• 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

Obama Government Big Spender Advertising Obamacare

Report: US government spent

at least $945M on advertising in 2010

 article sent by Lisa Rich…..source not noted:
 
July 30, 2010: The Obama administration released an ad featuring Andy Griffith extolling President Obama’s new health care law.
Federal agencies spent at least $945 million on contracts for advertising services in fiscal year 2010, and that sum doesn’t include all public communications expenditures in the agencies reviewed or even all of the executive branch, a congressional report out last week shows.

Congressional Research Service reported that the calculation was incomplete since the total sum may never be fully known.
“It is unclear how much the executive branch, let alone the federal government as a whole, spends on communications each year,” the CRS report found. 
 

Of that total that was calculable, more than $545 million was spent by the Defense Department, much of it on ads to attract recruits, CRS noted.

The study, first published by the Federation of American Scientists, was done as the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee’s Subcommittee on Contracting Oversight reviews 11 federal agencies. 

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., chairwoman for the subcommittee, issued letters to the heads of the federal departments last month asking for a reply by Friday with a list of contracts since October 2008 for radio and television spots, public relations contracts, direct
mailers or other advertising services.


The report found that the agencies are also engaging in using new and social media to communicate — the government hosts 1,504 federal government domains that carry thousands of websites on them. 


In addition, a Government Accountability Office report of June 2011 found that 23 of 24 federal agencies surveyed had a presence on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, and all 15 of the president’s Cabinet agencies have at least one Twitter account.

New media helps to “remove the filters between agency employees and the public,” allowing prompt and more intimate communications, but it has potential downsides, the study noted.

Social media may lead to agency employees making misstatements of fact or unsanctioned comments, and oversight can be complicated because communications can be easily deleted, altered, forged and made untraceable.

The report says that advertising serves many purposes, including informing the public of its rights and entitlements; telling the public of the agency’s activities; inviting public comment on proposed rules; warning the public of perils; and discouraging harmful or dangerous behaviors.

Agencies “often speak to the public because doing so generally is considered essential to the functioning of representative democracy. If government is to serve the people, then the people must be kept well-informed of the government’s activities so that they may judge its work and alter its policies through elections or other means (e.g., advocacy),” reads the report.

According to CRS, over the last 100 years, Congress has enacted three statutory restrictions on agency communications with the public — one to limit hiring of publicity experts, another to prohibit using budget money to lobby Congress, and one to ban using budget money for “publicity or propaganda.”

Congress has criticized government spending on advertising on two recent occasions — in March 2011, when the General Services Administration was questioned on hiring a private consulting firm to rebut criticisms that environmental contamination at one of its facilities had sickened and killed GSA employees. 

The other was in August 2010, when House Republicans on the Oversight and Government Reform Committee faulted seven agencies for engaging in propaganda to promote the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

R.I.P.  Andrew Breitbart to Occupy Wall Street “Stop Raping People, you Filthy Freaks!”

How Can Ann Curry Be So Stupid?…….. She has feelings before she has thoughts, the female disease!

Actor Kirk Cameron defends his  controversial

 comments about homosexuality

 by Tina Korbe    at Hot Air

WHAT IS  ”CONTROVERSIAL ”ABOUT  KIRK

CAMERON’S REMARKS?

“On “The Today Show” this morning, actor Kirk Cameron told host Ann Curry that he stands by his past controversial comments about homosexuality. Earlier this month, on “Piers Morgan Tonight,” Cameron said he does not support gay marriage and thinks that homosexuality is “destructive to so many of the foundations of civilization.”
 
(BE CERTAIN TO VIEW THE  VIDEO OF  CURRY’S QUESTIONS BELOW FOR THE  SUBLIME IGNORANCE OF ANN CURRY SO REPRESENTATIVE OF THE  AMERICAN NEWS MEDIA.)

In his conversation with Curry today, Cameron said it would have been more newsworthy if he had said otherwise — and he has a very valid point:

“I was surprised, frankly, that people were surprised by the things that I’ve said,” he told host Ann Curry. “I have been consistent for 15 years as a Christian. I’m a Bible-believing Christian. What I would have thought was more newsworthy is if I had said something that contradicted the word of God, if I had contradicted my faith.”

Curry asked the actor if he hated homosexuals.

“Absolutely not,” he said. “I love all people, I hate no one…When you take a subject and reduce it to something like a four-second soundbite and a check mark on a ballot, I think that that’s inappropriate and insensitive. To edit it down to that, it certainly didn’t reflect my full heart on the matter.”

When you think about his comments in that light, any outrage over them does seem hyper-sensitive and strange. “Noted Christian believes what Christianity teaches.” How shocking!

What’s sad, though, is that it is a surprise to many non-Christians when they hear a Christian stand up for controversial Christian doctrines because so few famous Christians do. When actress and Christian Kristen Chenoweth, for example, appeared on “Piers Morgan Tonight” in the fall, she presented quite a contrast to Kirk Cameron — and, as I recall, created no stir whatsoever by voicing her support for gay marriage.

It’s also interesting that so few people seem to remember a couple important people who theoretically still don’t support gay marriage.

A quick note on Cameron’s comment that homosexuality is “destructive to so many of the foundations of civilization”: If you take that very literally, it’s actually pretty indisputable. The very first foundation of any civilization is existence itself. Human reproduction is necessary for human civilization. If our twenty-first century civilization consisted entirely of homosexuals who engaged only in homosexual behavior, civilization would rapidly cease to exist. From this literal perspective, homosexuality is no more destructive to civilization than contraception or abortion — but it is destructive. It serves no point to deny that.

Nor does it serve any point to deny what we all know from personal experience: Every single human being has certain destructive tendencies inside of him — the tendency to meanness, maybe, or to unkindness, to sloth, to gluttony, to thievery, to murder. What Christianity claims to offer or, more specifically, what Christ claimed to offer — and what many Christians joyfully attest to experiencing — is a grace-sustained way of overcoming those tendencies. In that offer is not condemnation, but an invitation to true freedom.”

http://hotair.com/archives/2012/03/20/actor-kirk-cameron-defends-his-controversial-comments-about-homosexuality/

Comment:   What a perfect contrast between  this programmed Perfect Lefty Mind and Gab of a  Modern  American Ditz  interviewing  a rather traditional adult human male ideal of the past century of responsible Christian America.    It is as if this Kirk Cameron just arrived from outer space from some other galaxy and should shut up about what he sees and believes.  

 Ann Curry appears upset because Kirk Cameron’s  thinking, his Christianity, his views about gay marriage offend  LEFTIES!, so he should shut up.

This Ann Curry is even a woman rather than a teeny bopper or Fox News barby doll.   Nice voice, pleasant smile,  winsomely attractive,  excellent articulation of her vocabulary….a college graduate  no doubt…….her questions are more chimpanzee grunt than from human thought.

I am very, very private about my own sexuality.    I prefer male company,  the male intellect,  his  instinctive drive   to    problem solve.   

I prefer  the female sensitiveness, her  refinements and abilities to harmonize, for her special  love and care for children,  the gentility of her voice and perspectives of life  from her female mind.     But, she  is not comfortable as a problem solver.   She is not a builder.   She is not a thinker by preference.

 I believe in freedom and liberty.    She  prefers  security either from a human male or a   tyrannical government.

My marriage did not work out well.     I fell in love with my wife’s brain, her exemplary character,  and   female sensibilities; my female ideal.     I thought that would be enough to raise our family, our three kids.   She was a wonderful mother of my children.    Eventually I discovered I had a very narrow  gay part of my life I had to control and we eventually divorced.   

Intellectually, I decided to explore  where I might fit socially, morally,  meaningfully in society, for I finally admitted to myself that visually the most beautiful human being  in body and mentally in mind, was a young adult male, and found life profoundly better living alone, as celibate as possible,  to  lead a productive life  to support my children in anyway I could and be a responsible citizen for which I was educated to be.

I have been very lucky in nearly every aspect of my life……but, strangely only  have been   grateful   for the past 20 years.    

A marriage in a civilized society is between a man and a woman.    Legal gay unions make sense, as long as they are not considered the equal of  ‘Marriage”.     Children need a  ‘good’ father and a ‘good’ mother to advance the best possibilities for a healthy adult life.     Marriage is for raising children in the best possible way.   Unions are  primarily for sexual unions , not for raising children. 

“It” has nothing to do with hate.    It has to do with a healthier society.

Romney: Strong Candidate, YES, but Campaign seems Disjointed!!

 

I happen to disagree with the following article by Peter Suderman  at Reason.   The Romney campaign has not been a smooth operation from the very beginning  dating back to 2008.   Certainly the candidate has not explained well his variety of opinions and change of opinions on a variety to topics which suggest the term ‘flip-flop’ used by his opponents, right and left.   He needs to practice up on his polititicans’ sleek and sleaze  when confronting  sleek and sleaze star Barack Hussein.
I would think that most conservatives  would be impressed by every decision Mitt has made making him a more conservative candidate on every issue.   Isn’t that the whole point of an election…….to convince folks AND candidates that  conservative persuasion in American life are the best persuasions?  
 
Mr. Suderman notices that the campaign has not been smooth.   I agree.    His conclusion is a short sentence and a snied one and he has a right to his snied opinion, one without any examples.     “He reports:”
 
“As far as I can tell, the only big vision Romney’s ever had is of himself, sitting in the Oval Office. Which seems to be more or less what his campaign is running on”. 
 
Contrary to Barack Hussein Obama, Mitt Romney is a very likeable guy and is not afraid to engage in a conversation.   He has no record whatsoever of slithering around in the dark before voting “present” over 100 times as was Mr. Obama’s habit when state senator in Illinois.    At the nations capitol he plays golf  and complains about his opponents’ budget offerings, and pretends “present” in debate and leadership rather than perform.    Mr. Suderman must be using  unyielding dogmatist,  Marxist  Obama,  as  his presidential ideal.
 
I do not.
 
Mr. Romney has an excellent record in business and government.   He has an exemplary family, exemlary manners, exemplary hair, and smile, and wonderful wife, drsses well,  and seems to want to please.      That he has a core of being an American rather than a driven dogmatic conservative may be true.    He has wanted to please his constituencies with his leadership and business acumen.   
 
He listens to people.   His entire ethical behavior is top notch American.   He has friends as well and is  far more conservative than Barack Hussein is a Marxist.
 
If  Mitt Romney’sconservative opponents were thinking about the future of their country  rather than their own personal aggrandisement, they would bow out of the nomination process and BACK MITT ROMNEY, for American is under  siege by the dogmate  Marxist LEFT and has been seriously wounded by foreigner Barack Hussein Obama’s debauching the American currency and racist, sexist and class warfare.
 
Obama, the divider, MUST BE REPLACED BY ROMNEY THE UNITER THIS NOVEMBER,  AD 2012..
 
 

Romney’s Problem Isn’t His Campaign

Peter Suderman

Is Mitt Romney having trouble sealing the deal on the GOP nomination because of his campaign team?

The Atlantic‘s Molly Ball gets a handful of Republican consultants to dish on the former business consultant’s current staff of political consultants:

“Romney deserves a lot more out of his staff,” said one senior Republican operative who spoke on condition of anonymity. “They have mishandled him. It has been a clumsy campaign that lacks a message and has relied on a crutch of negative ad spending to make up for its weakness.”

Myopic, insular and overconfident, Team Romney has squandered the candidate’s strengths and exacerbated his weaknesses, these critics charge.

A couple of former advisers to Sen. John McCain’s presidential run even go on the record. Personal and professional biases ahoy!

…Another McCain campaign veteran, strategist Steve Schmidt, praised Romney’s “staying power” and said the campaign has been “technically proficient.” But, he noted, Romney has repeatedly “been put on defense” in ways that have obscured his positive pitch.

“The campaign hasn’t articulated a very positive, forward-looking, voter-focused vision of what prosperity looks like in the 21st century,” he said. “What are his plans that are understandable and connect with people’s minds? Instead, what they’ve found themselves in is an ideological contest against Republicans, which is a difficult fight for Mitt Romney for a lot of reasons.”

…”I think they’re extremely competent at the tactical things. They run a tight ship in terms of the nuts and bolts,” said John Weaver, the former strategist to John McCain and Jon Huntsman. “But their messaging is a head-scratcher at times. … Can they grind it out, run more negative ads, do more robocalls, that kind of crap? Yeah, they can do that better than anyone else. But what has it got them?”

No doubt Romney’s team has made a few errors in terms of signaling too strongly that the nomination was already in the bag: Romney ran on electability, and the drawn-out primary fight is undermining the case that he’s the candidate who’s best positioned to get people to the polls and win votes. 

But it’s hard to imagine what sort of messaging would have worked better for Romney, especially considering his record. One of the arguments the consultants make elsewhere is that Romney hasn’t captured the conservative media. But given Romney’s political record—an incredibly complex flip flop on abortion, business fee hikes used as a cover for tax hikes, embracing the word “progressive,” and supporting a state-level model for ObamaCare—conservative policy elites were always likely to be wary of Romney. A little more outreach might have softened the skepticism, but it also might have illustrated how little Romney likes to be challenged on questions about his policy decisions, and how slippery he can be when anyone tries to pin him down. Romney isn’t struggling because of his campaign. The campaign is struggling because of Romney.

When it comes to policy, Romney is not and never has been someone driven by a big vision. RomneyCare is the closest he’s ever come to a bold policy initiative, but even that was conceived mostly as a narrow technical fix to the insurance market. As far as I can tell, the only big vision Romney’s ever had is of himself, sitting in the Oval Office. Which seems to be more or less what his campaign is running on. 

 

Rumor Passing of a new Flavor of Ice Cream Cone….BAROCKY ROAD

Conservative fan, Marke Waldeland sent us the following note:

“In honor of the 44th President of the United States ,

Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream has introduced a new flavor:             
 
                               “BAROCKY ROAD” 
 
Barocky Road is a blend of half vanilla, half chocolate, and surrounded by nuts and flakes. 
 
The vanilla portion of the mix is not openly advertised and usually denied as an ingredient. The nuts and flakes are all very bitter and hard to swallow.

The cost is $92.84 per scoop…so out of a hundred dollar bill you are at least promised some CHANGE.!! 
When purchased it will be presented to you in a large beautiful cone, but after you pay for it, the

ice cream is taken away and given to the person in line behind you at no charge. 

You are left with an almost empty wallet, staring at an empty cone and wondering what just happened.

Then you realize this is what “redistribution ofwealth” is all about.
 
Aren’t you stimulated?”

Nixon May Have been “Tricky Dick”, But No President has everr LIED so habitually as Barack Obama

WHERE IS THE MORALITY OF TODAY’S AMERICAN ‘PROGRESSIVE’ LEADERSHIP, ESPECIALLY THE PRESIDENT?

 Prager:  ” The Bigger the Government, the Smaller the People”

Liberal Illiberalism

 - by Victor Davis Hanson                  

at  Pajamas Media:

Conservatives are put into awkward positions of critiquing liberal ideas on grounds that they are impractical, unworkable, or counterproductive. Yet rarely, at least outside the religious sphere, do they identify the progressive as often immoral. And the unfortunate result is that they have often ceded moral claims to supposedly dreamy, utopian, and well-meaning progressives, when in fact the latter increasingly have little moral ground to stand upon.

Take a few contemporary controversies.

Radical environmentalism. When “conservation” sometime in the 1970s was redefined as “environmentalism,” the morality of the entire issue likewise changed. Most Americans had wanted clean air and water; and they were willing to pay to curb pollutants and drive more expensive, but cleaner, cars. They had no desire to see condors die off or kit foxes disappear.

But at some point, the green creed began to dictate that all species were equal to humans. Soon concern for a tiny frog or worm trumped a needed project — a dam, an irrigation canal, an oil well, or a mine — designed to alleviate human suffering. Here I am not talking about large-scale species annihilation, but rather taking a truth about wishing to protect a natural habitat and perverting it into elevating concerns for insects, amphibians, and small fish over people’s elemental struggles to exist and prosper.

When California elites shut down 250,000 acres of irrigated agriculture to divert water into the San Francisco regional delta and bay, purportedly as a remedy to help the three-inch delta smelt, they were making a loud moral statement that those who mostly had secure jobs, mostly nice homes, and well-off environments were going to destroy the jobs of those in agriculture — not just the land owner and foreman, but the agricultural workers themselves — without much worry over the consequences.

In crude terms, the ideology might be paraphrased as something like the following, “I got mine, Jack, and can’t worry about you.” Or, “You don’t interest me as much as does a tiny fish in the delta.” In truth, I would be far more worried that the town of San Joaquin had little money for basic civic services from a cutoff in irrigation water than I would a drop in the delta smelt population.

Had a tractor salesman in Mendota or an irrigator in Firebaugh had an environmental Shane to square off against the Bay Area’s hired Jack Palance, then the dispute might at least have been more equal and honest. By that, I mean surely there are environmental problems with Berkeley’s treated sewage that goes into the Bay; a particular moth larva in theory could be found to be “in danger” when the next UC environmental sciences building is envisioned; and there must be all sorts of ways to ensure the Fish and Game Department’s trucks and SUVs run only on natural gas or propane, right?

In other words, so often in matters of producing gasoline for the lower middle classes, or cutting timber to ensure affordable housing, or making sure that we have plentiful cheap asphalt to fill potholes, we forget the moral argument that such resource utilization is critical to ensure that average folks have the same sort of chance for jobs, money, and aspirations as do the more wealthy whose green religious zeal makes them absolutely insensitive to — and in truth immoral about — the concerns of others less well off.

When Steven Chu admits both that he wishes gas prices to soar to European levels and that he has no need either to drive or to own a car, then he is really saying, “I don’t have much concern for the results of my own fantasies.” Yet had his lab and assorted lasers once been put on regular 12-hour blackouts to conserve “skyrocketing” energy, then he might have worried more about the consequences of his utopianism. When Barack Obama both calls for “skyrocketing” energy prices, and on his first January day in office turns up the West Wing thermostat to tropical temperatures, then there is a sort of immorality implicit in his entire ideology. At least Jimmy Carter put on a sweater and turned down the temperature to match his malaise rhetoric. Does Al Gore think that the Mexicans, Nigerians, or Venezuelans who supply some of the jet fuel that allows him to huckster via private aircraft are kinder to Earth in the Balance when they drill than when we would in ANWR or North Dakota?

That moral obtuseness, along with hypocrisy and pseudo-scientific bombast, is why Gorism has imploded. In short, radical environmentalism is a sort of medieval sect that terrorizes the less well-off.

Multiculturalism. Multiculturalism is another unkind dogma — the very notion that all cultures are professed equal, and those in the West often have a particular obligation to elevate illiberal and intolerant systems above their own in recompense for their supposedly ill-gotten prosperity and success. This week, SheikH Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah, the grand mufti of Saudi Arabia — not a minor voice in the world of Islam — announced that he wished, according to his reading of Koranic-inspired statute, that all the churches in the Gulf region be destroyed. That threat was met with silence in the West. We know that had the pope said something equivalent (e.g., Europe should be free of mosques), we would have heard loud denunciations, perhaps even a declaration from President Obama that he did not wish his daughters growing up in a world of such religious bias.

But again the press said little or nothing — even though Abdullah’s creepy declaration will spur Muslims even more to persecute Christians, most of whom are Arabs who have been Christian for millennia. Nor does the liberal establishment worry much that Jews are fleeing the Middle East, Africa, and other “third-world” countries, largely because of a new anti-Semitism, fueled by radical Islam.

All over the Middle East, Christians and Jews are treated as untermenschen (only in Israel are they safe), and in immoral fashion we believe that our multicultural fides exempt us from the fact that we are quite callous and unapologetically uncaring over the plight of tens of thousands.

Illegal immigration. Unfortunately, illegal immigration has turned into an abjectly immoral enterprise. Here I won’t dwell on the usual moral dimensions of massive influxes — illegal immigration makes a mockery of federal law in a way that would not be sustainable if the law were so assaulted in other areas; it undercuts the wages of U.S. entry level workers; it results in billions of dollars in remittances, often from subsidized senders, that leave the U.S. economy to Mexico; and it burdens insolvent states with entitlement costs bornd by the strapped general population.

Instead, I am curious why an abstract fact of legal or illegal entry into the United States has become a de facto “Latino” issue. There is zero concern voiced by Democrats over illegal aliens in general, unless, as in the case of the president’s aunt and uncle, they are well-connected. By that, I mean no political leader announces, “We are quite cruelly deporting those who overstay their visas or arrive without one, and just this month unfairly deported 10 South Korean students, 6 Nigerian workers, and 4 Russian tourists.” There is no interest in pondering how to free more Cubans from a totalitarian Castro regime that has systematically jailed and sometimes executed dissidents.

California Latino politicians are instead interested in the issue entirely on tribal grounds, not just out of empathy for those of the same ethnic background, but more practically in political terms of advancing their own careers as self-appointed tribal spokesmen in a multicultural system where hyphenation brings dividends. If the Mexican border were secure, and 1 million French Canadians were pouring into the U.S. without English, legality, education, or capital, the Latino community would be calling for border enforcement, expressing worry about the unfair competition to entry-level American workers, decrying the cost and separatism in providing French-English official documents, and regretting the mockery made of the law. It is hard to recall a comparable example in the history of two nations, in which millions of foreign nationals fled their own nation to a neighboring one, and then immediately made claims upon their new hosts, often in deference to their home country that they had just abandoned due to its failure to provide them basic services and opportunities.

And yet to suggest that illegal immigration has morphed into an issue of ethnic chauvinism, predicated on ignoring the law only in one particular instance — illegal entry into the American southwest from citizens of Mexico and some regions of Latin America — is to incur a charge of racism. How Orwellian that — a largely race-based lobbying effort, aimed at a single ethnic constituency, defends itself by alleging “racism” on the part of any who would so identify its own unapologetic motives as such.

Affirmative Action. Race-based exemption has become illiberal, and increasingly immoral. By that general term, I mean not just discriminatory quotas of a near half-century, or race-based advantages in hiring and admission, but a general pass given to illiberality on the basis of race. Just this last week, Lovie Smith, the coach of the Chicago Bears, released a video for Barack Obama’s reelection efforts. Here’s what I wrote about it on NRO’s Corner:

What are we to make of the coach of the Chicago Bears, Lovie Smith, announcing on a campaign video, “I have the President‘s back and it’s left up to us, as African Americans, to show that we have his back. Also join African Americans for President Obama today.” Does Coach Smith mean that “as African Americans” one has a duty to support the president by virtue of his race rather than his politics alone, or his politics as they relate to the welfare of African Americans? Are those African Americans who oppose Obama, then, doing so “not as African Americans”? Are whites and Hispanics who support Obama doing so because he is also half-white or as “not African Americans”?

And is the coach of the Chicago Bears now starting a precedent that the coaches of all NFL teams shall endorse particular political candidates (e.g., “I have Senator X’s back and it’s left up to us, as (fill in the blanks: White, Latino, Asian) -Americans, to show that we have his back.”), in hopes that their own races and team loyalties will sway voters? If so, Lovie Smith should read Procopius on the Nika riots and the volatile intersection between sport, faction, and politics.

These sorts of Byzantine blue/green tribal loyalties become creepy when our president is encouraging well known Americans to state them so overtly. And, of course, it is only a matter of time now when some will, in counter fashion, publicly state that they are voting against Obama as a matter or racial politics in the way that others are voting for him on that very basis—or perhaps by virtue that they also don’t like the Chicago Bears.

Again, the Obama-Smith strategy of race-based ethnocentrism is a suicidal path for any multiracial society that has hopes of transcending tribalism.

I am not suggesting that Mormons in Utah might not vote for Mitt Romney over Newt Gingrich or Rick Santorum because of their shared faith. But I am suggesting that if Mitt Romney overtly were to have the coach of the University of Utah football team proclaim that he supports official Romney-designated “Mormons for Romney” groups, and remind Mormons that it is “up to us as Mormons” to cover Romney’s back (from what?), then such a video would be stupid and morally wrong — and would be widely denounced by liberals.

Where does all this lead? At first, of course, only to embarrassing hypocrisy. Those in the Bay Area who idled critical food-producing farmland would not wish, as the proverbial Committee for Public Safety, the same environmental zealotry aimed at their own offices, cars, homes, and institutions. And they assume that they have the incomes to buy increasingly expensive food when others would not. The grand mufti would not like Billy Graham to announce that he wanted North America freed of all mosques. La Raza would not like a Volk movement that sought to wave immigration law for Germans on grounds they were once America’s largest immigrant group and should be again. Lovie Smith would not wish other rival coaches to pitch their own favorite presidential candidates on the basis of shared racial affinities.

To do all the above is retrograde and ultimately nihilistic. That something so unsustainable continues then is predicated on one unspoken truth: most in the West will not act like Bay Area greens, the grand mufti, La Raza, or Lovie Smith, because for all others to adopt their favored methodology and ideology would lead to something other than liberal life as we know it. Thus they act as they do because they know others will not act as they do — at least for now.

Tit-for-tat factionalism leads nowhere but to chaos and carnage. But the Western tradition is not made of adamantine metal; it is fragile and singular. Anytime we do not stand up and defend it, however unpopular, we cede to barbarism ourselves.

In other words, the only way to question these illiberal doctrines is without apology to identify them as immoral — and to welcome the hysterical reaction that ensues.”

THE CORRUPT LEADER CORRUPTS THE INSTITUTION HE LEADS>>>>>>>

Fact Checker: Book Records Obama’s Lies about Mother’s Health Insurance Issue

 No President in American History has been  so sleazy regarding honesty than Barack Hussein Obama

‘The Road We’ve Traveled:’

A misleading account of Obama’s mother

 and her insurance dispute

 by

 

-at    Fact Checker     The following is from the Obama “biography” designed for his re-election campaign,  “The Road We’ve Traveled.”

Narrator Tom Hanks: “He knew from experience the cost of waiting [on health care reform].”

President Obama : “When my mom got cancer, she wasn’t a wealthy woman and it pretty much drained all her resources”

Michelle Obama: “She developed ovarian cancer, never really had good, consistent insurance. That’s a tough thing to deal with, watching your mother die of something that could have been prevented. I don’t think he wants to see anyone go through that.”

Hanks: “And he remembered the millions of families like of his who feel the pressure of rising costs and the fear of being denied or dropped from coverage.”

–series of statements with images of Obama and his mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, in the Obama campaign film “The Road We’ve Traveled”

“The Road We’ve Traveled” is a very slick and impressively produced campaign film—sheer catnip for Obama fans. There are a number of facts and figures that could be challenged, but for now we are going to focus on this sequence. The series of words and images is an excellent example of how such films can create a misleading impression, while skirting as close as possible to the edge of falsehood.

The sequence, in fact, evokes a famous story that candidate Obama told during the 2008 campaign—that his mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, fought with her insurer over whether her cancer was a pre-existing condition that disqualified her from coverage.

But the story was later called into question by Dunham’s biographer. The fact that Obama’s initial claim is not directly repeated suggests the filmmakers knew there was a problem with the campaign story, but they clearly wanted to keep some version of it in the film.

The Facts

During the 2008 campaign, Obama frequently suggested his mother had to fight with her health-insurance company for treatment of her cancer because it considered her disease to be a pre-existing condition. In one of the presidential debates with GOP rival John McCain, Obama said:

“For my mother to die of cancer at the age of 53 and have to spend the last months of her life in the hospital room arguing with insurance companies because they’re saying that this may be a pre-existing condition and they don’t have to pay her treatment, there’s something fundamentally wrong about that.”

But then earlier this year, journalist Janny Scott cast serious doubt on this version of events in her excellent biography, “A Singular Woman: The Untold Story of Barack Obama’s mother.” Scott reviewed letters from Dunham to the CIGNA insurance company, and revealed the dispute was over disability coverage, not health insurance coverage (see pages 335-339).

Disability coverage will help replace wages lost to an illness. (Dunham received a base pay of $82,500, plus a housing allowance and a car, to work in Indonesia for Development Alternatives Inc. of Bethesda, according to Scott.) But that is different than health insurance coverage denied because of a pre-existing condition, which was a major part of the president’s health care law.

Scott writes that Dunham, who died in 1995 of uterine and ovarian cancer, had health insurance that “covered most of the costs of her medical treatment…The hospital billed her insurance company directly, leaving Ann to pay only the deductible and any uncovered expenses, which, she said, came to several hundred dollars a month.”

Dunham had filed the disability claim to help pay for those additional expenses. The company denied the claim because her doctor had suspected uterine cancer during an office visit 2 ½ months before Dunham had started the job with Development Alternatives, though Dunham said the doctor had not discussed the possibility with cancer with her. Dunham requested a review from CIGNA, saying she was turning the case over to “my son and attorney Barack Obama.”

When Scott’s book was published, the White House did not dispute her account. “The president has told this story based on his recollection of events that took place more than 15 years ago,” a spokesman said.

Now let’s look at what the movie does with this story. It does not directly repeat the claim that Obama’s mother was denied coverage because of a pre-existing condition, fighting for treatment in her hospital room. But look at what it does say:

1. Hanks says the president knew the cost of waiting on reform. (Though disability coverage was not an issue in the health care debate.)

2. The president says cancer “drained all her resources.” (Health insurance paid for most of her bills, so this is not the case of someone being bankrupted by tens of thousands of dollars in bills. Her salary of $82,500 in 1995 was the equivalent of $123,000 today, but Scott says she had little savings.)

3. Michelle Obama says Dunham “never really had good, consistent insurance.” (It is unclear what she means by this, except maybe that Dunham had different jobs, some of which did not provide insurance. But Dunham had good health coverage when the cancer was discovered.)

4. The first lady also suggests the death “could have been prevented.” (Again, it was not an insurance issue. Before going overseas, Dunham was too busy with work and had skipped an important test recommended by her U.S. doctor, dilation and curettage, that might have spotted the cancer earlier. Then an Indonesian doctor diagnosed her problem as appendicitis and removed her appendix. By the time the cancer was finally discovered, it was third-stage.)

5. Hanks says that Obama’s family felt “the pressure of rising costs and the fear of being denied or dropped from coverage.” (Maybe for disability, but not health insurance.)

In the end, the impression left by the film, especially if you watch it (go to the 8:45 mark), is very similar to Obama’s 2008 campaign rhetoric: His mother was denied health-insurance coverage, draining her resources, and with better coverage she might have lived longer. The film suggests this experience helped inspire the president to keep fighting for the health care law, even in the face of advice from aides that he accept a less-than-satisfactory compromise.

Note that none of the quotes in the film actually use the words “health insurance” or “health insurance coverage.” Instead, the first lady says “insurance” and Hanks says “coverage,” which could just as easily mean disability insurance. But that would not be as evocative—or as motivating.

Asked for a response, the Obama campaign referred us to the previous White House statement on Scott’s book.

The Pinocchio Test

We use a “reasonable man” standard here, and we think there are few viewers of this film who would watch this sequence and conclude that Dunham was involved in anything but a fight over health-insurance coverage.

The disability-insurance dispute certainly may have motivated the president, but he has never explicitly stated that. In any case, the filmmakers must have known they had a problem with this story or else they would have recounted it as Obama had done in the 2008 campaign, using phrases such as “pre-existing conditions,” “health insurance,” and “treatment.”

Instead, they arranged the quotes and images to leave a misleading impression of what really happened.

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