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The New Neo

A blog about political change, among other things

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Hitler’s “election”

The New Neo Posted on January 20, 2024 by neoJanuary 20, 2024

[NOTE: I thought it might be time to revisit the topic of how Hitler came to power. I know a lot of you are history buffs and are well aware of his path to dictatorship, but I keep seeing references – especially in other places – to the idea that the German people elected Hitler (usually said by the left with some supposed parallel to Trump, of course). The truth about Hitler is actually far more chilling: only about a third supported the Nazis but through series of fortunate (for him – unfortunate for the human race) events and machinations, Hitler became chancellor. Once there, he knew how to become dictator. I described some of the process in this post, written in 2006. I’m going to reproduce the relevant parts here, with some slight changes and additions.]

Several bloggers have pointed out a parallel [between the election of Hamas in Gaza and] the rise of the Nazis in pre-WWII Germany, saying “Hitler was democratically elected.” I beg to differ, at least slightly.

Yes, Hitler was selected by a Democratic process. But he did not come to power by winning the popular vote. He won neither a majority (difficult to do in a Parliamentary election, anyway), nor a plurality. In fact, he lost, and the Nazi Party’s fortunes were sinking.

That story is told here. An excerpt:

Between 1931 and 1933, vicious power struggles would break out between rival political parties. The power brokers in these struggles were Hindenburg and Schleicher. The problem during this period was that no party even came close to achieving the majority required to elect its leader Chancellor. Coalitions were either impossible to build, or were so transient that they dissolved as quickly as they formed. Ambitious leaders from every party began maneuvering for power, striking deals, double-crossing each other, and trying to find the most advantageous alliances. Hitler himself would ally the Nazis to the Nationalist Party. “The chess game for power begins,” Joseph Goebbels wrote in his diary. “The chief thing is that we remain strong and make no compromises.”

They had their sights on the prize from the start, and were confident that they could be the most ruthless of all. Hindenburg, who was around 84 at the time and not a well man (he died in 1934), was not up to the task of successfully opposing them. Although he was more popular with the people, he simply did not understand the depth of the calculating evil of the Nazis. Despite being against them, he ended up reluctantly playing a big part in their rise [emphasis mine]:

In 1932, hoping to establish a clear government by majority rule, Hindenburg held two presidential elections. Hitler, among others, ran against him. A vote for Hindenburg was a vote to continue the German Republic, while a vote for Hitler was a vote against it. The Nazi party made the most clever use of propaganda, as well as the most extensive use of violence. Bloody street battles erupted between Communists and Nazis thugs, and many political figures were murdered.

In the first election, held on March 13, 1932, Hitler received 30 percent of the vote, losing badly to Hindenburg’s 49.6 percent. But because Hindenburg had just missed an absolute majority, a run-off election was scheduled a month later. On April 10, 1932, Hitler increased his share of the vote to 37 percent, but Hindenburg again won, this time with a decisive 53 percent. A clear majority of the voters had thus declared their preference for a democratic republic.

However, the balance of power in the Reichstag was still unstable, lacking a majority party or coalition to rule the government. All too frequently, Hindenburg had to evoke the dictatorial powers available to him under Article 48 of the constitution to break up the political stalemate. In an attempt to resolve this crisis, he called for more elections. On July 31, 1932, the Nazis won 230 out of 608 seats in the Reichstag, making them its largest party. Still, they did not command the majority needed to elect Hitler Chancellor.

In another election on November 6, 1932, the Nazis lost 34 seats in the Reichstag, reducing their total to 196. And for the first time it looked as if the Nazi threat would fade. This was for several reasons. First, the Nazis’ violence and rhetoric had hardened opposition against Hitler, and it was becoming obvious that he would never achieve power democratically. Even worse, the Nazi party was running very low on money, and it could no longer afford to operate its expensive propaganda machine. Furthermore, the party was beginning to splinter and rebel under the stress of so many elections. Hitler discovered that Gregor Strasser, one of the Nazis’ highest officials, had been disloyal, attempting to negotiate power for himself behind Hitler’s back. The shock was so great that Hitler threatened to shoot himself.

But at the lowest ebb of the Nazis’ fortunes, the backroom deal presented itself as the solution to all their problems. Deal-making, intrigues and double-crosses had been going on for years now …

Hitler’s unexpected savior was Franz von Papen, one of the former Chancellors, a remarkably incompetent man who owed his political career to a personal friendship with Hindenburg. He had been thrown out of power by the much more capable Schleicher, who personally replaced him. To get even, Papen approached Hitler and offered to become “co-chancellors,” if only Hitler would join him in a coalition to overthrow Schleicher. Hitler responded that only he could be the head of government, while Papen’s supporters could be given important cabinet positions. The two reached a tentative agreement to pursue such an alliance, even though secretly they were planning to double-cross each other.

Meanwhile Schleicher was failing spectacularly in his attempts to form a coalition government, so Hindenburg forced his resignation. But by now, Hindenburg was exhausted by all the intrigue and crisis, and the prospect of civil war had moved the steely field marshal to tears. As much as he hated to do so, he seemed resigned to offering Hitler a high government position. Many people were urging him to do so: the industrialists who were financing Hitler, the military whose connections Hitler had cultivated, even Hindenburg’s son, whom some historians believe the Nazis had blackmailed. The last straw came when an unfounded rumor swept through Berlin that Schleicher was about to attempt a military coup, arrest Hindenburg, and establish a military dictatorship. Alarmed, Hindenburg wasted no time offering Hitler the Chancellorship, thinking it was a last resort to save the Republic.

On January 30, 1933, Hitler was sworn in as Chancellor.

You want to reach back in time and scream “No, no no!!” to Hindenburg. But alas, you cannot.

The Enabling Act followed not long after and solidified Hitler’s power; I’ve written about that here.

Posted in Historical figures, History | Tagged Germany | 39 Replies

Something new to fear: nanoplastics

The New Neo Posted on January 20, 2024 by neoJanuary 20, 2024

Someone was talking to me about this just the other day, as though we don’t already have enough to worry about:

So this must be the health scare du jour.

I actually rarely drink water from those little bottles. But I do use Sodastream, which is made of a different type of plastic that isn’t single-use. On their site they sort of talk around the issue but never come right out and say how their bottles stack up. But this scientist seems to be saying that Sodastream is better in terms of nanoplastics.

What I hate is how much plastic refuse one creates just by buying things: packaging of little electronics, food takeout, or even in the grocery store. I’m old enough to know it didn’t used to be like that. But it sure is now.

When I was young, we had a relative who distributed soda in glass bottles that really were recycled. We’d get cases of them delivered, and store them in the basement. It seemed like a great system.

Posted in Health, Me, myself, and I, Science | 22 Replies

Eric Holder: watch out, if Trump is elected he may do what we’ve been doing

The New Neo Posted on January 20, 2024 by neoJanuary 20, 2024

Holder must think most people haven’t noticed the last couple of years. Here’s what he said [emphasis added and comments in brackets added]:

Well, I think we have to take them at their word and take Donald Trump at his word.

Whether or not that idiot [Mike Davis] becomes attorney general or not, they will — Trump will try to put in place an attorney general who will do the — do his bidding. But they have also learned from the first term, and it will not only be who is the attorney general.

The question will also be who is the head of the Criminal Division in the Justice Department, who are the U.S. attorneys around the country, and what hiring authority those U.S. attorneys have, so that we will have an administration in place that will actually do the kinds of things that they tried to do in the first term, but were thwarted by career people and by people, to be fair, other political appointees [that is, those many leftists appointed during the Obama administration] who decided that they would not go against the rule of law [or Democrat interests].

I think that second Trump term — and this is something that the voters really need to keep in mind when they go to the polls in November. A second Trump term would have a politicized, weaponized — forget politicized — weaponized United States Department of Justice that would do the kinds of things that, with all due respect, that idiot just said.

Politicized and weaponized DOJ – I couldn’t have described the Obama/Holder/Biden DOJ better myself.

What Mike Davis said he’d love to do was (1) fire a lot of people in the executive branch of the Deep State (2) indict the Bidens (3) deport 10 million illegal immigrants and their kids (4) detain people in the DC gulag (5) issue a lot of pardons, including to all the J6 defendents.

Now, I have to say some of that actually is pretty extreme, particularly number 3: the deportation of “anchor kids” who are citizens, as well as the volume of deportations he mentions – 10 million. He also lists putting kids in cages. I can’t tell whether he’s serious or merely mocking the left, because of course Holder and company and their replacements in the Biden administration were busy doing the equivalent of Davis’ five-point plan, only on the left: (1) hiring many many leftists to man (and woman) the Deep State, including the DOJ (2) indicting Trump’s people and then later Trump himself (3) letting in tons more illegal immigrants (4) detaining people in the DC gulag. I’m not sure about the equivalent of number 5, because I don’t think there were all that many leftists who were political prisoners of the right to begin with.

So I think that Mike Davis is obviously relishing the opportunity for payback. Is he speaking tongue-in-cheek in order to tweek the left, or is he serious? The video is here, if you’re interested in judging for yourself. It’s long, and I couldn’t slog through all the MSNBC verbiage, so I only watched a small part of it. But why is the left saying Mike Davis might be Trump’s AG, other than the fact that they think he sounds like someone they can use to conjure up fear? I just spent about 20 minutes of my life that I’ll never get back trying to find out when and where Trump said that this man had a good chance of being his AG pick, and I couldn’t find anything he ever said about Davis, although it’s possible I missed something (my intrepid readers can take up the quest). I did find the left asserting that Davis is on the fast track to be Trump’s AG. But of course they love the idea of spreading Davis’ more incendiary comments and saying that he is Trump’s pick, the better to frighten and motivate their listeners to be even more afraid of Trump than they already are.

By the way, if the right did try to stage a bunch of political trials like the left has done, success would be a lot more difficult for two reasons. The first is that the DC court system isn’t available; only people on the right would be found guilty there. The second is that in the red venues they’d need to choose, the judges would be less likely to entertain kangaroo court convictions, even of leftists. So the charges and the evidence against the defendants would have to be very strong. That’s quite different from the low bar the left faces when trying to convict people on the right in places such as DC.

Posted in Law, Liberals and conservatives; left and right, Trump | 42 Replies

Open thread 1/20/24

The New Neo Posted on January 20, 2024 by neoJanuary 20, 2024

This guy’s a trouper:

Posted in Uncategorized | 43 Replies

The hostages present a Solomonic dilemma: why say “Bring them home”?

The New Neo Posted on January 19, 2024 by neoJanuary 22, 2024

The demonstrators in Israel for the hostages plead, “Bring them home!” But why address Israel? After all, Israel isn’t holding the hostages. And it’s been made clear for a long time that Hamas is finished negotiating, except perhaps to ask for a total Israeli surrender in exchange for the hostage release. So how can Israel “bring them home”? Aren’t the costs of such concessions unconscionable?

Israel is being addressed in these pleas, rather than Hamas, because Israel is humane and Hamas is not. Remember William Lloyd Garrison’s famous statement, “With reasonable men I will reason, with humane men I will plead … “. What many – most?- people forget is the rest of the quote, “but to tyrants I will give no quarter, nor waste arguments where they will certainly be lost.” Negotiations with Hamas are “wasted words.”

As far as a military way to bring them home goes – Israel probably doesn’t know where they all are, and even if and when Israel does know where they are (almost certainly not in one place but in many), a military approach would be likely to kill them or precipitate Hamas murdering them.

I think the phrase that makes more sense is “Let them go!” – addressed to Hamas and the Gazans. Of course, Hamas has no more intention of letting them go than Pharaoh had of letting the Jews who were slaves in Egypt go, as in the song “Let My People Go.” It took ten escalating plagues for that to happen, and it’s not surprising it took that much to get him to relent. Perhaps you believe that’s a historical fact, or perhaps you believe it’s a legend or a story, but whichever it is it tells something true about evil and power.

I suppose if the message is to be “Bring them home!,” the words should be addressed to the world: the UN, nations, supposed “humanitarian” organizations, and the international community as a whole. If the world was united in stating the obvious fact that the kidnappings are evil and Hamas must release the hostages or face attack or severe sanctions, globally – perhaps that would be enough pressure. But in reality that is very far from happening and Hamas knows it, and knows that the world is actually far more united against Israel.

Remember this past virtue-signaling? Now we hardly even have this sort of thing:

The following video is of another excellent and comprehensive discussion from The Jerusalem Center. It centers on the terrible choices the hostage situation presents, and how well Hamas has learned what Israel’s vulnerabilities around that are. I’ve cued it up to begin with a short talk on a different and yet important topic – the tax money Israel is supposed to transfer to Gaza and the West Bank as part of the Oslo Accords, and which the Palestinians use to reward terrorists for killing Israelis. After that brief discussion the speakers segue into the subject of the hostages (again, if it’s too slow for you, go to “Settings” and increase the speed). I had written a draft of the above post before I ever listened to this podcast, and I was surprised to hear the gentleman on the left of the screen (whose name and title I didn’t catch) say much the same thing about the phrase “bring them home” as I said. But there’s much much more in their talk that’s well worth hearing:

I think that Israel must not do any more large prisoner exchanges for hostages. Israel must hang tough against such negotiation and certainly against any long-term ceasefire. But I also think I know what the terrorists would do if Israel made that position clear – plus of course there would be the terrible and yet understandable spectacle of the grief-stricken and angry families of the hostages. The terrorists would then use Israel’s stance as a propaganda point to say that Israel is heartless. The terrorist propaganda would turn the terrorists’ own heartlessness and evil inside out and blame it on the Israelis, and much of the world would stupidly buy that, as they’ve bought so much else the terrorists are selling. In addition, I think the terrorists would start beaming videos of hostage after hostage pleading and pleading, and perhaps being mistreated or even tortured, as well as possibly killed either onscreen – or probably off, the better to claim that Israel’s airstrikes did the deed.

The bottom line is that, once hostages are taken by terrorists, there is no good result except their rescue. For release, the price is too high. And because of the number of the October 7 hostages and the way they’re being held and by whom, rescue is incredibly difficult.

NOTE: Last night when I watched that Jerusalem Center video, I thought of a film I saw in a large-screen movie theater when I was a teenager. Its name was The Sand Pebbles and it featured Steve McQueen, an actor on whom I had a huge crush; that’s why I went to see it. But the film itself filled me with horror – or rather, the only scene I remember after all these years filled me with horror. It featured the torture of an Asian man whom the sailor played by McQueen had befriended and whom the audience had grown to like. The man had been captured, and a vicious crowd was torturing him, with McQueen and the other sailors watching his torture from the deck of their ship. McQueen has a rifle, and he takes aim and shoots, putting his friend out of his misery. It is a searing, awful scene. But you understand that by doing that, McQueen ended the man’s suffering – because he was going to be killed slowly and painfully anyway, in full view of everyone. The McQueen character killed him, but stopped the sadistic spectacle of his suffering.

ADDENDUM:

Here is a video of a woman who was a hostage in Gaza. She is speaking to the World Economic Forum in Davos, describing her experiences and asking them to pressure Hamas for the release of the remaining hostages. I’ve not seen that approach before, and I think it’s a step in the right direction – not that the Davos crowd is going to do what she says, however:

Posted in Getting philosophical: life, love, the universe, Israel/Palestine, Terrorism and terrorists | 68 Replies

Haley in New Hamphire – plus Sununu

The New Neo Posted on January 19, 2024 by neoJanuary 19, 2024

Nikki Haley is doing well in New Hamphire, according to the polls. One of the reasons is that the popular NH Republican governor, Chris Sununu, has endorsed her.

Sununu is an interesting case. I think he would have been a shoo-in had he run for the Senate from NH in 2022 against the vulnerable Democrat incumbent, as he was expected to do. Instead, he announced that it was more important that he stay as governor. He did run for another two-year term as governor in 2022, but then announced about six months later that he wouldn’t be running for governor in 2024 either.

I guess it wasn’t so very important after all that he be the NH governor, because that leaves a very good possibility that a Democrat may win the NH governorship in 2024. Nor does this seeming retreat from politics mean that Sununu is actually retreating from politics, because he endorsed Haley a little over month ago, and has been making appearances with her. Sununu has made it clear he doesn’t like Trump, and his Haley endorsement should be seen in that light.

In New Hampshire, anyone can vote in the GOP primary unless the person is a registered Democrat. And even registered Democrats can fairly easily change their registration to “undeclared” and vote for one of the GOP candidates. It has to be done by a certain date – this year it was apparently in early October – but many many people just register as “undeclared” in general in order to keep their options open. It’s no secret that Haley is favored by Democrats and Democrat-leaners in the state, and there is a great deal of money behind her.

Posted in Election 2024, New England | 14 Replies

House GOP election security guidelines bill

The New Neo Posted on January 19, 2024 by neoJanuary 19, 2024

The House has come up with a model bill for states to follow in order to secure their elections. It’s a good effort, I think. But it’s the sort of thing that only will be passed in states with GOP legislatures, GOP governors, and conservative judges who won’t overturn it when it’s challenged in the courts by the left.

Here are some excerpts from the bill:

Titled, “The Uniform State American Confidence in Elections (ACE) Act,” the legislative tool kit provides 13 recommended state laws “to increase voters’ confidence and promote election integrity.” Many of the policies are modeled after the ACE Act, a federal measure containing similar provisions that House Republicans introduced last year. The bill was passed by the Committee on House Administration in July and is awaiting a full House floor vote.

Included in the Uniform State ACE Act are policies long-supported by election integrity activists, including voter ID and proof of residency requirements for individuals voting in person or by mail. Despite Democrats’ claims that ID requirements suppress non-white voters, the vast majority of U.S. voters — including those who are black and Hispanic — support such election safeguards. Several courts have also recently shot down Democrat-backed lawsuits alleging voter-ID laws “suppress” voters.

Another policy suggested is a mandate to regularly remove ineligible voters from state voter rolls. This would include removing any non-citizens on the list. …

Also included in the Uniform State ACE Act is a recommendation that states prohibit private funding of elections [such as “Zuckbucks”].

These things should be no-brainers for states to pass. They are simply obvious basic safeguards. But as I said, only GOP-controlled states will pass them, and the control has to be solid.

You may recall that, the next time the Democrats get control of the federal government, they are planning to pass HR1 or its equivalent, a federal uniform voting act that will make it impossible for states to employ these safeguards of voting security. This is an enormously important part of the Democrats’ platform, one of which many people are unaware. If the Democrats win both houses of Congress and the presidency, many more people will become aware, but it will probably be too late.

Posted in Politics | Tagged hr | 10 Replies

This and that

The New Neo Posted on January 19, 2024 by neoJanuary 19, 2024

Today I woke up in a funk. There are probably many reasons, and quite a few of them involve the news. I probably don’t need to list the things in the news that disturb me – the triumph of the knaves, the fools, and the knavish fools and foolish knaves. You know the drill.

I also recently was informed of the extremely serious illness of an old friend, and those messages come more and more frequently these days. You probably know the drill on that, too.

That said, I’ll just note that today I learned from comments in the Open Thread that the DOJ has issued a report on Uvalde. I haven’t read it yet, but I will. It reminds me that I’ve never published that long-promised report of my own on the same subject. So many other pressing things intervened that I kept putting it off. I’ll try to take the enormously long and disorganized draft I wrote ages ago and make it into a post or series of posts soon. I can almost guarantee my take on Uvalde will be significantly different than that of the DOJ.

Posted in Me, myself, and I | 18 Replies

Open thread 1/19/24

The New Neo Posted on January 19, 2024 by neoJanuary 19, 2024

Can it really be true that they’ve never met before and haven’t worked this out in advance? I think that’s the case:

Here’s the same guy doing another improv with a different woman:

Posted in Uncategorized | 52 Replies

Roundup

The New Neo Posted on January 18, 2024 by neoJanuary 18, 2024

(1) Here’s a link to a story about October 7 and its aftermath (hat tip: commenter “sdferr”), although I warn all of you that it describes a Palestinian atrocity so barbaric that you might not want to read about it. However, I’m posting the link because I think the event is emblematic of the horror Israel is fighting – one that all civilized people should be fighting.

(2) More on the FBI’s war on the right:

Federal investigators asked banks to search and filter customer transactions by using terms like “MAGA” and “Trump” as part of an investigation into Jan. 6, warning that purchases of “religious texts” could indicate “extremism,” the House Judiciary Committee revealed Wednesday in a letter obtained by Fox News Digital.
Fox News Digital has learned the committee also obtained documents that indicate officials suggested that banks query transactions with keywords like Dick’s Sporting Goods, Cabela’s, Bass Pro Shops and more.

The House Judiciary Committee and its subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government have been conducting oversight of federal law enforcement’s “receipt of information about American citizens without legal process and its engagement with the private sector.”

We are very deep in the weeds.

(3) Pakistan and Iran are having a skirmish:

Pakistan carried out a series of deadly military strikes on what it said were separatist militant hideouts inside Iran, in the latest incident across their shared border that has sent tensions between the two neighbors soaring.

The new strikes mean both Pakistan and Iran have now taken the extraordinary step of attacking militants on each other’s soil this week at a time of expanding conflict in the Middle East and wider region. …

Pakistan’s operation comes a day after Iran said it used “precision missile and drone strikes,” to destroy two strongholds of the Sunni militant group Jaish al-Adl in Pakistan’s southwest Balochistan province, according to the Tasnim news agency.

The strikes killed two children and wounded several others, according to local officials and Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, which described the attack as an “unprovoked violation of its airspace by Iran” and warned Iran of “serious consequences.”

Intra-Islamic violence has been a thing for a long time.

(4) Blinken thinks Israel should promise to give the Palestinians with a state. Now, where have we heard that before?:

The secretary of state returned to Washington, the officials said, having been rebuffed by Netanyahu on all but one of the administration’s asks: an understanding that Israel would not attack Hezbollah in Lebanon. …

Blinken’s major achievement on the trip was getting a commitment from Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and four other Arab leaders to help rebuild Gaza after the war, multiple senior administration officials said. The Arab leaders also agreed to support a new, reformed Palestinian government to secure Gaza, the officials said. The Saudi crown prince offered to normalize relations with Israel as part of a Gaza reconstruction agreement — a diplomatic development Netanyahu has long sought — but only if the Israeli leader agrees to provide Palestinians with a pathway to statehood, the officials said.

Netanyahu rejected the offer, officials said, telling Blinken that he’s not prepared to make a deal that allows for a Palestinian state. And now three senior U.S. officials say the Biden administration is looking past Netanyahu to try to achieve its goals in the region. Several senior U.S. officials told NBC News that Netanyahu “will not be there forever.”

Neither will Blinken and Biden, I suppose. The idea of some sort of Palestinian reconstruction supervised by others is fine, in the abstract. But who are the others? What would the marks be that Gaza’s government has “reformed”? How is that supposed to happen if Hamas isn’t destroyed militarily (and even if it is destroyed, “reforming” the area is quite the task)? And they want Netanyahu to make this deal now, after October 7, and while hostages are still being tortured in Gaza? Insane. Let’s reward barbaric terrorism.

(5) Anti-HIV drugs may be able to combat sepsis. I’ve written about sepsis several times before.

Posted in Uncategorized | 47 Replies

Hamas anti-Israel supporters harass children getting treated for cancer at Sloan Kettering

The New Neo Posted on January 18, 2024 by neoJanuary 18, 2024

I’m referring to this:

Thousands of anti-Israel protesters descended on Manhattan to demand a cease-fire in Gaza on Monday, with some even targeting a respected hospital for cancer patients over its alleged “complicity in genocide.”

The protesters shouted “Shame!” at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center while patients received treatment on the Upper East Side before targeting a Starbucks and a McDonald’s restaurant they reportedly accused of making “meals for genocide.”

“Make sure they hear you. They’re [patients, including children] in the window,” an organizer said on a bullhorn outside Sloan Kettering, according to footage posted on social media.

Someone in the crowd beat a drum as scores chanted: “MSK shame on you, you support genocide, too.”

And how does this hospital supposedly “support genocide”? The protesters are referring not to the genocide Hamas perpetrated, of course. They’re referring to the “genocide” accusations that have been given credence by the kangaroo court known as the ICJ.

And I think this explanation by a protester who was interviewed lets us know how complicit the MSM is in whipping up the kind of sentiment we see in this demonstration, and how the word is spread through social media, in order to affect young adults in particular:

One anti-Israel protester, 18, told The Post the images of Gaza have pulled at her heartstrings and motivated her to call for a cease-fire even though she isn’t Palestinian.

“It’s really been weighing heavy on my heart just seeing it on my timeline,” the resident who grew up in NYC said. “Every single day it’s a different child.”

So, why Sloan Kettering? Here’s the ostensible reason:

An organizers said the cancer center is a “complicit institution” for collaborating with Israeli medical centers.

And also:

An organizer for the pro-Palestine group Within Our Lifetime attempted to explain their rhetoric on X, accusing the hospital of accepting money from pro-Israel billionaires.

‘Sloan Kettering accepted a *400 million dollar donation* from billionaire Zionist Ken Griffin, the largest in their history. This was *after* he threatened pro-Palestine student activists at Harvard with revoked job offers. Our medical institutions are not innocent bystanders.’ But others were horrified by the behavior.

One can’t help but conclude that not only are the organizers of the pro-Hamas march in favor of harassing child cancer patients, but they’re against cancer research itself if that research has anything to do with Israel. This says a great deal about the protesters and their anti-life alliance with the anti-life jihadi killers. And people like that 18-year-old weeping for the poor Palestinian children should be weeping for the fact that Hamas wants its children to die, and puts them in harm’s way, in order to create publicity that affects people like her and causes them to support a murderous life-denying cause.

The organizers of these marches, and the hard leftists who participate, know they are not going to win anyone else over by this sort of action. But that’s not their goal. Their goal is to frighten and subdue and pressure; to cause as much trouble as possible and as much disruption as possible. They also are trying to frighten institutions like Sloan Kettering and so many others into “buying” protection (like in a Mafia shakedown) by complying and denouncing Israel or making statements supporting a ceasefire or at least not supporting Israel or having Israeli doctors there or taking donations from pro-Israelis or whatever the gripes might be. This is to let all other businesses know: if we would do this to child cancer patients, you’d better believe we’d do it to you.

Posted in Health, Israel/Palestine, Terrorism and terrorists | 7 Replies

No, Trump isn’t the only person “who can save America”

The New Neo Posted on January 18, 2024 by neoJanuary 18, 2024

[Hat tip: commenter “that guy.”]

Right at the outset, the title of this piece annoyed me: “Only Trump Can Save America.” My quarrel with it? No one person can “save America,” although one person – if elected president – can certainly help it begin to happen. But to do that, such a person would first have to get elected. Is Trump that person? I’m not at all sure he could get elected, although I’m pretty sure he could and will get nominated by the GOP.

Is DeSantis or is Haley that person? I definitely think DeSantis could be that person – but again, he’d have to get nominated first and then elected. Neither looks probable at this point, and neither has looked probable for many many months. So I pretty much gave up on that long ago.

I realized quite early in the campaign season that Trump was almost certainly going to be the nominee – barring black swan events – and I don’t know why everyone else didn’t realize it as well. I have long seen the race for second place as a competition to be the Trump alternative if something were to happen that would mean Trump couldn’t run, and I therefore think it’s fine if the second-place race continues for at least a while.

From the article:

Those of us who backed Ron DeSantis – or the other Republican candidates – should read the room. Former President Trump winnowed the field effortlessly and then crushed the remaining three candidates in Iowa. He leads in the polls everywhere else.

Is the writer, Steve Cortes, just noticing that? Is he only now “reading the room”? But it’s been quite obvious almost from the start of the race. Iowa was merely a demonstration of what has been apparent for ages.

Then he follows up with this:

It is time to coalesce and unite behind the clear preference of the GOP grassroots, Donald John Trump.

No, it’s not. As I’ve said before, that second-place battle is important. A lot of Republican voters don’t prefer Trump, and they don’t want to be prematurely deprived of their chance to vote for alternatives in the primaries. This is not a coronation.

Cortes continues:

We do not have the luxury of further internal strife and instead must gird for an epic battle this autumn against our opponents who are inflicting daily damage upon America.

“Internal strife” has long been a GOP constant, so forget about ending it. And calling to prematurely unite behind Trump when the primaries have barely begun might even increase that strife, because many Republican voters – probably close to half – might resent it.

And if the GOP leaders haven’t already been “girding for an epic battle this autumn against our opponents,” then we’re in even bigger trouble. It is possible to have several candidates competing in the primaries while at the same time not just “girding” for a battle later on against Democrats, but fighting that battle right now.

Posted in Election 2024, Trump | Tagged DeSantis | 42 Replies

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