Sunday, October 13, 2013

Sunday Cartoons

At Flopping Aces, "Sunday Funnies."

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Also at Randy's Roundtable, "Friday Nite Funnies," and Reaganite Republican, "Reaganite's SUNDAY FUNNIES."

More at Legal Insurrection, "Branco Cartoon – Got Your Back, Ted."

CARTOON CREDIT: William Warren.

Sunday Roundup of the Roundups — And Some #Rule5 Too!

Let's start it off with the Other McCain, "FMJRA 2.0: Cold Rock the Mike."

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More, "An Interesting Admission: The Lies of Team Kimberlin and ‘The Gaped Crusader’."

Also from Bob Belvedere, "Resistance to Tyranny Forever – #OUTLAW."

And at the Conservative Hideout, "Sunday Links: Facebook Friends Pic Edition, Volume 83."

At Proof-Positive, "Best of the Web* Linkaround."

And from Blackmailers Don't Shoot, "Pretty Girls on a Thursday, Oh My Edition."

Plus, from Director Blue, "Larwyn's Linx: Obamacare -- Mind-Boggling Incompetence," and "AWESOME: Vets Dismantle Fences Around War Memorials, Then Barricade the White House."

More at Marooned in Marin, "Veterans, Citizens Take Back Their Memorials From Obama's Spite House."

At Maggie's Notebook, "The Real Story of Opening the WW II Memorial Barricades on October 5th, 2013."

And at BCF, "'If Muslims were treated in this country as Christians are in Egypt and Syria, there would be international outrage'."

At Maggie's Farm, "Saturday morning links."

Also from Drunken Stepfather, "STEPLINKS OF THE DAY."

And Egotastic!, "Melissa Debling, Chanelle Hayes, and Stacey Poole Topless Monthly Mammaries Kick Off 2014 Calendar Season."

See also Warner Todd Huston, at RWN, "Illinois School Gives Kids a Death Panel Assignment."

And at the Smoking Jacket, "She's Pretty: Get to Know Playmate Kayla Collins All Over Again" (via Linkiest).

At AoSHQ, "Republicans Spooked by NBC Poll, Ready to Cut a Deal For Like Whatever, Man."

And Michelle's Mirror, "Shutdown Day 13: A WTF Theatre Episode, “Shelter in Place.”

Still more at Sweetness and Light, "AP: Obama Brings Chilling Effect On Journalism."

Daley Gator, "DaleyGator DaleyBabe Marisol Gonzalez."

And finally, at Pirate's, "Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup," and "If All You See……is a watering hole that has obviously been dried up from Someone Else preparing chili for football Sunday, you might just be a Warmist."

Drop your links in the comments to be added to the next roundup!

CNN, Salon Hatemonger Joan Walsh Tout Confederate Flag at Million Vets March — #1MVetMarch

Look, this is just the start of it. You'll see attacks on the "racist, Confederate" veterans all next week during the primetime newscasts. And "tea baggers" too.



Here's Ben Shapiro at Big Government, "CNN MOCKS MILLION VET MARCH AS TEA PARTY CRAZIES."

And at CNN, "Rallier tells Obama to ‘put the Quran down’."

Notice how CNN positions the Confederate flag front and center in its reporting:



And disgusting hate-merchant Joan Walsh took to Twitter to smear veterans as "racist neo-Confederates":



More, ICYMI, from Dana Loesch, "Media Targets Million Veteran March."

Powerful Photos From #1MVetMarch!

I'm overwhelmed with all the incredible news out of Washington. I'll try to post more, but the photographs from the Million Vets March are some of the most powerful of the Obama era.

See Twitchy, "Powerful photo from Million Vets March sums up ‘American spirit’," and Protein Wisdom, "Vets remove barrycades from memorial, carry them to the #SpiteHouse [Darleen Click] UPDATED!"

Added: "‘Shut down the White House!’ Million Vets March protests outside the Spite House [pics]."

This protest is so devastating to the left's narrative that now we have "mainstream" media outlets attacking veterans as "a 'group of conservatives' who are basically birthers and racists and hate Obama." In other words, "tea baggers." See Dana Loesch, "Media Targets Million Veteran March."

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PREVIOUSLY: "Million Vets March."

Backlash Against Britain's Treasonous Guardian Newspaper

I check Louise Mensch's Twitter feed everyday.

She's been on a crusade to bring charges against the Guardian UK for its treasonous publication of the NSA files, including the identities of UK intelligence personnel.



And see the devastating editorial at London's Daily Mail, "The paper that helps Britain's enemies."

Also at CIF Watch, "The paper which hates Britain? Guardian leaks ‘worst blow to British intel ever’":
The focus of this blog is of course to monitor the Guardian for antisemitism and the assault on Israel’s legitimacy, but it’s vital to understand the broader ideology which inspires the anti-Zionism we are constantly documenting.  Glenn Greenwald, as with his fellow political travelers at the Guardian, is not a mere “progressive” commentator (yet alone a “journalist) but, rather, a radical activist inspired by an “anti-imperialist” ideology which holds his own country and its democratic allies in contempt, and advances propaganda which amplifies the message of our enemies.

The Guardian’s editor Alan Rusbridger, typifying the vitriol directed against the West by many within the leftist intelligentsia, in defending his paper’s right to publish classified documents, referred to George Orwell’s book ’1984′ and argued that US and British intelligence gathering went “beyond Orwell’s imagination”. However, Orwell understood the advantages of even flawed democracies over totalitarian regimes and realized the danger of an intellectual elite which doesn’t understand such stark moral differences.

In 1945, Orwell published “Notes on Nationalism” which argued that within the leftist intelligentsia there is “a derisive and mildly hostile attitude towards Britain [that] is more or less compulsory”, and that that, to such intellectuals, political outrage is inevitably directed not towards truly totalitarian regimes, but “almost entirely against Britain and the United States.”

The Guardian’s role in nurturing indifference towards its own country’s national security – a political orientation John Stuart Mill characterized as a “decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling” – should rightly be seen as a genuine threat to the Western political values to which true liberals remain loyal.

Guardian editors and contributors may not hate Britain, but their activism certainly serves to aid and abet those who do.
Actually, I disagree there: They hate their country with a white-hot revulsion, as do any hard-leftists in any country, such as the American left supporting traitors such as Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden himself.

Million Vets March

I wish I was there.

At the Washington Times, "UPDATED: "Million" vets are in DC to demand their monuments be opened."

And at CBS News DC, "'Million Vet March' Storms DC Memorials."



More a Twitchy, "#1MVetMarch: Barrycades down! Spite House barricades no match for Million Vets March [photos]."

And, "‘It belongs to the people!’ Sarah Palin and Sens. Cruz, Lee address Million Vets March [pics]," and "‘Awesome!’ Veterans remove Barrycades from memorials, transport to White House [pics]."

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Pressure on Twitter to Change

Twitter's already changing for the worse, but once that IPO is consummated, it could be all downhill.

From Farhad Manjoo, at WSJ, "Please Twitter, Just Stay Weird: An IPO Will Pressure Twitter to Change—and Not for the Better":


I am an inveterate Tweeter. I use Twitter more than any communications medium other than email. I check it first thing in the morning, last thing at night, and about a billion times in between. (Assume that for every sentence in this article, I've refreshed Twitter three times.) I've tweeted my wedding, my kids' births, and my major surgeries.

I have joked with my wife—who, like most sensible people, doesn't use Twitter but loves Facebook FB +0.12% —that by neglecting the microblogging service, she's missing out on the most interesting facet of my personality. The sad thing about this is that, most days, it isn't really a joke: @fmanjoo is usually a lot more fun than Farhad Manjoo.

But as for all true loves, I've never been able to explain what I get out of Twitter, or why exactly I find it so enthralling. I don't think I've ever convinced a single person I know in real life to join Twitter. Twitter Inc., the company, seems to have a similar problem. It has long struggled with huge "churn"—many people who sign up don't use it—and reports suggest that its user growth slowed. Part of this stems from Twitter's insular conventions, all those mysterious @s and #s.

But there's a larger reason for Twitter's mainstream difficulty: Twitter is, fundamentally, a strange, nearly surreal service. Unlike Facebook, it isn't for everyone. That's what the initiated love about it—but now that Twitter is going public and looking for growth, Twitter's inherent weirdness is at risk.

When it is public, Twitter will be forced to do a couple things that it might not have otherwise considered. First, it will have to run a lot more ads. This isn't surprising—every website turns on the spigot at some time—and it won't be ruinous. Twitter's ads, which show up as regular tweets, are some of the least annoying ad units found anywhere online. But Twitter will also face intense pressure to alter its service in order to make the service more widely appealing.

To meet investors' expectations of growth, Twitter will increasingly be pushed to mimic services like Facebook and Instagram: to favor pictures and videos over texts, to highlight interactions with friends, or to impose some kind of order on your chaotic, fast-moving stream of tweets. The danger in Twitter's IPO is that it will be pushed to turn into something for everyone—something it isn't.

As I've argued before, most Web services take off by offering an online analogue for activities we already do offline. Facebook is an online phone book, Google an online library, Amazon an online store. These services instantly make sense to new users. Twitter isn't like that. What's Twitter? It's an online ham radio. The activities Twitter is good for—posting public links and commentary, making "friends" with people you don't know offline, following breaking news—aren't mainstream pursuits. Twitter is a natural platform for celebrities, journalists, politicians, marketers, and anyone else who wants to cultivate a public following or connect with strangers. But most people don't have anything to sell, they don't have a brand to burnish, and a lot of us are justifiably leery of posting publicly...
Continue reading.

It's already trying to be more like a "social media" site, and a lot of the changes aren't working too well, as indicated by Michelle Malkin's tweet above.

We'll see how it goes.

Tommy Robinson, Former EDL Leader, Capitulates to Islam, Joins Forces of Global Jihad

I have wonderful respect for my co-counter-jihad bloggers, but I have to say I've never been one to tout the bona fides of former EDL leader Tommy Robinson. I can spot a fascist organization when I see it, and the EDL is a bunch of drunks, hooligans, and criminal thugs. I wouldn't ally with them, frankly, and I personally warned Pamela Geller about these people a few years back. She's been wary, for good reason, but has been willing to listen to Robinson, and has championed him during his struggles against Britain's Islamo-coddling left.

But now the bloom is off the rose, if there ever was one.

Here's Pamela's report, "TOMMY ROBINSON: BREAKING BAD." (Robinson's pictured below with Islamist supremacist Mohammed Ansar.)

And more from Robert Spencer, "And here's to you, Tommy Robinson."

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Folks can read all the accounts at the links.

My theory is simply that Robinson sold out counter-jihad to save his sorry ass from a long stay in a British penitentiary. By confessing his sins, abandoning his blasphemy from the religion of Islamist supremacy, and redirecting his firepower against those still standing for freedom in the West, he's attempting to gain the good graces of the totalitarian forces now raising the black flag of Muslim tyranny over Europe. He's the Marshal Petain of contemporary Britain, a former warrior against jihad injustice and Islamic death, now a craven turncoat surrendering to an Occupied Britain.

See the Guardian UK, for instance, "Ex-EDL leader Tommy Robinson says sorry for causing fear to Muslims." And at London's Daily Mail, "Former EDL leader Tommy Robinson vows to help police track down 'racists' within the organisation and says he's sorry for scaring British Muslims."

He's turned states's witness, the sorry-assed coot.

Expect updates. I'm wondering how some of my fellow counter-jihadists are handling this, and will provide additional links as I find them.

Added: At Saberpoint, "The Effemination of Tommy Robinson Continues: He Publicly Apologizes to U.K. Muslims for Telling the Truth #EDL, #TommyRobinson, #Islam."

More: Check out Janice Fiamengo, "Tommy Robinson Exits the Field":
I hope I am wrong about what has happened to Tommy Robinson. I hope he will go on to successful anti-jihad activism with moderate Muslims and other Britons of good will. But I am afraid that his actions signal the end of genuine resistance to Islamism in Briton and represent the next stage in a tragic drama of capitulation and collapse of a once-valiant nation.
RTWT.

Democrats Reject Republican Plan to Extend Borrowing for Six Weeks

At WSJ, "Pace Quickens on Budget Resolution: White House Rejects House GOP Plan to Extend Borrowing for Six Weeks, Argues for Longer-Term Talks."



And at the New York Times, "Impasse Grinds On as House Says Its Offer Was Rejected," and the Hill, "Boehner reports no progress as focus shifts to Senate plan":
Rep. Richard Hudson (R-N.C.) said Boehner told members that there is "no deal" and "no negotiations" going on with the White House. The leadership is still waiting for more engagement from President Obama, Hudson said.

Conservative Rep Raul Labrador (R-Idaho) said they were told negotiations are stalled with White House.
"It's up to the Senate Republicans...the president rejected our deal," he said.

Asked if he had reason to hope for a resolution, Rogers said: "I don't see much reason."

The Collins proposal would set up longer-term budget talks between the House and Senate with a goal of reporting back by Jan. 15, 2014.

In exchange, Republicans are asking for minor changes to Obama's healthcare law that would include a two-year delay to a tax on medical devices. They would also ways to verify that people who get subsidies under ObamaCare are eligible to receive them.

In a Friday meeting at the White House, Obama did not embrace their competing plan, but it is clear that this is where the talks are now focused.

House Republicans expressed anger at the developments on Saturday.

“They are trying to jam us with the Senate and we are not going to roll over and take that,” House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) said after the conference meeting. Ryan said he was headed back to his district and would not return until after the Columbus Day holiday on Monday.

There is growing pressure on Republicans to bend and agree to a deal given surveys showing their approval rating is tanking. They are also running out of time, as the Treasury Department says the debt ceiling will be reached in just six days.

On Friday, GOP lawmakers in both chambers said there was confusion and frustration about the party’s strategy.

"There's plates spinning everywhere. Everybody's now trying to work on this," said Rep. James Lankford (R-Okla.), a member of House GOP leadership. "It's just confusing to try to figure out what's the deal that's actually getting traction."

Boehner would not comment on Friday. He spent about an hour eating Chinese food and kibitzing with fellow House Republicans in a smoke-filled room in the Capitol before departing for the evening.
Still more at Roll Call, "House GOP Talks With Obama Break Down as Both Look to Senate" (via Memeorandum).

Ezra Klein, #ObamaCare Ãœber Cheerleader, Admits Democrat Healthcare Launch Is Total Disaster

Hey, CWCID.

I don't like Ezra Klein. He's a bald-faced liar and partisan hack. A juice-box loser.

But hey, things are so bad even this tool can't spin things otherwise.

From Mary Katharine Ham, "Ezra Klein: Let’s face it, they’ve done a terrible job launching Obamacare."



And FWIW, here's the juice-box boy at WaPo, "Wonkbook: Obamacare’s Web site is really bad."

#ObamaCare is wrong for America and the disastrous health exchange launch is only a glimpse of the crushing incompetence and failing care in the years to come.

It's going to take full repeal to get rid of this monstrosity, but fortunately things are going so badly the GOP will leveraged into power in the coming elections, especially 2016.


Stacey Poole Official 2014 Calendar

I mentioned this lovely yesterday.

She's on Twitter.

And at Egotastic!, "Stacey Poole Topless 2014 Calendar Photoshoot."

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Jake Tapper: 'I haven’t heard Republicans comparing the Democrats to suicide bombers or to kidnappers or to arsonists...'

I haven't had a chance to post this clip, but it's not too late. The Democrats have gone absolutely rabid with their demonizations of Republicans.

Via Ed Morrissey:



More at Hugh Hewitt's, "Jake Tapper On Media Bias and the Government Shutdown."

#Dodgers Lose to #Cardinals in 13 Innings as Mattingly's Moves Are Questioned

I feel bad for Don Mattingly. He went with an aggressive decision to pinch run Dee Gordon for clean-up slugger Adrian Gonzales in the 8th inning. Even my wife asked why Gonzales was leaving the game. The guy's a freakin' clutch of the ultimate clutch hitters. And Mattingly pulled him to get a RISP.

It might have turned out well had the Dodgers been able to score, but Gordon never made it to second (he was out on a fielder's choice and the Cards retired the side with a double play after that). And now folks are already looking to post season, at least I am, and the end of Mattingly's career as the Dodger's manager. It was an excruciating game. The Dodgers left so many men on base I was getting tired of watching. The game was almost five hours long and was the third longest in NLCS history.

In any case, here's Bill Plaschke, at the Los Angeles Times, "Did Don Mattingly's removal of Adrian Gonzalez take Dodgers out of it?":

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ST. LOUIS — Nearly half-past midnight here, the fireworks blazed, the rock music blared, and the red-clad crowd roared.

All of which was surely nothing compared to the noises rattling around inside the Dodgers' psyche — and surely inside their embattled manager's head — after they watched a precious postseason win slip into a loss.

It was 13 agonizing innings. It was nearly five tense hours. Yet for the Dodgers, the National League Championship Series opener felt like forever after the Cardinals stole a 3-2 victory Friday night at Busch Stadium.

It was just one loss, but it seemed like much more. It was the defeat of a team whose starting pitcher, Zack Greinke, threw eight mostly brilliant innings, striking out 10. It was the defeat of a team that had one hit in 10 chances with runners in scoring position.

More than anything, though, it was the defeat of a team whose managerial decisions led it there.

Don Mattingly, whose curious moves led to the Dodgers' only loss in the division series against the Atlanta Braves, pulled another ugly rabbit out of his cap to become the main player in their second postseason loss. Mattingly made questionable late-inning moves during the regular season, but under the postseason spotlight, his moves have been magnified and the heat has been turned up considerably.

Friday night, the spotlight initially focused on the eighth inning, when Mattingly pulled Adrian Gonzalez, his most consistent postseason hitter, for Dee Gordon, a pinch-runner who was quickly wasted. It was a decision that came back to haunt the Dodgers again and again during a game in which Gonzalez's bat was sorely missed in several extra-inning situations.

Then, in the 13th inning, Mattingly let his best reliever, Kenley Jansen, sit in the bullpen while Chris Withrow, pitching his second inning, allowed a one-out single and walk. Jansen finally came into the game and promptly allowed a game-winning single to Carlos Beltran, whose line drive to right field rocked the house.

Even as the Cardinals were celebrating on the field, though, once again the focus was on the Dodgers dugout.

"If the rest of the series is like this game, it should be a pretty good one," Mattingly said.

Good for who?

The situation that initially bewitched Mattingly occurred in the eighth inning of a 2-2 game. Gonzalez, who came in batting .333 in this postseason, led off with a walk. The plodding first baseman was immediately replaced by speedy pinch-runner Gordon.

Mattingly was obviously betting that Gordon could score in that inning and the Dodgers eventually wouldn't miss Gonzalez's bat. It was a questionable bet under any circumstances — it was first-guessed here — but it would have been a much safer bet if Gonzalez had been on second base, the usual spot for such substitutions.

At first base, Gordon, unless he stole second, was vulnerable to a grounder. He didn't have a chance to steal second. On the third pitch, Yasiel Puig hit a grounder and forced Gordon at second base, and the switch was for nothing.

"Well, it's one of those [situations] that you've got to shoot your bullet when you get a chance," Mattingly said. "If we don't use him there and the next guy hits the ball in the gap and he doesn't score and we don't score there, we're going to say why didn't you use Dee? . . . You get a guy on in that inning, and you take a shot at scoring a run."

But the controversy was only beginning. The move plagued the Dodgers for the next hour...
Continued reading.

More here, "Dodgers' long, suffering Game 1 ends in bitter defeat to Cardinals."

And at the New York Times, "Beltran Lifts Cardinals Past Dodgers in a Taut Game 1."

A Crisis of the President's Own Making

From Kim Strassel, at WSJ:
For months now, the GOP has been held hostage by a faction of its party that deluded itself into believing President Obama might be rolled on his signature health-care law. Witness now an equally grand delusion on the Democratic side, one that President Obama nurtures at his peril.

According to Democrats, their steadfast refusal to negotiate on the government shutdown or the debt ceiling is rooted in a belief that now is the moment to "break" the GOP "fever." Democrats are furious that Republicans today use every Washington deadline to extract a spending concession—and insist they must be broken of that habit.

As New York Sen. Chuck Schumer put it on ABC's "This Week": If Democrats give in now to GOP demands, "it will lead to a future negotiation like that and a future one. If you go for this kind of hostage-taking once . . . it doesn't go away, it comes back worse and worse and worse."

Fact: The only thing that will make this "come back worse and worse" is a Democratic refusal to negotiate. Upon taking the House in 2010, Republicans made clear their top priority was getting the nation's spending and debt under control—a goal backed by the vast majority of the country—and they meant it. Time and again, they have asked the White House to work with them to reform the very entitlement programs that Mr. Obama has admitted are unsustainable and the primary drivers of debt.

Time and again, a spend-happy White House and Democrats have dug in, unwilling to buck liberal interest groups, refusing to touch Social Security or Medicare, mulishly granting only small spending concessions. Those were given only under duress, and only because the GOP threatened Armageddon in the 2011 debt-ceiling fight. Even then, the White House stubbornly refused to cede one dollar more than what was necessary to push another debt-ceiling round past the 2012 election.

So yes, Mr. Obama is facing another crisis—one of his own timing and making. And one that the White House and Democrats have understood was coming ever since 2011. And one that will be coming again—two weeks from now, six weeks from now, a year from now, three months after that—until such point as the White House does a significant deal, or the president's term ends. It is entirely the president's choice.

Water runs downhill. Republicans demand fiscal discipline. Whatever the near-term solution to this current impasse, the media and Democrats are deluded if they think the GOP will give up this issue. It is built into the Republican DNA; it is a baseline expectation of party voters. Republicans will continue to use whatever tools are available—government funding bills, debt-ceiling hikes, unrelated legislation—to force Democrats to cut, and they'll do it again and again.

Republicans have always been clear on their price for ending these dramas. House Speaker John Boehner even provided a formula: One dollar in debt ceiling increase for every dollar of decreased spending. Even a law professor can do the math on what it will cost to liberate the rest of his term.

Were the president to embrace these negotiations, he could do just that. With a big enough give on entitlement reform (one that goes well beyond the tinkering in the recent Obama budget), Republicans might be willing to raise the debt ceiling to the end of Obama presidency. They're open to fixing the sequester caps on sacred liberal programs. And free of the paralyzing budget fights, Mr. Obama could use the rest of his time in office for immigration reform, a focus on the economy, the building of a legacy.

Congressional liberals in particular are repelled by this idea—which is why so many are encouraging the "break the fever" baloney. Their biggest fear is that the White House will give any cover at all—much less big cover—to entitlement reform, and rob them of their favorite campaign issue.

But Mr. Obama doesn't face re-election. He faces three years of trying to govern. And while the White House might like to brag that it is "winning" this battle, that's a relative term.

Republicans have taken heat, but Mr. Obama's own approval ratings are down. His most vulnerable House members are being forced daily to take painful votes against crucial funding, which will be used against them in 2014. Another financial downturn will be remembered in the history books as President Obama's, not as some no-name GOP backbencher's.
More at that top link.

Now Is the Time to Delay #ObamaCare

From Peggy Noonan, at WSJ (via Google):
The Obama administration has an implementation problem. More than any administration of the modern era they know how to talk but have trouble doing. They give speeches about ObamaCare but when it's unveiled what the public sees is a Potemkin village designed by the noted architect Rube Goldberg. They speak ringingly about the case for action in Syria but can't build support in the U.S. foreign-policy community, in Congress, among the public. Recovery summer is always next summer. They have trouble implementing. Which, of course, is the most boring but crucial part of governing. It's not enough to talk, you must perform.

There is an odd sense with members of this administration that they think words are actions. Maybe that's why they tweet so much. Maybe they imagine Bashar Assad seeing their tweets and musing: "Ah, Samantha is upset—then I shall change my entire policy, in respect for her emotions!"

That gets us to the real story of last week, this week and the future, the one beyond the shutdown, the one that normal people are both fully aware of and fully understand, and that is the utter and catastrophic debut of ObamaCare. Even for those who expected problems, and that would be everyone who follows government, it has been a shock.

They had 3½ years to set it up! They knew exactly when it would be unveiled, on Oct. 1, 2013. On that date, they knew, millions could be expected to go online to see if they benefit.

What they got was the administration's version of Project ORCA, the Romney campaign's computerized voter-turnout system that crashed with such flair on Election Day.

Here is why the rollout is so damaging to ObamaCare: because everyone in America knows we spent four years arguing about the law, that it sucked all the oxygen from the room, that it commanded all focus, that it blocked out other opportunities and initiatives, and that it caused so many searing arguments—mandatory contraceptive and abortifacient coverage for religious organizations that oppose those things, fears about the sharing of private medical information, fears of rising costs and lost coverage. Throughout the struggle the American people must have thought: "OK, at the end it's gotta be worth it, it's got to give me at least some benefits to justify all this drama." And at the end they tried to log in, register and see their options, and found one big, frustrating, chaotic mess. As if for four years we all just wasted our time.

A quick summary of what didn't work. Those who went on federal and state exchanges reported malfunctions during login, constant error messages, inability to create new accounts, frozen screens, confusing instructions, endless wait times, help lines that put people on hold and then cut them off, lost passwords and user names.

After the administration floated the fiction that the problems were due to heavy usage, the Journal tracked down insurance and technology experts who said the real problems were inadequate coding and flaws in the architecture of the system.

There were no enrollments in Delaware in three days. North Carolina got one enrollee. In Kansas ObamaCare was unable to report a single enrollment. A senior Louisiana state official told me zero people enrolled the first day, eight the second. The founder of McAfee slammed the system's lack of security on Fox Business Network, calling it a hacker's happiest nocturnal fantasy. He predicted millions of identity thefts. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius—grilled, surprisingly, on "The Daily Show"—sounded like a blithering idiot as she failed to justify why, in the middle of the chaos, individuals cannot be granted a one-year delay, just as businesses have been.

More ominously, many of those who got into the system complained of sticker shock—high premiums, high deductibles.

Where does this leave us? Congressional Republicans and the White House may soon begin a series of conversations centering on the debt-ceiling fight. Good: May they turn into negotiations. Republicans are now talking about a grand bargain involving entitlement spending, perhaps tax issues. But they would make a mistake in dropping ObamaCare as an issue. A few weeks ago they mistakenly demanded defunding—a move to please their base. They will be tempted to abandon even the word ObamaCare now, but this is exactly when they should keep, as the center of their message and their intent, not defunding ObamaCare but delaying it. Do they really want to turn abrupt focus to elusive Medicare cuts just when it has become obvious to the American people that parts of ObamaCare (like the ability to enroll!) are unworkable?

The Republicans should press harder than ever to delay ObamaCare—to kick it back, allow the administration at least to create functioning websites, and improve what can be improved...
It needs to be killed, actually. But it might take a couple of elections to do that, but the day is coming.

Still more at that top Google link.

Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Wins 2013 Nobel Peace Prize

Malala Yousafzai should've won it, but the Nobel is a freakin' joke, so no matter.

At WaPo:
MOSCOW — The small Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons was still getting used to its unaccustomed role at the center of world affairs, overseeing the destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons, when it won the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.

“The news of the Nobel Peace Prize was really overwhelming,” said Ahmet Uzumcu, director general of The Hague-based agency. “I see it as a great acknowledgement of a success story.”

Until minutes before the Norwegian Nobel Prize Committee revealed its choice in Oslo, speculation had centered on Malala Yousafzai, the 16-year-old Pakistani girl who was shot in the head by the Taliban a year ago for defending education for girls. But just as it did last year when it selected the European Union,the committee took the world by surprise.

“We are now in a situation in which we can do away with a whole category of weapons of mass destruction,” Thorbjorn Jagland, the committee’s chairman, said. “Of course this is a very important message.”

On Aug. 21, a sarin gas attack in Syria killed more than 1,000 civilians, a reminder to the world of the horror chemical weapons visit on their victims. An estimated 100,000 people have died in the 21 / 2-year conflict.

OPCW inspectors were in Syria as part of a U.N. team at the time of the August chemical attack and subsequently investigated it, despite coming under sniper fire at one point. The team later produced a widely acclaimed report that documented the use of sarin in the attack and that indirectly implicated the Syrian government.

OPCW inspectors returned to Syria at the beginning of October. About two dozen inspectors are there, attempting to find and oversee the destruction of an estimated 1,000 tons of chemical weapons — in the middle of a civil war, accompanied by unarmed U.N. guards, with security entrusted to a Syrian government that doesn’t control the entire country.

Jagland said the committee hoped the prize would have implications beyond the Syrian conflict, including encouraging signatories to the Chemical Weapons Convention such as the United States and Russia to step up destruction of their stockpiles.

“The crisis in Syria highlights the need to do away with these weapons,” he said. “This is about disarmament, which goes straight to the heart of Alfred Nobel’s will.”

Friday, October 11, 2013

"Mother Forced by #ObamaCare to Choose Between 'New Health Plan or Putting Food on the Table'"

Because Democrat compassion!

Via the Weekly Standard.


Bwahaha!! MSNBC's Phil Griffin Wants Fox News Investigated After Megyn Kelly Blows Out Rachel Maddow in Key Demographic

Rachel Maddow sucks goats balls, so actually Fox News should be having MSNBC investigated for attempting to cook the books on the debut night of Megyn Kelly's new show.

At Twitchy, "‘Funniest sh*t I’ve read all day’: MSNBC president wants FNC’s ratings investigated."



MSNBC just freakin' sucks. Screw 'em.

NBC News Slams #ObamaCare Rollout as 'Public Relations Nightmare'

Look!

A real live news report with real live actual news on the disaster of the administration's signature Democrat clusterf-k.



Remember, we just had that CBS News report earlier this week completely eviscerating the administration's lies and incompetence.

AoSHQ picked up on that as well, "CBS' Jan Crawford: Obama Rollout 'Nothing Short of Disastrous'":
The left likes to flatter itself as thinking in terms of reason, facts, expertise, openness to doubt, and scorn of dogma and magical thinking.

Is this anywhere close to true?

When experts told the Obama Administration it was a fact the website was not ready, did they take seriously this advisement?

Nope! They simply said there was no cause for alarm; the strange gods of the left would just sort everything out.

Oddly enough, they didn't.
RTWT.

Here's That Spectacular Juan Uribe 8th Inning Homer Against #Braves in #NLDS

I couldn't believe it when Mattingly had Uribe bunt with Yasiel Puig at second base. Horrible play calling, but Uribe's a terrible bunter, so after failing twice to lay one down, he came back with the most dramatic home run I've seen all season. Talk about lol.

I was on Twitter and called it!




And now here's this, at the Los Angeles Times, "Don Mattingly finds that nothing answers critics like a home run":
ST. LOUIS — As Don Mattingly watched the home run that might have changed his life, he paused a few seconds to ponder the absurdity of it all.

"Playoffs are so stupid, aren't they?" Mattingly remembers thinking. "Just crazy."

Stupidity and craziness that could determine Mattingly's future with the Dodgers.

The Dodgers manager hasn't said whether he has received assurances about his job status beyond these playoffs. Dodgers management hasn't said whether it will exercise the team option on his contract for next season.

Team President Stan Kasten has been silent on the matter, which means Mattingly's fate could be tied to how the Dodgers perform in the National League Championship Series — and a result that could be decided by something as random as a two-strike home run by Juan Uribe.

If not for Uribe's home run in Game 4 of the division series, the Dodgers could have been playing the Braves again Wednesday in a winner-take-all fifth game. A loss in Game 5 could have sent Mattingly back to his Indiana farm and in search of a new job.

Uribe's home run illustrated how a manager's fortunes and reputation can suddenly change.

The Dodgers were down, 3-2, when Uribe came to the plate with Yasiel Puig on second base and no outs in the eighth inning. Mattingly signaled for a sacrifice bunt, a decision he immediately second-guessed when Uribe fouled off his first two attempts.

"Why am I bunting him?" Mattingly recalls thinking.

Never mind that Uribe doesn't bunt well. Mattingly had been criticized for bunting too much and probably would have faced more second-guessing had Puig not scored, regardless of whether Uribe successfully moved him to third base.

As the baseball gods would have it, Uribe connected on a 2-2 pitch by David Carpenter to reverse the deficit. Whatever questions Mattingly would have faced about asking Uribe to bunt disappeared into the stands with the ball.

So did questions about the Dodgers' decision to start Clayton Kershaw that day on three days' rest for the first time in his major league career.

The widespread perception was that the decision on Kershaw was Mattingly's. The manager was the highest-ranking team official to publicly talk about it before the outcome of the game was known. Kasten distanced himself from the move as much as he could, saying he had nothing to do with lineup decisions. General Manager Ned Colletti wouldn't meet with reporters face to face.

Because the Dodgers won, the decision to start became the right one and evidence that Mattingly's bold style of managing could pay dividends. With Zack Greinke in line to start Game 1 of the NLCS and Kershaw available to start Game 2, the move figures to have no lingering drawbacks.
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