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    Is Biden still spry enough to organize after his election a 1934-style Night of the Long Knives in which he crushes the street brawlers who helped him to the top? Or will Biden be more like a President Hindenburg, too old to control the radicals nominally under his control?
  • Has anyone noticed that these hoaxes happen every four years during the presidential election?
    1996 – burning of black churches hoax
    2000 – blacks are disproportionately ticketed on NJ Turnpike hoax
    2016 – Black Lives Matter round 1
    2020 – Black Lives Matter round 2

  • From the New York Times news section: In Ohio, a Father and Stepdaughter Show the Political Shifts in the Trump Era He’s a union worker and former Democrat now solidly behind President Trump. She’s a onetime Republican now worried about her sons growing up in the Trump era. Family get-togethers can be difficult. By Reid...
  • @Steve Sailer
    @Alden

    Why assume that some person spouting the conventional wisdom is made up?

    Replies: @Alden, @Undocumented Shopper, @Rosie, @The Last Real Calvinist

    You can use Intelius to verify if a person whose name and town are given, exists.
    (That’s what you get from the free version of Intelius but more can be found if you pay, you can even find the address.)
    According to Intelius, there is a Dan Moore aged 60 in Newton Falls and a Kelley Boorn aged 34 in Columbus.
    It looks like these people are real.

  • Is Biden still spry enough to organize after his election a 1934-style Night of the Long Knives in which he crushes the street brawlers who helped him to the top? Or will Biden be more like a President Hindenburg, too old to control the radicals nominally under his control?
  • @Alec Leamas (hard at work)

    Is Biden still spry enough to organize after his election a 1934-style Night of the Long Knives in which he crushes the street brawlers who helped him to the top?

    Or will Biden be more like a President Hindenburg, too old to control the radicals nominally under his control?

     

    I don't think the rioters see themselves as under the control of elected Democrats - at least not the national party level elected Democrats. So I don't think either Biden or Harris holds the leash. That said, I think the Democrats want to bait some small element of "Far Alt-Right Wing Radicals" to engage in the street disputes, which would provide the excuse for a heavy-handed response crushing everyone at once.

    The elected Democrats best able to control things are the District Attorneys and Mayors, who have thus far been unwilling to use the law against lawbreakers, processing them and releasing them back out to riot often on the same day. Somehow Biden would need to jerk the leash on these elected Democrats to get them to do their jobs in order to shut down the rioting.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @c matt

    That said, I think the Democrats want to bait some small element of “Far Alt-Right Wing Radicals” to engage in the street disputes, which would provide the excuse for a heavy-handed response crushing everyone at once.

    You’re mostly right but I would go even further.

    In Germany, it was revealed that about half of members of the NDP (their semi-legal Nazi Party) were police informers. The situation in the United States is probably similar.
    Instead of baiting the “Far Alt-Right Wing Radicals,” they will give them orders.

    Or it will be blamed on a false flag operation – Alt-Righters or Putin’s spies supposedly pretending to be Antifa.

    • Replies: @res
    @Undocumented Shopper


    In Germany, it was revealed that about half of members of the NDP (their semi-legal Nazi Party) were police informers.
     
    Do you have a reference for that?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    , @PapayaSF
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I think it's far more likely that any false flag operation will be Antifa pretending to be anti-Antifa.

    I think Trump is a lock for reelection, for too many reasons to list here. A better question is what happens to the Democrats after they are crushed in November. I predict a civil war within the party, with the left wing attempting a full takeover and purge of the old guard and any remaining moderates. The Squad etc. will try to turn it into a full-on, unapologetically socialist party. If they succeed, it splits the Democrats because centrists and swing voters will be pushed into the Republican camp. If they fail, it also splits the Democrats because much of the left will desert them. Once again, Trump will have set up a win/win situation for himself.

  • Chicago's Magnificent Mile has the highest retail rents in the United States outside of Manhattan, Beverly Hills, and San Francisco. The Water Tower Place shopping mall was constructed in 1975 at 835 N. Michigan Avenue, northeast of the Loop and about as far from the urban undertow of the South and West Sides as possible....
  • Serves them right.

    A lot of Big Business executives are actually pretty dumb.
    In 2015 Macy’s dumped Donald Trump’s merchandise line.
    https://www.politico.com/story/2015/07/donald-trump-macys-pulling-merchandise-119633

    “We canceled Donald Trump and all we got was this lousy looting.”

    • LOL: TomSchmidt
  • Hail to You offers a deep dive into the obscure life of Robin DiAngelo, who, after she turned 60 in 2016, became one of the highest paid public intellectuals of our day due to her 2018 book White Fragility. Little is known about the life of DiAngelo before she graduated from the U. of Seattle...
  • Getting rich at 62 is not that great. For most of her life she probably drove cheap autos and did not travel overseas.
    It’s harder to enjoy money in one’s sixties – a lot of people have health problems at that point and become fatigued easily.

    • Replies: @HammerJack
    @Undocumented Shopper


    It’s harder to enjoy money in one’s sixties
     
    Harder still is to enjoy poverty
  • But if we take her at her word that she will turn 64 in September

    This seems like her real age. I looked at Intelius and Mylife, which seem to work off credit histories and they confirm this number.

  • [Excerpted from the latest Radio Derb, now available exclusively through VDARE.com] Earlier: Trump's Defense Of The Suburbs Against Obama-Legacy Social Engineering Is TERRIFYING To Democrat-MSM Complex [Clip: Pete Seeger, "Little Boxes."] Little boxes on the hillside Little boxes made of ticky tacky Little boxes Little boxes Little boxes all the same There's a green one...
  • @Usura
    @Gurney Halleck

    I don't think that's right. I'm no expert in these matters, but this is just what I've observed from experience:

    -Your first statement "Housing in the United States is either a free housing or it isn’t." is inaccurate. There are a variety of cost sharing, partially-subsidized housing, low-income housing mechanisms. It certainly is not black and white, free or non-free.

    -There are many places in the United States where land is less than $1k an acre, and houses in good condition can be bought for cash for between $30k-$70k, and many of these are in majority white communities. These are in rural places where the job market is smaller, but not so vanishingly small that the majority of people are living in poverty.

    So if your argument is that middle class whites inflating their property values is what's causing the problem, the rebuttal is there are also many whites not doing this, or not able to do this, and anyone who wants to is welcome to move to those places.

    -Governmental intervention in zoning and housing laws is itself an artificial adjustment to the availability of housing. Your characterization of the revealed preference of the middle class wanting to keep its property values high as artifice is completely backward.

    -Real estate asset appreciation is the primary vehicle of growth of the middle class and has been for decades. Real-estate in white majority communities is also a major target of foreign investors who have piles of surplus U.S. dollars. Allowing blacks and hispanics to collapse those property values would drive away foreign investment and destroy the middle class.

    -Regarding the point of childless white women, housing is probably a factor, but not as big a factor as contraception, stagnating incomes, and men and women competing for the same job pool, constantly being whittled away by automation.

    In short overall there is no artificial restriction of housing, it only appears so to urbanites who are unwilling to move away from the city.The constricted housing supply in those areas is because many people want to live there (for reasons I would characterize as artificial), not because of the local homeowner's association et al. That mass of people have delusional ideas about what type of employment they are qualified for relative to property values; cryptologists generally wouldn't consider the housing in Silicon Valley restricted, whereas schoolteachers might.

    But given your quip about the inevitability of bi-racial children I'm guessing you're not arguing in good faith anyway.

    Replies: @Gurney Halleck

    I don’t think “bi-racial” children are inevitable or particularly desirable. I’m Somali, I want my children to look like me. No joke my aunt just sent me a picture of a gal I might marry, 21. Inshallah after Trump leaves I will be able to bring my wife and start working on my brood. But thank you for that analysis, I agree with a lot of it. Alas I’m one of those not willing to move from a concentrated East Coast area.

    • Replies: @Chris Mallory
    @Gurney Halleck

    If God has mercy on you then you will be forcibly returned to Somalia where you belong.

    Replies: @Gurney Halleck

    , @JMcG
    @Gurney Halleck

    There are thousands of houses available in North Philly for less than 50k. Put your money where your mouth is. You’ll fit right in. Or just leave.

    Replies: @Gurney Halleck

    , @dindunuffins
    @Gurney Halleck

    "I’m Somali, I want my children to look like me." EXACTLY. Just like Muhammad Ali stated. Just like Whites have every right to state as well "I’m White Euro ,I want my children to look like me." Absolutely nothing wrong with this way of thinking. The only thing wrong with your statement is it should only be accomplished in your land amongst your people. Support yourself and your brood with a job and property in your own country. It is so strange how most Whites think that all these black and browns want to mix with Whites. Most don't. They don't want to destroy who they are either. The biggest problem is stupid White whore women who think they can go breeding with black ghetto trash and then society has to deal with their fatherless feral bastard "keeds". Just like the black ghetto girls taught them. Insane how White Women emulate and copy what black ghetto women live by.Even alot of Hispanic women that mix with blacks. They know that all this black privilege is real,hence why all their mixed "keeds" get catered too and a free ride into any and all colleges and schools of their choice. Nevermind all the government freebies. White couples are the ones who don't have kids. They listen to all the "save the world, overpopulation OMG" and yet blacks and browns and muzzies breed like rabbits and you don't hear Whites going after these people for overpopulating the world and straining all our resources. Just like minorities drain all the money out of all these cities. This is why the keep raising taxes and in all your small towns they keep having budget meetings to keep passing higher and higher budgets. And they always use the schools as an excuse. We need more money for "da keeds".No matter how many times some people shoot down the budget they eventually get one passed. They just keep voting till they get one passed. So voting doesn't even matter. And all of this cost is because of this whole WELFARE..DA PROGRAMS...FREERIDE..FREE SCHOOLING...FREE LUNCHES...FREE INTERNET...FREE COMPUTERS...Free housing section 8 low income ...Basically the SOCIAL SERVICES INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX. These useless foreigners and inner city blacks are draining the country dry with absolutely no return.Useless degrees in fake african history...social justice...racism everywhere but really only from blacks and browns who are the real racists. These people are not the ones inventing anything new or building or maintaining and improving infrastructure. NOTHING>

    Replies: @Truth

  • "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." This was the nightmare of Ben Franklin. Yet, with passage this spring of a $4 trillion bailout of an economy facing historic losses because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and Nancy Pelosi's House having voted out another $3...
  • a hundred million real Americans spread across the eastern half of Europe

    At first glance, this seems like good idea. But will they import homomania as well?

  • an uncontrolled explosion of fresh spending

    Well, at least they will match new spending with new taxes so that the deficit will not go up.
    That’s not good but compare that to harebrained Republicans who lowered the taxes on the rich and on corporations, thereby increasing the deficit. The corporations expressed their gratitude by enthusiastically endorsing every possible woke insanity.

    Having said that, the biggest problem with Democrats is that they want to elect a new people (to paraphrase Bertolt Brecht.) Republicans could have done something about this during the first two years of Trump’s presidency, when they controlled the House and the Senate but instead, they focused on tax cuts.

    • Replies: @TheRandyGuy
    @Undocumented Shopper

    The financial problem is and always has been a spending problem, not a revenue one. As the government spends increasing amounts on social welfare programs that generate not one penny in revenue, keep thinking you can tax your way out of the problem.

  • The unforgivable fact of 2020 is that white men have done most of the great things of the last 600 years. This deeply angers many nonwhite people today that their ancestors didn't accomplish much. As T.S. Eliot asked: After such knowledge, what forgiveness?
  • @Buffalo Joe
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Undoc,libs on the defensive might be happening. The mayor Oakland votes against defunding the police and her house is vandalized and she is threatened on line. The very liberal Berkeley on line paper, "Berkeleyside" publishes the photos of vandals that the police need help identifying and their reporters are threatened and they pull the article. Mayor Lightfoot in Chicago isn't moving to defund the police fast enough and now she need round the clock protection for her home and self. Seattle's mayor caves and surrenders city blocks to a virtual take over and people are killed. Minneapolis can't get federal to rebuild. Chickens coming home to roost.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    What’s happening in Oakland and Chicago is good. The sooner they abolish police, the better. I want the cities run by liberals to look like Dresden in 1945 and the best thing is, liberals are willing to do the job themselves.

    But that will solve only some of the problems. We still need to come up with countermeasures to guarantee that those who think of disemploying or demonetizing fear consequences.

  • You are missing the fundamental point: the unforgivable offense of the great men of the past is not whatever they are being criticized for, but that they were white.

    Also, they were non-Jewish. Statues of Jewish scientists are not being removes and buildings named after Jewish donors are not being renamed.

  • @Jack D
    When I go to Christakis's original tweet I don't see Steve's reply at all. Was it deleted?

    Christakis, for those who may not remember, had his own tangle with Blackness:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f56xgHHZQ_A

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    Steve’s reply is still on Steve’s twitter. You’ve just discovered shadowbanning.
    It’s not exactly difficult to notice that Twitter sorts tweets according to secret priorities. There is no “show chronologically” option. Nobody’s even calling Twitter out on that.

  • @Wilkey
    FWIW, read the comments on Cbristakis’s Twitter post. Read them all. One of the smartest threads I’ve read, ever.

    If Republicans do manage to win this November - not likely, but possible - I think their first move should be to slash funding for colleges and science organizations across the board, and for any other organizations (arts, museums, etc.) that engaged in this madness. I’m not generally a fan of doing that. Not at all, in fact. But this insanity is doing far more to destroy science and culture than budget cuts ever could. It has to be stopped, immediately. If they want to cancel us then we need to cancel them.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Ari silver, @Mr. Anon, @jon, @MBlanc46

    It’s happening because Woke Jihadis are not risking anything. The worst that can happen is that their attempts fail to succeed.

    What’s needed is to make them feel pain and make them afraid of feeling pain so that they think twice before they attempt to cancel someone.

    Your suggestion would be a good first step, but more ideas are needed. We need to make them personally suffer.

    Also, conservatives must go on the offensive. Let’s start taking territory from liberals. That way, they will have to put effort into defense.

    • Replies: @Buffalo Joe
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Undoc,libs on the defensive might be happening. The mayor Oakland votes against defunding the police and her house is vandalized and she is threatened on line. The very liberal Berkeley on line paper, "Berkeleyside" publishes the photos of vandals that the police need help identifying and their reporters are threatened and they pull the article. Mayor Lightfoot in Chicago isn't moving to defund the police fast enough and now she need round the clock protection for her home and self. Seattle's mayor caves and surrenders city blocks to a virtual take over and people are killed. Minneapolis can't get federal to rebuild. Chickens coming home to roost.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

  • From my new Taki's Magazine column: Read the whole thing there.
  • @Kratoklastes
    @Undocumented Shopper


    Should We Cancel Aristotle?
     
    There's a much much much much much much MUCH stronger case for cancelling Maimonides. And Schneerson.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    And canceling Moses.

    Torah explicitly endorses slavery.

    Is there a Jewish prophet not worthy of canceling?

  • Should We Cancel Aristotle?
    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/21/opinion/should-we-cancel-aristotle.html

    … and the author is Agnes Callard. I immediately googled “Agnes Callard Jewish” and I found that in her own words

    “I was born in Budapest, Hungary and left there with my parents (illegally) at the age of 5 by way of a “vacation” to Vienna. From there we continued to Rome, where we spent a year before coming to the US under the auspices of a Jewish organization that focused on bringing Russian Jews to the USA.”

    So predictable.

    • Replies: @Sol
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Yep.

    , @Kratoklastes
    @Undocumented Shopper


    Should We Cancel Aristotle?
     
    There's a much much much much much much MUCH stronger case for cancelling Maimonides. And Schneerson.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

  • Politico Europe reports: President Kaczynski is most memorable outside Poland as the twin brother of fellow politician Lech Kaczynski, who sadly died in the Smolensk air disaster in 2010. Polish state television, which is acting as a cheerleader for Duda, has hit similar tones
  • @Druid
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Maybe the phrase “dumb po_lak”actually has some meaning!

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    In Druid’s case, phrase “dumb_redneck” has some meaning.

  • @anonymous1963
    Looks to me like a traditional Jewish shakedown. And when did Poland and Israel "become allies"?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    And when did Poland and Israel “become allies”?

    Speaking of alliances, there is a phrase “exotic alliance” which was coined by Stanislaw Cat-Mackiewicz, who was one of Poland’s leading journalists, and briefly, a Prime Minister of Poland’s government-in-exile.

    An exotic alliance is an alliance which is not based on common interests, or is even contrary to interests.
    For example, the alliance between the United Kingdom and Greece was not exotic despite the distance because the United Kingdom had a strategic interest in controlling the Mediterranean Sea.
    But the Alliance between France and Czechoslovakia was an exotic one and the Czechs learned about it the hard way, in Munich in 1938.

    The “alliance” between Poland and Israel is an exotic one.
    It is good for Israel, for example, Poland blocks anti-Israeli proposals in the European Union.
    In return:
    – Israel meddles in Poland’s affairs
    – Poles get accused of running Auschwitz
    – outlandish financial demands are made

    • Replies: @Druid
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Maybe the phrase “dumb po_lak”actually has some meaning!

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    , @Wielgus
    @Undocumented Shopper

    In 1995, on a visit to Poland, I went to see Pulp Fiction in Cracow. I had already seen it in England, and with French subtitles in Paris. One thing I noticed in Cracow was nervous laughter when "Pumpkin" talks about the perils of trying to rob stores owned by Jews - "Grandpa Irving" who owns a gun etc. The line got no particular reaction when heard in London or Paris, but a certain sensitivity to the Jewish question was still noticeable in 1990s Poland.

  • Whenever you read propaganda, find out which facts go unmentioned.

    Politico Europe and other media say nothing about the The American-Polish Claims Agreement of 1960. In that agreement, Poland paid the US government $40 million (in 1960 dollars) and the US agreed that any claims related to World War II would be paid by the US government.

    Poland settled this rather cheaply, but the country was broke, so both sides were satisfied. It often happens that debt is settled for pennies on the dollar.

    What is happening now is that Jews 1) regret having signed this agreement 2) pretend there is an unresolved issue there.

    • Agree: Iva
  • Two young Flemish nationalist politicians have symbolically restored a century-old monument to the Belgian Congo. The reason? Not for any particular sympathy for Belgium’s colonial past, but because the monument mentions a taboo fact: the Belgian annihilation of the Arab/Muslim-led slave trade in eastern Congo. The Monument features a statue of a Belgian crushing an...
  • @anonymous1963
    @Malla

    Actually the experience of any non-Muslim people under Islamic control has been a nightmare.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    In fact, Hindus were treated even worse than Christians. The reason for it was that Hindus, as pagans, were not “People of the Book.”

    • Replies: @Malla
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Very true. However Mughal Emperor Akbar somehow tried to "include" Hindus among the people of the books.

  • From NBC News: guGun violence is surging in cities, and hitting communities of color hardest Communities of color have endured the weight of COVID-19, the recession and social unrest. They’re also bearing the brunt of a surge in gun violence. July 9, 2020, 6:51 AM PDT By Safia Samee Ali CHICAGO — For many major...
  • The phrase “gun violence” is used to trick the reader into thinking that guns are to blame, which is then used to justify “gun control.”

    Rhetorical question:
    In many places, the number of shootings has tripled since last year. Has the number of guns tripled during the same period of time?

    • Replies: @alt right moderate
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Guns are the most efficient tool for killing rivals, so less guns probably would mean less deaths. Sure, some people will find other ways to kill each other, but it is silly to say that other weapons like knives are as efficient as guns. If they were, then we would still be fighting wars with spears and arrows instead of machine guns.

    As has already been pointed out on this site, gun control does make sense in big, crowded cities with lots of impulsive young black people, but is unnecessary in areas where gang violence is relatively low and high rates of gun ownership have positive effects like discouraging home invasions and property theft.

    Replies: @Justvisiting

    , @AceDeuce
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I've been calling it "black violence" or "nonwhite violence" for well over 25 years now. I wish that it would catch on.

    , @RAAAR
    @Undocumented Shopper

    LOL - "GUN VIOLENCE" I'm so happy my bedside pistol is lazy and just sits there not committing GUN VIOLENCE on anyone

  • They want your stuff.
  • They want permanent war.

    As soon as their current demands are met, they will make new demands.

    The only way to fight people with such mentality is to start taking stuff from them.

    • Agree: Gordo
  • Winter of NBC News goes on: Criminology professor Peter Moskos tweets: And then, I would add, 7): https://twit
  • You’ll see a lot of this in the coming years:

    Also, a lot of:
    “Without citing evidence, X says…”

  • Steve Hilton is a Briton who anchors a current-affairs show on Fox News. Mr. Hilton made the following feeble, snowflake’s case for the removal of the nation’s historically offensive statues: “What’s wrong with Camp Ulysses Grant,” Hilton further intoned sanctimoniously. He was, presumably, plumping for the renaming of army installations like Fort Bragg, called after...
  • @Trinity
    Traveling on I-75 just outside of Tampa, Florida you notice a HUGE Confederate Flag off in the distance. Must be some dude with a lot of money because it is on private property. I called my friend in Cigar City and he said the Stars And Bars is still flying proudly for all to see.

    LMAO. That must really piss off all the Jews, Blacks, and white traitor trash behind the Bolshevik/Jewish complete takeover of America that the biggest Confederate flag in the nation still flies proudly. ZOG has already taken over but the removal of Honest Abe, George Washington, Tommy Jefferson and others makes it official

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    I called my friend in Cigar City and he said the Stars And Bars is still flying proudly for all to see.

    It was taken down
    https://www.tampabay.com/news/hillsborough/2020/06/01/giant-confederate-flag-lowered-after-threats-to-set-it-on-fire/

    • Thanks: Trinity
  • From the NYT Opinion section, instructions on how not to Badthink about looting: Why do you keep noticing all the looting? If your mind was pure of racist thoughts, you wouldn't even notice the looting. But it's not, is it? You have racist thoughts! CONFESS. It deflects from the core problem that brought people to...
  • @PSR
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Haven't most papers quit allowing on-line comments? I know our local paper - The Columbus Dispatch (actually not 'local' anymore but owned by whomever publishes USA Today, and it shows) -quit allowing comments claiming they were getting too extreme. Funnily enough they publish a Sunday section called The Conversation. You can guess what the lectures are typically about.

    Slightly OT, this paper is now published in Indianapolis which is about 4 hours away. I predict its final demise in hard copy format will occur when sports start up again and people realize yesterday's games, unless they started at noon, aren't covered in the next day's paper. Do they imagine sports fans will wait two days to read a summary of games in the sports they're interested in?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    Haven’t most papers quit allowing on-line comments?

    Many newspapers have eliminated comment sections.
    But The New York Times has not. Sometimes they allow comments, sometimes they don’t. So there is an editorial decision there. And one can make inferences about editors’ biases. Also, which topics commoners are allowed to discuss and which topics are reserved for vetted MSM priests.

  • The average reader of NYT is an upper-middle-class liberal, so their comments under the articles are not representative.

    But one can still notice trends. Initially, the comments under the articles about demonstrations were supportive, even enthusiastic.
    But the enthusiasm turned to hostility when the articles were about looting or defunding police or the Seattle police-free zone.
    Even upper-middle-class liberals know that they are being gaslighted.

  • They did not allow readers to comment on this article.
    Very telling.

    • Replies: @Anon
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Much of the problem with the left is that they keep shutting down conversations that disagree with them. Consequently, there's no one on the left who utters centrist or common-sense opinions. This makes the left subject to extreme groupthink, and they keep urging each other to go farther and father out on that tree limb. By now, that limb is cracking and sagging.

    I think the wipeout the left is going to see in November is going to make British Labour's wipeout look trivial in comparison.

    , @PSR
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Haven't most papers quit allowing on-line comments? I know our local paper - The Columbus Dispatch (actually not 'local' anymore but owned by whomever publishes USA Today, and it shows) -quit allowing comments claiming they were getting too extreme. Funnily enough they publish a Sunday section called The Conversation. You can guess what the lectures are typically about.

    Slightly OT, this paper is now published in Indianapolis which is about 4 hours away. I predict its final demise in hard copy format will occur when sports start up again and people realize yesterday's games, unless they started at noon, aren't covered in the next day's paper. Do they imagine sports fans will wait two days to read a summary of games in the sports they're interested in?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    , @Abolish_public_education
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Since public education has not yet been abolished, one can contact Profster Kelley at his office:

    [email protected]

  • Recent events have made it harder but more necessary than ever to eschew the reactive tribalism encapsulated currently by “BLM vs. MAGA” in favor of an honest dialogue about the material conditions under which middle-to-lower class Americans in both camps increasingly suffer. Case in point is the BLM camp’s focus on “white supremacy” as a...
  • @Miro23

    Back in January, Tucker Carlson predicted that “the candidate who makes it easier for 30-year olds to get married and have kids will win the election and will deserve to win.”
     
    In 2014 Andy Grove (ex CEO of Intel) wrote his article "How The US Can Create Jobs" focusing on the US technology employment/outsourcing disaster.

    It's behind a Bloomberg pay wall, but it shows the enormous damage to US skilled employment in outsourcing advanced manufacturing to Asia - and not just in electronics. The US not only loses current employment but also a host of opportunities for future innovation. IOW leading edge manufacturing should NEVER be outsourced.

    For example, his 10X Factor:

    The 10X Factor

    Today (2014), manufacturing employment in the U.S. computer industry is about 166,000, lower than it was before the first PC, the MITS Altair 2800, was assembled in 1975 (figure-B). Meanwhile, a very effective computer manufacturing industry has emerged in Asia, employing about 1.5 million workers—factory employees, engineers, and managers. The largest of these companies is Hon Hai Precision Industry, also known as Foxconn. The company has grown at an astounding rate, first in Taiwan and later in China. Its revenues last year were $62 billion, larger than Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Dell (DELL), or Intel. Foxconn employs over 800,000 people, more than the combined worldwide head count of Apple, Dell, Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Intel, and Sony (SNE) (figure-C).
     

    Until a recent spate of suicides at Foxconn's giant factory complex in Shenzhen, China, few Americans had heard of the company. But most know the products it makes: computers for Dell and HP, Nokia (NOK) cell phones, Microsoft Xbox 360 consoles, Intel motherboards, and countless other familiar gadgets. Some 250,000 Foxconn employees in southern China produce Apple's products. Apple, meanwhile, has about 25,000 employees in the U.S. That means for every Apple worker in the U.S. there are 10 people in China working on iMacs, iPods, and iPhones. The same roughly 10-to-1 relationship holds for Dell, disk-drive maker Seagate Technology (STX), and other U.S. tech companies.

    You could say, as many do, that shipping jobs overseas is no big deal because the high-value work—and much of the profits—remain in the U.S. That may well be so. But what kind of a society are we going to have if it consists of highly paid people doing high-value-added work—and masses of unemployed?

    Since the early days of Silicon Valley, the money invested in companies has increased dramatically, only to produce fewer jobs. Simply put, the U.S. has become wildly inefficient at creating American tech jobs. We may be less aware of this growing inefficiency, however, because our history of creating jobs over the past few decades has been spectacular—masking our greater and greater spending to create each position. Should we wait and not act on the basis of early indicators? I think that would be a tragic mistake, because the only chance we have to reverse the deterioration is if we act early and decisively.

    Already the decline has been marked. It may be measured by way of a simple calculation—an estimate of the employment cost-effectiveness of a company. First, take the initial investment plus the investment during a company's IPO. Then divide that by the number of employees working in that company 10 years later. For Intel this worked out to be about $650 per job—$3,600 adjusted for inflation. National Semiconductor (NSM), another chip company, was even more efficient at $2,000 per job. Making the same calculations for a number of Silicon Valley companies shows that the cost of creating U.S. jobs grew from a few thousand dollars per position in the early years to a hundred thousand dollars today (figure-A). The obvious reason: Companies simply hire fewer employees as more work is done by outside contractors, usually in Asia.

     

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    • Thanks: Miro23
  • @Homeschooling Mom in NY

    but with such a lack of nuance as to close himself off to any conversation about how the next generation might achieve even an iota of the success he enjoyed.
     
    It's the immigration, stupid. In other words, it's largely too late. This article does a good job outlining the generational gap, and includes discussion of the demographic issue also at play. But fails to state how that originated. It's discussed like immigration just is and always has been, rather than a scheme set up (or at least accelerated) by the Boomers who were the primary beneficiaries. It didn't have to be this way.

    Another good point mentioned here is the idea of the oldsters that won't let go of the levers of power. This is a HUGE problem in getting anything useful done -- if not THE problem. We need a new election system that eliminates career politicians. May be a civil service type exam that puts you into a pool of qualified representatives and random drawing of names for public service. You do your service, are paid well for it, then you go away.

    Replies: @Thomasina, @TheTrumanShow, @Undocumented Shopper, @Curmudgeon

    I would make civil service exam compulsory for candidates in an election. There would be no threshold but the score would be disclosed to voters.

  • Side by side headlines in the U.S. version of the Daily Mail earlier this week: From my new column in Taki's Magazine: Read the whole thing there.
  • OT: Steve, check this out
    https://thetech.com/2020/06/11/math-department-diversity-inclusion
    I especially like this example of satire writing itself:

    Kelly Chen ’21, a math major, wrote in an email to The Tech that the math department’s annual end-of-year celebration, although designed to be an opportunity for socialization and to honor graduating seniors, “mostly celebrated those who did extremely well in math competitions like the Putnam, as well as a handful of students who received departmental/MIT awards or distinguished fellowships.”

    “Aside from one professor briefly congratulating all graduating seniors, there was no mention at all of any of the students who had not won an award. This seemed to be a pretty clear indication of what kind of students the department recognizes and values,” Chen wrote.

  • Race riots and disease sound like a bad combination. If there's a long-term rise in crime, like there was after the 1960s riots, that would be even worse. On the other hand, there is a lot more technology these days to catch criminals. But is there enough will to arrest criminals when most of the...
  • @Reg Cæsar
    @Ed


    What kind of thanks does he get from suburban whites? A drop in support among college white women and men that threatens to shift the election to Biden.
     
    What is the smallest census division coterminous with electoral ones? Look up the percentage of the vote going to the Democrat and the percentage of the population that is white.

    E.g., For 2016, here are the figures for those states with a single representative, % white 2010; % HRC 2016, rounded:

    Alaska 66, 37
    Delaware 69, 53
    Montana 89, 36
    North Dakota 90, 27
    South Dakota 86, 32
    Vermont 95, 57
    Wyoming 91, 22

    NB: This takes no account of nature of the non-white population or the non-Democratic vote in a particular state. Only the intersection of one party and one race. Whites voting for Democrats can be assumed to be voting for diversity.

    Now multiply them:

    Vermont 5415
    Delaware 3657
    Montana 3204
    South Dakota 2752
    Alaska 2442
    North Dakota 2430
    Wyoming 2002

    Vermont wins the prize! A clear majority of (voting) whites for diversification!

    Identify the top congressional district, county, municipality, precinct, whatever, of 2016 in this way. Then alert voters that the 2020 winner will get a windfall of Section 8, refugee resettlement, and other subsidies directed their way.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    1- the complete lack of shame, principle or even common sense of Democrats.

    You nailed it.
    In the past, many Democrats were quite realistic about Blacks, women and homos, provided they were speaking in private (Bloomberg would be an example.) What we now have is True Believers.
    These people can’t be reasoned with. A small proportion will change their views after they become victims of Black crime.

  • From the Minneapolis Star-Tribune: Reminds me of the anti-Chinese riots on Guadalcanal in 2006. After a night of looting, the locals showed up the next afternoon at their favorite stores, which they had just trashed and burned down, to buy their evening dinner. They were much befuddled by the fact that the stores no longer...
  • More about Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot
    “If there’s an issue, call 911” – this is not a headline from Babylon Bee or The Onion
    That’s what she said.

    Mayor Lori Lightfoot denounces vigilantism in Chicago after white men patrol Bridgeport streets with bats
    https://www.chicagotribune.com/politics/ct-chicago-bridgeport-lightfoot-opposes-vigilantism-20200604-jilfdhgmqjellfblozywe5iesa-story.html

    • Replies: @anonymous
    @Undocumented Shopper

    The mayor should also censure the Latinos for engaging in vigilante action to protect their neighborhoods along with the Chinese in Chinatown doing the same in Chicago. The Chinese patrolled with guns. Bridgeport is adjacent to Chinatown and a lot of Asians have moved in. I doubt all the "vigilantes" were white. Yet more singling out of white people. Shame on the mayor!

    , @Buffalo Joe
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Undocumented, well the whites are patroling their neighborhoods, the Latinos theirs and the Dominicans theirs. The blacks have nothing left to protect in theirs and the downtown is trashed. Lightfoot should be happy Chicago doesn't look like Hiroshima.

    Replies: @HammerJack, @fish

  • On the fifth night of rioting, looting and arson in Minneapolis, the criminal elements were driven from the streets. By whom? By the same cops who had been the constant objects of media derision and mob hatred. Without the thin blue line, far larger sectors of dozens of America's cities would be in ruins, burned...
  • In the former Soviet bloc, there was a joke that the government is working extremely diligently to solve problems that were created by the government itself.

    Let us start by admitting that there exists a police brutality problem and that cops kill and beat people up with frequency that cannot be justified. The victims of that brutality are sometimes White, too.

    In that sense, the cops about whom Mr. Buchanan speaks so respectfully, work extremely diligently to solve problems that were created by the cops themselves.

    • Replies: @Craig Nelsen
    @Undocumented Shopper


    The victims of that brutality are sometimes White, too.
     
    The victims of that brutality are mostly White, too.

    fixed your sentence

    -end asset forfeiture
    -end the war on drugs

    fixed police butality
  • However, Hizzoner's sign language interpreter, who looks suspiciously like Weird Al Yankovic, doesn't seem to be taking the Mayor's dignity all that seriously. Is Trump the only government official in America who doesn't have a sign-language interpreter? When did closed-captions get disinvented, anyway? My phone can probably convert speech to text more efficiently. iSteve commenter...
  • I will make a prediction.

    As far as gentrification is concerned, the upper middle class will hit the rewind button.
    In the wake of the epidemic and looting, the suburbs will be back in favor!

  • From Fox9 in Minneapolis: 13% being out-of-staters isn't insignificant. I saw a tweet from somebody claiming they'd been at the Twin Cities airport on Thursday morning and lots of Antifa-looking people were getting off airplanes. I don't have proof of that, but it fits the general timeline: But the bigger issue is that after 3...
  • Steve,

    Check this out:
    https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/500268-st-paul-mayor-says-arrested-protesters-were-from-out-of-state
    I would bet they were brought in by Antifa.
    Or even by the DNC.
    It’s hard not to notice that this kind of riots happens during election years.

  • Interesting poll from the Center for Polish-Russian Dialogue. Causes of discord: History 74% Economics 34% Current politics 21% Current culture 11% This suggests that the impasse in Polish-Russian relations may be resolvable, if Russia was to adopt my suggestion to adopt a "politics of memory" on the victims of Bolshevism. It's not like Warszawa, unlike...
  • @Undocumented Shopper
    Those in Poland who want the Smolensk crash to be an assassination complain that Russia refuses to turn over the wreck. Yes, the wreck is still in Smolensk but Polish investigators are free to access it. and to collect samples.
    I am Polish but I am sorry to say that the Russian decision to keep the wreck is the correct one.
    On the Polish side, the investigation (or the second part of it, after the current government came to power in 2015) was carried out in a Bolshevik manner. Instead of gathering the evidence and then drawing conclusions, the order was reversed. The outcome (Russia is guilty) was assumed at the beginning an then an attempt was made to fabricate evidence.
    I know these people, they are quite willing to lie and if they got hold of the wreckage, they might plant residue of explosives.
    There are people in Poland who are so obsessed with martyrdom that they are willing to create fake one, even though there was enough of real martyrdom. For example, some people invented a nonexistent concentration camp, read about this here:
    https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v41/n09/christian-davies/under-the-railway-line
    or google "KL Warschau hoax."

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    I am Polish but I am sorry to say that the Russian decision to keep the wreck is the correct one.
    (,,,)
    I know these people, they are quite willing to lie and if they got hold of the wreckage, they might plant residue of explosives.

    It seems to me that Russians have a more realistic view of international politics than other nations. The sad fact is that international relations involve a lot of backstabbing and reneging on promises.
    This may have something to do with Russia’s being a major power and having many opportunities to backstab and renege. Which is what all major powers do.

    Smaller nations don’t have that kind of experience.

  • @cliff arroyo
    I'm American not Polish but I have lived in Poland for many years (a great place to live once you figure out how things work).
    This poll is fake if it identifies Smolensk as a major concern of most people.
    Jarosław Kaczyński began distancing himself from the monthly 'observances' a couple of years ago and no one under the age of 25-30 cares.
    It's an issue for a small, mostly older mostly moderately or under educated and a few nuts.

    On Polish Russian relations. Many years ago a Polish woman contrasted attitudes toward Germans and Russians that sum things up pretty well.
    The Germans are kind of admirable but there's no feeling of kinship with them.
    With Russians there's some kind of feeling of kinship but they're not admirable.

    I've seen popular attitudes toward Russia come and go. Many Polish people like various aspects of Russian culture, even the language (despite supposed dislike when it was required in schools). But political barriers prevent long term good relations. Anyone speaking Russian or Polish with an eastern accent is now assumed to be Ukrainian.

    The presence of many Ukrainians working here (people are neutral to positive about only a tiny minority has a problem with them) will probably not make Poland any more pro-Russian.

    A lot of the continuing differences come down to what seems to be to be a single cultural issue.
    Russians (even AK) don't seem to care much when Russian governments kill people, including civilians, for political reasons.
    Poles do.

    Maybe it's a Roman Catholic vs Orthodox thing?

    Replies: @Beckow, @Undocumented Shopper

    This poll is fake if it identifies Smolensk as a major concern of most people.
    Jarosław Kaczyński began distancing himself from the monthly ‘observances’ a couple of years ago and no one under the age of 25-30 cares.

    That probably depends on how you ask the question.
    Fortunately, most Poles have more important problems than Polish-Russian relations. Not only the Smolensk crash but Polish-Russian relations in general are not a major concern for Poles.
    So if the Poles were asked to list all their concerns, Polish-Russian relations would not rank high.

    But if the question already assumes that Polish-Russian relations are bad (which is true) and asks why, then the percentages will be different.

    PS I like your blog.

  • One can get a good idea of where Polish-Russian tensions come from by watching an interview with Polish ambassador in Warsaw:
    https://vod.pl/programy-onetu/onet-opinie-bartosz-weglarczyk-siergiej-andriejew-1602/d2fepgt
    Both the interviewer (Bartosz Węglarczyk) and the ambassador (Sergei Andreev) behave professionally.
    The ambassador is in fact fluent in Polish but in this interview, the journalist asks questions in Polish while Andreev speaks Russian. So a Russian speaker will understand the ambassador fully and the journalist partly.
    One interesting moment is when they discuss the arrival of the Red Army in 1944-1945 and whether it was a liberation or not. The ambassador says:
    “Если не освободили, тогда спасали”
    i.e.
    “If they (Soviets) did not liberate, then they saved lives.”
    In my opinion, the ambassador got it right.
    Whether other Russians would say the same thing, I don’t know. The problem Russians have is that the Soviet Union made the Great Patriotic War into a secular religion, which makes it very hard to speak of the Red Army as anything less than morally pure.

    Let me add some personal anecdotes about the Red Army.
    1) Before 1989. there were Soviet troops in Poland but they kept a low profile.
    Most Poles (except those who lived near Soviet bases) never met a Soviet soldier in their lives.
    This was very different from Czechoslovakia and Hungary where the Soviet presence was in-your-face. In Czechoslovakia they made themselves seen by jamming highways with long columns of trucks and armored vehicles.
    One might say that Poland was treated slightly better than other so-called “fraternal” countries.
    2) My father lived in a small town southwest of Warsaw and as a child, he witnessed the main column of the Soviet Winter Offensive of 1945 passing through. That meant an interrupted stream of men and vehicles for several days.
    Like my father said, it was the biggest traffic jam he had ever seen.
    3) I once spoke to a man who, in 1945 served with the Polish armed forces that were formed by the new pro-Soviet government. He commanded a small unit guarding the train station and his main adversary were Soviet marauders. On one occasion, he was in a deadly shootout against them and apparently the Soviet commanders had no problem with that.
    Such incidents happened elsewhere but the sanitized version of history we learned in school excluded them.

  • Those in Poland who want the Smolensk crash to be an assassination complain that Russia refuses to turn over the wreck. Yes, the wreck is still in Smolensk but Polish investigators are free to access it. and to collect samples.
    I am Polish but I am sorry to say that the Russian decision to keep the wreck is the correct one.
    On the Polish side, the investigation (or the second part of it, after the current government came to power in 2015) was carried out in a Bolshevik manner. Instead of gathering the evidence and then drawing conclusions, the order was reversed. The outcome (Russia is guilty) was assumed at the beginning an then an attempt was made to fabricate evidence.
    I know these people, they are quite willing to lie and if they got hold of the wreckage, they might plant residue of explosives.
    There are people in Poland who are so obsessed with martyrdom that they are willing to create fake one, even though there was enough of real martyrdom. For example, some people invented a nonexistent concentration camp, read about this here:
    https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v41/n09/christian-davies/under-the-railway-line
    or google “KL Warschau hoax.”

    • Thanks: Anatoly Karlin
    • Replies: @Undocumented Shopper
    @Undocumented Shopper


    I am Polish but I am sorry to say that the Russian decision to keep the wreck is the correct one.
    (,,,)
    I know these people, they are quite willing to lie and if they got hold of the wreckage, they might plant residue of explosives.
     
    It seems to me that Russians have a more realistic view of international politics than other nations. The sad fact is that international relations involve a lot of backstabbing and reneging on promises.
    This may have something to do with Russia's being a major power and having many opportunities to backstab and renege. Which is what all major powers do.

    Smaller nations don't have that kind of experience.
  • The present conflict between Poland and Russia is more about style than about substance.
    For most of last several hundred years Poland and Russia had territorial claims against each other. Now they don’t. And they are not trying to overthrow each other’s government.

    At the same time the style is ugly and will continue to be ugly. That’s because angry rhetoric is mostly for internal consumption. In Poland, patriotism is centered around grievances and a general sense of victimhood. In a democracy, there will always be opportunists who will try to exploit those feelings in order to win votes. My guess is that something like 20% of Poles are truly paranoid about Russia and sooner or later some politician will try to use this paranoia to win votes.

    It seems like a lot of Russian hostility towards Poland is also for internal consumption.

    Disclosure: I am a Pole living in the United States. I am mostly indifferent to Russia, though I am glad Holbrooke and McCain are dead. If they went ahead with their fantasies of trying to break up Russia, only one country would benefit from the conflict – China.

    • Replies: @AKAHorace
    @Undocumented Shopper


    The present conflict between Poland and Russia is more about style than about substance.
    For most of last several hundred years Poland and Russia had territorial claims against each other. Now they don’t. And they are not trying to overthrow each other’s government.

    At the same time the style is ugly and will continue to be ugly. That’s because angry rhetoric is mostly for internal consumption....
     

    If I understand Karlins view is the Russians committed appalling crimes on the Polish, but get annoyed when called on it because the same regime also committed appalling (worse even ?) crimes on Russians ? Problems defining how "Russian" the regime that committed the crimes was ?

    But he says that a generous and honest apology would help things. What do you thing ? Would it make ugly rhetoric for internal consumption less likely to be taken seriously?

  • And now Twitter wants to cancel Andrew Sullivan for his skepticism about the Conventional Wisdom's blanket dismissal of a certain "myth" about racial differences, even though I presume Sullivan has done a lot of first-hand hands-on fact-checking of this question over the decades ... Personally, I defer to Sullivan's expertise on this subject. By the...
  • @Steve Johnson
    My recollection is that back in the early years of the blog explosion one of the things that gnxp used to use to go after Jared Diamond was that he authored a paper that compared testicle weight to body weight ratios by race - with a conclusion that surprised exactly no one.

    Perhaps Steve's searching skills are superior to mine and he can dig up this old paper to humorous effect on twitter.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @onetwothree, @ziel, @MEH 0910, @Anon, @Yngvar

    My recollection is that back in the early years of the blog explosion one of the things that gnxp used to use to go after Jared Diamond was that he authored a paper that compared testicle weight to body weight ratios by race – with a conclusion that surprised exactly no one.

    Diamond, J. M. (1986). “Ethnic differences: Variation in human testis Size”. Nature. 320 (6062): 488–489

  • For centuries and still today, Russia and large parts of Ukraine have had much in common—a long territorial border; a shared history; ethnic, linguistic, and other cultural affinities; intimate personal relations; substantial economic trade; and more. Even after the years of escalating conflict between Kiev and Moscow since 2014, many Russians and Ukrainians still think...
  • @Anonymous
    @Anonymous

    I find it odd how Eastern Europeans boast that they're much more intelligent and capable than Westerners, yet it seems to me that those of them with any intelligence and capability move to Western countries as soon as possible.

    If they're so wonderful shouldn't it be the other way round? Of course, they always blame it on "Communism" but that seems to be rather like the "Colonialism" excuse for why India and Africa is third world, how long is that excuse credible?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @peterAUS

    I find it odd how Eastern Europeans boast that they’re much more intelligent and capable than Westerners, yet it seems to me that those of them with any intelligence and capability move to Western countries as soon as possible.

    That’s only partly true. Polish software engineers seldom emigrate because they are well paid and the cost of living is lower, so they wouldn’t gain by moving to the UK or Germany. Scientists are low paid, but that’s a political problem.

  • Another important piece of the puzzle is NATO’s Strategic Concept, approved at the 1999 Washington Summit. It included for the first time “possibility of conducting non-Article 5 crisis response operations.” Since Article 5 refers to a response to a military attack against a member country, this single phrase changed NATO from a defensive alliance to an offensive one.

    This created a loophole. First, sponsor a separatist insurgency in a country you don’t like. When the government responds, claim that civilians are suffering. Mobilize the public opinion using photos of crying women (less than ten is enough, just show them frequently.) Follow up with accusations of “humanitarian crisis.” Claim that “genocide is unfolding” (this quote and the bogus claim of 100,000 dead Albanians was used in 1999). Frequently use the phrase “International Community”. Invade.

    This scenario was implemented against Yugoslavia and Libya. Had Al Gore won in 2000, Richard Holbroooke would become Secretary of State and he would use Chechnya as a pretext for intervention in Russia. It almost happened – Madeleine Albright asked Russia to permit presence of “observers” in Chechnya. Putin wisely refused, perhaps because he knew that “observers” in Kosovo were used to provide a pretext for war against Yugoslavia.

    Albright’s request happened soon after Nato permitted “non-Article 5 crisis response operations.”
    Few people realize how close we were to a repeat of Yugoslavia-style scenario being used to break up Russia.

    When Holbrooke died, I breathed a sigh of relief.

    • Agree: TheTotallyAnonymous
    • Replies: @Malacaay
    @Undocumented Shopper

    There is probably not a single sentence in your post that is not nonsensical, you fake amero clown. I haven't gone past the first paragraph as the reek of stupidity and ignorance was already overwhelming.

  • @Andrei Martyanov
    @Undocumented Shopper


    I would guess that’s still the long term goal.
     
    Kissinger confirmed (or rather reaffirmed it) in his interview to The National Interest

    https://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-interview-henry-kissinger-13615

    The problem, however, is with the fact that the United States has neither resources nor status anymore to do either:

    Kissinger: If we treat Russia seriously as a great power, we need at an early stage to determine whether their concerns can be reconciled with our necessities. We should explore the possibilities of a status of nonmilitary grouping on the territory between Russia and the existing frontiers of NATO.
     
    That's the danger, remove last remaining military and intelligence professionals and you have ignorant, grossly incompetent American political class which thinks that it is 1995.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @animalogic, @follyofwar

    The problem, however, is with the fact that the United States has neither resources nor status anymore to do either:

    I would add that if Russia were broken up, then very likely China and not the United States would capture the mineral wealth of Siberia. This would be a geopolitical blunder of biblical proportions, comparable to Germany’s decision to sponsor Lenin’s sealed train voyage.

    [Digression: Andrei, I read your blog and I agree about Russian Math and Physics cirriculum. I followed a similar cirriculum in Poland and I got into MIT easily. Я согласен]

    • Replies: @Andrei Martyanov
    @Undocumented Shopper


    comparable to Germany’s decision to sponsor Lenin’s sealed train voyage.
     
    While I disagree with this assessment--it was just an episode against the background of a complete collapse of Russia, even none other than Solzhenitsyn admits that Bolsheviks merely picked the power up from the street where it was laying because nobody realistically wanted it, I have to say that in terms of consequences of Russia breaking up, you are absolutely spot on. In such a scenario the main beneficiary will be China and it will be easy for it.

    Andrei, I read your blog and I agree about Russian Math and Physics cirriculum. I followed a similar cirriculum in Poland
     
    In general what is known as Socialist Camp--STEM education was extremely good, I know Germans, Poles and Czechs, among others, who also were the "products" of this education and yes, they had no problems navigating US higher-ed.

    Replies: @Anonymous, @Sergey Krieger, @AnonFromTN

    , @Crazy Horse
    @Undocumented Shopper

    "This would be a geopolitical blunder of biblical proportions, comparable to Germany’s decision to sponsor Lenin’s sealed train voyage."

    Exactly. The reason they did that was because they feared Russia would open up a second front. A short sighted objective in the end because the Zionists managed to sucker America into fighting on the side of the Allies for the promise of their "promised land" in Palestine.

    Same with America embracing Ukraine since Putin isn't going to follow the conventional rules of engagement since he doesn't have to thanks to the US abrogating the treaty on Medium range nukes. If NATO makes its advance through Ukraine he'll launch a nuclear counterstrike using tactical nukes.

    Replies: @Che Guava

    , @Charles Carroll
    @Undocumented Shopper

    "This would be a geopolitical blunder of biblical proportions, comparable to Germany’s decision to sponsor Lenin’s sealed train voyage."

    Can you explain how this was such a big blunder and for whom? It seems to have benefited Germany, because the Russian Army pulled out of WW1. It can be argued that it was good for Russia, because it was able to industrialize with the Bolsheviks.

    Replies: @Alden

  • About twenty years ago, breakup off Russia was advocated openly, for example by Brzezinski.

    I would guess that’s still the long term goal.

    • Agree: Andrei Martyanov
    • Replies: @Andrei Martyanov
    @Undocumented Shopper


    I would guess that’s still the long term goal.
     
    Kissinger confirmed (or rather reaffirmed it) in his interview to The National Interest

    https://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-interview-henry-kissinger-13615

    The problem, however, is with the fact that the United States has neither resources nor status anymore to do either:

    Kissinger: If we treat Russia seriously as a great power, we need at an early stage to determine whether their concerns can be reconciled with our necessities. We should explore the possibilities of a status of nonmilitary grouping on the territory between Russia and the existing frontiers of NATO.
     
    That's the danger, remove last remaining military and intelligence professionals and you have ignorant, grossly incompetent American political class which thinks that it is 1995.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @animalogic, @follyofwar

    , @Kolya Krassotkin
    @Undocumented Shopper

    God willing, Brzezinski is in hell (with Teddy Kennedy, John McCain, Janet Reno and 90% of America's other leaders).

    Replies: @Z-man, @Twodees Partain

    , @Charles Carroll
    @Undocumented Shopper

    The controllers of the Empire have targeted Russia for conquest or destruction just like they did to Germany before WW1. They achieved their goal with Germany in 1945.

    Replies: @RadicalCenter

    , @Malacaay
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Naturally. Russia occupies many nations, many a people are trapped and occupied inside that cesspool. Naturally they wish to be free of Russo occupation. It's the same with Murica, that disgusting, liberal, godless pit of Hell on Earth. How many nations are the states known as Murica comprised of? Murica is not a nation. It's an empire.

  • From Slate: The thread sparked an uproar on Twitter over the weekend, and the New York State Department of Financial Services announced on Saturday that it was launching an investigation into the credit card program, which Apple operates jointly with Goldman Sachs. The department declared, “Financial services companies are responsible for ensuring the algorithms they...
  • The Slate article does not say anything about incomes of David Heinemeier Hansson and Jamie Heinemeier Hansson. Were they the same?

    I will assume they were different, until proven otherwise.

    If the incomes were he same, the article would have said so.

  • From my new column in Taki's Magazine: The Reviled Right by Steve Sailer, October 23, 2019 In 2019, two books demanding more censorship have each devoted a chapter to portraying me as a historic villain. In the first, Angela Saini’s Superior: The Return of Race Science, I was cast as a bad guy along with...
  • Marantz is lazy, he doesn’t even know what Chronicles Magazine is and that Steve Sailer published there.

    This laziness is rather typical of liberal journalists who claim to be experts on Alt Right

    • Agree: sayless
  • From Marantz’s book:

    “the arbiters of palatable conservative opinion, such as the editors of National Review and The Weekly Standard”

    I always thought liberal journalists (and recently, Social Justice Warriors) were the arbiters of palatable conservative opinion, The editors of National Review and The Weekly Standard were merely taking orders from them.

    • Agree: Harry Baldwin
  • Last weekend, I reported on all the Africans who are suddenly showing up on the Mexican border, demanding to be let it. Whatever happened to them, anyway? From channel KENS 5 in San Antonio: They may not have figured out yet the Angolans are likely to speak Portuguese. Eventually, they may be flying in specialists...
  • When we reached out to Portland Maine they said, ‘Please don’t send us any more. We’re already stretched way beyond our capacity,”

    Utopias fail when Utopians run out of money. That’s why the Soviet Union is gone.

    • Replies: @International Jew
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Funny how Portland's (and especially Lewiston's) official line on its Somali imports was that they were rejuvenating an old tired city. Maybe what that really meant was that the Somalis constituted a full-employment guarantee for goodwhite city employees. So after a certain point, there's no further incentive to import Somalis.

    By the way, google "refugees Lewiston" and most of the hits are about the downside. This is pretty amazing, considering Google's policized search algorithm. But I guess positive articles really are that scarce now (and of course Google gives preference to recent articles).

    Replies: @Anonymous

  • @Polynices
    Seriously, why the F aren't we building tent cities for all these people and holding them there? How is letting invaders loose in any way compatible with the rule of law?

    Replies: @Mr McKenna, @Undocumented Shopper, @William Badwhite

    Seriously, why the F aren’t we building tent cities for all these people and holding them there?

    We have Guantanamo for that purpose.
    In saner times (1991 and 1994) the Haitian boat people were shipped there.

    Failing that, we should make life as inconvenient as possible for asylum seekers.
    Allowing the asylum seekers to board airplanes without IDs is something Trump can stop anytime.
    He can’t blame it on Democrats.

  • From the Arizona Republic:
  • @Anon7
    Tell me again why trump is doing better than Barack at the border? Better than if Hillary had won?

    I’m tired of being invaded. Where are people like me supposed to go? I don’t want a barrio surrounding my town. I don’t want to live in some reconstituted Shitholistan.

    If I wanted to live in Mexico, I’d live in fucking Mexico.

    Replies: @Mr. Anon, @dvorak, @Whiskey, @Undocumented Shopper, @Joseph Doaks, @Anonymous, @unpc downunder

    If I wanted to live in Mexico, I’d live in fucking Mexico.

    You’re not going to live in Mexico.
    Most migrants hail from countries south of Mexico, i.e. Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.
    We are talking about countries whose GDP per capita is one third of Mexico’s.
    Honduras has world’s highest homicide rate.
    That’s our future.

    • Replies: @Lot
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Agree.

    About 20% of Hondurans and 30% of Salvadorians are already in the USA.

    Unlike Mexicans, or immigrants from such awful places as Japan and Poland, Salvadorians and Hondurans can get work permits and free health care because of “Temporary” Protected Status.

    Of all Trump’s failures to take executive action, not immediately ending all TPS designations was the worst.

    ICE doesn’t even try to deport illegals from these countries outside of felons. Even those who never formally applied for TPS can do so if ICE catches them.

    In terms of just reducing the numbers of Third Worlders, making the largest number of them possible eligible for deportation lets ICE/DoJ target the easy and quick cases, and also spreads the resources of the immivasion activists much thinner.

    Shifting illegal migrants from TPS countries out of the legal labor force increases the competition for the limited number of off the books jobs, depressing the wage magnet for new illegals.

    Replies: @Vinteuil, @Clyde

  • From my new column in Taki's Magazine: the impact of Jewish donations on Washington’s pro-Israel slant. Just how much Jewish Democrats give to politicians I approximate below. ... Pelosi tried to get Omar to grasp that she can’t say that American Jews give a lot of money to politicians because…well…because American Jews do give a...
  • At the end, Steve says:

    As a journalist, my guess is that the choices of smart rich guys like Slim and Bezos demonstrate that spending on journalists offers a better return than spending on politicians.

    Great point.

    Moreover, there is no transparency. Money spent on influencing the media does not have to be reported.

    And most importantly, there is no law against bribing journalists.
    In fact, there is a long tradition of bribing journalists. Joseph Kennedy used it to build the image of Kennedy dynasty.

  •   In all but one of the last seven presidential elections, Republicans lost the popular vote. George W. Bush and Donald Trump won only by capturing narrow majorities in the Electoral College. Hence the grand strategy of the left: to enlarge and alter the U.S. electorate so as to put victory as far out of...
  • core, contributory social programs that they made payments to, decade after decade

    Republicans call them “entitlements” – implying that they are a form of undeserved gift from the government. And the strategy is to cut taxes, which leads to a deficit, which they hope to use to justify privatization of Social Security and Medicare.

    Pat Buchanan and Donald Trump are nostalgic about the 50’s but fail to mention that American middle class prosperity was made possible by the New Deal, strong unions, government involvement in the construction of housing (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were owned by the government) etc.

    • Replies: @Hibernian
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Entitlement just means it can't be cut so deep cuts have to be made to the few things that can be cut.

  • Being a child of the 1960s-70s, until the Ilhan Omar brouhaha broke, I hadn't fully realized that the word "trope" has largely replaced the word "cliché" and is sneaking up on "stereotype." I'd always associated tropism with what sunflowers do, but that's not really relevant to the current usage of "trope:" Merriam-Webster defines "trope" as:...
  • According to Google Ngram Viewer, “canard” is in decline while “fake news” is trending up.
    The same can be observed on Google Trends, with “fake news” jumping up in 2016.

  • From iSteve commenter Gringo: Amy Harmon at the NYT: No one tallies the number of black mathematicians in those departments, but as best I can tell, there are 13. That comes to seven-tenths of 1 percent of the total -— perhaps as far as any job classification gets from accurately reflecting the share of black...
  • @Jack D
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I think this is true in general of that whole 750+ SAT group. Actual Moochelle type American slave descendants (other than light skinned mulattoes from way back - Louisiana Creoles, etc.) are almost completely missing from that group. Instead you have blacks with one white parent, Caribbean blacks, Nigerian Igbos, etc.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    Apparently, 27% of Black undergrads are immigrants from Africa or the Caribbean.
    There is tension between them and those who descend from Southern slaves.

    At Cornell, demands were made:
    “We demand that Cornell admissions come up with a plan to actively increase the presence of underrepresented black students on this campus. We define underrepresented black students as black Americans who have several generations (more than two) in this country.
 The black student population at Cornell disproportionately represents international or first-generation African or Caribbean students. While these students have a right to flourish at Cornell, there is a lack of investment in black students whose families were affected directly by the African Holocaust in America. Cornell must work to actively support students whose families have been impacted for generations by white supremacy and American fascism.”
    https://www.insidehighered.com/admissions/article/2017/10/09/cornell-students-revive-debate-whom-colleges-should-count-black

  • @Triumph104
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Is Arlie Petters the guy from Belize? He identifies as being "two or more races", although he is always referred to as black or African-American.

    Former NFL player John Urschel is scheduled to earn his math PhD from MIT this spring. He was born in Winnipeg, Canada and has a black mother and white father, but you wouldn't know that from his media coverage.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Buffalo Joe

    Yes, one of those two was Arlie Petters.
    The discrepancy may be due to the fact that in the United States people who have some black ancestry are referred to as “Black”. Perhaps Belize does this differently?

  • It’s even less than 0.7% if you exclude Black immigrants.

    Anecdotal evidence: In the year I got my Math PhD, 1100 doctoral degrees in Math were awarded. Of those, two were awarded to Blacks. By accident, I knew both of them. One was an immigrant from Nigeria, the other was from Belize.

    • Replies: @Triumph104
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Is Arlie Petters the guy from Belize? He identifies as being "two or more races", although he is always referred to as black or African-American.

    Former NFL player John Urschel is scheduled to earn his math PhD from MIT this spring. He was born in Winnipeg, Canada and has a black mother and white father, but you wouldn't know that from his media coverage.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Buffalo Joe

    , @Jack D
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I think this is true in general of that whole 750+ SAT group. Actual Moochelle type American slave descendants (other than light skinned mulattoes from way back - Louisiana Creoles, etc.) are almost completely missing from that group. Instead you have blacks with one white parent, Caribbean blacks, Nigerian Igbos, etc.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

  • In the New York Times today, a classic example of how the NYT makes unwelcome stories seem boring by massaging inconvenient facts. Even though the Chicago Tribune reported on Thursday that the "persons of interest" in the Jussie Smollett purported lynching are said to be black, the NYT leaves out all mention of their race...
  • “He also said that he was sure that the men in the surveillance images were the ones who attacked him that night.”

    And the readers, who read prior NYT articles about Smollett, , will assume the two suspects are White (because according to prior articles the perpetrators were White.)

    This is a classic propaganda technique – instead of lying, NYT tricks readers into drawing a false conclusion.

  • My prediction is that Jussie Smollett will become unemployable.
    Too many risks – bad publicity, a frivolous lawsuit etc.

    • Replies: @Hidden Cat
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Liability and just plain old "problems" will loom large.

  • From the New York Times Magazine: The 1990 H-1B visa, obviously. Employers chose to employ foreign men over American women.
  • @Charles Pewitt

    The 1990 H-1B visa, obviously. Employers chose to employ foreign men over American women.

     

    George HW Bush and the US Congress passed a law in 1990 to attack and undercut American STEM workers by flooding the USA with foreigners on work visas. The 1990 immigration law pushed by George HW Bush and the US Congress was designed to lower wages for American workers and it was designed to destroy cultural cohesion in the USA.

    Treasonous globalizer rat George HW Bush was eager to attack American workers by flooding the USA with foreigners. The H-1B visa was one of the methods and weapons that dirtbag rat George HW Bush used to viciously attack and undercut American workers.

    Trump has now joined with the dead globalizer scumbag, George HW Bush, in his attacks on American STEM workers by calling for massive increases in guest worker foreigners and visa worker foreigners and other scams to attack American workers.

    When the H-1B visa was created in 1990, the 1952 requirement that the visa was temporary was removed. H-1B became a dual-intent visa which allowed the foreign worker to remain in the U.S. while applying for permanent residency (green card). Politicians and pundits said that H-1B was temporary their intent to make it a permanent visa was very clear.

     

    http://immigration-weaver.blogspot.com/p/a-legislative-history-of-h-1b-and-other.html

    Replies: @MarkinLA, @Undocumented Shopper

    George HW Bush and the US Congress passed a law in 1990 to attack and undercut American STEM workers by flooding the USA with foreigners on work visas.

    Partly true. In the early 1990’s the annual limit was 65,000 and H-1B visas were issued mostly to foreign graduates of US universities and to employees of multinational corporations (think of an employee of Goldman Sachs moving from the London office to the New York one.)

    Outcourcing to India took off after 1995.

  • From the New York Times: You know, it c
  • Google News is putting articles about the Jussie Smollett “possible hate crime” in the “Entertainment” category.

    That’s like a Freudian slip.
    Just another dumb algorithm.
    Reminds me of that incident in which Google Images algorithms classified Blacks as gorillas.

  • @The Last Real Calvinist
    @Undocumented Shopper


    Being a Democratic politician is very stressful nowadays. As soon as the latest outrage happens, they have to interrupt their activities and virtue signal on Twitter. Then there is competition – what if another politician’s tweet is more virtuous than yours?

     

    Great comment. That string of Dem-pol tweets emits a whiff of the ongoing near-panic that must reign in their operations. The virtue-signaling treadmill never stops, and they can never, ever get off.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Altai

    Thank you. I tried to make it humorous, but the reality is that our civilization is in reverse gear and accelerating. Any hoax, no matter how absurd, is instantly believed.

    We are back to the days of Salem Witch Trials, Host Desecration and Blood Libel.

    Some people say only a Pinochet-like dictatorship can save us.
    I hope they are wrong.
    Nevertheless, a significant proportion of the US population deserves to be declared legally incapacitated due to multiple mental diseases.

    • Replies: @The Last Real Calvinist
    @Undocumented Shopper


    . . . the reality is that our civilization is in reverse gear and accelerating. Any hoax, no matter how absurd, is instantly believed.

    We are back to the days of Salem Witch Trials, Host Desecration and Blood Libel.

    Some people say only a Pinochet-like dictatorship can save us.
    I hope they are wrong.
     

    More and more people are recognizing the essentially religious fear and fury that drive our decaying culture's most fervent 'reformers'.

    You couple this with the recent affirmations of the at-birth (or even now, seemingly, post-birth) slaughter of innocents in New York and Virginia, and you can detect, underneath the cloying perfume that is virtue signaling, the sulphuric stench of the demonic. Moloch must have his sacrifices.

    Ultimately, only God can remove and replace the idol factory in each human heart.

  • Being a Democratic politician is very stressful nowadays. As soon as the latest outrage happens, they have to interrupt their activities and virtue signal on Twitter. Then there is competition – what if another politician’s tweet is more virtuous than yours?

    • LOL: Simply Simon
    • Replies: @The Last Real Calvinist
    @Undocumented Shopper


    Being a Democratic politician is very stressful nowadays. As soon as the latest outrage happens, they have to interrupt their activities and virtue signal on Twitter. Then there is competition – what if another politician’s tweet is more virtuous than yours?

     

    Great comment. That string of Dem-pol tweets emits a whiff of the ongoing near-panic that must reign in their operations. The virtue-signaling treadmill never stops, and they can never, ever get off.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Altai

    , @Harry Baldwin
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Absolutely, you don't want to be the one who doesn't get a tweet on the record.

  • From the New York Times on New Year's Day, one of 12 articles the New York newspaper has run on this Texas shooting in recent days: The police sketch looked like the kind of cruelly handsome white actor who gets cast in home security TV commercials as a burglar, or like Viggo Mortensen starring in...
  • Steve,

    The links below are related the topic.

    Trump’s Justice Department is mostly useless.
    Until 2008, Bureau of Justice Statistics published an annual report, called National Crime Victimization Survey. It included two-variable statistics about race of victims and race of offenders.
    See, for example, table 42 of the 2008 report
    https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/cvus08.pdf
    That table raised the ire of SJWs because it implied that white-on-black rape is close to nonexistent.
    Starting with 2009 report, nothing was reported about the race of offenders.
    https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/cv09.pdf
    (For subsequent years, you replace cv09.pdf with cv10.pdf, cv11.pdf and so on)
    Moreover, the 2008 is not accessible through the “Data Finder” page
    https://www.bjs.gov/latestreleases.cfm
    not unlike certain books having been withdrawn from libraries in Orwell’s “1984” (or in the Soviet Bloc.)
    How have we been doing since Donald Trump became President?
    The 2016 report (published in 2017) has no data about race of offenders.
    The 2017 report (i.e. the latest one) has only single-variable statistics about race of offenders.
    Thus, one can find the percentage of Whites among rapists but one cannot find the percentage of Whites among rapists whose victims were Black.

    We should loudly demand return to pre-2009 standards!

    • Agree: Mr. Rational
  • From The American Conservative: What The Weekly Standard Has Wrought Its shuttering is a loss. But the awful costs of the foreign policy it advocated shouldn't be forgotten. By SCOTT MCCONNELL • December 17, 2018 There’s a sadness in the shuttering of any print publication, and The Weekly Standard is no exception. If its website...
  • @Escher
    Slightly off-topic, but why do people refer to him as “Saddam” when that is his first name (ditto: bin Laden referred to as Osama ).
    I don’t see anyone referring to George invading Iraq, how Angela single handedly screwed up Germany, or Donald’s policy on building the wall.

    Replies: @ben tillman, @Undocumented Shopper, @duncsbaby

    Slightly off-topic, but why do people refer to him as “Saddam” when that is his first name

    It’s a traditional propaganda technique. Foreign rulers are referred to by their first name when our government decides to overthrow them. Thus, Saddam Hussein became Saddam, Slobodan Milosevic became Slobodan and so on.

    • Replies: @Escher
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I don’t think so. Milosevic was always referred to by his last name, as was Gaddafi.

    Replies: @Anonymous

  • Our mainstream media remain consumed with the grisly killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, and how President Donald Trump will deal with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Understandably so, for this is the most riveting murder story since O.J. Simpson and has strategic implications across the Middle East....
  • “a nation that is already, at full employment, running a deficit of $779 billion a year.”

    As much as I dislike illegal immigrants, they have little to do with it.
    The Republican strategy has been known for a long time: cut taxes and use the resulting deficit as a pretext to privatize Social Security and Medicare.

  • From the LA Times: With 99% of the vote counted, the challenger is up 59-41, so it's not even close. So this is different from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's famous primary win, where there were ideological differences as well as identity differences. Capuano, age 66, is a ten term Congressman. Capuano had a pretty good leftist anti-war...
  • Notwithstanding Capuano’s support of the usual far left cocktail (sanctuary cities, gun control etc.) he was one of few congressmen who were opposed to overthrowing Syria’s Assad.

    Give him credit for opposing the “Invade” part of “Invade the word, invite the world.”

  • From the BBC: Commenter Polymath does the math: It's easy to underestimate how big these kind of disproportions are, so here's a handy benchmark to remember: if 20% of the population does 80% of the X, then the individuals in the 20% are doing X at 16 times the rate of the individuals in 80%.
  • Are winds of change blowing at the BBC?
    Their reporter recently interviewed Swedes about the link between crime and immigration and those Swedes who think immigration is not so great were portrayed in a sympathetic light.
    It’s on BBC’s youtube page, definitely worth watching:

    Video Link

  • From the New York Times: The horror, the horror. You ever notice how every.single.article these days is based on the premise of Too Many White People? Of course, my story is not unique — it’s an experience that’s probably shared by most American-born Asians as we shake off our perceived otherness and strive to prove...
  • Off-topic but Steve may find it interesting.

    Ronald Reagan talked about defunding the left.

    Without much fanfare, it’s happening right now. When a university has to reduce budget deficit, the fluffy majors go first:
    https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/04/02/umass-boston-budget-cuts-target-academic-research-centers/Nsl3PSQa1FmmOJa7W8hBDI/story.html
    “The other centers set to have their funding cut include the William Monroe Trotter Institute for the Study of Black Culture, the Center for Women in Politics and Public Policy, the Institute for New England Native American Studies, the Labor Resource Center, and the Center for Social Policy.”
    also of interest:
    https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2018/04/09/purchase-mount-ida-insult-umass-boston/iWdcquCvzZDdm0AsuDaNJJ/story.html

    • Replies: @Brutusale
    @Undocumented Shopper

    There's always a reason why things happen. In this case, it's an old story:

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2017/04/05/motley-step-down-umass-boston-chancellor/iNM3Kzu6bb17Rse8o71cJI/story.html

    UMass-Boston was known as UMass-Columbia Point at it's founding, but given its location hard by the poorest housing projects in New England, the name had to change. The school is inviolate, though, as the public "urban" campus.

    It'll be interesting to see if the Mount Ida campus continues to be the primary trainer of undertakers in New England.

  • The DACA business is getting interesting. Just to remind you, DACA stands for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, Barack Obama’s Executive Order giving renewable two-year work permits to illegal aliens under age 31 who claimed they were brought to this country by parents before age 16. Note the ages there. That age 31 was the...
  • The Cheap Labor Lobby, in addition to being evil, is also stupid. I mean, as soon as illegal immigrants are given green cards, they will look for jobs better than picking crops. In other words, it is in the economic interest of the Cheap Labor Lobby to keep them illegal.

  • From the New York Times: Why Women Had Better Sex Under Socialism Kristen R. Ghodsee RED CENTURY AUG. 12, 2017 ... Some might remember that Eastern bloc women enjoyed many rights and privileges unknown in liberal democracies at the time, including major state investments in their education and training, their full incorporation into the labor...
  • Communists also harassed homosexuals and were not ashamed of it:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Hyacinth

  • Everybody hates this anecdote from the new David Brooks column: But this seems pretty reasonable to me. Menus, in particular, have gotten much more intricate over the course of my lifetime. Dave Barry talks somewhere about how when he was a kid the typical fine dining menu consisted of: Fish $4 Meat $3 Spagetti $2...
  • Oh no, not again. Just recently Brooks made up a male blue collar friend (“I have a friend who is an avid Trump admirer. He supports himself as a part-time bartender and a part-time home contractor, and by doing various odd jobs on the side.”) Now he claims to have a friend who has a (sic) “high school degree”. I don’t believe any of it. Among the likes of Brooks having a Trump supporter or a high school graduate among friends is almost as bad as being friends with a child molester.

    Here is a French word for Brooks: Canard. And I don’t mean Terrine de Canard.

    • Agree: Daniel H
    • Replies: @Matra
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Oh no, not again. Just recently Brooks made up a male blue collar friend... Now he claims to have a friend who has a (sic) “high school degree”. I don’t believe any of it.

    Reminds of Bill Kristol's claim about an anti-Trump guy in a pizzeria saying he was counting on Kristol to "get us a better choice" than Trump: Penn Station Pizza Man Places the Fate of America in Bill Kristol's hands

    , @PiltdownMan
    @Undocumented Shopper


    Here is a French word for Brooks: Canard.
     
    Here is a British word for Brooks. Prat.
  • Clearly, the Japanese should instead have chosen mass immigration so that they could continue to live in 640 sq. ft. per family of four instead of 1400 sq. ft. per family of four. Seriously, here's an interesting thread on the successes of Japanese housing policy. Here in America, we constantly hear about how awful the...
  • @Citizen of a Silly Country
    Japan's GDP per capita growth has been around 0.63% annual for the past 25 years - about when their stock and real estate bubble popped.

    That compares to ~1.5% for the U.S. and ~1.0% for Germany. However, Japan continues to have a higher GDP per capita than Germany so some of that sluggishness may be been due to starting a higher level. Also, over the past decade, Japanese GDP per capita growth has been at least as good as the U.S.

    Main point is that Steve is right. Japan's economy is working just fine for the Japanese people, which, you know, should be the point of an economy, i.e. an economy should serve its people, not the other way around. Wall Street and and federal government want as much aggregate GDP growth as possible without caring so much about GDP per capita growth.

    I sometimes wonder if Marx may be been right about capitalism sewing the seeds of its own destruction. The Japanese seemed to have harnished this tool rather than bowing before it.

    Replies: @Erik Sieven, @Undocumented Shopper

    Japan’s GDP per capita growth has been around 0.63% annual for the past 25 years – about when their stock and real estate bubble popped.

    That compares to ~1.5% for the U.S. and ~1.0% for Germany. However, Japan continues to have a higher GDP per capita than Germany so some of that sluggishness may be been due to starting a higher level. Also, over the past decade, Japanese GDP per capita growth has been at least as good as the U.S.

    And perhaps most importantly, GDP is only an approximate measure of living standards. For example, in some places in the United States, private schools and gated communities are a necessity. Both of them increase GDP while lowering living standards.

    How awful of the Japanese to have good public schools everywhere!

    • Replies: @Citizen of a Silly Country
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Yep. I grew up in a small Midwestern town. In today's dollars, you could a very happy life for $50k to $60k. Do you get nice vacations, a McMansion and a Lexus. No. But you do get to play a lot of golf, have time for friends and family and the absolute supreme joy of living amongst your own.

    Priceless.

  • There’s something to report almost daily now in the war between Muslims and infidels being played out on the streets of Western cities. It’s getting to be so that any news outlet needs to just include a regular slot for these events, like the weather report. If things get any worse, some entrepreneur might start...
  • @KenH

    Poland is trying hard to remain Polish.
     
    Poland protects its people be not admitting any Muslims. I've talked to people who've traveled there for business and they love going there since the people are friendly and there's almost no third world presence, so Poland is virtually free of "no go" areas that plague Western Europe. People remark how safe and white it is (the two do go hand in hand).

    Add Hungary, Czechoslovakia and possibly Austria to the list of nations who protect their people and choose life over death by Islam and multiculturalism. But will it last and will the (((Soros))) brigade try to identity and groom the Merkels, Mays and Macrons in each of those nation so they, too, eventually become Muslim safe spaces?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @anonymous

    Add Hungary, Czechoslovakia and possibly Austria to the list of nations who protect their people

    Apparently, Bulgaria is trying to do that. During the peak of the migration crisis, the illegals avoided the Turkey to Bulgaria land route, preferring to cross by sea to Greece because the word got out that Bulgarians frequently beat up the illegal immigrants.

  • From Quartz: MIT is “fixing” the low graduation rate in its low-income, LGBT-friendly dorm by kicking everyone out Jenny Anderson June 15, 2017 Senior House, a dorm beloved by many underrepresented minority groups at MIT, has been described many ways: free-wheeling, experimental, diverse, inclusive—and, in the words of one former student, in constant violation of...
  • @Anonymous
    @Anonymous

    Lesbian women are common among college administrators. Off the top of my head, I can name five lesbian deans at my local colleges. I know another college employee, a middle-aged wife and mother, who left her husband for a lesbian. The president of one of my alma maters is a lesbian. I remember Steve's blogging about the tragic case of the lesbian president at UC Santa Cruz.

    On the flip side, I am familiar with a couple of humanities departments that have hired gay males exclusively for faculty positions for about five years. At least half the faculty in both departments fit that description now. It's hard to believe that some kind of informal networking is not at work.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    On the flip side, I am familiar with a couple of humanities departments that have hired gay males exclusively for faculty positions for about five years. At least half the faculty in both departments fit that description now. It’s hard to believe that some kind of informal networking is not at work.

    Since the standards are intentionally vague (“holistic”,) homos can easily make up an excuse in order to justify rejecting a heterosexual candidate. Supposedly that’s how they dominated some Catholic seminaries.

    Speaking of the Catholic Church, I was told by a well informed source that in 2013 the administrators of Saint John’s Seminary (in Archdiocese of Boston) hired a private investigator in order to identify homos (one of them was easy to identify since he got caught making love in the parking lot) and carried out a Night Of Long Knives by expelling all five of them. I’m surprised they had the will to pull it off. I pretty much wrote the Church off, perhaps I was wrong?

  • @Judah Benjamin Hur
    Where do you find this stuff ? :)

    Happy Father's Day to Steve Sailer and all the dads here.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    Where do you find this stuff ?

    I am the one who brought this to Steve’s attention. I actually found this accidentally on the Swiss version of Google News (no, I am not Swiss. I practice French in this way.) The story looked interesting, so I looked for news about Senior House in English.

    Our government likes to say “If You See Something, Say Something™”.
    I did and I encourage other readers to post interesting finds.

    • Replies: @Achmed E. Newman
    @Undocumented Shopper


    Our government likes to say “If You See Something, Say Something™”.
     
    They say that, but there is some fine print on the backside of that US Feral Gov't pamphlet that says (don't quote me) "... only applies to pleasure travelers and white grandmas at airports" "Any non-essential noticing of any sort is not applicable under this paragraph of the Federal Code and may be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and media." "Be a safe citizen - shut your yapper."
  • To Bret Stephens' assertion in the NYT that Commenter Bitfu responds:
  • Steve,

    This might be of interest to you.
    It’s “magic dirt” again. This time, at MIT.
    The administration has convinced itself that if a dorm popular with minorities is closed and students are moved to other dorms, their academic performance will improve.
    https://qz.com/1005761/mit-is-overhauling-senior-house-haus-a-dorm-beloved-by-poor-minority-and-lgbt-students-citing-drugs-and-late-graduation-rates/

  • "You all start with the premise that democracy is some good. I don't think it's worth a damn. Churchill is right. The only thing to be said for democracy is that there is nothing else that's any better. ... "People say, 'If the Congress were more representative of the people it would be better.' I...
  • It is not clear whether we live in a democracy. The media have gotten too skilled at manipulating the common people, the politicians renege on their campaign promises the day after they are sworn in, and last but not least, we are kept in the dark as to the dealings between lobbyists and legislators.

  • This New York Times article below is a good example of the barely existent distinction between outright Fake News versus The Narrative. The NYT manages to reassuringly mislead its subscribers by putting Real News in a distorted order. Berkeley Cancels Ann Coulter Speech Over Safety Fears By THOMAS FULLER APRIL 19, 2017 SAN FRANCISCO —...
  • The technique is so routine that it’s almost boring.

    Whenever they want to brainwash their readers, they come up with an ambiguous headline. For example:

    “Violence at Trump rallies”.

    That way, the blanks are left for readers to fill. If the readers fill it with “Trump supporters attacked angelic Democrats”, The Lying Press accomplishes its goal without getting blamed. Same with NYT’s

    “Berkeley Cancels Ann Coulter Speech Over Safety Fears”

    I bet many readers will assume that Coulter or her supporters are threatening to beat up someone.
    Things have gotten so bad that whenever I see an ambiguous headline, I assume bad intentions.

  • From the NYT: Most of the R&D work that makes Apple and Microsoft products wildly profitable around the world is done in the U.S.. But the IRS seldom manages to collect its 35% tax on corporate profits from sales abroad due to blatant tax evasion tactics. As I wrote in 2011: Yesterday, Microsoft announced it...
  • From the New York Times: Why not just use the term most relevant to the continued financial success of the New York Times: "A customer of Carlos Slim"?
  • @Undocumented Shopper
    MSM's way of dealing with this question is to use the term "Immigrants" when they have illegal aliens in mind. Which is dishonest because a green card holder is also an immigrant. Heck, a foreign-born but naturalized US citizen is still an immigrant!

    Here are some typical headlines I just collected from Google News:

    "TRUMP DUMPS DUE PROCESS TO TARGET ANY AND ALL IMMIGRANTS"
    "Fearful immigrants are offered anti-deportation training"
    "Toledo area immigrants, exiles feeling unsettled in Trump era"
    "This Agency Created a 'Panic Button' to Help Immigrants"
    "Bridgeport immigrants learn to evade ICE"
    "Advocates Educate Immigrants on Raids, Travel Ban"
    "Workshop aims to calm fears of immigrants"
    "Fearing deportation, Bay Area immigrants rush to make U.S.-born kids dual Mexican citizens"
    "Immigrants and their allies gather for ‘out of the shadows’ rally at State Capitol"
    "Border mystery: Where are the immigrants?"

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    “Fearing deportation, Bay Area immigrants rush to make U.S.-born kids dual Mexican citizens”

    By the way, this article says one of reasons they get Mexican citizenship for their kids is that without it the children would not be allowed to attend public schools in Mexico.

    I don’t think the authors intended to show how anarchic the US immigration policy is compared to Mexico’s, but they did.

  • MSM’s way of dealing with this question is to use the term “Immigrants” when they have illegal aliens in mind. Which is dishonest because a green card holder is also an immigrant. Heck, a foreign-born but naturalized US citizen is still an immigrant!

    Here are some typical headlines I just collected from Google News:

    “TRUMP DUMPS DUE PROCESS TO TARGET ANY AND ALL IMMIGRANTS”
    “Fearful immigrants are offered anti-deportation training”
    “Toledo area immigrants, exiles feeling unsettled in Trump era”
    “This Agency Created a ‘Panic Button’ to Help Immigrants”
    “Bridgeport immigrants learn to evade ICE”
    “Advocates Educate Immigrants on Raids, Travel Ban”
    “Workshop aims to calm fears of immigrants”
    “Fearing deportation, Bay Area immigrants rush to make U.S.-born kids dual Mexican citizens”
    “Immigrants and their allies gather for ‘out of the shadows’ rally at State Capitol”
    “Border mystery: Where are the immigrants?”

    • Replies: @Undocumented Shopper
    @Undocumented Shopper


    “Fearing deportation, Bay Area immigrants rush to make U.S.-born kids dual Mexican citizens”
     
    By the way, this article says one of reasons they get Mexican citizenship for their kids is that without it the children would not be allowed to attend public schools in Mexico.

    I don't think the authors intended to show how anarchic the US immigration policy is compared to Mexico's, but they did.
  • Following Mr. Trump’s kaleidosopically shifting policies isn’t easy. He was going to declare China a currency manipulator on day one, but didn’t, going to impose a forty-five percent tariff on Chinese goods but apparently won’t, was going to shift the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem but isn’t, going to tear up the Iran treaty...
  • There is no need to deport them. If we make life hard for illegals, they will self-deport.

    One might also offer them a half-amnesty, half-deportation deal: they reveal themselves to the US government, in return they receive a two year work permit. After that, they must go back to their home countries, which will be verified by reporting in person to a US Consulate. Once that condition is satisfied, they get back the Social Security taxes they paid.

  • Two weeks in Yellowtopia. The first thing you notice, strolling around in a Chinese city — in this case Taipei, the capital of Taiwan — for the first time in many years, is the appalling absence of racial diversity. Everybody in Taipei is Chinese. Well, of course, not quite everybody. You come across a round-eye...
  • @DB Cooper
    @Binyamin

    ". . . since 99.99% of humanity share the same genetic makeup there is no fundamental difference between the races."

    I think you mean humanity share 99.9% of the same genetic makeup and therefore there is no fundamental difference between the races.

    Well humans and bananas shared 50% of the genetic makeup do you think a banana is half a human?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Priss Factor, @Bu'bha al-Teksani

    “Well humans and bananas shared 50% of the genetic makeup do you think a banana is half a human?”

    This issue was addressed in the past by John Derbyshire himself:

    The BBC reports that 75 percent of our genetic makeup is the same as that of the common pumpkin. Presumably this is why the word “pumpkin” ends with “kin.” But wait — what is that fluttering of gossamer wings I hear! Why, it’s the Muse…
    Lines in Appreciation of Genetic Propinquity by John Derbyshire
    A certain young hillbilly bumpkin
    Was caught having sex with a pumpkin.
    When arrested he swore:
    “What’s all this fuss for?
    Where I’m from, it’s okay to hump kin!”

    Source: http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/82353/down-pumpkin-patch-john-derbyshire

    • Replies: @Wizard of Oz
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Don't broadcast it: I've been handing out JD's head to head contest entry with Robert Conquest (worthy of that anyway) for years on a one to one basis.

    , @Clyde
    @Undocumented Shopper

    How witty is this from the so called Derbyshire!! I guessed 2004 and I was right.

  • Encountering almost daily criticisms of the police by Pathologically Virtuous Whites of the sort one finds at Salon and NPR, many of these criticisms being nonsensical, I find myself wanting to ask these unpleasantly nice people: Do you know any cops? Have you ever known any? I mean known them well enough to have a...
  • @El Tigran
    @Anonymous

    " If the job that they signed up for is too tough, they can always resign and go do something else."
    An excellent rejoinder, and the beautiful part is it can be said to anyone, anywhere, in any job or role whatsoever, who ever complains about anything at all.
    eg Hillary doesn't like nasty criticisms: " If the job that she signed up for is too tough, she can always resign and go do something else."
    eg high school teacher at minority dominated or inner city school gets roughed up: " If the job that they signed up for is too tough, they can always resign and go do something else."
    eg gay soldier being discriminated against: " If the job that he signed up for is too tough, he can always resign and go do something else."

    Gotta remember this one :)

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    This rejoinder is typical of people who do not see any need to improve anything. Such as South African minister Charles Nqakula who said “they can simply leave this country” in response to complaints about South Africa’s rate of rape.

  • Another week, another Muslim atrocity, this one on the French Riviera: 84 dead as I go to tape. These incidents inspire in me what I can only describe as calm despair. There’s something in the collective character of Western humanity that is awfully resistant to learning an obvious lesson here. To adapt Chiang Kai-shek’s famous...
  • I did some research into ethnicity of Royce Mann. A Google Images search links him to his brother, Tendal Mann. Next, IMDB links Tendal Mann to his father, Barry Mann.

    Now, Barry supposedly is a Celtic name, but in the United States it is mostly a Jewish name. Some web pages claim that Jews use it as a substitute for Baruch.

  • From the St. Paul [Minnesota] Pioneer Press: Big parks must do more to attract Latinos, blacks, Asians, Met Council says By FREDERICK MELO | [email protected] PUBLISHED: July 19, 2016 at 4:17 pm | UPDATED: July 20, 2016 at 1:27 pm Asked what safety concerns kept them from visiting the metro’s regional parks, focus groups of...
  • @AndrewR
    @whorefinder

    I just looked up the rate of the camp I went to as a kid. This year it's $659 for two weeks. Given that you'd already be paying for your kid's food and extra utility use, it's really about five hundred bucks out of pocket. "Middle class" will be defined differently by different people but I feel confident in saying if you can't spare five hundred bucks a year then you're *definitely* not even close to middle class. I have no idea what definition you are using but it's a bizarre and nonsensical one. And I know many, many blue collar people who can afford that. In fact most can. At least the skilled ones.

    Granted, two weeks isnt all summer but it's plenty of time, at least for younger kids.

    Replies: @whorefinder, @Undocumented Shopper, @The Practical Conservative

    They should be able to afford summer camps, but in practice their personal finance skills are often even lower than their incomes. They often buy houses bigger than they can afford, waste money in numerous ways such as bounced check fees and high interest and so on.

    • Agree: AndrewR
  • An interesting perspective from commenter Das:
  • Actually, two Democrats – Matthew Yglesias and Paul Krugman wrote about Trump’s postion on Social Security and how he is the only Republican candidate who does not want to gut it, while other Republican candidates are pretty much extremists.

    Yglesias and Krugman are exceptions, others genuinely believe the “Rubio and Bush are moderates” meme.

    • Replies: @Dave Pinsen
    @Undocumented Shopper

    Two related issues history shows are stupid to run on:

    1) Reducing the growth in entitlement spending/making Social Security and Medicare sustainable.

    2) Reducing the federal debt.

    That doesn't mean they're stupid issues, they're just stupid to run on. They're easy for opponents to demagogue, and there's no political benefit in addressing them before circumstances force the issue (e.g., the bond market balks at our debt and starts demanding high interest rates to buy it; the OMB or some other nonpartisan watchdog raises an imminent warning about Social Security and Medicare).

    When circumstances force the issue, you hammer out a bipartisan fix and you move on. But running on it is just asking the other party to kick you in the nuts.

    Replies: @jimbo, @iffen

    , @Bugg
    @Undocumented Shopper

    SSI and Medicare need reforming. Perhaps an older full vesting age needs to be considered, higher deductibles on medical expenses should be explored, means testing for people who really don't need one or the other also should be a possibility. Very clear there are too many people getting fraudulent SSI disability, and Medicare scams are exploding. But why every GOP candidate starts every campaign scaring elderly people half to death is simply a once every 4 years unforced error. Those old people vote.

    As to Hillary! and other Dems using that "fighting for the middle class". Effete elitists who have never put on a law enforcement nor military uniform nor thrown a punch in anger love to invoke the fighting imagery to try to pretend they really are tough guys.Chuck Schumer's too numerous speeches would be almost nonexistent with invoking fighting for sombody for something.

  • I get a fair amount of mail wanting to know about expatriation to Mexico, whether it is a good idea, what it is like, and how to do it. I have consequently flung together the following to satisfy this curiosity. I hope it serves. Mexico is a friendly, courteous, flavorful country. It appeals to the...
  • Recent collapse in the price of oil (of which Mexico is a major producer) must have a negative impact on the Mexican economy. How does that affect American expats?

    • Replies: @Keith
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I do not think it has hit, yet. That being said, the plan (I read about this on Wolf Street) is to start gutting social services and like, which may lead to a spike in crime as people try to make ends meet. That being said, people living in Ex-Pat communities may not be affected, as they tend to be more secluded and keep out the riff raff (at least from what I saw in my travels in Asia). The Ex-pats will likely enjoy an improving exchange rate, seeing their dollars go a lot farther, due to the combined effects of the Fed tightening and the loss on oil income.

  • We live in an era of political news that is, all too often, shocking but not surprising. The rise of Donald Trump definitely falls into that category. And so does the electoral earthquake that struck France in Sunday’s regional elections, with the right-wing National Front winning more votes than either of the major mainstream parties....
  • I disagree with Krugman on many things, but he hit the nail on the had with his characterization of Republican establishment’s bait-and-switch:

    But there is a strong element of bait-and-switch to this strategy. Whatever dog whistles get sent during the campaign, once in power the G.O.P. has made serving the interests of a small, wealthy economic elite, especially through big tax cuts, its main priority — a priority that remains intact, as you can see if you look at the tax plans of the establishment presidential candidates this cycle.

    Sooner or later the angry whites who make up a large fraction, maybe even a majority, of the G.O.P. base were bound to rebel — especially because these days much of the party’s leadership seems inbred and out of touch. They seem, for example, to imagine that the base supports cuts to Social Security and Medicare, an elite priority that has nothing to do with the reasons working-class whites vote Republican.

  • At SlateStarCodex, Scott Alexander asks: It's easier for China to throw a little money at, say, women's weightlifting and win some Olympic gold medals than to build a men's World Cup contender. The men's World Cup is the single hardest thing to win in sports (it's almost always the same ten or so countries in...
  • You hit the nail on the head.

    In the former Yugoslavia, soccer games were one of few occasions where nationalism was expressed openly. It is no surprise that many soccer fan clubs later evolved into paramilitary militias.

  • Commenter Alice in Wonderland offers a sensible compromise to the Urge to Purge building among the conformitariat to throw either Alexander Hamilton off the $10 bill or Andrew Jackson off the $20 bill for their ineradicable straight white maleness: Sure, that makes perfect sense, but the point is much less to honor some woman or...
  • I predict that if Alexander Hamilton is replaced with a vibrant hag, lots of Americans will arm themselves with markers and cross her out. It’s illegal, but the law is unenforceable unless only a small number of people do it.

  • Radio comedian Will Rogers is often said to have sagely advised, "If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging." Western Europe has found itself in a hole over the last generation, having imprudently admitted large numbers of Muslims. Germany's two-pronged solution: - Double down - Bully Germany's eastern neighbors into the same mistake so...
  • @Anonymous
    Poland certainly has plenty of room for these migrants because many thousands of Poles have taken full advantage of EU free movement benefit and moved to more advanced countries like England, where they have more employment opportunities and enjoy a vastly higher standard of living than back home.

    You can't take advantage of EU benefits while simultaneously rejecting its obligations.

    As the son and grandson of Jewish refugees from Poland where many of my extended family perished in the Holocaust, I am saddened, but not shocked, by the xenophobia in Poland and elsewhere in eastern Europe where many other Jews emigrated in the last century. Bigotry and intolerance are endemic to the cultural history there and the ethnically-cleansed societies are now even less willing, though morally obligated, to make amends for their past indiscretions by accepting other migrants fleeing wars and religious oppression. The petty tribalism of human nature has no place in the 21st century either in Europe or especially here in the United States where all, except the dwindling number of Native Americans, are recent immigrants.

    Replies: @Gato de la Biblioteca, @Undocumented Shopper, @Bies Podkrakowski, @Chrisnonymous, @Anonymous, @bomag, @Ed

    “You can’t take advantage of EU benefits while simultaneously rejecting its obligations.”

    What obligations??? Under the terms that were negotiated when being admitted into EU, there is no obligation and nothing to reject.

    What is happening is that the likes of you want to unilaterally modify a contract after it was signed.

    “Bigotry and intolerance are endemic to the cultural history there and the ethnically-cleansed societies are now even less willing, though morally obligated, to make amends for their past indiscretions”

    At one point, majority of World’s Jews lived within the borders of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, even though they were free to go elsewhere. Poles fulfilled their diversity requirement a long time ago, but you need to make amends for your ingratitude.

    • Replies: @silviosilver
    @Undocumented Shopper


    What is happening is that the likes of you want to unilaterally modify a contract after it was signed.
     
    Well, you can't blame him. As the saddened-but-not-shocked son and grandson of Jewish refugees from Poland why shouldn't he try? If you were the saddened-but-not-shocked son and grandson of Jewish refugees from Poland you'd probably use your sob stories to try to rewrite the rules to favor your own interests too. But you're not the saddened-but-not-shocked son and grandson of Jewish refugees from Poland so any sob stories you might have don't carry the same weight.
  • A friend texts about a much better idea when being pulled over for a ticket than telling the cop you are a Sovereign Citizen: instead, act undocumented. So why risk declaring yourself a Sovereign Citizen and getting whomped on with the cop's flashlight for your troubles, when you can declare yourself a Sovereign Noncitizen? He...
  • If you’re an average middle class person, then your encounters with police consist of paying a speeding ticket every five years or so. Taking a risk is not worth it. Just pay it.

    Now the medical bills, that’s quite another story. The health care industry, with its unwillingness to disclose prices is a racket and deceiving them is not immoral IMHO.

  • As you'll recall, the 2011 destruction of the internationally recognized Libyan government by United States airpower in effect pulled the plug that had been bottling up 1.1 billion Africans from draining into Europe. Col. Gaddafi had contracted with Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi to limit transit through Libya of sub-Saharan Africans. But the murder-by-sodomy of Col....
  • @Anonymous
    @matt

    There's a difference between a theoretical McCain administration's war designs & what it could actually pull off during a Reid-Pelosi Congress. Another obstacle would be the anti-war "movement"/media fad, a supposed force of nature that evaporated once the polished Benneton boy was in charge. Consistently the whiteliberal synthetic romance with Blackus Aurelius has not only shielded generic R2P nitwits of the Susan Power/Sam Rice stripe, it's also created or saved the jobs of saboteurs like Victoria Nuland. Though it looked doubtful for a moment Obama truly has reclaimed U.S. foreign policy for the messianic-imperialist team.

    If you're trying to extoll the diplomatic prudence of Democrat leadership in general, spin while you can: it'll be harder not to laugh once Obama's Libya architect is in the White House again, bombing aspirin factories for a source of "Meet the Press" talking points.

    Replies: @Steve Sailer, @Undocumented Shopper, @Anonymous

    When a president wants to start a war, no Congress can stop him.

    The technique was designed and tested by Clinton: you start a war without congressional approval, then you accuse your of opponents of being unpatriotic. Next, you give the sheep orders to bleat “we must support our troops!”

  • @notsaying
    As best I can make out, Obama's reaction to Europe is about him, not Europe.

    Is it surprising that as someone whose black father took off to another continent when he was an infant and who is half European-American but considered black by most people that he felt the way he did?

    Under the circumstances, for his trip to Kenya and thoughts about his father to be uppermost in his mind seems natural to me. That Obama felt restless and unsatisfied by his stopover in Europe seems natural to me too.

    Actually this excerpt left me wanting to read more and to find out how things turned out.

    I think US policy on Libya was not primarily a result of anything Obama thought. It was a lot more about our hopes and desires for a different Middle East. There were a lot of decisionmakers here and in Europe who thought it would be a good idea to support the Arab Spring with more than words.

    There's some current Republican Presidential candidates who talk about "American exceptionalism" who seem to be all but promising us to get the US into a lot more wars in the future. I do not understand why so many Americans support that idea. Do they not realize when politicians say America has to "lead" by putting boots on the ground in this conflict and that conflict or we will look weak that more billion and trillion dollar wars will be the result?

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @notsaying, @Ozymandias, @AnotherDad

    Trump is an exception, but the rest of them are like McCain. As bad as Obama is, at least his Middle Eastern meddling is done on the cheap, without sending ground troops.

  • From The Week: Social media, which largely consists of bragging about how aweso
  • @Ed
    @Priss Factor

    This is why I say they should let them
    come. To many in Europe being seen as tolerant among their peers is far more important than leaving the country they inherited to their kids.

    Let Iceland turn into Syria North. Let Italy turn into Eritrea by the Mediterranean. The people want it, give it to them.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper, @Anonymous

    Tests should be carried out on volunteers or lab rats. And if Icelanders want to be lab rats, why not? Better to destroy a small country, which can serve as a warning to bigger ones.

  • @Priss Factor
    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/more-10-000-icelanders-ready-welcome-syrians-164942463.html#gkng8hK

    Replies: @Ed, @Undocumented Shopper

    Well, Nordics can also be dumb. It makes perfect sense that Iceland is the country where all banks went bankrupt.

  • From the NYT: The single biggest differ
  • Dean would have beaten Kerry in 2004 were it not for the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003. This was followed by public enthusiasm and it (sort of) seemed like the war was going well. Democrats were in panic and realized they needed someone with strong military credentials. Strictly speaking, none of Democratic hopefuls had strong military credentials, but John Kerry, who at least commanded a gunboat, was a one-eyed man in the land of the blind, which is why he won the Iowa caucuses.

  • Enough. I shall go deep into the Okefenokee Swamp, dwell in a hut of clay and wattles made, and live on crocodile meat and watermelons. The modern world is too much for me. I have just read ¡Adios, America! by Ann Coulter, and discovered that Mexico, my current home, is a suppurating moral sore where...
  • Fred is right.

    I did some googling, looking for phrase

    sexual arrestado “de 13 años” site:.mx

    and I found a recent arrest

    http://www.excelsior.com.mx/nacional/2015/05/04/1022344

    A Mexican singer, Omar Valenzuela Rivera was arrested for what looks like statutory rape:

    aunque señalan que existe el delito de violación equiparada cuando se mantienen relaciones sexuales con un menor de edad que no cuenta con la capacidad para comprender el significado del hecho.”

    So it looks like at least in this case the age of consent was 14 or more.

  • With wealth moving back downtown, the Obama Administration is working on how to get poor inner city blacks to move to the suburbs. Two, three, many Fergusons! In the name of racial justice, of course. From the NYT: Vouchers Help Families Move Far From Public Housing By BINYAMIN APPELBAUM JULY 7, 2015 PLANO, Tex. —...
  • @Bill Jones
    @Undocumented Shopper

    I seem to recall the probably apocryphal story that the Soviets proposed that when communism had taken over the World, Switzerland was to remain capitalist for purposes of price discovery.

    Replies: @Undocumented Shopper

    The real story is bigger than apocrypha you mentioned. Within COMECON (the trading bloc of Soviets and their satellites) they traded using prices which were set as moving averages of capitalist prices on world markets. So, behind the rhetoric, they were quite pragmatic.

    I would say that their pricing policy was more pragmatic than our housing policy.