Like Europe five or six centuries ago, the Middle East today is the scene of shifting alliances among states, political groups, and warring armies, in a struggle for supremacy or hegemony in the area. By contrast, the Ottoman Empire from its establishment in 1453 was a powerful, multinational, multilingual state that lasted until November 1, 1922, when the Turkish monarchy was abolished and a Republic was declared. The Ottoman Caliphate was abolished in March 1924.Continue reading.
In spite of problems, the Ottoman Empire remained intact for four and a half centuries. It ruled using boundaries of administrative divisions: provinces, or vilayets and districts, or sanjaks, Islam sustained the empire, and the sultan, the personification of a family that had ruled for seven centuries, was the protector of Islam.
The Palestinian narrative of victimhood has made the world familiar with the Palestinian concept of the Nakba, the so-called catastrophe, resulting from the displacement of Arabs during and after the 1948-49 war (a war which they started). But from an objective point of view, the real Nakba for Arabs was the end of the Ottoman Empire, which, in spite of political and military problems, had ruled with a strong army and accepted political institutions, and which had created alliances with political and racial groups...
Saturday, June 1, 2013
Bring Back the Ottoman Empire
An interesting essay, from Professor Michael Curtis, at American Thinker:
Weiner-Fluke 2016
Yeah, that's the ticket!
Via the People's Cube:
Related: At the New Yorker, "Will Anthony Weiner Be NY's Next Mayor?"
Also at National Journal, "Why Anthony Weiner Shouldn't Bank on Forgiveness in the New York Mayoral Race."
Via the People's Cube:
Related: At the New Yorker, "Will Anthony Weiner Be NY's Next Mayor?"
Also at National Journal, "Why Anthony Weiner Shouldn't Bank on Forgiveness in the New York Mayoral Race."
Labels:
Democrats,
Election 2016,
Moral Bankruptcy,
New York,
Progressives
Leaning Out: Men May Be Better at Work-Life Balance Than Women
See Business Week, "Alpha Dads: Men Get Serious About Work-Life Balance":
It's an interesting piece. My wife and I have a pretty good balance, but our kids are getting older. Babies and toddlers would be a whole different story. When my first son was born, I was in graduate school and I was the primary caregiver. I was home most of the time, getting ready to write my dissertation. My wife was really focused on her retail career. I focused on parenting for the first year of my son's life. It was an awesome thing being a new dad and spending my days being a good daddy. It would be a bummer for a new father not to be able to have that kind of experience. Things are different these days. Both parents often have careers. Couples have to find the balance. Kids take an incredible amount of time.
“ ‘Work-life balance’ is one of these terms that tends to get overused,” says Rob Lanoue, a partner with Deloitte’s consulting group in Toronto. “It’s ‘balanced/unbalanced,’ ” chips in colleague Andrew Hamer, a senior consultant.Continue reading.
Lanoue, 43, in an open-collar shirt and sporting a wall clock-size dive watch, exudes a relaxed jock vibe, while Hamer, 29, is more hunky corporate hipster, with a beard, jeans, and checked blazer. They, along with Jonathan Magder, 35, a slender, mellow-voiced manager in Deloitte’s corporate strategy group, are eating breakfast across the street from their office, spearing eggs and discussing how they juggle their careers and families. In its contours, the conversation happens countless times a day among groups of women. This male version also touches on the challenges of getting home for bath time, showing up at recitals, and how all that must be reconciled with driving ambition. The only thing missing is the guilt and self-flagellation, which, if they were women, would be accumulating on the floor in puddles around their feet. You might call them “Alpha Dads,” guys who are as serious about their parenting as they are about making partner. What they illustrate is that men might actually be better at handling women’s issues than women. They don’t believe in “balance.” They believe in getting what they want, even if it’s time to yell at their 5-year-olds from the sidelines of a soccer game on a Wednesday afternoon.
Together, Lanoue, Hamer, and Magder run a group called Deloitte Dads, which aims to help working fathers. “New dads can be their own worst enemies,” Magder says. “The biggest thing for sure is time management.” One of his friends at another company tried to take a longer-than-average paternity leave after his first child was born, only to be told by his bosses that they were surprised he wanted to do it—surely his wife would be home, no? His friend wimped out on taking extra time off. For that reason, these guys believe, it’s important for them to live what they preach as much as possible. Magder’s wife doesn’t work, which may afford him a little more breathing room, but both Lanoue and Hamer are married to full-time professionals. None of them have illusions of achieving perfect harmony.
Lanoue, who became partner in 2010, has two children in school full time, a 5-year-old and a 9-year-old, and he estimates that he works one day a week out of his basement office at home, partly to spend more time with them. He manages this, he says, by “being proactive with my calendar, weeks out,” planning his schedule meticulously, moving in-person meetings to conference calls when he needs to and being blunt and in-your-face about it. Even when he’s in the office, he sometimes has to leave at 3:30 p.m. to drive his son to his hockey games, a fact he broadcasts to help dispel the stink that can trail people when they sneak out early. “Everyone knows my routine when I’m not there,” he says. “Between 3:30 p.m. and 7 p.m., I’m available by e-mail. If there’s anything I have to review, it’s well into the evening.” In other words: It’ll get done, but on his time.
Hamer has a 2-year-old who goes to day care and a 12-week-old who’s currently not sleeping—he sports the dark eye-circles to prove it—and at the moment his assignment takes him out of town three nights most weeks to work at a client’s office. “For me,” he says, “flexibility is more about being able to take part in morning routines and not having to worry about the commute.” Magder has three children, ages 6, 4, and 2. He tries to be home at least two or three times a week for dinner and bedtime. Sometimes it’s tough, he says, recalling one period when he was working 80 or 90 hours every week and was desperately short on sleep. But, “most people understand that if I leave for the day, I’m just changing my [work] location.” Magder and his colleagues sound in many ways like typical MBA guys, only they’re applying the principles of efficient management to the task of parenting...
It's an interesting piece. My wife and I have a pretty good balance, but our kids are getting older. Babies and toddlers would be a whole different story. When my first son was born, I was in graduate school and I was the primary caregiver. I was home most of the time, getting ready to write my dissertation. My wife was really focused on her retail career. I focused on parenting for the first year of my son's life. It was an awesome thing being a new dad and spending my days being a good daddy. It would be a bummer for a new father not to be able to have that kind of experience. Things are different these days. Both parents often have careers. Couples have to find the balance. Kids take an incredible amount of time.
Labels:
Careers,
Family,
Feminism,
Social Networking,
Social Policy,
Society,
Women
Kelly Brook Shows Off Bodacious Cleavage at Shopping Center Celebration in Belfast
At London's Daily Mail, "Make a wish! Kelly Brook shows off her cleavage and blows out candles for shopping centre's fifth birthday."
Via Ms. Brook on Twitter.
Via Ms. Brook on Twitter.
Labels:
Babe Blogging,
Kelly Brook,
News,
Women
The Cost of Colonoscopies
I've got my insurance authorization to have this procedure done, but I've been waiting for the semester to wind down to schedule it. It's a routine test after the age of 50, apparently, and an expensive one, depending on how doctors bill insurance providers.
See the New York Times, "The $2.7 Trillion Medical Bill: Colonoscopies Explain Why U.S. Leads the World in Health Expenditures."
See the New York Times, "The $2.7 Trillion Medical Bill: Colonoscopies Explain Why U.S. Leads the World in Health Expenditures."
Labels:
Health Care
Democrats for Education Reform
I just came across this piece from April, by Karin Klein, "State Democrats decide who's a REAL Democrat."
Also, "California Democrats blast efforts to overhaul schools." Well, yeah. Overhaul will weaken the death grip of the teachers' union.
Also, "California Democrats blast efforts to overhaul schools." Well, yeah. Overhaul will weaken the death grip of the teachers' union.
Labels:
California,
Education,
News,
Progressives,
Radical Left,
Unions
Troubling Stories About IRS Continue to Mount
At the Oklahoman:
THE story of Catherine Englebrecht of Richmond, Texas, should put to rest any suggestion that the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of conservative groups was simply the work of overzealous or confused low-level staffers in Cincinnati. It's a story that should give the willies to any American, regardless of political bent.Continue reading.
Engelbrecht and her husband own a small manufacturing business. Through the years, Engelbrecht developed an interest in public policy. She acted on it by forming two groups, called True the Vote and King Street Patriots. The former seeks to ensure the integrity of elections by, among other things, working to clear voting rolls of people who have died.
In July 2010, Engelbrecht sought tax-exempt status from the IRS — and her world started to get turned upside down because, as Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan put it, “The U.S. government came down on her with full force.”
In December of that year, the FBI came to her home to ask about a person who had attended a King Street Patriots function. The following month, in January 2011, the FBI asked more questions and the IRS audited her business tax returns. The FBI came knocking again in May 2011, about King Street Patriots.
One month later, Engelbrecht's personal tax returns were audited and the FBI visited again. Questions about True the Vote came in October 2011, with another FBI inquiry a month later — and again one month after that. In February 2012, the IRS came with another round of questions about True the Vote, and questions about King Street Patriots.
Engelbrecht's business has a license to make firearms, but doesn't. In February 2012, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms did an unscheduled audit of the business. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration did the same in July 2012. Additional IRS questions about True the Vote followed in November 2012, and again in March of this year. In April, ATF conducted a second audit.
Engelbrecht says she and the feds had never crossed paths before her filing for tax-exempt status. “These people, they are just regular Americans,” her attorney, former Oklahoman Cleta Mitchell, told Noonan. “They try to get dead people off voter rolls; you would think that they are serial killers.”
Engelbrecht is fighting back with a lawsuit against the IRS. Brava! Meantime, she still hasn't received the exemptions she sought three years ago.
Homosexual Parenting Harms Children
The lead letters at yesterday's Los Angeles Times were in response to the coward David Blankenhorn's recent op-ed, "What matters now about marriage."
I'm surprised this one got past the editors:
And all of this activism won't end with same-sex marriage, because progressives are never satisfied with the status quo. The Kaitlyn Hunt saga demonstrates that reason and decency won't stand in the way of 100 percent license for homosexuals to do whatever they please. See, "The #FreeKate Meltdown Continues," and "Local PFLAG: ‘The Cry of Discrimination …Does Not Seem to Apply’ in Hunt Case."
I'm surprised this one got past the editors:
I would say to Blankenhorn that what matters about marriage is the children. He fails to mention where the children fit into a gay marriage that has either two men or two women living together.After all is said and done, this is the core argument that leftists can never rebut. All they can say is that it doesn't matter, that people have a so-called "human" right to marry whomever they want. Screw the children. It's all about the homosexual narcissists themselves.
How does a child keep his or her head on straight when there is either no father or no mother? How does a female child living with two women learn the love and protection that only a man can provide? How does a male child living with two men learn the love and softness that only a woman can contribute?
How does the child, living in a lopsided environment, understand that a woman has her role in the marriage and that the man has his role in the marriage? It cannot be duplicated by two men or two women being married partners.
Lori Graham
Los Angeles
And all of this activism won't end with same-sex marriage, because progressives are never satisfied with the status quo. The Kaitlyn Hunt saga demonstrates that reason and decency won't stand in the way of 100 percent license for homosexuals to do whatever they please. See, "The #FreeKate Meltdown Continues," and "Local PFLAG: ‘The Cry of Discrimination …Does Not Seem to Apply’ in Hunt Case."
Friday, May 31, 2013
Topless Femen Protesters Storm 'Germany's Next Top Model'
At the Los Angeles Times, "Heidi Klum ambushed by topless women during 'Top Model' finale," and Der Spiegel, "Crashing the Catwalk: Femen Hijacks 'Germany's Next Top Model'."
RELATED: At the Economist, "Why are feminists going topless?"
RELATED: At the Economist, "Why are feminists going topless?"
U.S. Woman Killed Fighting for Rebels in Syria
At Fox News, "Michigan woman, 33, killed in Syria fight, family says."
And at the Guardian UK, "Nicole Mansfield 'just a regular American', says daughter.'
More video at Euro News, "Westerners 'killed in government ambush' in Syria," and CNN, "Daughter grieves mom killed in Syria."
And at the Guardian UK, "Nicole Mansfield 'just a regular American', says daughter.'
More video at Euro News, "Westerners 'killed in government ambush' in Syria," and CNN, "Daughter grieves mom killed in Syria."
Labels:
Islam,
Middle East,
National Security,
News,
Terrorism,
U.S. Foreign Policy
Orange County Woman Wins $1 million on 'Wheel of Fortune'
This was last night. My wife was watching.
At London's Daily Mail, "Woman becomes second contestant EVER to win $1 million on Wheel of Fortune (and she did it with just four letters)."
Video here.
At London's Daily Mail, "Woman becomes second contestant EVER to win $1 million on Wheel of Fortune (and she did it with just four letters)."
Video here.
Labels:
Entertainment,
News,
Orange County,
Television
Restoring Public Faith Will Require Full Investigation of IRS Politicization
From Peggy Noonan, at WSJ, "An Antidote to Cynicism Poisoning":
The Benghazi scandal was and is shocking, and the Justice Department assault on the free press, in which dogged reporters are tailed like enemy spies, is shocking. Benghazi is still under investigation and someday someone will write a great book about it. As for the press, Attorney General Eric Holder is on the run, and rightly so. They called it the First Amendment for a reason. But nothing can damage us more as a nation than what is happening at the Internal Revenue Service. Elite opinion in the press and in Washington doesn't fully understand this. Part of the reason is that it's not their ox being gored, it's those messy people out in America with their little patriotic groups.Continue reading.
Those who aren't deeply distressed about the IRS suffer from a reluctance or inability to make distinctions, and a lack of civic imagination.
An inability to make distinctions: "It's always been like this." "Presidents are always siccing the IRS on their enemies." There's truth in that. We've all heard the stories of the president who picked up the phone and said, "Look into this guy," Richard Nixon most showily. He got clobbered for it. It was one of the articles of impeachment.
But this scandal is different and distinctive. The abuse was systemic—from the sheer number of targets and the extent of each targeting we know many workers had to be involved, many higher-ups, multiple offices. It was ideological and partisan—only those presumed to be of one political view were targeted. It has a single unifying pattern: The most vivid abuses took place in the years leading up to the president's 2012 re-election effort. And in the end several were trying to cover it all up, including the head of the IRS, who lied to Congress about it, and the head of the tax-exempt unit, Lois Lerner, who managed to lie even in her public acknowledgment of impropriety.
It wasn't a one-off. It wasn't a president losing his temper with some steel executives. There was no enemies list, unless you consider half the country to be your enemies...
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Teen Driver Hit Speeds of Over 100 MPH in Fatal Newport Beach Crash
Lots a new details on the crash.
At LAT, "Teen driver in fatal O.C. crash may have been going 100 mph."
Also, "Teen driver in fatal Newport Beach wreck was unlicensed":
At LAT, "Teen driver in fatal O.C. crash may have been going 100 mph."
Also, "Teen driver in fatal Newport Beach wreck was unlicensed":
The 17-year-old high school student who was at the wheel when his car spun out of control in a horrific Memorial Day crash in Newport Beach did not have a valid driver's license, according to DMV records.
The crash left five teens dead, all high school students from Irvine. Two sisters were among the casualties.
Police said speed was a contributing factor to the wreck. Investigators didn't say how fast the teen's Infiniti was going, but the mayor in the beach city said he was told the car may have been traveling at 100 mph or faster.
The driver of the car, identified as Abdulrahman M. Alyahyan, received a citation in April for violating his provisional license, among other offenses, court records showed.
The high school junior, records show, was pulled over just blocks from his Irvine home and cited for making a prohibited modification to the exhaust system of his gray 2008 Infiniti — which bore the personalized license plate "KHASONA" — and having tinted windows that obstructed the driver's view.
Although the citation lists a driver's license number, a DMV official said that number actually corresponded with Alyahyan's application for a license.
The single-car crash occurred on a downhill stretch of Jamboree Road where the posted speed limit is 55 mph. It's less than a mile from the spot where the co-founder of mixed martial arts apparel company TapouT was killed in 2009 when his Ferrari was struck by a Porsche traveling at 100 mph.
Labels:
Irvine,
News,
Orange County,
Tragedy
Four in 10 Households Now Have Women as Primary Breadwinner
The fact that women are primary breadwinners is non-controversial, in itself. What's controversial is the number of women who are single parents, so that children are denied the benefits of a stable two-parent family with one mother and one father.
At the New York Times, "U.S. Women on the Rise as Family Breadwinner":
More at the link.
At the New York Times, "U.S. Women on the Rise as Family Breadwinner":
Women are not only more likely to be the primary caregivers in a family. Increasingly, they are primary breadwinners, too.At the clip, Erick Erickson makes the extremely politically incorrect statement that men should be the "dominant" partner in the family relationship, and this has folks in a fit at Memeorandum. See Amanda Marcotte especially, "Watch the Men of Fox News Freak Out Over Female Breadwinners."
Four in 10 American households with children under age 18 now include a mother who is either the sole or primary earner for her family, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of Census and polling data released Wednesday. This share, the highest on record, has quadrupled since 1960.
The shift reflects evolving family dynamics.
For one, it has become more acceptable and expected for married women to join the work force. It is also more common for single women to raise children on their own. Most of the mothers who are chief breadwinners for their families — nearly two-thirds — are single parents...
More at the link.
Labels:
Democrats,
Family,
Feminism,
Gender Equality,
Progressives,
Radical Left,
Social Breakdown,
Society,
Women
The Fiscal Cost of Amnesty to U.S. Taxpayers
From Robert Rector, at the Heritage Foundation, "The Fiscal Cost of Unlawful Immigrants and Amnesty to the U.S. Taxpayer":
And at WaPo, "What amnesty for illegal immigrants will cost America."
The governmental system is highly redistributive. Well-educated households tend to be net tax contributors: The taxes they pay exceed the direct and means-tested benefits, education, and population-based services they receive. For example, in 2010, in the whole U.S. population, households with college-educated heads, on average, received $24,839 in government benefits while paying $54,089 in taxes. The average college-educated household thus generated a fiscal surplus of $29,250 that government used to finance benefits for other households.Continue reading.
Other households are net tax consumers: The benefits they receive exceed the taxes they pay. These households generate a “fiscal deficit” that must be financed by taxes from other households or by government borrowing. For example, in 2010, in the U.S. population as a whole, households headed by persons without a high school degree, on average, received $46,582 in government benefits while paying only $11,469 in taxes. This generated an average fiscal deficit (benefits received minus taxes paid) of $35,113.
The high deficits of poorly educated households are important in the amnesty debate because the typical unlawful immigrant has only a 10th-grade education. Half of unlawful immigrant households are headed by an individual with less than a high school degree, and another 25 percent of household heads have only a high school degree.
Some argue that the deficit figures for poorly educated households in the general population are not relevant for immigrants. Many believe, for example, that lawful immigrants use little welfare. In reality, lawful immigrant households receive significantly more welfare, on average, than U.S.-born households. Overall, the fiscal deficits or surpluses for lawful immigrant households are the same as or higher than those for U.S.-born households with the same education level. Poorly educated households, whether immigrant or U.S.-born, receive far more in government benefits than they pay in taxes.
In contrast to lawful immigrants, unlawful immigrants at present do not have access to means-tested welfare, Social Security, or Medicare. This does not mean, however, that they do not receive government benefits and services. Children in unlawful immigrant households receive heavily subsidized public education. Many unlawful immigrants have U.S.-born children; these children are currently eligible for the full range of government welfare and medical benefits. And, of course, when unlawful immigrants live in a community, they use roads, parks, sewers, police, and fire protection; these services must expand to cover the added population or there will be “congestion” effects that lead to a decline in service quality.
In 2010, the average unlawful immigrant household received around $24,721 in government benefits and services while paying some $10,334 in taxes. This generated an average annual fiscal deficit (benefits received minus taxes paid) of around $14,387 per household. This cost had to be borne by U.S. taxpayers. Amnesty would provide unlawful households with access to over 80 means-tested welfare programs, Obamacare, Social Security, and Medicare. The fiscal deficit for each household would soar.
If enacted, amnesty would be implemented in phases. During the first or interim phase (which is likely to last 13 years), unlawful immigrants would be given lawful status but would be denied access to means-tested welfare and Obamacare. Most analysts assume that roughly half of unlawful immigrants work “off the books” and therefore do not pay income or FICA taxes. During the interim phase, these “off the books” workers would have a strong incentive to move to “on the books” employment. In addition, their wages would likely go up as they sought jobs in a more open environment. As a result, during the interim period, tax payments would rise and the average fiscal deficit among former unlawful immigrant households would fall.
After 13 years, unlawful immigrants would become eligible for means-tested welfare and Obamacare. At that point or shortly thereafter, former unlawful immigrant households would likely begin to receive government benefits at the same rate as lawful immigrant households of the same education level. As a result, government spending and fiscal deficits would increase dramatically.
The final phase of amnesty is retirement. Unlawful immigrants are not currently eligible for Social Security and Medicare, but under amnesty they would become so. The cost of this change would be very large indeed.
And at WaPo, "What amnesty for illegal immigrants will cost America."
Pakistan Says U.S. Drone Killed Taliban Leader
Well, so much for that war on terror reset.
At the New York Times:
More from Max Boot, at Commentary, "Taliban Strike Exposes Flaw in Proposed Drone Guidelines."
At the New York Times:
WASHINGTON — Less than a week after President Obama outlined a new direction for the secret drone wars, Pakistani officials said that a C.I.A. missile strike on Wednesday killed a top member of the Pakistani Taliban, an attack that illustrated the continued murkiness of the rules that govern the United States’ targeted killing operations.Yeah, that's a pretty convenient exception.
The drone strike in Pakistan’s tribal belt, along the Afghan border, was the first since Mr. Obama announced what his administration billed as sweeping changes to the drone program, with new limits on who would be targeted and more transparency in reporting such strikes.
But in the days since the president’s speech, American officials have asserted behind the scenes that the new standards would not apply to the C.I.A. drone program in Pakistan as long as American troops remained next door in Afghanistan — a reference to Mr. Obama’s exception for an “Afghan war theater.” For months to come, any drone strikes in Pakistan — the country that has been hit by the vast majority of them, with more than 350 such attacks by some estimates — will be exempt from the new rules.
American officials refused to publicly confirm the drone strike or the death of the Pakistani Taliban’s deputy leader, Wali ur-Rehman, even as Pakistani government and militant figures reported that he had been killed. Thus, the promise of new transparency, too, seemed to be put off.
Still, by one measure, Mr. Rehman would seem to fit the new road map for drone strikes: the threshold laid out by Mr. Obama that the target of the strike pose a “continuing and imminent threat” to United States citizens...
More from Max Boot, at Commentary, "Taliban Strike Exposes Flaw in Proposed Drone Guidelines."
Western Cultural Suicide
From VDH, at National Review:
Multiculturalism — as opposed to the notion of a multiracial society united by a single culture — has become an abject contradiction in the modern Western world. Romance for a culture in the abstract that one has rejected in the concrete makes little sense. Multiculturalists talk grandly of Africa, Latin America, and Asia, usually in contrast to the core values of the United States and Europe. Certainly, in terms of food, fashion, music, art, and architecture, the Western paradigm is enriched from other cultures. But the reason that millions cross the Mediterranean to Europe or the Rio Grande to the United States is for something more that transcends the periphery and involves fundamental values — consensual government, free-market capitalism, the freedom of the individual, religious tolerance, equality between the sexes, rights of dissent, and a society governed by rationalism divorced from religious stricture. Somehow that obvious message has now been abandoned, as Western hosts lost confidence in the very society that gives us the wealth and leisure to ignore or caricature its foundations. The result is that millions of immigrants flock to the West, enjoy its material security, and yet feel little need to bond with their adopted culture, given that their hosts themselves are ambiguous about what others desperately seek out....RTWT.
At no time in our history have so many Americans been foreign born. Never have so many foreign nationals resided in America, and never have so many done so illegally. Yet at just such a critical time, in our universities and bureaucracies, the pressures to assimilate in melting-pot fashion have been replaced by salad-bowl separatism — as if the individual can pick and choose which elements of his adopted culture he will embrace, which he will reject, as one might croutons or tomatoes. But ultimately he can do that because he senses that the American government, people, press, and culture reward such opportunism and have no desire, need, or ability to defend the very inherited culture that has given them the leeway to ignore it and so attracted others from otherwise antithetical paradigms.
That is a prescription for cultural suicide, if not by beheading or by a pressure cooker full of ball bearings, at least by making the West into something that no one would find very different from his homeland.
Michelle Fields Just Eviscerates Tamara Holder Over Idiot Adam Levine's 'I Hate This Country' Comment
I love it!
And Sean Hannity bet Holder $100 to name one conservative how said "I hate this country."
Also at Twitchy, "Adam Levine caught on hot mic: ‘I hate this country’; Responds to backlash with douche-tweets; Update: Blames ‘frustration’ for comments."
And Sean Hannity bet Holder $100 to name one conservative how said "I hate this country."
Also at Twitchy, "Adam Levine caught on hot mic: ‘I hate this country’; Responds to backlash with douche-tweets; Update: Blames ‘frustration’ for comments."
Labels:
Conservatives,
Exceptionalism,
Fox News,
News,
Pop Rock,
Progressives,
Women
Chinese Baby Flushed Down Toilet
This story is so unbelievably depraved...
At Mirror UK, "Chinese baby flushed down toilet: Mum tells police miracle boy FELL into sewage pipe."
And at the Washington Times, "Chinese mom who flushed newborn down toilet won't be charged."
At Mirror UK, "Chinese baby flushed down toilet: Mum tells police miracle boy FELL into sewage pipe."
And at the Washington Times, "Chinese mom who flushed newborn down toilet won't be charged."
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