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The New Neo

A blog about political change, among other things

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Cornhead goes to a Walz rally so you don’t have to

The New Neo Posted on August 19, 2024 by neoAugust 19, 2024

Here’s his report. An excerpt:

The crowd was at least 75% female. That’s the largest percentage I have ever seen over the years in attending Democrat events. On top of that, at least half the people were unionized teachers who cheered when asked if they were teachers. For Tim Walz and his wife, both of their parents were teachers and all but two siblings are. It’s a union family. At one point Walz threw out the canard about how the GOP is banning books. The Dems are okay with pornography in grade school libraries, doncha know. …

This same former student said, “I can’t wait for the rest of the country to get to know this guy.” Me too. And that’s why I shouted out a question, “Why did you let the Twin Cities burn?” I know Walz heard me, but he didn’t answer. A woman in my row told me to shut up. After the rally, I told her that two people died in the riots and there was at least $500 million in property damage. But she didn’t want to hear of it. And her husband started screaming at me about acting like an adult instead of a child. The thing of it is, adults should make decisions based upon facts and reality and that means hearing inconvenient truths about public safety under Governor Walz.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged Tim Walz | 33 Replies

Open thread 8/19/24

The New Neo Posted on August 19, 2024 by neoAugust 19, 2024

The Mark Twain segment apparently isn’t authentic, but the rest are:

Posted in Uncategorized | 33 Replies

Meet violinist Adrian Anantawan, who was born without a right hand

The New Neo Posted on August 17, 2024 by neoAugust 17, 2024

There are some stories that are simply inspiring, and testaments to the human will. The life of Canadian violinist Adrian Anantawan is one such story. He was born with no right hand; you can find a lot of information and many videos of his playing at the website I just linked.

Here’s a good introduction, though:

And another slightly longer talk and demo:

When he was born, I doubt his parents thought of Anantawan as a future violinist. And yet I would imagine that, once he made the choice to start the violin and then kept going, it was at least in part due to their encouragement. Then again, he may have been born not only with no right hand but also with a temperament that gave him the determination to persevere and ultimately succeed at something he loved very much.

A personal note: I have a friend with a similar disability, acquired in utero for a similar reason. She had surgery as a child to take off a couple of her toes and fashion them into a few rudimentary fingers. The amazing thing about her is that most people don’t even notice. She has developed various techniques for hiding her hands, and she is very animated in a way that means that people focus mostly on her face. She’s also is able to do most ordinary things with her hands – although she doesn’t play the violin.

Posted in Getting philosophical: life, love, the universe, Health, Music, People of interest | 12 Replies

Is Biden still president?

The New Neo Posted on August 17, 2024 by neoAugust 17, 2024

Then again, was he ever?

Some would say he’s always been a complete figurehead, right from the start. But I’ve never felt that he was entirely out of the decision-making loop, especially early in his presidency. That’s not to say he wasn’t strongly influenced and even at times overruled by his handlers, whom I always felt were in turn under the influence of some sort of coalition headed by former president Obama. But certainly, in the past few months and especially since the coronation of Kamala Harris as nominee, Biden has been shoved aside far more and perhaps even entirely.

Which brings us to the next question: will Biden try to sabotage Kamala’s election chances out of spite? After all, he was done dirty by those who decided it was time for Joe to go. Or is his hatred of Trump and the GOP great enough to overcome his anger at those in his party who deposed him? I think the latter, but I’m not sure.

Then again, Kamala Harris doesn’t seem to be in charge now, either.

And isn’t it funny how the Democrat voters don’t appear to care about any of this? I believe that the top priority of most of them is to stop Trump, and they trust that the Deep State and the Democrat Party will take care of things after that. The priority of stopping Trump has been fueled by the propaganda branding him as Hitlerian, but it is a reflection of more generalized fears and hatred of his supporters as violent, racist, homophobic, misogynist, gun-toting, anti-science fundamentalists who will ban not just abortion but contraception as well.

So, who cares about the details of Kamala’s plan for the future? Who cares how Joe was treated? The only thing that matters is that Joe stopped Trump when it was needed (either through a fair election or a fraudulent one; the latter doesn’t matter to them either, except the need to deflect all talk of the possibility of Democrat fraud), and that Kamala do the same now that it’s needed again.

And if Kamala wins in November – heaven forbid – I don’t think she’ll be in charge, either. Not fully, anyway. Kamala is identity-politics window-dressing, and the left as well as Trump-hating liberals are hoping that will be enough for victory in 2024.

Posted in Biden, Election 2024, Trump | Tagged Kamala Harris | 38 Replies

Reading Lolita in Tehran is even more relevant than before

The New Neo Posted on August 17, 2024 by neoAugust 17, 2024

[NOTE: I originally wrote this post in 2005, nearly twenty years ago. I was reminded of the subject matter last night when commenter “Jeff Z” wrote, on the Holocaust inversion thread, “I don’t know if you’ve ever read ‘Reading Lolita in Tehran,’ but aside from being a terrific book, it covers this very phenomenon. The left-wing intellectuals thought the Islamists were lower-class blockheads, but then…well, you know.” Indeed, I do know, having written about that very thing in 2005. Last night I reread the post, and – unfortunately – it is even more relevant today, when we have our own marriage of leftists and Islamists uniting to destroy. So here’s the post again.]

Azar Nafisi’s Reading Lolita in Tehran has scored a surprising amount of popular success. I think part of its popularity (aside from its great title) is that it’s the type of book that especially appeals to women’s book groups—in fact, that’s how I came to read it. Most of the members of my book group talked about the book’s main theme: the shocking and depressing ways in which Iranian women’s lives have been stunted and twisted by the authoritarian and misogynistic theocracy in charge in Iran, and how Nafisi and her students somehow managed to feed their spirits by the clandestine study of some of the classics of Western literature.

Apparently, literature can help keep people who live under a totalitarian system sane—the Soviet dissidents also provided evidence of that. But, although of interest, that was not the theme I kept noticing and marveling at when I read the book; no, a very different aspect of Reading Lolita in Tehran kept grabbing my attention: the tendency of literary and intellectual youths in free societies to gravitate towards leftist causes that would end up curtailing that very freedom.

Author Nafisi is currently a literature professor at Johns Hopkins. The biographical blurb on the flyleaf of her book states that she had formerly been an English professor at the University of Tehran but was expelled for refusing to wear the veil, and that she later emigrated to the United States in 1997.

But Nafisi’s story, and her relationship to the revolution that devastated her country, is far more complex and ironic than that. The year 1997 was not her first emigration from Iran; she had left at the age of thirteen and been educated in England, Switzerland, and the US, only returning during the pivotal and fateful year 1979 to her beloved and much-longed-for homeland.

And what a homecoming it was! She writes:

The dream had finally come true. I was home, but the mood in the airport was not welcoming. It was somber and slightly menacing, like the unsmiling portraits of Ayatollah Khomeini and his anointed successor, Ayatollah Montazeri, that covered the walls. It seemed as if a bad witch with her broomstick had flown over the building and in one sweep had taken away the restaurants, the children and the women in colorful clothes that I remembered. This feeling was confirmed when I noticed the cagey anxiety in the eyes of my mother and friends, who had come to the airport to welcome us home.

Nafisi learned through bitter experience that you can’t go home again, although you can try.

The terrible irony of her story arises because Nafisi herself was part of the revolution that ended up destroying her country. Her tale resembles that of so many youthful visionaries, dabbling in politics like a bunch of naive Mickey Mouses (Mice?) in Disney’s “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” not realizing until too late the horrors their machinations will conjure into existence.

Nafisi married early, at eighteen, and attended college at the University of Oklahoma during the 1970s. Her plunge into political activism was as casual (and as literary) as it was leftist:

I joined the Iranian student movement reluctantly. My father’s imprisonment and my family’s vague nationalist sympathies had sensitized me towards politics, but I was more of a rebel than a political activist–though in those days there was not much difference between them. One attraction was the fact that the men in the movement didn’t try to assault or seduce me. Instead, they held study groups in which we read and discussed Engels’s Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the State and Marx’s The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. In the seventies, the mood—not just among Iranians, but among American and European students—was revolutionary. There was the Cuban example, and China of course. The revolutionary cant and romantic atmosphere were infectious, and the Iranian students were at the forefront of the struggle.

So, revolution was a mood, an essence, something infectious in the air—rather like bacilli, as it turns out. Nafisi describes the group as markedly Marxist in philosophy and in style, sporting “Che Guevara sports jackets and boots…and Mao jackets and khakis.”

For Nafisi herself, romanticism and literature seem to have been the primary motives, passed somehow through the alchemy of her homesickness and transmuted into political activism:

[I] insisted on wearing long dresses outside the meetings…I never gave up the habit of reading and loving “counterrevolutionary” writers—T. S. Eliot, Austen, Plath, Nabokov, Fitzgrerald—but I spoke passionately at the rallies; inspired by phrases I had read in novels and poems, I would weave words together into sounds of revolution. My oppressive yearning for home was shaped into excited speeches against the tyrants back home and their American backers.

Once in Tehran, Nafisi began to realize that the unsettling airport scene had been only the tip of the iceberg. She soon came to bitterly regret the mindless revolutionary zeal of her youth, and to realize that her revolutionary dream had turned into a nightmare, as they so often do:

When in the States we had shouted Death to this or that, those deaths seemed to be more symbolic, more abstract, as if we were encouraged by the impossibility of our slogans to insist upon them even more. But in Tehran in 1979, these slogans were turning into reality with macabre precision. I felt helpless: all the dreams and slogans were coming true, and there was no escaping them.

Although the revolutionaries back in Oklahoma and elsewhere had been decidedly leftist, the revolution they helped birth was a restrictive theocracy. One of the most interesting portions of the book describes how those leftists, at least in the early stages, managed to rationalize and excuse such clear signs that things had gone sharply awry as the imposition of the veil and the subjugation of women.

Nafisi was not one of those excusers, however; she describes her horror at the relentless approach of the suffocating clasp of the mullahs, a chill embrace undreamt of in her leftist days in Oklahoma.

And it got worse, much worse; there are many passages in the book that reminded me uncannily of what it must have been like for French revolutionaries to have watched the unfolding of the Reign of Terror (those who survived, that is), not to mention Stalin’s ex-comrades viewing the purges of their ranks:

In later months and years, every once in a while Bijan [Nafisi’s husband] and I would be shocked to see the show trials of our old comrades in the U.S. on television. They eagerly denounced their past actions, their old comrades, their old selves, and confessed that they were indeed the enemies of Islam. We would watch these scenes in silence…I turned and ask Bijan, Did you ever dream that this could happen to us? He said, No, I didn’t, but I should have.

“No, I didn’t, but I should have.” What quiet words of chilling despair! And indeed, one wonders how it was that smart people could have been so dumb; by the mid-to late-1970’s, when Nafisi and her friends were supporting a leftist revolution in Iran, surely the jury was no longer out on the fact that this was a road that would lead to the revolution swallowing its own as well as many others. But we see such a phenomenon again and again, as history repeats itself in its winding, twisting path.

In Nafisi’s case, she seems to have been mainly a romantic, interested in literature almost to the exclusion of other topics—such as history, apparently. Unfortunately for her, she had to learn the lessons of history the hard way, from personal experience. And so, too, did her revolutionary Iranian comrades-in-arms, unfortunately for them—and for us, and for the world as well. They could never have guessed at the trajectory their lives would follow from those long-ago days of sartorial playing at being revolutionaries, sporting Che and Mao jackets, to their final moments in the executioner’s chamber.

And, if you can believe this interview, the Iranian students who took the Americans hostage in the last year of Jimmy Carter’s administration were hardly more serious or more focused than Nafisi herself. Read it and weep.

Nafisi’s story underscores the fact that there does seem to be something in the literary mind that is especially susceptible to romantic ideals of revolution, that doesn’t accept that institutions of government will always be flawed, that seeks a sort of misty perfection, and that believes in the power of youth to proclaim those ideals merely by taking to the streets and wishing it very, very hard.

Posted in Iran, Liberty, Literature and writing | 38 Replies

Open thread 8/17/24

The New Neo Posted on August 17, 2024 by neoAugust 17, 2024

Posted in Uncategorized | 36 Replies

Trump speaks on anti-Semitism, Israel, and Harris

The New Neo Posted on August 16, 2024 by neoAugust 16, 2024

I’ve cued up a few minutes of his speech:

Posted in Election 2024, Israel/Palestine, Jews, Trump | Tagged Kamala Harris | 25 Replies

Kamala Harris unveils her economic proposals

The New Neo Posted on August 16, 2024 by neoAugust 16, 2024

I call them “proposals” because they might just be in the realm of empty campaign promises to appeal to the voters she’s now courting. It’s also somewhat humorous in a bleak way to remember that fresh-new-face Harris has actually been in power for nearly four years.

Here’s the gist of her economic plan:

Harris’s plan calls for beefing up the Child Tax Credit (CTC) to provide a $6,000 tax cut to families with newborn children, as Democrats have sought to drive a contrast with Republicans on the issue in recent weeks.

The plan would allow for “$6,000 in total tax relief for middle-income and low-income families” for the first year of their child’s life, according to a campaign fact sheet. …

The plan calls for what it described as the “first-ever federal ban on price gouging on food and groceries,” though it doesn’t offer much detail as to how the proposal would be carried out.

We covered that last bit yesterday.

More:

The plan additionally calls for “new authority” for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and state attorneys general “to investigate and impose strict new penalties on companies that break the rules.” …

Another plan Harris proposed builds upon a previous proposal from the Biden administration that sought to provide first-generation homebuyers with $25,000 in down-payment assistance, along with a tax credit for first-time homebuyers.

Congressional Democrats had previously sought to pass similar legislation as part of President Biden’s sweeping Build Back Better agenda toward the start of his presidency, although the larger effort fell apart as the party struggled to unify amid concerns from moderates over the size and cost of the plan.

And then there’s her copycat “no tax on tips” proposal, mimicking Trump.

Is Harris serious about any of this? Who knows. She’s the original shape-shifter.

More here.

NOTE: Wonder of wonders, the WaPo published an op-ed yesterday that was critical of Kamala’s price control proposal.

Posted in Election 2024, Finance and economics | Tagged Kamala Harris | 39 Replies

On Holocaust inversion and other Big Lies

The New Neo Posted on August 16, 2024 by neoAugust 16, 2024

When I was a child, my playmates bickered a lot. One of the most common rejoinders I remember from those days was bounces off me and sticks to you, an annoying reversal that my verbal adversaries would use when valid accusations were leveled against them. Another similar one was I know you are but what am I?

If you’re of a certain age you’ll probably remember that sort of thing – a way a person could hurl insults right back in the opponents’ face. Truth didn’t matter in this verbal jujitsu. What mattered was to deflect and annoy.

When my son was a child I don’t recall hearing either of these phrases. Perhaps they’d grown out of style. But they came to mind today when I saw this article dealing with a far more serious problem. It’s entitled, “Holocaust inversion is going mainstream – it’s deeply disturbing: Holocaust inversion transposes the guilt of the abusers, the Nazis, onto the abused, the Jews, and leaves no room for any other possibility. The point, of course, is to legitimize violence against Jews.”

Well, yes. It’s been going on for quite some time, and not just about Jews as the new Nazis. Take a look at the number of times I’ve used the word “inversion” on this blog, nearly always to describe the lies of the left. Inverting the truth, rather than merely lying, is a favorite ploy of leftist propagandists and it has an especially infuriating and pernicious effect on its targets.

Here is a quote from the Holocaust inversion article:

Lesley Klaff explained this particular phenomenon in 2014. “What has been called ‘Holocaust Inversion,'” she wrote in Fathom, “involves an inversion of reality (the Israelis are cast as the ‘new’ Nazis and the Palestinians as the ‘new’ Jews), and an inversion of morality (the Holocaust is presented as a moral lesson for, or even a moral indictment of ‘the Jews’). … The Holocaust … is now being used, instrumentally, as a means to express animosity towards the homeland of the Jews.”

Indeed.

People studying this phenomenon often use the term Big Lie to describe it. It’s not just that it’s an egregiously large lie, however; it’s this inversion of the truth – this act of turning something upside down so that it becomes the opposite of the truth – that is especially evil.

But although most people are aware that the term Big Lie has Nazi origins, it’s my impression that most are also unaware of the fact that when Hitler wrote about the Big Lie it was in the act of telling a big lie – against the Jews, naturally – and not just lying but inverting the truth.

From a previous post of mine on the subject:

Hitler did talk about the Big Lie … [and his words] were couched in an accusation towards others, this time not against the English but against – you guessed it – the Jews:

“But it remained for the Jews, with their unqualified capacity for falsehood, and their fighting comrades, the Marxists, to impute responsibility for the downfall [of the Germans in WWI] precisely to the man who alone had shown a superhuman will and energy in his effort to prevent the catastrophe which he had foreseen and to save the nation from that hour of complete overthrow and shame. By placing responsibility for the loss of the world war on the shoulders of Ludendorff [see ADDENDUM below] they took away the weapon of moral right from the only adversary dangerous enough to be likely to succeed in bringing the betrayers of the Fatherland to Justice.

“All this was inspired by the principle — which is quite true within itself — that in the big lie there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation are always more easily corrupted in the deeper strata of their emotional nature than consciously or voluntarily; and thus in the primitive simplicity of their minds they more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie, since they themselves often tell small lies in little matters but would be ashamed to resort to large-scale falsehoods.

“It would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously. Even though the facts which prove this to be so may be brought clearly to their minds, they will still doubt and waver and will continue to think that there may be some other explanation. For the grossly impudent lie always leaves traces behind it, even after it has been nailed down, a fact which is known to all expert liars in this world and to all who conspire together in the art of lying.”
— Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, vol. I, ch. X

Hitler displays his knowledge of the workings of the technique, one he had mastered, but he certainly never owned up to his own use of it.

Those who use the Big Lie against Israel and Jews fall into two groups: those who are aware that their own accusations against Jews are themselves a Big Lie, and those who are not aware of it. The relative size of each group is unknown.

Speaking of which, this is as good a time as any to mention once again that the current anti-Israel and anti-Semitic demonstrations – some of which threaten to interrupt the Democrats’ convention in Chicago – are a fusion of leftists and Islamists, as Professor Jacobson writes here. These days it’s called the Red-Green Alliance – red for the left, and green for the pro-Hamas wing:

Israel is something around which groups who have absolutely nothing in common can come together in hate. And that would be what’s frequently referred to as the Red-Green Alliance. So the Marxists and the anarchists and the Islamists, who in many ways are the exact opposite ideologically all come together to hate the Jews and hate Israel.

And so that has developed over 30 years. So it didn’t start on October 7th …

It’s been building in this country for at least thirty years. But that same alliance between leftists and Islamists was a main feature of the Iranian Revolution that ended up installing the theocracy that’s been in charge of Iran since 1979. That’s about forty-five years ago. In Iran, the left thought it would be the last group standing. But as we know, the Islamists won the day in the battle of who was more ruthless.

[ADDENDUM: The Hitler quote from Mein Kampf was, of course, written many years before Hitler came to power. Hitler ended up changing his mind on Ludendorff – who was an early supporter of Hitler – and Ludendorff also ended up changing his mind on Hitler. Ludendorff was a fascinating character. Some excerpts:

Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff … was a German military officer and politician who contributed significantly to the Nazis’ rise to power. He achieved fame during World War I for his central role in the German victories at Liège and Tannenberg in 1914. After his appointment as First Quartermaster General of the Army General Staff in 1916, he became the chief policymaker in a de facto military dictatorship until Germany’s defeat. During the Weimar Republic, he took part in the failed 1920 Kapp Putsch and Hitler’s 1923 Beer Hall Putsch. …

After the war, Ludendorff became a prominent nationalist leader and a promoter of the stab-in-the-back myth, which posited that Germany’s defeat and the settlement reached at Versailles were the result of a treasonous conspiracy by Marxists, Freemasons and Jews. …

Tipton notes that Ludendorff was a social Darwinist who believed that war was the “foundation of human society”, and that military dictatorship was the normal form of government in a society in which every resource must be mobilized. The historian Margaret L. Anderson notes that after the war, Ludendorff wanted Germany to go to war against all of Europe, and that he became a pagan worshipper of the Nordic god Wotan (Odin); he detested not only Judaism, but also Christianity, which he regarded as a weakening force. …

Nice guy. And not altogether dissimilar to some of today’s leftists who want to destroy Western Civilization and its Judeo-Christian underpinnings.

When Ludendorff turned against Hitler, he apparently turned hard – if in fact it’s true that he sent the following telegram to Hindenburg when Hitler first became chancellor (it may have been a forgery):

I solemnly prophesy that this accursed man will cast our Reich into the abyss and bring our nation to inconceivable misery. Future generations will damn you in your grave for what you have done.

Ludendorff’s Wiki entry is very long.]

Posted in Historical figures, Iran, Israel/Palestine, Jews | Tagged Islam | 14 Replies

Open thread 8/16/24

The New Neo Posted on August 16, 2024 by neoAugust 14, 2024

Posted in Uncategorized | 23 Replies

Harris’ great idea: price controls

The New Neo Posted on August 15, 2024 by neoAugust 15, 2024

Trump recently made a taunting joke about Kamala Harris:

? Trump TAUNTS Harris Campaign on Her Plan:

"She's waiting for me to announce [my plan] so she can copy it"pic.twitter.com/AktYW2tqU8

— Resist the Mainstream (@ResisttheMS) August 14, 2024

I chuckled yesterday when I read that. It’s a reference to the fact that Harris copied Trump’s “no tax on tips” proposal.

But you know what? Harris didn’t suggest that at all. Instead, she came up with price controls:

In a statement released last night, Harris’ campaign said it would enact the “the first-ever federal ban on price gouging on food and groceries—setting clear rules of the road to make clear that big corporations can’t unfairly exploit consumers to run up excessive corporate profits on food and groceries,” with enforcement power given to the Federal Trade Commission. You heard that right: price controls.

It’s not clear how an “excessive” profit would be defined, nor why policing that would be in the purview of the federal government, nor why food prices in particular ought to qualify. It’s not clear what types of behavior that are currently legal would be outlawed.

Price controls have been disastrous whenever they’ve been implemented. Prices are signals, ways of communicating how much of a good is needed by consumers and how much ought to be produced.

To me it seems odd that Harris would choose this particular method, when she’s been engaged in trying to pretend she’s not a leftist. Then again, the leftists who control the Democrat Party these days have only a few arrows in their quiver, and this sort of “blame evil big business and fix the problem with more federal government control” approach is most definitely one of them. It appeals to envy and ignorance, two commodities that certainly aren’t in short supply.

More here:

Of course, the press lapped it up, with several journalists on social media treating it like Harris had just stepped down from upon high to present the Ten Commandments. Nothing matters on that front. If the Harris campaign says it, it’s going to be spun as “joy” and “optimism” wrapped in abject brilliance.

For normal Americans, though, these policies have consequences, and price controls would be an economic disaster. One only needs to look at the history of the Soviet Union to understand that, or if you’d like a modern day analogue, Venezuela. When government is used to cap the prices, from groceries to rent, it inevitabily leads to stagnation or even regression in the market.

I’m further informed by commenter “sdferr” that Harris’ father was a Marxist economist who proposed just that sort of thing for Jamaica in the 1970s. Interesting. Even Snopes – not a voice on the right – agrees that Harris’ dad was indeed a Marxist economist:

Taking a closer look at Harris’ work and the economics school of thought he professed, we were able to confirm that he inscribed himself in Marx’s intellectual tradition. …

… Donald J. Harris, a professor of economics at Stanford University, also did his research from a post-Keynesian perspective. Fowé was noting his line of inquiry admiringly. Keynesians stipulate that markets alone cannot ensure full employment and instead advocate for government intervention. Post-Keynesians agree, but argue that in intervening, the government should focus on equality and redistribution of wealth. …

Harris was also preoccupied with exploitation and other concepts that came directly from Karl Marx’s theory of capital. For example, The Economist recounts that he once argued that the inequality that beset Black people in the U.S. did not come from a form of “colonial rule” where white people dominate. Instead, he argued that the problem was capitalism. In this sense, Harris was indeed marxist in his thinking.

Of course, children don’t necessarily ascribe to the parents’ ideologies. But in this case, Harris’ behavior is very much in line with leftist economic theories and behavior. My guess is that she’s relying on the supposed ignorance of the electorate on such things, and pandering to the desire of many to blame “corporations” – or maybe it’s her own ignorance being demonstrated here. Or perhaps both.

Posted in Election 2024, Finance and economics | Tagged Kamala Harris | 91 Replies

France is a mess

The New Neo Posted on August 15, 2024 by neoAugust 15, 2024

If you want to understand what’s happening politically in France – including the recent elections – I recommend reading this article.

Posted in Election 2024 | Tagged France | 19 Replies

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HadEnoughTherapy? (yep)
HotAir (a roomful)
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JawaReport (the doctor’s Rusty)
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Pamela Geller (Atlas Shrugs)
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Sisu (commentary plus cats)
Spengler (Goldman)
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Volokh (lawblog)
Zombie (alive)

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