Once again we are seeing mass hysteria in the ranks of the Liberals over the selection of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court by President Trump. The dismay they are experiencing may be even greater than when President Trump won the election over HIllary Clinton, which they have never accepted as reality. Senate Minority … Continue reading TDS: The Saga Continues
New Poster Child of Democratic Socialists
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, 28, is working overtime to project the working-class girl from the Bronx who "understands" blue-collar Americans and minority issues. Ocasio-Cortez won the Democratic primary in New York's 14th district June 26. Trouble is, she's far from the "middle-class' working family the liberal media wants us to believe. Not even close. Breitbart's Josh Caplan … Continue reading New Poster Child of Democratic Socialists
The End of Civility
The liberal barbarism has started to come out. Brittany M. Hughes' report on MRCTV about violence acts toward government employees should be a wake-up call. Most troubling is this part: "When protesters in Portland camped out in front of an ICE agency building last week and heckled employees on their way to work, Portland … Continue reading The End of Civility
Point of Reference
I use a wireless mouse. Today I sat down at my computer, turned it on, and grabbed the mouse. When I moved the mouse left, the pointer moved right! I moved the mouse right, and the pointer moved left! What??? (I hadn't had my coffee yet.) Somehow moving stuff around while dusting, I had managed … Continue reading Point of Reference
Social Media Blues
I use to jokingly say “Facebook is Evil”, but I'm really beginning to believe it. After it has been brought out that Facebook, Google, and other “famous” companies of social bent have been censoring conservative views and web sites, it seems that perhaps my initial assessment is correct. And no, I do NOT use Facebook, … Continue reading Social Media Blues
Idle Hands
“Among the forces that have shaped human behavior boredom is one of the most insistent and universal.” That was the conclusion sociologist Robert Nisbet came to in his assessment of human history. “Although scarcely as measurable a factor in history as war, disease, economic depression, famine, and revolution,” he said, “it is far from invisible … Continue reading Idle Hands
The Plight of America
Bill Federer writes: "“Hegelian dialectics” is the method of concentrating power by first creating a crisis. Described as a triangle: one corner is the thesis, the opposite corner is the antithesis, and the top corner is the synthesis. In other words, create a problem that is very bad and people will readily surrender their … Continue reading The Plight of America
Constable On Patrol
He was only 23 years old. He didn't get a chance to date, fall in love, get married, go on vacation with his wife and kids, become a grandfather—all those things that “normal” people do. But for two and a half years he did do what he loved to do every day. He was a … Continue reading Constable On Patrol
How Much Do We Take?
First, the United States Congress is full of self-righteous, self-aggrandizing, self-centered, egotistical, power-mongering, whore-mongering, greedy, scumbags who call themselves politicians! They lie to the very people who voted them into office (maybe they were voted in, maybe not) and take every effort to keep them from knowing the truth about what's going on in Washington. … Continue reading How Much Do We Take?
Privileged Guilt
DePauw U. has offered students a "guide" on how to "navigate issues surrounding racism, homophobia, xenophobia, classism, and other systems of oppression.” It has articles that examines "white fragility", "privilege guilt", LBGT rights, and on and on. Needless to say, the whole thing is left-leaning. One article on white fragility argues that “white fragility” is … Continue reading Privileged Guilt