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White Men as Modern Scapegoats
Post Date: 2010-06-19 12:39:12 by Turtle
8 Comments
June 20, 2010 I look at the Gospels not so much as religion but as good practical wisdom about people, their motivations, and their behavior. There are at least four archetypes in the Gospels that applied not only then but also today. They are the State, the Mob, the Leaders, and the Scapegoat/Human Sacrifice. The leaders incite the mob into a frenzy, and both then call for the scapegoat/human to be sacrificed through the power of the state. The Gospels tell us that the leaders of Jesus' time saw him as a threat, one whom they erroneously thought would bring the Romans to destroy their nation. They incited and united the mob against him by claiming he was a danger. He was then ...

Learning from the Right
Post Date: 2010-06-18 11:24:33 by Turtle
0 Comments
I read with interest Greg Johnson’s recent article about Douglas Hyde’s Dedication and Leadership, a book where the author — who fed 20 years of his life to the meat-grinder of Communist activism — provided trenchant advise on how best to mobilize the idealism, and inspire the sacrifice, of those seeking to change the world. In bringing Hyde to readers’ attention, Johnson’s aim was to encourage activists on the Right to learn from the winners on the Left. The Right, he argued, has been fighting a losing battle since 1943, to the point where nowadays even so-called “conservatives” are defined by their political enemies. Understanding, therefore, how ...

The Lust for Money and War
Post Date: 2010-06-17 13:02:58 by Turtle
0 Comments
One of the temptations of Jesus (whose real name was Joshua, but the way) was when the Devil offered him political power over the world, and he refused it. Then there was Jesus’ comment about being unable to serve both God and money. St. Paul echoed this when he wrote that “The lust [not love] of money is the root of all evil.” The lust for money, and the lust for political power. The trouble those two things have wrought in the world! Most especially when they’re combined. Governments have killed more people in the world than everything else combined. That’s what political power does. And then we have the lust for money. And when the lust for money is combined ...

Filming the Police
Post Date: 2010-06-17 10:17:46 by Lysander_Spooner
0 Comments
Filming the Police In at least three U.S. states, it is illegal to film an active duty policeman: The legal justification for arresting the "shooter" rests on existing wiretapping or eavesdropping laws, with statutes against obstructing law enforcement sometimes cited. Illinois, Massachusetts, and Maryland are among the 12 states in which all parties must consent for a recording to be legal unless, as with TV news crews, it is obvious to all that recording is underway. Since the police do not consent, the camera-wielder can be arrested. Most all-party-consent states also include an exception for recording in public places where "no expectation of privacy exists" ...

The 2010 Silver Buying Guide
Post Date: 2010-06-16 23:08:21 by DeaconBenjamin
4 Comments
Silver has been sizzling and causing lots of buzz in the industry. Investors are excited. Part of the hubbub is due to its current run. Since its February 8 low, silver has roared ahead 22.4% (through June 21) and has doubled from its November 2008 low. This excitement has spilled over into greater investment demand – especially so for coins. The U.S. Mint sold more Silver Eagles in the first quarter of this year – just over nine million – than any prior quarter in its history. The Royal Canadian Mint produced 9.7 million silver maple leafs in 2009, also a record. Take a look at the jump in U.S. Mint coin sales since 2007. Silver bullion ETFs are growing, too, ...

Why Helen Thomas’s Fate Makes Sense
Post Date: 2010-06-16 15:56:17 by ghostdogtxn
0 Comments

How an Alabama fire chief risked jail to save town from Gulf oil spill
Post Date: 2010-06-16 15:36:24 by Horse
0 Comments
Jamie Hinton, the volunteer fire chief of tiny Magnolia Springs, Ala., has a plan to use a blockade of barges to stop the Gulf oil spill from entering the Magnolia River. For a time, he went ahead with the plan, even though it might have landed him in jail. Members of the Fish River Marlow Fire Department work to anchor oil containment booms at the mouth of Weeks Bay in Magnolia Springs, Ala., June 6. Officials plan move the small barge at right rear across the mouth of the bay in an attempt to block the Gulf oil spill. Dave Martin/AP

Wow, right there on the street.
Post Date: 2010-06-16 12:47:18 by wakeup
1 Comments
Poster Comment:Shall we caption this one? It looks like a movie poster: "Coming To A Theater Near You"

The Four Cardinal Virtues and Government
Post Date: 2010-06-16 10:58:08 by Turtle
2 Comments
The Four Cardinal Virtues are not what most people think they are. Justice and Courage sound like good things; Prudence and Temperance, don’t, not really, to many people. The idea that many people have of them, they sound like they take a lot of the fun out of life. But in reality they are good things. It’s just that most people don’t understand the correct definitions. Prudence is actually defined as “using reason to discover the laws that govern reality.” Basically, that’s it. It’s not just theoretical knowledge; it’s also practical knowledge--putting what you know into effect. Let’s use economics as an example. Someone who is prudent will ...

Richard Simkanin, Political Prisoner, Getting Out
Post Date: 2010-06-16 01:13:39 by christine
3 Comments
This Friday, June 18th, Richard Simkanin, after having been held as a political prisoner by the U.S. tyrants for over SIX YEARS, will be free (relatively speaking). I cannot even begin to express the injustice that Mr. Simkanin has had to endure, in so many different ways. What the god-complex megalomaniacs and their mercenaries-- especially one sadistic fascist swine called "Judge" John McBryde-- did to Mr. Simkanin is despicable. They hate him for his honesty and courage, and his determination to tell the truth and do the right thing, and they made sure to do whatever they could to destroy his business, ruin his finances, mess up his family and social life, assault his ...

Why Christian Zionists are Not Christian
Post Date: 2010-06-15 10:54:50 by Turtle
28 Comments
Poor Nietzsche. Half genius, half insane – and after his untreated syphilis advanced far enough, totally insane. The trigger for his breakdown was when he saw a horse being beaten. He threw his arms around it, sobbing. He never recovered, and ended his days in an insane asylum. For all of his attempts to portray himself as a bad boy, Nietzsche was in real life anything but. For one thing, he was far too sensitive for his own good, even though he tried to pretend he wasn’t sensitive at all. As hard as he tried to not to, he identified with victims, and that’s why the horse being beaten broke him. In one of his writings, “Dionysius vs. the Crucified,” Nietzsche ...

State Dept Wants Own ‘Combat Force’ for Iraq
Post Date: 2010-06-15 06:23:26 by Ada
10 Comments
Officials Aim to 'Duplicate' Military Force After Dec. 2011 Tenuous though it may be, the Obama Administration maintains that it still intends to complete the Iraq military pullout by the end of December 2011. Even that won’t be the end of combat operations, however. Now the US State Department is looking to get into the war fighting business in its own right, saying it needs its own combat force to meet the “extreme security challenges in Iraq.” Not only is the State Department looking for a combat force, they insist they need to “duplicate the capabilities of the US military,” seeking to acquire 24 Black Hawk helicopters, and a number of other combat ...

Lindsey Williams on Rense Now [Full Thread]
Post Date: 2010-06-14 23:12:48 by Original_Intent
82 Comments
Lindsey William is currently on Rense - says new info.

Who Stole our Culture?
Post Date: 2010-06-14 11:52:38 by Turtle
2 Comments
Editor's note: This column is an excerpt from Dr. Ted Baehr and Pat Boone's new book "The Culture-wise Family: Upholding Christian Values in a Mass Media World." In the book, entertainment expert Dr. Ted Baehr and legendary musician Pat Boone urge people to make wise choices for themselves and their families so they can protect their children from toxic messages in the culture. The following is Chapter 10, written by historian Williams S. Lind. Sometime during the last half-century, someone stole our culture. Just 50 years ago, in the 1950s, America was a great place. It was safe. It was decent. Children got good educations in the public schools. Even blue-collar fathers ...

The Voldemort View: What Must Not be Named
Post Date: 2010-06-14 11:05:12 by Turtle
2 Comments
Over the last decade, a bipartisan consensus has been emerging among politicians, the prestige press, and leading philanthropists: the racial gap in achievement is the fault of—schoolteachers! If only schoolteachers were more multiculturally sensitive, or if only they held students to more rigorous standards, or if only they could be fired in large numbers and replaced by young investment banker-types who work 19 hours per day and live on Red Bull and idealism, or if only … well, the cure-all proposals go on and on. As a certain anonymous teacher wrote in an important essay on Achievement Gap Politics on the National Association of Scholars blog on May 9th: “Educational ...

Human Accomplishment
Post Date: 2010-06-12 12:12:38 by Turtle
0 Comments
Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 BC to 1950 is a book by Charles Murray surveying outstanding contributions to the arts and sciences from ancient times to the mid-twentieth century. The book represents the first attempt to quantify the accomplishment of individuals and countries worldwide in the fields of arts and sciences by calculating the amount of space allocated to them in reference works, an area of research sometimes referred to as historiometry. Murray found that nearly all scientific progress, and all important scientific and artistic ideas, were made by white Europeans or their descendants (such as white Americans, Australians, ...

Out, Damned Spot! Out!
Post Date: 2010-06-10 12:34:47 by Turtle
11 Comments
“Truth comes by conflict.” ~ Hillaire Belloc “Without contraries, there is no progression.” ~ William Blake I used to write for a libertarian site (well, sort of libertarian) called LewRockwell.com. But no more. My archives have been erased, and on top of that, they have been erased from the Google cache, which can only happen if the owner of the site where the articles were posted requests it (I�ve already saved all of them, so not to worry). Now who could it be who did this, I wonder? By the way, over 200 articles were destroyed. 217, I think. All dropped down the libertarian version of Orwell’s Memory Hole. I’m not the only one who ...

Christianity -- a Modest Defense
Post Date: 2010-06-10 12:02:05 by Turtle
4 Comments
Christianity - A Modest Defense I can recall so clearly those Sundays in my youth growing up in Cincinnati, Ohio in the 1950s. I attended a large Presbyterian church. I was one of the few who asked questions in Sunday School. And most of my questions were about the book of Matthew. I remember one Sunday school teacher in particular. He was a lawyer, and a professor at the University of Cincinnati Law school. At the tender age of 12 I had just read Matthew 23, the famous condemnation by Christ of Scribes and Pharisees. So I asked this teacher, "what is a Pharisee?" "I dunno." He did not even care enough to look it up and give me an answer in the following week! Ironic ...

My once-in-a-generation cut? The armed forces. All of them
Post Date: 2010-06-10 06:18:16 by Ada
2 Comments
We are safer than at any time since the Norman conquest. Yet £45bn is spent defending Britain against fantasy enemies I say cut defence. I don't mean nibble at it or slice it. I mean cut it, all £45bn of it. George Osborne yesterday asked the nation "for once in a generation" to think the unthinkable, to offer not just percentage cuts but "whether government needs to provide certain public services at all". What do we really get from the army, the navy and the air force beyond soldiers dying in distant wars and a tingle when the band marches by? Is the tingle worth £45bn, more than the total spent on schools? Why does Osborne ...

Become a Human Lie Detector: How to Sniff Out a Liar
Post Date: 2010-06-09 10:48:09 by Turtle
0 Comments
Have you ever been burned by somebody because they told you an outright lie? It can happen in your personal or business life – you’re on cloud nine when your girlfriend says she loves you, only to find out later she’s been cheating on you for months; a client says their business is solvent, but they end up bankrupt, and you lose a ton of money on an account. Wouldn’t it be great to avoid these situations by being able to tell right then and there if someone is lying to you? Well, based on research by behavioral scientists and the work and experience of FBI agents and police officers, a system has been developed to help people become human lie detectors. Below we ...

How Propaganda Works
Post Date: 2010-06-08 12:19:00 by Turtle
15 Comments
How Propaganda Works by Bob Wallace "Once you base your whole life striving on a desperate lie, and try to implement that lie, you instrument your own undoing." - Ernest Becker, The Denial of Death. It's not hard to understand how propaganda works. You don't need a college degree, or to even to read any of those thick textbooks everybody hates. Everything relevant can be explained in one not-particularly-long article. And, I guarantee you, you must understand how propaganda targets you, to immunize yourself against the attempts. Propaganda works by appealing to our most base, animalistic instincts. It does not appeal to our better nature, although one of the purposes of it is to ...

VIDEO: Admiralty law, Common law and the Sovereign
Post Date: 2010-06-08 11:45:45 by wakeup
4 Comments
Poster Comment:"From the film Kymatica. Our society is run by lawyers, our politicians are lawyers, they write our laws. Our judges are lawyers, our presidents are lawyers. They are above us, do you suppose they want you to understand the law? These are the witch doctors of the current age, ruling over us with their lawyer speak that we could never understand. We do understand though that this requires sacrificing the individual for the "system". In order to understand how to resist what is being forced upon us I think it is imperative that we educate ourselves to the multi-faceted system that is the source of our oppression. So many things we sign, and by doing so waive our ...

So, what exactly is a Freedom Outlaw?
Post Date: 2010-06-08 06:44:44 by Ada
2 Comments
“Freedom Outlaw.” The term came up here a few days ago. It’ll arise again and again on this blog. If you’ve been hanging out in my vicinity for a few years, you probably know what I mean by it. If not, you might be puzzled or even offended by the notion that people who believe in freedom are (or should be) criminals. Thought I’d stop this morning and define some terms. So this is mostly for people who haven’t heard it all before. A Freedom Outlaw is (loosely) somebody who cares so much about freedom that he or she will go after it regardless of any laws or regulations blocking the way. Will go after it personally. Not petition for it. Not write letters for ...

Suicide or Murder at Guantánamo?
Post Date: 2010-06-08 06:16:26 by Ada
1 Comments
On June 2 last year, the Pentagon announced that a Yemeni prisoner at Guantánamo, Mohammed al-Hanashi (also known as Muhammad Salih) had died, reportedly by committing suicide. He was the fifth reported suicide at Guantánamo, following three deaths on June 9, 2006, and another on May 30, 2007, and he was the sixth man to die at the prison, following the death, by cancer, of an Afghan prisoner, Abdul Razzaq Hekmati, on December 26, 2007. All of these deaths were, in one way or another, suspicious, except for Hekmati, a 68-year old Afghan, whose story, instead, hinted at medical neglect, and also revealed, on close examination, the callous cruelty of the regime at ...

For the first time in history, US Airforce prepares to fight "unconventional foe" in the United States
Post Date: 2010-06-07 18:47:40 by Mind_Virus
16 Comments
Units make history with Air Force's first homeland defense ORI Posted 6/1/2010 Updated 6/1/2010 by Maj. Dale Greer 123rd Airlift Wing Public Affairs Officer 6/1/2010 - GULFPORT, MISS. (AFNS) -- Three units representing each component of the Air Force made history here May 16 through 23 when they successfully completed the first homeland defense operational readiness inspection. The ORI, held at the Gulfport Combat Readiness Training Center here, was administered by the Air Mobility Command Inspector General on a trial basis, but it may help pave the way for future inspections, officials said. "For the very first time, the U.S. Air Force has validated a unit's wartime ...

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