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Opinion Matters

Archive for May, 2007

On Men, Marriage, Women, and Socialism.

Posted by Bernard Chapin On May - 30 - 2007

What’s up my brothers? I just finished an interview with Dr. Allan Carlson regarding his new book, The Natural Family: A Manifesto, and cannot post it all here as Bobby Maddex accepted it for publication at Salvo where it will appear later in the year. Give it a click because he’s got some good essays up (no, none of them are written by me, lol). When the entire interview gets published I’ll post a link if he puts it online as not all Salvo articles go online. Anyway, I knew you guys would enjoy two of the questions which I’ve posted in below as they intimately concern the MND brethren.

BC: It seems to me that men face far more risks in marriage than do women—a biased court system, legal concepts like “equitable paternity” and marital rape, and severe punishment for those males who get divorced—so, given the nature of our misandric society—why isn’t cohabitation a better decision for men than marriage?

Dr. Allan Carlson: Well, I won’t say that it is because ultimately cohabitation is a wrong and immoral choice, but, for the reasons you just cited, it may have certain advantages. The key though is for us to change the laws to benefit marriage and the family. Men and women should be equal in the eyes of the law, but family autonomy must be taken into account. There are important differences between the sexes which have to be acknowledged in our law and public policy. People do things differently and they do different things well. Unfortunately, the law has become corrupted so we must restore its legitimacy.

BC: You argue that socialism gains greatly from the denigration of the family. I agree but don’t you find it ironic that so many women, even traditional women, vote for candidates who promise more and more government despite its eroding the foundation of marriage?

Dr. Allan Carlson: Well, the socialist movement plays very effectively on a deep historical problem that many do not recognize. Changes brought about by the industrial revolution have forever complicated family life and the rearing of children. This was a radically new change based on our history before 1800 when the majority of people worked and lived in the same place during their lifespan. Now that’s changed completely. Who will take care of the children is an important question in our times. Socialism promises a solution to the problem on everyone’s mind. It tells people that the state will ease their burden and take over childrearing and this appeals to many women and some men as well. Of course the joke here, the supreme irony, is that in Scandinavia feminism turned this into a very odd development. Women’s work became socialized and transferred to the state. The government then took on the traditional function of the home and family with the state providing child care. Then women, in turn, rejected the private sector and largely took jobs within the government. They continued to do what has traditionally been women’s work except now they provide child care for other people’s children. Their role has not changed but now they’re married to the state.

Good stuff! I’ll put a review of his book together in some form in the next week or two.

Protest for Father's Rights in California's Capitol City

Posted by Ray Blumhorst On May - 28 - 2007

Last Tuesday, May 22, 2007, Fathers 4 Justice, CRISPE, and the National Coalition of Free Men, Los Angeles staged a protest in front of the Family Relations Courthouse in Sacramento, California.The day preceding the courthouse protest, a couple of us (as private citizens accompanying another group) spent time in the state capitol, where we observed the functioning of our state government.

Yes, Fathers and men’s rights activist do know the way to Sacramento, and as private citizens, we are concerned to see how our elected officials are treating us.  Are they recognizing us? Are they ignoring us, or are some just downright hostile and in opposition to every issue a good Father, or good man, faces today in California?

After our perusal of the “halls of political power,” we were eager for an opportunity to confront a major contributor to many a California Father’s/man’s oppression - family relations court.  We figured there’d be no better place to raise awareness of the issues Father’s /men are facing, than in front of the Family Relations Courthouse in Sacramento.  We made our presence known from about 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. and received numerous honks from passing motorists.

We enjoyed our trip to Sacramento and hope to be back soon to continue our educational work.  God knows it’s sorely needed.

Can You Get Me Back My Daddy?

Posted by Ray Blumhorst On May - 28 - 2007

Sunday before last, May 20th, 2007, from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. the Van Nuys/Sherman Oaks park was the site of a Father’s Rally and picnic as the National Coalition of Free men welcomed Fathers 4 Justice to Los Angeles.  In reality, the event more widely welcomed Fathers for Justice to California.  People came from as far away as Sacramento (to the north) and as far away as San Diego (to the south).

Yours truly arrived at dawn to get the spot we wanted at the corner of Hazeltine and Huston.  I unloaded picnic supplies for about half an hour, and then broke out a new reclining lawn chair to await the arrival of others who’d help with set up.  It was good we arrived at the opening time for the park as others were soon setting up nearby.  A children’s birthday party was immediately to our west.  They’d set up one of those big blow up tents on which children love to play and romp.   Throughout the day, the voices of excited and happy children would provide a pleasant backdrop.

 

By 10 A.M., we were ready. Throughout the day, a steady stream of folks arrived.  Some mentioned they’d seen one of the flyers we‘d passed out, and others just saw the signs at our event and wanted to know more.  We accommodated all.

Near the beginning of our event, one young lad of about six or seven saw the big purple CRISPE bus that drove up from San Diego and asked Harry about it. “What’s that big purple bus about,” he asked? “It’s to get Father’s and their children back together,” replied Harry, of the San Diego Men‘s Center.  The young man then sincerely asked Harry, “Can you get me back my Daddy?”  How do you answer a question like that?  Harry was touched by the question, but responded professionally, “We’re working to restore contact for all Fathers with their children, but it’s going to be a lot of work to make it happen.”

Many conversations went on throughout the day as people joined us for a hot dog, potato salad and a soft drink, then left to go about their Sunday routines.  One enthusiastic fellow commented to my surprise, “I just had to see that truck and meet the guy who drives it.” “That truck,” was parked prominently on Huston close to the corner where it intersects Hazeltine, and just to the west a few car links, was the big CRISPE bus in all its glory.  I even brought the “old truck,” but was so busy with activities I didn’t even wash it or put a sign in its bed.

All in all the days events went well and we acquired a page and a half of names, phone #’s and email addresses from people who said they would be interested in F4J and/or NCFMLA future activities.

Just before the conclusion of our rally/picnic a shout went out, “group photo.” Those still present assembled in the shade of the CRISPE bus and posed for the cameras.

Overall, the day’s events were considered by all a success. We made new friends, reestablished contact with old friends, promoted Father’s and Men’s issues, and had a fun time doing it.

Immediately after the picnic we put everything away, then CRISPE1 and I hopped in that big motor home to take off for Sacramento, where we would participate in strategic planning, training and activism.  The long drive north met the sunset about halfway there.  We basked in the warm glow of the setting sun as we basked in the warm memories of the day and anticipated the promise of things to come the morrow and the next.    To be continued…

Recently, a series of exchanges was printed in a local Caribbean News outlet (Caribbean Net News), regarding domestic violence in the Caribbean.  At times, the exchange of perceptions was rather robust.  One local Caribbean domestic violence advocate even went so far as to say this about Mr. Marc Angelucci, local President of the National Coalition of Free Men, Los Angeles (NCFMLA):

“Mr Angelucci has sought to enter a discourse in a cultural context wherein he is out of his depth with little experience and knowledge. Mr Angelucci would be best advised to leave topics in this discourse to experts like Dr Spooner who have studied and understand the context of domestic violence in the English-speaking Caribbean states.”

Below are as many links as I could find, revealing the history of the aforementioned exchange of perceptions.  As you can see (below), I was fortunate enough to personally have a “Letter to the Editor” published.  It appears from what I could find, that Caribbean Net News graciously allowed me to have the last word in the matter:

“Today’s domestic violence industry, worldwide, follows (or advocates) a biased, gender feminist, domestic violence methodology, that systematically works to marginalize and exclude males. Anyone entering the domestic violence debate with only the knowledge provided by such biased, gender feminist propaganda is pathetically ignorant of the true dynamics of domestic violence to such an extent, that “misandrist” most precisely characterizes the junk science positions presented by them.

Domestic violence advocates in the Caribbean, or anywhere in the world, who base their positions on such corrupt, gender feminist, junk science as is so overwhelmingly present in the worldwide domestic violence industry today, can only have their position described as “so shallow they truly have no human depth at all,” in my opinion.”

Here is the list of links to that exchange:

Original “biased” (IMO) article on domestic violence by Dr. Spooner:

Commentary: Domestic violence is not women’s fault

Published on Monday, April 30, 2007

http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/news-1185–6-6–.html

Letter by Mr. Angelucci, responding to Dr. Spooner’s article:

Letter: Domestic violence article ignored male victims

Published on Friday, May 4, 2007

http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/letters/letters.php?news_id=1308&start=0&category_id=7

Response to Mr. Angelucci by Ms. James:

In response to Marc Angelucci’s letter

Published on Monday, May 7, 2007

http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/news-1356–7-7–.html

Letter by Mr. Angelucci, responding to Ms. James’s rebuttal:

Letter: In response to Salome James’ letter

Published on Tuesday, May 8, 2007

http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/news-1373–7-7–.html

Response by Mr. Blumhorst to Ms. James’s attack on Mr. Angelucci’s first response:

Letter: Domestic violence issue

Published on Friday, May 11, 2007

http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/news-1436–7-7–.html

I was very pleased to see Caribbean Net News include a working link to the story I wrote last year about the International Conference on Family Violence.  In that story I provided some detail about bias against men, present at that “International” Conference.  Thank you Wendy McElroy (Ifeminist), Mike LaSalle (Men’s News Daily) and all others who still having a working link to that story:

Men’s News Daily

http://tinyurl.com/2jc54o

Ifeminist

http://www.ifeminists.net/introduction/editorials/2006/0927blumhorst.html

At the end of that story is a picture of Mr. Angelucci (and the rest of our group), just smiling away “in our depth,” in our booth, at the ICFV, amidst the “International” domestic violence community).  :-)  

A Brief Tour of Schmuckdom.

Posted by Bernard Chapin On May - 23 - 2007

It’s not everyday that you get to speak to a legend, but that’s what happened to me last month when I found myself interviewing Jackie Mason. He was my uncle’s favorite comedian and I’d seen him on television numerous times so I was pleasantly surprised to hear his voice on the other end of the receiver. Although not included in my piece, the funniest parts of our exchange were due to my failing to recognize the rhetorical nature of his aside, “Is this understood?” I kept breaking in with “Yes, sir.” Hopefully, he got a kick out of that, but there’s no need to wonder what readers will think about his new book, Schmucks!: Our Favorite Fakes, Frauds, Lowlifes, Liars, the Armed and Dangerous, and Good Guys Gone Bad, as it’s got all the laughs that audiences have come to expect from him.

With the help of co-author, Raoul Felder, Jackie Mason has put together a mostly lighthearted series of vignettes illustrating the schmuckery of 62 persons who have done much to advance the cause of human misery. As one might expect, the principal offenders are mostly found on the left side of the political spectrum and include self-righteous nebbishes like Hillary Clinton, Cindy Sheehan, and Ramsey Clark along with entities like the ACLU, The New York Times, and Jews for Jesus. The entries are brief enough to ensure the attention and pleasure of the average reader.

Mason’s not the only famous comedian to lend his skills to political commentary. In recent years, cutups like Dennis Miller and Larry Miller have written articles well-regarded by conservatives, and this is far from a fledgling venture on Mason’s part as he has penned numerous columns with Felder for The American Spectator in the past.

Here, in Schmucks!, the wordplay is occasionally as clever as Mason’s stand-up bits. In fact, many of his fans of will recognize some of the material as emanating from his act. The shtick about restaurant critics, Cajon food, and Sushi appears in these pages as does his famous spiel about reform Jews. There is no question that all the comedic one-liners, such as, “you tell your boss who is so dumb he received a refund from a mind reader,” give the book added oomph. Material like that is seldom found in conservative best sellers and more than a couple of times I found myself laughing out loud. Perhaps the best turn of phrase involved Al Sharpton, whom they dubbed “the longest, unsustained, unsponsored carnival in America.” Halleluiah! Almost as good was their take on the Hilton Sisters, “You can’t spell hotel without ‘ho,’” and their treatment of the NCAA’s ban on “hostile” team nicknames was classic. They point out that none of the team names are truly offensive at all, but if they want to find some that are Mason and Felder are only too happy to oblige them as “Rampaging Wops, Big Heebs, or the Fighting Colored Folk” are exactly the type of nicknames that PC bureaucrats deserve.

There’s more here than just guffaws though. It’s good to see that at least somebody somewhere remembers the media’s false sense of outrage over Rick Lazio. During his 2000 debate with Hillary Clinton the former Congressman walked over and asked her to sign a pledge concerning campaign finance reform. She refused to do so, but a wholly vanilla situation got turned into “the Rape of Sabine Women” by legions of Hillaryophile journalists. It seems that our country has now confused being placed into an unscripted moment with full frontal oppression. Not in every society does an all-powerful, conquering superwoman insist on being treated like Our Lady of Fatima. If we really want to enhance the marketplace of ideas, we should convince the junior Senator from New York to go toe-to-toe with Mr. Mason in a debate. The venue for that battle would sell out faster than tickets to a Yankees-Mets World Series. Alas, it will never be as Hillary, nor practically any other politician, possesses a sense of humor let alone the ability to ever laugh in their own direction.

Bernard Chapin is a writer living in Chicago. He is the author of Escape from Gangsta Island, and is currently at work on a book concerning women. He can be contacted at veritaseducation@gmail.com.

Parker Decision Upheld

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 21 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
Nothing.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
The District of Columbia’s request to have a full-court (”en banc”) re-hearing of the Parker case — the case that reinstated the people’s ability to legally have an operating firearm in their homes — was turned down by the D.C. Court of Appeals on May 8, 2007.

This is good news, maybe. It means the excellent original pro-rights decision stands. An en banc hearing could have overturned it.

Residents of D.C. can now keep a registered operable firearm at home (but apparently can’t buy one, or transport one through the District to their homes). Hey, it’s a good first step.

If it had been overturned en banc, the good guys would have appealed to the Supreme Court, which they believe has pretty good justices facing an excellent case. It’s a risk, as it always will be, but factors seem as good now as they may ever be.

Now it’s up to officials in D.C. to appeal to the Supreme Court. Will they? They hate guns, gun owners, and want the rights stripped away again from their innocent residents. They want the system they’ve had in place since 1976 — no Second Amendment for D.C. residents. Their criminals are heavily armed, but at least the public is not. “For safety.”

But they must know their case is weak, the plaintiffs are excellent, honorable, judicious individuals seeking their rights, not some sleazy bottom feeder trying to duck a sentence for some crime. Will they appeal?

They have little to lose. If SCOTUS overturns the Circuit, D.C. officials win. If the High Court affirms, they’re no worse off than they are now. Their direct concerns are local — but everyone knows the nation hangs in the balance. Will the big gun anti-gunners in Congress twist arms behind the scenes and convince them to leave this case alone?

If D.C. officials appeal, it will make the news, big time. If the High Court takes the case — another unknown — it will set the stage for the biggest gun-rights confrontation, maybe in our entire history.

The Washington Post argued in an editorial that the D.C. mayor owes it to the residents to appeal to the Supreme Court. In other words, the esteemed Post believes the city should spend its taxpayer’s dollars to try whatever it can to remove its taxpayer’s rights. The New York Times expressed its views in an editorial cleverly entitled, “The Right to Ban Arms.”

May you live in interesting times.

Gun Sales Skyrocketing

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 20 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
Nothing.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
The National Shooting Sports Foundation reports that firearm and ammo sales leaped 23% in the fourth quarter of 2006. Although news media routinely jump all over impressive sales growth in other industries, it never covers the subject in this industry, for unknown reasons. Reporters could not be reached for comment.

The boost was lead by a stunning 56.4% increase in handgun sales, part of which was attributed to higher retail selling prices.

The stats are calculated from quarterly Pittman-Robertson federal excise taxes earmarked for state wildlife conservation and habitat restoration programs. During the quarter, $67.4 million was generated for conservation, compared to $54.9 million in the same period in 2005.

Total wholesale sales for the quarter was approximately two-thirds of a billion dollars. Maybe that’s just not a lot of revenue to newspapers — most of which have been losing money for years.

Reporters Report Reports

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 20 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
National Public Radio reports that four graduating seniors in Tucson have developed technology that could save the city millions of dollars at its landfills over the next 20 years. It’s not clear whether the city will implement the technology.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
What is the money-saving technology? The report didn’t say.

People reading news on air are readers, not reporters. They read material handed to them, produced by writers and editors who are not and cannot be identified. The readers, sometimes disguised as or mistaken for actual reporters, read the handouts whether the material makes sense, is rational, or contains gaping holes that make it meaningless.

Failure to read the material as written, or questioning it in any way, is grounds for dismissal, and is never done.

Lott Lives! An Interview with Jeremy Lott.

Posted by Bernard Chapin On May - 20 - 2007

Role models are rather hard to come by for internet writers. Ours is not a magnificent brave world, but it is rather new and one of the scribes who always made a favorable impression upon me is Jeremy Lott. From humble beginnings, his career has progressed favorably and he is well-known and well-regarded within Conservadom. I’ve read and enjoyed scores of his pieces over the years, and I still take time out to devour whatever it is he posts. Currently, he is the Competitive Enterprise Institute’s current Warren Brookes Journalism Fellow and a contributing editor to Books & Culture. As an independent writer he’s appeared at practically every important conservative site such as The American Spectator in which he had an article last week.

BC: Jeremy, nice to meet you. For those who aren’t familiar with your latest book, what’s the central thesis of In Defense of Hypocrisy?

Jeremy Lott: Dan McCarthy brought to my attention a quote from Adam Smith that I wish I’d stuck in the book: “Virtue is more to be feared than vice, because its excesses are not subject to the regulation of conscience.”

It could just as easily have been called On Hypocrisy. I look at instances where people are charging hypocrisy and ask a few questions: (1) Is hypocrisy really the problem here or is it a distraction? (2) Say you could eliminate the hypocrisy. Would that have a good or a bad effect? (3) Are these hypocrisy accusations just somebody’s way of asserting his own virtue? The point is to get readers to think about these things and supply their own answers.

BC: What is it about hypocrisy which so uniquely angers people?

Jeremy Lott: The moral free riding. I, the hypocrite, put on an act to convince people to think better of me but then go out of character when I think they aren’t looking.

BC: Could we not say that the hypocrite is superior to a good many other people due to his knowing right from wrong? Even if he doesn’t “walk the walk,” isn’t his knowledge of proper behavior a point in his favor?

Jeremy Lott: Hypocrisy is valuable because it doffs its hat to the good, even when our behavior is not so good. It also works to limit that behavior. Good parents, for instance, tend to watch their swearing and otherwise act better around their kids because they understand that they’re being watched like hawks. They want to start the kids off on the right foot, and it changes them.

BC: I found your subtitle intriguing, “Picking Sides in the War on Virtue?” Is there a war on virtue at the moment? Wasn’t that battle lost long ago?

Jeremy Lott: In a piece for the Dallas Morning News, I clarified this, calling it an “undeclared war on virtue.” Attacks on hypocrisy are usually attacks on moral distinctions, and I think that struggle will go on for quite some time.

BC: Along the same lines, does the culture war still rage? It seems rather one-sided at the moment. Is there any hope for conservatives in the decades to come?

Jeremy Lott: It depends on what they want to accomplish. One of the reasons that Iraq is such a mess is that the U.S. went in with fuzzy or unworkable objectives. So my question to conservative culture warriors is this, “What concrete things do you want to accomplish?” It won’t do to complain about a Carteresque malaise. And if you want to use the government to enforce all but the most basic norms, then you’re rendering unto Caesar something that frankly does not belong to him.

BC: Let’s turn to political correctness. Isn’t cultural Marxism all about hypocrisy or, at least about the adoption of fake virtues?

Jeremy Lott: Hmm. I argue in the book that hypocrisy accusations are a cheap way of arguing for our own virtue. I am denouncing these really bad guys and so, “Oh what a good boy am I.” PC denunciations can serve the same function.

BC: Is hypocrisy a partisan issue? The political left appears to be uniquely enflamed by it. They often use it as an argument stopper. Once they establish that a person doesn’t always practice what he preaches then they maintain there’s no reason to listen to their opinions about anything.

Jeremy Lott: Hypocrisy accusations are a staple of leftist rhetoric and also conservative talk radio palaver. Boy it’s been fun trying to make that case on right wing talk shows.

BC: How’d you get into writing? Was it an accidental career path? I always liked your story—which of course I’ll let you to tell.

Jeremy Lott: In the nineties I was part of the now largely forgotten amateur e-zine movement. It was fueled by new technology — which made it possible to publish stuff online but not so easy that just anybody could do it (i.e., blogs) — and Clinton hatred. A few people took notice of my zine work and so, during college, I was able to freelance to pay the bills. After accidentally graduating, I decided that the night job would be a better fit.

BC: So far you’ve worked at Reason and The American Spectator, where do you plan on going from here? Are you disillusioned by the world of political writing?

Jeremy Lott: To answer your first question, it’s up in the air at the moment. I took a detour into the think tank world for the last few years. My current job as the Warren Brookes Journalism Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute is great, but it’s only a one year gig and few fellowships would give me as much freedom.

The second book, a comic history of the vice presidency, should be finished in June. I’ll have between then and the end of September to line up a new gig. If anybody out there is interested in one slightly used writer, drop me a line.

As for the second question, it assumes that I was “illusioned” in the first place, no?

BC: Thanks, Jeremy.

Bernard Chapin is a writer living in Chicago. He is the author of Escape from Gangsta Island, and is currently at work on a book concerning women. He can be contacted at veritaseducation@gmail.com.

Conclusions Precede Research

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 19 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:

The highly authoritative International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has determined that mankind is responsible for global warming. If massive changes aren’t made quickly, under international control, the planet may be doomed and life could become extinct.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:

Accuracy In Media (AIM), the Wash., D.C.-based non-profit media watchdog, notes that the IPCC conclusions and policy recommendations have been released in advance of the scientific research. With the policy preceding the actual results, pressure is mounting to ensure that the science matches the announced plans.

AIM quotes noted Harvard physicist Lubos Motl on the decidedly unscientific approach, “In the past, scientists had to do their research before the implications for policymaking could have been derived.”

Measuring national coverage, AIM notes that The Washington Post did say that the science hasn’t been completed before the conclusions were heralded, in paragraph 20 of a 21 paragraph story. The New York Times waited until paragraph 40 (out of 44) to mention the same trivial detail.

Motl mockingly calls this, “the vastly superior post-modern scientific method.” The media calls it fair, balanced, ethical, unbiased, spin-free, news of record.

The variable output of the sun, considered by many to be the main driving force of Earth’s temperature, has been missing from “news” reports. Experts note that climate changes, because that’s what climate does.

Learn more about AIM’s efforts to hold the media accountable and how you might help too: www.aim.org.

Reporters Inspiring Copycats

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 18 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:

Guns should be banned because a maniac in Virginia got some and went on a killing spree, reporters reported. One week later, after incessant prominent promotion of the suicidal immigrant psychopath, reports emerged of others interested in emulating the sick behavior, and setting new atrocity records.

Editors nationwide denied that their reports inspired copycats, or have any effect on the public that reads the “news.” Why reporters would write stories if they have no effect was unexplained at press time.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:

In a dramatic break with tradition, the 500,000-circulation Arizona Republic ran a page one Sunday editorial written by The Uninvited Ombudsman, that sets the record straight on the value of guns, and the deceptions politicians use in efforts to disarm innocent Americans.

The published newspaper editorial appears here.

The anti-rights “balance” piece, by a former Republic reporter now living in Chicago, is here.

The only significant omission in the published version of the editorial was this:

“How many criminals and crazies would sign up for gun registration? Right. None. It’s actually illegal to force them—violates their Fifth Amendment rights! Registration schemes are hopelessly misguided.

“If registration makes so much sense, why not register reporters? We know they can be dangerous or harmful. Why would an honest reporter object?”

The answer to that question did run. The Ombudsman’s unedited original version appears here.

Czars Overrunning America

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 18 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
The AP reports that the Bush administration is having a hard time finding a “war czar,” who would coordinate military efforts in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:

The AP’s apparent love, and frequent use of the word “czar,” is an affront to the entire American public.

A czar is a merciless dictator, not subject to the will of the people, operating ruthlessly in pre-Communist Russia.

The suggestion by the AP and their hopelessly anti-freedom unthinking lapdog followers in the lamestream media, that the U.S. has a drug “czar,” and education “czar,” a fiscal policy “czar,” and numerous other czars has gotten the public and officials to accept the word, without realizing just how brainwashed they have become.

Even if some twisted politician somewhere was the first to apply the word in some unknown circumstance, a proper reporter would say, in effect, “Although politician X called the new bureaucrat a ‘czar,’ the salaried government worker is actually only a mere employee, subject to reprimand, dismissal and the rule of law.”

French Turnaround Possible

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 17 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
“Nicolas Sarkozy, a blunt and uncompromising pro-American conservative was elected president of France on Sunday,” the AP reports on page ones across the country.

“There were few reports of unrest, despite fears that the impoverished suburban housing projects, home to African and Arab immigrants and their French-born children would erupt again,” in a repeat of 2005 rioting. The AP questions whether Sarkozy can “unite the increasingly diverse and polarized nation.”

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
Nicolas Sarkozy, a forthright and uncompromising pro-freedom politician was elected president of France on Sunday, despite smears and editorializing in lamestream “news” reports. He defeated a make-nice appeasement-bent socialist female for the position.

Growing enclaves of Muslim separatists, operating under their own sharia law in French suburbs, have resisted all efforts to assimilate into French society, which they consider un-Islamic and unclean.

Referred to as “youths” in French media, the jihad agents and sympathizers continue to take advantage of the French welfare state, collecting “free” money from overtaxed Frenchmen, and executing any of their members who show even slight signs of affinity for French culture. Police are unable and unwilling to attempt entry into the violent, illegally fortified Muslim housing projects that used to serve as government homes for imported laborers.

Experts note that these people, called “scum” by Sarkozy, are spreading their umma, or worldwide Muslim coalition, bent on establishing a caliphate on the Continent as they had in the 700 A.D. era. The non-Muslim French are known as kaffir, a term applied to all non-believers, whose purpose under sharia law is to be converted, enslaved or put to death.

Although a caliphate is the expressed goal of the Muslim immigrants, French and U.S. “news” outlets refuse to call a spade a spade, preferring euphemisms like downtrodden immigrant, youth, and impoverished disenfranchised Africans and Arabs.

By some estimates, the high-birth rate Muslims, facing low birth-rate French, are within two generations of taking over the country and moving it backwards to a middle-ages Islamic foothold in the heart of Western civilization.

Virginia Supports Rights

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 17 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
“Efforts to tighten the gun-show law die perennially in Virginia’s Republican-run pro-gun general Assembly,” writes Bob Lewis for the Associated Press, in a story with a familiar pretense of neutrality.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
Efforts to restrict people’s liberty and impose government sanctions on free-market gun shows are introduced every year by anti-rights Democrats, and die in Virginia’s pro-freedom General Assembly.

“The public can see the editorializing and deceit in the imitation ‘news’ reporting from people like Lewis and the AP, but sometimes cannot reframe the twisted coverage with suitable aplomb,” said the Uninvited Ombudsman, when asked by no one in particular.

Dead Islamists Missing

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 16 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
Nine U.S. soldiers and 17 Iraqi civilians died when a suicide bomber detonated at a crowded market in the troubled yada yada province today.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
Nine U.S. soldiers and 17 Iraqi civilians were brutally murdered when a radical Islamist waging jihad on the West blew himself up in a crowd of innocent food shoppers.

All news of terrorists killed by U.S. troops, Islamists taken out by U.S. troops, jihadis sent to the grave by U.S. troops, Muslim militants put to death by U.S. troops, and foreign insurgents shot dead, blown up or mowed down by U.S. military personnel continues to be suppressed by the “news” media. Reports of dead enemies have all but disappeared from all public news sources.

Webb’s Assistant Skates

Posted by Alan Korwin On May - 16 - 2007

The lamestream media told you:
Nothing.

The Uninvited Ombudsman notes however that:
Charges against Virginia senator Jim Webb’s assistant, for carrying a sidearm in a bag into a Senate office building, have been quietly dismissed. Prosecutors were not confident they could prove the aide carried the firearm “knowingly,” a required element of the offense.

Attorney Richard Gardiner, who successfully represented the aide, had used a similar argument previously, also for a congressional aide. The media, which swarmed in gun-crazed style for days all over the original incident, had little to say about the innocence of their story subject.

Uplift Our Troops As Heroes, Support Their Cause!

Posted by Felicia Fee Benamon On May - 15 - 2007

Why has the war become a political football? Why do we have leaders in Congress who are determined to push benchmarks on an Iraq withdrawal when clearly our enemies are watching every move the Congress makes? Ayman al-Zawahiri, Al Qaeda’s number 2 man recently mocked the bill Congress passed giving a time of withdrawal.  In an internet video, he said the bill “reflects American failure and frustration.” Why give our enemies the satisfaction of seeing our Congress in opposition against the President as he fights to win the War on Terror?  We are surely showing weakness when we include a timetable to withdraw from Iraq.It’s not that hard to reiterate the importance of making sure that our troops have what they need to do their jobs. The $124 billion war funding bill that President Bush vetoed had too much pork attached 

and a timetable for troops to begin leaving Iraq. The President clearly said he would not sign it. So instead of coming up with a bill that WILL get the President’s approval and help the troops, and sensing the urgency to which we need to get funding to the troops, Democrats remain pessimistic on Iraq, continuing to express how fast Iraq is going downhill. In that spirit, there has been ”compromise” on both sides; some Republicans are starting to waver. Compromise in this sense isn’t good…Republicans are becoming increasingly downcast about the war.

Senator Evan Bayh (D-IN) and Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME) introduced a bill that had certain conditions attached…the Iraqi government must get it together or face dwindling support from the US.  President Bush said he would be open to a bill with “benchmarks” so in a sense, he is giving in. 

While Democrats (and some Republicans) are free to articulate their feelings about a withdrawal from Iraq, they should be mindful of the importance of helping the troops…of getting funding to them quickly, and opt to leave out any conditions for withdrawal or “benchmarks” from the war funding bill.

When looking at the situation in Iraq, in some places, it’s understandable to be dismayed with the lack of progress occurring. But our troops are busily trying to curtail the amount of violence…they are rooting out terrorists, and are also trying to rebuild and maintain security in a volatile land.  They need to know that our Congress back home will send them the means to be successful and not set conditions that have to be met to be successful.  Our troops don’t need this type of stress. They have a job to do and they want the Congress to back their efforts.

President Bush is desperate to get funding to the troops to ensure their success, and he has agreed to a compromise just to get the funds.  But the President is the Commander in Chief, he hears reports from the ground in Iraq, he knows what the generals need, and what needs to be done. It isn’t the job of the Congress to set conditions to a funding bill for our troops. Just get the bill to the President’s desk already and fund our troops. 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) has been going head to head with President Bush since she assumed power.  Her attitude is that she must make the President responsible to the American people, accountable if you will.  But are her actions deemed responsible when she visited Syria in defiance of the White House to hold “talks” with Syria’s President?  What good did that do other than to cause confusion and contention with the White House?

Pelosi visited Iraq earlier this year and called the situation there “chaotic” and that we must “redeploy our troops.”  Funny how that description is not what our troops are describing as they work hard for the security of Iraq and Afghanistan. They are not running amuck wondering what to do…thinking all is lost. No, they are still fighting. Still working hard. Shouldn’t we support them? 

During her visit, Rep. Pelosi said she wanted to visit the troops to “applaud their patriotism, the sacrifice they’re willing to make and the courage they’re demonstrating.”  If that is the case, shouldn’t she make every effort possible to make sure that our troops do not sacrifice in vain…by “having their back?” 

Politicians need to stand down in trying to assess the way the war is going and stand down in running counter to President Bush’s foreign policy. They can serve the American people and our troops best by listening to the advice of our military on the ground, like General Petraeus and cooperating with the President to make sure that the war we are fighting is successful.

As a country, during past wars, there was no question as to what needed to be done. We stood by the troops thick and thin. We demonstrated it.  We were focused with the troops and determined to see a conflict through.  But many Americans are soaking in the constant negativity from the media, the images and news from Iraq, and are listening to the negativity on the war from those in Congress and are becoming pessimistic about the situation.  Regardless of what is being said, shouldn’t we have enough faith in God and in our troops that they are making life better for those in every country where US troops are present?  Will you stand strong and feel proud at the work they are doing?

  

Make every effort to support our troops when you can. They are supporting you whether you know it or not. They fight to keep us safe, whether abroad, or stateside.

I know that has been said over and over, but it’s time that it sinks in with all of us. It’s time that we pause every now and then during our lives and say a prayer for and think about our troops who are bravely fighting for us.

Be thankful and grateful you live in a free society. Because it didn’t come without sacrifice from our troops past and present.

It is by the grace of God that and the American soldier that I am able to do what I do, and for that I am grateful.

Related Reading:

Zawahiri mocks US Congress Iraq bill: http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070505/wl_afp/iraquspolitics_070505211802

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) calls the situation in Iraq “chaotic”(interview):

http://www.npr.org/about/press/2007/013107.pelosi.html

Bush critic Pelosi visits Baghdad:

http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2007/01/26/bomb_kills_15_in_new_attack_on_baghdad_pet_fair/

Please Support our Troops:

www.AnySoldier.com

Hear from the troops why they serve!  Go to: www.mnf-iraq.com.  Select From the Troops, then Click Why I Serve.

 *Felicia (Fee) Benamon is a political columnist who writes for various conservative sites including RenewAmerica.us, Michnews.com, Daley-Times Post, Renaissance Women ( http://www.rwnetwork.net/ ) , Capitolhillcoffeehouse.com, TheConservativeVoice.com, Mensnewsdaily.com, ConservativeCrusader.com, and other news sites like AmericanChronicle.com.  She is a columnist and a reporter for the Mid-South Patriot ( www.freewebs.com/midsouth-patriot ) in Memphis, TN.  Felicia hails from a military background, and has been politically active since the 2000 elections.  She has been a guest speaker on various conservative internet talk radio shows.

You may email Felicia:  Feereports@aol.com

A friend sent me an email a few days ago announcing, “The Kentucky Commission on Women (KCW) will present the 2007 Governor’s Conference on Kentucky’s Women July 13th at the Kentucky International Convention Center in downtown Louisville.”   He proceeded to ask, “Why is it that women’s issues have special conference and special speakers addressing ONLY the plight of W O M E N???”  That’s certainly a valid question considering there are over two hundred seventy (270) women’s commissions in Amerika, but only one (1) for men in New Hampshire - - - and it receives no government funding.  That’s certainly a valid question considering men’s list of historical (and present) ”oppressions” is as great or greater than women’s.

I was thinking just this afternoon about all the different perspectives on “women’s issues,” taken by different women’s factions in our society.  Most women’s issues seem to fall broadly under two categories. 

On the one hand we have the ”progressive” perspective, encompassing the spectrum of liberal women’s views, from the right to choose, to comparable (commie) worth, to special treatment under domestic violence and sexual harassment laws, etc. 

On the other hand we have the ”traditional” perspective, encompassing the spectrum of conservative (right wing) women’s views from the expectation of chivalrous treatment to an interpretation of “choice” that includes right to life, adoption, alimony, stay at home Motherhood, being a kept woman, etc., etc.

I really don’t see traditional women “street protesting” against the viewpoints and issues of liberal women, other than abortion, but leftist women tend to denigrate just about everything a conservative woman stands for.  Neither women’s camp is aggressive at shucking off the special privileges garnered on women, coming from the opposition women’s camp.  Again, abortion seems to be the most controversial issue dividing liberal and conservative women so what one considers a privilege, the other considers an oppression, ergo strong disagreement on that one issue.

Politicians seem quick to accommodate and very, very slow to condemn, the whole breadth of women’s topics from the most conservative to the most liberal.  As a result, IMO, American women today seem to be in an oddly win-win smorgasbord of politics, where every option and choice is on the table with no real penalties for hypocrisies.  After-all, it has always been a woman’s prerogative to change her mind. 

If any dare criticize the abundance of special privileges and pampering that American women enjoy today under nanny state programs, and chivalrous treatment, just trot out that tired old gender feminist propaganda about the historical oppression of women under Patriarchy and watch the dumb a$$ male politicians all line up like ducks in a row to salute, as that fallacious mantra of women’s politics is run up the flag pole.  You won’t find very many American women in the house, IMO, who will disavow how unfair life has been, according to their expectations of what life should be, or should have been.

I wonder what the outcry would be if the Governor of Kentucky got up to speak at the Women’s Commission gathering and the first words out of his mouth were “get tough or die?”  Conversely, I suspect Marines to this day are still taught to say that phrase to each other.

The hypocritical double standards between the way men are treated and women are treated in America today are numerous and stink to high heaven, yet we are considered equal - clearly separate, if in anyway equal.  I’d like to make that point at the next convening of the California Men’s Commission, except it doesn’t exist.  Oh, but there are at least 31 California Commissions for women.

Women will never be equal, until men have their (women’s) rights and privileges too.  

A Commission for Men in Los Angeles County would be a great place for California to begin to level the playing field.

 

Known Quantity: An Interview with John Derbyshire.

Posted by Bernard Chapin On May - 15 - 2007

Possessing diverse life experiences provides writers with a richness of perspective unmatched by many of their peers, and I can think of no writer for whom this is more true than John Derbyshire. He presently is a columnist at National Review and The New English Review, but before becoming a writer worked in the financial markets and even once acted in a Bruce Lee movie. Mr. Derbyshire has a great variety of interests apart from politics. Mathematics is one of his pleasures and is the subject of his latest book, Unknown Quantity along with being the subject of his 2003 work, Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics. He has also penned two novels, Fire from the Sun and Seeing Calvin Coolidge in a Dream, and currently is at work on another.

BC: Let’s start with political correctness which is a matter of acute concern at the present time. What do you have to say to those denying its existence or that conservatives exaggerate its threat? Given the manufactured fervor over Don Imus and that a man was recently fired for describing a Mexican as “a Mexican” it seems ludicrous to pretend that cultural Marxism is declining in power.

JD: It’s a big and fascinating subject—about which, as a matter of fact, The American Conservative has just asked me to write a big & fascinating piece. I am collecting my thoughts. A couple of those thoughts:

(1) PC was a response to multiculturalism. It was always there at a low level in the USA, because the USA was always multicultural (white, black, red—OK, that’s “multiracial,” strictly speaking, but “multicultural” follows, or at any rate followed). In the UK it came up after the great wave of non-European immigration from 1960 on—the first such event in British history. My childhood in 1950s England was perfectly monocultural.

(2) PC is widely accepted. It is wrong to think of it as imposed. Plenty of people—especially (see below) women—like it. They respond to it. It flatters them, tells them they are virtuous. Thomas Sowell has covered the territory pretty well in Vision of the Anointed. PC caters to a natural human desire for moral one-upmanship.

(3) Self-flattery aside, there is a need—a natural, social need, widely felt— for some code of decorum to cope with multiculturalism. PC is the code we have come up with. People accept it faute de mieux. I believe it is a lousy code, because…

(4) PC is built on a theoretical foundation that is false. OK, we need a code of decorum; but a code of decorum that is founded in lies is not a good code of decorum. We ought to be able to come up with something better. But…

(5) We won’t. As preposterous as PC seems to me and you, it has been completely internalized by most of a generation—perhaps two generations—by now. My daughter, age 14 and brighter than average, reacts with horror—instinctive horror, from internalized revulsion—if I comment in any way at all on anyone’s group identity. I’m not talking about the n-word here, which I don’t use, but just saying things like, “So-and-so is Jewish, isn’t she?” Nellie will grimace and say, “Really, Dad!” It is wicked, morally wrong, to notice anyone’s Jewishness, blackness, Hispanitude, Orientality, gayness, sex, disability, and all the rest.

You must go through life holding fast to the belief that these are empty attributes, carrying no information value, and that any reference to them must be—can only be—motivated by malice. Plainly people can actually go through life doing that. It’s amazing to me, but they can—sort of floating effortlessly above the reality of human nature, defying gravity.

BC: The other day I read an excellent description you had for the modern university. You described it as “a warm bath of Political Correctness” which is precisely what it is, but why do think conservatives have been unsuccessful in pointing this out to the general population. Why have we allowed this calamity to poison our once formidable institutions?

JD: That “warm bath” metaphor was actually borrowed from Orwell, who described the traditional boarding-school education given to upper-class English boys as “five years in a lukewarm bath of snobbery.” I upgraded the metaphor from lukewarm to warm because of the crude force and intimidation that is used when ramming PC down college freshman throats—so much coarser than the gentle, subliminal indoctrination carried out at Orwell’s Eton.

Nobody has commissioned me to write a piece about the modern college, but I’d love to try. It’s quite a study. The thing that jumped out at me from all those stories about the Virginia Tech shootings was the size of the place—26,000 students! I mentioned my surprise to an acquaintance who actually teaches at Virginia Tech. He told me, “I did my graduate studies and postdoc at Maryland and Wisconsin respectively, both in the 40,000 range.” Good grief!

Well, to your questions. Nobody cares what conservatives think, nobody listens to conservatives. We are morally inferior people, don’t you know that? We are mean-spirited. Why would anyone listen to what we have to say? I live in a bosky middle-middle-class northeastern suburb. My neighbors are all liberals. The nearest conservative I know lives eight miles away. We are a lunatic fringe. Probably we shall all be rounded up and incarcerated in mental institutions at some future point, if not actually euthanized en masse.

Why do people put up with the college racket? (And that’s what it is—a vast money racket.) Well, in the first place, they have a natural desire for their kids to do well in life, and we have so perverted our society that without a college degree, your chances of doing well are much reduced.

Even if you hate the college racket as much as I do, you send your kids anyway, because you don’t want them to be losers and blame their loserdom on you. (They might of course turn out losers anyway; but then at least you can say, “Don’t blame me! Didn’t I beggar myself to put you through college?”)

But of course, most people don’t hate the college business. Most people have swallowed the stuff about education being an unqualified good; and also the multiplicative fallacy—that if something is good, then twice as much is twice as good. That’s not how we salt our stew, but it’s a natural tendency in human thought none the less.

Although in fact, I believe we may soon see an end to the college racket, or at least a serious cratering of it. E-degrees are really beginning to take off, with more options and more acceptance by employers. Why pay $150,000 and submit to the indignities of “diversity awareness orientation” when I can learn the same stuff from a Teaching Company course for one percent the cost, and without people yelling crackpot theories about human nature into my ears? If I could then sit a state-refereed exam for some nominal fee, and get a recognized credential, why would I go to college? This horrible college farce can’t last.

BC: I’m not as partisan as I once was but allow me to ask, what exactly does the Democratic Party stand for? I am increasingly bewildered by their popularity when it seems that all they embody is grievance mongering, hostility, negativity, and socialism. Also, are you surprised by the way so many people are oblivious to the continuum of socialism? Often they profess to being opposed to it in principle, but then seek to increase the size of government as much as possible.

JD: Why, it’s the party of whole-hearted belief in dependency on state support for the individual life.

It’s tough getting through life by your own efforts in a world as crowded and sophisticated as this one. Postindustrial society has huge surpluses of wealth that can be harvested by the state and handed out as benefits. There’s a squeaky-wheel bias to it all—groups that can manipulate the process, for example by making emotional-blackmail (sometimes actual blackmail) appeals, tend to do best, but everyone gets something.

It’s pretty popular. That’s why the old self-support ideal of American life is dead, dead as mutton. It lingers on among some Americans as a fading dream; and to the degree that there is any difference between Democrats and Republicans, it is that Republicans appeal to that dream, while Democrats paint the old order as a scheme of oppression and cruelty. It’s a dream, though, a fading dream. The real difference between Democrats and Republicans is that Democrats want the authorities to confiscate 34 percent of your income for purposes of redistribution, while Republicans think 32 percent would be better.

Modern socialism—neosocialism, the socialism of Clinton and Blair—in which capitalism is given a pretty free rein, so that the state can harvest and redistribute the surpluses, is successful and very popular. A lot of conservatives are in denial about that. Sure, neosocialism has a vast bureaucratic overhead—tens of millions of paper-shufflers doing nothing useful with their working lives—but it can afford that. And sure, it destroys that fine spirit of adventure, striving, self-support and self-improvement that was instrumental in building our civilization.

So what? Nobody really wanted to build a civilization. Harsh necessity forced them to do something with their lives. If Cortez, or Shakespeare, or Gauss, or Mozart, or the Founding Fathers, or the prairie settlers, could have got nice cushy cube-jockey jobs as Administrative Assistants in the Department of Administrative Affairs, and gone home at night to watch American Idol from the comfort of a Barcalounger—well, they probably would have.

There is a quote I read 25 years or so ago, when I was working through a lot of Soviet-dissident literature. I am sure it was either Shafarevich or Zinoviev, but I have never been able to re-find it. It is to the effect that communism was not just imposed on a passive populace, but that as communism descended on the people, their spirits rose to meet it.

This strikes me as a profound and true insight, and applicable to the whole human race. It was a mistake to think that the people of the USA would forever remain indifferent to the attractions of socialism. Nations change, often very quickly. The wild and terrible Vikings became the pale, pacifistic Scandinavians. The savage Magyar horde became—much more quickly, in just a couple of generations—the Christian Kingdom of Hungary. Pious, priest-ridden, poverty-stricken Ireland became, as I watched with my own eyes through the 1980s and 1990s, a hedonistic, skeptical, bustling hive of entrepreneurial vigor that had to import priests from the Third World to keep churches open.

Just so, the land of the brave and the home of the free could become the land of the timid and the home of the servile. This could happen, could be happening. The signs are not good.

BC: Let me ask one question about England. I look across the Atlantic and see a nation that appears to be as corrupted by cultural Marxism and the wayward cult of sensitivity as we are, yet many of our English cousins look down on us. Is there any reason to believe that the UK is socially superior to America? What, if anything, of old marvelous England remains?

JD: It’s worse over there than it is here. The odd thing is that when political correctness first came up, English people—I was one myself at the time—thought of it as an American aberration, and scoffed at it as just another variety of wild-colonial-boy primitivism.

The answer I think is again multiculturalism, which was more of a psychic shock to the English than to Americans. America, as I pointed out above, always had multiculturalism, so when racial separatism gave way to integration and meritocracy, Americans were just reworking their attitudes to something that was at least familiar. When postwar England began to fill up with black people and Muslims, it was all new, all utterly new. The switch to political correctness wasn’t a reform, it was a revolution. Revolutions tend to be total, don’t they? Once you have lost, or destroyed, your equilibrium position, you go rolling off across event space until you reach some new, distant, equilibrium point.

But deep-seated attitudes, like the colonial-bumpkin image that the English have had of Americans for 300 years and more, are very resistant to change—especially when, like this one, they are self-flattering. The English will go on believing that they are Athens (ancient, cultured, wise) to our Rome (brash, militaristic, dumb), though the current truth is probably that the whole Anglosphere is just Constantinople (tired, frivolous, gullible), waiting for the Sultan and his army to show up with their humongous cannons.

BC: Apart from your cultural commentary, you’ve also written novels such as Fire from the Sun and Seeing Calvin Coolidge in a Dream. What advantages do you see in writing fiction over non-fiction? I ask this principally because I know scores of very intelligent people who refuse to read fiction, and it’s difficult for me to convince them of its worth. Do you see it as a dying art?

JD: Well, let’s be accurate, I have written just those two novels, only one of which (Coolidge) I could persuade anyone to publish. The other (Fire) I published myself. It was just too long. (It includes, for example, an 11,000-word appendix of terms from opera, and thumbnail descriptions and biographies of operas, arias, and composers. One publisher actually suggested I publish that appendix as a book by itself….)

Never having mastered—all right, bothered with—the art of book marketing, and the vanity publisher having screwed up the printing anyway, I eventually put the entire text of Fire on the internet, where you can read it (here! here!), with a PayPal button you can click to send me $20 if you like the book. People actually do—I get a couple hundred dollars a year from that button. Hey, it’s more than Milton got for Paradise Lost.

From the writer’s point of view, the great advantage of writing nonfiction is, you can sell the book and pocket an advance before you’ve written the darn thing. A good 10-page proposal will sell a nonfiction book, and get you an advance so you don’t have to worry about money for a while. With fiction, you actually have to write your book, then try to sell it—at least until you’ve made enough of a name that you can negotiate three-book deals.

So far as difficulty is concerned, fiction is much harder. You have to make everything up. At any rate, you should—autobiographical fiction is just cheating, in my opinion. With nonfiction, the material is out there somewhere. You just have to select, gather and arrange it, and apply an attitude.

No, I don’t at all see fiction as a dying art. The world of fiction is always changing, sometimes in unhappy directions. Right now, for example, I hear that romantic fiction is in decline. The old ladies who used to read it are dying off, and younger women (comparatively younger, that is—i.e. middle-aged) are not so keen on it. Genres flourish and decline like that. Everyone knows about the Golden Age of science fiction. Guess what? It’s passed.

Storytelling is a very fundamental human activity, though. It will always be with us; and the imaginative opportunities you get from words-on-pages fiction, as opposed to TV fiction, stage fiction, radio fiction (now there’s a dead art form), movie fiction, comic-book fiction, or video-game fiction, will always have appeal to lots of people. Books are awfully handy things.

Some number of people will always thrill to words-on-pages fiction. The very worst that might happen is that fiction books will go the way of the stage play—a minority interest surviving in defiance of more easily accessible alternatives, just because people like the flavor of it, the imaginative “fix” it gives them. But I don’t think things will get that bad for written fiction.

BC: You’re the perfect person to ask about mediums because you’re practically a pioneer of the podcast. The Derb Radio segments over at National Review Online are rather precious. Does podcasting has allowed you to reach a larger audience?

JD: I actually have no idea about the numbers involved. If I were to ask National Review Online, I suppose they’d tell me, but I resist doing so for psychological reasons—fear of failure, probably. I get roughly the same number of commenting emails on a Radio Derb podcast that I get on a web column, so I assume the numbers are roughly equal, but there may be a factor there I’m missing.

BC: Speaking of Derb Radio, you had a very interesting segment the other day about a “Woman’s Town” in China wherein women will rule and men obey. Its motto is to be “Women never make mistakes and men can never refuse woman’s requests.” Although nowhere near as blatant, cannot a case be made that the United States is headed in the same direction with the female bias indigenous to the legal system and the mainstream media?

JD: Well, let’s talk about stereotypes—wonderfully useful things, an important and essential part of our cognitive equipment.

One of the most widespread and enduring stereotypes about the U.S.A. is that it is a country run by women. I was raised, like most non-Americans, to believe that American males scurry around in terror of their overbearing women. I can recall as a kid watching The Mary Tyler Moore Show and hearing people sitting watching with me—working-class English people, I mean—saying: “She’s so bossy! Why does he put up with it? Poor guy!” Our mentality was more of the Andy Capp sort. You know: “Florrie, where’s my pencil?” “It’s behind your ear, love.” “Don’t mess around, woman—which ear?”

One of my schoolmasters told us that this stereotype was one of the causes of the War of Independence. When Lord North’s government was deliberating the Tea Act (my schoolmaster told us), there was a faction in the government that worried the Act might lead to boycotts on tea. Don’t worry, said a second faction: The American women would insist on having their tea, and everyone knew that colonial men were slaves to their women. This second faction won and the War followed. I have never checked this story and have no idea if it is true; but the fact that this kind of thing was—probably still is—widely believed, tells you something about the U.S.A., as it appears to the rest of the world.

With the rise of multi-culturalism and PC, these tendencies have got much worse (or true, if you think they were false in the first place). There is a very strong anti-masculine thread in PC. The PC-ification of America, and of the rest of the Anglosphere too, is in large part a feminization, a sissification.

Quite a large part of modern education in the Anglosphere, from elementary school up to and through college, consists of efforts to get boys behaving like girls. The great masculine virtues—courage, emotional restraint, small-group loyalty, humor, pride, personal independence, curiosity, daring, competitiveness, the capacities for leadership and for disinterested friendship, the fascination with weapons and fighting, the lust for glory (including posthumous glory)—are all looked on unfavorably by the transmitters of our culture. The things that men are naturally good at—war, mathematics, games, engineering, exploration, poetry, musical composition—are increasingly unfashionable.

BC: What can we do to combat the absurdity of contemporary feminism which no longer has anything to do with equality and everything to do with women’s superiority? I’m awaiting the day when “feminist scientists” promote the idea that man and woman are actually members of different species [perhaps the distinction will be set between “homo sapiens” and “homo-friendly sapiens”].

JD: I don’t know what we can do to combat it. Though never a Marxist, I do think that there is sometimes something owed to the notion of historical inevitability. Perhaps we have passed on to some stage of our species’ history where men are just surplus to requirements. I have written at length about this somewhere—yes, here it is.

BC: Yes, I recall that article and I couldn’t stand it. At any rate, allow me to congratulate you on your recently won Euler Book Prize for your work, Prime Obsession. Has it found a niche among mathematicians and scientists over the course of the past few years?

JD: Thank you. It was a thrill. The MAA was very generous to give an award like that to a nonmathematician.

The book’s niche is not among “mathematicians and scientists,” though, and I would have been surprised if it was. I aimed the book at ordinary educated people who just wanted to read a math story. That’s where it has found its niche. Though I should say that among the many letters and emails I’ve had, a striking proportion are from engineers of various kinds, people who’ve been using practical math all their working lives—sometimes at a very high level—but who want to know more about pure-math topics like analytical number theory.

BC: Do you have any new projects that you’re working on?

JD: I have just started work on a new novel, into which I am going to put some themes about human biodiversity, political correctness, religion, politics, aging, group conflict, and the world of magazine writing. No opera, though! After that, my next project will be somehow to make some money so that my kids can enjoy that warm bath of political correctness at decent colleges. Grrrr.

BC: Thank you very much, Mr. Derbyshire.

Bernard Chapin is a writer living in Chicago. He is the author of Escape from Gangsta Island, and is currently at work on a book concerning women. He can be contacted at veritaseducation@gmail.com.

Hillary Clinton, a Trojan Horse?

Posted by Bernard Chapin On May - 13 - 2007

Like many conservatives, I’ve been a frequent consumer of Hillariana over the years. I fondly recall the chapters of The Hillary Trap: Looking for Power in all the Wrong Places, Hell to Pay: The Unfolding Story of Hillary Rodham Clinton, Madame Hillary: The Dark Road to the White House, and Rewriting History. So, with a mix of stimulation and fatigue, I opened Bay Buchanan’s newly released The Extreme Makeover of Hillary (Rodham) Clinton. Undeniably, there are few more topical persons than the junior Senator from New York, but, as works concerning her continue to roll forth, the crucial question regarding the Hill-o-hype is, “what new things does this author have to say?”

Bay Buchanan, the younger sister of Pat Buchanan and former Treasurer of the United States, offers up some unique bulbs of observation amidst a larger garden of perennial wisdom. She updates the earlier tomes with an exploration of Mrs. Clinton’s time in the Senate and provides a central theme that is both compelling and persuasive. Her idee fixe is that character is a monumental aspect of leadership and that Hillary Clinton is a person entirely devoid of it.

The Extreme Makeover illustrates Hillary’s unfamiliarity with the virtue of responsibility, and that she is every bit as prolific and stunning a liar as her husband. Buchanan traces the scandals integral to Mrs. Clinton’s existence and finds one element common with them all: she could have mitigated the damage in practically every instance had she admitted the truth from the outset. This was trued of her venture into cattle futures, the Whitewater fiasco, Travelgate, her collection of FBI records on “perceived enemies,” and the Grand White House Looting scheme of 2001. Yet, self-admission is not something of which Hillary has ever been capable—she would prefer to blame others. The author describes her as a card-carrying member of “the National Association of Victimhood.” It may take several decades to document all the mistruths inherent to a second Clinton administration…and by then, in the words of Christopher Hitchens, they’ll be no one left to lie to.

The evidence on display is damning, but it’s highly unlikely to be read by non-conservatives due to its partisan viewpoint. Furthermore, the author’s tone is odd at times such as when she adopts a quasi-compassionate and condescending tone in regards to her subject. A few sentences were reminiscent of Werner Herzog’s narration in the film Grizzlyman: “I wonder if she regrets trading it all in for fame and power. And as I wonder, I also hope that somewhere in her heart she has a place that’s full of joy.” Some ponderings are best left to Oprah.

Apart from style, The Extreme Makeover succeeds in warning readers of what a Hillary Clinton presidency will look like, and, more precisely, who it will target. A made over person is exactly the Hillary we see lecturing us on CNN and CBS. The real would-be queen is simply not fit for widespread consumption. The junior senator’s personality revolves around a lust for power, a need to control others, and rampant insecurity. Anger and irritability are natural attributes, and but only her family, advisors, and the secret service are allowed to observe them. Mrs. Clinton’s inner core is so volatile and brittle that not even a massive team of handlers and PR specialists have managed to infuse her with charisma or charm.

The outcome of this bizarre makeover is a bionic mask of Lancôme and ritzy apparel cloaking the radical within, but one that ultimately renders her artificial, robotic, heartless, calculating, and inhuman. What better words could describe the buffoonish behavior she paraded in Selma, Alabama when she tried on a southern accent as if it were a new pantsuit from Bloomingdales?

Buchanan notes that Mrs. Clinton’s alterations, even in politics, have been totally cosmetic. Her initial support for the Iraq War is something she regrets. At the moment, she is doing everything possible to repudiate the past and has even sponsored an initiative to rescind the original Iraq resolution. In this way she is a typical leftist who believes that not only humans, but actual events, are infinitely malleable.

Hillary’s conformity is something rarely discussed as it does not seem in keeping with the domineering uberfemale image many of us have of her, yet it is an enduring characteristic and another reason why her presidency would be disastrous. Senator Clinton is highly impressionable and historically has been quick to regurgitate the positions and views of trusted advisers. There seems to be no record of her generating any original ideas on her own.

The suggestibility of her “life history” is readily evident. As a child she absorbed her father’s Republican views, and consolidated them upon reading Barry Goldwater’s The Conscience of a Conservative. She then began the lengthy process of moving left after falling under the spell of a radical preacher. Then she discovered the belief system of Saul Alinsky whose Rules for Radicals Buchanan labels “the gospel according to Hillary.” From there she merged her essence with her husband’s, and, when it became impossible to deny that his worldview was near beer, she embraced the banalities of Michael Lerner’s “politics of meaning.” Next would come Jean Houston, a New Age goof who tantalized her with the notion of channeling famous persons. Now Hillary could quiz Eleanor Roosevelt and Mahatma Gandhi in the hopes of expropriating their opinions as her own.

No quotation better embodies Hillary than Alinsky’s: “power is the very essence, the dynamo of life.” It certainly is when you’re a truly a sick individual. Mrs. Clinton’s sex drive was sublimated long ago, and its energy continues to fuel her lust for power. We are left with a crawling, purposeful cretin hiding her coarseness behind soothing words that strike conservative ears as “my precious, my precious.”

Is Hillary Clinton a Trojan Horse? Frankly, I doubt it. As a charlatan she is rather primitive. It’s hard to imagine her true character remaining hidden over the course of the next year-and-a-half. Her advisors will have to apply so many swats of subterfuge to the palette of her personality that she’ll more resemble a Jackson Pollock canvas than an actual person. Besides, admissions like “We’re going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good” don’t play well before non-Broadway audiences.

Bernard Chapin is a writer living in Chicago. He is the author of Escape from Gangsta Island, and is currently at work on a book concerning women. He can be contacted at veritaseducation@gmail.com.

Pure Lunacy! More Global Warming Madness and First Amendment Attacks

Posted by Felicia Fee Benamon On May - 7 - 2007

Could we get any more idiotic than this? The designation of July 4th, our Independence Day as “Energy Independence Day”!  Have I missed something? Has the Global Warming fanaticism hit SO hard that now we direct attention away from one of our most patriotic days celebrated in our nation to declare our allegiance to… “Mother Earth”?

“Energy Independence Day” is the term Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) coined as she intends to push through the Democrats’ Global Warming agenda around or on the 4th of July! It’s gone so far that there is now a new House committee known as the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming.

Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA), the chair of the committee is so serious about climate change that he saw it as a matter of national security.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi stated that Global Warming is “one of humanity’s greatest challenges.”

Read more: http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCulture.asp?Page=/Culture/archive/200704/CUL20070426a.html

I guess combating the huge problem of International terrorism has fallen off the map with some people as being among the most important issues facing our country.

It should be the case that politicians are willing to consult a variety of scientists with different perspectives on the issue of Global Warming before releasing absurd statements like those above, and before pushing through unnecessary legislation.

As one can see from the comments from our politicians, the job of the Global Warming crowd is to alarm the populace, not to inform them of in depth information about changes that are occurring to our Earth.  

Until there is an overwhelming consensus in the scientific community suggesting that our Earth is in DIRE need for a reverse in the course we are going currently, I do not believe such “committees” are worth the time and energy of Congress.

The House could very well focus their energy on sending the President an effective war funding bill for our troops instead of going gaga over how we must save the Earth. 

Leave the 4th of July alone, as a day we pause to celebrate our nation’s Independence and to appreciate all that America is. It is a patriotic day. It’s not a day to “go green.”

More Lunacy!  

As the news flows in, I wonder… could there be anything more insane than using July 4th to promote environmental issues?  Well, yes, I’ve found it.

An absurd “Hate Crimes” bill or The Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act passed the House on Thursday. H.R. 1592

http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c110:H.R.1592 ) adds more teeth to law enforcement to go after so-called “hate crimes”.  Many feel that it also includes speech against the subject of homosexuality.   

Christian leaders like Bishop Harry Jackson said the bill:

“…threatens religious leaders’ right to preach against homosexuality by including sexual orientation and gender identity as characteristics that can be subjected to hate.”

As a black man of the Christian faith, he said “the inclusion of sexuality is insulting to blacks, because original hate crimes legislation aimed at protecting people who were attacked because of their race, while new legislation would include a characteristic he believes is a chosen behavior.”

President Bush does not see the need to sign the bill as he has said that states across the country already have laws against “hate crimes”. 

Read more: http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200705/POL20070503e.html

Here’s my thought on “hate crimes”… If you attack ANYONE, (I’m talking physically) regardless of race, religion, etc., it is ALREADY designated as a crime. There’s no need to attach the “hate” wording to it. Someone who attacks someone maliciously without provocation is doing so out of hatred for that person,  that’s a crime.  Surely everyone has heard of assault.  Therefore the word “hate crime” just makes no sense. A crime is a crime.

Homosexuals should not be afforded protection status from those who disagree with how they live their life.  Everyone should be looked upon as equal, having equal protection under the law. Gays are not to be put in a special category for protection.

Threatening ANYONE regardless of sexual preference shouldn’t be tolerated.  As a Christian, I am to love those who sin, and show them the way to God…to let those who practice the homosexual lifestyle know that it is a sin in the sight of God and I disagree with the lifestyle homosexuals lead. And it’s not wrong to have an opinion and to share with someone what the Bible says about homosexuality. Especially since there are those who are pushing the lifestyle in society as if it were normal.

“Do not lie with a man as one lies with a woman; that is detestable.”–Leviticus 18:22 (NIV)

Homosexuality is a perversion in the sight of God.  He created man and woman.  Why would God introduce Eve to Adam if He didn’t intend for the two to bond and come together as man and wife?  The family structure from the beginning of time consisted of man and wife.  

President Bush has threatened to veto H.R. 1592, but it should never see the President’s desk. Christians and freedom loving people need to make their voices heard… stand up and demand your leaders vote against it in the Senate!:

Senate: http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

House of Representatives: http://www.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml

President Bush:  comments@whitehouse.gov

Banning the words “mom” and “dad”?!

The homosexual indoctrination continues… this time from the California State Assembly!! They plan to “ban references to ‘mom’ and ‘dad’ in public schools” in California.  This helps the homosexual community feel right at home, preventing the use of “mom” and “dad” would “reflect adversely” on those who practice homosexuality.

Click here to see the story and more outrageous “proposals” regarding homosexual indoctrination:

http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=55413

This is just an example of more pressure coming from the homosexual groups/lobbyists like the Gay-Straight Alliance Network to force their agenda in California schools…it’s disgusting, and it’s happening in states other than California! 

We wonder why our children are not doing well in school. Sometimes it is the schools that are failing our children! They are being bombarded by filth from groups willing to push their agenda on children as young as kindergartners when they should be taught the basics that has been in school curricula for years. The 3 r’s…reading, ‘riting, and ‘rithmetic has never failed.

Do you want to see more of this America? Just continue to remain silent and watch it get worse. Every American citizen has a job to do, and that’s to uphold our freedoms to disagree.

Wars may rage in other countries around the world, but I don’t know of any other country that’s under assault like the United States is currently by radicals who want to seize control of how you live your life through the courts and enacting needless legislation.

Let’s just hope that Christians aren’t going to wake up one day and realize that speaking their mind on certain issues will cost them a pretty penny, or worse. 

What has happened to America? It’s truly time to be proactive.

Don’t ever forget about the creed we live by as mentioned in the Declaration of Independence:  ”…that among these are life, liberty (freedom), and the pursuit of happiness.”  Not ”the pursuit of agendas/causes and indoctrination.”  

F4J is Coming to Los Angeles & NCFMLA Is Welcoming Them!

Posted by Ray Blumhorst On May - 7 - 2007

Fathers-4-Justice (F4J) and the National Coalition of Free Men, Los Angeles (NCFMLA) invite you to meet fellow grand parents, children, women and men who are joined together to stop the unfair practices of lawyers and family court. Have lunch in the park with people like you who need to be heard and need to take action. Bring your story and join us for hot dogs, soft drinks and conversation. This is a great opportunity to meet new friends and realize that you are not alone in your experiences.

We have already received word that the Children’s Rights Initiative Sharing Parents Equally (CRISPE) will be coming to Sherman Oaks for this event.

The protest rally and picnic will be held, May 20, 2007 (Sunday), from 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. at the Van Nuys/Sherman Oaks Park in Los Angeles County.   The picnic in the park will be located at the corner of Hazeltine and Huston in the S.E. corner of the park.

The address of the park is:
14201 Huston Street
Sherman Oaks, CA 91423



Here is a link to Mapquest for the VNSO Park,

http://tinyurl.com/2aqsz8

Together we will make a difference!

Members of Father’s and men’s rights groups (CRISPE, F4J, and NCFMLA) protested today outside the  downtown, Los Angeles County Municipal Courthouse, that was hearing matters in the Baldwin-Basinger visitation dispute.

http://www.californiamenscenters.org/crispe.html

http://www.f4j.us/index.php?id=ca

http://www.ncfmla.org/

The protestors came from as far away as Sacramento and San Diego for a chance to express their opinions on “equal patenting” and other custody and visitation issues.

Approximately 25 to 30 protestors were present, although it was apparently difficult for the news media to determine crowd size. Some protestors walked around over a wide area, while a group of about twelve protested steadily in front of the West entrance to the L. A. County Municipal Court building at 110 N. Grand (near the intersection of Grand and 1 st. Street). Others protested across the street to the West and a few protested at the entrance were Kim Basinger is alleged to have entered the courthouse.

http://www.9news.com/life/entertainment/article.aspx?storyid=69321

While Associated Press (above) reported only “about a dozen people” in attendance, Reuters (below) was much close to the actual number, reporting:

http://www.reuters.com/article/peopleNews/idUSN0434898020070504?pageNumber=2

“about two dozen men, many of them divorced, noncustodial fathers, staged a demonstration in support of Baldwin, carrying signs with such slogans as “Parental alienation is child abuse” and “Los Angeles County abuses fathers.’”

According to sources closely associated with the demonstration, 25 people were in attendance (mostly concerned men, but also a significant number of concerned women).

 

 

 

In just a quick Google search of the web, I noticed stories containing the Reuters and Associated Press snippets, appearing in states around America from New Hampshire to Colorado, and around the world from Canada, to Scotland, to India. By early evening, all mention of protestors had disappeared from the AP stories I was finding on the web, although Reuters still carried mention of the protestors in its coverage.

The protest lasted from 6:45 A.M. to 11 A.M. Reports came in during the protest that video of the protest was airing on local news stations. When I got home shortly before Noon, I turned on the news and was able to videotape a news report about the Baldwin-Basinger visitation dispute, that showed: protestors, the mobile red white and blue protest sign, and a short interview with a “parents rights advocate.” By the time the 5 o’clock news rolled around the Basinger-Baldwin visitation dispute was still making all the local news channels, but the entire portion showing the “equal parenting “protest was edited out.

While assembling this report, I listened to different TV news sources in the background to see if there may yet be some coverage of all the caring parents I saw today, working as a force for good. Alas, I heard nothing of those parents struggling to proactively further loving ties between parents and children.

Instead of responsible news coverage of the good I saw today, I heard different media outlets carry malevolent and sensationalistic news, of another Hollywood Actor allegedly being videotaped in a drunken stupor by his 16 year old daughter. Journalistic standards that determine what constitutes news, appear to me to be severely lacking any kind of moral or ethical balance, and are thereby an unbalanced reporting of what truly constitutes a truthful reflection of news worthy of reporting.

The “media beast” is indeed a ravenous beast. The media beast appears to be as much, or more, concerned with molding societies perception of what it thinks news is, as it is concerned with fairly conveying a true and balanced reflection of what actually is the news.

CRISPE, F4J, and NCFMLA are certainly working hard to change that as it regards issues of parenting (and other Father’s/men’s issues) in America.

Happy May Fools Day!!!

Posted by Ray Blumhorst On May - 1 - 2007

Today is May Day, traditionally a day to celebrate the coming of Spring, but alas another cultural event now co-opted by Marxist toadies for their own purposes.   Around the world, in commie countries, and commie leaning countries like Amerika, May day is now a day to celebrate and promote political dogma, based on the ever failing ideology of Karl Marx.   

Although many interpret today’s rallies and celebrations as primarily a promotion of illegal immigration, I see the events as more generally, a typical May 1st celebration like  communists annually engage in.  

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_Day#The_Soviet_Union

“May Day was an important official holiday in the former Soviet Union, celebrated with elaborate popular parade in the centre of the major cities. It was first openly celebrated on May 1, 1917. The biggest celebration was traditionally ogranized on the Red Square, where the General Secretary of the CPSU and other party and government leaders were greeting the crowds form the Lenin’s Mausoleum.”

America has come a long way down to get to such big celebrations of this evil day, where we see such large support for communists, cultural Marxists and other step children of Marx‘s corrupt ideology. 

Today the news media abounds with stories about May Day celebrations in major leftist cities across Amerika.   Ten’s of thousands are marching in Los Angeles alone.   Thousands, or tens of thousands more, supporting cultural Marxist corruption, take to the streets in cities like Chicago, Boston, New York, Washington, and San Francisco.

Such celebrations add fuel to the candidacy of Presidential candidates and cultural Marxist darlings like Hillary Clinton, who support the communist concept of “comparable worth,” as well as other cultural Marxist doctrines of “The Nanny State.”

http://www.hillaryclinton.com/video/13.aspx

Stories promoting the gender fascist fallacy of “the wage gap” have recently taken on mythic status in mainstream media with that “big lie,” being repeated over and over again in newspapers and television media outlets across the western world.   Joseph Goebbels would be proud of the lack of journalistic fact checking behind the promulgation and dissemination of that “big lie” propaganda weapon.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Lie

The level of hype surrounding mythic, wage gap MsInformation has reached such a level of hype, it has gone off the hype meter and NOW circles planet earth in a newly discovered ring of gases known as the “ludicrous sphere” (roughly the equivalent of that area above earth carrying the waves (signals) broadcast by our mass media outlets).   The latest contribution to the “ludicrous sphere” is a proposal calling for a “man tax,” based on the flawed communist model known as “comparable worth,” which itself was used to establish the infamous wage gap propaganda.

  http://www.startribune.com/535/story/1149212.html

“Taxing women less: Gender pay equity?”

 Comparable worth is, yet again, co-opting noble sounding words, but yet again using methodology based on flawed, cultural Marxist dogma.   Yet again, the results of such corruption and dishonesty are nothing less than a proposition for tyranny.  I can hardly believe anyone would have the temerity to propose such an outrageous and irresponsible proposition as a “man tax.”   What could be more appropriate to say today, about such an unAmerican, and unequal rights propostion as a ”man tax,” other than “HAPPY MAY FOOLS DAY?”

Of course, the MsInformation being broadcast by irresponsible mainstream media does not exist in a vacuum, nor did it come about without the aid and assistance of the leftist bases of indoctrination know as Amerika’s colleges and universities.   ”Get ‘em while their young,” has always been the