Category Archives: Blogosphere

Perry for President

I’ve always liked Rick Perry. I like the idea of the governor being an Aggie, a farmer and a former C-130 pilot. And I like the idea of Anita being the First Lady of Texas. What a babe.

As for Rick’s chances of becoming president, well, he’s already being outed for what looks like a potential kickback scandal, whether it actually is or not. His contributor cronies are getting millions in state tax money which, whatever the legality and good intentions of it, smells rotten.

Meanwhile, I still think no white man is going to beat Obamalot, pathetic as he is, in these times of cultural decline. The first black president, and all that. It will take a woman or a minority to do it. So far, there is no strong GOP minority candidate. Michele Bachmann is the only viable woman. I’m still hoping Sarah decides to run.

Via Instapundit.

Obamalot makes the rich richer

Counter-intuitive, right? Socialist health care and new entitlements and all that.

Ah, but you’re forgetting the price of gold: Since 2008 when Obamalot took over the White House, the price of gold has more than doubled from a mere $883 an ounce to $1703.

And who owns gold? Heh. I’ll give you a hint. It ain’t the poor.

Via Plancks Constant.

Meanwhile, there’s even an upside to the market crash. Bargains galore!

The Apple monopoly, or antitrust 101

Used to be that Microsoft was the bugbear of all right-thinking Web users and little Apple the oh, so righteous darling. Well, when it comes to ebooks, Apple is no longer little and certainly not righteous.

Comes a lawsuit that’s been long overdue, arguing that Apple is colluding with traditional publishers (HarperCollins, Hachette, Macmillan, Penguin, and Simon & Schuster) to keep ebook prices artificially high. It’s been quite noticeable for a long time now at Amazon, when a paperback sells for $8 or $9  and an ebook for $16. Time to take a big righteous bite out of the wormy Apple.

Via Kindle Review.

The badge gang

Years ago, I was summarily excluded from corporate-sponsored encounters with the public after I responded to a question from one in a group of schoolchildren about who/what in society we should all be most concerned about with two words: “The police.”

Because, I added for the shocked young people, who were no doubt raised to believe that police officers were their friends, that we know the police don’t always tell the truth but judges and juries nevertheless usually take their word as Gospel.

Well, things are more complicated nowadays, thanks to some recent police killings murders (at least one a year here in Austin, for instance), the ubiquity of SWAT teams in full military regalia including automatic rifles  sent out to confront ordinary people, rather than hardened criminals, and incredible disclosures such as this Houston PD statement about an officer’s running down a pedestrian that Houston police are not required to use lights or sirens when speeding. (One more reason to stay out of Houston.)

Vox Day, the blogger-author of the timely The Return of the Great Depression, who calls police “the badge gang,” recently summed it up this way:

“If the police do not wish to be condemned and held in contempt by the American public, they had better reject militarization, respect the Constitution, and deal justly with the criminals among them. If they cannot or will not do those three things, they will discover that without the tacit cooperation of the American public, they possess far less power and authority than they appear to presently believe.”

I think that’s exactly right, and they can start by  staying away from people who photograph them at work with cell-phone cameras instead of getting all huffy about it and demanding they stop or they’ll be arrested. Or do they think that the First Amendment only applies to them and their cronies?

Israel’s “silent majority” speaks up

“This post is mainly for my friends abroad, wherever they are, who may have trouble projecting their beliefs and experiences onto our small but peculiar country….

“It started in a small way, with the cottage cheese boycott. Was it the surprising success of the Facebook-led “uprising” or other reasons, but the unrest spread and continues to spread, expanding into new domains and involving more and more citizens, hitherto inert and apathetic.”

My Israeli pal Snoopy the Goon offers a tentative explanation of the new phenom of Israel’s “silent majority” which has recently hit the streets of Tel Aviv and elsewhere to protest high prices, low influence and, well, my advice is to go here and read it for yourself.

Especially if  you think Israel is only about their decades-old trouble with the intolerant Muslims and the recent dispute with Obamalot.

The 14-century crux of the Arab-Israeli conflict

Middle East wisdom from Yoram Ettinger, Israel’s onetime consul general in Houston:

“…..the crux of the Arab-Israeli conflict does not depend on Israel or on the Americans. It is a derivative of the Middle East as it has been for 14 centuries. One shouldn’t ignore the fact that for 1,400 years, since the appearance of Islam, there has not been intra-Arab/Moslem peace, intra-Arab/Moslem compliance with intra- Arab/Moslem agreements, intra-Arab/Moslem ratification of all borders and not a single Arab/Moslem democracy.

“Terror has been an integral key element of intra-Arab/Moslem policy. In defiance of such an entrenched reality, some of us wish that the Arabs would bestow upon the Jewish State that which they have yet to accord to one another. I wish that it would be a logical expectation, but it is not.”

Via Seraphic Secret and Israel Matzav

It’s the elderly, stupid? Actually, it’s the pols and their media enablers

“We all know that the elderly are by far the wealthiest group of Americans and yet their demands on current and future generations are insatiable…”

The manufactured debt argument between our thieving political elites, who waste our tax money on their pork-barrel spending, has lately turned into repeated attacks on seniors who dare to take Social Security checks, use Medicare, and, worst of all, live past the age of seventy.

Here’s the latest one, boldly claiming that senior “private pleasures” are the cause of the debt problem. Really? We’ve been paying Social Security payroll taxes all of our adult lives (me since my first job in 1960 at age sixteen) so the political elite could steal the money for their cronies and now that they’ve spent it all we deserve nothing?

I plan to vote ALL the incumbents on my ballot OUT next chance I get and I hope other seniors do the same. Especially our adolescent moron of a president.

(As Tennessee law professor Glenn Reynolds, the Instapundit, says: “…we have the worst political class we’ve ever had, with the possible exception of the 1850s.”)