01.30.10
Alito was sucker-punched
. . . and Neo-neocon says that’s the qualitative difference between TCM’s highly public dissing of the Supreme Court during the SOTU and Justice Alito’s quiet, spontaneous response.
Ruminations on music, culture, America and the world stage
. . . and Neo-neocon says that’s the qualitative difference between TCM’s highly public dissing of the Supreme Court during the SOTU and Justice Alito’s quiet, spontaneous response.
IPCC chief Pachauri knew that the data on melting Himalayan glaciers was false prior to Copenhagen.
This guy’s got about as much integrity as Silky Pony.
Then again, that’s also about the integrity levelof TCM, who tried peddling that settled-science dog vomit in the SOTU the other night.
Ronald Radosh looks at the poisonous work of “historian” Howard Zinn, who passed away this week.
I’d like to make the case for Barney Frank. Check out his remarks about meeting with banking-industry leaders in Davos, Switzerland.
. . . actual annualized GDP growth for the fourth quarter of 09 was only 2.2%. Still, watch for TCM to make much hay of this as he pushes for more utopian fantasies and punishment of real-world normal-people economic activity.
Telling indeed is San Fran Nan’s response to a reporter’s solicitation for a response to Ford being the only US car company to turn a profit this year. She sniffed about how commendable it was that Ford lived up to its “responsibility,” whatever that means in her warped totalitarian mind.
Consider the new grant money the broke state of Michigan is going to dole out for more electric-car research.
Then read Payne’s last couple of paragraphs, which have to do with the actual consuming public eschewing the utopian hooey and flocking to the section of the show where the petroleum-powered normal-people cars were.
The Dow slides 115 points on new jobs and durable goods data.
Andy Wickersham at Pajamas Media looks at what ADA and ACU ratings tell us about how far to the left the Dem party has veered in the last three and a half decades.
No wonder we call them Freedom-Haters.
Some takes that are basically mine as well:
WSJ Money line: “Mr. Obama believes he can conjure jobs and a durable expansion from the private sector while waging political war on its animal spirits. It can’t be done.
This reflects a larger problem, which is his belief that economic growth springs mainly from the genius of government.”
Jonah Goldberg in the New York Post. Goldberg makes the point that anyone who doesn’t want to see more US jobs go oversees ought to be against a carbon tax.
. . . but as I watch TCM wrap up his foul, terrifyingly evil designs based on his comprehension of what he has the power to do, I understand more clearly than ever that he is not just some president or fellow American citizen or fellow human being, but an evil monster that must be fought with ultimate ferocity until he is rendered completely incapacitated. Defeating what he and his kind is about has always been a key element of what this blog is about, but that purpose is thunderously renewed after hearing this poisonous sludge put forth tonight.
This editorial doesn’t sound too different from something one might read in National Review or The Weekly Standard.
Kasich leads Strickland 51 to 45 in an Ohio governor’s-race poll.
Stocks wipe out their advances over continuing jitters over TCM’s hatred of banks. It’s fine with him. It’s all part of his plan for American decline.
Rep. Pence sees his immediate work as being done in the House.
I know that’s not the body we historically get our executive-branch candidates from, but does anybody else feel like a Pence-Bachmann ticket in 2012 would have some electricity to it?