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Posts Tagged ‘Kyle Smith’

New York City, July 1993

by Mojambo ( 127 Comments › )
Filed under Crime, Democratic Party, Politics at July 23rd, 2013 - 7:00 am

The irony is that Giuliani (and Nanny Bloomberg) made the city safe enough for all these out-of-town hipsters to move to yet they are about to go “back to the future” to a  modified rerun of the David Dinkins administration

by Kyle Smith

It’s been a busy month for local news here in the big, bad city.

Flipping through a few copies of this month’s Post, we find, “Here We Ho Again! Spitzer Running for Comptroller.” There’s also been, “Prison for Cat Killer: Rat Blames Feline,” “Cubism, Boobism: Nude of Art in Times Square,” “Sharknado: Could It Happen Here?” “ ‘Versed’ Pickup Line Ever: Sex-Poem Harass Suit,” “Snack Is Wack: NYers Weigh in as the Twinkie Returns,” “The Oy of Sex! Kosher Lube a Blessing for Religious Jews,” “Orlando Bloomin’ Hot in the Apple,” “No Money, No Monet at the Met” and “Angels Fear to Ped – Models: Citi Bike? No Way!”

 Twenty years ago, my first July as a journalist in New York City (at The Associated Press), I remembered things being a little different.  […….]

July 1993 was a month of unbelievable levels of random mayhem. Headlines included “Desperados Shoot Up Bus,” about teens who robbed 22 passengers in Queens, “Cab Ride to Hell,” about some Australian tourists who saw their cabdriver slain and “Savage Slaying Shocks Tribeca,” about a building worker who was killed execution-style.

A Staten Island man was surrounded by a gang of 20 to 30 youths and beaten to death. Two Washington Heights firefighters responding to a fake call about a gas leak were instead firebombed (then, when they bailed out of the truck with second-degree burns, surrounded by an angry crowd that threw bottles at them). A mother of eight was killed in a crossfire on a Brooklyn street while pushing a 3-year-old in a stroller and carrying an infant in her arms. A 21-year-old Hunter College student was shot to death on a 5-train for his Nike Air sneakers.

In Queens, a 4-year-old girl was hit by a stray bullet while she slept. [……..] The same neighborhood cringed at the news that Larry “the Wild Man” Hogue, a deranged homeless person who roamed upper Broadway, hurling trash cans and once pushed a toddler into traffic, was being let out of a mental hospital. Two plain-clothes cops were mugged at 2 p.m. in the Brooklyn museum subway stop.

In 1993 Mets news, center fielder Vince Coleman lit a firecracker and threw it at a group of fans, injuring three including a 1-year-old girl.  [……..]

This month, Matt Harvey joined Coleman as front-page material: “Meet the Matt: The Lowdown on Mets’ All-Star: Photo Fashion Spread: Pages 31-34.”

[……..]

If you think the Travis Bickle era was the high point for the Gotham mayhem industry, you’re wrong. The fourth-worst year for murders in New York City was 1993, with 1,960 (Nos. 1-3 are 1990-1992, the other three years of the David Dinkins administration).

In the first half of this year, in a city that is home to about 20% more people, there were 156.

It wasn’t so long ago that things were completely crazy, when guests at cocktail parties chatted about strategies for dealing with muggers (it was widely believed that you should always carry what we called ”mugger money” so as not to anger your attackers). Those who were brave enough to park cars on city streets made sure to remove the stereos when they parked, then place “No radio, nothing valuable in car” signs on their dashboards. If you fell asleep on a subway train, you awoke with an X neatly cut over your pocket and your wallet gone.

In his forthcoming memoir, Dinkins blames “racism, pure and simple,” not residents fed up by a city out of control, for his narrow 1993 defeat by Rudy Giuliani.

Now it seems likely that we’re going to elect another conventional liberal mayor, for the first time in two decades. As Dinkins did during his successful 1989 campaign, most of the rival Democratic candidates for mayor are playing for votes by trying to turn citizens against the police (though a recent poll found that Commissioner Ray Kelly, who is rumored to be the next head of Homeland Security in DC, enjoys an approval rating of 75%, including more than 60% among blacks).

The 20 years of the Giuliani-Bloomberg era have been a pleasant vacation from the decades-long decline that preceded it. Today we joke about soda bans instead of how to react to armed robbers. But soon New York may be back doing what it does best: Being Crazytown, USA.

Read the rest – NYC, July 1993

How nonprofit think tanks and the media collude in a vast left-wing conspiracy

by Mojambo ( 191 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections, Media, Politics, Polls, Progressives, Tranzis at July 2nd, 2012 - 2:00 pm

Kyle Smith’s review of a new book based on the left-wing money machine is enlightening for the spotlight which is shined on left wing philanthropies/foundations and more importantly their biased polling tactics. What is particularly sad is that many of these philanthropies were founded by conservatives who made their  fortunes through capitalism.

by Kyle Smith

Old joke: Guy tells his friend, “Guess what? My new girlfriend is a virgin.” The friend says, “How do you know she’s a virgin?” Guy says, “She told me.” The friend replies, “How do you know she’s not lying?” First guy says, “Virgins never lie.”

That circular reasoning, UCLA poli-sci professor Tim Groseclose points out in his book, “Left Turn: How Liberal Media Bias Distorts the American Mind,” is the kind of thing you hear from otherwise intelligent, even scientific-minded liberals when it comes to the kinds of stories that turn up in popular media outlets such as CBS, CNN or The New York Times.

Groseclose measured the extent to which these outlets mentioned liberal vs. conservative think tanks in their coverage and found a pronounced bias toward the left. A colleague of Groseclose’s to whom he mentioned this said, essentially, “So what? Those liberal think tanks are more reputable than the conservative ones.” And how did he know this? Because, er, they were the ones that were so often quoted on CBS, CNN or in The New York Times.

The crux of Groseclose’s book, which came out in paperback earlier this year, is seconded by this summer’s “The New Leviathan: How the Left-Wing Money Machine Shapes American Politics and Threatens America’s Future” by David Horowitz and Jacob Laksin.

Horowitz and Laksin explore the world of foundation money, where it came from, where it goes and what it does. Philanthropic organizations such as the Ford Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and their equivalents with names like Heinz, Rockefeller, Carnegie and Mellon tend to support left-wing causes. The financial assets of the 115 major tax-exempt foundations of the left, says Laskin, added up to $104.56 billion — more than 10 times the size of the war chest held by their ideological opposite numbers on the right.

We owe to Hillary Clinton the deathless term “vast right-wing conspiracy,” a sobriquet she used to ridicule reports that her husband might have had an inappropriate relationship with Monica Lewinsky.

The evidence is ample, though, that when it comes to weaving an intricate web of money and influence, the left is far more successful than the right.

[……]

Groseclose is careful to point out that, in his analysis, the mainstream media do not make up facts. They don’t report lies. The bias is in the kinds of stories they do and don’t do, the kinds of experts they quote, how much prominence they are given and how they’re identified.

In an illustrative Los Angeles Times report on the size of the black student body at UCLA (after California outlawed consideration of race in state-college admissions), the reporter quoted five liberal supporters of affirmative action (none of whom was identified with an ideological label) and one opponent (who was stamped, correctly, as “conservative”). The conservative was given two paragraphs to make his case. His views were accurately summarized. But the liberals were awarded 17 paragraphs.

Newspapers don’t typically ask journalists what party they belong to. They don’t have to. Journalism is a field that attracts liberals.

So does philanthropy. In “New Leviathan,” Horowitz and Laksin discover that foundations don’t necessarily seek out liberal officers. They look for “nonideological” experts and experienced professionals in the field — but most of these turn out to have an affinity for giving money to left-wing or even far-left groups.

Take the Daniels Fund, for instance. It was set up by conservative Republican Bill Daniels, who made a fortune in cable television. He didn’t leave any instructions for how its operations were to be conducted. Its first president, Phil Hogue, went to existing foundations for advice. Foundations like the MacArthurs’, which has repeatedly showered largesse on socialist and even Marxist groups such as Global Exchange, which promoted the anti-World Trade Organization riots in Seattle and is headed by a pro-Castro communist.

Says a conservative observer quoted in “New Leviathan,” “I knew we had lost Daniels when I met a former Rockefeller program office at a reception who had just been hired at Daniels. Who can quarrel with foundation expertise acquired at one of the nation’s best? And I’m sure all the while Hogue thought he was just doing the most professional job he could in carrying out Daniels’ will.”

[……]

Staff lawyers for the environmental group the Natural Resources Defense Council, says Laksin, describe their job as, “We’re the shadow EPA; we make the EPA do its job.”

Bizarre as it is to contemplate the fortunes of supercharged capitalists like Rockefeller, Carnegie and Ford being used to fight capitalism, isn’t pointing this out merely conservative whining? Surely everyone is entitled to spend their money promoting whatever message they please.

Correct, says Laksin. But these foundations’ tax-exempt status depends on their being nonpartisan. He mentions that the head of Pew Trusts, Rebeca Rimmel, recently complained that the book falsely portrays Pew as a partisan group. “That’s demonstrably false,” Laksin says. “Pew Trusts spends millions funding radical environmental groups like Earth Justice and anarchist Ruckus Society. If that’s non-partisan, then the term has no meaning. Foundations should be upfront about their political agendas.” And lose their tax-exempt status.

It was free-market apostle Adam Smith who said, “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public.”

[……]

Read  the rest – Poll says: GOP sucks

Why do feminists reject Margaret Thatcher?; and Meet Chris Kyle – America’s deadliest sniper

by Mojambo ( 170 Comments › )
Filed under Iraq, UK at January 2nd, 2012 - 2:00 pm

The answer is because the Iron Lady  rightly said that she did not owe her success to feminism. Thatcher ( a daughter of a grocer) owed every thing to her own talents and ambition. She did not ride the coattails of her husband (see Hillary Clinton) or inherit her position from  her father (see Indira Gandhi).  Thatcher recognized socialism for what it  was – a corrosive philosophy which was destroying Britain and she challenged the unions stranglehold on the nation. Ultimately as the author points out – Thatcher will always be hated by the feminists because she rejected unequivocally left-wing politics and sloganeering.

by Kyle Smith

When it comes to the feminist version of history (sorry — herstory!), it’s hurrah for Gloria Steinem. She started a magazine nobody ever read. And cheers for Billie Jean King, the tennis player who proved a young professional athlete could beat a 55-year-old slob.

Give it up for Indira Gandhi and Hillary Clinton, who proved that you could sweep into power on the coattails of your dad or husband, and by all means let us celebrate Oprah Winfrey, who proved that you could spin mystical mumbo-jumbo, airy empowerment talk and perpetual wounded victimhood into a billion-dollar sisterhood racket.

What about the most important woman of the 20th century, Margaret Thatcher, the subject of this week’s Oscar contender “The Iron Lady”? Here feminists get quiet. Demure, even. They let the gentlemen take over the conversation while they retreat to the next room.

Or else they attack her. In her first campaign to lead Britain, in 1979, a popular slogan launched by feminists was “We want women’s rights, not a right-wing woman.” (In her 1983 campaign, the Left boiled this down to “Ditch the bitch.”) A newspaper columnist put the common feminist view thus: “She may be a woman, but she is not a sister.” Opponents in Parliament dubbed her “Attila the Hen.”

“I owe nothing to women’s lib,” Thatcher said, and at another point she remarked, “The feminists hate me, don’t they? And I don’t blame them. For I hate feminism. It is poison.”

Yet Thatcher is among the most effective living ripostes to so many of the things feminists say they hate, such as:

* Being judged superficially based on style. Thatcher was said by some to be “sexy” — Christopher Hitchens used the word to describe his early meeting with her at a party — but she largely ignored the fashion game. She stuck with her frozen-nimbus haircut and boasted about shopping for undies at Marks and Spencer, an unglamorous mid-market chain.

* Being defined by a man. Hillary Clinton, standing by her husband amid excuse-making for his legendary adultery, famously said, “I’m not some little woman standing by her man.” Though Thatcher’s husband, Denis, was a successful businessman, after her rise began, no one doubted who was the senior partner. Jim Broadbent shows with his twinkly-eyed performance in “Iron Lady” how Denis became increasingly amused by his secondary role, jovially calling her “the Boss.”

* Getting ghetto-ized. Far from fixating on stereotypically female issues such as the family, health and education, Thatcher was a research chemist and tax lawyer who steeped herself in economics and foreign affairs.

[………]

A writer for the lefty British paper The Guardian harrumphed, “[Thatcher] had little interest in improving the public image of women, or in furthering other women’s careers; she had no interest in peace, or sundry other matters that might be considered “feminine” . . . On a practical level, she improved women’s lot not at all. But for those of us whose world did improve, who saw opportunities swing open and had the background, wealth, education and circumstance to maximize them, she did something unmatchable. Is it churlish if I carry on hating her anyway?”

Feminists will probably carry on hating Thatcher for the twin faults of rejecting left-wing policies and demonstrating their feebleness, but there is a whiff of sexism about the suggestion that a real woman must support liberal dogma instead of thinking for herself.

Thatcher bettered the lives of Britain’s women and men by decreasing income taxes (which were as high as 98 percent for investment gains), defeating the unions whose demands amounted to a tax on every household, decreasing regulation and privatizing inefficient state-run industries. In an astute 1989 profile for Vanity Fair, Gail Sheehy wrote, “People refer to Thatcherism as if it were a coherent, worked-out ideology. What it really is, in my view, is a reflection of her character. The ultimate self-made woman, she has created a religion of herself. And from her character and ambition flow her policies.” Sisters should be proud.

Read the rest – No way to treat a Lady
Meet Chris Kyle  (from Texas naturally)   a  former Navy SEAL and our deadliest  sniper  – an American hero who has killed 160 of our enemies (and had a price put on his head by the jihadis in Iraq) many of them in Fallujah.
DEVIL AND ANGEL: Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle watches over US Marines from his perch atop an upturned baby crib in a bombed-out building in Fallujah, Iraq. Branded a “legend” by his comrades and a “devil” by his enemies, Kyle racked up a record 160 kills.

DEVIL AND ANGEL:Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle watches over US Marines from his perch atop an upturned baby crib in a bombed-out building in Fallujah, Iraq. Branded a “legend” by his comrades and a “devil” by his enemies, Kyle racked up a record 160 kills.

Chris Kyle

Chris Kyle
by Gary Buiso
Secluded on the top floor of a bombed-out four-story apartment building north of war-scarred Fallujah, Iraq, Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle is just getting comfortable.

It’s November 2004. Thanksgiving time. The second battle of Fallujah has launched, and Kyle is swaddled in silence atop an upturned baby crib, studying the enemy through a Nightforce 4.5-22 power scope attached to a .300 Win Mag rifle.

He’s feeling badass.

“We just got word that the president of Iraq said that anyone left in the city is bad — meaning, clear to shoot,” he recalled for The Post. “From that point on, every fighting-age male was a target.”

That was just fine with Kyle, who spent five weeks in the hideout, protecting Marines on the ground and bagging seven confirmed kills — adding to his official total of 160, making him the deadliest sniper in US history.

“After the first kill, the others come easy. I don’t have to psych myself up, or do anything mentally — I look through the scope, get the target in the cross hairs and kill my enemy before he kills one of my people,” Kyle writes in his new autobiography, “American Sniper.”

During his 10-year career as a member of SEAL Team 3, Kyle, 37, saw action in every major battle during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

He became known among his fellow SEALS as “The Legend.”

The enemy was less complimentary.

In Ramadi, insurgents put an $80,000 bounty on his head and branded him “Al-Shaitan Ramadi” — “The Devil of Ramadi.”

“That made me feel like I was actually doing my job and having an effect on the war,” he said.

In north-central Texas, Kyle grew up dipping tobacco, riding horses and hunting deer, turkey and quail — a cowboy at heart.

[……]

The son of a Sunday-school teacher and a church deacon, Kyle credits a higher authority for his longest kill.

From 2,100 yards away from a village just outside of Sadr City in 2008, he spied a man aiming a rocket launcher at an Army convoy and squeezed off one shot from his .338 Lapua Magnum rifle.

Dead. From more than a mile away.

“God blew that bullet and hit him,” he said.

For Kyle, the enemy is a “savage” — there’s no room for gray, only black or white.

His Charlie platoon even adopted the insignia of the comic-book vigilante The Punisher, spray-painting skulls on their body armor, vehicles, helmets and guns.

“You see us? We’re the people kicking your ass. Fear us, because we will kill you, motherf–ker,” he writes.

The married father of two is now president of Craft International, an outfit that provides sniper and security training for the US military.

He teaches what’s required to take that perfect shot: Study the terrain, correct for elevation and wind, prepare for the vibration after the shot, and keep in mind the Coriolis effect, the effect of the rotation of the Earth on a bullet’s trajectory.

[…..]

He retired a chief petty officer, and along the way, collected an armload of hardware, including two Silver Stars and five Bronze Stars with valor.

“That’s just candy,” Kyle said. “That’s not why we were there.”

Read  the rest – Meet the big shot

The GOP’s 2012 Trouble

by Phantom Ace ( 127 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2012, Progressives, Republican Party at February 13th, 2011 - 2:25 pm

Things are looking murky in 2012 for the Republicans after a triumphant 2010 when they won the House, picked up Senate seats and decimated the Democrats at the local level. Obama’s approval ratings are back up and the media is pushing the Obama  Boom theme, that this is the best the economy can get. The Republicans have wasted in month in finally getting around to doing budget cuts. They still haven’t proposed any tax and regulatory reform to make American economically competitive again. The irony is Obama is set to win re-election in 2012 because of their surrender  in the lame duck session. It’s even at the point that Obama is calling himself the gipper, a reference to Ronald Reagan. No Republican has come out and called Obama out on this! Things are not looking for the Republicans in 2012.

Another handicap the Republicans face is their pathetic 2012 Presidential field. None of the 4 main candidates Romney, Palin, Huckabee or Gingrich are offering new ideas or proposals. Instead they speak in catchy phrases, the same stale talking points and all are politically damaged. Polls show Obama would handily defeat any of these four if the election was help today. This is due to the decimation the Republicans had in 2006 and 2008. Obama right now is sitting pretty for 2012, anemic economy and all.

WASHINGTON — Marry the movie star, or the librarian?

This year is a little different, though. Reagan is in the air, everywhere. Republicans can’t help remembering the time they nominated their boldest, sexiest choice — and he turned out to be

That was the question conservatives were puzzling over at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference this weekend in DC. In the past, Republicans have flirted with sexy but extreme candidates like Pat Buchanan, Ron Paul and Mike Huckabee, but, being conservatives, tend to commit to safer, consensus candidates — even when those pols were so safe and mainstream (like Bob Dole and John McCain) that no one in the party (or, alas outside of it) succeeded in getting excited about them.

Everywhere you looked, there were Reagan posters, Reagan speaking from TV monitors, Reagan birthday parties. There was so much Reagan it was almost like it was the 1980s — “1984” in fact, with Big Gipper watching us everywhere we turned, threatening to disapprove. It got kind of creepy after a while.

And the party has lots of national leaders of tomorrow — baby-faced Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the lovably cantankerous New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, the quietly appealing Rep. Kristi Noem of South Dakota, Louisiana’s boy wonder Gov. Bobby Jindal.

The source of the party’s unease is that it knows it doesn’t have a now leader. The unspoken hope of GOPalooza 2011 was that someone would emerge as our Obama.

No one did.

Read the rest:  The Right’s stuff

The Republican Party’s best hope is the Senate in 2012. With 23 out of 33 Senate seats in play, Republicans should easily win that chamber. In 2016, we will have probably the best presidential candidate field ever. However it maybe too late as by 2016, America will have gone through nearly 16 of a sub-par economy of low job growth and stagnant pay. Americans may well get used to diminished lifestyle and lose hope for a better tomorrow. Obama’s reckless 3rd World Liberation based foreign policy will put America in its weakest global position. 2012 is critical, but the 4 major GOP candidates are not up to the task of presenting a winning alternative to Obama’s politics of diminished returns.

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