Category Archives: Scribbles

It only hurts when I laugh

Basically, this is not very funny. It’s a good reminder of what I’m not missing. Especially the unpaid overtime, which makes journalism more of a self-inflicted disease than an occupation. Inevitably, I suppose, there’s the pollyanna side. There’s just a lot less of it.

Temple Beth El

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This is one of the oldest synagogues in Mississippi, dedicated in 1905 in my father’s hometown of Lexington, in the hills on the edge of the Delta. There were never more than eighty in the congregation, and the rabbis always drove in from Vicksburg or elsewhere. But, like the ark, symbolized by the handles (or horns) up there on the sanctuary’s roofline, the believers have remained steadfast. There’s talk now–as the Jewish population has dwindled–of moving the building to Ole Miss, but I wonder if that wouldn’t be a mistake. Could be there’s still some draw left in the place, and the population will rise again.

Kill your kids

Refuse to complete their vaccinations, because of your personal beliefs. Enjoy their funerals, you moron.

Via Instapundit 

The past or the future?

This is the dichotomy a Democrat friend of mine says will be the guiding question of this year’s presidential election. By which, I’m pretty sure, he meant the "old" John McCain versus the "young" Barack Hussein Obama. Or maybe he meant the boring white guy versus the up-and-coming mixed-race guy. I hope he didn’t mean Barry’s race-baiting preacher is who we have to look forward to leading the White House prayer breakfasts. And it certainly can’t be their politics that he has in mind. Barry, after all, whatever he says in his stump speech, is a tax-raising 1960s Great Society liberal with one of the most liberal voting records in the U.S. Senate–a certified rubber stamp for the Democrat party. You can’t get much older than that. Unless you want to go all the way back to the New Deal. You know, the New Deal, same as the Old Deal.

Barry’s dilemma

I see it now, having finished Steele’s A Bound Man. Barry could not disown Rev. God damn America without losing his black constituency, much of which thrives on confronting whites. But if he didn’t, he risked losing his white constituency, which wanted his non-confrontational persona. He made his choice, to stick with Wright, and now sees his white constituency diminishing. Not, perhaps, in his battle with Hilarity, with whom Rasmussen showed him six points ahead on Saturday–though the proof awaits the Pennsylvania primary. But in the five points Rasmussen had him Saturday behind John McCain.

Talking with a Democrat who attended Saturday’s state Democrat convention in Austin, one image stood out. That of the eight thousand plus attendees, all committed to Barry, doing the wave, like pilgrims at a new Woodstock. My friend was thrilled. I didn’t say anything. I kept thinking how little it means in Texas, which McCain can count on. As I think it will not mean much in the rest of the country, especially now that this previously non-confrontational South Chicago radical has crippled his own easy-going aura by clinging to a race-baiting preacher.

Finally, black dissent

Philadelphia’s black mayor, Michael Nutter, steps out of ranks and criticizes Rev. God damn America.

A Bound Man

My copy of Shelby Steele’s book on Barry came last night via UPS while we were watching the Longhorns drub Stanford, 82 to 62. I haven’t finished it yet (it’s short), but I see that Barry already is practicing what Steele says will be his downfall (I cheated and read the last few pages): he is not a man of policy convictions honed by experience (like McCain and even Hilarity) but an empty suit trying to be everyone’s Magic Negro. Steele maintains that it will not work. I think we know, on the other hand, from Barry’s autobiography and twenty years with Rev. God damn America that deep down he wants to be a big-government, high-taxing Leftist, and if he wants to have any chance at all he’d for damn sure better keep that as quiet as possible. Newermind his race, America has never elected one of those president, either.