SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:18:13 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
locogringo

  Respond to of 1575627
 
Work As A Maid For Extremely Wealthy Dem Donors And Want Maternity Leave? Nope, You’re Fired Instead…


Such loving and caring liberals…

Via WFB:

A pair of ultra-wealthy Democratic donors fired their nine-months-pregnant housekeeper after she requested maternity leave, court records reveal.

Her firing, which she said violated California employment law, came after weeks of alleged retaliation and harassment by one of her employers, Laura Baxter-Simons, who, the housekeeper claimed, objected to her request for maternity leave.

Baxter-Simons is married to hedge fund tycoon Nathaniel Simons. The two are high-dollar donors to Democratic candidates—though Baxter-Simons has also donated to Republicans—and run a foundation that distributes tens of millions of dollars to left-wing groups each year.

Simons and his wife are the owners of Elan Household, LLC, a company they created to manage household expenses, including salaries and benefits for three housekeepers, at their 6,700 square-foot home in Berkeley.

Elan hired Madalyn Garcia as a cook and housekeeper in June 2010. Garcia claimed that she was a good employee who routinely earned bonuses based on performance.




To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:18:58 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
locogringo

  Respond to of 1575627
 
Staples Fires Back At Obama: ‘The President Appears Not to Have All The Facts’
........................................................................
breitbart.com ^ | 2/11/2015 | Charlie Spiering



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:21:06 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
FJB

  Respond to of 1575627
 
If Obama were Muslim, what would he do differently?’



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:27:16 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
FJB

  Respond to of 1575627
 
PROGRESSIVE ATHEIST KILLS 3 MUSLIM STUDENTS, MEDIA IGNORES

....................................................................................
DailyCaller.Com ^ | 02/11/2015 | DEREK HUNTER






Three Muslim students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill were tragically murdered by a crazed progressive atheist, and the mainstream media is ignoring that fact. The victims, Deah Shaddy Barakat, 23, his wife, Yusor Mohammad, 21, and her sister, Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, 19, were shot and killed by Craig Stephen Hicks, 46.




The New York Times reported on the murders and mentioned Hicks’ atheism, but not his politics. CNN did the same, as did The Washington Post. Yet even a passive look...




To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:33:20 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1575627
 
State Dept. Backs Obama: Paris Attack Didn't Target Jews
......................................................................................................

2/11/2015
Arutz Sheva ^ | Ari Soffer

Jen Psaki .
the latest Obama spokesperson to stutter an explanation as to why he described the attack on kosher store as just 'random'. It's the controversy that just won't go away - and it's hard to understand why.

Since US President Barack Obama's controversial comments during a recent interview, in which he downplayed the anti-Semitic nature of the deadly shooting attack at a kosher supermarket in Paris last month, government spokespeople have been falling over themselves to explain what exactly he meant. And failing pretty miserably.

It's the controversy that just won't go away - and it's hard to understand why. In the interview with Vox, published earlier this week, the US President asserted that the media was "overstating" the threat from terrorism to garner ratings, but admitted terrorism was still a problem. In so doing, however, he provoked a storm of controversy with the following comment: "It is entirely legitimate for the American people to be deeply concerned when you've got a bunch of violent vicious zealots who behead people or randomly shoot a bunch of folks in a deli in Paris."

That statement provoked widespread outrage, with viewers taking to social media to ask how an attack by a follower of a virulently anti-Semitic ideology on a kosher store could be seen as "random," rather than as an attack against the Jewish community.

First, White House official spokesman Josh Earnest made a valiant but cringeworthy attempt to tidy up after the President, justifying Obama's claim that climate change was more dangerous than terrorism, as well as attempting to explain how ISIS terrorist Amedy Coulibaly was simply "shooting random folks" without paying any attention to their background at the Hyper Cacher store.

Later Tuesday evening it was the turn of State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki, who similarly struggled to rationalize Obama's strange comments.

Associated Press journalist Matt Lee began the exchange, asking: "Does the administration really believe that the victims of this attack were not singled out because they were of a particular faith?"

Psaki's response to the straightforward question was perhaps even more evasive than Earnest's.

Psaki: "Well, as you know... I believe... if I remember the victims specifically, they were not all victims of one background or one nationality so I think what they mean by that is... I don't know if they spoke to the targeting of the grocery store... but (rather) the individuals who were impacted."

When Lee pointed out that Secretary of State John Kerry's own actions, by meeting specifically with members of the Jewish community to pay condolences after the attack, suggested otherwise, Psaki struggled to formulate a coherent response.

Psaki: "Naturally given that is... the grocery store is one that, uh..."

Lee: "But don't you think the store itself was a target?"

Psaki: "That's different from the victims being..."

Lee: "Does the administration believe that this was an anti-Jewish... an attack on the Jewish community in France?"

Psaki: "I don't think we're going to speak on behalf of French authorities and what they believe was the situation at play here..."

Lee: "But if a guy goes into a kosher market and starts shooting it up, he's not looking for Buddhists is he?

"Who does the administration expect shops at a kosher (store)...? An attacker going into a store that is clearly identified with one specific faith - I'm not sure I can understand how it is that you can't say that this was a targeted attack!"

Psaki: "I don't have more for you Matt, it's an issue for the French government to address."

It is of course possible that the original comments by Obama were simply flippant, and not specifically intended to play-down the anti-Semitic motive of the attack.

But the subsequent responses of two senior administration spokespeople such as Earnest and Psaki - whose jobs are to simply parrot the line of the US government - appear to suggest otherwise, raising some difficult questions.

Why is the Obama administration trying so hard to play-down the anti-Semitic nature of the attack?



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:40:29 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations

Recommended By
locogringo
Qualified Opinion

  Respond to of 1575627
 



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 2:44:35 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1575627
 
Obama won’t say “Islamist” when Islamists commit terrorist acts. So he won’t say “Jewish” when Jews are targeted.



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 3:04:55 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
TideGlider

  Respond to of 1575627
 
The Anti-Zionist Guide to Burning Synagogues

February 10, 2015 by Daniel Greenfield 56 Comments

Wuppertal’s synagogues had been destroyed on Kristallnacht. By the time the war was over, the 3,000 Jews living in this German city had been reduced to a community of 60. 75 years after Kristallnacht, the Bergische Synagogue began to burn after three Muslim men had thrown six Molotov cocktails at it.

The Jews of Wuppertal however have nothing to worry about. Judge Jörg Sturm found that the attack was not anti-Semitic, but had only been a way of bringing “attention to the Gaza conflict”.

It wasn’t anti-Semitism, but anti-Zionism.

The three Muslim men, two named Mohammed and one named Ismail, received suspended sentences and 200 hours of community service. In their defense, they claimed that they wanted to “send a signal”, but had not intended to set a synagogue on fire when they threw firebombs at it.

The men claimed that “they weren’t aware that by throwing them they could burn the synagogue or injure other people.”

Inside the synagogue, a blandly anonymous brick building whose only sign that it is a synagogue is a small line of Hebrew letters over the doors containing Isaiah’s prophetic message, “My house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples”, there are security cameras, bulletproof glass and a security guard behind glass. The building is squat with tall narrow windows. Its fort-like construction is a far cry from the baroque onion domes of the Barmen synagogue destroyed on Kristallnacht that it was meant to replace. The only element that has remained the same is the prophecy of Isaiah over the doors.

But the three Muslim men did not come to pray there. They came to burn it. And by the fall, Muslims were marching around the city wearing vests reading “Sharia Police”.

There’s a thin line between anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism. The name of the line is plausible deniability. Students for Justice in Palestine and the Muslim Students Association hate groups have in the past asserted that their disruption of Holocaust memorial events was anti-Zionist, not anti-Semitic.

Anti-Semitic attacks in Europe have been put down to Anti-Zionism, and not just by the Europeans.

Ambassador Howard Gutman got his posting to Belgium after raising $500,000 for Obama. There he claimed that Muslim violence against Jews wasn’t anti-Semitism, but “tension” to be blamed on Israel. Gutman, who would later be accused of pedophilia by a whistleblower, was arguing that attacks on Jews by Europeans were anti-Semitic while attacks by Muslims on Jews were anti-Zionist.

When Nazis burn a synagogue, it’s anti-Semitism. When Muslims do it, it’s anti-Zionism.

The state of the synagogue remains the same either way, but the perpetrators get off with a slap on the wrist. And the Jews are blamed for the violence carried out by Muslims against them.

While it appears historically apt for Germany to be the first country in Europe where a judge justified an attack on a synagogue, the media had already been doing it long before.

A decade ago, CNN’s Matthew Chance justified the Muslim destruction of a synagogue in Israel by describing it as “very controversial” and synagogues as “hated symbols of the Israeli occupation”. The Los Angeles Times wrote of a synagogue as a “hulking Star of David-shaped building” destroyed by Muslims venting “their fury over the occupation by laying waste to the synagogues”.

The London Telegraph lyrically described a poetic scene of synagogue burning. “The skies were yet to be lit by the rising sun when the first flames from burning synagogues could be seen, set alight by Palestinians incensed by years when the Israeli army ruthlessly defended the settlements.”

“Anti-Zionist” synagogue burnings don’t just stay in Israel. Once torching a synagogue is justified, then it can and will happen anywhere.

In 2000, four Muslim men tried to torch a New York synagogue before Yom Kippur.
Like his current counterpart in Germany, Mazin Assi claimed that he had intended to “make a statement” about Israel. Assi was represented by terror lawyers Lynne Stewart, who would later be sent to jail for conspiring with the Terror Sheikh linked to the original World Trade Center bombing, and Stanley Cohen, a Hamas supporter recently sentenced to jail for tax evasion.

Stewart described her defense of a man who tried to burn a synagogue as “an underdog fighting against great odds.” It was unclear whether she meant the odds of fighting buildings or Jews.

“I want my client tried by a jury of people who understand the difference between anger and hate, a people who understand the legitimacy of fighting back,” Stanley Cohen told the Village Voice.

He accused the D.A. of courting “the synagogue or pro-Zionist lobby in the Bronx”.

The pro-Zionist lobby was now anyone who didn’t want to see synagogues burn.

The terror lawyer made the same argument that his client had not intended to “cause fire-related damage”, but to send a message. “The prosecutors keep wanting you to think this had something to do with Jews,” he claimed of the attempted synagogue arson, when it was really about Israel.

The New York Times even wondered whether the whole thing wasn’t “a misguided message critical of Israeli policies against Palestinians”. But after September 11, no jury could be found that would support the “legitimacy” of fighting back by firebombing synagogues.

Stanley claimed, “These are ugly times… I believe the jury was swept by 9/11.”

But even the most twisted arguments sooner or later find root somewhere. That was the lesson of what happened to the old Barmen synagogue on Kristallnacht and what happened now to the Muslim terrorists who threw Molotov cocktails at the Bergische Synagogue in Judge Sturm’s courtroom.

Judge George Bathurst-Norman in the UK had paved the way by clearing anti-Israel activists of an attack on a factory. But Judge Strum went one step further, ratifying a mini-Kristallnacht as a political protest.

If trying to torch a synagogue is just good clean anti-Zionism, then there is no anti-Semitism. Or rather they are the same thing. Burn a synagogue, beat a Jew and send a message about the Middle East. And the kindly judge will let you off with a little community service.

Since the left insists that Zionism is racism, anti-Semitism becomes the ultimate in anti-Racism. Beating Jews and burning synagogues is the best way to be racially tolerant. Take it from Germany
.

The story is a familiar one. Hitler and Goebbels had orchestrated Kristallnacht as a “venting” of popular anger over Jewish crimes. It’s the same defense Lynne Stewart and Stanley Cohen used. Goebbels wrote, “Driving to the hotel, windows are being smashed. Bravo, bravo. The synagogues burn like big old huts.” The Nazi Minister of Propaganda sounded a good deal like CNN or the Telegraph.

Evil ideas don’t go away. They rise again under new names. Anti-Semitism is now Anti-Zionism. Synagogues become “very controversial”. Burning them isn’t a crime, it’s a statement. A message.

The new Nazis are diverse. They’re multicultural. They’re not the Reich, they’re a Caliphate. And when they burn synagogues, it’s not reactionary. Their synagogue burnings are as progressive as it gets.

http://www.frontpagemag.com/2015/dgreenfield/the-anti-zionist-guide-to-burning-synagogues/

..........
Hard Little Machinea day ago
This will happen in NY City inside of a year. And de Blasio will tell people that complaining about it is of course racist.
...........



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/11/2015 3:05:37 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
locogringo
TideGlider

  Respond to of 1575627
 
The future must not belong to those who burn synagogues and slaughter kosher grocery shoppers: Something Obama will never say



To: tejek who wrote (835908)2/12/2015 1:42:30 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575627
 
Ted, if I trusted that Obama really wanted ISIS eliminated (as opposed to "wishing they would go away"), I would support his war efforts.

Tenchusatsu