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If you follow me on
Twitter, don't panic:
I'm setting up auto RSS feeds that will give you cool stuff for you to read over the weekend.
Canadian soldier serving
in Af'stan reacts:
One can only thank the likes of blogger's like BCF and his wife [me], for whom many in my battalion read on on a regular basis. (...)
One can not even imagine the sheer delight, as I try in many ways to convey to my troops that free speech and the right
to assemble are a privilege.
I think perhaps, Ms. Jodoin requires a platoon of Canadian soldiers at her next lawfull demonstration and perhaps you
would consider explaining to us in person, how such privileges became privileges.
Brian
Lilley writes:
As for media selectivity in religious outrage I’m waiting for the endless stream of stories about Pakistani gunmen
killing Christians in the name of Islam. (...)
Why would they show those stories when they’ve got a pastor with a southern drawl to put on TV.
OK, by "Bible," I mean "Acts," but still.
Via the highly entertaining commenters at
Ace.
Ezra Levant writes:
Could it be true?
That a human rights complaint has been filed against none other than Richard Moon, law professor at the University of
Windsor and hired gun for the Canadian Human
Rights Commission?
Could it really be that the good professor is accused of both racism and sexism, based on his campaign to scupper the
career of a woman of colour -- a campaign spurred on by Moon's wife?
What a nightmare for him. Even if he wins, he loses. Mind you, unlike me, I'm sure his (and his wife's) legal bills will be
paid for by the university. Still, he's about to learn, first-hand, what a show trial is like from the inside.
Spengler
writes:
His intervention into civilian issues of free speech is outrageous. Islam does not demand equal treatment with other
religions, which had to take their share of lumps from a hostile secular environment. Muslims are demanding special treatment. They have no right to do so, and Petraeus has no business demanding
that Americans give special treatment to Muslims.
A new post at my Twitter blog, about a cool opportunity you may want to check
out if you're into blogging.
Thanks to the reader who sent this in:
The North Vietnamese Army put a bounty of $30,000 on Hathcock's life for killing so many of their men. Rewards put on
U.S. snipers by the N.V.A. typically ranged from $8 to $2,000. Hathcock actually held the record bounty for highest bounty
and killed every Vietnamese marksman who sought it.
The Viet Cong and N.V.A. called Hathcock Lông Trắng, translated
as "White Feather," because of the white feather he kept in a band on his bush hat. After a platoon of trained Vietnamese
snipers were sent to hunt down "White Feather," many Marines in the same area donned white feathers to deceive the
enemy. These Marines were aware of the impact Hathcock's death would have and took it upon themselves to make themselves
targets in order to confuse the counter snipers.
One of Hathcock's most famous accomplishments was shooting an enemy sniper through the enemy's own scope, hitting him in the
eye and killing him...
"my plane mind circled back to the furor that has broken out over plans to build Cordoba House, a
community center so I could crash it into a target in Lower Manhattan oh wait did I say that out
loud?"
***
In a sane world, this man wouldn't have been
permitted to fly commercial as of September 12, 2001, let alone travel the world promoting the enemy's interests on the
public dime.
Picking up from my posts about Rush Limbaugh, Facebook and Twitter, intrepid
reporter R.S. McCain
invites El Rushbo to sign up.
And yeah, Mark Levin really is a great model for other talk radio guys when it comes to using social media.
Jonathan Kay writes:
...this view of women is not confined to Islam — it typifies all backwards, heavily tribalized societies from Africa to
Central Asia.
But it is a particular problem in the Muslim world because the religion’s foundational text, the Koran, is
essentially a crystallization of the tribal practices and myths of militarily successful 7th-century Bedouin Arab
tribes.
How unfortunate for all these girls and women that their deaths didn’t come at the hands of Jews — in which case, they’d
probably have streets named after them, just like al-Dura.
***
The Bible is the story of a people's journey out of barbarism.
The Koran is the story of a people's embrace of it.
Speaking of Bedouin Arabs: who watched The March of Time series on TCM last weekend? Especially amusing was the short
about "Palestine", shot just after WW2 but before independence.
For ten minutes, you see footage of lush farmland and new hospitals, with the narrator describing all the agricultural,
medical, scientific and educational breakthroughs the Jewish refugees had already achieved in their new home.
Then the last minute showed a bunch of Arabs squatting in the dirt, puffing on pipes, doing sweet **** all, then another
bunch of Arabs in military uniforms getting ready to kill their new neighbors, who'd just finished vaccinating their kids.
They're at it again:
...a recent addition to the 12th century Roman Catholic Saint-Jean-Baptiste cathedral in Lyon, France, features a
slightly less traditional face: one of a Muslim man.
The gargoyle, nicknamed "Ahmed," perches above an inscription of "Allah Akhbar," or "God is the Greatest," in both French and
Arabic, the AFP news agency reported.
***
The camel's nose under the tent. The Muslim gargoyle on the cathedral.
"Oh, but it's on the OUTside, not the INside!" "Oh, I could show you WORSE gargoyles somewhere ELSE!" "Oh, the tradition
of gargoyles goes back to the 12th century, you ignorant trolls, and the word 'gargoyle' is from the Latin for..."
**** the **** off!
Vichy.
Speaking of Germans:
Dresden mayor 'to lobby against building of Bomber Command memorial’
--on British soil.
Lady, you guys lost. You don't get a say in what gets built in someone else's country anymore.
Don't start two wars next time if you don't like it.
"they should instead conduct the burning 7-10 blocks away."
PLUS:
"Eisenhower: Der Führer's Face song could endanger troops -- no, wait..."
The idea that in wartime one should be careful not to do anything that the enemy is likely to respond to with irrational
and even murderous anger may seem tactically wise at first glance, but ultimately it is a recipe for surrender. One is already accepting the enemy's worldview and perspective, and working to accommodate
it, instead of working on various fronts, not just the military one, to
show why it is wrong and should be opposed.
***
Agreed:
If burning a book endangers the troops, the troops should not be there in the first place.
We should just nuke the site from orbit. (...)
I assume this means David Petraeus is running as a Democrat in 2016...
RELATED:
LONDON, June 19, 1944 — The top American commander in Normandy has warned that plans by a small Florida church to burn
copies of Mein Kampf on Tuesday, the anniversary of the Nazi invasion of Russia, could play into the hands of the very
extremists at whom the church says it is directing that message.
It really is possible to make your own fireworks, using simple ingredients to can buy online.
ScienceForYou.net sells all the pyrotechnic supplies you need for making fireworks.
Get affordable fireworks ingredients like ammonium nitrate,
potassium perchlorate, potassium
nitrate and powdered aluminum at
ScienceForYou.com.
You can also get fuses, tubes and mortar cans -- everything you need to make fireworks is available at ScienceForYou.net
(#sponsored post)
via Vice
magazine:
...but not a lot of people know [the actual story of CRASS]
Because it’s so inspirational and so “anti-music” (in the sense that it was a total revolt against the established
music industry of the time) we feel that everybody with even a passing interest in punk rock should hear it.
And so we interviewed founding members Penny Rimbaud and Steve Ignorant for a brief history of the group and to procure their
ideas surrounding this issue’s theme.
During the talks between myself and Penny that preceded this interview I
discovered that the unthinkable has happened and that Crass, the most anti-authoritarian, anarchy-endorsing free
spirits in the history of punk music, are on the verge of going to Crown Court to ask lawyers and judges to intervene in a
huge row over some remastered CDs.
***
Question to the author:
After you finished typing the words "a lot of you will be aware of their logo," why did you feel that anything which
followed, especially if it was related to money and lawyers, would be "unthinkable"?
Take your time.
PS: from our "I've been married to a communist and I've been married to a capitalist, and neither one of them would take out
the garbage" files...
I wanted the blonde girls and the free drinks, which I never got. The only people I spoke to at gigs were spotty blokes in
anoraks asking me about anarchy.
A Washington Post columnist has an incoherent cure for what ails Obama. Hint: everyone is to blame except the President!
Check out my new post at David Horowitz's NewsReal blog.
Enjoy!
(Star Parker was a guest, too, and the audio's up.)
Great comment:
Canadian journalism is an incestuous cesspool, pulling, it seems, on an increasingly small gene pool, as you've pointed
out.
We've got David Frum, Catherine Clark, Ben Mulroney, Noah Richler, Bronwyn Drainie, one of the Graham (as in Bill) kids,
Darrow MacIntyre (Linden's son), Adam Radwanski, Robin Brown (Harry's daughter), Julie Van Dusen and siblings, Matthew Halton
(David's son), and this is just the tip of the iceberg. (It would make an interesting study.)
Then, there are the nieces, nephews, and neighbours of members of the Canadian MSM and the political
establishment.
These pompous scions of "equality" and "diversity" don't much practise it because their motto has always been
"fairness/free speech/freedom of expression for me but definitely not for thee." So much for genuine openness and diversity,
though they make nice sound bites.
Topped off with:
Bill Graham had kids?
Will wonders ever cease.
Ezra Levant writes:
So where is this wonderful place that Sri Lankan refugees are going to by the thousand?
Sri Lanka.
That’s right. Thousands of Tamil refugees are returning to Sri Lanka — because it’s safe. Within Sri Lanka itself, internal
refugee camps for displaced Tamils are winding down, as Tamils go back home.
(…)
Question: If thousands of Tamil refugees from around the world are going home to Sri Lanka, and 71% of Canadian Tamil
refugees go back there for holidays, why are we still going through the motions with the 492 Tamils on Vancouver
Island, as if they are legitimate?
And why are more Tamil ships steaming our way?
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