• Pragerisms

    For a more comprehensive list of Pragerisms visit
    Dennis Prager Wisdom.

    • "The left is far more interested in gaining power than in creating wealth."
    • "Without wisdom, goodness is worthless."
    • "I prefer clarity to agreement."
    • "First tell the truth, then state your opinion."
    • "Being on the Left means never having to say you're sorry."
    • "If you don't fight evil, you fight gobal warming."
    • "There are things that are so dumb, you have to learn them."
  • Liberalism’s Seven Deadly Sins

    • Sexism
    • Intolerance
    • Xenophobia
    • Racism
    • Islamophobia
    • Bigotry
    • Homophobia

    A liberal need only accuse you of one of the above in order to end all discussion and excuse himself from further elucidation of his position.

  • Glenn’s Reading List for Die-Hard Pragerites

    • Bolton, John - Surrender is not an Option
    • Bruce, Tammy - The Thought Police; The New American Revolution; The Death of Right and Wrong
    • Charen, Mona - DoGooders:How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help
    • Coulter, Ann - If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd Be Republicans; Slander
    • Dalrymple, Theodore - In Praise of Prejudice; Our Culture, What's Left of It
    • Doyle, William - Inside the Oval Office
    • Elder, Larry - Stupid Black Men: How to Play the Race Card--and Lose
    • Frankl, Victor - Man's Search for Meaning
    • Flynn, Daniel - Intellectual Morons
    • Fund, John - Stealing Elections
    • Friedman, George - America's Secret War
    • Goldberg, Bernard - Bias; Arrogance
    • Goldberg, Jonah - Liberal Fascism
    • Herson, James - Tales from the Left Coast
    • Horowitz, David - Left Illusions; The Professors
    • Klein, Edward - The Truth about Hillary
    • Mnookin, Seth - Hard News: Twenty-one Brutal Months at The New York Times and How They Changed the American Media
    • Morris, Dick - Because He Could; Rewriting History
    • O'Beirne, Kate - Women Who Make the World Worse
    • Olson, Barbara - The Final Days: The Last, Desperate Abuses of Power by the Clinton White House
    • O'Neill, John - Unfit For Command
    • Piereson, James - Camelot and the Cultural Revolution: How the Assassination of John F. Kennedy Shattered American Liberalism
    • Prager, Dennis - Think A Second Time
    • Sharansky, Natan - The Case for Democracy
    • Stein, Ben - Can America Survive? The Rage of the Left, the Truth, and What to Do About It
    • Steyn, Mark - America Alone
    • Stephanopolous, George - All Too Human
    • Thomas, Clarence - My Grandfather's Son
    • Timmerman, Kenneth - Shadow Warriors
    • Williams, Juan - Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America--and What We Can Do About It
    • Wright, Lawrence - The Looming Tower

Democrat Millionaire Corzine Subpoenaed by Senate Committee to Explain MF Global Collapse

Senate Panel Agrees to Subpoena Corzine

By Charlene Carter   at  Roll Call

“The Senate Agriculture Committee voted to subpoena former MF Global Holdings CEO Jon Corzine to testify at a hearing next week on the bankruptcy of the company.

The former New Jersey governor and Senator resigned as CEO of the commodities brokerage Nov. 4, just days after it filed for bankruptcy.

Agriculture Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow said the committee has been in touch with Corzine’s lawyer, but he has not responded to the panel’s request to testify.

“We can’t keep waiting. We need definite answers,” the Michigan Democrat said.

The committee agreed by voice vote to subpoena Corzine and other MF Global executives to testify at the Dec. 13 hearing. Stabenow said the hearing is part of an examination of the circumstances surrounding the firm’s bankruptcy — the eighth-largest in U.S. history.

“They can help us get to the bottom of this, better understand what happened and help us to maintain confidence in the futures market,” said Sen. Pat Roberts (Kan.), the top Republican on the panel.

The FBI is investigating possible criminal conduct related to the MF Global bankruptcy. As much as $1.2 billion in client money allegedly was commingled with the firm’s funds — a violation of Commodity Futures Trading Commission rules — and has since gone missing.

Stabenow’s panel is investigating where the money is, how to refund customers, whether the bankruptcy was preventable and whether the rules were appropriately crafted to protect customers’ money. Last week the panel heard testimony from CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler and Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro on their oversight of MF Global.

The CFTC on Monday voted 5-0 to approve new rules on investment brokers’ and merchants’ use of customers’ funds — limiting the type of transactions that are alleged to have contributed to the collapse of MF Global.

Roberts said this would be the first time the committee had to subpoena witnesses to testify.

“Unfortunately it is the only option available to us to try and get the answers that so many … demand,” Roberts said.

Last week, the House Agriculture Committee agreed by voice vote to subpoena Corzine for a similar hearing set for Thursday.”

Dennis Prager Defends Capital Punishment…….Good for Dennis!

A Response to Oregon’s Governor

 on Capital Punishment

by Dennis Prager:
 

“The governor of Oregon, John Kitzhaber, announced last week that he would not allow any more executions in his state during his time in office.

Kitzhaber, a Democrat, gave five reasons for his decision. My response follows each one.

1. “I refuse to be part of this compromised and inequitable system any longer.”

This has become one of the most frequently offered reasons for objecting to capital punishment — that because the system is not equitable, no murderer should be put to death.

This is a reason that is devoid of reason. If a system is not equitable, you don’t end the system, you try to end what is not equitable. This is classic left-wing thinking — destroy what is good if it is imperfect. Documentary-maker Michael Moore was recently on CNN with Anderson Cooper and provided a perfect example of this way of thinking.

Moore: “2011 capitalism is an evil system set up to benefit the few at the expense of the many.”

Cooper: “So, what system do you want?”

Moore: “Well, there’s no system right now that exists. We’re going to create that system.”

The utopian streak that is an essential part of the left-wing mind is puerile and destructive: “If it isn’t perfect, eliminate it.”

2. “I do not believe that those executions (the two that the governor allowed) made us safer.”

We all acknowledge that two executions do not make us safer (though they do make it safer for prison guards and for other inmates). Who ever said two executions would make us safer? Overwhelmingly, the reason people give for supporting the death penalty is justice. It is indescribably unjust to allow everyone who deliberately takes a human life to keep his own.

But if you want to talk safety, then yes, we who support the death penalty are certain that, applied with any consistency, it is a deterrent. The late sociologist Ernest van den Haag had an interesting thought experiment. Suppose that murders committed on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays carried a death sentence, while those committed on the other days were punishable by a prison sentence. On which days do you suppose more murders would be committed?

The notion that parking tickets deter illegal parking but that death does not deter murder is truly irrational. It shows what happens when people put ideology over common sense.

3. “Certainly I don’t believe (the executions of murderers) made us more noble as a society.”

Why is it noble to keep all murderers alive? Was Israel less noble for executing Adolf Eichmann, the architect of the Holocaust? When two men enter the home of a family of four; rape the wife and two young daughters; beat all four nearly to death, leaving them in the agony of crushed bones and skulls; and then tie them up and burn the three females to death, why is it “noble” to keep the men who did that alive?

4. Oregon has an “unworkable system that fails to meet basic standards of justice.”

Opponents of the death penalty make it virtually impossible to execute murderers. They then lament how long and laborious the effort is to execute a murderer.

5. “… And I simply cannot participate in something I believe morally wrong.”

Opponents of the death penalty simply assert the death penalty is immoral. That is their prerogative. But “morally wrong” in this context means nothing more than “I don’t like it.” Indeed, as reported in the The New York Times, “Asked with whom (Kitzhaber) had consulted, he said, ‘Mostly myself.’”

Kitzhaber’s moratorium delays the execution of a murderer who had raped and brutally beaten to death a woman named Mary Archer. Needless to say, the family and friends of Mary Archer disagree with the governor’s action.

“We are just plain devastated,” said the man who had been Mary Archer’s husband. “This is such a miscarriage of justice.”

Indeed it is. And worse. Societies that allow all murderers to live have lost some of their hunger for justice and certainly lost their hatred of evil. They also cheapen the crime of murder. Punishment is society’s way of communicating how serious it views a crime, and there is all the difference in the world between the death penalty and life (not to mention less time) in prison.

When all murderers are allowed to live, the evil exult while the victims weep. Why is that noble?”

Comment:   I always thought William F. Buckley was a buffoon.   His mannerisms said so.   I was a Lefty all those years he performed on television, yet  I religiously listened to his huffing and puffing Eastern snobbery while viewing his  Sunday afternoon television show.

I wanted to know what the other half of America was arguing.   

Mr. Buckley was a strong advocate for the death penality for most capital crimes.   He claimed a number of persuasive reasons for  it.   He pooh-poohed the usual conservative claim that the death penalty reduced the number of capital crimes in the country.    The murderer usually doesn’t hesitate for a thought or two about his or her future after commiting the murder.

Prisons were less violent then.   Today hundreds are murdered every day in the world of American prisons.   Many who are murdered by killers  (saved by Lefty sanctimoniousness)  never committed a capital crime.   Those killers saved by Lefty hysterics  continue their  murdering  in prison and go  forever unpunished it Democrat Party states which have abolished the death penalty.

Mr. Buckley stated one reason supporting  execution for viscious capital crime stood above all.   It  illustrates the value a society places on each human life.    If one believes each  human being has a soul , and that soul has been destroyed by evil, the evil must pay the capital price of his or her evil actions.

In all of my thinking life I have  believed  each human being has a soul unique throughout all of existence, and therefore sacred.   If that which is sacred is violated profoundly,  the murderer ceases to be sacred in the eyes of  the living.

It should be enforced  with civility and extraordinary caution reserved for the obvious and the profound to be judged by honorable citizens according to law.

Those who have committed lesser crimes have a right to serve their terms determined by the law without being murdered while serving them.

Mr. Buckley persuaded me those many years ago to think a bit deeper about a rather simple solution…..when your society truly values human life.       But, then that last clause tells us something about the modern American, don’t you think?

America’s prisons today are a disgrace to every American.

George Will Assumes Role of the Liberal Snob Again……Calls Herman Cain a Charlatan

George Will often trips into the Eastern Liberal Establishment Snobbery Abyss.     Seldom has he fallen further into that Dante  miasma world than yesterday when he announced that certain  American citizens should be disqualified from running for the presidential office.   Leading among them he named Herman Cain and Donald Trump, for former he claimed  was a ”charlatan entrepreneur” or  “an entrepreneurial charlaton”.   He had sinned for campaigning while having had written a book.

These days, nearly every lefty and  most conservative competitors for the American presidential office write books used in their campaigns for the White House.  Mr. Will overlooked mentioning this fact in his tirade.  

Note that when you click on the video below to see Mr. Will playing his Eastern Snob role  who sits amid this particular  clique  from ths Snob community.   Isn’t that Ms. Huffington to his left…..and Donna Brazile nearby?

It is likely many Americans believe that Snobbery should disqualify these citizens from running for  president.

Perhaps.  However,  in that case Mr. Obama would have been doubly disqualified as president, as  the excessive  snobbery he possesses and also for the books  he has written  which he used in his presidential campaign.

I checked our  Federal Constitution, (the Law of the Land) to review the requirements for a citizen becoming  a presidential candidate.    I couldn’t find the Article which preserves our nations highest political office from the Snobby and those who write books.  


http://www.mediaite.com/tv/george-will-calls-herman-cain-entrepreneurial-charlatan-who-used-campaign-as-a-book-tour/

Judge Defends Separation of Government Powers Over NeoMarxist Democrat Dictatorship

Judge shuts down child-care unionization

by executive fiat in MN

posted  by Ed Morrissey  at HotMail

 
“Yesterday, a Minnesota court struck a blow for separation of powers and defied Governor Mark Dayton in his attempt to featherbed for his union backers.  Dayton had issued an executive order for a union election among 4300 child-care businesses that care for children on a state subsidy program.  Ramsey County Judge Dale Lindman ruled that Dayton should have asked the legislature to pass such a law rather than issue an executive order, rebuking Dayton:

A Ramsey County judge delivered a setback to union organizers and a rebuke to Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton on Monday by halting a pending election seeking to unionize thousands of Minnesota child care workers.

In issuing a temporary restraining order, Judge Dale Lindman said the unionization issue should have gone through the Legislature rather than Dayton’s approach of calling the vote through an executive order.

“If unionization of day care is to become the law of Minnesota, it must first be submitted to the lawmaking body of the state,” Lindman said after hearing three hours of arguments from a bank of attorneys. His order remains in effect at least until another court hearing on Jan. 16.

Opponents of the union drive argued that Dayton governor exceeded his powers and designed an election that would have prevented many providers from weighing in. Their attorney, Tom Revnew, told the judge that nothing in state law “directs small business owners or employers to engage in an election. It’s simply not there.”

The Star Tribune offers a lighter version of the rebuke:

A Ramsey County judge on Monday blocked a vote on child-care unionization that was to have started Wednesday among thousands of providers across Minnesota.

The ruling came after some child-care providers and Republicans said Gov. Mark Dayton overstepped his authority in calling for the vote last month. Ramsey County District Judge Dale Lindman said he respected the governor’s executive powers but was not persuaded that the unionization vote had to take place so quickly.

“I just believe the process should go through” the Legislature, Lindman said. He issued a temporary restraining order that will prevent mail-in ballots from going out on Wednesday. “I don’t understand where there’s a need for speed.” …

The election was to have started on Wednesday, with a two-week period for mail-in ballots. Although there are 11,000 licensed child-care providers in Minnesota, Dayton’s order would have restricted the election to 4,300 providers eligible to care for children on a state subsidy program. The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), along with the Service Employees International Union have been organizing that subset for years.

Bear in mind that these child-care centers are not owned or run by the state, but are independent businesses.  Dayton issued the order on the basis that the state subsidy more or less made them a common labor pool answerable to the state government, an intent that has not been endorsed by the Minnesota legislature.  The child-care operators strongly objected to this effort, as did the legislature itself in seeing the governor trample on the legislative process.

Gary Gross has been following the case closely the last few months, and declares victory:

This is a major, crushing blow to Gov. Dayton, AFSCME Council 5 and the SEIU. … Gov. Dayton only has the authority to call for unionization elections if public employees are involved. If Judge Lindman indeed ruled that these child care providers weren’t public employees, then that’s why Judge Lindman issued his order.

Victory isn’t yet complete.  Lindman only temporarily barred the election, and will conduct further hearings on the matter.  The issue here is whether the acceptance of customers who receive public subsidies makes a private business a public-sector workplace that is subject to executive orders without any chance to have the legislature debate such a distortion of the law.  This has a much greater impact than just the 4300 child-care workers who suddenly discovered that their governor had declared them to be servants of the state rather than the private businesspeople they had considered themselves previously in order to allow his labor allies a chance to bully them into paying dues to the public-employee unions.  Keep an eye on Minnesota and the Ramsey County courts to see whether the separation of powers in government will continue to have any meaning, and remember that the “Democrat” in DFL is apparently an anachronistic vestige rather than a description of current philosophy.

 

Theodore Dalrymple Reviews the New Battle for Britain……A Must Read for All Americans!

If you ever come across the name Theodore Dalrymple attached to a piece of writing, not matter how long, do stop and read it.

Some English speaking people are just more civilized than others…..in thought and memory, speech and style, writing and information….and probably in a host of other things as well.  

Some people are born nice, kind, loveable, trusting, and smile even when the face doesn’t display a smile.   Most of these people are female, that’s true.   Nevertheless certain writers emanate  the best of the human beast, the beast as individual or in the collective.

I can’t pull from memory Mr. Dalrymple’s real name at the moment.    But Theodore Dalrymple is the name to remember.  He spent  much of his professional life counseling the worst of the worst in Brit prisons, as I recall.   And, hitting home more personally, Mr. Dalrymple, now an intellectual conservatie came from a super lefty background…….actually from one of the worst……Communism.    Another convert who has deeply interested  me is David Horowitz whose writings I used to follow a generation or two ago when he was an evangelistic Soviet type Red and I was in college.    David bears more angst in his writings.   Both are even older than I am which adds to my attachment.

Two  collections of essays  which have latched me to the Dalrymple following are Life at the Bottom and Our Culture, What’s Left of It.    When I read Our Culture (referring to the Brit’s modern mess six or seven years ago)  I stopped feeling so isolated in my thoughts and concerns about my own Americana and the garbage it has collected for culture over the past 40 years.    I now had company who wrote as I felt.   Throughout the 1990s I spent a month or two each year in London adding up to almost a year of my life.   It became then a home away from home in many respects.  

Its culture was grubbier, more medieval and chaotic that suburban life in Minnesota. 

I have not yet read the following article which I found at RealClearPolitics this morning.   I am testing my evaluation of Theodore Dalrumple i have  written above.   I have confiidence I will win my bet that he is the same writer as in the past….accurate, descriptive, informative, incisive,  believable and pleasant and likeable despite the nature of his topic.

Theodore Dalrymple
Barbarians on the Thames
A postmortem of the British riots

London burning

Lewis Whyld/AP Photo
London burning

Complex human events have no single or final explanation. The last word on the outbreak of looting and rioting that convulsed large parts of England, including London, in August will therefore never be heard. But some of the first words were foolish, or at least shallow, reflecting the typical materialistic assumptions of the intelligentsia.

An August feature story on the riots in Time offered a particularly striking example. The author suggested that to understand the riots, we should start with “something called the Gini co-efficient, a figure used by economists to indicate how equally (or unequally) income is distributed across a population.” In this traditional measure, the article notes, Britain fares worse than almost every other country in the West.

This little passage is interesting for at least two reasons. First is the unthinking assumption that more equality is better; complete equality would presumably be best. Second is that the author apparently did not think carefully about the table of Gini coefficients printed on the very same page and what it implied about his claim. Portugal headed the list as the most unequal of the countries selected, with a 0.36 coefficient. Next followed the U.K. and Italy, both with a 0.34 coefficient. Toward the bottom of the list, one found France, with a 0.29 coefficient, the same as the Netherlands. Now, it is true that journalists are not historians and that, for professional reasons, their time horizons are often limited to the period between the last edition of their publication and the next. Even so, one might have expected a Time reporter to remember that in 2005—not exactly a historical epoch ago—similar riots swept France, even though its Gini coefficient was already lower than Britain’s. (Having segregated its welfare dependents geographically, though, France saw none of its town or city centers affected by the disorder.)

As it happened, when I read the Time story, I had an old notebook with me. In it, among miscellaneous scribblings, was the following list, referring to the riots in France and made contemporaneously:

Cities affected 300
Detained 2,921
Imprisoned 590
Burned cars 9,071
Injured 126
Dead 1
Police involved 11,200
Average number of cars burned per day before riots 98

And all this with a Gini coefficient of only 0.29! How, then, could it have happened? It might also be worth mentioning that the Netherlands, with its relatively virtuous Gini coefficient, is one of the most crime-ridden countries in Western Europe, as is Sweden, with an even lower Gini coefficient.

At least Time does not go in for the theory that what caused the riots was the coalition government’s reduction in spending, which my Polish publisher tells me is the almost universally accepted view in the Polish press. This Ping-Pong theory of youthful misdemeanor, as one might call it, suggests that if only the state provided enough services for potential rioters—including such amenities as leisure centers with Ping-Pong tables and other diversions—they would behave better. (In the U.S., the theory would promote midnight basketball.) Apart from the empirical unlikelihood of the Ping-Pong tables’ exerting the hoped-for prophylactic effect, the theory suggests that it is government’s duty not merely to keep the peace but to keep the population happy and amused. It is hardly surprising, then, that when people claim that service reductions provoked the riots, they are unable to see that if this were so, the problem would be not the removal of services, but dependence on them in the first place. In any case, as Time pointed out, the effects of the proposed—and economically inevitable—spending reductions have yet to be felt (and few of the reductions have been implemented to date).

But Time also proposed, perhaps without fully realizing it, a more plausible explanation of the riots: that “some of the disaffection with Cameron and his government has more to do with who they are than what they’ve done.” And what they are is upper-class. This theory implies that the rioters’ “disaffection” was more self-consciously analytical than was probably the case; but it does capture a characteristic of the rioters and, indeed, of many British intellectuals: resentment.

Resentment is a powerful, long-lasting emotion that usually is self-serving and dishonest (I have never heard a criminal complain that his defense lawyer is upper-class, as he often is), as well as useless. Resentment is undoubtedly part of everyone’s psychology, at least potentially, and few of us have never heeded its siren song. A population’s general level of resentment, however, is not a natural phenomenon that one can analyze in purely mechanical terms, as if it increased geometrically with the Gini coefficient. Britain itself has been far more unequal in the past without widespread riots’ breaking out, so it is clear that we cannot understand people’s behavior without referring to the meanings that they attach to things.

John Maynard Keynes famously observed that “practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist.” But why should this servitude apply only to the kind of men whom Keynes regarded as practical—businessmen, for instance? After all, for every 1,000 people who intone that the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community against his will is to prevent harm to others, only one has actually read John Stuart Mill (they never seem to quote Mill’s contention that a father who abandons his children may rightfully be put to forced labor). And when Keynes goes on to say that madmen in authority are distilling their frenzy from some earlier academic scribbler, he does not explain why this should apply only to madmen in authority. Why not to madmen who loot and commit arson?

There is reason to think that it should so apply. One rioter told a journalist that his compatriots were fed up with being broke all the time and that he knew people who had absolutely nothing. It is worth pondering what lies behind these words. It is obvious that the rioter considered being broke not merely unpleasant, as we all would, but unjust and anomalous, for it was these qualities that justified the rioting in his mind and led him to suggest that the riots were restitution. Leave aside the Micawberish point that one can be broke on any income whatever if one’s desires fail to align with one’s financial possibilities; it is again obvious that the rioter believed that he had a right not to be broke and that this right was being violated. When he said that he knew people with “nothing,” he did not mean that he knew homeless, starving people left on the street without clothes to wear or shoes on their feet; none of the rioters was like this, and many looked only too fit for law-abiding citizens’ comfort. Nor did he mean people without hot and cold running water, electricity, a television, a cell phone, health care, and access to schooling. People had a right to such things, and yet they could have them all and still have “nothing,” in his meaning of the word. Somehow, people had a right to something beyond this irreducible “nothing” because this “nothing” was a justification for rioting. So people have a right to more than they have a right to; in other words, they have a right to everything.

Tangible benefits, on this view, come not as the result of work, effort, and self-discipline: they come as of right. This inflated doctrine of rights has turned into a cargo cult as primitive as that in New Guinea, where the natives thought, after a laden airplane crashed in the jungle, that consumer goods dropped from the sky. Apparently, all that is necessary for people like the rioters to live at a higher standard of living, equal to that of others, is for the government to decree it as their right—a right already inscribed in their hearts and minds.

This doctrine originated not with the rioters but with politicians, social philosophers, and journalists. You need only read Henry Mayhew’s nineteenth-century account of the laboring poor in London to realize that the notion of having rights to tangible benefits was once unknown to the population, even during severe hardship. But the politicians, social philosophers, and journalists transformed things evidently desirable in themselves—decent housing, for example—into rights that nothing, including the behavior of the rights holders, could abrogate. It clearly never occurred to the well-meaning discoverers of these “rights” that their propagation might influence the human personality, at least of that part of the population destined to become increasingly dependent on exercising them; and it required only an admixture of egalitarianism to complete the dialectic of ingratitude and resentment.

What about unemployment as a cause of the riots? If there are no jobs, there is no opportunity for self-advancement. And as Time points out, unemployment for Britons between 16 and 24 years old has increased from 14 percent to 20 percent over the last three years and is much higher in the areas where most of the rioting took place.

Here, too, the explanation is superficial. The current British unemployment rate, to start with, is not especially high by European standards, though perhaps it is too early to say that similar riots could not happen elsewhere in Europe. More to the point, in the boom days before the financial crash, Britain already had high levels of unemployment among the unskilled young, even as the country imported large numbers of unskilled immigrants to work. For every 20 unskilled jobs created in the run-up to the crash, 19 immigrants found work in Britain, while millions of natives remained in state-subsidized idleness.

Three reasons explain this seeming paradox. In the first place, foreigners, initially without British welfare entitlements, found the wages for the jobs on offer sufficiently enticing to accept them. For natives on welfare, however, the financial difference between working and not working—especially when they could supplement their welfare benefits with a little trafficking or casual work in the black market—was insufficient to get them into the workforce. A locution that welfare recipients frequently use is revealing: “I get paid on Friday,” they say, referring to getting their welfare funds. Their work, apparently, is existence.

Second, many of the young foreigners possessed qualities superior to those of their British counterparts, making them more attractive to employers. Few are the jobs, especially in the service economy, in which such characteristics as punctuality, reliability, politeness, and helpfulness are not important; but these qualities were not much in evidence among the young British population. While in France, one can run a good hotel with young French employees, it would be impossible in Britain with young British employees; in Britain, hotels and many other services are good in proportion to their employment of foreigners. And while educational standards may have fallen elsewhere, it is rare that young migrants to Britain are as uneducated as young Britons. The foreigners, unlike the Britons, can do simple calculations, and they often speak an English that, if not more fluent, is more refined than that of the young Britons.

Finally, the existence of subsidized public housing, or “social housing,” as we term it in the U.K.—it would be more accurate to call it “antisocial housing”—discourages recipients from moving to find work. Because the benefit is not transferable from one location to another, moving would mean that the tenant would have to pay rent at an unsubsidized rate. At the age when young people should be most geographically flexible, many become attached to their lodgings by iron hoops of subsidy. That is why public housing in Britain so often resembles a prison without walls and without warders, and why the riots had some of the qualities of a prison riot.

The rioters and the social class to which they mainly belong thus have genuine reason to feel aggrieved, but that reason is not one that they often cite. In the name of equality and redistributionism, the state has provided them with an expensive education that is nearly useless, thanks to the implementation of pedagogical theories from whose practical effects the better-off and better-educated parents are, to some extent, able to protect their children; entrapped them in de facto prisons; and driven up the cost of their labor so far by means of welfare subsidy that it is worth no one’s while to employ it. At the same time, their minds have been filled with notions of entitlement that can only breed resentment.

The state has failed these Britons in one other respect, perhaps the most significant in helping to explain the riots: it has not repressed their propensity to crime. It has given criminally inclined Britons the (correct) impression of impunity. Consider that the British police catch the culprit of just one robbery in 12 and that just one in eight convicted robbers goes to prison in the U.K. Since the number of robberies is much greater than the number of robbers—each robber tends to commit many such crimes—failure to imprison robbers, and to do so for a long time, is in effect to grant the state’s imprimatur to robbery.

When one bears in mind that leniency is shown toward criminals who have committed other serious offenses as well, it is no surprise that the young and criminally inclined should believe in their own impunity. They may not be able to do arithmetic, but they can certainly recognize long odds when they see them. They know, too, that they have respectable society on the run when successive lord chief justices have complained that too many Britons are sent to prison and that such sentences should not be administered to first-time burglars (meaning, of course, the first time that they get caught, not the first time that they burgle, a distinction that seems to have escaped their lordships). It would not be too much to say that recent lord chief justices of England are a major cause of the riots.

Crime, in short, has been normalized as a way of life. For further evidence of that proposition, recall that the pretext for the August orgy of looting and arson was the shooting of one Mark Duggan by the police, who thought that he had a gun and was going to shoot them. What Duggan’s friends and relatives said about him was highly revealing. Duggan’s girlfriend observed that if Duggan had had a gun and had seen the police, he would have run away. This is not exactly a paean to his peaceful and law-abiding way of life; she did not claim that it was unimaginable for him to have been carrying a gun. And if she knew that he might have been carrying a gun, she knew a lot more about him and his way of life than she was revealing. A sister said, yes, Mark was “involved in things,” but he was not violent. She delicately refrained from saying what those “things” were, but her way of putting it suggested that she was using a code that almost anybody of her milieu would be able to crack. A friend noted that she did not believe the original press reports, subsequently proved false, that Duggan had shot first at the police because “Mark is not so stupid to shoot at the police.” The word “stupid” implies only a prudential and not an ethical reason for Duggan’s behavior; presumably, there were others at whom it would not be stupid to shoot.

This impression could only be strengthened by a widely published photograph of Duggan in which he held one hand up as a gun, clearly in the pose of a gangster. It is possible that the gesture was only bravado; but at the very least, it suggests an admiration for gangsters not unconnected with the antinomial tendencies of most popular culture.

It is true that the British police have come to resemble not the force of uniformed citizens of which Sir Robert Peel (the founder of the modern police) dreamed, but a paramilitary occupier, feared mainly by the innocent and law-abiding. The police have become simultaneously bullying and ineffectual, the worst of all combinations, barking rudely at motorists who stop where they shouldn’t but disregarding manifestations of serious criminality entirely. The reasons for the degeneration of British policing are (again) complex, but one of them is the extreme leniency of the courts. For a long time, the police had little incentive to pursue criminals short of murderers, for the courts will impose a trivial punishment on them.

The riots might herald a positive change, at least in the official stance toward crime. In an implicit, maybe not even fully conscious, criticism of the last half-century’s criminal-justice policy, the magistrates have imposed much stiffer sentences on the rioters than anyone expected. A judge sent one woman to prison for four years (of which she will serve two and a half) for using Twitter and Facebook to incite rioting, for instance.

The liberal press viewed this sentence and others handed out after the riots as “disproportionate,” which, in a sense, they were. The Guardian noted that two-thirds of those brought before the magistrates and accused of rioting were remanded into custody and that only 34 percent received bail; the “normal” figure was 10 percent in custody and 90 percent granted bail. Likewise, 45 percent of those found guilty of rioting got prison sentences; “normally,” only 12 percent of those found guilty of assault, robbery, burglary, or brawling in public were imprisoned. Few in the media seemed to recognize that if there was disproportion here, it was because the system was too lenient before, not too severe now.

It is therefore just possible that the rioters will, in the long run, have done a service to the country by awaking it to its past follies. But no one ever made much of a mistake by overestimating the pusillanimity of the British political class.

Theodore Dalrymple is a contributing editor of City Journal and the Dietrich Weismann Fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

Closing comment:    Conclusion after reading the above, NEVER miss a reading written by  Theodore Dalrymple.  

More Stormy Weather for the Al Gore ‘Global Warming’ Scandal Crowd

Climategate (Part II)

A sequel as ugly as the original.

by      Steven Hayward      at the Weekly Standard

The conventional wisdom about blockbuster movie sequels is that the second acts are seldom as good as the originals. The exceptions, like The Godfather: Part II or The Empire Strikes Back, succeed because they build a bigger backstory and add dimensions to the original characters. The sudden release last week of another 5,000 emails from the Climate Research Unit (CRU) of East Anglia University​—​ground zero of “Climategate I” in 2009​—​immediately raised the question of whether this would be one of those rare exceptions or Revenge of the Nerds II

Before anyone had time to get very far into this vast archive, the climate campaigners were ready with their critical review: Nothing worth seeing here. Out of context! Cherry picking! “This is just trivia, it’s a diversion,” climate researcher Joel Smith told Politico. On the other side, Anthony Watts, proprietor of the invaluable WattsUpWithThat.com skeptic website, had the kind of memorable line fit for a movie poster. With a hat tip to the famous Seinfeld episode, Watts wrote: “They’re real, and they’re spectacular!” An extended review of this massive new cache will take months and could easily require a book-length treatment. But reading even a few dozen of the newly leaked emails makes clear that Watts and other longtime critics of the climate cabal are going to be vindicated.

Climategate I, the release of a few thousand emails and documents from the CRU in November 2009, revealed that the united-front clubbiness of the leading climate scientists was just a display for public consumption. The science of climate change was not “settled.” There was no consensus about the extent and causes of global warming; in their private emails, the scientists expressed serious doubts and disagreements on some major issues. In particular, the email exchanges showed that they were far from agreement about a key part of the global warming narrative​—​the famous “hockey stick” graph that purported to demonstrate that the last 30 years were the warmest of the last millennium and which made the “medieval warm period,” an especially problematic phenomenon for the climate campaign, simply go away. (See my “Scientists Behaving Badly,” The Weekly Standard, December 14, 2009.) Leading scientists in the inner circle expressed significant doubts and uncertainty about the hockey stick and several other global warming claims about which we are repeatedly told there exists an ironclad consensus among scientists. (Many of the new emails make this point even more powerfully.) On the merits, the 2009 emails showed that the case for certainty about climate change was grossly overstated.

More damning than the substantive disagreement was the attitude the CRU circle displayed toward dissenters, skeptics, and science journals that did not strictly adhere to the party line. Dissenting articles were blocked from publication or review by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), requests for raw data were rebuffed, and Freedom of Information Act requests were stonewalled. National science panels were stacked, and qualified dissenters such as NASA prize-winner John Christy were tolerated as “token skeptics.” The CRU circle was in high dudgeon over the small handful of skeptics who insisted on looking over their shoulder, revealing the climate science community to be thin-skinned and in-secure about its enterprise​—​a sign that something is likely amiss. Even if there was no unequivocal “smoking gun” of fraud or wrongdoing, the glimpse deep inside the climate science community was devastating. As I wrote at the time (“In Denial,” March 15, 2010), Climategate did for the global warming controversy what the Pentagon Papers did for the Vietnam war 40 years ago: It changed the narrative decisively.

The new batch of emails, over 5,300 in all (compared with about 1,000 in the 2009 release), contains a number of fresh embarrassments and huge red flags for the same lovable bunch of insider scientists. It stars the same cast, starting with the Godfather of the CRU, Phil “hide the decline” Jones, and featuring Michael “hockey stick” Mann once again in his supporting role as the Fredo of climate science, blustering along despite the misgivings and doubts of many of his peers. Beyond the purely human element, the new cache offers ample confirmation of the rank politicization of climate science and rampant cronyism that ought to trouble even firm believers in catastrophic climate change.

“Economist”, Paul Krugman, “Clueless GOP Must Denounce Big Government, High Taxes, and Barack Hussein”

Dear reader:   What a stunning explanation for ‘clueless’.   Count me in.   Where can I sign up to champion these Clueless?   

For leftwing enlightenment, do  read the following article entitled:         “Send in the Clueless”

By       economist at the New York Times

“There are two crucial things you need to understand about the current state of American politics. First, given the still dire economic situation, 2012 should be a year of Republican triumph. Second, the G.O.P. may nonetheless snatch defeat from the jaws of victory — because Herman Cain was not an accident.

Think about what it takes to be a viable Republican candidate today. You have to denounce Big Government and high taxes without alienating the older voters who were the key to G.O.P. victories last year — and who, even as they declare their hatred of government, will balk at any hint of cuts to Social Security and Medicare (death panels!).

And you also have to denounce President Obama, who enacted a Republican-designed health reform and killed Osama bin Laden, as a radical socialist who is undermining American security.

So what kind of politician can meet these basic G.O.P. requirements? There are only two ways to make the cut: to be totally cynical or totally clueless.

Mitt Romney embodies the first option. He’s not a stupid man; he knows perfectly well, to take a not incidental example, that the Obama health reform is identical in all important respects to the reform he himself introduced in Massachusetts — but that doesn’t stop him from denouncing the Obama plan as a vast government takeover that is nothing like what he did. He presumably knows how to read a budget, which means that he must know that defense spending has continued to rise under the current administration, but this doesn’t stop him from pledging to reverse Mr. Obama’s “massive defense cuts.”

Mr. Romney’s strategy, in short, is to pretend that he shares the ignorance and misconceptions of the Republican base. He isn’t a stupid man — but he seems to play one on TV.

Unfortunately from his point of view, however, his acting skills leave something to be desired, and his insincerity shines through. So the base still hungers for someone who really, truly believes what every candidate for the party’s nomination must pretend to believe. Yet as I said, the only way to actually believe the modern G.O.P. catechism is to be completely clueless.

And that’s why the Republican primary has taken the form it has, in which a candidate nobody likes and nobody trusts has faced a series of clueless challengers, each of whom has briefly soared before imploding under the pressure of his or her own cluelessness. Think in particular of Rick Perry, a conservative true believer who seemingly had everything it took to clinch the nomination — until he opened his mouth.

So will Newt Gingrich suffer the same fate? Not necessarily.

Many observers seem surprised that Mr. Gingrich’s, well, colorful personal history isn’t causing him more problems, but they shouldn’t be. If hypocrisy is the tribute vice pays to virtue, conservatives often seem inclined to accept that tribute, voting for candidates who publicly espouse conservative moral principles whatever their personal behavior. Did I mention that David Vitter is still in the Senate?

And Mr. Gingrich has some advantages none of the previous challengers had. He is by no means the deep thinker he imagines himself to be, but he’s a glib speaker, even when he has no idea what he’s talking about. And my sense is that he’s also very good at doublethink — that even when he knows what he’s saying isn’t true, he manages to believe it while he’s saying it. So he may not implode like his predecessors.

The larger point, however, is that whoever finally gets the Republican nomination will be a deeply flawed candidate. And these flaws won’t be an accident, the result of bad luck regarding who chose to make a run this time around; the fact that the party is committed to demonstrably false beliefs means that only fakers or the befuddled can get through the selection process.

Of course, given the terrible economic picture and the tendency of voters to blame whoever holds the White House for bad times, even a deeply flawed G.O.P. nominee might very well win the presidency. But then what?

The Washington Post quotes an unnamed Republican adviser who compared what happened to Mr. Cain, when he suddenly found himself leading in the polls, to the proverbial tale of the dog who had better not catch that car he’s chasing. “Something great and awful happened, the dog caught the car. And of course, dogs don’t know how to drive cars. So he had no idea what to do with it.”

The same metaphor, it seems to me, might apply to the G.O.P. pursuit of the White House next year. If the dog actually catches the car — the actual job of running the U.S. government — it will have no idea what to do, because the realities of government in the 21st century bear no resemblance to the mythology all ambitious Republican politicians must pretend to believe. And what will happen then?”

Business As Usual in the Chicago that Gave us Jeremiah “God Damn America” Wright’s Obama

Let’s get this resolved

Voters — and Rep. Jackson — deserve a finding

before the March 20 primary

from the Chicago Tribune Editorial Page

“This just in from the House Ethics Committee, charged with determining whether Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. tried to buy himself a promotion to the U.S. Senate: We’re still working on it.

In the meantime, the committee has released the detailed investigative report it received from the Office of Congressional Ethics in August 2009, along with a 17-page letter from Jackson’s attorneys responding to that report.

The investigation found “probable cause” that Jackson directed or knew of efforts to persuade then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich to appoint Jackson to the vacant Senate seat in exchange for $1.5 million in campaign cash. It also found “substantial reason to believe” the congressman misused the resources of his House office to lobby for the Senate job.

But the Office of Congressional Ethics doesn’t have subpoena powers, and its report notes that it was not able to compel Blagojevich and two alleged go-betweens to cooperate. There’s no surprising new evidence in the 2-year-old report released Friday.

So a cloud remains over Jackson — those seemingly damning phrases “probable cause” and “substantial reason” — but there’s not necessarily a clear case of wrongdoing.

It falls to the Ethics Committee to finish the job. The committee put the brakes on its review at the request of federal prosecutors, who were pursuing the criminal case against Blagojevich.

The ex-governor is set for sentencing this week. Jackson faces a likely primary challenge from former Rep. Debbie Halvorson, who has already ripped him for being “ethically challenged” and accused him of living in Washington, D.C., instead of his district. Democratic voters will have to make a decision on those candidates in March.

The Ethics Committee, notorious for dragging its feet on investigations of its members, needs to get its Jackson business resolved quickly.

Jackson says he didn’t try to cut a deal for the Senate seat; he simply pitched himself to Blagojevich as the best candidate.

The staffers who helped him volunteered their time, were not relieved of their regular duties, and didn’t do much anyway, he says. Nothing they did would have violated House rules about separating public work from campaign work, he says, and in any case, there was no campaign because there was no election.

If the Ethics Committee doesn’t see it that way, Jackson could face sanctions ranging from a stern letter to expulsion from Congress.

But voters have their own verdict to render. The primary election could well turn on whether they believe a 16-year incumbent was involved in buying a Senate seat and misused his office. Voters care about what went on with that Senate seat, and they deserve to have all available information before they cast their ballots.

The Ethics Committee should finish its work before March 20, in fairness to voters and to Jackson.”

Comment:   It should never be forgotten that Barack Hussein Obama was  “religiously’ eduated for 22 years at  Jeremiah “Goddamn America” Wrights Temple of Racism in Chicago.    Mr. Obama wrote that “Preacher Wright” was his ‘father figure”.

$1,200,000,000 “Missing from Democrat New Jersey ExGovernor’s MF Global Collapse

Congress subpoenas Corzine on MF Global collapse

by Alexandra Alper  and   Charles Abbott

(Reuters) – A U.S. House committee voted to subpoena Jon Corzine to testify before Congress about the collapse of MF Global, after the former CEO refused an earlier invitation.

The move intensifies pressure on Corzine, who has been largely absent from public view since he resigned as chief executive early last month. His lawyer had previously told the committee that the former New Jersey governor would be unable to attend a hearing set for December 8, the panel’s chairman said on Friday.

The House Agriculture Committee is holding the hearing to examine the collapse of the futures brokerage and the search for hundreds of millions of dollars in missing customer funds.

“It is this committee’s responsibility to shed light on the facts and circumstances surrounding the bankruptcy,” said Frank Lucas, the Republican chairman of committee.

A spokesman for Corzine and his lawyer, Andrew Levander, declined immediate comment.

MF Global filed for bankruptcy on October 31, after $6.3 billion in risky bets on European sovereign debt spooked investors and an effort to sell the company failed.

Investigators are searching for as much as $1.2 billion in missing customer money, which regulators said the company may have diverted for its own needs.

It is in Corzine’s best interest to invoke his right to avoid self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, said Barry Pollack, a criminal defense attorney at Miller Chevalier.

But Pollack said public figures “are genetically predisposed ” to give their side of the story.

“His best case scenario in testifying is that they use him as a punching bag. His worse case scenario is that he provides testimony that can subsequently be used by law enforcement authorities putting together a criminal case against him,” Pollack said.

U.S. regulators are investigating MF Global’s business practices, including its accounting and disclosures. The FBI also has shown an interest in the missing funds.

Congress is holding a series of hearings examining whether regulators and company insiders could have done more to prevent the failure and protect investors, traders and farmers who may be out hundreds of millions of dollars.

The Senate Agriculture Committee and a House Financial Services panel have also called on Corzine and others to testify later this month.

In addition to governor, Corzine served as a U.S. senator from New Jersey and, before that, CEO of Goldman Sachs in the late 1990s. He took over as head of MF Global last year after failing to win reelection as governor.

Lucas told reporters on Friday that the House Agriculture Committee had requested that Corzine appear and received a letter from Corzine’s attorney saying he would not be available on December 8, the requested date.

“We are putting the pieces in place to compel testimony,” Lucas said. “It is too important to let slide.”

Friday’s vote to issue a subpoena was unanimous with bipartisan backing.

“I am in full support of the endeavor we are undertaking today,” said Representative Collin Peterson, the committee’s top Democrat. “It is imperative that we hear directly from all those involved.”

The House Agriculture Committee also expects to hear from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, two of the many regulators responsible for overseeing MF Global.

A committee aide said the panel last issued a subpoena in 1996.

Neither MF Global nor its executives has been charged with wrongdoing.

(Reporting by Alexandra Alper and Charles Abbott in Washington, additional reporting by Grant McCool in New York; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Dave Zimmerman)

HUFF POST BUSINESS GUESSES CORZINE WILL NOT BE JAILED       click below for article


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-kuttner/jon-corzine-mf-global_b_1128342.html

 

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