Tuesday, June 5, 2012

What's at Stake in the Wisconsin Recall Election

At the Wall Street Journal, "The Wisconsin Recall Stakes":

A single election rarely determines a democracy's fate, but some matter more than others. Tuesday's recall election of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker is one that matters a great deal because it will test whether taxpayers have any hope of controlling the entitlement state and its dominant special interests.

Specifically, we will learn if a politician can dare to cross government unions and survive. Mr. Walker isn't facing this extraordinary midterm challenge because he and a GOP legislature asked public workers to pay 12.6% of their health insurance premiums and put 5.8% of their paychecks toward their pensions. Those are small sums compared to what private employees typically pay.

His political offense was daring to challenge the monopoly sway that public unions have come to hold over modern state government through collective bargaining. Public unions aren't like private unions that negotiate labor terms with a single company or workplace. Public unions have outsize influence because they can often buy the politicians who are supposed to represent taxpayers. The unions effectively sit on both sides of the bargaining table.

Thus over time they have been able to extort excessive wages, benefits and pensions, as well as sweetheart contracts like the monopoly provision of health insurance. Their focused special interest trumps the general interest of taxpayers, who are busy making a living and lack the time to focus on politics other than during elections or amid a fiscal crisis.
RTWT.

And see James Taranto, "What's at Stake in Wisconsin."

RNC Rips Obama's Anna Wintour Ad

At ABC News, "RNC Web Video Lampoons Obama’s Anna Wintour Fundraising Effort."

'Fear' #hopechanged

From American Crossroads, via Theo Spark:

The DDG-1000 Zumwalt, the U.S. Navy's Next-Generation Destroyer

This is cool.

At London's Daily Mail, "Navy's answer to a rising China: $3 billion warship that can sneak up on coastlines undetected and fire missiles at twice the speed of sound."


IMAGE CREDIT: Wikimedia Commons.

Ed Schultz: From Panic to Incoherence Over Wisconsin Recall

Notice how Schultz is sounding pretty combative at the video clip from his MSNBC broadcast last night. That's an obvious attempt to rally the troops for a final push to victory. Remember, the polls have looked bad for the unions for some time. And in fact, a number of outlets have been downplaying expectations on the left. For example, here's the headline for AP's report at the Washington Post: "Nothing to see here: Wisconsin recall will provide few hard clues on who wins the White House." That's a genuine headline, not a joke. And Will Oremus piles on the stupid at Slate: "What the Wisconsin Recall Tells Us About November: Nothing."

Now check NewsBusters, which plots how Schultz himself has come around to the combative tone in just the last couple of days. See, "Ed Schultz Lurches From Panic to Incoherence Over Wisconsin Recall."

Read it all at the link. This is going to be something else tonight.

Marine Le Pen Threatens to Sue Madonna Over Swastika Concert Image

At Telegraph UK, "Marine Le Pen threatens to sue Madonna":
Marine Le Pen, the leader of the French far-Right, has threatened to sue Madonna over a video depicting the National Front chief with a swastika on her forehead.
The fleeting image was shown at a concert the US-born singer gave in Tel Aviv last Thursday as part of her MDNA world tour.

Projected during the song Nobody knows me, the film morphed Madonna's face with a number of famous figures, including Chinese leader Hu Jinatao, US Republican former presidential candidate Sarah Palin and Pope Benedict XVI.

Miss Le Pen's eyes and forehead then appear for a second before a swastika and the eyes of Adolf Hitler are superimposed onto the FN leader.

Furious, Miss Le Pen threatened to sue the singer if she kept the video unchanged when she performs in Paris on the July 14 national holiday and in Nice in August. "If she does that in France, we'll be waiting for her," she told Le Parisien.

Hitting back at Madonna, she was quoted by the newspaper as asking: "By the way, has Madonna given back the children she stole from Africa? Or did she end up buying them?" Madonna adopted two children, David and Mercy in Malawi in 2007 and 2009, sparking a coalition of around 85 local NGOs to accuse her of "child kidnap".
Also at London's Daily Mail, "Madonna attacked by French National Marine leader Marine Le Pen after depicting her with swastika on face during Israeli concert."

The image appears at about 1:30 minutes at the clip.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Ali Akbar Targeted by 'Breitbart Unmasked'

Linkmaster Smith has the report: "Gauntlet Thrown Down @ali."

The likely Brett Kimberlin front-site "Breitbart Unmasked" posted a photograph of Ali's mother's home in Texas --- a clear thug-style warning and implied threat of violence.

Bob Belvedere links to the Breitbart Unmasked hit piece: "The #BrettKimberlin Report [D+10]: Ali Akbar And Family Targeted":
Ali Akbar, one of the founders of the National Bloggers Club and a conservative political consultant, is the latest conservative to be targeted by Leftist thugs.

As is typical, they’ve gone after Ali’s family as well.
And see AoSHQ, "National Day of Blogger Silence -- This Friday."

Plus, check Twitchy as well: "National Bloggers Club president targeted by Brett Kimberlin supporters; National Day of Blogger Silence planned for Friday."

Purported Tunisia Apostate Beheading is Recycled Video From Syria's Al-Nusra Front (al Qaeda) — EXTREME CONTENT WARNING!

The video below is c/o Blazing Cat Fur.

It's getting a lot of attention, for example, at Israel Matzav, "Graphic video: What a 'moderate' Islamic revolution does to Christians (and to Jews if they get the chance)." And Gateway Pundit, "Arab Spring... Muslims Behead Christian Man in Tunisia While Reciting Anti-Christian Islamic Prayer" (via Memeorandum).

But Jawa Report indicates this is a recycled clip said to show al Qaeda forces in Syria (see here):

The BBC has background: "Does al-Qaeda have a foothold in Syria?" And at Telegraph UK, "Al-Nusra Front jihadists claim Damascus suicide bombs."

Audiotapes From Aaron Worthing's 'Peace Order' Hearing in Maryland

William Jacobson posted a vital reminder yesterday on the importance of keeping the spotlight on the Brett Kimberlin story. William praised Robert Stacy McCain for his investigative reporting: "Good job." And William also points us to the latest developments this morning: "Another good job."

It turns out that Patterico has the transcriptions from the Aaron Worthing hearing. See: "Audio and Transcripts from the Hearing Where Aaron Walker Was Arrested for Blogging About a Public Figure."

And Michelle Malkin has a shout-out: "Contempt: Free speech-trampling judge in Kimberlin case exposed; help Aaron Walker fight back."

Now, checking back over at The Other McCain, Robert has a new post up: "‘A Faint Whiff of Vigilante Hysteria’: Weinergate’s Kimberlin Connection."

Recall that I visited my congressman's office last week: "Is Convicted Terrorist Brett Kimberlin Abusing Tax-Exempt Status? Calling for Congressional Hearings on Continuation of Section 501(c)(3) Benefits."

I urge others to contact their representatives and keep blogging and tweeting this story. Keep the pressure on. As Michelle notes:
This isn’t just a one-day commitment. It’s an ongoing battle for free speech. Every voice, every blog post, every tweet, every e-mail counts.

Who to Blame On Wednesday?

Here, in a sense, are your overlapping memes for the Wisconsin recall.

It's full panic mode right now, remember.

At the second half of the video (skip to about 6:00 minutes), Rachel Maddow dissects the union defeat in Wisconsin, and she interviews Ed Schultz. There's a lot of pathetic leftist spin, and outright lies, but it's a beauty to behold the progressive dejection. And I completely agree with Maddow's thesis, that Republicans are determined to destroy unions across the states. Shoot, if we could get a conservative Republican in California this once-great state might have a chance:


Now, for a very different picture, check the report from Althouse on the mood in Madison:
By the way, I spent time in various Madison spots today — 2 cafés, walking on various streets including State Street and around the Capitol, basking and brat-eating on the Union Terrace — and I didn't see any activity related to Tuesday's recall election. No signs, no protesters, no drumbeating, no clipboards. And there were lots of people out on this beautiful June Sunday. I did see an old chalking on State Street.

And in the first café — where I sat alone, grading exams — there were about 6 people sitting at another table, talking politics. But they weren't talking Tuesday. They were talking Wednesday. What should they say on Wednesday? Who should be blamed for this calamity? They sounded especially upset at how much money had been thrown away. Not the $18 million dollars of tax money the state must pay to conduct the election, but all the contributions that went to the Democratic candidates... down the rat hole.
BONUS: From William Jacobson, "Desperation wearing a cheesehead hat" (via Memeorandum). And at Twitchy, "Last minute smear job: Dems claim Scott Walker fathered ‘love child’ 24 years ago; Update: Debunked by reporter" (via Memeorandum).

UNHAPPINESS = IMAGE - REALITY

I keep wondering if I'm going to have a midlife crisis --- I haven't had one yet, and this last year's been tough. But listening to Dennis Prager on happiness at the clip, I just think I'm pretty realistic about things. And I'm pretty happy, in any case. I'm not having a crisis.

Via Theo Spark:


And I've just about finished Prager's new book, Still the Best Hope: Why the World Needs American Values to Triumph. I'm expecting to write some review-type comments when I'm done. Maybe tonight...

'Your First Amendment Right Can Be Terminated'

Via Glenn Reynolds:


And Althouse comments:
That this police officer would talk like that to news reporters is evidence that he talks like that on such a regular basis that he doesn't even notice how shocking it sounds to people who know what rights are. It's important to push back hard against this kind of policing for the sake of all the people who don't know what their rights are and who can be controlled and oppressed by false information coming from an authority figure.

Jessica Simpson's 'Baby Bliss' at People Magazine

I'm reading my wife's People Magazine, with Jessica Simpson featured on the cover, "Jessica Simpson, Daughter Maxwell Do First Photo Shoot."


She had a cesarean section. The baby was two weeks early, at 9 lbs. 13 oz. And she put on a lot of weight, apparently. Simpson is now a new spokeswoman for Weight Watchers, "Jessica Simpson Reveals After-Baby Weight Loss Plan."

She's going to be fine, but TMZ didn't take long to heap the ridicule: "Jessica Simpson -- Professional Fat Person -- Weight Watchers."

April Rose at Maxim: Top 100 Most Annoying Songs

April Rose is Maxim's Hometown Hotties 2008 winner.

She's lovely.

The End is Near for Higher Education in California

I'm only being slightly facetious at the title.

It's been 52 years since Gov. Pat Brown signed California's Master Plan for Higher Education into law. The commitment embodied in that program --- guaranteed public education at nominal cost to the state's citizens --- can no longer be sustained. But rather than serious proposals to reform the system, we're getting more and more hysterical warnings about declining quality and access only for the wealthy. And that's just in California. Now here comes the New York Times with this sky-is-falling report, "California Cuts Threaten the Status of Universities":
LOS ANGELES — Class sizes have increased, courses have been cut and tuition has been raised — repeatedly. Fewer colleges are offering summer classes. Administrators rely increasingly on higher tuition from out-of-staters. And there are signs it could get worse: If a tax increase proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown is not approved this year, officials say they will be forced to consider draconian cuts like eliminating entire schools or programs.

For generations, the University of California system — home to such globally renowned institutions as Berkeley and U.C.L.A. — has been widely recognized as perhaps the best example of what public universities could be. Along with the California State University system and the state’s vast number of community colleges, higher education options here have long been the envy of other states.

But after years, and even decades, of budget cutbacks from the state, that reputation is under increasing threat. University leaders, who had responded typically to earlier budget cuts with assurances that their institutions were still in top form, now are sounding the alarm. In trying to rally support, they openly worry that their schools do not offer the same quality of education as a decade ago.

“I’d be lying if I said what we offer students hasn’t been changed and that there hasn’t been a degradation of the learning environment,” said Timothy White, the chancellor of the University of California, Riverside, which has had record growth in recent years. Last year, plans to open a medical school on the campus were shelved after state budget cuts.

While there are more students than ever, the number of academic advisers has dropped to 300, from 500 a few years ago, for more than 18,000 undergraduates. Courses that used to require four writing assignments now demand half that because professors have fewer assistants to help them with grading papers, something other campuses have implemented as well.

While no one is arguing that cutting higher education spending is a good thing, some say that the state budget crisis makes it necessary — and may provide an opportunity for needed changes.

Jon Coupal, the president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, which strongly opposes the proposed tax increase, said the colleges should do more to show they are cutting spending, like reducing pay for top administrators or closing programs that do not directly benefit the state.

“We’ve had the luxury in prior years of heavily subsidizing colleges,” Mr. Coupal said. “But like anything in California, the delivery of higher education is not performance based. They’ve created new campuses and programs based on politics and not need.”

Chancellor White and others say the concerns about the budget cuts are beyond academic. For generations, the universities have been economic engines for the state, graduating hundreds of thousands of students each year. At every level, the universities are receiving more applicants than ever. But without more state money, colleges are struggling to find room for eligible students.

Nathan Brostrom, executive vice president of business operations for the University of California, said the system was now in the middle of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. In the last year, the state has cut $750 million from the system’s budget. This year, for the first time, the system receives more money from tuition than from state aid — but that only makes up for roughly a quarter of the cuts from the state. Over all, the budget is the same as it was in 2007, when there were 75,000 fewer students enrolled.
Continue reading at that top link.

We need reform. We need rationalization. And that's going to entail some program cuts and cost increases --- at least until we restore a full employment economy in the state.

PREVIOUSLY: "Community Colleges All But Eliminate Summer School Classes."

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Sunday Cartoons

I've been hanging out watching baseball all day. I almost forgot to post my Sunday cartoons.

Check Flopping Aces, "Sunday Funnies."

Sunday Cartoons

Also at Reaganite Republican, "Reaganite's Sunday Funnies." And Theo Spark, "Cartoon Roundup."

BONUS: At Jill Stanek's, "Stanek Sunday funnies 6-3-12."

Elizabeth Warren Is a Liar and a Phony

William Jacobson has a summary, "Elizabeth Warren: Exposing me for who I am means you’re nasty":

Elizabeth Warren is the Democratic Party nominee for Senate, after party leaders twisted arms to make sure Marisa DeFranco did not make the primary ballot.

Warren may have become the nominee, but she’s stil not Native American.

Whereas prior to May 2012 one might have said Warren simply believed what she (allegedly) was told, now the genealogical evidence has come out that Warren is not Cherokee  and there is no evidence she is any other Native American group.  So when Warren now insists she that being Native American is who she is, she knows that the facts contradict her; she’s no longer just mistaken, she’s lying.

Warren also has been caught lying about how she used her false Native American status professionally.  Her initial denial has given way to revelations about getting herself listed as a “Minority Law Teacher” in a law faculty directory, in the federal diversity reports filed by U. Penn. and Harvard, in the Harvard Women’s Law Journal, and in Harvard’s promotional campaign in the 1990s.  Only when all this evidence came out did Warren finally, a couple of days ago, admit that she had informed U. Penn. and Harvard of her Native American status.  Caught.

Slowly but surely, Warren is being exposed as a phony.  She is a real estate flipper  who took advantage of foreclosures, yet she decries people who take advantage of the financial misfortunes of others.  She overstated the financial difficulties of her parents when she was growing up, and makes bizarre boasts about being the first nursing mother to take the New Jersey Bar exam.

Warren stresses how she has overcome huge odds, but she ignores that her career owes much to her landing a job at U. Penn. law school because the law school wanted to hire her husband.  (Funny how that revelation has not received much attention yet.)

Warren started creating a persona of being Native American while at Penn and then parlayed that “woman of color” and “minority” status — as well as her gender – into a job at Harvard Law which was under enormous pressure at the time to diversity its faculty; only a complete naif would believe it played no role.

And last for now but not least, the woman who is the champion of the little people and transparency worked with Democratic Party bosses to prevent the little people from voting to decide who would become the nominee of the Democratic Party to go up against Scott Brown.

Warren, however, considers it “nasty” campaigning when she is caught and called out on lies and exposed...
And that video c/o Lonely Conservative, "Video: Elizabeth Warren Says She’ll Be Massachusetts 1st Native American Senator."

Progressives in Full Panic Mode in Wisconsin

There's a lot of activity in Wisconsin. Via Memeorandum, we see that the so-called Wisconsin Citizens Media Cooperative has published some pathetic rumors about a Scott Walker love child. And Althouse responds: "Wisconsin Citizens Media Co-op drops a load on Scott Walker."

But it's the earlier Althouse reporting that's especially messed up, and reminds me of the thug intimidation in California after Proposition 8 passed. See "'We have seen the power of a single mailer disclosing the voting behavior of oneself and one’s neighbors'."
The surveillance effect! It's important for people to know when political organizations, like the Greater Wisconsin Political Fund, are deliberately using a psychological manipulation that has been tested and studied. Please, get out the word that mailers like this are trying to mobilize...

The Surveillance Effect.
And here's the mailer Althouse received, complete with a list of her own and her neighbors' voting activities, "'We're sending this mailing to you and your neighbors to publicize who does and does not vote'."

Althouse Voting

William Jacobson has more: "Just letting you know your neighbors’ political contributions."

The Queen's Diamond Jubilee

This is great.

See the Telegraph UK, "Eyes of the world on the Thames."

And more coverage at the link.



More video at Blazing Cat Fur.

Homosexual Bullies

Via Blazing Cat Fur, "The Ugly Dyke Screams 'You Deserve to Be Bullied' at the End."


Background at the Daily Caller, "Legislation could force Ontario Catholic schools to recognize gay student clubs."

And see Pete John Mitchell, "Legislation won’t stop bullying."

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Van Halen at Staples Center: 'Getting Along Famously'

When Rolling Stone reported last month that Van Halen was postponing its world tour after the Southern California leg, the explanation was that the band members "hate each other." Yet, in a video last week David Lee Roth reported that the band was "getting along famously." As Roth remarked in an interview at the Los Angeles Times:
Contrary to rumors that the famously volatile band isn't getting along, Roth said Van Halen is simply attempting to avoid exhaustion. "We bit off way more than we could chew, when it came to scheduling," Roth said. "The band is winning, but our schedule has been sidelined for unnecessary roughness."
And if there was any lingering doubts, last night's performance at Staples Center certainly dispelled them. It was all smiles for two hours, plus a few hugs and kisses too. These guys were having a blast and it was genuine. Here's a clip of the opening number, "Unchained," from the band's fourth album, Fair Warning:


Now, I'm calling this guy either crazy or a Grinch, but Randall Roberts at the Los Angeles Times claimed the gig last night was a "lackluster" performance. I'm guessing this dude needed to pump out 1000 words of copy for newspaper's dead tree edition and decided to pad it with a heap of drivel.

Seriously.

Leo Howard, who plays "Jack" on Disney's comedy series, "Kickin' It" (watched regularly in my household), gave a superlative review in 140 characters on Twitter:
You can say that again.

To be fair, Roberts makes a good point about some missteps with the set list, and the Hollywood Reporter picks up on that as well at their otherwise excellent review, but it's extremely uncharitable to dismiss Van Halen in 2012 as a nice but low-charged bit of nostalgia:
Despite all the talent, and those songs, Friday night offered evidence that nostalgia by definition seldom moves a person forward, rarely satisfies in the long run, and can only sustain a certain number of concerts before weariness sets in.
I'm going to disagree, and I'll bet most of the 20,000 fans at the sold-out arena would too. That place was on fire alright. If the band is indeed "getting along famously," I see no reason not to expect a long touring run and perhaps another trip or two to the studio. Roth, at 57, looks happy and healthy --- with plenty of trademark high kicks --- and Eddie Van Halen remains one of the world's premier guitarists. The Hollywood Reporter has the set list from last night. Eddie turned "Eruption" into a 9-minute guitar solo, and that was the lead-in to a smokin' rendition of "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love." And with "Jump" closing out the concert as the grand finale, complete with confetti and Roth waving a king-sized checkered flag, this was one homecoming that won't be easily forgotten.

If Van Halen makes it to your town when the tour kicks back up, do yourself a favor and catch the show. These guys still got it going on and how.

Elizabeth Warren Wins Massachusetts Democratic Nomination

The state's Democrat big wigs rammed this nomination through at the party convention.

See the Boston Herald, "Elizabeth Warren knocks Marisa DeFranco off primary ballot."


Also at Big Government, "Nominee! Dems Circle Wagons For Embattled Warren."

And at Legal Insurrection, "Results of Massachusetts Democratic Convention":
Now it’s on the Dem leadership as Warren’s drip-drip falsehoods about her family history and her personal narrative continue to play out.
RELATED: At the Boston Herald, "Records: Prof profited by buying, selling homes." (Via Memeorandum.)

This lady is utterly morally bankrupt. She's got a lot to answer for and ultimately she owes the voters a huge apology. The drip drip of this campaign continues. It's going to be extremely interesting.

Obama Longs for the Good Old Days of '08

Well, what do you know?

Mitt Romney's really is throwing the progs into conniptions.

See Byron York, "In tough fight with Romney, Obama longs for McCain" (via Memeorandum):

The last week, more than any in the campaign so far, has shown Team Obama that Romney and his aides are prepared to fight as hard as needed to win in November. The Romney-organized shouting-down of top Obama aide David Axelrod in Boston; the Romney sneak event at the old Solyndra headquarters in California; Romney's refusal to give in to Democratic demands to repudiate Trump; and Romney's determination to avoid side controversies while remaining singularly focused on the economy all revealed a candidate who has resolved to battle Obama on his own, and not Obama's, terms. It's no wonder Obama has become nostalgic for the relatively comfortable days of 2008.
Also blogging:

* Neo-Neocon, "“In tough fight with Romney…”"

* Pundette, "Obama diagnoses the opposition: They've got 'a fever'."

* Q &O, "Obama: 'Hey, Mitt, wouldn’t you rather be a nice loser than a mean winner?'"

* Wake Up America, "Romney Rallies The Base While Obama Becomes Nostalgic For John McCain."

BONUS: No More Mr. Nice Blog calls foul:
Right-wing spinmeisters are saying to the base, "Oooh, we took the gloves off and Obama is whining!" In fact, Obama's trying to warn centrist voters not to be fooled when they read that Romney is really, deep down inside, a middle-of-the-road guy.
Idiot.

It's not ideology. It's backbone. Romney's not capitulating to the left's narrative, freakin' dweeb.

Fifty-Seven Percent of Independents in New Boston Globe Survey Say Elizabeth Warren Has Not Fully Explained Claims of Native American Heritage

I have to agree with William Jacobson's response to new survey from the Boston Globe. See: "Not The Boston Globe’s headline: Scott Brown maintains lead, Warren negatives rise."

As you can see at the screencap, incumbent Scott Brown enjoys a comfortable favorability rating. And it's what's not shown that's even more important, frankly. The Globe's report is here: "Scott Brown, Elizabeth Warren neck and neck in new poll." Here's the most interesting passage:

Untitled
The poll results among self-identified independents, whose votes Brown needs to win overwhelmingly in a state that traditionally favors Democrats, are particularly helpful to Brown. Fifty-seven percent of independents in the Globe survey said Warren had not fully explained the issue.

The Native American controversy has eclipsed the negative attention Brown has received from Warren supporters.

Only 19 percent of voters said they were very familiar with stories about Brown’s fund-raising from Wall Street interests, with 37 percent saying they were somewhat familiar.

And among those who were at least somewhat familiar, 66 percent said it would not affect their vote.

Brown also did well on a question that has, historically, often accurately forecast election winners. Voters, when asked who they think will win the race, regardless of their preference, chose Brown by a margin of 52 percent to 27 percent. Smith said that question is often a valuable predictor, especially farther away from an election, because it takes into account what poll respondents’ friends, relatives, and co-workers are saying about the candidates.

Laurie Petrie, a 60-year-old Chicopee Democrat who is unemployed, illustrates that point. She said she would be voting for Warren, but ‘‘I think a lot of people like Scott Brown; I wouldn’t be terribly upset if he beat her.’’
Basically, Brown is a non controversial incumbent, a finding even more significant in that both Warren and the national Democrats have made class warfare their rallying cry this election. Clearly, if the dynamics of the race don't change --- and the way Warren is responding to the controversy, that's not likely to happen soon --- then it's quite reasonable to expect Brown's favorability rating to stay well above the 50 percent line heading into the election. And as some say this is an anti-incumbency year, I'd say Scott Brown is sitting pretty, despite what the headline writers at the Globe would have you believe.

Remember, independents are key, and Brown's even doing well with self-identified Democrats.

BONUS: There's more at Legal Insurrection, "Mass Dems set to ditch true liberal in favor of self-aggrandizing fake Cherokee historic Bar-exam taking nursing mother foreclosure speculator."

Also at Memeorandum.

UPDATE: Protein Wisdom links. Thanks!

Americans Boast 82 Percent Favorable Rating of Queen Elizabeth

I'm not surprised at all. Personally, I love the monarchy and I've already noted the major royal revival a couple of times.

See CNN, "Queen's popularity sky-high in America on eve of Diamond Jubilee."


I'll have some coverage of the Diamond Jubilee this weekend.

Meanwhile, check over at Telegraph UK for the latest.

'Serious Headwinds' — Rash of Disastrous Economic News Pounds Obama's Reelection Prospects

Like I've been saying, things aren't going too well for Baracky.

Where to begin?

Well, Telegraph UK has the dire headline on the poor economic data out yesterday, "Stock markets slump as slew of poor data bodes ill for world economy." And the Los Angeles Times has more, "Stocks end down more than 2% in broad sell-off." The Dow erased the gains from the entire year and we could be looking at a Black Monday when stocks start trading again after the weekend.

And at the video, a beleaguered president speaks in Minnesota. See: "Obama says jobs report shows economy faces 'serious headwinds'."

Plus, "If bad job news persists, advantage shifts to Romney":

Another month or two of downbeat jobs reports like Friday's, and the 2012 electoral advantage will shift to Mitt Romney.
At the moment, the election is still a coin flip.  But even before the latest evidence of slowing job growth, President Obama was no better than a 50-50 pick to win reelection (as noted Democratic pollster Peter Hart put it recently).  And with economic storm clouds building, it’s easy to imagine that Obama could be the underdog before too long.

“If the May report is a harbinger of what's coming, Romney’s message that ‘We can do better, but Obama can't’ will really resonate,” said Bill Galston of the Brookings Institution, a White House advisor in the Clinton administration.

The latest blow to Obama’s prospects – and the corresponding lift to Romney’s — illustrate the teeter-totter nature of a tight election contest in an evenly divided nation.

The Republican challenger, careful not to celebrate his good fortune at the expense of millions of jobless Americans, issued a statement from his Boston headquarters that termed the latest jobs report “devastating” for U.S. families.

“It is now clear to everyone that President Obama’s policies have failed to achieve their goals and that the Obama economy is crushing America’s middle class. The president's reelection slogan may be ‘forward,’ but it seems like we've been moving backward,” Romney said.

A top White House economic advisor acknowledged that more  needs to be done to recover from the worst economic downturn since the Depression of the 1930s.

“It is important not to read too much into any one monthly report and it is helpful to consider each report in the context of other data,” said Alan B. Krueger, chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Advisors.
Actually, I'd say the advantage is already shifting. Obama is at 45 percent in Friday's presidential tracking poll at Gallup (more here).

So, again, things aren't looking too hot for old Baracky.

More later...

Friday, June 1, 2012

Van Halen Tonight

My wife and I are heading out to see Van Halen at Staples Center.

The Las Vegas Weekly has a review of last Sunday's show at the MGM Grand: "Van Halen pours out the power at MGM Grand Garden Arena." I guess David Lee Roth still does the high leg kicks, so that answers that mystery. He's in great shape.


I'll have a report later. Have a great night!

Left-Wing Strategy Preview: Attacking Mitt Romney as a 'Nasty Jerk'

BuzzFeed reports on Mitt's aggressive campaign stance, which has endeared him to the conservative base: "Mitt Romney Wins Over The Right By Confronting Obama." (Via Memeorandum.)

And this "punch back twice as hard" campaign has the radical left all wee-wee'd up and whining pathetically about how Mitt's all "mean" and "nasty." See Jed Lewison at Daily Kos, "Right wing falls in love with Mitt Romney ... because they finally realize he's kind of a jerk":

...conservatives are realizing that Mitt Romney, Cranbook's senior bully, and Mitt Romney, 2012 Republican nominee, are one and the same—and they'd love nothing more than to see Eric Fehrnstrom pin President Obama to the floor as Willard shaves that crazy hair right off Obama's head, lest it turn into an Afro.
They really aren't paying attention the substance of what he says, at least when it comes to policy, because so much of what Romney says on policy is a jumbled mess of contradictions and falsehoods. But when Romney goes after Obama, it really gets them hot-and-bothered.

For example, when Romney yesterday defended sending his staff to disrupt an Obama press conference on his gubernatorial record, he said he was merely responding to heckling from Obama. That would be reasonable (though childish) if true ... but it was utterly false. And nothing makes conservatives hornier than a brazen lie told in pursuit of the destruction of Barack Obama.

The only thing that surprises me is that conservatives are surprised that Romney can be so nasty. They were more willing to accept Romney's about-face on Romneycare and reproductive rights than they were to accept that Romney is a slash-and-burn politician, but that's exactly what he is. He won the GOP nomination by destroying his enemies, and there was never any reason to believe he'd back off once Barack Obama became his opponent.
Oh, the poor babies. Romney comes out a might bit tougher than John McCain and it throws 'em into conniptions. I love it, frankly. Things are going really badly for the left.

More at Memeorandum.

Elizabeth Warren Admits She's 'Concerned' About Senate Bid

Actually, she admitted she was concerned while whining about how the Fauxcahontas scandal distracts from how Republicans are "hammering" middle class workers, or something.

See The Hill, "Warren admits she's 'concerned' about her campaign in wake of heritage controversy."


But it gets worse.

Warren may have issued yet another whopper yesterday, about how her parents "eloped." See Michael Patrick Leahy, "Exclusive: Eloped? Elizabeth Warren's Parents' Married in Religious Ceremony." It's not clear if Warren's parents married in church or in a private religious ceremony. Ed Morrissey has a big post up on this: "Warren: My parents had to elope because my mother was 1/16th Cherokee, or something..." (Via Memeorandum.)

And see William Jacobson, "Oh Elizabeth, there you go again."

More later...

CNN's Ashleigh Banfield Backtracks After Calling Homosexuality a 'Lifestyle Choice'

She says she misspoke, but she called radical homosexuality a "lifestyle choice."

And that threw the extreme homosexual left into fits of apoplexy.

See Towleroad, "CNN's Ashleigh Banfield Calls Homosexuality a 'Voluntary Lifestyle Choice', Tweets Clarification: VIDEO."

That's the walk back at the link. Here's the original segment.


Also at PuffHo, which has Banfield's tweets: "Ashleigh Banfield, CNN Anchor, Calls Being Gay a Voluntary 'Lifestyle Choice,' Says She 'Mangled Words'."

FLASHBACK: "ACTRESS Cynthia Nixon refuses to bow to pressure from the gay community to change her opinion that her homosexuality is a "choice'', despite facing criticism for her beliefs."

And I thought progs were supposed to be all choice? Well, not that choice!

Police Arrest Pro-Walker Protester at Bill Clinton Rally for Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett

The guy was hoisting a sign that said "Support Scott Walker, Not Union Thugs."

I guess that didn't go over too well with the union thug crowd.

See the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "Clinton fires up Democratic faithful."
Clinton spoke in the very spot he appeared with former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl in May 1996. Clinton reminisced a little about his visits to Wisconsin as candidate and president, and said he remembered Milwaukee schoolchildren singing to him and Kohl in German.

While there were hundreds of Barrett signs throughout the park, one Walker supporters stood nearby holding a sign that said, "Support Scott Walker, Not Union Thugs."

After Clinton spoke, the man moved forward to a rope line where Clinton was shaking hands and posing for pictures. Asked by police officers to back away, the man apparently refused.

He was later taken away by officers and was arrested. An officer said the man would be charged with disorderly conduct.
Via the comments at Althouse, "Bill Clinton in Milwaukee, campaigning for Tom Barrett."

Added: Some video...


More Althouse has lots of news: "At the Clinton-Barrett rally: "'heyre arresting the walker supporter'."

And: "'Nice police department you got there, Mayor Barrett'."

Ann links Instapundit.

More at BuzzFeed: "Scott Walker Supporter Arrested At Bill Clinton Rally."

Guantanamo Prisoners Forced to Listen to Barney 'I Love You' for 24 Hours: Pentagon Claims It's 'Not a Form of Torture'

Hey, my brain and body functions would "start to slide" too, after 24 hours of Barney's "I Love You, You Love Me..."

Politico has the story, "Music used as 'disincentive' at Guantanamo Bay, Pentagon says."

This is just terrible treatment of these people. Terrible!

John Edwards Likely to Walk After Mistrial

At the Los Angeles Times, "In wake of John Edwards mistrial, a new trial is called unlikely."

WASHINGTON -- Having failed to convict John Edwards of campaign finance violations, the U.S. Justice Department must now decide whether to retry the former Democratic presidential candidate on the five charges for which the judge declared a mistrial.

Edwards had been charged with six counts of campaign finance law violations. He was acquitted Thursday of one charge by a jury of eight men and four women in U.S. District Court in Greensboro, N.C.

Several legal experts said a retrial seemed unlikely. They also raised questions about the trial's effect -- or lack thereof -- on campaign finance law.

"We knew this was a strange case, and it resulted in a strange trial with a strange ending," said Elliot S. Berke, a Washington attorney who  represents elected officials on campaign finance issues.

He said the jurors' inability to reach a decision on five of the six counts "largely reflected society's confusion about campaign finance law and where the lines are."
Also: "John Edwards owns up to 'sins' in wake of mistrial."

Compare Edwards to Sarah Palin....

Oh well, yeah, no comparison. The dude's a butt freak loser.

Top Strategist David Axelrod Heckled at Obama Campaign Event in Boston

God, this is brutal.

CNN has the background, "Axelrod launches attack on Romney's home turf."

And see Ed Morrissey, "Video: Famous Chicago political organizer … outorganized?":

This sums up perfectly the first month of the general election campaign. The team with the community-organizing experience thought they could secretly arrange a rally in their opponent’s home state to attack his record as governor, led by the chief organizing genius of the campaign. David Axelrod got a large, unpleasant lesson in Chapter One of This Ain’t 2008 Any More...
RTWT.

Worldwide Search for Homosexual Porn Star Luka Rocco Magnotta, Suspect in Grisly Killing and Dismemberment in Montreal

Gay family values.

At Toronto's Globe and Mail, "Manhunt goes global as police say killing and dismemberment suspect fled to France":

Police around the world are on the hunt for Luka Rocco Magnotta, who is believed to have flown to France on the weekend shortly after the brutal killing and dismemberment of a man in Montreal.

A Montreal police spokesperson confirmed Thursday that investigators “have good reasons to believe that [Mr. Magnotta] has left the country.” They have called on Interpol to place him on the international organization’s list of wanted persons, sending “red notices” to police forces in more than 100 countries....

The investigation of the gruesome crime recorded in a video posted to the Internet now appears to be focused on the international manhunt, with the scene of the crime wrapped up even though police are still searching for missing body parts.

The victim, an Asian man in his early 30s who has yet to be named, was reported missing Tuesday, Montreal police Commander Ian Lafrenière said. But the victim’s relatives live outside Canada, and police have been unable to reach them to notify them, another officer said.

Mr. Magnotta and the victim were involved, Commander Lafrenière said. “They were dating. They’ve been involved in a relationship,” he said.

The suspect remains mostly an unknown to neighbours in the Montreal apartment building where he lived for the past three months. Few of his neighbours in the dingy yellow-brick apartment building overlooking Montreal’s Décarie expressway saw him with anyone, and none said they had ever seen him with an Asian man.

“I’ve never seen [the victim] here,” said Richard Payette, 59, who lives down the hall from Mr. Magnotta’s second-floor apartment. He said he once heard a man’s voice inside the apartment, about two weeks ago, when Mr. Magnotta asked the man whether he was staying the night, but the man said he had to go home.

Mr. Magnotta didn’t speak much, never played music, and Mr. Payette said he had never seen him with anyone else.

Derek MacKinnon, a former resident of the building who still meets friends for a beer on the doorstep, said he was the only one around the building to whom Mr. Magnotta ever really spoke. That was perhaps because they were both gay, said Mr. MacKinnon, who identified himself as the actor who played a serial killer in the 1980 Canadian horror film Terror Train.

Mr. Magnotta asked what the gay bars were like, but didn’t say much about himself. “It was just normal conversation as he’s walking in and out the door,” Mr. MacKinnon said.
Lots more at that top link.

And see the National Post, "Luka Rocco Magnotta tried to drum up notoriety for years before being accused in gruesome murder."

BONUS: At Blazing Cat Fur, "Come Back Necrophiliac, Head Choppin, Kitten Killin, Gay Porn Star Luka Magnotta! All Is Forgiven! You Were Bullied!"

George W. Bush Steals the Show at White House Portrait Unveiling

President Bush is naturally hilarious. I miss him a lot.

And amid all our nation's intense partisanship, this was an even where past and present chief executives came together as Americans.

At Fox News, "Alongside Obama, George W. Bush steals the WH show."


And at the Los Angeles Times, "George W. Bush's White House portrait unveiled in ceremony with Obama."

Community Colleges All But Eliminate Summer School Classes

My college isn't mentioned at the article, but we're barely offering anything as well --- and this will be the second summer I've not been teaching (I'm enjoying it, actually).

At the same time, the faculty Academic Senate is up in arms about LBCC's administration advocating on behalf of SB1550 in Sacramento (Motion 2 at the link). Recall Santa Monica College's proposal to charge students a few hundreds bucks a unit for selected course offerings? I think it's a good idea. There's a report at UCLA's Daily Bruin, "Senate Bill 1550 proposes pilot program that charges higher fees to help offset community college cuts." The Academic Senate says it is opposed to "establishing an extension program based on funding from courses offered at the actual cost rather than courses funded with state apportionment." Got that? Opposed to funding offered at "actual cost," as if that "actual cost" goes away if the state government pays for it rather than students who need the classes. Amazing, isn't it?

In any case, here's the report on the summer classes at the Los Angeles Times, "College summer school in California largely a thing of the past":
In an informal survey of about half of the state's 112 community colleges, conducted by the chancellor's office, more than a third reported reduced offerings this summer and eight campuses planned no summer sessions at all. Overall, enrollment and course offerings have plummeted and are at their lowest level in 15 years. From 2008 to 2011, the number of students served fell nearly 43%.

Santa Monica College found in a recent study that 15 Los Angeles-area community colleges this summer are offering only a third of the courses they offered in 2008, equivalent to a loss of 6,000 teaching assignments and 168,000 classroom seats.

"The state cuts are in the range of 13%, so where does that come from?" asked Don Girard, director of government relations at the popular school. "Summer and winter session are the areas the elected board has the most authority over."

Santa Monica College is offering about 745 credit and non-credit classes, about the same as last year. Tuition from a large population of international and out-of-state students helps to fund the program, Girard said.

The problem is especially acute in the huge Los Angeles Community College District, where only one of the nine campuses, East Los Angeles College, is offering a full slate of courses — about 330, which is a 30% reduction from the previous year, said Richard Moyer, vice president of academic affairs.

A controversial new policy this year gives priority registration to continuing East L.A. students, leaving those at other campuses in the district with fewer options, Moyer said. About 15,000 students are expected to enroll, and the school could easily have doubled that number if it had the resources, Moyer said.

Although Pierce College and Los Angeles Trade Tech are offering a couple dozen credit courses, Los Angeles Harbor College is typical of others in the district, offering only a smattering of specialized or non-credit courses mostly funded by grants. Harbor student Devin Green managed to find a biology class he needs at El Camino College, which is outside the Los Angeles district. Green, 21, was lucky to get the course and managed to do so only because he has been attending both campuses and was able to register early.

Another Harbor student, Andrew Mestman, said he had unsuccessfully tried to enroll in summer classes for several years and has given up this time. He said he needs one math class to complete requirements to transfer to a four-year institution.

"At Compton College last year, there were 60 people in class and 15 more on a waiting list, so what's the point?" said Mestman, 20. "It's like gambling every summer."

It's not just students who are frustrated. Ken Sherwood, a public speaking instructor at Los Angeles City College, said this will be the third year in a row he hasn't taught a summer course, after 20 years of never missing such assignments. And because he's a full-time employee and can't apply for unemployment, his income will take a hit.

In previous years he might have been able to pick up a class in another district, but cutbacks have eliminated that option this year. He's unsure what he's going to do.

"It's not like I can walk into a McDonald's and say I need a job for two months, that's not practical," said Sherwood.
I guess I'm lucky. I've got money saved for summer, and of course my wife is working. It's going to be tight, but I get to be home with my family.

SpaceX Splashdown

At the Los Angeles Times, "SpaceX's mission ends with a splashdown in the Pacific."


Also at Daley Gator, "SpaceX Dragon Capsule Splashes Down In Pacific, Ending Historic Test Flight (Video)."

Most California Oppose Marijuana Legalization

I guess they're undersampling the Wiz Khalifa constituency.

At the Los Angeles Times, "Most California voters don't support legalizing pot, poll finds":

In California, cradle of the marijuana movement, a new poll has found a majority of voters do not support legalization, even as they overwhelmingly back medicinal use for "patients with terminal and debilitating conditions."

Eighty percent of voters support doctor-recommended use for severe illness, a USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll found. But only 46% of respondents said they support legalization of "general or recreational use by adults," while 50% oppose it. Those against using pot were more adamant in their position, with 42% saying they felt "strongly" about it, compared with 33% for proponents.

The survey found opinions have not measurably changed since voters defeated the legalization initiative Prop. 19 in 2010 by similar margins. And oddly, given the state's long role as the leader of marijuana decriminalization and cultivation, support for sanctioning its general use here appears to lag behind the sentiment in the rest of the country.

A Gallup poll in October showed support nationwide for legalizing pot at 50% for the first time since the pollster began asking the question in 1969, when only 12% of Americans supported it. A Rasmussen Reports survey this month found 56% of voters favored authorizing and regulating cannabis sales like alcohol and tobacco sales. With this uptick in popularity, marijuana advocates succeeded in getting initiatives qualified for the upcoming November ballot in Colorado and Washington, while they failed in California.

Dan Schnur, director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at USC, said the California numbers suggest voters are concerned about the way the Compassionate Use Act, passed in 1996 to permit medical marijuana, has been carried out.

"They like the idea of providing marijuana for medical use, but they're worried that the law is being abused," he said.

Cities and counties have been struggling with how to rein in the proliferation of pot shops. Some law enforcement agencies have targeted them, while some have been more lenient. Some cities have tried to ban them, and courts have issued conflicting opinions up and down the state as to whether, where and how they can operate.

The federal government, which does not recognize medical marijuana as legal, has been shutting down dispensaries and growers, while threatening landlords who rent to them and cities that give them official sanction by granting permits.
Yeah.

It's pretty messed up.

Kim Kardashian Thanks Instagram Followers With Hot Photo Featuring Leather and Lingerie

Well, if you got it flaunt, no doubt.

At London's Daily Mail, "Kim Kardashian's lingerie and leather treat as she celebrates 2m Instagram fans."

Truck Crashes Into Bar at Gordie's Place in Little Canada, Minnesota

Talk about stopping in for a drink, sheesh.

See the Duluth News Tribune, "Truck crashes into Minnesota tavern, injuring patrons (with video)."

Thank God no one was killed. It's a really violent crash:

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Mitt Romney Visits Solyndra in Surprise Attack on Failed Policies of Obama Administration

I like the surprise element, and I especially like how Romney's going at Obama where's he's most vulnerable: corruption.

At CNN, "TRENDING: Romney makes surprise visit to Solyndra" (via Memeorandum).


And see Carla Marinucci, "Mitt Romney makes surprise visit to Solyndra, attacks Obama’s “Taj Mahal of corporations”."

Added: Hey! Just checking over at Instapundit and we're on the same wavelength, "YOU KNOW, I THINK I LIKE THE CUT OF THIS ROMNEY FELLOW’S JIB":
Heh: Romney Holds Campaign Event Outside Solyndra HQ. “Solyndra is the failed California-based solar technology company that received more than $500 million in federal stimulus money before it went bankrupt last year. It has since become a mantle of Romney’s argument that Obama doesn’t know how to run the economy.”

Romney’s people kept the event secret for fear of Obama-administration interference.
And more at that link.

I Stopped For a 'Super Big Gulp' On the Way Home — While I Still Have the Chance!

I don't drink these too often, but I get a regular Coca Cola when I do.

Maybe I'll stop off for Super Big Gulps more often, the way things are going — Jerry Brown might get some big idea!

See the New York Times, "Bloomberg Plans a Ban on Large Sugared Drinks." Of course everybody's blogging on this at Memeorandum. I'll read around the horn a bit later. Meanwhile, Sarah Kliff at WaPo's Wonk Blog is digging it: "Why New York City’s Big Gulp ban could be a big success."

Big Gold

My wife is not digging it, however. She penned a letter this morning for a post on her Facebook timeline, a true libertarian:
Dear Government:
Stop telling me what I can and cannot drink.
Stop telling me what I can and cannot eat.
Stop telling what I can and cannot do.
This is f-king America!
I can dig that!

Democrats Endorse Sex-Selection Abortion

Wow!

Today's a huge day for pro-life forces.

Live Action is out with a fresh investigative video from New York. I'll have more on that later.

Meanwhile, the House is voting on a sex-selective abortion ban today (see Steve Ertelt on Twitter).

It's not good for the Democrats. See The Hill, "Dems say sex-selective abortion bill restricts women's right to choose," and "Anti-abortion groups turn 'war on women' charge against Democrats."

And at Twitchy, "House votes on sex-selective abortion bill; Obama and Left think gendercide is hunky-dory."

What a day!

Check back for updates. Until then, here's Michelle on Fox & Friends:

This 'Free Ad' From Fox News is Driving Progressives Batsh*t Crazy

Ed Morrissey reports, "Video: Fox’s “Four years of hope and change”." (Via Memeorandum.)


Captain Ed has a problem with such a partisan documentary mash-up being shown on a cable channel. But it doesn't bother me a bit. As I've long argued, the U.S. has reverted to the kind of "partisan press" we had around 1800. Media outlets take sides. It's as simple as that. And it's a good thing conservatives have Fox News or we'd be f-ked.

That said, this one's especially good in how literally wild it's driving the progressives, especially the Media Matters goons.

Re-blog and tweet that clip far and wide, in any case. It's perfect.

The O.C. Republican Party Embarrasses the Conservative Voter Foisting Establishment Candidates Into Our Faces

This is the most amazing letter to the editor. Wow!

See the Orange County Register, "Supervisor candidate Deborah Pauly a clear conservative":
Your headline using the word Pauly "Dumped" is a poor choice of words. Call it what it was: Councilwoman Pauly was railroaded, lynched, persecuted and scapegoated at the GOP county meeting as the party voted her out of her position as First Vice Chair despite articulate protests from the audience and hearty applause after her passionate response to Chairman Baugh's allegations.

Chairman Baugh accused her of being "provocative". Provocative can be good. Can we say Boston Tea Party/provocative? Pauly has been accused of being "incendiary". Can we say Thomas Paine's Common Sense as being incendiary? Pauly used the words "sodomy and rape" to describe how Obamacare was rammed down the voters' throats. I call it a metaphor.

Councilwoman Pauly stood up for a member who sent out a cynical cartoon about Obama. She didn't stand up for the cartoon of the chimp: Pauly stood up for the woman's First Amendment freedom.

Pauly said her removal as First Vice Chair on the eve of the election for 3rd District County Supervisor is a "hit piece." She has been endorsed, amongst many, by the Howard Jarvis Foundation and by Chuck DeVore. She is opposed by Todd Spitzer. What timing. Imagine the coincidence of her being "dumped"! Can we say Meg Whitman's housekeeper Nicky Diaz being brought out at the last minute was a "hit piece?" What timing. Imagine the coincidence.

I've heard Mrs. Pauly speak at 6 public meetings. She was honest, decent, and clear in her conservative values. I heard Mr. Spitzer speak at a forum last month in Anaheim Hills. He called her a "potty mouth." He challenged her to get up out of the audience and debate him. She graciously declined as the forum was not for debate, and he knew it.

A former George Wallace supporter who hasn't been a segregationist for decades said he admired Pauly's conservatism. His statement is being used as a race card guilt by association tact.

Chairman Baugh said The (Republican) Youth Advocates were against Pauly. The spokesperson for the Youth Advocates firmly denied this! He countered that Deborah Pauly has always been honorable and courteous.

Implying Pauly is divisive, Baugh said the party is a family together. No, Mr. Baugh, the Republican party is a house divided often eating their own thus not heeding Ronald Reagan's 11th commandment to refrain from doing so.

Chairman Baugh said Pauly embarrasses the party. On the contrary, the party embarrasses the conservative voter foisting establishment candidates into our faces. We are losing our base because the party has abandoned our principles. Pauly is speaking up for the base, the disenfranchised, those whose voices can't be heard because the party isn't listening!

All this hearkens to mind a portion from Rudyard Kipling's classic poem If.

"If you can hear the truth you've spoken

Twisted by knaves to set a trap for fools..."

So I ask the voter: Whose fool are you going to be?

Gail Bales
Anaheim Hills
PREVIOUSLY: "'Little Boys Playing Politics': O.C. GOP Establishment Smears Villa Park Councilwoman Deborah Pauly."

New Cherokee Group Challenges Elizabeth Warren

I don't see Elizabeth Warren lasting much longer, although Massachusetts Democrats are likely stuck with her at this point.

Check this out, from Cherokees Demand Truth from Elizabeth Warren, "Elizabeth Warren - The Cherokees Will Not be Silenced":

The authentic Cherokee tribes are made up of descendants of those listed on either the Dawes or Baker Rolls. Those rolls include the names of citizens who stayed with their nations; helped clear and farm their nations' land; helped build their nations' businesses and schools; participated in their nations' governments; and defended their nations in times of war and unrest. Through their loyalty to their nations, those Cherokee citizens paid the price for their descendants to have the right to call themselves Cherokee today. No one else has that right; not the individual walking down the street, not the members of the fraudulent tribes and certainly not a person who is running for the United States Congress. It is time for Ms. Warren to come clean and tell the truth. Until she does, we will not be silenced.
RTWT.

And see William Jacobson, "Hundreds of Cherokees form new group to challenge Elizabeth Warren." (Via Memeorandum.)

And the Boston Herald has more on the race: "Liz Warren just won’t commit."

Michael Patrick Leahy is just having a field day with this stuff, at Breitbart.

Our Fear of Talking Honestly About Race

Well, it's a sensitive question, and of course no one likes to be attacked as RAAAAACIST!!!

Video c/o Instapundit:


And the book is here: No Matter What...They'll Call This Book Racist: How our Fear of Talking Honestly About Race Hurts Us All.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Is Convicted Terrorist Brett Kimberlin Abusing Tax-Exempt Status? Calling for Congressional Hearings on Continuation of Section 501(c)(3) Benefits

I visited the district office of my congressman this morning, Representative John Campbell of California's 48th Congressional District. He's on Twitter here.

Photobucket
Rep. Campbell, a Republican, sits on the House Financial Services Committe. The committee's jurisdiction extends to "all issues pertaining to the economy" and includes "efforts to combat terrorist financing." And the committee oversees the Treasury Department, the cabinet-level agency which includes the Internal Revenue Service within its organizational authority.

I spoke briefly with District Director Lou Penrose. I delivered to him a number of documents.

These included:

* Brett Kimberlin's 2010 tax return for Justice Through Music, which provides information to the IRS on tax-exempt criteria and qualifications.

* David Hogberg's first-hand report from Aaron Worthing's "peace order" hearing, "IBD at Kimberlin Hearing: Walker Handcuffed, 1st Amendment Muzzled."

* Glenn Beck's report from his May 25th broadcast, "Glenn talks to bloggers about Brett Kimberlin Terrorism."

* Hans Bader's essay at Open Markets, "Injunction Imposed Over Blog Posts That Criticized Convicted Terrorist-Turned-Left-Wing Activist."

* Matthew Vadum's report at Capital Research, "Nonprofit of terrorist bomber received Tides Foundation funding."

* Vadum's article at FrontPage Magazine, "Brett Kimberlin and the Hall of Fame of Leftist Terrorists."

*****

The Senate Finance Committee issued a press release last week announcing the investigation of a disabled veterans 501(c)(3) organization. See: "Baucus, Burr Investigate Nonprofit for Exploiting Veterans, Taxpayers, Abusing Tax-Exempt Status — Senators Demand Answers from Disabled Veterans National Foundation About Potential Charity Abuses, Failure to Provide Services to Disabled Veterans."

That's a good model for what I'd like to see. Checking the link shows that the committee requested a bill of particulars that would show "whether DVNF meets the standards for a 501(c)(3) organization." And while Brett Kimberlin's organization is much smaller than DVNF, according to Robert Stacy McCain:
Federal tax forms filed by convicted terrorist Brett Kimberlin’s tax-exempt non-profit Justice Through Music Project (JTMP) show that the 501(c)3 group collected $1.8 million in gifts, grants and other contributions during its first six years of operation. An analysis using database research indicates that more than $300,000 of that sum came in the form of grants from tax-exempt foundations, including the George Soros-connected Tides Foundation, the Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund, the Barbara Streisand Foundation, and the Heinz Family Foundation, connected to Democrat Sen. John Kerry’s wife.
That's a lot of money. A congressional investigation could determine whether Kimberlin's organization is in violation of any of six rules for non-profit organizations:
Private benefit/inurement
Lobbying
Political campaign activity
Unrelated business income (UBI)
Annual reporting obligation
Operation in accord with stated exempt purpose(s)
The first rule on the use of tax-exempt funding for personal use seems particularly problematic in Kimberlin's case. As Ed Barnes reported at Fox News in 2010:
A review of tax filings for Kimberlin’s blogs, “Velvet Revolution” and “Justice Through Music,” raises troubling questions about whether his “nonprofit” operations are dedicated to public activism — or are just a new facade for a longtime con artist.
And Kimberlin is likely in non-compliance with rule 3 prohibiting direct or indirect political activity, given his long campaign to silence conservatives daring to speak out on his political affiliations.

So, there you go.

It's perhaps a stretch to hope for some kind of congressional hearing on the Kimberlin affair, but you never know until you try. I've heard back from District Director Penrose. He indicated that he's forwarding all of the above information to the Rep. Campbell's D.C. office and he requested that I follow up on the status of my request.

I will be doing that and more, since this case is a turning point in the left's war on free speech.

See also Ace of Spades HQ, "What Can You Do?"

And especially Michelle Malkin, "A post-Brett Kimberlin blogburst to-do list; Updated."

The key is to not let up on this. Megyn Kelly had a brief report today on Fox News, so we know the story is filtering up the media chain: "Conservative blogger targeted by new 'swatting' tactic."

I'll be updating with more ideas and action.

Meanwhile, see Lee Stranahan, "Brett Kimberlin, Meatball Justice & Legal Crowdsourcing."

UPDATE! Linkmaster Smith links: "Donald Douglas Doubles Down; Brett Kimblerlin, Perhaps, Will Frown." Thanks!

Also at That Mr. G Guy and Paco Enterprises. Right on!

Glenn Reynolds links. Thanks!

The Lonely Conservative links, "Something We Can All Do About Brett Kimberlin." Thanks!

And more, from Daley Gator, "Donald Douglas going in after the rails of Brett Kimberlin’s Tax-Exempt Crazy Train." Thanks!

A Convicted Terrorist and Soros-Backed Activist is Beating Conservative Bloggers

Brett Kimberlin, an ex-terrorist and now jailhouse lawyer, is beating conservatives by abusing the legal process. This may be a short-lived victory, but it's true.

The main thing to notice today is that Aaron Worthing is shut down. He can't blog about what's happened. So in the larger analysis, much of the fighting we've been doing has been for naught. The one guy who really got us fired up is sitting at home, prohibited even from tweeting updates on the case. That is demoralizing.

That said, it's a long war, and Stranahan posts today's clarion call: "Brett Kimberlin’s Ambush of Aaron Walker Will Not Stand."

And see also Patterico's report, "Professor Jacobson on Brett Kimberlin’s Abuse of Process."

You can help Aaron's legal defense funding here.

I'll have more this afternoon...

What F-CKING MORON Picked the Friday Before a Long Weekend to Launch the #BrettKimberlin Blogburst?

Actually, I thought it was pretty awesome, but she has a point.

That would be Kate McMillan, at Small Dead Animals, quoted at Kathy Shaidle's excellent essay, "Brett Kimberlin and the Future of Blogbursts."

And I think IBD's David Hogberg has the closest thing to mainstream media reporting on the trials of Aaron Worthing. See, "IBD at Kimberlin Hearing: Walker Handcuffed, 1st Amendment Muzzled." (Via Memeorandum.)

And see Patterico, "Aaron Walker Arrested for Blogging? Clearing Some of the Fog Surrounding Today’s Litigation" (via Instapundit).

More later...

'Not Even Half'

Via Theo Spark:


And at the Washington Post, "Romney in Colorado attacks Obama’s job creation record."