Sunday, December 19, 2010

'Deal With It' — Straight Troops to Shower With Gays Under DADT Repeal

According to a Stars and Stripes report, December 1st:

ARLINGTON, Va. — Should ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ repeal become a reality, the message that the Pentagon’s working group sent to straight troops Tuesday was clear: Deal with it.

The working group concluded that integrating openly gay troops into the military would best be achieved with complete immersion, rather than hindered by separate rules or facilities. And straight troops who oppose the decision, with very rare exceptions, should not be granted special accommodations.
And today at CNS News, "Straight Troops Must Shower With Gays, Says DOD Working Group" (via Memeorandum).

And at
Black Five:

I think back to the best speech I have heard regarding lawyers, liberals and problems like this and the defense of the nation...

And my existence, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, saves lives...You don't want the truth. Because deep down, in places you don't talk about at parties, you want me on that wall. You need me on that wall.

We use words like honor, code, loyalty...we use these words as the backbone to a life spent defending something. You use 'em as a punchline. I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom I provide, then questions the manner in which I provide it! I'd rather you just said thank you and went on your way. Otherwise, I suggest you pick up a weapon and stand a post. Either way, I don't give a damn what you think you're entitled to!

Thanks Col. Jessup for your supportive words. I have always said I don't care what you do or with whom you do it, but don't demand that I think that it is normal or OK. And mark my words, there are going to be problems.... Huge problems....

So libturds, you might think that you have given us a kinder gentler military that is more fashion conscious and sensitive. All you did today was weaken a country.

PREVIOUSLY: "Senate Repeals 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' — BUMPED AND UPDATED!"

Real Marriage is the Union of Husband and Wife

Now that DADT has fallen, radical progressives will escalate their attacks on DOMA (the Defense of Marriage Act). It's not likely that Republicans in the new Congress will be sensitive to progressive concerns, but the Obama administration will face continued attacks for "selling out" the progressive base to the political center. Not only that, we have Prop. 8 working its way up to the Supreme Court, and my sense is that if Anthony Kennedy is the deciding vote, the Court will strike down Prop. 8 with arguments along the same lines as Lawrence v. Texas.

In any case, progressives could very well prevail on gay marriage at the federal level eventually, although not without a fight. And taking up arms anew are Sherif Girgis, Robert George, and Ryan Anderson, in their new paper, "
What is Marriage":

Real Marriage Is—And Is Only—The Union of Husband and Wife

As many people acknowledge, marriage involves: first, a comprehensive union of spouses; second, a special link to children; and third, norms of permanence, monogamy, and exclusivity. All three elements point to the conjugal understanding
of marriage.

1. Comprehensive Union

Marriage is distinguished from every other form of friendship inasmuch as it is comprehensive. It involves a sharing of lives and resources, and a union of minds and wills—hence, among other things, the requirement of consent for forming a marriage. But on the conjugal view, it also includes organic bodily union. This is because the body is a real part of the person, not just his costume, vehicle, or property. Human beings are not properly understood as nonbodily persons—minds, ghosts, consciousnesses—that inhabit and use nonpersonal bodies. After all, if someone ruins your car, he vandalizes your property, but if he amputates your leg, he injures you. Because the body is an inherent part of the human person, there is a difference in kind between vandalism and violation; between destruction of property and mutilation of bodies.

Likewise, because our bodies are truly aspects of us as persons, any union of two people that did not involve organic bodily union would not be comprehensive—it would leave out an important part of each person’s being. Because persons are body‐mind composites, a bodily union extends the relationship of two friends along an entirely new dimension of their being as persons. If two people want to unite in the comprehensive way proper to marriage, they must (among other things) unite organically—that is, in the bodily dimension of their being.

This necessity of bodily union can be seen most clearly by imagining the alternatives. Suppose that Michael and Michelle build their relationship not on sexual exclusivity, but on tennis exclusivity. They pledge to play tennis with each other, and only with each other, until death do them part. Are they thereby married? No. Substitute for tennis any nonsexual activity at all, and they still aren’t married: Sexual exclusivity — exclusivity with respect to a specific kind of bodily union—is required. But what is it about sexual intercourse that makes it uniquely capable of creating bodily union? People’s bodies can touch and interact in all sorts of ways, so why does only sexual union make bodies in any significant sense “one flesh”? Our organs—our heart and stomach, for example—are parts of one body because they are coordinated, along with other parts, for a common biological purpose of the whole: our biological life. It follows that for two individuals to unite organically, and thus bodily, their bodies must be coordinated for some biological purpose of the whole.

Here is another way of looking at it. Union on any plane — bodily, mental, or whatever—involves mutual coordination on that plane, toward a good on that plane. When Einstein and Bohr discussed a physics problem, they coordinated intellectually for an intellectual good, truth. And the intellectual union they enjoyed was real, whether or not its ultimate target (in this case, a theoretical solution) was reached—assuming, as we safely can, that both Einstein and Bohr were honestly seeking truth and not merely pretending while engaging in deception or other acts which would make their apparent intellectual union only an illusion.

By extension, bodily union involves mutual coordination toward a bodily good—which is realized only through coitus. And this union occurs even when conception, the bodily good toward which sexual intercourse as a biological function is oriented, does not occur. In other words, organic bodily unity is achieved when a man and woman coordinate to perform an act of the kind that causes conception. This act is traditionally called the act of generation or the generative act; if (and only if) it is a free and loving expression of the spouses’ permanent and exclusive commitment, then it is also a marital act.

Because interpersonal unions are valuable in themselves, and not merely as means to other ends, a husband and wife’s loving bodily union in coitus and the special kind of relationship to which it is integral are valuable whether or not conception results and even when conception is not sought. But two men or two women cannot achieve organic bodily union since there is no bodily good or function toward which their bodies can coordinate, reproduction being the only candidate. This is a clear sense in which their union cannot be marital, if marital means comprehensive and comprehensive means, among other things, bodily.

2. Special Link to Children

Most people accept that marriage is also deeply—indeed, in an important sense, uniquely—oriented to having and rearing children. That is, it is the kind of relationship that by its nature is oriented to, and enriched by, the bearing and rearing of children. But how can this be true, and what does it tell us about the structure of marriage?

It is clear that merely committing to rear children together, or even actually doing so, is not enough to make a relationship a marriage — to make it the kind of relationship that is by its nature oriented to bearing and rearing children. If three monks agreed to care for an orphan, or if two elderly brothers began caring for their late sister’s son, they would not thereby become spouses. It is also clear that having children is not necessary to being married; newlyweds do not become spouses only when their first child comes along. Anglo‐American legal tradition has for centuries regarded coitus, and not the conception or birth of a child, as the event that consummates a marriage. Furthermore, this tradition has never denied that childless marriages were true marriages ...

This is basically the argument I've made against same-sex marriage following the passage of Prop. 8 in November 2008.

There's a rebuttal from Kenji Yoshino at Slate, "
The Best Argument Against Gay Marriage: And Why it Fails." And then the "What is Marriage" authors respond: "The Argument Against Gay Marriage: And Why it Doesn’t Fail."

Senate Repeals 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' — BUMPED AND UPDATED!

At NYT.

I've been on record as favoring repeal for a long time, but that doesn't mean I don't find the military's rationale compelling. See, "
Against Gays in the Military."

And I haven't seen this kind of reaction for a while, but see Bryan Fischer's, "
Benedict Arnold Republicans destroy military and our national security."

The GOP platform is plain and unambiguous:
“Esprit and cohesion are necessary for military effectiveness and success on the battlefield. To protect our servicemen and women and ensure that America's Armed Forces remain the best in the world, we affirm the timelessness of those values, the benefits of traditional military culture, and the incompatibility of homosexuality with military service.” (emphasis mine)
For those who say the Republican Party does not need a litmus test for its candidates, you just lost the argument and frittered away the strength of the U.S. military at the same time.

The armies of other nations have allowed gays to serve openly in the military. The reason they could afford to do this is simple: they could allow homosexuals to serve in their military because we didn’t allow them to serve in ours.

They knew they could count on the strength, might, power, and cohesion of the U.S. military to intervene whenever and wherever necessary to pull their fannies out of the fire and squash the forces of tyranny wherever they raised their ugly heads around the world.

Those days are now gone. We will no longer be able to bail out these other emasculated armies because ours will now be feminized and neutered beyond repair, and there is no one left to bail us out. We have been permanently weakened as a military and as a nation by these misguided and treasonous Republican senators, and the world is now a more dangerous place for us all.
PREVIOUSLY: "Gen. James Amos Comes Out Against DADT Repeal." And lots of commentary at Memeorandum.

UPDATE: Eric Rawls, "Hello flamers, goodbye Marine Corps," cross posted at Astute Bloggers.

Also, from the comments at This Ain't Hell:

"I will be tendering my resignation this summer after 27 years of service."

I saw this comment in response to similar sentiment on another blog and I think it’s true here as well…

=====
You know what is irritating… while I 100% understand and support anyone who will now leave the military or refuse to join, because they don’t like the PC bullsh!t with which it has been infested, this then plays right into the Left’s hands.

Now, with conservatives leaving or not joining the military, it allows the Left/progressives to take it over and destroy it from within… just as they have done with the MF-ing media, with our grammar schools, high schools, universities, Hollywood, etc.

Just as they did with all those organizations, they are now going to take over the military and make it a liberal PC utopia. And, just as they don’t care about results in the other organizations (don’t care about facts in the MF-ing media, don’t care about education of children in schools and universities, don’t care about making money in Hollywood, so long as they get their message out, etc), they won’t care if the military becomes inefficient.

This is their goal. Take over the military from within, destroy it with PC bullsh!t.
And more:

"Can we talk about something else now? Something important? Something like killing large numbers of our enemies who won’t tolerate gays either?"
And here's Senator McCain's comments from the Senate floor:


And see Politico, "John McCain's New Role: GOP Agitator." (At Memeorandum.)

Plus, radical progressives weigh in at Rachel Maddow's.

And from AmericaBlog:

More, at NPR, "Gays See Repeal as a Civil Rights Milestone."

Related, from William Kristol, "Gays in the Military, ROTC back on Campus?" Plus, more at Instapundit, and Volokh Conspiracy, "DADT is History."

At 9:52am on Sunday, check out some of the progressive reaction to John McCain:

From Steve Benen:
Watching McCain rail endlessly yesterday was a genuinely painful experience. In one sense, he was practically embracing the caricature of himself, lashing out as a bitter, cantankerous ass. I kept expected McCain to start shaking his fist at clouds and demanding that children stay off his lawn.

But that's really not that unusual anymore, and it's only part of a larger picture. McCain wasn't just an angry old man yesterday; what we saw was darker and uglier. The Arizona senator on the floor yesterday, with a series of cringe-worthy tantrums, was hateful and filled with bile. McCain was even sarcastic at times, as if he almost relished the role.

This wasn't about policy. By all appearances, this was personal.
And Thers at Firedoglake:
The United States Senate is a preposterous institution that has no place in an advanced democracy — or even the turd-festering cesspit we’re currently soaking in.

The pig-stupid disgraces of the Senate are multiple. It is antidemocratic; states where nobody lives except gay cowboys and halfwit moose-slaughtering reality teevee stars are as equally represented as states containing multi-millions of people deemed contemptible because they inhabit “cities,” a term that in contemporary Official American Moron Discourse translates as “Mordor.” Moreover, the Senate operates according to a set of “rules” that a Distinguished Panel of Geniuses comprised of Nostradamus, Caligula, and a cherrystone clam would consider arcane, vicious, and primitive.

Most hideously, the Senate tends to produce Senators, who as a class are insufferable cretins whose self-regard and pomposity and belief that they are not horrible loathsome shitheaded troglodytes stand in precisely inverse proportion to the fact that they are, often enough, James Inhofe.

So one can never really expect very much from an encounter with a United States Senator; all one might reasonably express is the wan hope that they might not prove overly difficult to scrape off one’s shoe.

Nevertheless, John McCain has recently managed to dunk head and shoulders below his colleagues in terms of Senatorial road-apple bobbing.
Road-apple bobbing?

I learn a new progressive phrase of demonization almost every day.

Saudi King Pushes on Ground Zero Mosque Relocation

At NY Post, "Saudi King May Want to Move Ground Zero Mosque to St. Vincent's Site." And at Australia's Daily Telegraph, "'Plan to Move Ground Zero Mosque'."

Leftist MNA Amir Khadir Boycotts Quebec Store That Sells Israeli-Made Shoes

At Blazing Catfur, "Muslim Attempts to Turn Montreal Into Nazi Shithole." And at Vlad Tepes, "Muslims Harrass Montreal Shoe Shop for Selling Israeli Shoes."

What's unreal is this guy's a member of the Quebec National Assembly. See, "MNA Khadir urges boycott of shoe store." And "
MNA Amir Khadir Unapologetic for Picketing Store That Sells Israeli-Made Shoes."
Yves Archambault, owner of Le Marcheur, said he was "sickened" to learn his own MNA was picketing his store.

"I was sickened to see him distributing flyers and stopping people who were coming into the store to tell them they shouldn't support a business that sells Israeli products," Archambault said.

"In Quebec we have free enterprise, and as long as it is legal, nobody has the right to tell me what I can and cannot sell in my store," he said.

Archambault said he is "completely apolitical" and does not follow politics here or abroad. He admits he had no idea who Khadir was, until some of his employees told him.

He said he feels personally attacked by the picketers, and Khadir's participation has made it worse.
More here: "Amir Khadir is the only member of the Quebec Parliament representing the separatist Quebec Solidaire political party, which is distinguished from the Parti Quebecois by being much more left wing, extreme and militant."

Video c/o Blazing Catfur:

Demi Lovato Nude Video Scandal!

Well, not yet, but close.

At TMZ, "
Porn Co. -- We Want Demi's Hypothetical Sex Tape!"

And of course, R.S. McCain's on the case, "
Four Words You Probably Never Wanted to Hear: ‘Demi Lovato Sex Video’."

Also, "Racy Photos of Demi Lovato Leaked Online."

PREVIOUSLY: "
Demi Lovato's Crisis Shows Risks of Teen Stardom."

E.D. Kain: Sleaze-Blogging Asshat Who Would Sell Your Ass Down the River for One Night With Andrew Sullivan

I've learned that Barrett Brown has ended his relationship with E.D. Kain at Ordinary Gentlemen. Charles Johnson at LGF too, about which you can hear at the clip. I had an e-mail exchange with Barrett a couple of weeks ago and told him the truth about both E.D. and C.J. Barrett wasn't having problems then, so it was mostly academic. Now though things have gotten rather nasty. I hate to say I told you so ...

I should have more on this later, but check E.D.'s comment at the entry, "All Apologies":
I’m going to research ways to better protect commenter privacy, including implementing a new commenting software altogether such as Disqus.
And at the thread, the responses from a couple regulars a bit futher down:

Mike at The Big Stick December 18, 2010 at 6:29 am

About 3 years ago I was involved with a politics chatboard and got on the bad side of the board owner. Since I was occasionally posting from work (come on guys – we all do it) he used my IP address to tell the whole board where I worked and threatened to call my company if i ever posted on his board again. This completely FREAKED ME OUT. The fact that I still post on other people’s sites clearly demonstrate some kind of danger fetish on my part but I think it’s reasonable that we should all be able to expect as much anonymity as we desire.

From reading through his comments on that other thread i don’t think Barret has a clue how wrong his actions were. Sorry to see such a low moment in League history and happy to see it (hopefully) put to rest.

*****
Mike Schilling December 18, 2010 at 11:05 am

This completely FREAKED ME OUT.

Too bad comments can’t have bits in flashing red 40-point type, because I’d need that to express how much it would have freaked me out.

Actually, it's not all that interesting beyond E.D. Kain's bullsh*t moral sweetness, a morality only in effect when the safety of his own blog commenters is on the line.

This guy personifies utter moral bankruptcy. I don't comment at Ordinary Gentlemen, but I'd be glad to provide Barrett Brown with background information on E.D., perhaps material that might go in a big piece at Vanity Fair. The guy's an ugly piece of progressive refuse and his reputation needs to be spread far and wide.

A Google search pulls up my entries: "e.d. kain workplace intimidation." And see especially, "E.D. Kain Alleges Defamation: True/Slant Blogger's Workplace Intimidation Attempts to Shut Down American Power!"

Added: At Diary of Daedalus, "Barret Brown Discusses Chuck."

Saturday, December 18, 2010

The Secular Religion of Radical Progressivism

It's been almost two weeks since Elizabeth Edwards died. And the reaction to my comments are still reverberating around the web. Details on that below, but first it's worth sharing this quote from David Horowitz, at NewsReal Blog, "The Surreal World of the Progressive Left":

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It is not for nothing that George Orwell had to invent terms like “double-think” and “double-speak” to describe the universe totalitarians created. Those who have watched the left as long as I have, understand the impossible task that progressives confront in conducting their crusades. Rhetorically, they are passionate proponents of “equality” but in practice they are committed enthusiasts of a hierarchy of privilege in which the highest ranks are reserved for themselves as the guardians of righteousness, and then for those they designate “victims” and “oppressed,” who are thus worthy of their redemption. Rhetorically they are secularists and avatars of tolerance, but in fact they are religious fanatics who regard their opponents as sinners and miscreants and agents of civil darkness. Therefore, when they engage an opponent it is rarely to examine and refute his argument but rather to destroy the bearer of the argument and remove him from the plain of battle.
I've written much on the totalizing secular religion of the progressive left, most recently, for example, at "Totalitarian Faith." But I've learned much more since Elizabeth Edwards died. I think by now it's fair say that my essay, "Elizabeth Edwards' Parting Statement Omits Mention of Faith in God," has received more attention on the radical left than anything else I've written. And I know why: My concluding paragraph at the post was like hitting a grand slam. Not only did I find it odd that Mrs. Edwards had abandoned God but I made an explicit connection between her views and those of the progressives, and I pulled those together by noting my surprise at how high "God is dead" nihilism had reached into the "precincts" of neo-communism. The reaction has been unreal, perhaps animalistic, even demonic. It was like waving a crucifix in the face of the progressive left. Retaliation for deviating from the accepted narrative came swiftly. The evil monkeys swarmed my comments. I got hate mail. And then angry atheists contacted the department chair at my college. The resident demons at that atheist blog were enraged when my colleague handled the incident professionally. One suggested that they get the complaint "Pharyngulated." That would be a campaign of viral hatred and intimidation akin to a DDoS attack, although the term didn't ring a bell initially. But yesterday PZ Myers linked, and the bell went off. Myers publishes Pharyngula, which was proclaimed by the journal Nature as "the top-ranked blog written by a scientist." The blog is obviously revered across the God-hating world. And Richard Dawkins, author of The God Delusion, and one of the most famous atheist avatars on the scene, linked to Myers' post — and the commenters there appended my entry to the thread.

That's pretty astounding — no doubt an epic badge of honor for a Christian warrior! My only regret is that Tintin, the demonic prick at Sadly No!, didn't link the post. Now THAT really would have made my day, because, you know, there's no such thing REAL atheistic communism.

P.S. I just noticed that Huffington Post still features
the Thanksgiving essay from 2006 praying for Dick Cheney to have another heart attack, "to rid the planet of its Number One Human Tumor."

Right.

Praying for the death of the Vice President of the United States. Hmm ... intolerance of competing opinion, campaigns of retaliation and workplace harassment, with the prototypical example of leftist death-wish hypocrisy? Behold the secular religion of radical progressivism.

Extending the Bush Tax Cuts — Journal Editorial Report

Scroll forward to 8:00 minutes for the discussion of the Bush tax cuts. Kimberley Strassel's always on target, and the last segment talks about taking on the public sector unions in the states. Good stuff:

Will Fears of Terrorism Upset Holiday Travel Plans?

A follow-up to yesterday's report, "Holiday Terror Warning Cites Car Bombs and Small Arms Attack."

At Fox News, "
U.S. Concerned About Terror Attacks During Holidays."

And be sure to click the video.
Laura Ingle looks fabulous:

Penélope Cruz Anchor Baby?

At NewsReal Blog, "Penélope Cruz Will Bear “Anchor Baby,” Latino Republicans Protest."

Yes, and this gives me a chance to post a fabulous picture, while spamming for some Google traffic.

And perhaps
The Other McCain will link?

And don't forget to visit American Perspective, Bob Belvedere, Mind-Numbed Robots, PA Pundits, Pirate's Cove, Theo Spark, Washington Rebel, and Zion's Trumpet.

Senate Blocks DREAM Act‎ Amnesty Boondoggle

At Politico, "DREAM Act Dies in Senate" (via Memeorandum).

And at The Hill, "Pro-immigration groups decry 'shameful' vote; enforcement groups vow new push." Plus, at Michelle's, "They'll Keep Trying."

No doubt.

Gateway Pundit has more, "
BREAKING: DREAM ACT FAILS TO ADVANCE IN SENATE."

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IMAGE CREDIT: The People's Cube.

Progressives Attack Sarah Palin's Faith in God

Here's the updated clip featuring Richard Wolffe attacking Sarah Palin's citation of the works of C.S. Lewis. See, The Blaze, "C.S. Lewis Schools Richard Wolffe on Sarah Palin."

The story goes back a couple of weeks. See Cubachi, "Richard Wolffe mocks Palin and C.S. Lewis as just “a children’s author”"

Wolffe seems to think it is clever to mock Palin reading a “children’s author,” while disrespecting one of the greatest authors in literature. Yes, C.S. Lewis is most famous among the pop culture crowd with the movies and sudden ressurgance of The Chronicles of Narnia, which happens to be an allegorical tale of Jesus Christ, who became a human being, and gave His life to save undeserving human beings from the penalty of sin. (Richard Wolffe seems to be in the same boat as Liam Neeson when it comes to not understanding C.S. Lewis’ Christian tales.)

Lewis is also a well-accomplished Christian author who writes novels of human nature in some adult fictional work and essays on Christian faith.
Yet, it's more than progressive ignorance we must address. And it's not just children's books. It's the larger issue that leftists are attacking Palin on the basis of her faith. See, "Palin Criticized for Praying to God, Obama Given a Pass for Playing God."

I'll have more on these issues throughout the day.

Eminent Domain and the Little Guy

From Glenn Reynolds, at NY Post, "Columbia U. vs. the Little Guy" (via Instapundit):
Part of the American Dream was the expectation that if you started a business, you might go broke but you didn't have to worry about the government seizing your business on behalf of those with more political juice. That sort of thing was for Third World countries, corrupt kleptocracies where connections mattered more than capability.

Not anymore. In fact, some of those formerly corrupt Third World countries have started providing stronger protection for private property, as they've realized that the more power you give to politicians and their cronies, the less incentive people have to try to succeed through hard work. What's the point, if you're at the mercy of the cronies?
Plus, Randy Barnett, at Volokh Conspiracy, "“Rich Bully” Lee Bollinger “is Getting His Way”."

Obama's Tax-Cut Strategy Won't End Polarization

Background at The Hill, "House passes temporary extension of Bush-era tax cuts, 277-148."

But I'd say LAT's got the right takeaway, "
Obama's tax-cut strategy may falter on other fronts":

President Obama's year-end deal-cutting with Republicans, which produced an important compromise on extending George W. Bush-era tax cuts, has come to represent what White House officials see as a successful template for the president's role on other issues heading into a contentious 2011.

By emerging as a mediator, Obama showed a way of doing business that many voters were expecting but didn't see during most of his first two years. As a result, White House aides now feel they have "a little wind at our back," a senior White House official said. That could help point the way on other issues, such as trade, education and energy.

But as the tax deal was wrapping up, there were few indications that Washington's partisan divide has eased. If anything, the gulf is likely to widen as a new, more conservative Congress is sworn in. Chances for repeating the bipartisan compromise that led to the tax deal stand to be sparse, many analysts think. Governing is likely to become even messier.
And interesting piece from David Dayen, "GOP Gets Chance to Cut Spending in February After Omnibus Collapses." (At Memeorandum.) Looking at the issues the GOP traded for a deal, I doubt conservatives will simply give up the fight. The New York Times has more on the congressional politics, on DADT and START: "Bid to Repeal ‘Don’t Ask’ Law Draws Support in Senate."

Friday, December 17, 2010

Black Swan: Dark Side of Perfection

That's the thesis at this review, and at NYT, "On Point, on Top, in Pain."

Saw it earlier this evening. A great thriller, both sensuous and taut. Natalie Portman nails it:


Matt Bors, Neo-Communist

The guy doesn't like me, but he'd obviously jump at the chance to go bareback with Julian Assange:

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RELATED: Bors gets props from fellow commie Ted Rall, at the link.

More Lucy Pinder

At this bikini wash video:

Previously: "Lucy Pinder Holiday Rule 5."

RELATED: "
Blogger Gets 2 Million Hits Because of His Insightful Commentary and Lucy Pinder’s Enormous Breasts, But Mainly ..."

Winona Ryder Looks Great in New GQ!

See "Winona Forever." (Photo slideshow here). And she dishes on Mel Gibson's anti-Semitism, and more (at WeSmirch).

Winona Ryder


Victoria's Secret's Christmas 2010

'Tis the season:

Plus, "The 10 Hottest Victoria's Secret Christmas Commercials" (via Linkiest).