Sunday, December 5, 2021

Oh, Oh, Omicron!

The new COVID variant is an excuse for control—the frisson that comes with the exercise of power and lording it over other people.


Last week, I dusted off my Chinese-flu soapbox and said a word or two about (cue the scary music) the Omicron variant. It sounds like the title of a Robert Ludlum novel, doesn’t it? A friend told me about a parlor game that the journalist Christopher Hitchens and his pals used to play in which the object was to contrive names for Shakespeare’s plays that sounded like the title of a Ludlum novel. Hamlet was “The Elsinore Conundrum.” I am sorry that Hitch is not still with us to try his hand at the Omicron variant. 

So far, I have to say, it’s been pretty much of a dud—unless, that is, you’re the stock market, which has taken a beating this last week or so, in part because of this new kid on the medical block (there is also that much more toxic financial emergency, the Biden Administration, but that’s for another day). The new variant has also been a godsend for scolds, nags, bureaucrats, and meddlesome so-called public health officials nannies who are just itching for another excuse to lock down your world, introduce new travel restrictions, and impose new testing protocols. 

How will it all play out? TSTS—Too Soon to Say, but I suspect this sequel is going to be a flop at the box office. For one thing, although only recently named, there is abundant evidence that Omicron has been around for months. If it had been previously unnamed, that is perhaps because it is no big deal. The South African doctor who first identified the strain noted that while the virus was possibly more contagious than versions named for letters earlier in the Greek alphabet, symptoms tended to be mild, indeed “very mild.” A typical news report notes that “patients mostly suffered from mild muscle aches, scratchy throat and dry cough.” (Remember colds? Remember the flu?) 

So why the panic? Partly, it is because panic is an antidote to boredom. People are heavily bored. Panic also licenses the people who want to run your life to, well, run your life. “Most Omicron cases so far have been mild,” runs one headline, “but experts say it will take weeks to understand how severe the variant can be.” Ah, “experts”! What would we do without them? 

One thing we’d do is ride public transportation without wearing a mask. But apparently there are sufficient numbers of people who are cowed enough, or bored enough, to don the little badge of their submission and pretend that they are not only “staying safe” but keeping you safe, too. Where did your mother tell you that road paved with good intentions led? 

Here’s the reality: the COVID “pandemic” is over. I hasten to add: also, it will never end. 

No, I am not pretending to be G. W. F. Hegel, for whom no day was complete that did not include a little contradiction masquerading as wisdom. 

What I mean is this: COVID is a coronavirus, not dissimilar to the virus that causes the common cold. It is everywhere. It is constantly mutating. The world will never be rid of it. Nevertheless, the pandemic—or, to dial things down a bit, the epidemic—is over precisely because the virus is ubiquitous and poses a serious threat only to a tiny sliver of the population. 

As I said last week, one of the great things about COVID is that it has effectively abolished death from old age. These days, you really have to work at dying from something that is not COVID. Last year, there were some 700 deaths from the flu in America. Usually, there are at least 25,000 to 35,000, and often more. Is there anything COVID can’t do? 

Hospital administrators love the disease, for it has kept a steady stream of government premiums flowing into their coffers. At one point hospitals were paid $13,000 for every person admitted as a COVID case, and another $39,000 for every patient put on a ventilator. “What do you think Barney? Should we put Mrs. Smith on a ventilator?” 

And of course vaccines are big business. I am not anti-vaccination. Indeed, I’ve been jabbed twice and am even thinking about getting the St. Anthony Fauci™ booster. The rapid development of the various COVID vaccines was an impressive medical achievement of American technology and a notable logistical achievement of the Trump Administration. But the very rapidity of its invention and dissemination means that it was not as thoroughly tested as many other vaccines. How could it have been? There wasn’t time. I don’t see why people find it difficult to admit this. 

And I don’t know why there is this official insistence that everyone be vaccinated and then the further insistence that you must wear a mask, practice social (i.e., anti-social distancing) distancing, and be tested every 15 minutes. 

Actually, I think I do know why this happened, in direct contradiction of the earlier promise that, once vaccinated, we would be mask free. Mostly, it’s about control, both the optics of control and the little frisson that comes with the exercise of power, lording it over other people.

It’s also about money. Lots and lots and lots of money. Look at the credits of a newly made movie or television program. There is an entire chapter devoted to people populating the new cottage industry of COVID. I doubt they come cheap. You’ll discover “COVID compliance supervisors,” people handling “COVID logistics,” “COVID digital tracking,” “COVID digital analysis,” and the like. I wonder if you can major in those subjects at college yet?

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is far more skeptical of vaccines in general than I am, but he makes some good points in his new bookThe Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health. Did you know that 45 percent of the FDA budget comes from pharmaceutical companies? Did you know that Anthony Fauci’s agency owns half the Moderna patents? Did you know the extent of Bill Gates’ involvement in food and medical companies that cater to Africa? 

Those are just a few of the tidbits Kennedy shares in his disturbing book. Tucker Carlson aired an eye-opening interview with Kennedy. The media went crazy over it, claiming that it was “nutso,” “conspiracy-ridden,” etc. Naturally, he has been tossed off social media for peddling “vaccine misinformation.” As Gertrude observed in response to the play Hamlet put on for her entertainment, the lady doth protest too much, methinks.” I think Kennedy ably diagnoses the creation of a “track and trace” surveillance state, “the systematic demolition of our Bill of Rights,” the obliteration of the middle class by tech elites who have profited mightily from COVID. Watch it yourself and see what you think. 


X22, And we Know, and more-Dec 5th


 


Evening. Here's tonight's news:


2021 Was the Year of Vindication for Trump

One by one, the lies of the past 5 years are being exposed.



"For there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; neither hid, that shall not be known."

— Luke 12:2 (KJV)

The year could not have started any worse for former President Trump. Thousands of his supporters from all over the country, of all different races and religions gathered at the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., to show their support for a president who for four years fought for the forgotten men and women of this country.

They were proud of his many accomplishments.

Even with four years of lies and conspiracy theories about Russian collusion, and a bogus quid pro quo charge involving the president of Ukraine that led to an embarrassing impeachment, Trump still managed to cut taxes, reduce regulations, and preside over the highest labor force participation rate ever recorded in U.S. history, with 157 million Americans working—until the Chinese coronavirus decimated our economy.

Although the Left painted Trump as a sexist and a racist, he started a $50 million initiative to help create employment opportunities for women, offered new mothers the first ever paid family leave plan, and signed a bill that would permanently provide more than $250 million annually to historically black colleges and universities.

Trump rebuilt our military, increased national defense spending, eliminated the ISIS caliphate, negotiated peace treaties in the Middle East, secured our southern border by beginning construction of a wall and through robust law enforcement. He renegotiated unfair trade agreements, stood up to China, and delivered three vaccines and therapeutics during a once-in-a-century pandemic.

He fought for the factory workers in Indiana, the farmers in Michigan, the ranchers in Texas, the truckers in Pennsylvania, the military who kept the peace, and the police officers who kept us safe.

But in the blink of an eye, the real estate magnate-turned-politician was shunted back to Mar-a-Lago after supposedly losing the first ever mail-in ballot election to a 77-year-old feeble and often confused man who campaigned almost exclusively from his basement on the lie that he would restore our national unity. 

The ruling class told us we weren’t allowed to question the outcome of the most bizarre and corrupt election in history, one in which​ tens of millions of ballots were mailed out, without proper safeguards in place to ensure that the identity of the voter could be verified, and where several Democratic secretaries of state illegally changed election laws in defiance of state legislators.

Trump’s 75 million supporters were rightfully outraged, as they saw his election night lead slip away in the wee hours of the morning, while being labeled rubes and conspiracy theorists by the ruling class.

Before Trump had even finished speaking on January 6, and told his supporters to “peacefully and patriotically” make their voices heard, hundreds of people had already stormed the Capitol building as a riot ensued.

No one who illegally trespassed should be excused from breaking the law. But contrary to false media reports, the only two people who were killed on that day were two unarmed female Trump supporters, Ashli Babbitt and Rosanne Boyland. Most consumers of the New York TimesWashington Post, CNN, and MSNBC are probably unaware of that fact, and probably still believe that Officer Brian Sicknick was killed at the rally by deranged QAnon followers.

The leftist corporate media and the Democrats would use the events of January 6 as their final “big lie” of Trump’s presidency, and absurdly claim he had incited an insurrection. Big Tech would subsequently use January 6 as a pretext for deplatforming him from Facebook and Twitter, and a second impeachment farce occurred while he was no longer in office.

According to the Fourth Estate, that event was worse than two 110-story buildings disappearing from the New York City skyline, a gaping hole in one side of the Pentagon, a plane crashing into a field in Shanksville, and 2,977 people murdered in a single day on September 11, 2001.

The goal for these corrupt entities was always very clear: Punish Trump and any of his supporters to ensure that he could never be elected president again.

But try as they may, the ruling class has once again failed at disarming Trump. Most, if not all of the false stories and intentional lies that were peddled about him during the course of his presidency—an in-kind contribution to the Democratic Party—have been completely disproved in the last several months.

We now know, as many of us already did during his presidency, that hydroxychloroquine works, and has been proven to be an effective treatment at fighting COVID-19. And we now know the China virus in all likelihood originated from a Chinese lab.

We know, as we did all along, that Hunter Biden’s laptop documenting his family’s corruption and pay for play schemes was real, and was not “Russian disinformation.”

We now know that Lafayette Square was not cleared for a photo op, and the Antifa and Black Lives Matter rioters who refused to disperse, after being told to do so by law enforcement, were not generally “peaceful.”

We know now as we did then that Kyle Rittenhouse never was a Trump-supporting white supremacist, but rather a good Samaritan who acted in self-defense, while protecting his friends’ business from being burned to the ground.

We now know as we did then that the “Russian bounties” story was fake, and we know that Trump who loved our military and our soldiers never did call them “suckers and losers.” We know now as we did then that blue state lockdowns didn’t work, and schools should be opened for in-person learning.

We now know that critical race theory is being practiced in our K-12 schools, even if the mouthpieces on CNN and MSNBC continue to deny it, and Trump’s southern border security program was successful before Biden reversed it.

We knew all along that both of the Trump-hating Cuomo brothers were corrupt partisan hacks who are no longer useful for the Left and got the fate they deserved.

We began to wonder, but we now know it was only a matter of time before associates of Hillary Clinton and the DNC were finally indicted for orchestrating a plot to overthrow the president.

And we now know that the current occupant of the White House was exactly who we thought he was. A man who never once had an original thought, an individual who always had a tenuous relationship with the truth, a race-baiting huckster, whose cognitive decline appears to be worsening by the day. A grifter who is owned by the far-Left radical wing of his party, and who does whatever his puppetmasters tell him to do, while they destroy our country, and turn it into a socialist hellhole, all in the name of equity.

It turns out Trump knew who the real enemy of the people was all along. But at least now their lies are now in plain sight.


The WaPo Stumbles Upon the Biggest Issue With Kamala Harris


Sister Toldjah reporting for RedState

We reported earlier this week on how yet another big wheel has fallen off the Kamala Express, this one in the form of Harris’s senior adviser and chief spokesperson Symone Sanders.

Ms. Sanders’ resignation along with comms director Ashley Etienne resigning last month are just two of several that have shaken up the VP’s office in recent weeks as the bad press keeps rolling in, with rumors swirling of a growing rift between Harris and President Biden, something that appeared to be obvious during a joint appearance at a pre-Thanksgiving D.C. soup kitchen where Biden seemed to snub Harris.

What’s behind the resignations? Officially, the people who are stepping down have painted things as all wine and roses, but as has been previously reported about Harris even going back to well before she became Biden’s second in command, the real issues are likely much less sunny and far more embarrassing than anyone is willing to go on record to admit.

The reports have come out fast and furious since Harris was sworn in about how exceedingly difficult some former and current staffers say she has always been to work with beyond the standard rough and tumble one can expect working in the office of a high-profile politico (turnover among campaign staff during her failed 2020 presidential bid was said to be very high).

But the Washington Post filed a story today that stumbled upon what Harris’s biggest issue is, in my opinion, and it’s one that not even her crisis comms manager will be able to fix.

The problem? Harris lacks authenticity in a big way. Take a look at this nugget of information:

Staffers who worked for Harris before she was vice president said one consistent problem was that Harris would refuse to wade into briefing materials prepared by staff members, then berate employees when she appeared unprepared.

“It’s clear that you’re not working with somebody who is willing to do the prep and the work,” one former staffer said. “With Kamala you have to put up with a constant amount of soul-destroying criticism and also her own lack of confidence. So you’re constantly sort of propping up a bully and it’s not really clear why.”

In other words, Harris can’t be bothered to do due diligence on anything she speaks publicly about. She expects to be able to spout off common talking points and buzzwords that make the media and the “woke” left salivate, and when she ends up getting embarrassed about it later, it’s the hard-working staffers behind the scenes who get punished.

She popped off half-cocked about Jussie Smollett. She did the same thing with the Minnesota rioters bail fund. She did the same thing with the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict. I’d bet money that she literally did not have the first solid fact in hand when she commented on those situations. Because it didn’t and doesn’t take deep dives into any of those topics (nor her numerous other hot takes that ultimately did not age well) to see that maybe she should have read up a little more on what she was commenting on before speaking on the subjects.

Even a casual observer who isn’t a political junkie can simply watch her as she speaks to see how the lack of authenticity shines through. Her words sound scripted, fake, and she oftentimes comes across as ill-informed on the matter she’s being asked to address.

Let’s go back to that smackdown she gave Joe Biden during the first Democratic presidential primary debate revolving around the busing issue. The media predictably swooned and swayed and she enjoyed a brief rise in the polls, but it wasn’t long after that that her numbers began tanking, especially once it became obvious that the “that little girl was me” line she used during the debate against Biden was scripted. Black voters who supported Biden when he was Obama’s VP didn’t appreciate it, as it turned out.

Weeks later, Tulsi Gabbard tore into her during that infamous second debate moment, calling her out on national TV over her troubling record as a DA and state prosecutor in California, something that prior to that was not widely known by Dem voters. Not long after that, core Democrat groups were polled (women and back voters) and her support dropped by double digits. Not even the voters who were “expected” to support her were willing to do so. At that point, her inauthenticity had been fully exposed – by other Democrats and Democrat-friendly news outlets.

It also doesn’t help that it’s not exactly a secret that Harris’s rise to political stardom in the state of California came as the result of a well-documented affair with a very well-connected married man (former SF mayor Willie Brown) who was several decades older and who even wrote in an early 2019 column after she’d declared her candidacy that he had greased the wheels that helped put her professionally on the path to success in state politics.

People can get angry with me for stating that inconvenient fact, but as Ben Shapiro says, facts don’t care about anyone’s feelings.

Harris’s team is fond of blaming “racism and sexism” for the criticisms she’s been hit with over the last several months, but as I’ve said before, Kamala Harris has consistently been her own worst enemy and she continues to be. This is what happens when one’s career starts off the way Harris’s did. You begin to expect to be given preferential treatment as you climb the ladder and treated to fawning interviews in the press because of “who you are” and what you supposedly represent from a “historical” perspective.

As it turns out, being the “first” whatever really doesn’t amount to a hill of beans to the average person, especially if you keep demonstrating that not only are you really, really bad at what you do (which Harris often does) but also that you’re about as genuine as a $3 bill. The vast majority of Harris’s problems are self-inflicted, especially the authenticity issue, something even the Biden White House apparently realizes considering the talk swirling about dumping her in 2024.

Sorry not sorry, Kamala Harris. Your political woes are all on you.



Nancy Pelosi Puts on a Worrisome Display During Press Briefing


Sister Toldjah reporting for RedState

We write a lot here about the rambling incoherence and odd staring often displayed by President Biden during scripted press conferences and other public appearances he makes where his handlers frequently intervene in bizarre ways and sometimes even upstage him.

And while that’s obviously very concerning to many Americans when one considers the fact that he is the leader of the free world, it’s equally worrying when it comes from the second person in the presidential line of succession – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi has had her share of moments in front of the cameras that have caused people to do double takes out of either concern or outright shock, but we may have just come across the worst one of all.

Take a look at what she said below during a press briefing late last week when she was asked “Why hasn’t the House acted on that bill about Uyghur oppression, and do you think that it will?”

Can you make heads or tails of it? I can’t:

Even the “cleaned up” version of the transcript posted by Pelosi’s office doesn’t help much (it’s missing several of the awkward pauses, which I added back in), but here it is anyway:

So, we have a bill in the House. It’s the McGovern bill, a stronger bill than the [confusion] it’s a bill that we could have freestanding or bill in the EAGLE Act that is part of the [confusion, long pauses and awkward laughter] Foreign Affairs Committee. Mr. Kendrick Meeks – no, Gregory Meeks’ bill. Kendrick – we are all very sad about losing Carrie Meek this week, so I referenced her son. But Chairman Meeks’ bill in the House. So, we will have that.

But, you see, in a defense – [in a] bill, whether it’s in the whatever that thing’s called that they have in the Senate, or in a DOD bill, the Senate does not have the right to have a revenue or an appropriations matter.

I get it that sometimes people have so much on their plate that it’s easy to forget names, places, things, stumble on a word or two. But that was just painful. A trainwreck. A genuinely concerning moment.

When I see things like this (and the Biden video), I assume what’s happening is age-related. And it makes me wonder if maximum age limits should be put on who can serve in the House, Senate, and White House. But if we did that then there would be some highly effective people who are on up in age who would either be disqualified from running or who would have to bow out at a certain point due to the age limit.

As far as Pelosi’s concerned, it may be that if Democrats get trounced in 2022 she decides to hang it up altogether. Rumors are already swirling to that effect. But even if she didn’t retire, her being out of the Speaker’s chair would be a welcome relief for many reasons, not just the fact that she appears to have big coherency problems. The good news is that even if Republicans don’t retake the House next year, Pelosi has said that this will be her last go-round with the Speaker’s gavel.

Hopefully, though, Republicans will regain control, which would ensure that Pelosi’s promise to step down as Speaker doesn’t get a chance to get tested. Because enough’s enough already.



Bob Dole, former senator and presidential candidate, dies at 98

 

WASHINGTON — Former Sen. Bob Dole, a Kansas lawmaker and decorated World War II veteran who never realized his ambitions to win the presidency but left an indelible mark on the nation’s capital and history, died Sunday. He was 98.

Dole died in his sleep, according to an announcement from the Elizabeth Dole Foundation.

For all his accomplishments, Dole wanted to be remembered for his service – particularly as a soldier who lost the use of his right arm on the battlefield in Italy. “Veteran who gave his most for his country,” Dole described how he wanted to be remembered, during an interview in May 2013 on Fox News.

As a politician, though, Dole was a major force in the Republican Party for three decades. That service began in 1971, when he was its national chairman, and culminated in 1996 as the GOP presidential nominee in an election lost to Democrat Bill Clinton. Dole holds the record as the Senate’s longest-serving Republican leader, a post he held for nearly 11 years.  


Late in his life, Dole was hospitalized from time to time at Walter Reed National Military Center with a variety of ailments. In February, Dole announced he had lung cancer.  


In one of his last public pronouncements, the former standard bearer criticized his party for a lack of ideas and a tilt so conservative that icons such as Ronald Reagan – and himself – could not make it in today’s Republican Party.

“I think they ought to put a sign on the national committee doors that says ‘closed for repairs’ until New Year’s Day next year and spend that time going over ideas and positive agendas,” Dole said.  


Dole’s political career spanned what came to be called “the American century,” and he played a role in many of its pivotal moments. He fought – and lost the use of his right arm and nearly died – in World War II, helped pass landmark civil rights legislation in the 1960s and later spearheaded a bill to make Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday a national holiday.

Dole steered his party through the Watergate crisis of the 1970s, and pushed to expand opportunities for the disabled and improve nutrition for the disadvantaged during 27 years as a senator. He played a key role in a 1983 compromise that saved Social Security from insolvency.  

After leaving public life, Dole helped raise more than $197 million for a memorial to his fellow World War II veterans on the National Mall. He also co-chaired a presidential commission in 2007 that investigated sub-standard conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. More recently, he spent 18 months working with other former Senate majority leaders — Democrats George Mitchell and Tom Daschle and fellow Republican Howard Baker — on a bipartisan list of recommendations for improving the nation’s health care system that was issued July 2009.

“He was one of the greatest of the greatest generation,” said Whit Ayres, a longtime Republican consultant.

In a poignant scene in December 2012, Dole visited the Capitol to say goodbye to another World War II veteran, Senate colleague and lifelong friend. With some help, he lifted himself out of his wheelchair to walk across the Rotunda to salute the casket of Democrat Daniel Inouye, a Medal of Honor winner who represented Hawaii in the Senate and House for 50 years. Dole and Inouye, who also lost an arm in battle, became friends recuperating at the same Army hospital.  


Despite his party affiliation and advancing age, Dole was a politician who could change with the times. He appointed the Senate’s first female chief of staff and the first woman to serve as secretary of the Senate. In 1999,. Dole made headlines by openly discussing male impotence problems in ads for Viagra.

Dole and his second. wife, Elizabeth, made one of Washington’s most glamorous power couples. A Harvard-educated lawyer, she served as secretary of Transportation in Ronald Reagan’s administration, secretary of Labor under George H.W. Bush and president of the American Red Cross. Dole campaigned for his wife when she successfully ran for a Senate seat from her native North Carolina, a post she held for one term, from 2003 through 2009.

“I regret that I have but one wife to give for my country,” Dole quipped.  


Humor was one of Dole’s trademarks, as was his habit of referring himself in the third person. Joking about the bureaucracy he endured as an Army infantryman, he liked to say, “I was a boy from the plains of Kansas, so they sent me to the Alps.”

In Italy, Dole was gravely wounded while trying to rescue another soldier. He spent 39 months in hospitals and endured eight surgeries. Twice he had life-threatening infections. At one point, his temperature climbed to nearly 109 degrees. He never regained the use of his right arm. Throughout his political career, Dole made a habit of carrying a pen in his right hand to prevent others from trying to shake it.

Dole had been a promising athlete who was planning to go out for football, basketball and track when the war interrupted his college career. After his injury, he channeled his competitive energies into politics.

 

 

From partisan to dealmaker

His ability to adapt to changing circumstances would come to the fore again when Dole, a sharp-edged partisan at the outset of his Washington career, matured into one of the town’s consummate dealmakers, who had high-powered admirers in both parties.

Dole entered Congress in 1961, a few weeks before another Kansan – President Dwight Eisenhower – left office. Dole won a U.S. House seat after a tough Republican primary fight against Keith Sebelius, a state senator. Sebelius later succeeded Dole in the U.S. House and became his friend. Sebelius’ daughter-in-law, Kathleen, was elected governor of Kansas as a Democrat in 2003. In 2009,. President Obama named her secretary of Health and Human Services.

Elected to the Senate in 1968, the same year Richard Nixon won the White House, Dole first drew the attention of party leaders for his aggressive partisanship and staunch defense of the president’s Vietnam strategy.  


Sen. William Saxbe of Ohio, a less conservative Republican, described Dole in The New York Times as “a hatchet man.” More admiringly, Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., said the party finally had in Dole someone who “could grab ’em by the hair and haul them down the aisle.”

As Gerald Ford’s vice presidential running mate in 1976, Dole famously described American battlefield deaths of the 20th century as casualties of “Democrat wars.”

Nor was Dole’s brusqueness confined to the political arena. “I want out,” is how he informed his first wife, Phyllis, of his plans to file for a divorce in 1971. The couple had a daughter, Robin, who began campaigning for her father as a toddler, wearing “I’m for my Daddy” pins, and continued to do so through his 1996 run for the White House.

In 1988, during the second of his three tries for the presidency, he physically confronted his chief rival, then-vice president George H.W. Bush, on the floor of the Senate. Dole told a TV interviewer that Bush should “stop lying about my record.” Bush eventually won the presidency. Dole made an effort to soften his image after that campaign.  


Final run at White House

Dole gave the 1996 White House race his best shot, recruiting Jack Kemp, a favorite of GOP conservatives, as his running mate even though the two men had feuded over supply-side economic theories (Kemp bought them; Dole didn’t). In Clinton, Dole had a young, incumbent opponent presiding over a booming economy in peacetime.

Scott Reed, who managed the GOP presidential campaign, said Dole mounted an all-out, 96-hour campaign marathon in the closing hours of the race not for his own sake — “We knew we were going to lose” — but to help other Republican candidates. “That was classic Dole,” Reed said.

Reed said he regrets advising Dole to rein in his acerbic wit. “That was a mistake,” he said, “because people didn’t see the real Bob Dole.”

Once the campaign was over, Dole volunteered to help the man who beat him, serving as Clinton’s envoy in Bosnia and throwing himself into the effort to make the World War II memorial a reality. For Dole, extending a hand to a political opponent had become the quintessence of patriotism.  


At the World War II memorial’s 2004 dedication, Dole called the monument of stately granite columns, graceful bronze wreathes and placid fountains a tribute to a “people who in the crucible of war forged a unity that became our ultimate weapon.”

He made regular visits to the memorial, without fanfare, to greet other veterans. “It’s like he had discovered late in life one of the most important things,” says Sen. Dan Coats, an Indiana Republican who served with Dole in the Senate and later shared a law office with him.

In retirement, Dole continued lending his name and energies to one of his other favorite causes: opening doors for the disabled. In a 2005 interview with Caring magazine, Dole called passage of the 199 Americans with Disabilities Act his proudest achievement as a senator.

Asked once how he’d like to be remembered, he said, “As somebody who had a sense of humor, who got along well with people and who kept his word.”  


https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/12/05/bob-dole-obituary/8513903002/   






UK Physicians Worried About Large Numbers of Cardiac Health Emergencies


A report in the U.K. shows doctors worried about a spike in heart related medical issues.  However, the physicians in the national health service attribute the issue to stress caused by the pandemic and not the possibility that adverse vaccine reactions might be the common denominator.

(UK Standard) – […] Tahir Hussain, a senior vascular surgeon at Northwick Park Hospital in Harrow, said he has seen a significant rise in cases where he works.

He said: “I’ve seen a big increase in thrombotic-related vascular conditions in my practice. Far younger patients are being admitted and requiring surgical and medical intervention than prior to the pandemic.  “I believe many of these cases are a direct result of the increased stress and anxiety levels caused from the effects of PPSD [post-pandemic stress disorder]. (read more)

It’s weird how no-one is allowed to ponder the possibility that the vaccine may be causing the spikes in heart related medical issues.  Instead, the doctors grasp at the politically correct straws to explain the unexplainable.


Absolute Hysteria and Choice Memes Flow Over 'Dictator' Ron DeSantis and His New 'Trump Red Army'


Bonchie reporting for RedState

As RedState reported Friday, Gov. Ron DeSantis caused an earthquake on the left after the governor proposed reinstating the Florida State Guard. DeSantis was accused, among other things, of starting his own “militia” to serve as “Trump’s Red Army.”

In reality, 23 other states already have a state guard and Florida’s would simply join the already long list, increasing the resources available to respond to natural disasters like hurricanes.

That didn’t stop the hysteria from flowing, though. After my initial write-up, things just went downhill from there. Nikki Fried, who is trying to get the Democrat nomination to run against DeSantis in 2022, went on with Joy Reid last night (because who else?), and hoo boy, was it something.

DeSantis is going full authoritarian by having a state guard like 23 other states already have? Welcome to the logic of the left, and that crazy just continued into the next day, with MSNBC’s Tiffany Cross losing her ever-loving mind this morning.

I’m pretty sure DeSantis doesn’t need a state guard to shoot looters, if that is his motivation. Couldn’t state law enforcement do the job? Of course, that’s not his motivation because he’s not suffering from a mental breakdown like these cable news hosts are displaying. Things got so bad that even Sarah Silverman, a leftwing Hollywood actor/comedian, had to throw down on Joy Reid, pointing out that she clearly had no idea what she was talking about.

In response to all that insanity, conservatives had some fun, leading to some rather hilarious memes. 

Jokes aside, though, why does the left act like this about Ron DeSantis? The answer is because they fear him. He is the most effective politician, not just on the right, but in the entire country. He can bash the media with expert skill one minute and solve major problems the next. He’s also shown that he’s not afraid to make tough decisions, even when that means putting his own neck on the line. Democrats are used to Republicans being meek and cowardly, unwilling to use delegated power to protect individuals and do the right thing.

DeSantis horrifies them because he’s the antithesis of that caricature. Republicans aren’t supposed to use executive power to stop vaccine mandates or stand up to big tech. They aren’t supposed to defy Dr. Anthony Fauci and not lockdown during a pandemic. They aren’t supposed to always have the right answer when the media comes calling with their bias. DeSantis does all those things, and they hate him for it.

That’s exactly why Republicans love him, though. He’s earned every accolade he’s received and his star is only getting brighter, which makes the constant hysteria surrounding him all the more enjoyable. There’s something to be said for being able to simultaneously govern well and own the libs. It’s a rare combination.



Remembering December Eight Decades Ago

 

 

USS Arizona Dec. 7, 1941


Article by Clayton Spann in The American Thinker


Remembering December Eight Decades Ago

As we enter this troubled December, let us reach back eighty years.  To another December, and eight days that birthed the world of peril and promise we occupy today.

In the first days of December 1941, the German Army was approaching Moscow from the north, west and south.  The Wehrmacht steadily advanced despite snow, bitter cold, and fanatical resistance.  Everyone in Europe and the United States braced for word that the Soviet capital had fallen.  The Soviet Union – a horrible entity to be sure – seemed doomed.

But General Georgy Zhukov had assembled a massive reserve of nearly sixty divisions.  On Dec. 5 he unleashed a counterattack against the German forces to the northwest of Moscow.  The attack achieved total surprise.  The Germans reeled backwards.  On Dec. 6 Zhukov launched attacks to the west and southwest.  Again the Germans were driven back.

The counter-offense of Zhukov ended Hitler's hope for a decisive victory in 1941.  Hitler and his generals now knew that they were locked in a war of attrition with the Soviet Union.  A war of attrition with an adversary possessing twice their population and a greater industrial base, augmented by Lend-Lease supply.  The Germans also faced a regime – and a leader – even more ruthless and brutal than their own.

On Dec. 7, the Soviet offensive continued.  But the eyes of the world shifted elsewhere, to the Pacific Ocean.  That morning, hundreds of Japanese aircraft descended on the airfields and naval berths of Oahu in the Hawaiian Islands.  Over twenty-four hundred American servicemen were killed and an array of warships and planes laid in wreckage.  Seven hours after the attack, Japan belatedly declared war on the United States and Great Britain.

Also that day (EST) the tentacles of Japan reached elsewhere.  Their troops invaded Thailand, Malaya (a British colony and a vital source of rubber), and Hong Kong.   Their warplanes struck Singapore, the Philippines, Guam, and Wake Island.

Also that day, in Germany, Adolf Hitler issued the sinister Night and Fog Decree.  The secret decree allowed for the disappearance of political opponents and resistance fighters.  Most of the thousands of victims were nocturnally seized and no word was given to families on their fate (often death in concentration camps).

On Dec. 8, President Roosevelt delivered his famous “a date which will live in infamy” speech to a joint session of Congress.  It is inspiring to watch video of that speech, both the ringing call to arms by FDR (“the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory”) and the roaring cheers of the united audience.  Shortly after the speech, Congress declared war on the Empire of Japan.

On Dec. 9, China declared war on Japan, Germany, and Italy.  Japan had already inflicted great devastation and death on China.  It is little noted in the West that Japan killed nearly four million Chinese civilians (often marked by appalling atrocities) between 1937 and 1945.  But China has not forgotten nor forgiven.

Dec. 10 brought the sinking off the Malayan coast of the British warships Repulse and Prince of Wales (the latter in May had traded shots with the German battleship Bismarck).  Japanese torpedo planes dealt the fatal blows.  The sinking of the two capital ships by aircraft shocked the world and announced the arrival of a new age in naval warfare.  The British should not have been surprised, since six months earlier, their own torpedo bombers disabled the Bismarck.

Dec. 11 brought the decisive day of World War II:  In the greatest blunder of that war, Adolf Hitler delivered a speech before Reichstag deputies in Berlin.  Citing a long list of grievances, he declared war on the most powerful economic nation in the world.  Over the next four years, that nation would also become the supreme military power.

In turn, the United States declared war on Germany.  We must remember that prior to Dec. 7, the nation was vehemently split between the interventionists and the isolationists.  In the immediate days after the Pearl Harbor attack, united support existed only for war with Japan.  William Shirer wrote1:

My own impression in Washington at that moment was that it might be difficult for President Roosevelt to get Congress to declare war on Germany.  There seemed to be a strong feeling in both Houses as well as in the Army and Navy that the country ought to concentrate its efforts on defeating Japan and not take on the additional burden of fighting Germany at the same time.

Without the Unites States at war against Nazi Germany, it is doubtful the British could have successfully invaded France.  Nor is it likely that the British alone could have expelled the Germans from North Africa or landed in Sicily or Italy.  Without American involvement, the Nazis would perhaps to this day remain masters of western Europe.

With the United States sidelined, the Germans could have concentrated nearly full force against the Soviets.  Could the Wehrmacht have raised the price in blood high enough to gain a stalemate in the East?  Already it had achieved a six-to-one causality ratio in battle.  With forces not needed for a second front, at the very least the Germans could have greatly slowed any Soviet advance.

We must also consider that with America battling only in the Pacific and the Soviets slowed, Germany would have had time to develop and field impressive numbers of their advanced weapons.  To wit, jet fighters and bombers, ballistic and guided missiles, fortress tanks, night vision equipment, and yes, eventually, nuclear weapons.

All this Hitler negated by his astounding error of Dec. 11.  If Hitler had decided otherwise, the world today could be profoundly different.

On the last of the eight days, Dec. 12, Hitler made another decision -- one which still haunts us many years after the destruction of his heinous regime.

In a meeting in the Reich Chancellery with top subordinates, Hitler gave a green light for the Holocaust.  Prior to this meeting, SS death squads (Einstazgruppen) had murdered many thousands of Jews in Poland and the USSR.  But annihilation of European Jewry was not yet an official policy.  This decision laid the foundation for the death factories which methodically consumed millions of Jews and others hated by Hitler.

Eight days in December of 1941.  Eighty years ago.  Which wrenched the world into total war and unleashed the worst of our demonic impulses.

Are the leaders of the great powers of today wise enough to refrain from initiating another global war?  The present world, for all its troubles, is on the verge of creating paradise.  A world where want and disease and perhaps death itself will fade away. Where humankind can achieve Winston Churchill's vision of moving “forward into broad, sunlit uplands”.

As we move towards another Christmas, let us pray for the vision to become reality.

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2021/12/remembering_december_eight_decades_ago.html 

 






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