Posts Tagged ‘America’

Hooman Rights: Baloney Invented and Pushed by International Jews and Marxists

Because you’re hooman, see, you automatically have special rights that other animals don’t have, see? (Ask a Jewish expert – like René Cassin). But these hooman rights will vary greatly, depending on various factors, e.g., whether you are White, non-White, female, poor, a leftist, a homosexual, etc. If you’re a conservative, White male, you have no hooman rights:

[Article].

Hooman Rights: Baloney Invented and Pushed by International Jews and Marxists

Because you’re hooman, see, you automatically have special rights that other animals don’t have, see? (Ask a Jewish expert – like René Cassin). But these hooman rights will vary greatly, depending on various factors, e.g., whether you are White, non-White, female, poor, a leftist, a homosexual, etc. If you’re a conservative, White male, you have no hooman rights:

[Article].

OPINION: Christian Zionists – possible chief protagonist in Afghanistan/Iraq War

The following article is the slightly edited version of the speech Mr. Sunic gave on August 7, 2010 at the festival-conference of the NPD (National Democratic Party), near the town of Goerlitz, Germany. Sunic’s live speech in German can be accessed on the VOR radio broadcast. The original text in German (“Wem nutzt der Krieg [...]

A Lot of Nothing

Overheard: a group of women talking. Women never seem to talk about anything important. It’s just endless chatter about carpets, drapes, dieting, cats, hair-care and who’s Debby-at-the-beauty-salon dating? It’s a bunch of nothing. (Morning TV is the same way, which is probably why they watch it). Remember that these people now control half of our country.

U.S. Protects Israel at UN Meeting

As usual. That’s why they call America “USrael.” (Notice the tattered relations between former pals Israel and Turkey. Funny!):

[Article].

TWILIGHT OF A GREAT NATION

Written three years ago in 2007, Rayburn’s opinions were, ironically, a foreshadowing of things to come.   WW~ W.P. RAYBURN, JD “Don’t tell me I am wrong, you must first endeavor to prove it! Don’t simply disagree with me, show me why I am wrong, and for God’s sake move it. For if you cannot [...]

Kansas State Historical Society next week will remember Holocaust

Kansas State Historical Society next week will remember Holocaust / LJWorld.com

Quote:

Topeka — A Holocaust commemoration service takes place next week at the Kansas State Historical Society museum in Topeka.

Monday’s event will include a talk by Holocaust survivor Eva Unterman, of Tulsa, Okla., who was 12 years old when World War II ended. She was a young child when her family was moved to Poland’s Lodz Ghetto and later to the Nazis’ Auschwitz concentration camp.

Republican state Rep. Lana Gordon of Topeka is one of the organizers of Monday’s commemoration. Gordon says the presentation will give a firsthand account of the Holocaust and the effect on world history of Nazi Germany’s killing of millions of Jews.

The commemoration service is open to the public.


I thought last Sunday the 11th was rememberance day?
See how they continually have rememberances?
Sure would like to leave a comment on this that wouldn’t get removed, no chance of that!

McCain: Time to ‘Pull the Trigger’ on Iran

I wish this old bastard would have died in Viet Nam. He was a traitor to his country then and he’s a traitor to his country NOW!

Message to the Black Man!!!!

Message to the Black Man!!!!

America, the fragile empire

latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ferguson28-2010feb28,0,2697391.story

latimes.com
Opinion
America, the fragile empire
Here today, gone tomorrow — could the United States fall that fast?
By Niall Ferguson

February 28, 2010

For centuries, historians, political theorists, anthropologists and the public have tended to think about the political process in seasonal, cyclical terms. From Polybius to Paul Kennedy, from ancient Rome to imperial Britain, we discern a rhythm to history. Great powers, like great men, are born, rise, reign and then gradually wane. No matter whether civilizations decline culturally, economically or ecologically, their downfalls are protracted.

In the same way, the challenges that face the United States are often represented as slow-burning. It is the steady march of demographics — which is driving up the ratio of retirees to workers — not bad policy that condemns the public finances of the United States to sink deeper into the red. It is the inexorable growth of China‘s economy, not American stagnation, that will make the gross domestic product of the People’s Republic larger than that of the United States by 2027.

As for climate change, the day of reckoning could be as much as a century away. These threats seem very remote compared with the time frame for the deployment of U.S. soldiers to Afghanistan, in which the unit of account is months, not years, much less decades.

But what if history is not cyclical and slow-moving but arrhythmic — at times almost stationary but also capable of accelerating suddenly, like a sports car? What if collapse does not arrive over a number of centuries but comes suddenly, like a thief in the night?

Great powers are complex systems, made up of a very large number of interacting components that are asymmetrically organized, which means their construction more resembles a termite hill than an Egyptian pyramid. They operate somewhere between order and disorder. Such systems can appear to operate quite stably for some time; they seem to be in equilibrium but are, in fact, constantly adapting. But there comes a moment when complex systems "go critical." A very small trigger can set off a "phase transition" from a benign equilibrium to a crisis — a single grain of sand causes a whole pile to collapse.

Not long after such crises happen, historians arrive on the scene. They are the scholars who specialize in the study of "fat tail" events — the low-frequency, high-impact historical moments, the ones that are by definition outside the norm and that therefore inhabit the "tails" of probability distributions — such as wars, revolutions, financial crashes and imperial collapses. But historians often misunderstand complexity in decoding these events. They are trained to explain calamity in terms of long-term causes, often dating back decades. This is what Nassim Taleb rightly condemned in "The Black Swan" as "the narrative fallacy."

In reality, most of the fat-tail phenomena that historians study are not the climaxes of prolonged and deterministic story lines; instead, they represent perturbations, and sometimes the complete breakdowns, of complex systems.

To understand complexity, it is helpful to examine how natural scientists use the concept. Think of the spontaneous organization of termites, which allows them to construct complex hills and nests, or the fractal geometry of water molecules as they form intricate snowflakes. Human intelligence itself is a complex system, a product of the interaction of billions of neurons in the central nervous system.

All these complex systems share certain characteristics. A small input to such a system can produce huge, often unanticipated changes — what scientists call "the amplifier effect." Causal relationships are often nonlinear, which means that traditional methods of generalizing through observation are of little use. Thus, when things go wrong in a complex system, the scale of disruption is nearly impossible to anticipate.

There is no such thing as a typical or average forest fire, for example. To use the jargon of modern physics, a forest before a fire is in a state of "self-organized criticality": It is teetering on the verge of a breakdown, but the size of the breakdown is unknown. Will there be a small fire or a huge one? It is nearly impossible to predict. The key point is that in such systems, a relatively minor shock can cause a disproportionate disruption.

Any large-scale political unit is a complex system. Most great empires have a nominal central authority — either a hereditary emperor or an elected president — but in practice the power of any individual ruler is a function of the network of economic, social and political relations over which he or she presides. As such, empires exhibit many of the characteristics of other complex adaptive systems — including the tendency to move from stability to instability quite suddenly.

The most recent and familiar example of precipitous decline is the collapse of the Soviet Union. With the benefit of hindsight, historians have traced all kinds of rot within the Soviet system back to the Brezhnev era and beyond. Perhaps, as the historian and political scientist Stephen Kotkin has argued, it was only the high oil prices of the 1970s that "averted Armageddon." But this did not seem to be the case at the time. The Soviet nuclear arsenal was larger than the U.S. stockpile. And governments in what was then called the Third World, from Vietnam to Nicaragua, had been tilting in the Soviets’ favor for most of the previous 20 years.

Yet, less than five years after Mikhail Gorbachev took power, the Soviet imperium in central and Eastern Europe had fallen apart, followed by the Soviet Union itself in 1991. If ever an empire fell off a cliff, rather than gently declining, it was the one founded by Lenin.

If empires are complex systems that sooner or later succumb to sudden and catastrophic malfunctions, what are the implications for the United States today? First, debating the stages of decline may be a waste of time — it is a precipitous and unexpected fall that should most concern policymakers and citizens. Second, most imperial falls are associated with fiscal crises. Alarm bells should therefore be ringing very loudly indeed as the United States contemplates a deficit for 2010 of more than $1.5 trillion — about 11% of GDP, the biggest since World War II.

These numbers are bad, but in the realm of political entities, the role of perception is just as crucial. In imperial crises, it is not the material underpinnings of power that really matter but expectations about future power. The fiscal numbers cited above cannot erode U.S. strength on their own, but they can work to weaken a long-assumed faith in the United States’ ability to weather any crisis.

One day, a seemingly random piece of bad news — perhaps a negative report by a rating agency — will make the headlines during an otherwise quiet news cycle. Suddenly, it will be not just a few policy wonks who worry about the sustainability of U.S. fiscal policy but the public at large, not to mention investors abroad. It is this shift that is crucial: A complex adaptive system is in big trouble when its component parts lose faith in its viability.

Over the last three years, the complex system of the global economy flipped from boom to bust — all because a bunch of Americans started to default on their subprime mortgages, thereby blowing huge holes in the business models of thousands of highly leveraged financial institutions. The next phase of the current crisis may begin when the public begins to reassess the credibility of the radical monetary and fiscal steps that were taken in response.

Neither interest rates at zero nor fiscal stimulus can achieve a sustainable recovery if people in the United States and abroad collectively decide, overnight, that such measures will ultimately lead to much higher inflation rates or outright default. Bond yields can shoot up if expectations change about future government solvency, intensifying an already bad fiscal crisis by driving up the cost of interest payments on new debt. Just ask Greece.

Ask Russia too. Fighting a losing battle in the mountains of the Hindu Kush has long been a harbinger of imperial fall. What happened 20 years ago is a reminder that empires do not in fact appear, rise, reign, decline and fall according to some recurrent and predictable life cycle. It is historians who retrospectively portray the process of imperial dissolution as slow-acting. Rather, empires behave like all complex adaptive systems. They function in apparent equilibrium for some unknowable period. And then, quite abruptly, they collapse.

Washington, you have been warned.

Niall Ferguson is a professor at Harvard University and Harvard Business School, and a fellow of Jesus College, Oxford. His latest book is "The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World." A longer version of this essay appears in the March/April issue of Foreign Affairs. foreign.affairs.com

Copyright

US police quash protesting students in Berkeley

Sat, 27 Feb 2010

Police in California have suppressed a demonstration in Berkeley University held to protest against rising study fees ahead of March 4 rallies for a similar purpose.

Police in riot gear clashed with the protesters who had reportedly stormed and occupied a building in the Berkeley campus, US media reported Friday.

At least two students have been arrested for ‘inciting violence’ and purported misdemeanor.

The Thursday night protest that went well into early Friday turned violent after police tried to subdue a group of students who gathered on the campus for upcoming protests across several states over increasing education costs in America.

Police say that around 100 protesting students damaged construction equipment and public property during the night-time unrest.

They say two of their officers have also been injured in the clashes.

The exact number of hurt students, however, remains unclear.

Local authorities have already summoned 45 students over allegations of occupying faculty buildings and ‘vandalism’ during November 2009 protests against study fee hikes.

Recently, students and activists have staged demonstrations against tuition hikes that have led to unprecedented debt burdens on students in public colleges.

They say preparations are being made to mark what they call the "National Day of Action for Public Education."

US police quash protesting students in Berkeley

U.S. Training Congo Troops Accused of Abuses

U.S. Marines have begun training Congolese troops accused of attacking civilians and committing extreme abuses.

LatAm nations to create new non-US bloc

Mexico’s President Felipe Calderon speaks during the opening ceremony of the Rio Group Summit.
Latin American and Caribbean nations have agreed to launch a new regional body that will exclude the United States and Canada.

The new bloc will bring together some 32 nations in order to resolve regional issues and present a common position on global challenges.

The decision was made during the periodical Rio Group Summit at the resort town of Cancun, Mexico.

The new group will be an alternative to the Organization of American States (OAS), the main forum for regional affairs in the past 50 years.

The OAS has been criticized for pursuing US interests and its members have repeatedly failed to get along when it comes to economical policies and trade.

The White House has regarded the group cautiously saying it does not have any problems with it as long as it does not replace the Washington-based OAS.

Discussions about the group, which yet has to be named, are to be continued at summits in Venezuela and Chile in 2011 and 2012.

FF/MMA

LatAm nations to create new non-US bloc

Fearing Obama Agenda, States Push to Loosen Gun Laws

By IAN URBINA — February 23, 2010

Tennessee has challenged federal regulation of some guns.

Virginia lawmakers passed a bill allowing people to carry concealed weapons, like this .45 Colt semiautomatic, in bars.

When President Obama took office, gun rights advocates sounded the alarm, warning that he intended to strip them of their arms and ammunition.

And yet the opposite is happening. Mr. Obama has been largely silent on the issue while states are engaged in a new and largely successful push for expanded gun rights, even passing measures that have been rejected in the past.

In Virginia, the General Assembly approved a bill last week that allows people to carry concealed weapons in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol, and the House of Delegates voted to repeal a 17-year-old ban on buying more than one handgun a month. The actions came less than three years after the shootings at Virginia Tech that claimed 33 lives and prompted a major national push for increased gun control. (continued…)
Fearing an Obama Agenda, States Push to Loosen Gun Laws – NYTimes.com

CEO/CFOs are resigning at an alarming rate.

Most notably are telecoms, banks and energy companies. People who would have insider knowledge if something huge were about to happen.

CEO/CFOs are Resigning Fast ? – Timeline 2012

‘Less than 3 in every 20 Americans have faith in govt.’

Mon, 22 Feb 2010

A recent poll suggests that only 14 percent of Americans have complete faith in the United States government and the way it functions.

Results of a CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll published Sunday further indicated that 85 percent of those surveyed believe that "the system of government is broken."

The polling center interviewed 1,023 adult Americans, including 954 registered voters, over phone between February 12 and February 15.

Compared with a similar survey in 2006, the percentage of Americans who think the government is broken has increased by eight points.

"That increase is highest among higher-income Americans and people who live in rural areas," said Keating Holland, CNN polling director.

The poll’s sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

‘Less than 3 in every 20 Americans have faith in govt.’

Brooklyn rabbi is charged with $4M hedge fund blackmail scheme

Oy, not again.

A Brooklyn rabbi, accused seven years ago of stealing government grants, was busted Thursday for blackmailing a Connecticut hedge fund to give $4 million to two schools he works with, prosecutors said.

Rabbi Milton Balkany, 63, was charged with extortion, blackmail and making false statements as part of an elaborate scheme to shake down the hedge fund, prosecutors charged.

They say Balkany told the hedge fund the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI were trying to get a jailbird he knew to give up information about illegal insider trades made by the financial firm.

There were no insider trades.

Balkany made up the story to trick fund managers into giving millions to the Bais Yaakov School in Borough Park, where he is the dean, and another school, Torah Vodaath, prosecutors said.
Balkany said prosecutors are telling tales.

"Seven or eight years ago I was accused of wrong-doing and the government had to back off then. This is much more ridiculous," Balkany said as he dodged photographers while leaving Manhattan Federal Court Thursday night.

"When you are in public service that’s the price you pay. An innocent man is constantly dragged through the mud," he said before speeding off in a black SUV after being released on $250,000 bond.

Balkany, known as the "Brooklyn Bundler" for his skill at campaign fund-raising – mostly Republican – said he was just trying to help a young man in prison.

"This is from helping an individual in jail. He got a very lengthy term and I was trying to reduce it. I was in touch with the U.S. Attorney’s office the whole time," he said.

Prosecutors say it was all a scheme.

Fully story here: Brooklyn rabbi is charged with $4M hedge fund blackmail scheme

FBI Closes controversial Anthrax Case

Sat, 20 Feb 2010

We all know this guy didn’t commit suicide!

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) closed the case of Army scientist Bruce Ivins, concluding that he was solely responsible for the five deaths that resulted.

The case on the investigation of the US Army medical researcher was formally closed on Friday, ending the long hunt for the suspected killer after years of false leads, no arrests and public criticism over falsely accusing prominent scientists in the case.

Though Ivins denied any involvement for the deaths and insisted on being innocent, he killed himself in 2008 once he learned that the prosecutors were prepared to charge him for the attacks.

In 2001, letters laced with anthrax were sent to law makers and news organizations. Postal facilities, US Capitol buildings and private offices were shut down for inspection and cleaning by workers in hazardous materials ”space suits” all over the nation.

US observers have expressed strong suspicions about FBI claims of Ivins’ suicide, arguing that the claim was a pretext to prevent the US Army scientist from exposing the involvement of the former Bush Administration in the anthrax mailings in an effort to raise false alarms about the dangers of the so-called "Islamist terrorism."

FBI documents allegedly portray that at the time, the troubled researcher’s life was breaking down and heading towards failure as he struggled with mental health issues.

Ivins died of an overdose of Tylenol, leaving the case open for the FBI, postal inspectors and federal prosecutors.

The federal investigation was not without its missteps and false turns. Officials spent the first years with suspicions that the anthrax mailings were the work of al- Qaeda.

"This has been a closed-minded, closed process from the beginning," said Ivins’ lawyer, Paul Kemp. "The evidence the FBI produced would not, I think, stand up in court."

———- Post added at 01:38 pm ———- Previous post was at 12:28 pm ———-

Anthrax case is closed by the FBI | detnews.com | The Detroit News

Case closed: FBI says scientist was anthrax killer – Yahoo! News

FBI formally closes anthrax case that hit Princeton, Hamilton – The Trentonian News: Serving Trenton and surrounding communities. (trentonian.com)

Dress American, think Muslim

This is hardly "breaking news." The inconvenient story was obviously withheld from the public in December so as not to risk riling the restless sheep, on top of news of the Ft. Hood jihadist massacre and all.

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Five Muslim Soldiers Questioned at Fort Jackson in South Carolina

CBN News has learned exclusively that five Muslim soldiers at Fort Jackson in South Carolina were questioned just before Christmas. It is unclear whether the men are still in custody. The five were part of the Arabic Translation program at the base.

Patrick Jones, the Deputy Public Affairs Officer for Fort Jackson, confirmed for CBN News Thursday afternoon that an investigation was ongoing.

Prior to this posting, CBN News learned that these details were also confirmed by a government official with knowledge of the investigation.

The men are suspected of trying to poison the food supply at Fort Jackson.

A source with intimate knowledge of the investigation, which is ongoing, told CBN News investigators suspect the "Fort Jackson Five" may have been in contact with the group of five Washington, D.C., area Muslims that traveled to Pakistan to wage jihad against U.S. troops in December. That group was arrested by Pakistani authorities, also just before Christmas.

Coming as it does on the heels of November’s Fort Hood jihadist massacre, this news could have major implications.

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