The things that matter in life.

The things that matter in life.
The things that matter in life.

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Trump is it--get over the quibbling and NeverTrumping

From "Crossing the Trump Rubicon," by Victor Davis Hanson, 06 NOV 2017.

Like it or not, Donald Trump in fits and starts has chosen not to accommodate the progressive vision. But in most unlikely fashion he leads the fight against it.
...
And yet, warts and all, the Trump presidency on all fronts is all that now stands in the way of the completion of what was started in 2009.
Looking back, the improbable election of 2016 proved a Rubicon moment. Once Trump crossed over the Rubicon, carried by his base of “crazies,” “irredeemables,” and “deplorables,” the die had been cast, and those who were fearful where America had been headed had no choice but to follow him through the river.
Either Trump will restore economic growth, national security, the melting pot, legality, and individual liberty or he will fail and we will go the way of Europe.



Friday, December 15, 2017

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Monday, November 13, 2017

Don Jr-WikiLeaks emails explained

Donald Trump, Jr back during the campaign (thank God it wasn't this year, or I'd want Don Jr locked away for gross stupidity), he had a brief exchange of messages with WikiLeaks, and now that's under scrutiny. Because of when it was, and because people didn't realize then that WikiLeaks IS basically Russia, he can survive this and it can be filed under "Even more political stupidity by Trump people during the campaign."

Don Jr. will take hits because now we know WikiLeaks is Russia but didn't release this publicly, at least. It's easily conceivable he didn't put this together, and at least he didn't communicate with them about or release his emails regarding the meeting with the Russian lawyerette through them (as some suggested he ought to have done). It's probably not a crime to "talk" to an outfit like WikiLeaks, but it looks bad. 

KEY POINTS:
1. Probably not illegal.
2. Political stupidity during campaign (still in business thinking).
3. Didn't know WikiLeaks is Russia.

A Russian surrogate inserting useful info into the campaign feeds the narrative that the Russians were helping the Trump campaign. Primary points here are:
1. Russians also helped Clinton with false Trump dossier.
2. Not sure how tight a leash Russia keeps on Assange and WikiLeaks.
3. The "Russia just trying to disrupt everything" factor.

Also, it's further evidence of a lack of "backchannel" or conscious, affirmative effort at collusion.

Worst part: Russia gave into to Trump campaign.
Best part: Don Jr apparently stopped communications with them, and didn't release those meeting emails through them.

Another case of lawyering out things in politics when the Fake News media is against you.






Thursday, November 9, 2017

STORYBOARD--Explanation of 31 MAR 2017 campaign meeting in controversy


STREAMLINED VERSION, WITH EXTENDED CONCLUSION:

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Satellites do the craziest things

WHY WE ARE WHERE WE ARE IN ALL THIS:

James Comey, an acknowledged jerk, acknowledged under oath--and out of fear of "tapes" allegedly held by President Donald Trump--that the President, as critical at times of the Russia "collusion" investigation as he has been, indeed wanted an investigation to learn what Trump termed "satellites" may have been doing during the campaign.  In a March 31 meeting of a foreign policy advisory committee for the campaign, a certain member raised the possibility of using contacts with Russian officials to arrange a public meeting of Trump with Vladimir Putin.  In a discussion of this idea, it was put down by a number of people there, who noted the "optics" of such a meeting, with Senator Jeff Sessions insisting that the idea of such dealings never be talked about again.  At some point, a campaign policy was even put into effect barring any campaign employee from traveling overseas as part of the campaign.  Hence, the idea of any sort of "collusion" was resolved in Trump's mind--this committee member would not have any contacts with Russia in the course of his campaign work (whatever had happened before), and thus there would be no contacts by Trump associates with Russia in their campaign capacities. Except...

The problem was, it is common in down-and-dirty politics for associates and ancillary figures to do down-and-dirty things that are kept from the candidate or in contravention of campaign policy. And so, while Trump attacked insinuations and assertions that he himself was involved in any such alleged "collusion"--i.e., the "witch hunt"--and noted at times that he himself knew of no such connections made by people in the campaign (seeing as how that March 31 meeting had shut down the idea), he understood that others may have taken actions unapproved by him to make contacts with foreign entities, contacts which some may construe as "collusion" in the current political setting.


And that's where we are now.  We are learning, as I predicted in July, that there were indeed contacts between people in the campaign and individuals with at least some connection to the Russian government. The irregularity and even failure in many cases of these contacts, along with post-election events, shows the lack of a so-called "backchannel" of communication.  That is, there was no regular, ongoing, "official" (for want of a better word) communication between the Trump campaign and the Russian government, thus discrediting the claim of a hand-in-hand (or hand-in-glove) "collusion."

Satellites are weird things. They generally move in predictable patterns, but sometimes malfunction. And when they are human, they can simply do stupid or wrong things.  What we are seeing is that truth in effect.  Trump was right to recognize that some of his associates--including at least one at that March meeting--did indeed alter their orbits in disadvantageous ways.  What he had thought was a closed-out matter was raising his own concerns at rogue or actions contrary to campaign by members of his campaign. At one level, it's not surprising--save that the apparent connections were failures.  (This, of course, is another exculpatory fact for Trump himself--he's usually successful at making contacts.)

Hence, we find the whole "Russia" issue to be this: Did any attempt by Russia--and most of this is clearly at the instigation of the Russian side--actually succeed in passing to the Trump campaign anything of political usefulness?  If so, then believers in a collusion could argue they were "technically" right--the Trump campaign got direct help from Russia. Yet at the same time, by Trump's own expression about wanting to know what his "satellites" were doing, the disbelievers would also "technically" be right--no campaign-organized "collusion" or even mutual connection existed (as the failures and fiascos we've seen demonstrate).

Of course, this will all continue. That is actually necessary, as President Trump wants to find out what members of his campaign were doing in this regard. And so, the politics will continue. 

Now, I am not in the business of advising the anti-Trump side, so I will only advise the pro-Trump side as to how to proceed: Hold to the President's core position from the beginning--he himself did not collude or know of collusion in the course of the campaign, and it is good to find satellites who may have done so. Don't worry about the ancillary issues--or ancillary people.  Criminality is not really in sight here. Take how Andrew C. McCarthy, someone who is decidedly not a steady pro-Trump figure, but one who tries to be objective (even if wrong sometimes), summed up the position in a discussion debunking the "obstruction" charges against Trump as the core point.  Too often people get taken off the main objective, and I am no exception to this.  Focus on this core.



The more that comes out, the more it shows a lack of campaign effort at a collusion, and why Trump would have no knowledge of any satellite activity in this regard.  Yet it shows one more thing--something else I talked about in July: The problems of taking business lawyering into politics. What may be legal and honest may yet be bad politics and problematic in related ways.  It's not illegal or dishonest, but it is unwise.



Friday, November 3, 2017

Keeping perspective on whole "Trump/Russia" investigation

From June 2017. This discussion of Comey lays out the core position of Trump's denunciation of the witchhunt. It's not a blanket denial of contacts occurring (the Russians try to get into everything), but rather of the running of an operation by the campaign or a reaching out on a par with Ted Kennedy's action in 1984.

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

More than new judges needed to fix Judiciary

MY BRILLIANT THOUGHTS:

1. The Constitution itself needs serious revision, as in its current configuration the Judiciary ends up with the claimed power, even if by accident. By not stating an alternative short of a Second Amendment solution for overreach by the political branches, the courts ended up with the responsibility.
2. Gutting the Judiciary by literally eliminating ALL--repeat, ALL--lower courts and replacing them with totally new courts with hack judges will A. go far to cancelling out district- and circuit-level precedent, and B. right now give the good guys full control of the Judiciary overnight.
3. Courts don't have guns. All authority really lies in the ability to kill people. So courts can't really do that. The Executive needs to remember that and learn to use a powerful verbal weapon against judges--the "F-bomb" (coupled with the word, "off").


https://www.conservativereview.com/articles/why-appointing-better-judges-will-not-fix-our-rogue-courts

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Some, albeit limited, good news for Europe





Sunday, October 15, 2017

A bit on the death of Western civilization

Women want strong, assertive men.
PC prohibits that.
Non-White men are exempt from PC.
Therefore, White Western women go for non-White men.

CONCLUSION: White genocide.


Friday, September 29, 2017

Cats Can Be A Real Pain In The Grass - Simon's Cat | STORYTIME

ME: "Simply put, it's White Guilt"

The following was posted by yours truly as a rushed comment on a friend's sharing on Facebook of the video at the end.  Hence it presumes certain contexts and is far from complete. It can be understood without watching the video, but the video is still worth watching on its own account--just with my explanations.

Simply put, it's White Guilt. Or "White/Western Guilt," as I sometimes say. The protesters believe that America and Western civilization.is inherently tilted toward Whites--i.e., the founding demographic--and so is "racist." "Racism" is defined by them not as an attitude or an ideology, but as a system--THE system. They hold that the tilt toward Whites makes our system unfavorable by nature toward others. So, no matter who any given individual feels, if their words or actions support "the system"--e.g., they stand for the Anthem--they are being "racist." They are upholding the system. Hence, to be "anti-racist" in fullness requires opposing our system--the country, etc. This is why you will sometimes see, "Anti-racist is anti-White" in memes. In a very real sense, it's true.


It's not about individual opportunity or achievement. Too often conservative-types let their tendency toward individualism--which itself is to a degree pushed on them by PC White Guilt (only Whites are denied a collective identity)--cause them to give responses that don't really address what the other side is saying. This fellow in the video hits on it, but because PC and White Guilt make it difficult to follow through on any collective view of the issue.

And therein lies the difficulty in combating what these BLM-type insurgents are doing. They think collectively, and it gives them strength. Opponents think individually, and are scared to counter BLM with a collective response. When I point this out to White conservatives, they desperately try to shift and find a way to counter BLM without doing that. That's how powerful PC is, and that's how deep--if perhaps subconscious--White Guilt is with many of them.

So the question is, have Occidental (Western) peoples--Anglo-Europeans--fallen so far that they can't recover. Trump can only do so much. It's up to our people.



Thursday, September 14, 2017

The great hysteria of Trump supporters believing a couple of Fake News tweets 13-14 SEP 2017

UPSHOT: Fake News tweets spreading fake news send Trump supporters into hysterics. The washout of it all is that nothing is different than 24 hours ago.  Trump is, I do believe, soft on the general DACA issue, but true to his promises.  Border security is the priority for him. He is simply erring on the "humane" side, as the following shows was an unfortunate possibility:





Here's the reality today:




Trump tweeted this morning. Here is my honest (even negative when accurate) assessment:

Here are key videos from today:












Thursday, September 7, 2017

TO TRUMP SUPPORTERS DISAGREEING (AS I DO) WITH PRESIDENT TRUMP'S SOFT STANCE ON "DACA":



Donald Trump is not an ideologue. He is a pragmatist (and some would say, an attitudinalist). No one will agree with him all the time. He is also, despite MSM and Fake News characterizations, a man who is genuinely compassionate toward the plight of individual persons.

Some of us disagree with Trump's desire to see a DACA-type solution to the issue of people in that situation. We would prefer a more "tough-stance" approach. But, this is a place where Trump is opting to err on the side of "humane approach." You and I might disagree with him on that, and he made it clear often during the campaign that he respects honest disagreement, even--perhaps especially--among his supporters. What we need to keep in mind is that while we might believe this is a mistake, Trump remains committed to the MAGA agenda, and we need to support him for that.

That said, NOW is the opportunity to all of us to be a more substantive part of MAGA than ever. We can directly influence our members of Congress to work with our President on this matter, and in resolving the issue of those people, do so in a way that mitigates whatever problems will result from whatever conclusion is reached. (And there is no possible solution that does not raise problems.) SEN Tom Cotton of Arkansas (the home state of Sabine Durden--if you care about DACA, you know who she is) has exhibited a largely proper attitude on the matter, and he has offered an excellent approach to doing this (see statement and listen to his interview here: https://twitter.com/SenTomCotton/status/905520995783426048  )

Now is the time to act. We help our President, we help MAGA--and indeed, we help the people caught in the DACA situation. A win-win-win is possible here.













Friday, August 18, 2017

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Schlichter: "The Military Coup Against Donald Trump of 2018" (Parts 1 and 2), with my brilliant commentary








MY BRILLIANT COMMENTARY:







Friday, July 21, 2017

Monday, July 17, 2017

Part 3 of assessment of Trump Jr. "Russia" meeting

A few tidbits have come out about the Trump Jr. "Russia" meeting:
1. Trump Sr. may have been told that information was forthcoming about Hillary.
2. Trump Sr. MIGHT vaguely recall a meeting about the orphan issue, but is not sure.
3. There were apparently more "Russians" at the meeting than previously believed--a translator and a member of a Russian family concerned about the orphan issue--i.e., people not actively involved in the discussion itself.

4. Jay Sekulow raised a question about the matter based on an incomplete and incorrect understanding of basic facts.

CONCLUSION: You are seeing how rumors and conspiracy theories get started. People like to think everything is ideallic in how it happens. Even I myself like to try to figure out logical reasons for seemingly illogical actions. But this whole story has forced me to officially cease that effort, because (my words):

Otherwise decent, rational, intelligent people can do indecent, irrational, and/or utterly stupid things.

What we see with the Trump Jr. meeting is probably one of the key events that spurred the politically weaponized Intelligence Community to try to spy on the Trump campaign. Bias and agenda are rampant, but there is usually some kernel of reality in any effort--an anchor on which to chain everything. 

Imagine this scenario: Trump Jr. gets the cartoonish email from his flaky friend. And like a good Teabrainer, he generally buys into it and plans a meeting. Trump Sr. hears of some impending receipt of dirt on Hillary, including a reference to "Russia," and in his usual Trump style launches into his "truthful (to his honest understanding) hyperbole" and announces plans for a major address on Hillary's dirt.  Soon after, the meeting occurs, where no dirt was uncovered.  Trump Jr. doesn't even mention the meeting to his father as it turned out to be nothing., perhaps not putting it together with his father's announcement (if he heard it--remember, Trump Jr. is still focused on running the business).  Nonetheless, Trump Sr. may or may not hear about some meeting or other about the Russian orphan issue in connection with someone involved in it.  Nothing about it registers with him, and memory of it is only jarred recently by all the attention to that point in time.  

Meanwhile, you have someone talking about information about Hillary and Russia, a not-so-memorable reference to a meeting about orphans, and a Trump Tower just filled with foreign intelligent assets, all trying--and they would logically do--to get information about the possible next President of the most powerful country on the planet.  They report these vague stories, which means our own (politically weaponized) Intelligence Community (IC) picks up on them.  Knowing that their boss the Great Black Hope expects them to conform to his objectives like he was Idi Amin, and being Intelligence--a discipline of which half is guesswork (trust me, I know)--they pursue this whole matter.  An attempt to get legal wiretapping authority from the FISA dial-a-warrant court is turned down, but they pursue.  

Now, add to this the relatively sudden interest in Russian action in the election at about that time.  Somehow someone is getting stories of Russia-Trump "collusion" even then.  (In other words, this line of attack by the then-administration is relayed to the Hillary campaign.)  The IC continues their efforts, linking what in many cases is probably totally unrelated information to that initial story, and the flawed picture grows. Intelligence analysis, not appreciating the truth of my italized words above, is "fixed" (probably in part by political pressure and bias--I know from personal experience that Intel, even in the military, is much more liberal than one might expect from a "security" agency) around a collusion theory.  Confirmation bias sets in, and the story grows.  Typical Russian efforts to insert their influence into our elections--which may have been what the Trump Jr. meeting was for the "Russian" side--are interpreted as being received positively and wittingly by the Trump campaign, even if in fact it was actually rebuffed or a failure.  After all, they "KNEW" there was collusion, so of course the meeting succeeded.  (But for some reason, they never explained why so many different efforts were made by the Russians when there would had to have been an ongoing covert "backchannel.")  Any business actions of the Trump Organization--an organization with tentacles in so many things--that in any way connect to Russia are more proof. Any meeting with a Russian present is considered a meeting with Putin, as one anti-Trump member of Congress suggested.  Items like the "Trump Dossier," produced by an outfit linked to some of the very people involved in the Trump Jr. meeting--at least by the same standards used in directly linking them to Russian government operations--are inserted into the mix (by an anti-Trump politician who shall remain John McCain), which only add a salacious element and a fanciful roadmap for the pursuit. 

These findings and factoids get circulated--especially toward the end of the Obama years of darkness with new allowances put into place--recycled, and used to confirm each others' assessments: Meeting A was bad because Meeting B was bad, and we know Meeting B was bad because Meeting A was bad.  Add in a "Deep State" determined to thwart the will of an election and a news media openly working as a propaganda wing of the now-opposition party spreading not only leaks and outright lies, but also some of the same kind of normal, sometimes hit-and-miss rumoring that spread the whole Trump Jr. meeting information in the first place, and there you have the story of the "Trump-Russia collusion scandal."

Human nature and human failings (and a Satanic influence, for the theologian-types in my loyal readership) account for so much of what has transpired in history.  Empires have fallen because emperors couldn't keep their you-know-what's in their pants, or empresses couldn't keep their legs together.  Total brainfart understandings have created missed opportunities for so much good.  The sheer limits of normal human understanding, coupled with the need for a hasty response to a threatening situation, have led to flawed policies and positions.  Rumors, propaganda, and disinformation--and simple errors--will often crowd out better information, even if the latter is overwhelming.  Prides, prejudices, presumptions, and preconceived notions block stone-cold objective analysis.  Natural--and not always improper--defense reactions, like lawyering out every statement or obscuring with broad generalities, to issues sometimes create more uncertainty and problems.  Greed and envy, self-will and self-indulgence, all these and more operate in how our species has taken the course of history.  (Then add in the Teabrainery phenomenon on top of all of that, wherein people who might otherwise be smart show hick-like ignorance and a lack of due diligence to get their understandings right.)  

These have their effect on even the "elites" of society.  Now, despite being a Trump supporter, I have, as I've stated before, been concerned about the slamming of such during the campaign.  There is a reason they are called "elite," and even if one must reject their conclusions and positions, one ought to at least respect their knowledge and skills.  Politicians should early on seek the aid, advice, and education from elites holding the same interests.  Had the Trump campaign did that more thoroughly from the start, many of these problems would not be such problems today. That said, even they are impacted by human nature, and even they might miss the obvious for whatever reason.

The Trump campaign in many ways was what I hold to be the ultimate pop-culture depiction of Teabrainery (albeit largely outside of its normal political context): The Beverly Hillbillies. Much like the Clampett clan moving to the big city way out yonder in Caleefornee, the Trump crew--as truly intelligent and capable as they were in business--had no idea what they were doing in politics. Terms had different meanings.  Communications tactics sometimes backfired (I do NOT speak of tweeting on that point--I WANT TRUMP TWEETS!).  Naivete, ignorance of ethics and laws, and the business inclination to do things on the cheap (even as the Clampetts continued their hillbilly lifestyle despite Jed's millions) created problems and obstructed obvious solutions. "Teabrainers with bank accounts." 

[None of this is to take away from the brilliance, beneficial unorthodoxy, total willingness to get down in the mud as necessary, and the utter ability of Trump to withstand seemingly ANY PC attack that got him elected.  I have long ago learned not to question Trump's tactics--they got the team in a mansion in Washington--THE mansion of all mansions. But even as I might almost wish for a "Pleasantville" event to hurl me into the TV series so I could help everyone avoid problems, I also am glad to see the Trump team learning--albeit sometimes painfully--the need to mesh Trump style with political experience.]

In short: "Otherwise decent, rational, intelligent people can do indecent, irrational, and /or utterly stupid things."

And that, I believe, is what the whole Trump-Russia collusion matter amounts to.  Without discounting the impact of knowingly dishonest and disingenuous activists--e.g., most of the journalism profession--it was of themselves innocuous matters like the Trump Jr. meeting, Carter Page's brief and public conversation with someone some hold as suspicious, defensive lawyering out of statements, and understandable incomplete recollections (like how many people were at the Trump Jr. meeting), plus actions by others to impact the situation perceived through the liberal lens of our IC, that has brought us to where we are.  

This is not intended as a "conspiracy theory." Quite the opposite. A conspiracy means all the key component parties conspire, not simply follow influences and a generally common agenda. "Conspiracy of thought," perhaps, but one notable thing WikiLeaks did was show a lack of Godfather-esque coordination. Whatever collusions may eventually be found in these official activities of what has come be known as "The Resistance," it was NOT a singular earthly cabal.  It was politics--generally Left-wing politics--taken to a new extreme in the American context.

Was their such a collusion? If so, then why the efforts AFTER the election to create a backchannel?  Frankly, that point alone is enough to show no collusion program. If now-Attorney General Sessions' presence at the same place as the Russian ambassador in April was a set-up of a collusion, why the ridiculous Trump Jr. meeting with the even more ridiculous emails?  And if the Russians were indeed feeding information about that time about Hillary, why couldn't Trump Sr. give the address he planned to give, at least at some point? Give the Russkies and the Donald credit: They can do this kind of thing. If the Trump campaign had been witting partners in the effort, it would have happened, and we wouldn't be having to listen to "Hillary won the popular vote!" all the time.  The information apparently promised regarding the meeting would have come out, and Hillary would be in prison already!  The definition of "collusion" keeps getting downgraded, going from active hand-in-glove planning ("Russia told Trump to say, 'Crooked Hillary'!") to, now, the ridiculous Trump Jr. meeting which ended up having no impact on the campaign. 

Will "investigators" find more supposed evidence?  I'll surprise some of you and guess YES!  I'm sure they will find more meetings by Trump people who had no idea they were being subjected to Russian "social engineering" (a term used in Information Assurance).  I'm sure they will find Trump Jr.-type Teabrainery leading people to make silly mistakes.  (One aspect of my theory about the Trump Jr. meeting is that perhaps it may indeed have been a Russian effort to influence the campaign, but Trump Jr. was too dense to pick up on it, and thus doesn't realize what it was.) 

And who knows, maybe they will find some successful Russian effort to insert something beneficial into the campaign (if so, THANK YOU, RUSSIA!), with the recipient Trump "satellite" either too dense to realize what happened or too hit by human frailty to bring it forward in a proper  manner (meaning to and, perhaps ultimately, through, the Trump campaign).  Will this be the impeachable "collusion" being sought?  Nope, just politics by Teabrainery.

[This scenario, of course, presumes the general innocence of the Trump campaign--that is, that whatever efforts--actual efforts--were made by Russia to effectively insert itself into the Trump campaign's operations were either rebuffed or only unwittingly tolerated and not spotted because because certain otherwise small but politically Teabrained Trump campaign people didn't even see what was happening--e.g., the Trump Jr. meeting, presuming it actually was such an effort.  To critics of this approach, I say that given the solid bias of their Fake News media allies, given the presumption of innocence, given that the preponderance of evidence is even still AGAINST the claim of a true collusion, and given that I don't give a rat's ass what they think and really don't care if there was collusion--Trump saved us from Hillary, gave us Gorsuch, is stopping illegals, has all but destroyed ISIS, got us out of the Paris Accords, rolled back some gun control efforts, and has generally screwed over the Fake News media and shoved their own actions up their collective ass--I tell them, in uncharacteristically nice terms, to go to Hell.]



Friday, July 14, 2017

Part 2 of assessment of Trump Jr. "Russia" meeting

It keeps coming back to three failings:
1. Lack of broad analytical skills or effort.

2. Political naiveté.
3. Business approach to information communication.

Click on to enlarge and read.




"LIBERALS ARE LIARS; CONSERVATIVES ARE CONFUSED"*

"LIBERALS ARE LIARS; CONSERVATIVES ARE CONFUSED"*

PEOPLE TEND TO PROJECT THEIR OWN MOTIVATIONS AND TRAITS INTO OTHERS. THAT'S WHY LIBERALS SAY CONSERVATIVES LIE, AND CONSERVATIVES SAY LIBERALS ARE DUMB.

Liberals tend to think that wrong statements or actions by opponents are willful efforts to be wrong, when quite often they are honest expressions from ignorance. Todd Akin was not pushing a falsehood to promote an anti-woman agenda. He honestly thought women couldn't (or that it was very difficult to) get pregnant from a rape. Sarah Palin was once caught calling for "profiling" to combat terrorism, then quickly followed use of that term up by saying we need to keep "profiles" on specific suspects. She wasn't trying to cover for a slip in support of something the Left considers "racist." She genuinely thought that's what the term meant. And Donald Trump Jr. didn't try to engage in or hide the smoking gun evidence of illicit "collusion." He sincerely was (is?) so politically naive that he had no idea what was going on, and so politically DUMB that he thought the business approach of being truthful but not more forthcoming than immediately necessary with information was the proper approach.

Conservatives know precise areas, but tend to be weak on the grand picture--i.e., they may study deep, but not broad. Liberals have broad perspective, but lie about particular areas. They may study deep, but can ignore what they find.

* NOTE: Firearms-related matters are probably the only exception to this formula--that is, it's the one place where liberals indeed genuinely will know less than conservatives and aren't necessarily lying when they spew garbage. It could be argued that religion is some contexts is another exception, but that is not nearly as universally the case as it is with gun matters.



Wednesday, July 12, 2017

(ADDENDUM ADDED) My comment on Donald Trump Jr.'s "Russia" meeting; with video of Hannity interview

I tweeted regarding the event: "Not evidence of collusion, as none occurred, but politically naive 'satellites' (w/ a dirty trickster) being suckered into such a move."

The point to remember--and many may not realize this--but the emails were completely wrong regarding the Russian government connection. It was a ruse, demonstrated by the fact that there is no "Crown prosecutor" in Russia. Don Jr.'s acquaintance was fed a ruse, which he passed on. So this is by its nature no more evidence of collusion than a Bullwinkle cartoon of Boris and Natasha walking into Trump Tower. A legitimate issue exists regarding the thinking of Don Jr, et al, on this, but as the full substance regarding the emails and event spreads over the next couple of days, anyone saying otherwise will be either ignorant or lying.


One question some have raised is why this is stretching out so much. Trey Gowdy, for instance, has suggested that the campaign staff should be locked in a room to told, "Okay, from the time you saw 'Dr. Zhivago,' to the time you had vodka with a guy named Boris, lay out every connection whatsoever you've had with Russia." One of the concerns I had during the campaign was the Trump team suffered a Tea Party-type lack of political understanding and an almost redneck hick-like lack of analysis skills when it comes to matters of social science. They are smart people, but like so many conservative-types, lack the benefit of the liberal arts-type education that is necessary for political action. Given that Trump Jr. is a businessman, which by nature means he more focused on the actual and direct (as opposed to the theoretical or cross-referenced), it is quite believable that he (and others) would brainfart on all of this and not have this event register. Since the "Russia-Russia-Russia!" craze was not going, it didn't register then. Since it was a complete case of nonsense, he put it out of his mind. And since his mind is trained toward business, not more theoretical things--and since conservative-types tend to be introspective by nature anyway--it would have been, unfortunately, all too easy for this meeting not to register later as an issue to mention.

So, as I said, it was total naiveté.

EDIT: One has to wonder, though, if this meeting might be the genesis of much of the rumoring about a collusion.  "The walls have ears."  Whispers and hints of this may well have leaked out and taken on lives of their own.  Foreign agencies may well have heard of it, causing "chatter" in our communications intercepts of their conversations.  Add in a few odd facts and the direction of the Obama people to politically weaponize intelligence, and this would fit.

WITH ADDENDUM:



Friday, July 7, 2017

Do our people have the will to survive? (Video from President Donald J. Trump)


Thursday, July 6, 2017

Trump's Poland Speech--destined for history

This speech will go down in history with Churchill's "Iron Curtain," JKF's "Ich bin ein Berliner," and Reagan's "Tear down this wall" speeches.










SNIPPITS:

And so I am here today not just to visit an old ally, but to hold it up as an example for others who seek freedom and who wish to summon the courage and the will to defend our civilization.

  
...

Americans, Poles, and the nations of Europe value individual freedom and sovereignty.  We must work together to confront forces, whether they come from inside or out, from the South or the East, that threaten over time to undermine these values and to erase the bonds of culture, faith and tradition that make us who we are.  (Applause.)  If left unchecked, these forces will undermine our courage, sap our spirit, and weaken our will to defend ourselves and our societies.


...


We have to remember that our defense is not just a commitment of money, it is a commitment of will.  Because as the Polish experience reminds us, the defense of the West ultimately rests not only on means but also on the will of its people to prevail and be successful and get what you have to have.  The fundamental question of our time is whether the West has the will to survive.  Do we have the confidence in our values to defend them at any cost?  Do we have enough respect for our citizens to protect our borders?  Do we have the desire and the courage to preserve our civilization in the face of those who would subvert and destroy it?




TRANSCRIPT:




ANALYSIS: