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Politics : A Real American President: Donald Trump -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Honey_Bee who wrote (100894)10/27/2018 1:00:33 PM
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We need coal mines, not newpapers

Don Surber
Saturday, October 27, 2018
donsurber.blogspot.com

"Despite Trump Rhetoric, Journalists Are Losing Jobs at a Faster Rate Than Coal Miners," the Observer reported.

Kurt Schlichter (retired Army colonel, attorney, novelist and columnist) did a video, "Journalists are losing their jobs — and I don’t care."


His argument is, "Why, even coal miners are doing better. You know, the hard-working folks who the press were happy to see lose their jobs? Not a lot of sympathy from me."


Kurt Schlichter?Verified account @KurtSchlichter 7h7 hours ago

Kurt Schlichter Retweeted The Rebel

I hope the media collapses because it is a leftist shill and it blows.

Newspapers are obsolete. Video killed the radio star, and bloggers killed the newspapers.

A few executives, including the ones who run the New York Times, are trying to segue to the Internet, something they should have done 20 years ago.

But most newspaper publishers think they can limp along by cutting staff.

The smart money left long ago. Thomson and other big chains of newspapers got out 10 to 20 years ago when the going was still good.

The new owners usually are either hedge funds that will squeeze the orange rind for juice a few more times, or delusional local people with little newspaper experience who think they can save the buggy whip factory.

But the most delusional people are the writers and reporters at newspapers. They think they are better than coal miners.

Consider columnist Catherine Rampell's reaction to the job losses.


Catherine Rampell?Verified account @crampell 3 Apr 2017

From Jan 2001 to Sep 2016, newspaper publishing lost over half its employment, from 412k to 174k.

Catherine Rampell?Verified account @crampell 3 Apr 2017

BTW US has lost many more newspaper jobs than coal jobs over that period, in both raw numbers and percentage terms.


Excuse me, but that just shows that coal miners are more important than reporters. In the marketplace, coal miners win hands down.

ABC News reported, "The average starting salary for a coal mine worker is $60,000."

The average for reporters is half that.


Coal mining requires the skill to run heavy equipment. Reporting requires typing. I had a managing editor 40-plus years ago who said he could teach someone to be a reporter in an afternoon. And he did.

But such humility is rare in the business.

We need coal mines to supply reliable electricity, and to make steel. Replacing them with windmills not only would line our hills with unsightly turbines but it would put electric production at the mercy of the weather.

But newspapers are easily replaced by alternate news outlets. They are less harmful to the environment as they don't require the timbering of forests, and don't fill the landfills with old papers.

I get the argument about the importance of free speech and a free press.

But Schlichter is right. So many newspapers are run by leftist shills that we do not have a free press.

Only 20 newspapers in the USA endorsed Donald John Trump for president.

He carried 30 states.

I would say that states he won that failed to have a newspaper that endorsed him are news deserts.

West Virginia is the best example. None of the state's newspapers endorsed him. He won by 42 points. How in the heck can newspapers claim any relevance when they are so out of touch with readers?
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To: Honey_Bee who wrote (100894)10/27/2018 1:01:14 PM
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Because We Live Here

By Pedro Gonzalez
October 27th, 2018
amgreatness.com




What surges toward the United States from the south is not a “caravan,” it is an invading force.

Mothers who take money from leftist activists to drag their children on for thousands of miles in front of cameras are not brave, they are mercenary.

Men who tear apart metal barriers and cry, “Donald Trump is the antichrist,” are not “just looking for work,” they are looking for a fight and are daring anyone to stop them.


Just as well, I would refer the “free market” fearmongers, who insist that America needs a constant influx of fresh “diversity” as tribute to satiate the Invisible Hand, to Chilton Williamson Jr.: “You could ‘prove’ to me that, without the immediate transference of the entire population of Hong Kong to the state of California, the United States would be in a major economic depression by the middle of next year, and I would still be against transferring it there.”

Yet even as we scramble to address the threat before us, another rears its head. There is now a second mob 2,500 strong organizing to march on the United States.

Some still wonder, incredibly, what is the worst that could happen should we simply welcome them all among us?

Just before his death, Murray Rothbard broke away from supporting open borders in an article called “ Nations by Consent: Decomposing the Nation State.” As the Soviet Union collapsed, wrote Rothbard:


it became clear that ethnic Russians had been encouraged to flood into Estonia and Latvia in order to destroy the cultures and languages of these peoples. Previously, it had been easy to dismiss as unrealistic Jean Raspail’s anti-immigration novel The Camp of the Saints, in which virtually the entire population of India decides to move, in small boats, into France, and the French, infected by liberal ideology, cannot summon the will to prevent economic and cultural national destruction. As cultural and welfare-state problems have intensified, it became impossible to dismiss Raspail’s concerns any longer.

What did Americans think Mexico was up to, when it began printing manuals to help illegal aliens enter the United States? At least now we know for certain that the governments of Latin America are making more money than ever before on remittances—all at the expense of American citizens.

What do Americans suppose Augustin Cebada of the Brown Berets meant when he said: “Go back to Boston! Go back to Plymouth Rock, Pilgrims! Get out! We are the future. You are old and tired. Go on. We have beaten you. Leave like beaten rats. You old white people. It is your duty to die . . . Through love of having children, we are going to take over.”

Better yet, what do Americans suppose Mario Obledo, former California Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare under Governor Jerry Brown, and founder of MALDEF (the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund) meant when he said: “California is going to be a Hispanic state. Anyone who doesn’t like it should leave. Every constitutional office in California is going to be held by Hispanics in the next 20 years.” And people who don’t like such demographic changes, according to Obledo, “should go back to Europe.”

Our failure to distinguish between people who came to this country truly to be part of it, to assimilate into Anglo-Protestant culture, and those now marching toward our border, has only encouraged a generalized enmity and eliminated any distinction between myself and hostile foreigners soon to be at our gates. This road, history will show us, is pitched with blood.

After Spanish Christians successfully drove Muslims from their lands in 1492, many Muslims left, but many more remained. Though they promised to behave themselves, they colluded with Turkish and North African Muslims to stage revolts within the country, while Spain’s enemies attacked from without. After the Spanish government put an end to these revolts, the decision was made to integrate Muslims with the rest of the population. Muslims were given a choice: convert to Catholicism or leave. Some left, but many stayed and claimed to have converted, known then as “Moriscos.” But many, however, continued to practice Islam in secret, refused to assimilate, and maintained contact with Turkish and North African Muslims. They eventually staged more insurrections, destroying churches, and beheading and burning Christians.

In the end, the Spanish government decided to expel all of the Moriscos. Caught up in the expulsion, however, were those who were faithful Catholics and patriotic Spaniards. In Miguel Cervantes’ Don Quixote there is an account of the expulsion, as told by a patriotic Morisco who acknowledges that most of his fellow Moriscos were hostile to Spain.

And what forced me to believe this truth was that I knew what vile and foolish intentions our people had, and it seemed to me it was divine inspiration that moved His Majesty to put such a bold resolution into effect. Not that we were all to blame, for there were some who were solid and true Christians. But these were so few that they couldn’t compare with those who weren’t, and it would have been unwise to keep enemies in one’s own house, like sheltering a serpent inside one’s shirt. So, with good reason we were punished with the sentence of banishment—which seemed soft and easy in the opinion of some, but to us it was the most terrible sentence that could be given to us. Wherever we are, we weep for Spain, where we were born, after all, it’s our native country.
The compassion of the Spanish up until the expulsion was admirable, but too many of the Moriscos never actually assimilated, and it proved calamitous for everyone in the end—especially for those Moriscos who truly loved Spain and were faithful Christians. The price of misguided “compassion,” then, is paid most dearly by those it is intended to help.

There can be no more illusions about what is at stake. As Chilton Williamson noted in his 1991 column, “we are no longer a young, powerful, restless, and inexhaustibly optimistic society capable of surmounting great difficulties and eager to accept all challenges, in particular idealistic ones.” Inked during the first stages of our culture wars, Williamson wrote:

Today we are a very different country from what we were in the 19th and early 20th centuries: middle-aged at least, perhaps prematurely old. We are no longer restless, we are bored and tentative; we are not optimistic but increasingly (and with good reason) the opposite; we have lost confidence in our heritage, our traditions, and above all perhaps our faith. This does not mean that we will necessarily adopt other traditions and other faiths; it does mean that we will have less and less of ourselves to offer peoples whom we would assimilate to the remnant of an indigenous culture. We know this. And so do the people who have recently appeared among us.

If we cannot assert our right to exist as an Anglo-Protestant civilization, then why should we expect foreigners to assimilate or have any respect for us?


The president could commit troops to the border to stop the incoming mob in its tracks, but it would not matter if Americans lack the cultural courage to demand that the line be held, that their civilization be preserved. Why? Because we live here and it’s our house. We don’t need a better reason than that.


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To: Honey_Bee who wrote (100894)10/27/2018 1:03:54 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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Caravan Members Reject Mexican Offer Of Benefits, Residency - NOT ENOUGH FREE STUFF IN MEXICO FOR ILLEGAL INVADERS!!!

JAZZ SHAW
Posted at 8:31 am on October 27, 2018
hotair.com

If you had any doubts about the intentions of the migrants in the Honduran caravan you can put them to rest. Mexico continues to make good faith efforts to deal with the flood of humanity in a legal fashion, but the organizers of the caravan have no interest in the law. This week the Mexican government offered the travelers refuge, supplies and the opportunity for permanent residency in two southern states if they applied for asylum. While hundreds of the Hondurans took them up on the offer, thousands more took a vote and decided once again to reject the plan, insisting that they were heading to the United States. (Associated Press)

Several thousand Central American migrants turned down a Mexican offer of benefits if they applied for refugee status and stayed in the country’s two southernmost states, vowing to set out before dawn Saturday to continue their long trek toward the U.S. border.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto announced what he called the “You are at home” plan, offering shelter, medical attention, schooling and jobs to Central Americans in Chiapas and Oaxaca states if they applied, calling it a first step toward permanent refugee status. Authorities said more than 1,700 had already applied for refugee status…

“Thank you!” they yelled as they voted to reject the offer in a show of hands in the town of Arriaga. They then added: “No, we’re heading north!”


This short video from the Associated Press is worth a look just for the quotes from some of the caravan members.


I’d like to take a moment here to offer some well deserved praise to the government of Mexico for the way they’ve stepped up this year and tried to do the right thing. Unlike in years past, Mexico seems to have really gotten the message from Washington and are at least making an effort to bear their responsibilities in these migration situations. While they were unable to significantly shut down the caravan at their southern border, they at least shipped in extra officers and made the attempt. They arrested quite a few and turned others back, but the sheer numbers were too much for them.

As we’re seeing in this story, Mexico is also trying to take on the role of a Safe Third Country Agreement participant, even though we haven’t formalized that deal with them yet. By offering the migrants asylum status and temporary food and lodging while their claims are processed, there’s no reason the vast majority of them couldn’t remain in Chiapas and Oaxaca. It represents a major drain on Mexico’s resources to make such an offer and they should be earning a lot of credit and support from the United States for doing so.

Unfortunately, as I noted at the top, most of the migrants have no interest in accepting the offer. They plan to march on the United States border uninvited. We have no more ability to process that many requests in a short period of time than Mexico does and the travelers have already demonstrated what they plan to do if their demands can’t be immediately accommodated. They jumped one border crossing over from Guatemala to Mexico and they will obviously do it again when they reach the United States.

The caravan has more than 1,000 miles to go before they reach Texas. That gives us some time to come up with a plan to stop what can only honestly be described as an invasion. But that time isn’t unlimited, so the state and federal governments need to be working together and preparing for their arrival.



To: Honey_Bee who wrote (100894)10/27/2018 1:13:35 PM
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The Real News the Media Ignored This Week

By Chris Buskirk
October 26th, 2018
amgreatness.com

Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes? That should be the Democrats’ midterm motto.


Brett Kavanaugh appeared to be a modest, self-effacing family man with a lovely wife and two daughters. He’d devoted his career to the law and taught at Yale where he had earned the respect of colleagues. But really, he’s an especially promiscuous satyr who had somehow managed to avoid detection for decades. So committed was he to his disguise that he managed to live his entire adult life as a model of personal piety and family devotion.

Then there is Trump’s war on the media that makes it unsafe to be a journalist in America. How do we know this? Because these intrepid journalists brave their way to the studios of CNN and MSNBC to tell us about how repressed they are. They tell us about the unprecedented violence brought on by President Trump’s incendiary language. For most of this week, the media couldn’t find time to talk about how the Senate Judiciary Committee referred creepy porn lawyer Michael Avenatti and his client Julie Swetnick to the Justice Department for criminal investigation for lying to Congress about Kavanaugh.

They couldn’t be bothered to cover the House interview with George Papadopoulos which Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) said showed “the blatant double standard for the politically connected” like Andrew McCabe, who lied to the FBI and not only walked free but got a full pension. Nor was there any interest in new polls showing Republicans gaining ground in congressional races across the country.

A few weeks before an election that should be big news. But it wasn’t. Instead there was wall to wall coverage of a dozen packages sent to prominent Democrats containing devices that look like a particularly inept third grader’s approximation of a bomb. Not even the recipients thought they were in danger as evidenced by the fact that the folks at CNN took the time to unwrap theirs and lay it out on the counter in the office kitchen, photograph it, and send some indignant tweets about it, before going outside and telling each other how brave they were.

In the meantime though there has been a rash of political violence. Against Republicans. Kellen Michael Sorber has been charged with setting fire to the Albany County Republican headquarters in September. On October 11, the windows of the Metropolitan Republican Club in New York City were smashed and a message was left stating, “Our attack is merely a beginning.” The Nebraska Republican Party’s headquarters had their windows smashed and “Abolish ICE” was spray painted on the wall [say when]. The windows at House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s Bakersfield office were also broken.

Then there are the physical attacks on people. Last month, a knife-wielding man named Farzad Fazeli attacked San Francisco Bay Area Republican Rudy Peters, who is challenging Eric Swalwell, one of the most leftist members of Congress. According to reports, Fazeli charged at Peters with a switchblade while yelling, “F— Trump! F— Trump!” Wilfred Michael Stark, a progressive activist who works for David Brock’s American Bridge 21st Century, seems to like assaulting Republicans. His most recent arrest charges him with assaulting Kristin Davison, the manager of Adam Laxalt’s gubernatorial campaign by “trapping” her in a doorway and twisting her arm behind her back and squeezing it so hard she screamed in pain.

We shouldn’t be surprised. Hillary Clinton said on October 9th that you “can’t be civil with (Republicans)”, who she calls “deplorables.” This gave Democrats trying to win elections some heartburn, but it’s nothing new. Obama told Democrats to find Republicans and “ argue with them and get in their face,” that if their political opponents bring a knife to a fight they should bring a gun, and that he’s looking for “ whose ass to kick.” Maxine Waters told her supporters that when they see Republicans they should “create a crowd and you push back on them, and you tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere.” You know intimidate people you don’t like with the threat of mob violence.

Is it any wonder that people believe them? Progressivism is an aggressive fundamentalist religion which will tolerate no competition.

And earlier this month, the deadly poison ricin was sent to President Trump, Senator Ted Cruz, and Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis. Two Cruz staffers were hospitalized. Little was made of this.

In fact, all these attacks on Republicans—including the commander-in-chief—got little more than a passing mention. But the media has indulged its most self-referential biases this week, only to find out that the packages were sent by a crazed ex-stripper who has a record of living in his van and threatening people that goes back to 2002.

Meanwhile, in political news which will actually impact the future of the republic rather than just titillate hungry eyes and itch eager ears, there has been a lot happening.

Kyrsten Sinema, the Arizona Democrat running for the U.S. Senate against Rep. Martha McSally, just lost the endorsement of the State Troopers Union. This comes on the heels of Arizonans learning that Sinema said that stay-at-home moms leech off their husbands and that it’s just fine with her if Americans go fight for the Taliban. She continues her slow slide into oblivion. She blew an early lead and is now down between two and four points.

In Tennessee, Democrat Phil Bresden has been called out by the NRA for claiming that he has the group’s endorsement. He doesn’t and they’re letting everyone know about it. The RealClearPolitics average has Republican Marsha Blackburn up by 6.5 points.

In Missouri incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill is in trouble. Her closing argument is that she’s “not one of those crazy Democrats.” That’s actually a line from her ad. Not great, since it makes people ask, “Well, even if she’s not one of those crazy Democrats, she’s works with them, caucuses with them, and votes with them so I’m not going to vote for her because that would be, well, crazy.” And it doesn’t sit well with other Democrats either. State Senator Maria Chappelle-Nadal is urging Missouri Democrats to write-in a Progressive candidate rather than voter for McCaskill. Ouch. The GOP says Hawley leads by seven points.

Democrat Joe Manchin in West Virginia has seen his lead evaporate and might now be in trouble.
In deep blue New Jersey, Bob Menendez is now leading by just five points. He’s still the favorite to win, but that’s too close for comfort and forces Democrats to spend resources there just as they will have to in West Virginia. This, plus a raft of House races that have been trending towards Republicans, including Arizona’s 1st Congressional District and California’s 16th Congressional District, where Republican Elizabeth Heng is within striking distance of Democrat Jim Costa, have put Democrats on defense in the closing weeks of the race.

That’s the news that our legacy media couldn’t bear to print.