Saturday, July 7, 2012

Online Harassment Against Feminist Blogger Anita Sarkeesian

Robert Stacy McCain reports on Think Progress's Alyssa Rosenberg's defense of feminist blogger Anita Sarkeesian. See: "‘Concentrated Campaign of Harassment … to Terrorize People into Silence’- UPDATE: Parallels to Rauhauser." (Via Instapundit.)

Rosenberg's essay is here: "The Escalating Campaign Against Anita Sarkeesian and The Long-Term Weakness of Sexist Trolls." It's a good piece. These people are definitely cowards. It's not clear though that the attacks are right-wing attacks. Go back and read Robert's essay. Apparently Helen Lewis of the New Statesman indicates that the 4Chan hackers might be involved in the attacks on Sakeesian --- and I remember distinctly how advocates for 4Chan claimed the group's activists have no ideological motivation to their attacks. I argued in contrast that the troll-hacker types were anarchist and inherently leftist. I'm not saying much more than that here. Simply that until we see some folks on the left getting SWAT-ted like Patterico and the others, I'll continue the hold that it's the left that's mounting the prominent campaign of online intimidation to silence speech.

Anita Sarkeesian

PHOTO CREDIT: Anita Sarkeesian via Wikimedia Commons.

ADDED: Bob Belvedere reports with this reference to The Other McCain:
Also, do check out Stacy’s report on a case of Leftist-On-Leftist Thuggery, how [sur-frickin'-prise] high hypocrisy reigns among the ‘respectable Left’, and how Neal Rauhauser comes into play [he's like shit, it seems: he's everywhere].
See the full report: "The #BrettKimberlin Report D+43."

Anthony Glen Gorospe, Mentally Disturbed Hoarder, Arrested in Shooting Standoff With Long Beach Police

My college is located in North Long Beach.

See the Long Beach Press Telegram, "UPDATED: Police arrest North Long Beach shooting suspect after seven-hour standoff."

And this is what SWAT-ting looks like. A dangerous situation:


And see London's Daily Mail, "Hoarder terrified police and housing officials were going to take his possessions 'shot inspector in the head'."

The inspector is extremely lucky to be alive. The bullet grazed him right next to the eye.

BONUS: Back at the Press-Telegram, "Scavengers stealing from home of alleged hoarder."

Serena Williams Wins 5th Wimbledon Title

That's Cliff Drysdale with the analysis at the clip below, and there's another video here (she hugs her family).

And at the Los Angeles Times, "Serena Williams wins fifth Wimbledon singles title":

Serena Williams, who had already eliminated defending Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova and second-seeded Victoria Azarenka, who had won this season's first major title at the Australian Open, took down third-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska on Saturday to win her fifth Wimbledon title and her career 14th major championship.

Williams, who had last won a Grand Slam title here two years ago, first overpowered and then outlasted the 23-year-old Radwanska, 6-3, 5-7, 6-2. Radwanska was playing in her first Grand Slam final.

Shortly after Williams, 30, dominated the 2010 Wimbledon championships, she had a foot injury that required surgery and then a pulmonary embolism that combined to keep her away from tennis for almost a year.

She made her return to majors tennis here a year ago but was upset in the fourth round. Williams suffered an unexpectedly decisive loss in the finals of the 2011 U.S. Open to Samantha Stosur, then lost in the fourth round of the 2012 Australian Open and in the first round of the French Open last May.

But Williams, seeded sixth, overpowered the field here. In the second game of the second set against the Radwanska, Williams set a new Wimbledon women's record with her 90th ace and that stellar serving kept all her opponents off balance.
More at the link.

And see London's Daily Mail, "Serena beats Radwanska to level Venus' Wimbledon tally with fifth crown at SW19."

'Bye-Bye, Miss American Pie' – Video Shows Copter Pilot Singing Don McLean Song Before Blasting Afghan Insurgent

And this is controversial?

Well, it is for the folks at Guardian UK, "'Bye-bye, Miss American Pie' – then US helicopter appears to fire on Afghans."


The Guardian was one of the big newspapers to publish the WikiLeaks files a few years back, but this 'American Pie' video won't rekindle any enthusiasm for the previous witch hunts.

Added: Weasel Zippers had this first, "Thursday Morning War Porn…" And the update: "War Porn Makes the News: UK Lib Rag Guardian Outraged American Pilot Sang “Bye-Bye Miss American Pie” Before Taking Out Taliban IED Team…"


George W. Bush Visits Africa to Support Efforts to Fight Cancer

I miss him so much.


And at London's Daily Mail, "The President and the orphan: Poignant picture captures moment George W Bush embraced child on tour of Africa."

Obama's Imperial Presidency

From Kim Strassel, at the Wall Street Journal:

Kim Strassel
The ObamaCare litigation is history, with the president's takeover of the health sector deemed constitutional. Now we can focus on the rest of the Obama imperial presidency.

Where, you are wondering, have you recently heard that term? Ah, yes. The "imperial presidency" of George W. Bush was a favorite judgment of the left about our 43rd president's conduct in war, wiretapping and detentions. Yet say this about Mr. Bush: His aggressive reading of executive authority was limited to the area where presidents are at their core power—the commander-in-chief function.

By contrast, presidents are at their weakest in the realm of domestic policy—subject to checks and balances, co-equal to the other branches. Yet this is where Mr. Obama has granted himself unprecedented power. The health law and the 2009 stimulus package were unique examples of Mr. Obama working with Congress. The more "persistent pattern," Matthew Spalding recently wrote on the Heritage Foundation blog, is "disregard for the powers of the legislative branch in favor of administrative decision making without—and often in spite of—congressional action."

Put another way: Mr. Obama proposes, Congress refuses, he does it anyway.
Continue reading.

Blake Lively Fourth of July Swimsuit Pics

Notice it's not "bikini pics." She's not wearing one.

I guess she's not as concerned about having a totally ripped bod like some other Hollywood hotties. Ryan Reynolds doesn't seem to mind, that's for sure.

At London's Daily Mail, "Dotty about Blake! Ryan Reynolds steals a kiss from his stunning girlfriend as they strip down and heat up July 4 party."

Democrat House Candidate Tammy Duckworth Responds to Rep. Joe Walsh's Attacks

This is yet another one of those times where I'm less than pleased with a sitting Member of Congress, Rep. Joe Walsh of Illinois' 8th congressional district. I watched Ashley Banfield's lengthy interview with Walsh the other morning, and video's now available: "Duckworth: Rep. Walsh is extremist loudmouth'."

And then yesterday Duckworth went on the air to respond, seen here with Wolf Blitzer: "Duckworth responds to opponent's attacks."

And read Erick Erikson's takeaway, "I Support Joe Walsh. You Should Too."

Actually, I agree with Erickson, except for a key point: Walsh does indeed come across looking like he's slamming a distinguished veteran who lost both of her legs in combat. Duckworth is an advocate for veterans. She's open about how that's her signature issue. While she's no doubt a far-left opportunist who became antiwar after returning from her service in 2006, running for Congress before the Bush surge, I doubt Walsh will gain much traction with that line of attack. Watch that CNN interview with Banfield. He's not so articulate. Frankly, he comes across like a lout. And while it's not something I followed much, he was also dogged by reports that he dodged his spousal and child support payments.

In any case, it's a battleground district, which CNN is calling one of the nastiest in the country. So, I'll be checking back in on this one.

High-Level Defections in Syria

An excellent report from CBS News:


And see also the Wall Street Journal, "Diplomats Cheer Syria General's Defection," and "Syria Defector's Little-Traveled Path."

Lake Elsinore Kinky Sex Retreats for School Administrators!

At the Riverside Press-Enterprise, "LAKE ELSINORE: Lawsuit cites risqué school district retreats."

And see Chelsea Schilling at WND, "YOUR GOVERNMENT AT WORK. School retreats spotlight 'kinky sex,' plastic genitals."
Former superintendent Frank Passarella, now retired, reportedly announced the video at the 2011 retreat by telling administrators “everyone should know that it is all in fun.”

According to the complaint, Guevara told district employees to draw shapes and lines that were used to determine whether each attendee liked “kinky sex.”

The newspaper notes that attorneys provided a sexual harassment training workshop after the “kinky sex” incident, but they joked about the exercise.
These retreats are generally taxpayer funded, so it'll be interesting to see what else comes out of this story.

Brad Pitt's Mother Slams Gay Marriage and President Obama

Well, I guess they ran out of Kool-aid out there in, er, Springfield (Missouri).

See the Los Angeles Times, "Brad Pitt's mother knocks Obama on gay marriage, abortion stances."


Also at Maggie's Notebook, "Brad Pitt’s Mother – Jane Pitt: Obama a Liberal Who Kills Unborn Babies – Vote for Mitt Romney."

Change! Growth in Retail Sales Slows From Last Year's Numbers

At the New York Times, "Retail Sales Fell Short in June":
Some of the nation’s biggest retail chains reported on Thursday that sales growth slowed in June, as shoppers held back amid wavering consumer confidence and unemployment.

A survey by Thomson Reuters of 18 retailers showed that sales at stores open more than a year were up 2.5 percent in June, well below the 7.7 percent increase recorded in June 2011. The same-store sales results surpassed Wall Street analysts’ forecasts of a 2.4 percent rise.

Retailers have seen lower spending over all by domestic customers, a drop in consumer confidence as millions of people remain out of work and fewer tourists are willing to spend amid a global economic slowdown.

Nancy Liu, a retail strategist for Kurt Salmon, a consulting firm, said that one of the reasons for the lower June results this year was that the sales numbers were being compared with a strong performance in June 2011.

“Retailers were coming out of the gate” a year ago, she said. “They would have had to outperform to beat those numbers.”

Global economic issues were weighing on consumers. Ms. Liu said the euro zone crisis, the potential slowdown of growth in Asia and unemployment rates that had not recovered as quickly as people expected had prompted retailers to promote and discount heavily to get customers to buy.

In addition, because of a mild winter, retailers may have benefited from some of the summer spending earlier in the year, and inventories are being discounted and cleared to allow for back-to-school buying.

Retailers have been keen to attract cautious consumers in a recovery weighed down by constraints in employment, housing and credit as well as, until recently, high gasoline prices.

“The second quarter is proving to be a real downer for retailers and consumers alike,” said Chris G. Christopher Jr., a United States economist for IHS Global Insight. “Job prospects are looking dimmer, equity markets are more volatile, the European debt crisis has reared its ugly head and consumer confidence is back into recession territory.”

Arizona Mom Faces Child Abuse Charges After Arrest for Pouring Beer Into Her 2-Year-Old's Sippy Cup

It's hard to believe.

The main thing is the kid is doing fine.

See the Los Angeles Times, "Arizona mom admits putting beer in 2-year-old's sippy cup."

Valerie Marie Topete

More at London's Daily Mail, "Mother arrested after allegedly pouring beer into the drinking beaker of her two-year-old son."

F-king Despicable Global Warming Progressives Exploit Colorado Wildfires to Stoke Climate Change Hysteria

LGM communist Erik Loomis couldn't resist exploiting the wildfires to stoke global warming hysteria: "Colorado is the Future."

Loomis is too predictably stupid to merit a response. Anthony Watts calls the Colorado-inspired hysteria "crazy": "‘What global warming really looks like’ – Michael Oppenheimer FAIL."

But see Michelle Malkin, who was evacuated from her home due to the Waldo Canyon Fire, "Global warming blame-ologists play with fire":
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Good news: The Waldo Canyon fire, which forced 32,000 residents (including our family) to flee, claimed two lives and destroyed 347 homes, is now 100 percent contained. Bad news: Radical environmentalists won’t stop blowing hot air about this year’s infernal season across the West.

Al Gore slithered out of the political morgue to bemoan nationwide heat records and pimp his new “Climate Reality Project,” which blames global warming for the wildfire outbreak. NBC meteorologist Doug Kammerer asserted: “If we did not have global warming, we wouldn’t see this.” Agriculture Department Undersecretary Harris Sherman, who oversees the Forest Service, claimed to the Washington Post: “The climate is changing, and these fires are a very strong indicator of that.”

And the Associated Press (or rather, the Activist Press) lit the fear-mongering torch with an eco-propaganda piece titled “U.S. summer is what ‘global warming will look like.’”

The problem is that the actual conclusions of scientists included in AP’s screed don’t back up the apocalyptic headline. As the reporter acknowledges under that panicky banner:

“Scientifically linking individual weather events to climate change takes intensive study, complicated mathematics, computer models and lots of time. Sometimes it isn’t caused by global warming. Weather is always variable; freak things happen.”
So, this U.S. summer may or may not really look like “what global warming looks like.” Kinda. Sorta. Possibly. Possibly not.

Furthermore, the AP reporter concedes, the “global” nature of the warming and its supposed catastrophic events have “been local. Europe, Asia and Africa aren’t having similar disasters now, although they’ve had their own extreme events in recent years.”

A more hedging headline would have been journalistically responsible, but Chicken Little-ism better serves the global warming blame-ologists’ agenda.

More inconvenient truths: As The Washington Times noted this week, the National Climatic Data Center shows that “Colorado has actually seen its average temperature drop slightly from 1998 to 2011, when data is collected only from rural stations and not those that have been urbanized since 1900.”

Radical green efforts to block logging and timber sales in national forests since the 1990s are the real culprits. Wildlife mitigation experts point to incompetent forest management and militant opposition to thinning the timber fuel supply.

Another symptom of green obstructionism: widespread bark beetle infestations. The U.S. Forest Service itself reported last year...
More at the link.

Jobs Numbers Could Affect Presidential Race

At the New York Times, "Stakes for Jobs Figures Rise as Voters’ Views Start to Solidify":

WASHINGTON — Economists are slashing their already tepid growth forecasts. The unemployment rate seems stuck at around 8 percent. It is a tense time for the American economy. It is also the time that some experts believe the country’s undecided voters are beginning to cement their presidential picks.

That is why many political scientists and consultants consider Friday’s jobs report and the ones immediately following it to be so important — perhaps more so than those of the previous three years.

“I don’t know whether it is because American voters are myopic, or because they are forward-looking,” said Andrew Gelman, the director of the Applied Statistics Center at Columbia University. “But they appear to care most about change in the economy in the year preceding the election,” rather than the state of the economy over an incumbent president’s first four years.

Some narrow the critical period even more, arguing that what happens from April until October of an election year weighs especially heavily on voters’ minds.

“It’s difficult to sort out the electoral effects of specific slivers of economic conditions,” said Larry M. Bartels, a Vanderbilt University professor of political science. But he cited the economic climate of the middle of the election year as unusually important — a time when even wavering voters begin to lock in decisions on the presidential race and lock out conflicting reports about the economy.

This political reality is not lost on the Obama and Romney campaigns, which have sparred over the state of the economy to the near exclusion of every other issue.

Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee, has centered his campaign on the notion that President Obama’s incompetence as an economic steward has made recovery weaker than it need have been — with unemployment too high and job growth too slow.

Mr. Obama has countered that Mr. Romney’s business record at Bain Capital epitomizes the profits-at any-cost philosophy that has cut middle-class jobs. As for his own record, he argues that pushing the 2009 stimulus program through Congress has helped the economy rebound and that without it, the nation would be in worse economic straits.

“Throughout history, it has typically taken countries up to 10 years to recover from financial crises of this magnitude,” Mr. Obama said recently, noting the sustained recessions in Europe. He added, “Our economy started growing again six months after I took office, and it has continued to grow for the last three years.”

The question now is which economic messages will sink in among the pool of voters — roughly one in 10 — who tell pollsters they are undecided.
RTWT.

Also, a surprisingly lame piece at the Los Angeles Times, "Analysis: Impact of jobs report on presidential contest minimal."

I think O's looking like Carter in 1976, or perhaps G.H.W. Bush in 1992 --- in other words, I expect him to lose. Romney's had a rough week coming out of the NFIB decision and the campaign's lame response, but he'll get back on top of his game. He's going to be hammering this president. And there's still a while to go.

See also James Pethokoukis, "June jobs swoon: America’s labor market depression continues."

And at Instapundit, "INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY: 10 reasons why jobs market even worse than weak June employment report."

Mitt Romney: Jobs Report a 'Kick in the Gut'

At the Christian Science Monitor, "Bad jobs report jolts Obama, gives Romney a break":
The weak June jobs report ends a three-week stretch of momentum for President Obama. For Mitt Romney, it interrupts cries from conservatives to shake up his floundering campaign.
WASHINGTON - On balance, it’s a bad day for President Obama. The June unemployment report came in Friday below expectations, with only a net 80,000 jobs created and unemployment stuck at the high rate of 8.2 percent.

That makes 41 straight months above 8 percent unemployment, Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney was quick to remind at an early-morning press conference.

The discouraging jobs report ended three weeks of momentum for Mr. Obama, which began with his new policy halting deportations for some young undocumented immigrants - a highly popular move in the crucial Latino voting bloc – and continued with the Supreme Court’s surprise ruling last week that upholds most of his health-reform law.

The jobs news also interrupted Mr. Romney’s damaging narrative of discontent among prominent conservatives, after he and his campaign fumbled their response on health care and news reports about his business practices and off-shore bank accounts.

Now, the discussion has jolted back to the core issue of the campaign: the economy.

“There’s no way around it, the jobs numbers are a loss for Obama,” says Cal Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.

Wall Street Journal Critique of Romney Shows Rupert Murdoch's Doubts on Candidacy

An interesting piece at NYT, "Shots by Murdoch at Romney Play Out to Conservative Core." And this paragraph is a keeper:
Fundamentally, Mr. Romney and Mr. Murdoch are very different. Mr. Romney is said to respect Mr. Murdoch as a visionary business mind and deeply admire how he built the company he inherited from his father into a $60 billion global media power. But a teetotaling Mormon from the Midwest and a thrice-married Australian who publishes photos of topless women in one of his British newspapers are bound to have very different world views.
Yeah, that's quite a difference.

RTWT at the link.

Click though at the link for the WSJ editorial: "Romney's Tax Confusion."

Friday, July 6, 2012

The Socialist's Constitution

Progressives are at base socialists in the Marxist mode. They won't admit it, because socialism has been discredited historically; but because markets will always produce winners and losers, and because different outcomes (inequality) are inherent to capitalism, the left's ultimate goal remains the eradication of the institutional structures that give rise to those patterns of difference.

In the American experience, however, the nation's founding saw the establishment of such robust institutions of liberty that the progressives have had to work piecemeal, evolutionary rather than revolutionary, in order to erect a structure of state socialism here at home. A central part of that program, clearly, has been the delegitimation of the American regime. All the recent attacks on American exceptionalism are right in that vein, along with the deranged periodic outbursts by leftists, screaming things like "I hate this G**-damned country!" (because they have to take personal responsibility for their own health).

And now three years into the Obama interregnum, left-wing radicals are becoming more aggressive in enunciating fundamental reforms to the constitutional order, designed to limit the classical liberal vision of the Founders. (Nancy Pelosi's call to amend the Constitution to limit conservative speech is one key example.) The protection of property rights was central to the constitutional project. As James Madison warned in Federalist #10, the mischiefs of faction could work to bring a majority to power that was determined to expropriate private property in the name of the people. It's no surprise then that our republican form of government, along with the separation of powers, was designed to protect minorities from the will of an unruly mob. The Founders feared "mobocracy" in pure majority rule. The signal achievement of the founding was to elevate the notion of individual liberty above that of collective rights, and that is today what is most despised by contemporary progressives qua socialists.

This is all frankly long-established and well-known. The problem for the left is that the constitutional order stands in their way. So what's the solution? Same as it's always been: change the narrative, lie and deceive, and then leverage into power a false epistemology that functions to radicalize the pre-revolutionary cadres and bolster the vanguard leaders to "fundamentally transform" the nation in the mold of the Marxist collective.

Today's New York Times provides a particularly good example in the op-ed from William Forbath, a radical labor historian at the University of Texas School of Law. Here's a long sample from Forbarth's essay, "Workingman’s Constitution," which is the lead commentary at the top of today's New York Times op-eds (p. 21):
WORK and opportunity, poverty and dependency, material security and insecurity: for generations of reformers, the constitutional importance of these subjects was self-evident. Laissez-faire government, unchecked corporate power and the deprivations and inequalities they bred weren’t just bad public policy — they were constitutional infirmities. But liberals have largely forgotten how to think, talk and fight along these lines.

And they’ve done so at the wrong time. The Supreme Court is again putting up constitutional barriers against laws to redress want and inequity. While it handed liberals a victory on the Affordable Care Act, it also gave a boost to conservatives to revive the old laissez-faire Constitution in the polity and courts: new doctrine and dictums for their attack on the welfare and regulatory state.

But there is a silver lining for liberals as well: in much the same way that the conservative court of the 1930s forced Franklin D. Roosevelt and his allies to construct the constitutional foundations of the New Deal state, today’s court challenges the White House, the Democrats and the liberal legal community to reassert a constitutional vision of a national government empowered “to promote the general Welfare” and — in Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s terse formula — “to regulate the national economy in the interest of those who labor to sustain it.”....

The majority opinion of Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., along with the jointly written dissent of the other four conservatives, outlines the doctrinal and rhetorical bases for assailing much of the New Deal-Great Society constitutional order over the coming years....

Liberals have too often been complacent and purely defensive. The Constitution, they often declare, does not speak to the rights and wrongs of economic life; it leaves that to politics. Laissez-faire doctrines were buried by the New Deal.

Until last week, this response may have been understandable. But it was always misleading as history, and wrong in principle, as well. And it was bad politics, providing no clear counternarrative to support the powers of government now under attack from the right.

That’s a major failing, because there is a venerable rival to constitutional laissez-faire: a rich distributive tradition of constitutional law and politics, rooted in the framers’ generation. None other than Madison was among its prominent expounders — in his draft of the Virginia Constitution, he included rights to free education and public land.

Likewise, many framers of the Reconstruction amendments held that education and “40 acres and a mule” were constitutional essentials that Congress must provide to ex-slaves. They also held that equal rights and liberty for white workingmen required a fair distribution of initial endowments, including free homesteads and free elementary and secondary education, along with land-grant-funded state colleges.

In the wake of industrialization, turn of the century reformers declared the need for a “new economic constitutional order” to secure the old promises of individual freedom and opportunity. America was becoming a corporate oligarchy, making working people wage slaves, impoverished and ill-equipped for democratic citizenship.

The New Deal brought this progressive vision to partial fruition. In the preindustrial past, Roosevelt explained in countless speeches, the Constitution’s guarantee of equal rights “in acquiring and possessing property” joined with the ballot and the freedom to live by one’s “own lights” to ensure the Constitution’s promise of “liberty and equality.”

But the “turn of the tide” came with the closing of the frontier and the rise of great “industrial combinations.” New conditions demanded new readings. “Every man,” he said, has a “right to make a comfortable living.” Alongside education, “training and retraining,” decent work and decent pay, his Second Bill of Rights set out rights to social insurance, including health care.

The distributive tradition has evolved, but its gist is simple and durable: you can’t have a republican government, and certainly not a constitutional democracy, amid gross material inequality.
That, my friends, is a manifesto for the modern socialist agenda in the United States. I've highlighted the key sections and phrases. For example, progressives have bastardized the "General Welfare" clause of the Preamble to mean the social welfare state rather than the pursuit of general well-being and happiness (as stressed by the Declaration of Independence). We should regulate the economy in the name of labor, according to Ruth Bader Ginsberg, which in essence means to regulate for the dictatorship of the proletariat. Also, "laissez-fair died with the New Deal" and in its wake emerged a new constitutional "distributive" order based on collectivism and collective rights rather than liberty for the individual, in contrast to what the Founders had established in 1787.

And more: Not only would post-Civil War America promise 40-acres and a mule for the former slaves, white workingmen would be guaranteed "a fair distribution of initial endowments." What are those initial endowments? Land? Capital? Property? To provide those endowments would require expropriating them from those who had them, which could be done only by force and through the wholesale evisceration of the constitutional guarantees for private property. This, then, is the left's "new constitutional order," one that would bend "the Constitution's guarantee of equal rights" into the distributive guarantee of "acquiring and possessing property" in a redefined conception of what constitutes "liberty and equality" in the United States. Indeed, the call for a "Second Bill of Rights" is nothing less than the demand for economic leveling and the rape of the wealthy in the name of the masses. Only then, after "republican government" is destroyed would the progressives be able to secure their long-cherished utopia of "constitutional [mob] democracy" free from the despised "gross material inequality" of the capitalist system.

Forbath's "Workingman's Constitution" is a cheap spinoff from his Dissent essay from earlier this year, "Workers’ Rights and the Distributive Constitution." And according to his bio, Forbath is a regular contributor to the Nation, the left's pro-Soviet literary outlet throughout the Cold War and after. Indeed, Forbath's work is all about economic redistribution, but it's veiled in legalistic and political garb that is central to the stealth neo-Marxist progressive agenda. So just make a note of it. The "Workingman's Constitution" is in fact the "Socialist's Constitution." The only thing missing is the more explicitly aggressive class conflict language one finds at, say, the Trotskyite "Worker's World."

So, there you have it. The bonus being that it's no surprise that Forbath's flaming anti-Americanism finds a ready home at the New York Times editorial pages.

UPDATE: Linkmaster Smith links: "Forbath Lost Me at ‘Laws to Redress Want and Inequity’." Thanks!

Royal International Air Tattoo 2012

Via Theo Spark:


And more here: "Royal International Air Tattoo 2012 Wednesday 4th July."

Rosie Jones Rule 5 Update

Actually, at one point Rule 5 was supposed to be safe for the entire family. You know, wholesome ladies frolicking at the beach and all that.

Well, forget about it. Rosie Jones is smokin'!

At Egotastic, "Rosie Jones Outtakes Highlight Her Black Lingerie Lusciousness."

And previously: "Smokin' Rosie Jones Rule 5."