The roots of Total War
Where did the Neocons get the idea they could obliterate any who stand in their way? From the Radical Republicans, of course. A great piece by Al Benson, Jr.
Current events and commentary from a Southern perspective. The most powerful political forces of our time -- localism, secession, and confederalism -- vindicate the Southern Cause.
Where did the Neocons get the idea they could obliterate any who stand in their way? From the Radical Republicans, of course. A great piece by Al Benson, Jr.
9/11 demonstrated that intervening where you don't belong is going to blowback on you sooner or later. At least, that's what it showed most of us. To Bush's handlers, it wasn't a lesson; it was an opportunity. Though it was sold to a frightened, confused public as retaliation for the death of nearly 2,000 innocent Americans, it was later justified as a pre-emptive invasion to keep Americans safe.
Indeed, an April 2006 National Intelligence Estimate concluded that “the war in Iraq has become a primary recruitment vehicle for violent Islamic extremists, motivating a new generation of potential terrorists around the world whose numbers may be increasing faster than the United States and its allies can reduce the threat,” and that “the Iraq conflict has become the ‘cause célèbre’ for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of U.S. involvement in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement.”
Sounds to me like McCain has once again demonstrated his distaste for conservatives:
On yesterday's call, Mr. McCain fielded seven questions, including three from non-conservative bloggers: Kate Sheppard, political reporter for environmental Web site Grist.org; Joanne Bamberger of PunditMom (http://punditmom1. blogspot.com); and Erin Kotecki Vest, who blogs at catchall site BlogHer.com as well as liberal sites HuffingtonPost.com and MOMocrats.com.
"I give them an A for effort," Ms. Vest said in a phone interview after the conference call.
She asked Mr. McCain whether the vision he laid out yesterday of U.S. troops succeeding in Iraq by 2013 didn't amount to the sort of timetable he has criticized when Democrats propose a specific date for withdrawal.
Mr. McCain shot right back: "Either you didn't read or didn't understand my speech. One of the two."
Ms. Vest said she "read it and understood it just fine, and I don't understand how 2013 isn't a date."
I suppose Neocons have to express everything in military terms -- even reform:
What was the surge about? It was Dave Petraeus changing the way the U.S. military works, and it worked. It succeeded. Why can’t we do this for the rest of the U.S. government? Lots of the U.S. government is broken. We need, in effect, a surge, a reformist surge, for the whole U.S. government.
Sure, some conservatives are upset because he has tolerated a surge in federal spending, downplayed swollen deficits, failed to use his veto, created a vast Department of Homeland Security, and fashioned an alliance of sorts with Teddy Kennedy on education and Medicare. But the real gripe is that Bush isn't their kind of conventional conservative. Rather, he's a big government conservative. This isn't a description he or other prominent conservatives willingly embrace. It makes them sound as if they aren't conservatives at all. But they are. They simply believe in using what would normally be seen as liberal means--activist government--for conservative ends. And they're willing to spend more and increase the size of government in the process.
Here's a practical step you can take to monkeywrench the Empire: take your children out of the government schools. Don't have kids? Then donate to a church or private school, or to a homeschool association. By denying the government propaganda mills of victims, you pave the way for future generations to take this country back. The Alliance for the Separation of School and State is one organization providing materials for returning sovereignty to parents. Here's their website and intro:
The brightest future for education begins here.
We believe parents, and not the state, should be in charge of their children's education. That control may take many forms and levels of involvement, but the state will never be part of the picture.
If this seems like an impossible idea, consider that 8 million children already learn free of state control. We're not starting from scratch here. The snowball of educational independence is already rolling.
Smell that? It's the smell of fear -- and it seems to be coming from the Stupid Party:
A third-straight special election defeat in as many months left congressional Republicans reeling Wednesday, seriously concerned about what the November elections have in store for their party.
House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, called the defeat a "wakeup call."
"We have to show Americans that we can fix the problems here in Washington and fix the problems that they deal with every day," Boehner said.
Democrat Travis Childers defeated Republican Greg Davis on Tuesday in a Mississippi district that hasn't voted Democratic in more than 15 years, one where George W. Bush defeated John Kerry by 25 points in 2004.
It was a result that even Republicans admit is ominous sign of what could happen in the fall.
Republicans and conservative independent groups pulled out all the stops to defend the seat, pouring upwards of $2 million into the contest and dispatching party heavyweights there in the final days to drum up support, including Vice President Dick Cheney.
Not only has he declared victory in Iraq, McCain has now announced that the illegal immigration problem is fixed, and that we shouldn't worry our little heads about it any more.
Border state governors have certified and the American people recognize that after tremendous improvements to border security infrastructure and increases in the border patrol, and vigorous prosecution of companies that employ illegal aliens, our southern border is now secure. Illegal immigrants who broke our laws after they came here have been arrested and deported. Illegal immigration has been finally brought under control, and the American people accepted the practical necessity to institute a temporary worker program and deal humanely with the millions of immigrants who have been in this country illegally.
With Democrats winning elections even in conservative districts, it's time for the Republicans to reverse their disastrous course. So McCain has taken a bold but necessary first step to end the ongoing disaster in Iraq by declaring victory and announcing a timetable for withdrawal:
In a speech he's about to give shortly at the Greater Columbus Convention Center in Ohio, Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, will for the first time talk about a specific date for when he envisions direct American military involvement to be over in Iraq.
It's January, 2013. By then, he says, American combat involvement will be over and most U.S. troops back home.
McCain's surprising remarks this morning are an early indicator of a significant shift in the former fighter pilot and POW's stance on the controversial and unpopular war. ...
Maybe you remember during their most heated debate exchange of the Republican primary season, McCain going right after former Gov. Mitt Romney for even hinting at a vague timetable for U.S. troop withdrawals because the Arizona senator alleged it would be taken by the enemy as a sign of surrender and a date they need only await.
I swear, I cannot tell the difference between reports from this insane administration and Onion satire. Guess what this is:
U.S. President George W. Bush said on Tuesday he quit playing golf in 2003 out of respect for the families of Americans killed in the war in Iraq.
"I don't want some mom whose son may have recently died to see the Commander-in-Chief playing golf," Bush said in an interview with Yahoo and Politico.com.
"I feel I owe it to the families to be as -- to be in solidarity as best as I can with them. And I think playing golf during a war just sends the wrong signal," he said.
If it is saved, it will first have to be saved from its leaders, as Serge Trifkovic warns us:
Topping the list is elite hostility to all forms of solidarity of the majority population based on shared historical memories, ancestors, and common culture; the consequences are predictable:
- the loss of a sense of place and history among Europeans and North Americans;
- rapid demographic decline, especially in Europe, unparalleled in history;
- rampant Third World (and in Europe, overwhelmingly Muslim) immigration;
- collapse of private and public manners, morals, and traditional commonalities;
- imposition of “diversity,” “multiculturalism,” “sensitivity”; and
- demonization and criminalization of any opposition to any of the above.
The end-result is the Westerners’ loss of the sense of propriety over their lands.
"A questioner asked Mitt Romney to explain his tough talk against illegal immigration, in light of political ads the former Massachusetts governor is airing in Spanish. This presented another moment for Tancredo to pontificate on the need to preserve the English language. When it was McCain's turn, he couldn't resist quipping, "Muchas gracias."
The Open Borders propagandists are becoming even more brazen in their assertions. Here's the latest example -- but be warned -- it's a doozy:
I first met McCain 10 years ago when I was a working at the Arizona Republic. What I remember is that, in a political climate where so many elected officials — Republican and Democrat alike — were wearing themselves out pandering to racists who demanded action on illegal immigration, McCain was one of the few who didn't play that game.
In 1998, while Texas Gov. George W. Bush made headlines for earning an impressive 49 percent of the Hispanic vote in his re-election, McCain walked off with an unheard-of 65 percent in his Senate re-election bid. Six years later, he did even better, earning around 70 percent of the Hispanic vote.
Another Hispanic Republican called McCain the original compassionate conservative, someone who wore that label before there ever was a label. And, she said, as someone who has faced his share of challenges in life, McCain's compassion bleeds over to anyone picked on or preyed upon.
"If you look at Latino families, we've all got someone who has been in the military," said Ruben Alvarez, a McCain supporter and principal at the Molera Alvarez Group, a public affairs firm in Phoenix. "The fact that McCain is so patriotic is a draw for many Latinos." ...
But there's another factor that helps explain McCain's appeal to Hispanics — he's spent 20 years quietly recruiting them into his campaigns and building up personal relationships in that Arizona community.
McCain marked Cinco de Mayo by launching his Hispanic outreach effort, which includes a Spanish-language Web site. Those gimmicks don't hurt.
It's called character, and Hispanics — like many other Americans — may not always be able to define it. But they know it when they see it.
Looks like the citizens of the Great State of North Carolina have at least one advocate in government:
The community college system will no longer admit illegal immigrants to degree programs based on an advisory letter from the Office of the Attorney General, the system announced today.
[This] is good news. It was certainly helpful that our Chapter was represented strongly at the so-called May Day "immigrant rights day" protest rally in Raleigh. The rally was so effective that the planned "pro-illegals" march disbanded.
The turnout of those demanding that our State government secure our own borders, send illegals out of our State, and deny criminals access to our publicly supported education system, was obviously effective as seen below. As you know, the leftists who dominate our educational system wanted to allow children of illegal aliens into our community colleges, and charge them the same as North Carolina citizens.
The Bush regime, which fancies itself the ultimate arbiter of right and wrong in the world, has once again stuck its nose where it doesn't belong, harming those it claims it wants to help. Here's what Burmese have to say about Bush's ironic criticism of the Burmese junta for its failure to act after a devastating flood:
Even Burmese dissident groups criticized the timing of the administration’s rhetorical onslaught against the junta—declaring that it made getting rapid relief to the desperately needy that much more difficult. According to the Washington Post, exiled Burmese political analyst Aung Naing Oo called Laura Bush’s verbal harangue “totally and utterly inappropriate. She is trying to score political points out of people’s disaster.”
... can be summed up as "Damned if you do, and damned if you don't."
Pollsters have found it difficult to accurately measure racial attitudes, as some voters are unwilling to acknowledge the role that race plays in their thinking. But some are not. Susan Dzimian, a Clinton supporter who owns residential properties, said outside a polling location in Kokomo that race was a factor in how she viewed Obama. "I think if it was somebody other than him, I'd accept it," she said of a black candidate. "If Colin Powell had run, I would be willing to accept him."
The White Rose was a German resistance group whose members were imprisoned and executed during Hitler's reign for creating and distributing anti-Nazi leaflets. Here are some select quotes from these brave young people - but these statements are so fitting for the times we're in today, it's scary. Every statement made against the Nazis applies to today's Neocons and their Beloved Leader. Take a look for yourself: