Saturday, February 1, 2014

Israel Losing the Propaganda War?

Sometime back, my good friend Norman Gersman mentioned that he wasn't that worried about this or that depraved anti-Israel leftist spewing the latest anti-Semitic bilge against the Jewish state. I can't remember Norm's exact words, but I think he was remarking on Israel's confidence and dynamism, and how the country's strength and vitality would carry it through whatever momentary attack was in the news. I think that's true, to a point. The main reason to be confident is that Jews have their own state, a point Caroline Glick stresses repeatedly. And when people like Scarlett Johansson stand up and do the right thing it reminds me that basic decency in the face of regressive evil is the strongest bulwark against the left's delegitimation campaign.

That said, leftists won't relent in their depraved campaign of Israel hatred. And Hirsch Goodman, at the New York Times, helps their efforts with this clever piece of concern trolling, "Losing the Propaganda War":
JERUSALEM — ON Feb. 4, 1965, as a teenager, I left South Africa, the country of my birth, for a new home in a place I’d never been — Israel.

I loved South Africa, but I loathed the apartheid system. In Israel, I saw a fresh start for a people rising from the ashes of the Holocaust, a place of light and justice, as opposed to the darkness and oppression of apartheid South Africa.

Now, almost 50 years later, after decades of arguing that Israel is not an apartheid state and that it’s a calumny and a lie to say so, I sense that we may be well down the road to being seen as one. That’s because, in this day and age, brands are more powerful than truth and, inexplicably, blindly, Israel is letting itself be branded an apartheid state — and even encouraging it.

In apartheid South Africa, people disappeared in the night without the protection of any legal process and were never heard from again. There was no freedom of speech or expression and more “judicial” hangings were reportedly carried out there than in any other place on earth. There was no free press and, until January 1976, no public television.

Masses of black people were forcibly moved from tribal lands to arid Bantustans in the middle of nowhere. A “pass system” stipulated where blacks could live and work, splitting families and breaking down social structures, to provide cheap labor for the mines and white-owned businesses, and a plentiful pool of domestic servants for the white minority. Those found in violation were arrested, usually lashed, and sentenced to stints of hard labor for a few shillings per prisoner per day, payable to the prison service.

None of this even remotely exists in Israel or the occupied territories. But, increasingly, in the mind of the world it does. This is because of Israel’s own actions and a vigorous campaign by those who oppose its occupation of Palestinians’ land and, in some cases, Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state. They understand that delegitimization is Israel’s soft belly and apartheid the buzzword to make it happen.

International isolation is potentially more dangerous for Israel than the Iranian nuclear program. The Palestinians and their supporters, particularly the young generation, some of whom have graduated from the best universities in the world, have come to realize that the stones of the first intifada and the suicide bombers of the second are yesterday’s weapons in yesterday’s war.

Boycott, divestment and sanctions are now the way they seek to end the Israeli occupation or Jewish Israel itself. Their message has started to resonate with trade unions, churches, universities and international companies in Europe and the United States, who see Israel as oppressing Palestinians and violating their human rights.

A Dutch pension giant’s decision last month to divest from Israel’s five largest banks because of their ties to occupation rang warning bells in Israel’s business community and the Treasury. According to the finance minister, even a partial European boycott would cost Israel 20 billion shekels (about $5.7 billion) in exports annually and almost 10,000 jobs. But the greatest damage is self-inflicted.

The “apartheid wall,” “apartheid roads,” colonization, administrative arrests, travel restrictions, land confiscations and house demolitions are the clay apartheid comparisons are made of, and cannot be hidden or denied, for as long as Israel continues with the status quo...
More at the link.

Frankly, Goodman's examples are just that much more propaganda. And none of those examples will stand the scrutiny of close examination. He's just recycling the lies of the Israel-bashers he's purporting to criticize. I don't like that kind of commentary. It's sleazy.

Jessica Perez for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit 2013

Man, they work really hard to get these pictures.

'I'm going up the country, babe don't you wanna go...'

School starts Monday, so I'll be spending a lot more time commuting.

From yesterday afternoon's drivetime, on the way home from picking up my syllabi at the campus copy shop, at the Sound L.A.

Canned Heat, "Going Up the Country."





Going Up the Country
Canned Heat
1:27 PM

New Sensation
INXS
1:24 PM

She's So Cold
The Rolling Stones
1:19 PM

Lovin', Touchin' Squeezin'
Journey
1:09 PM

Ticket to Ride
The Beatles
1:06 PM

Smokin' In the Boys Room
Brownsville Station
1:03 PM

Evil Woman
Electric Light Orchestra
12:58 PM

Whole Lotta Love
Led Zeppelin
12:53 PM

Bad Moon Rising
Creedence Clearwater Revival
12:51 PM

South African Grant 'Twiggy' Baker Wins 2014 Mavericks Invitational Surf Contest

At NBC Bay Area:



With the best of conditions under sunny skies, the Mavericks Invitational, the so-called Super Bowl of surfing, was won by South African Grant "Twiggy" Baker.

Baker also won the title in 2006 and reclaimed the title on Friday afternoon, with Hawaiian Shane Dorian coming in second in  his first Mavericks contest and Ryan Augenstein of Santa Cruz coming in third.

Fellow Californians Tyler Fox of Aptos, Greg Long of San Clemente  and Anthony Tashnick of Santa Cruz rounded out the six surfers who made the finals.

“I got lucky today. I didn't get bucked off," Baker said.

Now Baker takes home the $12,000 -- and a lot of respect from fellow surfers.

"Mavericks is a one-of-a-kind wave that you've got to prepare for, for life and for years,” competitor Rich Peters said. “So it's not something to take lightly. I really respect these guys. They're athletes just like any other athlete."

The competition kicked off Friday morning off the coast of Pillar Point north of Half Moon Bay, Calif.

As predicted, the big waves reach astounding heights of between 40 and 50 feet...

#Democrat Exodus Has a Common Thread: #ObamaCare

From Ed Morrissey, at Hot Air, "Dem exodus from Washington has a common thread – ObamaCare."

Waxman's announcement signals that veteran Democrats, with years, if not decades, of healthcare policy experience, are abandoning the sinking ObamaCare ship like rats.

Evel Knievel

Ed Morrissey tweeted last night:


Check the thread.

Then Dan Riehl sent this one.


And that had snippets of the Caesar's Palace crash, which is iconic.



.@MSNBC's Racial Hypocrisy

Jason Riley interviewed at WSJ Digital.



Riley's wife is Naomi Schaefer Riley, who is white.

Conservatives More Likely to Live in Mixed-Race Households Than Leftists

At Expose Liberals, "MSNBC hates this: More conservatives than liberals belong to biracial families."

 photo BfPIAdaCUAAH6b0_zpse0412635.jpg

Following the links takes us to Jim Lindgren, at Volokh, "MSNBC flap: New evidence on the political views of mixed-race adopted and step-families":
Not surprisingly [in the General Social Survey], there is no statistically significant left-right political differences in the proportion of adopted or step-families that are in mixed race households. Indeed, among families with step-children or adopted children, 11 percent of conservatives were living in mixed race households compared to 10 percent of liberals living in mixed-race households.

Similarly, 9.4 percent of Republicans living in step- or adopted families were in mixed-race households, compared to only 8.8 percent of Democrats in such families. (Again, this small advantage for Republicans is not large enough to be statistically significant). If one breaks things down further by both party and political orientation, only 7.7 percent of liberal Democrats and 3.6 percent of moderate Democrats lived in mixed-race adopted or step-households, compared to an insignificantly different 10.6 percent of conservative Republicans.

Thus, there is no evidence in the GSS data that Republican, conservative, or conservative Republicans who were living with step-children or adopted children were less likely to live in mixed-race households than Democrats, liberals, liberal Democrats, or moderate Democrats in adopted or step-families. Indeed, in each instance the point estimates for living in a mixed-race household were insignificantly higher for the right side of the spectrum than for the left side.
Indeed, that's why MSNBC is Walter James "Kleagle" Casper's favorite channel. F-king racist jackboot thug.

Unlimited Free Image and File Hosting at MediaFire

Confessions of a Former TSA Agent

You gotta read this, at Politico, "I Saw America Naked - Confessions of a TSA Agent":
I hated it from the beginning. It was a job that had me patting down the crotches of children, the elderly and even infants as part of the post-9/11 airport security show. I confiscated jars of homemade apple butter on the pretense that they could pose threats to national security. I was even required to confiscate nail clippers from airline pilots—the implied logic being that pilots could use the nail clippers to hijack the very planes they were flying.

Once, in 2008, I had to confiscate a bottle of alcohol from a group of Marines coming home from Afghanistan. It was celebration champagne intended for one of the men in the group—a young, decorated soldier. He was in a wheelchair, both legs lost to an I.E.D., and it fell to me to tell this kid who would never walk again that his homecoming champagne had to be taken away in the name of national security.

There I was, an aspiring satire writer, earnestly acting on orders straight out of Catch-22.

I quickly discovered I was working for an agency whose morale was among the lowest in the U.S. government. In private, most TSA officers I talked to told me they felt the agency’s day-to-day operations represented an abuse of public trust and funds.
RTWT.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Former Mayoral Candidate Wendy Greuel Announces Run for Henry Waxman's Seat

Last I heard she was considering a run for county supervisor, but no doubt a congressional bid is way more attractive.

At LAT, "Former Los Angeles mayor candidate Wendy Greuel to run for Waxman seat."

.@MSNBC's Rachel Maddow Ripped for Ridiculously Obvious Obama Cheerleading

Rep. Tim Huelskamp is cool. He should have ripped Maddow for her network's racism as well.

See from last night, at Expose Liberals, "Rep. Tim Huelskamp biracial right-wing family offends progressives."

And now at Legal Insurrection, "Obama Cheerleader Rachel Maddow upset at being called an Obama Cheerleader."
What’s “amazing” is that Maddow won’t fess up to what everyone knows.



And, "Off topic — has she apologized yet for her inaccurate anti-Koch Brothers conspiracy theory?"

She's a disgusting dirtbag.

The Economist Pulls Anti-Semitic Obama/Iran Cartoon

Background at Israel Matzav, "Economist publishes anti-Semitic cartoon, ADL demands apology."

And now at Blazing Cat Fur, "The Economist finally apologizes for anti-Semitic cartoon."

Economist Anti-Semitic Cartoon photo economistcartoon01141_zps79982c29.jpg

New Face of Jim Beam? Smokin' Mila Kunis!

Awesome.

Jim Beam's my drink!

At LAT, "Mila Kunis is the new face of Jim Beam, learns the Kentucky chew."

And London's Daily Mail, "Drinking in her beauty! Mila Kunis visits Kentucky distillery to meet Jim Beam's great-grandson ahead of commercial."

Hat Tip: The Other McCain, "LIVE AT FIVE: 01.31.14."

Mila Kunis photo mila-kunis-jim-beam-01292014_zpse886b0fa.jpg

Intense Super Bowl Security Preparations

At SB Nation, "Super Bowl security: Is the NFL ready for everything?"

And at the Blaze, "Sunday's Super Bowl Set to Feature Some Intense Layers of Security Most Attendees Will Never See."



Thieves Steal 300-Year-Old Stradivarius from Musician

Some of these violins are worth millions. Why the dude was casually taking his out to the car in the parking lot is beyond me.

At NYT, "A Violinist’s Triumph Is Ruined by Thieves":
It should have been one of those nights musicians live for. Frank Almond, the concertmaster of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra for nearly two decades, had just closed a chamber concert in his own “Frankly Music” series with Messiaen’s hushed, eerily intense “Quartet for the End of Time.” Mr. Almond drew the graceful, ringing high notes of the finale from his prized 1715 Stradivarius violin, producing a tone so intensely focused that the audience in the Wisconsin Lutheran College’s 388-seat auditorium sat in awed silence for 20 seconds before applauding.

But the glow of the moment evaporated quickly, once Mr. Almond, 49, stepped into the college art center’s parking lot at 10:20 p.m. Monday, his violin carefully swaddled against the subzero temperatures and minus-25-degree wind chill. And as he neared his car, a figure stepped up to him and shot him with a stun gun.

It happened in a matter of seconds: Mr. Almond dropped the violin, the attacker scooped it up and jumped into a late 1980s or early ’90s maroon or burgundy minivan, where an accomplice was waiting to speed away. Edward A. Flynn, the Milwaukee police chief, said late Thursday afternoon that Mr. Almond had described the thieves as a man and a woman. Chief Flynn has given the value of the violin as “the high seven figures.” The police said earlier that the violin’s empty case had been found several miles from the hall.

A spokeswoman for the orchestra confirmed that the instrument was insured, but said that because of the investigation, she could not provide details about the amount, or what restrictions, if any, applied to the use of the instrument. Given its prominence — high-resolution photographs of Strads are plentiful — it would be virtually impossible to sell the instrument on the open market.

“We’re not engaging in the pretense that this is just any other crime,” Chief Flynn said on Thursday. “This is an extraordinary art theft. It is just as extraordinary as if some master criminal crept into the Milwaukee Art Museum and stole several of its most valuable pieces. It’s an inordinately rare violin of unquestioned provenance, made 300 years ago and worth a lot of money. So obviously we are treating this like much more than just another mugging.”
Right.

Which again raises the question of why the dude didn't have armed guards transporting the instrument for him. I shake my head at this story.

More at that top link. Really. Keep reading. It's an extremely prized violin. Only 650 like instruments still exist.

St. Louis Rams Returning to Los Angeles?

Wow. This is interesting.

At LAT, "A return of L.A. Rams? Owner is said to buy possible stadium site":
The owner of the St. Louis Rams has bought a large piece of land in Inglewood that potentially could be used for an NFL stadium, multiple individuals with knowledge of the transaction have told The Times.

Within the last month, billionaire Stan Kroenke bought a 60-acre parking lot located between the Forum and Hollywood Park, according to individuals who spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on behalf of the buyer or seller.

Wal-Mart originally owned the land but sold it after failing to get public approval for a superstore. Madison Square Garden Co., which owns the Forum, had planned to buy the lot for an estimated $90 million in order to acquire more space for parking and possibly additional development. However, MSG was informed by Wal-Mart at the end of 2013 that the land had already been sold to an unnamed party. The individuals confirmed the buyer is Kroenke, a former Wal-Mart board member and husband of Ann Walton Kroenke, daughter of Wal-Mart co-founder Bud Walton. For years, Kroenke has owned a substantial amount of land in Southern California. The Rams neither confirmed nor denied that Kroenke had purchased the land and declined to comment on the situation.

Kelly Brook Cadbury Commercial

At London's Daily Mail, "She can boogie! Kelly Brook unleashes her disco diva in new car wash video for Cadbury chocolate."



Amanda Knox 'Frightened and Saddened' as Acquittal Reversed

At the Los Angeles Times:
An Italian judge sentences Knox to 28 years in the slaying of her former roommate Meredith Kercher. Her ex-boyfriend gets 25 years.
Video at CNN, "Amanda Knox convicted of murder again."

And commentary at Saberpoint, "Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito Found Guilty (Again) of Murder."

Mayor Kasim Reed Rejects Criticism of Atlanta Snow Response

Kasim Reed. What a f-king clown.

At NYT, "Mayor Unapologetic as Questions Fly About Storm":

ATLANTA — Anyone who has listened to Kasim Reed, the former entertainment lawyer who became Atlanta’s mayor in 2010, knows the man who calls himself a street fighter likes to be forceful when he makes a point.

But for the past two days, as the national face of a city that was virtually incapacitated by two inches of snow and ice, Mr. Reed has come across more as peevish than powerful as he has done interview after interview, mostly rejecting criticism of the government’s role in Atlanta’s vast ice storm gridlock.

“I don’t want to get into the blame game,” he snapped at local reporters Wednesday as children were still stranded in schools and images of thousands stranded on frozen interstates rolled in a seemingly endless media loop.

Atlanta Officials Gamble on Storm and Lose, and Others Pay the PriceJAN. 29, 2014
The next day, he fired back at national journalists, suggesting that Matt Lauer of NBC’s “Today” be more accurate in the images of a crippled region he was presenting to viewers and sniping with Mika Brzezinski on “Morning Joe” on MSNBC.

How the capital of the Deep South fell victim to more than 24 hours of icy paralysis despite early predictions that a rare winter storm was about to fall is still being analyzed.

Gov. Nathan Deal, in an apologetic briefing for reporters on Thursday and in his own series of national interviews, was as soft and contrite as Mr. Reed was unyielding and combative. The governor said he did not learn the storm had been upgraded until about 9 a.m. Tuesday, six hours after the fact. He was beginning an internal investigation into why early warnings were not heeded sooner, he said.

But larger questions loom for Mr. Reed, an ambitious 44-year-old politician, and Mr. Deal, who is running for re-election in November. How much will a losing gamble on how to handle a paralyzing storm hurt? And what’s the best way to cope with the kind of disastrous storm response that has dramatically wounded the careers of numerous politicians over the years?

Left up to some voters, the gamble could hurt a lot. Drew Hansen, a University of Georgia criminal justice student who spent Tuesday night in a pharmacy after driving for more than seven hours, faulted both Mr. Deal and Mr. Reed.

“To be honest with you, I don’t think they cared,” Mr. Hansen, 21, said. “Deal was warm. Reed was warm. They didn’t care. For them it was like, ‘Whatever, yeah, there’s people out there. We’re already in office. We don’t care.’ ”
More at the top link.

Syria Stalls on Chemical Weapons Handover

At WaPo, "Assad regime is dragging its feet on removing chemical weapons, U.S. says":

The Obama administration said Thursday that only 4 percent of Syria’s most dangerous chemical weapons had been removed from the country, and it accused President Bashar al-Assad of dragging his feet on complying with the international agreement to eliminate the arsenal.

Officials responsible for overseeing the weapons’ destruction met in The Hague to review what diplomats called major delays and obstruction by the Syrian government as the eradication project ramped up this month.

“The effort to remove chemical agents and key precursor chemicals from Syria has seriously languished and stalled,” Robert P. Mikulak, the U.S. representative to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, told the body.

Mikulak rejected Syria’s explanation that the delay is the result of security concerns in the areas through which chemical stores would be transported. Syria has demanded additional equipment to protect the shipments from rebel attacks.

“These demands are without merit and display a ‘bargaining mentality’ rather than a security mentality,” Mikulak said.

The White House said Assad must speed up chemical weapons shipments from inside the country to the port city of Latakia as agreed under a landmark deal to secure and destroy one of the world’s largest stores of lethal chemical agents.

“It is the Assad regime’s responsibility to transport those chemicals to facilitate removal. We expect them to meet their obligation to do so,” White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters traveling aboard Air Force One.

The slow Syrian compliance in January came as the separate United Nations effort to convene peace talks between the Assad government and political opponents also hit snags. The tandem efforts are the pillars of U.S. policy toward Syria nearly three years into a civil war that has killed more than 100,000 people and displaced millions.

The Assad government and opposition figures sat down with a U.N. mediator this week but have made no real progress. Even a deal that was largely prearranged, to get more food and other aid to besieged areas of Syria, has not emerged from the brief talks. That agreement was supposed to build confidence between negotiators who might then be able to begin to form a power-sharing government.
Keep reading.