, it will stop still less from laying its hand on any tendency in art which, no matter how great its achievement in form, threatens to disintegrate the revolutionary environment or to arouse the internal forces of the Revolution, that is, the proletariat, the peasantry, and the intelligentsia, to a hostile opposition to one another. Our standard is, clearly, political, imperative, and intolerant.”                                                     Leon Trotsky

All these ideas, expressed by the foundational thinkers of the Socialist/Communist movement recognize the power of controlling information and the dialogue.  Although not as deeply thought out as Karl Marx or Vladimir Lenin, Saul Alinsky builds on these strategic thoughts as he published his “tactical” Rules for Radicals. (e.g. "If you push a negative hard and deep enough it will break through into its counter-side; this is based on the principle that every positive has its negative.")

It is interesting to see pseudo-intellectual thinkers of today embrace these ideals without understanding either the implications or likely outcomes for their actions.  True socialism or communism has failed the poor in every country it has been implemented in.  It has failed the illiterate, the mentally unstable, the minorities, and the sexually different as well.  Yet here we are being pushed into this concept by those who’ve spent a lifetime being indoctrinated by an educational system run by those who’ve spent their lives believing they are underpaid and underappreciated by those uneducated parents who’ve entrusted their children into their care.

You have to look no further than the progressive DNC movement and its propaganda arm to see the implementation of these doctrinal ideas of how to destroy a free society.  

Monday, June 29, 2020

What They Really Mean.


Recently there was an exchange between an older conservative and a younger liberal regarding the destruction of monuments here in the United States.  In the course of the exchange, the younger liberal explained with all her education and training she cared far more for people than she did about the destruction of public property.  This set off a series of internal questions I’ve been mulling over.  I’ve come to the conclusion if the young liberal really believes what she is saying is true she is living through a serious case of self-denial.
What the evidence suggests is she believes in causes far more than she believes in people and she has been deluded into believing that supporting the “right cause” is the same thing as caring about people.  Let me explain.
In an earlier discussion, I asked her what she would do to end “systemic racism” in America.  Let’s stop right here for a moment while I explain I am not sure what systemic racism is, but I do understand the evil of racism so I figure if we could end racism the systemic part would take care of itself.  So that was kind of the answer I was looking for.
Her answer didn’t surprise me.  She listed a whole litany of progressive causes.  Everything from transitioning police funding into community programs, business incentives to hire minorities, to abolishing the electoral college.  I had seen every single one of her solutions identified in progressive papers, or conservative critiques.  Not one item actually dealt with how to change an individual from a belief set that one was superior to another (a root cause for racism). Every single suggestion dealt with centralizing power and prioritizing that funding as progressive politicians have suggested curing the ills of society.
In defending the on-going political struggle between those who would overthrow the government and those who would defend it, she again sided with those who would overthrow the government rather than adapt.  It is, after all, today’s “cause celeb.”  This was when “I believe in people” comes in.
She has spent a good portion of her life in school and now works for a technology firm where she makes a good living.  The question I would ask her if I thought it had the remotest chance of causing self-reflection is, if you care about people more than statues why aren’t you spending your life helping people rather than creating technology that has proven to divide us?  The reality I see is all the social progressives who’ve achieved success express empathy with the poor and downtrodden, as long as it doesn’t take their getting their own hands dirty or separate them from their personal wealth.
There are thousands of people who spend their entire life trying to make the lives of the unfortunate better.  Of course, some people think if they can give enough money to a cause it will make things better, but I am talking about people who really truly believe in helping people.  Those people work at the human to human level. They are the Mother Teresa people.  They quietly, without fanfare, and with the deepest compassion set out to make the world better by making one life at a time better, until they look back at their own life and they’ve changed the world.  Those are the people who believe in people.  I do my own small part, but I realize I am not one of those magnificent examples of humanity, and neither are almost all liberals. 
We simply need to look at the way liberals approach a problem to see that.  Almost all the influential liberals get someone else to do the heavy lifting.  As this younger liberal pointed out, she would be out on the streets with Antifa and BLM, but she had to work.  She is not a mover or shaker in the world of high tech so she can probably be forgiven if she doesn’t really understand how her company takes advantage of cheap foreign labor to suppress the income of minority college graduates looking for entry-level jobs in the high-tech business she works for.  She could be forgiven if she didn’t recognize the billionaires who employ her use the same tax loopholes available to the uncaring conservatives who think that the tax code should be dismantled, but she recognizes that she is superior to others who “don’t support the correct causes” and so I wonder why should I forgive her?
At church this morning there was a wonderful homily about God and love.  The foundation of love for our fellow man is found; as Jesus explains in his discussion of the commandments given to the Jews as they fled from Egypt.
 Jesus replied, “This is the most important: ‘Hear O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.  The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ No other commandment is greater than these.”   Mark 12:29-31
Of course, if you reject the idea of God it is simple to reject the wisdom of these words as being critical to our survival as societies.  You can see in the progressive movement all kinds of alternatives to these profound words.  We create a wide variety of moral rationales, but time and time again we come up short in our ability to find a form of government where all are treated equally.  The strong will always dominate, the weak will always cower and the majority will go with whatever direction someone who promises greatness points them in.
If we can replace the wisdom of the bible with the new wisdom of relative morality, we can always find a cause to believe in and another to despise with equal enthusiasm.  Let me set before you a simple example. 
We can watch on the television commercial after commercial talking about saving whales, abandoned puppies, orphaned giraffes, rhinos, and cheetahs.  All seeking to allow you to relieve your guilt by sending in a few dollars a month, the equivalent of a Starbucks coffee a day.  You’ll hardly miss those dollars and think of all the good they will do?
On the other hand, women and men will take to the streets and the media will cover with as many hours as it takes to promote the idea that a human fetus is nothing but a “clump of cells” that should be mined for any genetic value they may have.  They are unwilling to acknowledge the viability of the human until there is no other option, but even then, they have no problem with the stark contrast between killing a fetus and then claiming black lives matter. Not one of them is willing to question the illogic of that statement when black fetuses are killed at a significantly higher rate than as a simple percentage of the population.  Nor are they willing to admit that only certain black lives matter.  Black cops are okay to kill, black children in the major cities are okay to kill as long as they aren’t famous.  After all, if blacks are killing blacks that don’t fit the agenda of the cause.  It is just “inconvenient truth.”  The only black lives that matter isa the ones they say matter.  No more, no less.
I am not sure I understand how liberals come away with a sense of moral superiority but they do, you see it in their every action.  Governor Cuomo made a decision that led to 40,000 dead New Yorkers from the COVID pandemic, yet he has the balls to lecture the rest of the nation on how they should follow New York’s lead on keeping their states locked down and that will solve everything.
We see in the news the portrayal of those who choose to protect themselves against the mobs as anti-social, while “the cause” seeking to overturn the evil of our society as legitimate by those who choose not to think through the consequences of their choices.
A couple of years ago another liberal engaged me in a discussion over the use of tear gas as a crowd dispersal tool.  His opening salvo was all about how it was immoral for the national or state governments to allow this, and oh by the way it was forbidden by the Laws of Armed Conflict.  Having served in the military for more than 20 years and been trained in the defenses for Chemical and Biological warfare I was pretty certain this young man, with zero actual military experience didn’t have a clue about the subject, and I found out in the course of my discussion and research all he was doing was parroting the talking points popular with the protest crowd as they bitched about being on the receiving end of a tear gas exchange.
After pointing out the actual agreement on the use of chemical and biological weapons he still insisted on the laws that allowed their use was morally outrageous.  The fact that the alternative to the use of tear gas could be the use of lethal force we finally decided to end the discussion.  The thing that became apparent in this and every subsequent exchange is his dogmatic commitment to “the cause.”  I’ve not seen many original fact-based thoughts come out of him as we’ve exchanged ideas.  He has a lot of opinions, but everyone I’ve ever checked up on comes out of popular progressive talking points.  I don’t see any deep thought going into his sense of moral superiority.
On a purely selfish level, I have to laugh at the two children (for despite their ages they are in fact indoctrinated children who can’t think beyond the public statements of the cause). Memories come up which recall the time the young liberal ran crying to her bedroom because she was mad, or the time her older brother had to prove his grasp of modern trivia while intimidating his sister.  The one good thing appears they’ve become more supportive of each other as she identifies her brother as a “well-respected Geneticist,” with his BA in Biology, I had always thought of him more as a lab technician.  So, there is that.

Sunday, June 9, 2019

It's a Mystery.

I am a little confused by the DNC primary process.  There is nothing in their policies, public statements, or candidates to suggest they are at all interested in what middle America (the flyover states) have to say.  Why then do they hold their earliest primaries there? 
Wouldn't it be more cost effective to just divide NY, MA, CA, WA, and OR into like 50 different districts and concentrate the primaries there and then tell everyone else how it turned out?

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Is it a Matter of Choice?

For years, I've attempted to get people who claim to be pro-choice or woman's rights advocates to answer a simple question.  "When does life begin?"  It is the foundational question the U.S. Supreme Court deferred on in Roe v. Wade in 1973.
This week we see the Senate vote 53 to 44 against the "Born Alive" bill, which would have provided post birth protection for babies who survived the abortion process. The vote indicates at least some Republicans sided with the Democrats to deny care for the infants.
There can be no mistake from this point forward.  Those who claim to support a woman's choice believe no life is sacred and it only begins when they feel like saying it does.  As I've asked before, why stop at infants?
It seems to me the vote on this issue reflects a belief that there is no value in life unless it can further a political position.  So until the child can declare its party affiliation (which had better be with the DNC), their life has no value.
Yet the same people who have decided life does not begin at birth have the gall to complain about separating immigrant children from adults, and they are supported by those who claim Trump is mean to people while physically assaulting people who wear MEGA hats.
Give me a break!

Thursday, October 4, 2018

Trump Loves Hate


Okay, now you’re just being silly.  As the Democratic extremists continue to argue against Kavanaugh, and suggest that if this or that was done it might change their position it has reached a point of absurdity.  On the bright side, it seems they and their tactics may just make this a mid-term to remember.  Six months ago, all the alleged experts were calling for a blue wave where incumbent Republicans would be tossed out and the Democrats would sweep into power to impeach and convict the President, thus removing him from office.  It appears that may not be as dramatic as the media would like it to be.  In fact, there may be a political red tide in lieu of a blue wave.
Diehards within the activist’s groups in the DNC don’t know how to quit, but the responses to their outrageous behavior are certainly getting easier for those who must confront them.
It seems daily their bad behavior is now displayed even on the most bias of social and public media.  It doesn’t matter if it is some guy with a roundhouse kick to knock out some poor pro-life girl with a camera, or the idiots who are yelling out the FBI investigation was incomplete.  For the average middle of the road voter, they are now getting a sense of how dangerous it would be to restore power to the extremists who’ve become the face of the Democratic party.
For those complaining the FBI didn’t interview Professor Blasey Ford or subject Judge Kavanaugh to a lie detector test, I offer two simple observations.
a. Professor Ford and her lawyers had over six months to come forward and didn’t.  She and her lawyers sought to control and limit her exposure to questioning by the Judiciary Committee where they had every opportunity to lay all their substantiation on the table.  They and the minority members chose not to -- believing uncorroborated claims would be enough.  Not one Democratic member chose to ask probing questions that would have perhaps filled in some of the corroborations.  They chose instead to praise and glorify her victim status since they had already made up their minds.  Because of the testimony, there was zero reason for the FBI to interview her, despite the claims by her lawyers she could offer corroborating evidence.  It seems interesting a recently retired law professor from UW Madison wrote on her blog today.  "There's so little honesty in law and politics. I sometimes feel like retreating from all of it and..."
b. The American Psychological Association[1] says this about Polygraph (lie detector) tests. “Polygraph testing has generated considerable scientific and public controversy. Most psychologists and other scientists agree that there is little basis for the validity of polygraph tests. Courts, including the United States Supreme Court (cf. U.S. v. Scheffer, 1998 in which Dr.'s Saxe's research on polygraph fallibility was cited), have repeatedly rejected the use of polygraph evidence because of its inherent unreliability.”  So, any call for the Judge to take a polygraph test is either coming from a useful idiot or would be immediately questioned as bogus if he were exonerated.   This call is simply another red herring thrown up by those who don’t want President Trump to win.
I am surprised I haven’t heard how many people will die if he is appointed.  Oh wait, I have.  Never mind.
Maybe someday, perhaps not in my lifetime but someday, the DNC will actually have good ideas to make America Great and not just resort to ad hominin attacks on those who would like to live in a great country.

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

The Beauty of Made Up Stuff (or How the DNC is like a pack of wolves)


This picture came out a couple of years ago, supposedly to show how a brilliant wolf leader leads from behind and how the pack protects the weakest in the pack by putting them in the front.  Both Snopes[1], and Truth or Fiction[2] classify the photo as mislabeled or false. It was put on the internet by someone with an agenda who had no problem imposing his or her personal view as if it were the absolute truth.  The internet is great for that.

Someone, in one of the activities I am now a part of, sent that same  picture to all the members yesterday to reflect how we should lead from behind and care for the weakest and oldest in our community.  While I agree we must care for the weakest and oldest the question is where does a leader lead from?

There are several old jokes that come to mind about people, who are supposedly in charge, having to hurry to stay up with the people they are supposed to be in charge of.  Then, of course, there is the old book of British Military Performance Reviews that has this gem.  “His men would follow him anywhere, but only out of curiosity.”

So, this got me to thinking.  I believe this picture reflects the reality of the current Progressive Democratic Party leadership.

In the front of the pack, you see the three lead dogs wolves who will be used as sacrificial victims as the pack hunts down their next Trump appointee. You can clearly see they are sniffing for the weakest prey and their heads are bowed as they realize their fate is to be the victim in front.

Next, inside the yellow rectangle, come the youngest and most aggressive political operatives who will quickly move forward to stand up for the victims as they fall to the media frenzy.  It is their job to divert the conversations from fact to the fiction the pack leader has chosen to present.  They will loudly and viciously chew at the appointee in hopes of improving their political standing within the pack.

The group following them will be the majority of the political pack who trudge dutifully along following in the steps of the victims and the advocates waiting to get a chance to get on camera and get their share of the kill.

The group identified in green are the party leaders who will howl their instructions to the victims and the rest of the pack while maintaining some safe distance from the actual slaughter.  Their main role is to protect the anointed leader who follows at a safe distance.  They must be prepared to change direction quickly to defend their anointed so they are located where they can sniff out the prey, but not so far ahead of the anointed they can’t change direction quickly to encircle him or her within the safety of the pack.

Finally, at the end of the pack is the anointed leader who howls the loudest when the hunt begins encouraging those who will be sacrificed that their role is a worthy one and their loss will be long remembered within the pack.

So that is how the DNC is like a pack of wolves.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

A Question of Education (part II)


Continued
What Has Our Current Educational System Given us?  This is an almost impossible question to answer with any true legitimacy because we have no idea of the outcomes if we had made alternative choices.  True, we can look around and make assessments, but they are directly flavored by the political divide this country is fracturing into.
What I see:  Large universities are becoming rich at the cost of overwhelming student debt (which a socialist left would have forgiven by making it a part of our national debt).  A significant percentage of students emerge from their time at college without the skills employers are seeking.  The promise of increased earnings from a basic college degree is becoming a distant memory.  An understanding and appreciation for civics (the nature of our nation-state), is disappearing – along with a respect for how we should change those things worth changing.  The ability to reason, debate and resolve conflict no longer seems to be a part of the political process.  Educators seem to have instilled in the young a belief the government is responsible for their success or failure, rather than understanding personal accountability.  Let’s look at each of these separately.
The United States spends more per student on education than most other developed countries,[1] but with far less success than places in northern Europe or Asia.  Just to be clear, those countries have a fairly homogenous population and set high expectations for the young.  With those expectations comes a stress to excel and with that stress, failure takes on a very personal penalty.  We, on the other hand, have an ethnically diverse population with a much larger issue with integration into a common cultural norm.  That is a fact, but perhaps not the central issue.  Beginning with the post-World War II years we’ve seen the Federal government push the universities to ever larger sizes with the funding of student education, first through the creation of the Veterans benefits and then through guaranteed student loans.  Both of these programs have had huge impacts on our nation, and few would argue they’ve not been overwhelming successes for the lives of most who’ve benefitted from them.  At the same time though we’ve created an expectation on the part of state university systems that they are due to all the federal funding they can get.  They are now an industry, just like Monsanto, and like Monsanto, they lobby for their “fair share” of the government dole.  At the same time tier, 1 schools and school systems have increased their endowments to epic proportions[2] where their values are measured in billions of dollars. 
Where do we start with understanding a cause?  Let’s start with the role of politics as it has been introduced into the equation because of the huge amount of dollars we spend.  (Federal Department of Education alone sends the states about $15 billion/year[3]).  With our perpetually elected Congress and the educational lobbyists who enrich them, we can see a real correlation.  Clearly, Congress has written laws that have taken the risk of loaning money off the backs of the bankers and placed it on the backs of the taxpayers who guarantee these loans.  Meanwhile, the airwaves are filled with commercials talking about how much more money a college graduate will make than someone with just a high school diploma.  But is that really true?  Today we have a deficit of people with the skills necessary to keep our society viable, and an overabundance of people with little experience in anything other than going to school, but who’ve been thoroughly indoctrinated into supporting the preferred political solutions of their educational professionals. 
Thanks to the support of our politicians the cost of education has far outpaced the inflation index for the past 40-years.  This chart[4] from InflationData.com shows how much the universities have increased costs compared to the standard inflation of consumer prices since 1985. 


We hear a tremendous outcry over the “greed” of industries like bankers and investment firms, or hear about the billionaires of the tech industries or the wealthy 1%, but where is the outcry over the wealth of institutions like Harvard, Yale, or the California and New York university systems?  Is it because those advocating for the vilification of the 1% have a personal stake in not protesting their own jobs? 
Take, for example, Senator Warren (D-MA)[5] who left what seemed to be a cushy job at Harvard where she was paid over $400,000/year[6] to teach (there are claims she taught a single course but there is little hard data to support or refute this claim).  This afforded her the opportunity to earn additional income through consultation with both private companies and the Federal Government.  She is now a Senator lambasting the rich, but I don’t see much comment on the wealth of the educational institutions where she has spent so much of her adult life.  She and many of her colleagues clearly fall in the top 1% themselves and seem to make no effort to voluntarily pay what they say is their fair share of taxes so others can be cared for without regard to cost.
What has this push for college education done for the average citizen/student who is looking to make the most for themselves and their families?  What we see in the news is the tremendous burden of student debt we have created.  According to Student Loan Hero website[7], the average student in the class of 2017 graduates from college with a debt burden of $39,400 and the total debt is a staggering $1.4 trillion dollars.  How did this occur? That’s easy, the politically powerful in the country serve as advocates for the educational system.  Routinely we see a crossflow of people moving from education to government and back to education as each administration seeks the “best and brightest” to implement their agenda.  The same thing is said of industry and each is a reasonable fact of life, but there is clearly a willingness to enrich those centers of education by creating both the demand for education and the means to enrich those who play along with this whole process. 
But what kind of job market are they coming out of college into?  Well, obviously that depends on what kind of job market the country has based on its involvement in the current (capitalist) based system.  As in most things, there seems to be a natural cycle where the economy ebbs and flows, but what the record has shown in the 20th and 21st centuries is the greater the government involvement in regulating and controlling the free market system the greater the likelihood of stagnation and job loss through poor policy and market manipulation.  The year 2008 stands as a testament to this, when the government support of cheap money for housing for those who could not afford to repay their loans lead to a collapse of the housing market, and bankruptcies for tens of thousands if not millions of families.
With millions of unemployed workers, salaries stagnate and new graduates find little improvement in their lives.  As universities encourage students to spend their time studying areas that offer great social awareness, but little social value they come out of college with debt but ill-prepared for a job market where specific skills are in demand and a degree in women’s studies only prepares them for more education.  But even when students pursue degrees in the touted STEM disciplines, the fact the job market is so soft creates a real question of how does a degree generate a reasonable return on investment?
The other day I was talking to my brother, an electrical engineer, and he gave me a great example of how this all fits together.  When he graduated from college in the 1980s his cost of education was about $45,000 dollars.  His starting salary as an engineer was $28,000/year.  His daughter recently graduated from college with an engineering degree, her cost of education was well over $200,000 but her starting salary is $45,000.  A markedly reduced return on investment.  Life for teachers, who will have about the same sunk cost in education is significantly worse since their salaries routinely fail to keep pace with private industry.
Now let’s consider how education has changed from opening minds to political indoctrination.
Who are our teachers?  Teaching is a unique profession, and as in all professions there is a standard for admittance into it, and with expanding government regulation a licensing process the selection process seems to narrow to those who have a common view of the role of a teacher.  One of the things that make the majority of teachers unique is they are government employees (obviously private/religious schools are the exception).  As public employees, their salaries are set by the state legislatures and the role of the union would seem to be one akin to a lobbyist where they persuade the local and state politicians to reward their members with good salaries.  But there is a difference, like all unions they have from time to time taken their members out on strike and when this happens the union members seem to act exactly as if they were any other union with protest and occasional violence against those who fail to support them.
Who trains our teachers?  Teachers are trained by other teachers, who work at the college/university level and who are quite possibly employed for life through the tenure system.  Reducing their accountability for job performance to nearly zero.  While I have not bothered to actually check on the credentials of the tenured professors there is enough information in the news to suggest these individuals come mostly from my generation were for the male’s college was a way to escape military service, and their formative years were spent advocating for social upheaval.  They have risen to positions of authority where they have surrounded themselves with like-thinking individuals and are now engrained in the institutional structures creating a social bubble for themselves and their students that mirrors what we see in socialism.  There is only one right answer and failure to adhere to that idea will result in loss of position, failure and perhaps expulsion.
Over the past thirty years, we’ve seen our educators set on a path of cultural change that removes the focus from learning to indoctrination to support a single-party political state, where the citizen is dependent on the largess of the state for their physical well-being.  With the fall the of the Soviet Union teachers can push aside the evil that occurred in that government and selectively celebrate the free healthcare, universal employment, and educational benefits while casting aside the empty store shelves, state oversight of one’s personal life, and the slaughter of millions of its citizens.  To do this they must make time in the curriculum -- so the study of our own civic responsibility within the republic seems to be far less important.
One of the historical roles of education was to teach the young the history of civilization and how it has evolved to create the modern world.  It seems now educators are more concerned with teaching how we must reshape society to conform to their expectations and we are now expected to vilify those who’ve gone before us.  Their failures are the focus of a great debate about the evils of society.  In the course of this shift in focus, any thought of celebrating the successes of society are cast aside and a full discussion of the pros and cons of the society are lost.  Jorge Agustín Nicolás Ruiz de Santayana y Borrás, also known as George Santayana, reminds us “Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”  I believe what is most important in this idea is knowing that remembering requires us to understand the context of the past as well as just a few random events.  That distinction seems to be lost on today’s youth.  Perhaps because the teachers are focused on reshaping the minds to think as they think, rather than creating a true liberal learning environment?
Then we enter into the whole politically correct and sensitive speech arena where you just can’t express yourself, you’ve got to self-regulate so as to avoid any potential for offense to those who might disagree with you.
The whole myth of politically correct speech is cloaked with the idea it is about being sensitive to others.  I think nothing could be further from the truth.  The idea of controlling speech has been, and will always be, about control and domination of the political debate.  How better to win an argument than to limit the opponent’s ability to respond by changing the meanings of words, by identifying words as offensive, and by shaming the opposition into a subordinate position.  Who better to do this indoctrination than the educators we turn our children over to?
Sadly, what I see in reading the commentary on social media of the socially conscious millennial is an inability to distinguish fact from opinion and a willingness to forsake reason for instant gratification as they respond to some media-generated outrage.  I wonder, will they change as they grow older?  If my generation is any indication I fear they will not.

Saturday, April 21, 2018

You Know, I Thought We Were Better Than That.



“I thought we were better than that,” has become one just another tired cliché.  I’ve pointed this out here, but this week while I was traveling another instance of our base ugliness made the news.  I am saddened that so many who view themselves as superior to so many others actually find ways to prove they are not.
On April 17th Barbara Bush, wife of George H.W. Bush, passed quietly away after an illness.  By all measures, she was a fine woman, wife, mother, and First Lady.  She represented the strength and dignity of those who’ve become known as America’s Greatest Generation.  Before it became fashionable to recognize HIV/AIDS she used her position to bring a humanity to the plight of those infected.  As First Lady, she pushed hard to encourage America to read and be literate.  She was originally from Rye NY and will be buried today in College Station Texas.
Almost immediately after her death was announced, Professor Randa Jarrar, California State University, Fresno, felt compelled to take to Twitter to call Mrs. Bush and the Bush family all racists who deserved to die. She upped the ante when she pointed out she was a tenured professor who couldn’t be fired.  Completing the trifecta of petty, ugly, behavior she gave out the phone number of a suicide hotline for Arizona State University and told people upset with her to feel free to call her and debate the claim, thus closing the line to people who might actually seek counseling before attempting to kill themselves.
She was not the only person who felt compelled to show their ass but is the one I am most aware of.
Hopefully, her university and she will come to find there are consequences to their actions, but I am not holding my breath since so many believe being ugly to one another is somehow protected by the First Amendment and her supporters will claim any critic of her action must be a racist or (xxxxxx)phobe of some kind. 

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Beyond the Age of Reason

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It amazes me, on an almost daily basis, how some people reason through the defeat of Hillary Clinton, as if the flaws of the candidate had no bearing on the decisions of the traditionally Democratic states that decided she was not the lessor of two evils.

My favorite comment today was from a devote Democrat who chastised other democrats, who had supported Bernie Sanders, but did not follow his advice to vote for Ms. Clinton.  In so many aspects, this woman reflects the DNC position -- where party faithful are little more than drones who should do only what the party leadership tell them to do.

If we are so willing to surrender our thinking; to fall in line with the party, how much longer will we be capable of a republican form of government?

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Three Friends at an Intersection

Three young men or women, or two men and woman, or two women and a man (to avoid sexist stereotyping) are walking down the street and come across an elderly woman (or man) attempting to cross the street.

One young man/woman says, clearly the government needs to do something about the traffic and pedestrian problems, we need to get a crossing signal installed, I shall write the mayor.

Another says, the whole urban area is flawed, a traffic signal isn't doing enough, we need to reroute traffic so these poor old people don't face this kind of problem, I shall push for design of a new city plan and seek stimulus funding to implement new traffic flow and eliminate this problem for all future generations.

The third agrees there may be wisdom in those approaches, but questions the cost versus gain as he assists the person across the street.

Can you pick out the Liberal, Progressive, and Fiscal Conservative?
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