Category Archives: Blogosphere

The Zimmerman Lynching

Poor George Zimmerman’s ride through the biased media and now the legal system looks more and more like the Duke LaCrosse case. Which was a previous example of media and prosecutorial misconduct.

It’s poop like this, where the legal fraternity puts an innocent man through the wringer for their own political aggrandizement that makes people loath our so-called “justice” system. They already despise the media. We can only hope that Zimmerman’s prosecutor winds up like the one who beat-up on the Duke LaCrosse team: disbarred, doing jail time, and bankrupt!

Detroit: the canary in the EPA-closed coal mine

People used to say that as California went, so would go the nation. We can hope that’s no longer true, now that the Californicators are almost broke. Detroit, meanwhile, is well beyond almost.

“The city fathers [and mothers] of Detroit inherited one of the richest and most productive cities in the world, and they ruined it in a generation. The gentlemen in Washington have been entrusted with the richest and most productive nation in the history of the world, and the trendline does not look good.”

Want your town to become Detroit? Vote Democrat. You’ll get your wish.

Indeed, there is justice in the world. The Northeast and the Midwest, which helped elect Obozo, are about to suffer the most from his anti-coal policies.

“…the states in the Eastern region are headed for a significant spike in electricity prices thanks to Obama’s disastrous regulations, foremost among them Utility MACT.  The Midwest, even more heavily reliant on coal-fired power plants, will be hit even harder.”

Enjoy the hit to your household budgets, suckers. Maybe you can get an exemption if you donate to his re-election campaign. Why not? He does that for his pals, you know.

Why I don’t like Obamacare

Not just because of the 22 tax increases (12 of them hitting the middle class)  it will bring us starting next year. Or the consequently lower chances of reducing unemployment and a return to pre-2008 prosperity anytime soon.

But because, fundamentally, Obamacare is a Leftist fraud that will not save money nor increase fairness but only raise costs and reduce choices, which will screw the poor and most of the rest of us as well.

“Pretty much wherever government has asserted the old Progressive/New Deal/Great Society need for total control of some segment of the society or economy, the ground has been sown with salt.” —James DeLong in Ending Big SIS (the Special Interest State).

More here from DeLong in a good interview on Reason TV.

It was obvious this power-grab of one-third of the economy was only going to prolong hard economic times even before the toady chief justice joined the lockstep liberals in declaring Obamacare A-OK with the constitution.

Meat eaters

If we had to butcher our own meals, I submit there would be a lot more vegetarians

This amusing comment at Althouse the other day reminds me how far removed most of us are from what our recent ancestors took for granted, i.e. butchering of animals on the farm for the dining table.

They were not vegetarians. Vegetarians were then awfully sparse on the ground. It is a modern phenom, aided by the fact that most of us are such wusses from having no contact with meat except under plastic film. In our timidity, we imagine being horrified at the bloody process of butchering.

We might have been. They weren’t. It was a part of their living, as it no longer is ours.

Real unemployment rate: 22 percent

The Obumbles court media is parroting unchallenged the Democrat federal bureaucracy’s claim that unemployment in June stayed at 8.2 percent.

High but still respectable enough to get Obozo-the-clown re-elected on the multicultural ticket.

Except that Spengler has the shocking truth: Government, thy besmirched name is mendacity.

Happy Dependence Day, sheeple

Independence Day? Ha! Used to be,  but it sure ain’t any more. It’s not even close to the way it was when it all started back in 1776 when Americans had the highest incomes and the lowest taxes in the civilized world.

These days it’s high unemployment, higher taxes on the way and just one damn restriction after another: no smoking in airports or on airplanes (and, soon, not even in public parks), no plastic bags in groceries, no Big Gulps or “excessive” salt in New York City, and in many other cities (including Austin) no fireworks.

On the Fourth of July.

Too dangerous. Too individual. Same thing.

Now that Obamacare has been ruled constitutional by the swing vote of a supposedly-conservative judge, all of us good sheeple in the collective will soon be standing in line for federally-approved medical care. Or denied it if we’re too old. (Well, we can still travel to Mexico for a choice.)

Not to mention a 75 percent increase in food stamp applications under Obama and an even more alarming popularity of the full-time federal dole. Easier than working. Just be sure to vote the bureaucrat’s way: Democrat.

You never know. They might check. They have spies in the sky now.

As Instapundit says: “They’re turning us all into beggars, cause they’re easier to please.”

And, whatever you do, don’t forget the Badge Gang. They’re unionized and you know which party loves the unions. The Badge Gang sure does.

Independence Day? Heh. Have another helping of government cheese.

Things We’ll Miss About Israel

As Mrs. Charm, Mr. Boy and I return to Texas today from our 10-day visit to Israel, here are some of the things (a few cribbed from this insider’s list) we’ll miss, in addition to my longtime blog-friend and host Snoopy-the-Goon and his family:

Fresh vegetables for breakfast.

An entire country slowly shutting down and settling into Shabbat around 4 pm, every Friday.

Seeing young children on urban streets after dark, not always accompanied by an adult but unafraid.

The generally friendly people who seldom failed to nod and say “Shalom.”

The supply of beautiful women, with generous decolletage, which never seemed to run out.

Chez Stephanie B&B ski resort (photo above) on the slopes of Mount Hermon where we stayed one night. Wonderfully cool temperatures after much lowland heat and humidity.

The brave young soldiers of the IDF, men and women, black and white, their automatic rifles slung over their shoulders at the mall and on the street. Even hitch-hiking, which they are no longer supposed to do.

Pretty sunsets and puffy clouds which easily rival the Texas ones.

The smell of eucalyptus at Bet She’an in the lower Galilee.

The steep, ancient rock path at Gamla which Mr. Boy’s encouragement (“just a little way more, dad”) finally got me up to the top without a heart attack.

The informal (“individual,” Snoopy says) way most Israelis dress most of the time.

Camel Crossing signs in the mountainous Negev Desert.

The thousands of prayer notes seeking help from God rolled up tightly and stuffed into crevices in the Kotel.

Ice cream on a stick for five shekels (about a dollar).

The funny way some of the lower-domination coins are larger than the higher-denomination ones.

The way drivers sat patiently, without honking, in an almost two-hour traffic jam in Jerusalem caused by forest fires whose smoke blanketed the main highway, but honked repeatedly in the hour-long jam caused by Russian PM Putin’s visit to the city.

Riding the Swiss cable car at Masada.

The hugely-generous buffet supper and breakfast at the Lot Hotel on the Dead Sea, and the colorful flowers in the courtyard at Gil’s Guest Rooms where we actually spent the night—even if the Wi-Fi had a poor signal and kept cutting out.

The round-abouts which make a lot more sense and are easier to use than the four-way stops in the U.S., where no one can remember who is supposed to go first.

Those curious buttons on the tank tops of Israeli toilets: I finally figured out the difference between the two of them shortly before we left.

The juicy cucumbers you can eat like popsicles, without cutting them, one bite at a time.

Diced cucumbers and tomatoes of the ubiquitous Israeli salad.

Red-clay tile roofs on many residences and more all the time.

Roof-top water heaters which make a lot of sense in a country with so much sun. And would in Texas, too.

Sparklers on restaurant birthday cakes.