Obama Spies On Congress

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* How come no mention of former Congresswomen Jane Harman, who was a member of the panel on intelligence, agreeing to act for an Israeli operative in exchange for pressure through a donor on Pelosi to appoint her chair of the intelligence panel? This was learned through an NSA wiretap in 2005.

* Perhaps this is where Hillary makes some sort of deal with the NSA just prior to the ’16 election, a la “Ok, you guys know what to do. When I’m elected you’ll receive an unlimited budget, and total complete control on wiretaps etc if you’ll just promise to:

1. Keep my stuff that you have under wraps for at least the second yr of my second term (ca. 2022).

2. Give me the juiciest bits that you have on Trump in his file so I can use it this yr. during the campaign. I can then discretely have the NYT/DC Post “accidentally” dig it up on their own so that it makes them look like they found it themselves with no direct connection to my campaign. Caveat: Uh, just make sure that Bill isn’t directly involved or else there’s no win for me. I mean, I sure can’t have the NYT brandish a story about Bill and Donald going to some luxurious getaway to pick up teens/early twentysomethings together cause that would nullify any direct political points that might come my way. Plus it would only serve to confuse both sides (e.g. Family Values crazies and the loony Liberal base of which I’m so dependent on to come out and vote for me in the fall).

So remember: Only give me the juiciest bits on Trump that the NYT/Post can suddenly discover just a few days before the election. Has to be juicy, plausible, and of course, damaging to him without directly involving Bill. Maybe something like the Firefly scout plot point in David Mamet’s Wag the Dog thriller. Something along those lines.

Whatever you’ve got on The Donald, I want it. Whatever it takes to keep you guys happy, it will be worth it, and that’s my promise. After all, you guys listen in on all the secrets.

* Sailer Echo Syndrome: Alex Jones is starting to talk about the Gulen Cult, and is doing it in a way that makes me think he’s reading your old posts about Gulen, the Poconos, charter schools and government contracts.

* Does anyone know the specific reasoning behind Obama not wanting to go to war with Iran? (I know the obvious reasons, of course, but they didn’t seem to stop George W. Bush in Iraq. I would like to know what exactly makes Obama anti-Iranian war). Also, does anyone know why the mere knowledge of Israeli influence on a US lawmaker is enough for the White House to defeat the Israeli tactic of influencing US lawmakers? Is it just that the administration and its catspaws in Congress have the repartees ready in advance for every talking point of the Israeli-dominated bloc in Congress? Clearly the Obama administration is not taking this information to the press in an attempt to win the public’s sympathy, that is, releasing the names of specific US lawmakers who are controlled by Israel. I guess my question is, how did this US surveillance work to keep us out off Iran?

* I know people who were involved in that 1970s effort to bring Soviet Jews to the US. One of the interesting bits of that saga is that the Israelis were constantly trying to sabotage their efforts. The Israelis wanted the Soviet Jews to come to Israel instead.

* Speaking of Maxwell, the English satirical Private Eye had a long running fight with Maxwell, whom they nicknamed Captain Bob (he was an avid sailor)- careful on the spelling there, Jones. He sued them for libel numerous times and they took to incorporating a new legal vehicle for each Issue at one point if they had good stuff on him.

They of course had the last word, after he was found drowned after falling, drunk, off his boat, the PE headline was
“Captain Bob, Bob, Bob”

The word around town at the time was that Maxwell had been “suicided.”

* The fact that the NSA spies on everyone means that one has to assume that government is largely conducted by blackmail. I don’t know if that is true or not – but it has to be assumed as a possibility.

Do we even know who runs the NSA? I mean who really runs it. How do we know they don’t sell their intelligence to the highest bidder? How do we know they don’t spend a considerable fraction of their working day engaged in day trading, using the best possible inside information?

Posted in America, Barack Obama, Benjamin Netanyahu, Iran, Islam, Israel | Comments Off on Obama Spies On Congress

The Hard Problem

Steve Sailer writes:

In The Hard Problem, set in England in the first decade of the new century, his similarly old-fashioned heroine is beset instead by the self-confidence of her neo-Darwinian colleagues. The left is intellectually nugatory, and all the energy resides with the disciples of the late biologist William D. Hamilton, such as Richard Dawkins and Matt Ridley. Stoppard explains that the play grew out of an argument he started with Dawkins over his 1976 book The Selfish Gene.

Indeed, the two young men the heroine strives to out-argue sound rather like my pals at the classic blog Gene Expression circa 2005. In his “Author’s Note,” Stoppard cites Imperial College evolutionary biologist Armand Marie Leroi, an expert on human genetic variety, as his chief guide to the science. (Here’s Razib’s interview with Dr. Leroi at GNXP ten years ago.)

This surprisingly short play references a remarkable number of concepts utilized by 21st-century right-of-center intellectuals—the story opens, for example, with the heroine’s tutor explaining the Prisoner’s Dilemma, the standard introduction to theories of how altruism could evolve.

Other longtime fascinations of the Edge.org crowd featured in The Hard Problem are the replication crisis in psychology, the larger implications of the financial crisis of 2008, and adoption. The nature-nurture implications of adoption are of natural interest to Stoppard, who only discovered in his 50s that he wasn’t roughly a quarter Jewish as he had assumed, but was entirely Jewish.

Posted in Genetics | Comments Off on The Hard Problem

What Happened To Bill Clinton At Oxford?

Comments:

* Bill Clinton has been referred to as a ‘Rhodes Scholar’ many times over the years. But he never completed it, did he? Didn’t he abruptly abscond, practically in the dead of night? Any known reasons for that? I think Christopher Hitchens (if I remember correctly) claimed it was because of some rape accusations that induced our hero to zip out of there. Any truth to all that?

* While Clinton was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, he allegedly raped a woman named Eileen Wellstone. He admitted the encounter but said it was consensual. She never pressed charges.

* Speaking of the academia, I think we can make good use of immigrants and migrants.

The problem with native-born white university presidents, deans, and professors is that they are a bunch of wusses.

But people from less PC-parts of the world would make tougher shepherds of spoiled brat crybullies.

Posted in Hillary Clinton | Comments Off on What Happened To Bill Clinton At Oxford?

Republican Terror and Anger

Paul Gottfried writes:

David Frum in The Atlantic (January/February 2016) perceptively observes that the emotion of college students when they mounted the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations pales in import beside the feelings being released by Trump’s candidacy. Among Republican voters and many independents who have rallied to Trump, there is “a rebellion against the power of organized money.” Those who were Tea Party rebels are angry that the GOP establishment treated them like mindless foot-soldiers, while others who cheer on Trump are reacting against the arrogance of wealth. A social war, notes Frum, has erupted in the Republican Party, and it may split that party apart. “The dividing line that used to be the most crucial of them all, class, has become a division within the parties, not between them.” Moreover, those who are coming over to Trump “aren’t necessarily superconservative. They don’t often think in ideological terms at all. But they do feel strongly that life in this country used to be better for people like themselves, and they want the old country back.”

It might be almost too obvious to note that the Trump supporters, who may be on the verge of destroying the Republican Party as we know (and speaking personally, detest) it, bear a striking resemblance to the National Front in France. Both are identified with the populist Right and have been incessantly denounced as fascist or Nazi-like by the media-political establishment. Both groups are shuffling the political cards by incorporating working-class programs into an anti-immigration parties that, as Frum remarks about the Trump’s followers “want their country back.” Finally, each party can claim about 40% of the electorate but may have problems capturing any more. The rest of their countries‘ voters stand with the Left or with a socially left-leaning globalist corporate establishment.

COMMENTS:

* Just taking myself as an example (and I certainly don’t fit the stereotype of the typical Trump supporter since I possess three degrees after high school), I started out the year predicting Trump wouldn’t run, and, even after he announced, I was skeptical. But once he attacked McCain’s status as a “war hero,” I was all ears. I quickly changed my opinion about Trump. I believe others, once they start paying attention, will experience the same conversion. At least, I hope so. I find encouragement in the fact that his polling numbers have steadily increased as he got more exposure and the fact that TV ratings for the Republican debates have shattered previous records.

* It seems very likely that the US will be in recession by election time, so it would be very rash to assume that Trump could not win as GOP candidate against Clinton. All the history of presidential elections tells us that. So anyone who wants to stop him from becoming president had better stop him from becoming the nominee.

* We should not confuse Marine Le Pen with Donald Trump, they are totally different products of totally different political systems. In Europe fascism is something very specific, with a clear historical course over decades and it it distinguished mainly by its anti-parliamentarianism. The National Front in France is definitely the evolution of French fascism, even if you believe that Marine Le Pen has a sincere intention to evolve it into a democratic party of the right. This would not necessarily be impossible, it was done in Italy by Gianfanco Fini to Mussolini’s own party, though the end product did not prove very durable.

In the United States on the other hand European style fascism never took hold. Donald Trump is no more a fascist than I am a dinosaur. In American politics “fascist” is just an insult you throw at someone when you run out of rational political arguments.

* I increasingly think that the Republican Party needs to go the way of the 1850s Whig Party and if Trump’s candidacy accelerates the evolution of an ethno-nationalist white party in the U.S., then it will have served a purpose, even if Hillary Clinton (ugh!) takes the oath of office on January 20, 2017.

* I’m for Trump. I’ve an Ivy League Ph.D. and have professional experience in many of the areas where Trump’s policy positions are clearest. He is the only candidate espousing rational solutions to some of the country’s most serious problems. I don’t like his rhetorical style but someone needs to break the party structure that is destroying this country; a structure that rewards incumbents who ignore the righteous concerns of the country’s ciutizens while battening on the financial support of billionaires and foreign powers seeking aggrandizement at the expense of the common people. If one of the current stoopid party midgets ends up facing off against Hilary or another dimocrat come next November I’ll stay home or vote dimocrat for the first time in my life. I’d prefer that the dimocrats get full responsibility for the disaster that follows.

* Trump has already done a great service to the American people. If he is nominated and debates Hillary his service will be magnified. Opposed by our ENTIRE political class, Trump is revealing the truth that the game is not red team vs blue team but instead a classic conflict between the working and ruling class.

* Recent Rasmussen poll had Trump and Hillary within a point.

1. Ras has a history of over-estimating Republican support.
2. Recent study showed face-to-face and telephone polls underestimating Trump’s support (because people are sheep and the media doesn’t approve of him).
3. Trump’s support will increase going forward as others drop out, while Hillary is probably much closer to topping out.

Study in 2 showed Trump got 9 points more support among college-educated respondents in online polls; college-educated are the biggest sheep of all.

* Trump is the only candidate who is serious about enforcing immigration law. Trump is the only candidate who opposes the trade agreements that have hollowed out America’s manufacturing industry and given us a massive permanent trade deficit. He is the only Republican not eager to restart the Cold War with Russia. As for Hillary, the one who pushed Obama to help take out Qaddafi, thus making Libya safe for ISIS, and who like all Democrats is eager to give illegal aliens amnesty, and who is as hawkish towards Russia as any Republican, she is totally unacceptable.

So I will hold my nose and vote for Trump.

* Now, the GOP establishment and mainstream Conservatives have right to be upset with Trump’s tactics and proposals, but surely they should recognize that Trump has given the ‘American Right’ a great opportunity for some real soul-searching.
Even if they don’t endorse Trump, they can ask key questions such as:

1. How come the Establishment favorites like Jeb are such duds?

2. How come so many Conservatives are connecting with Trump like they’ve done with no one else for a long time?

3. How come the media attack on Trump has had little effect on him?

4. In what ways has the GOP failed that has led to the Trump phenom?

5. etc.

Instead, the GOP establishment and mainstream Conservative types are doubling down, swinging their batons, and giving us the same horseshit that no longer sells.
If anything, the so-called ‘mainstream conservatives’ are not mainstream at all. ‘Mainstream’ implies something that represents the majority. Well, we are told that Jeb Bush is ‘mainstream’ whereas Trump is a fringe candidate, but Trump seems to be doing better with your average Conservative than Jeb is.
It’s like the term ‘mainline’ Protestantism. It suggests the main bulk of Protestant believers, but in fact, ‘mainline’ means nothing today as their churches have totally dried up. There is no blood, soul, and passion in the movement. In contrast, Evangelicalism is still alive cuz the faith still remains.
Now, Trump is no religious figure, but there is real passion among his supporters that simply doesn’t exist among supporters of the likes of Rubio, Fiorina, Jeb, and etc. Trump may be a swindler, but his fans and supporters are genuine conservatives and patriots. They really believe in America just like Evangelicals really believe in Jesus as the Son of God.
In contrast, Mainline Protestants regard themselves as too sophisticated, educated, and aloof to literally believe in God and Jesus. They just value the abstract ‘essence’ of that stuff so that it can be used to serve secular causes… like ‘gay marriage’.

Likewise, the so-called ‘mainstream conservatives’ of the Establishment no longer believe in core conservatism, patriotism, Americanism, and etc. They are ‘secular patriots’ than ‘spiritual patriots’. Their idea of America is an abstraction. It is not about American history, people, culture, and power. It is about America as some abstract proposition cooked up by Emma Lazarus Sulkowicz and the Neocons.
Their reaction to red-blooded patriotism is like mainline protestant reaction to Evangelical faith in God as the real Lord than some abstract idea.

Given that populist red-blooded conservatives have been rather unintelligent and un-educated, they’ve been easily manipulated by the elites. They were thrown some red meat on occasion at least in symbolism: pledge of alliance, bogus controversies about prayer in school, etc. Mostly, their passions were stoked only during election time only to win some votes for politicians who were really in the pocket of globalist elites.

And over the yrs, US has become less white, less conservative, less spiritual, less moral, and etc. despite all the promises of GOP elites(even when GOP held the presidency and both houses). Also, populist conservatives were led to believe that if they support the rich folks, the rich folks would reciprocate and fight leftist Big Government and support American patriotism. But that was all bogus. American populist conservatives are waking up to the fact that the super-rich(whom they’d supported) are pushing the very agendas that are doing the most harm to the vast majority of middle class, lower middle class, and working class white Americans.

But we don’t see any soul-searching from the likes of George Will. My beef with Will is not that he dislikes Trump. There are many good reasons not to like Trump, to distrust him, to even despise him.
But at the very least, Trump has provided us with an opportunity to discuss serious matters about the future of American Conservatism. He has blown the cover that there is indeed a HUGE discrepancy between the Establishment and the duped conservative masses who are now fed up and sick to death of guys like Lindsey Graham and John McCain who schmooze with the likes of Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama.

If Trump is the destroyer of the GOP, it’s only because he lifted up the hood and exposed the shoddy machinery. GOP has been like a sleazy used car salesman for some time. It’s been trying to fool America, especially populist white voters, that the engine is still powerful and ready to win the race and serve American interests.
But then, Trump comes along and opens up the hood, and it’s obvious that the so-called pistons are made up of noodles like Jeb, Rubio, Carly, Lindsey, and the rest. Trump does the Tucker thing in the Coppola movie, and the establishment just can’t handle it.
Still, we have now seen the GOP under the hood, and we can’t buy it anymore unless it gets a real new engine. And this is what the likes of Will are bitching about. They don’t want a new engine. They wanted to sell us a souped-up version of the same bogus engine hidden under the shiny hood. And instead of blaming themselves for the crummy engine, the Establishment types are blaming Trump for having lifted up the hood to reveal the truth.
Now, the Grease Lightning that Trump is selling could be a bogus junk car too. But we should credit Trump for exposing the GOP for what it is.

In a way, the fate of GOP is what happens when something becomes overly institutionalized. In some ways, such development is understandable. After all, people with the stuff of greatness can be mavericks and visionaries. They can do great things but also bad things.
So, instead of having men of powerful personalities and leadership qualities, the system prefers those who go long and get along. After a spell under such a system, both the GOP and Democratic Party have filled up with pushovers, fakers, phonies, and slicksters. They are hand-shakers than world-shakers; they are puppets who take orders from AIPAC, Soros, Koch Brothers, and Adelson.
And over time, such a system only produces one colorless and bloodless second-rater after another because anyone with any true vision or personality is purged and exiled.
So, Citizen Trump’s moment is truly remarkable in this sense.

At any rate, the GOP may now be fatally broken like Tsar’s power during WWI.
It’s gotten to the point where all the main talking points no longer hold any water or have any sway over us. It all sounds like empty rhetoric by professional hacks who just mouth the same cliches because they don’t know and can’t think of anything else.
It’s like the scene in DOCTOR ZHIVAGO where the deserters just about had enough of the war and have become deaf to the rhetoric.

* This article briefly touches on Trump’s liberal past. I was reading about Trump’s 1999-2000 involvement with the Reform Party and was surprised he called Pat Buchanan the usual anti-white slurs. Trump’s views were probably well in line with the MSM narrative for much of his life. My theory is that he has had a gradual racial awakening since Obama’s election. He switched to a Republican in 2009 right after Obama’s election. A couple years later in 2011, he engaged in some mild race baiting over Obama’s birth and flirted with a run for President. His increasing conviction is why he is running for real now and did not do so in 2012, though a weaker field without Obama and Romney is another big reason. I think Trump’s liberal past has been a good thing. If he had spent the 90s and 00s as a Republican, it is highly likely he’d be a neocon cuckservative. In any case, for Trump to have such a shift in his views during his 60s is impressive. Regardless of what happens next year, hopefully the bond Trump has formed with his supporters will encourage him to remain highly active in politics. The public may have saved him from social and economic ruin in June, and Trump is providing a vehicle for ordinary Americans to fight back against their tormentors in government and media for the first time in decades.

* Trump is a phenom because he is perceived as the not-establishment guy. That’s why everything the establishment does against him makes him stronger.

All my life, the GOP establishment has campaigned to the hard right and then governed to the squish-middle-left.

And that is why conservatives despise the establishment. I don’t know anyone who is under any illusions about Trump. But conservatives hate the establishment bad enough to take the risk. How could it really be any worse than what fake conservative Paul Ryan just pulled off in the budget deal? And just as Obama spent the first six-plus years of his tenure blaming Bush, Ryan is now blaming Boehner.

* Trump is belligerent? Against the cucks, traitors and scum who have been destroying this country for over half a century. I’d prefer a firing squad but if all I can get is belligerence I’ll take it.

* It may turn well be that Trump’s supporters have all the hard to get engineering degrees, while the other guys’ supporters have the degrees in basket weaving and gender studies.

* All the polls in advance of the 2015 General Election in Britain predicted a Labour win; Labour lost very badly in one of their worst-ever results. The inaccuracy of the polls was ascribed to the reluctance, in the current PC climate, of so-called ‘shy Tories’ to admit that they intended to vote for a (nominally) right-wing party. UKIP, whose supporters here are generally fans of Trump, gained 4m votes, an unprecedented share; though our first-past-the-post system denied them a proportionate representation in parliament.

It will be interesting, from a European perspective, to see how the Donald fares. He is already providing great entertainment value. He’s like a bull in a china shop. The horrified proprietors can do nothing but stand by, watching their meretricious stock getting trashed.

* Except for the populist, patriotic strains in her rhetoric, I can find no common ground between Marine and interwar fascism. The National Front does not advocate a one party state (unlike its opposition which in effect has already created one), has never called for abolishing a parliamentary government, and does not advocate the kind of corporate state that was characteristic of Latin fascist programs, in France as well as in Italy and Spain. The continuity that Mr. Vasilis is claiming to see is not there, save as a convenient fiction generated and perpetuated by the French and international leftist media. I’m not even sure that the now frequently encountered term “extreme rightist party” used to describe the Front in the WSJ and NYT has any relation to reality.

* It’s time to rid ourselves of the notion that the foreigner’s view of the US President is in any way meaningful – or that their likes and dislikes should be considered by us when choosing.

The truth is that those outside the US like or dislike an American President primarily based on one thing: their belief that he is willing to subordinate US interests in favor of the interests of their country.

That’s really what it boils down to. So in a very real sense, the less “the world” likes our President, the better he probably is… for us.

* Trump is right about Muslim immigration. Maybe we should figure out this Muslim thing before we move ahead on immigration.

Muslims have their own way of thinking, their own culture – that culture is antithetical to Christian Western culture. Christian Western culture is open to freedom, it is optimistic, and it welcomes change.

In Christian culture, we look to ourselves for a better tomorrow – not to God. This is not true of the Muslim culture. The byword of Muslim culture is “God willing” – where as a Christian says “I’m willing.”

Perhaps to a fault, Christian culture has evolved to extend freedom to everyone. Clearly this is not true of Muslim culture. Their treatment of women is inhuman. In the Christian West, the nuclear family, father mother and children, is the unit of human stability and progress. In Muslim culture the clan arranges marriages between relatives. Sorry but that is old world.

Fundamentally, the Muslim culture does not like other cultures. It does not mix well or integrate with other cultures – it is not open to other peoples ways – it does not want to evolve.

Most unfortunately for Muslims and Christian America, the Jew have deviously and devilishly in-snared us into killing each other – pitting Muslim against Muslim – with us destroying Muslim countries.

There is righteous bad blood between we Americans and Muslims. By far the Muslims have been hurt the most – it is ungodly what has happened..

Is it not time for a grand life saving exchange – we militarily leave their lands and they stay within their land and culture, trading goods with the world – evolving their culture in their own way?

* I started off the year betting Trump wouldn’t even run and thinking he was a joke. Even when he announced he was running, I felt the same way. Then he started talking, I listened, and I changed my mind. Compared to the others in the field in both parties, a vote for Trump is a no-brainer for me at this point. I read a columnist recently invoking the “Bradley effect,” which described the experience of the seemingly popular black mayor of LA who lost twice running for California despite last minute polls showing him winning. Some observers concluded that people lied to pollsters about how they were going to vote for fear of being thought “racists” for voting against the black candidate. That’s my feeling about what is happening now. I think the polls are underestimating Trump’s support across the country.

Posted in America, Fascism | Comments Off on Republican Terror and Anger

ISIS Enshrines a Theology of Rape

The obvious solution to this is to bring more Muslims to the West and give them welfare and make criticism of them illegal.

New York Times:

QADIYA, Iraq — In the moments before he raped the 12-year-old girl, the Islamic State fighter took the time to explain that what he was about to do was not a sin. Because the preteen girl practiced a religion other than Islam, the Quran not only gave him the right to rape her — it condoned and encouraged it, he insisted.

He bound her hands and gagged her. Then he knelt beside the bed and prostrated himself in prayer before getting on top of her.

When it was over, he knelt to pray again, bookending the rape with acts of religious devotion.

“I kept telling him it hurts — please stop,” said the girl, whose body is so small an adult could circle her waist with two hands. “He told me that according to Islam he is allowed to rape an unbeliever. He said that by raping me, he is drawing closer to God,” she said in an interview alongside her family in a refugee camp here, to which she escaped after 11 months of captivity.

The systematic rape of women and girls from the Yazidi religious minority has become deeply enmeshed in the organization and the radical theology of the Islamic State in the year since the group announced it was reviving slavery as an institution. Interviews with 21 women and girls who recently escaped the Islamic State, as well as an examination of the group’s official communications, illuminate how the practice has been enshrined in the group’s core tenets.

The trade in Yazidi women and girls has created a persistent infrastructure, with a network of warehouses where the victims are held, viewing rooms where they are inspected and marketed, and a dedicated fleet of buses used to transport them.

A total of 5,270 Yazidis were abducted last year, and at least 3,144 are still being held, according to community leaders. To handle them, the Islamic State has developed a detailed bureaucracy of sex slavery, including sales contracts notarized by the ISIS-run Islamic courts. And the practice has become an established recruiting tool to lure men from deeply conservative Muslim societies, where casual sex is taboo and dating is forbidden.

A growing body of internal policy memos and theological discussions has established guidelines for slavery, including a lengthy how-to manual issued by the Islamic State Research and Fatwa Department just last month. Repeatedly, the ISIS leadership has emphasized a narrow and selective reading of the Quran and other religious rulings to not only justify violence, but also to elevate and celebrate each sexual assault as spiritually beneficial, even virtuous.

“Every time that he came to rape me, he would pray,” said F, a 15-year-old girl who was captured on the shoulder of Mount Sinjar one year ago and was sold to an Iraqi fighter in his 20s. Like some others interviewed by The New York Times, she wanted to be identified only by her first initial because of the shame associated with rape.

“He kept telling me this is ibadah,” she said, using a term from Islamic scripture meaning worship.

“He said that raping me is his prayer to God. I said to him, ‘What you’re doing to me is wrong, and it will not bring you closer to God.’ And he said, ‘No, it’s allowed. It’s halal,’ ” said the teenager, who escaped in April with the help of smugglers after being enslaved for nearly nine months.

Posted in Islam, Rape | Comments Off on ISIS Enshrines a Theology of Rape

Europe Is Doomed

New York Times:

Brussels Police Investigate Reports of Police Orgy Amid Terror Alert

Officials are investigating accounts of an alcohol-fueled “orgy” at a police station one night last month while Brussels, the Belgian capital, was nearly shut down over fears of a copycat terrorist attack…

About 20 soldiers from an infantry unit known as the Ardennes Battalion of Hunters were bivouacked at a police station in Ganshoren, a neighborhood north of Molenbeek. According to the newspaper, after the police station closed for the night at 10 p.m., two policewomen were invited upstairs to the floor where the soldiers were sleeping and had sex with eight of them.

Posted in Sex | Comments Off on Europe Is Doomed

Cleanthony Early of the Knicks Is Robbed and Shot in Queens

Nothing good happens after midnight unless you’re at home.

New York Times: Three cars converged on an Uber cab carrying a New York Knicks forward, Cleanthony Early, home from a strip club in the predawn hours on Wednesday, the authorities said, with masked men jumping out and shooting him in the right knee before escaping with several necklaces and gold caps on his teeth.

Posted in Blacks, Crime | Comments Off on Cleanthony Early of the Knicks Is Robbed and Shot in Queens

Black Violence

The latest tweets:

* Black male gunned his white neighbor down in front of his pregnant girlfriend.

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* Black male calls 911 and confesses to his white mother & girlfriend’s murder.

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* Black female shot woman to death; kept the body on couch as a ‘shrine’.

black2

* Black whale punched officer in the face and slammed her head in glass.

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* Black male arrested for stabbing Chinese woman to death in Queens Park.

black4

* Black mailman tossed hundreds of Christmas packages and letters.

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* Black male arrested for abduction and rape of 14-year-old Missouri girl.

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* Police searching for black male who fondled himself on subway.

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* Police searching for black male who stabbed his brother on Christmas.

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* Garden City Bowl fight leads to six arrests, five injuries, cops say.

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Posted in Blacks, Crime | Comments Off on Black Violence

’55 yr old Betty Jones was gunned down by Chicago police. Her daughter felt THIS was the right thing to wear’

latarsha

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UNDERSTANDING THE MARC GAFNI STORY, PART II

Mark Oppenheimer writes for Tabletmag.com:

Gafni’s also has defenders in the New Age world. My article in the Times quoted Gafni supporters Ken Wilber and Sally Kempton defending him on various grounds having to do with his nature, or his innate energy, which they believe in time he’s learned to control better. There were others I spoke with who believed either that Gafni’s past had been exaggerated, or that he had changed, and often both.

The men’s rights advocate Warren Farrell is in a monthly men’s group with Gafni, author John Gray, and others, and he is the third author on Gray’s planned next sequel to Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus. Farrell is also associated with Gafni’s think tank, the Center for Integral Wisdom. “Marc is able to bring people in, see what their gift is, and then co-create with them,” Farrell said in an interview.

“I’ve looked into it,” Farrell said, when asked about Gafni’s controversial past. “People who know me say the single thing that stands out most with me is word integrity. Marc was very open about telling me and sharing with me what his background was. I did do some research on it. I knew one of the women he was involved with at the time I met him.” Farrell said that while he had only “Marc’s perspective on it,” he had concluded, “What feels pretty accurate to me was that Marc was basically in an Orthodox community and he tends to behave in unorthodox ways … Orthodox communities are pretty sexually repressed, and Marc is not sexually repressed.”

That line of argument—that Gafni suffered from an imperfect fit with the Orthodox Jewish world in which he was raised—was also put forward by Kempton, who writes about Eastern wisdom traditions and yoga, who is revered in certain precincts of the New Age world, and whose endorsement was instrumental in helping Gafni rebuild his reputation after he left Jewish life. She suggested that there was something in the hothouse of boys’ yeshiva education, or in his Jewish “lineage,” that explained why he turned to a 13-year-old for sexual release.

“I recognize,” Kempton said, “that particular heart-to-heart transmission in Marc, that he is able to offer in a large group, and that I think is very connected with one of the Hasidic lineages—I don’t know enough about Jewish lineages to understand it, but it’s a felt sense that I recognize … As you probably know, those highly, incredibly high-energy, smart young yeshiva boys are just filled with energy that spills over in super-, hyper-talking, obviously, in their hyper-sexuality. And I don’t think that in that sense Marc is that different from a lot of young Orthodox guys that I have known who are trying to stay celibate until they got married, and it was killing them.

“So the early relationship that started this whole thing,” Kempton continued, “was with a freshman in high school, he was 19, I think it was his first serious girlfriend. They made out, and he was very persuasive. He is a high-energy person. She was 13 or 14—it is not exactly clear which—but having been a 13-year-old girl with an older boy, I know how 13-year-old girls are kind of polite when somebody is kissing them, and they don’t really love it. And I think a lot of what is called abuse in teenage interactions really comes from girls being over polite and boys thinking that if a girl isn’t kicking them in the balls, that means [it’s okay].”

…Not all of Gafni’s new supporters come from the New Age world. Adam Bellow is an editor at HarperCollins known for working with conservative authors, including Sarah Palin and Ted Cruz. He is now advising Gafni’s think tank, the Center for Integral Wisdom, and helping Gafni plan future publications. He is one of the talking heads in Rise Up, a short movie that seems to be a preview for a planned longer movie for the center. (Motivational speaker Tony Robbins, Whole Foods CEO John Mackey, and Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus author John Gray are also in the five-minute movie.)

Bellow—who in 1993 published David Brock’s The Real Anita Hill—believed that the charges against Mr. Gafni may have been exaggerated over time, in part due to contested, and politicized, definitions of “rape.”

“We obviously cannot know for certain what occurred between two people—as the Hill/Thomas case amply demonstrates, memory is a very tricky thing and an experience that might seem benign or acceptable at one time in a person’s life may look very different in hindsight,” wrote Bellow in an email to me.

“Clearly there is something about Marc that elicits strong reactions, some of them harshly negative, but many others strongly positive. Can all these people who love and admire him really be completely wrong? Are they under some weird kind of spell? I think when you meet him you will see that he has no such magical power of enchantment. If he does, I am certainly immune to it. And yet in your position, I would be reluctant to dismiss the deeply felt and no doubt convincing claims of women who insist they have been harmed by him.”

In the end, Bellow suggested that Gafni was in part a victim of his own unconventional energy. “I can tell you from my own experience that the fire of Eros is a real thing,” Bellow wrote. “In recent years I have myself developed a capacity to experience and channel this energy in a series of tantric relationships. I have no doubt that it is real, that it has been experienced and described by many great poets and mystics, and that Marc himself is a powerful receiver and transmitter of it. I also have no trouble believing that in his early life he had little understanding or control over this powerful gift … Anyone who has gifts of this kind needs to learn to handle them responsibly and ethically. This can take some time, and even in the best of circumstances, people can get burned.”

Gafni has had a repeat gig lecturing at Phillips Exeter Academy, known as Exeter, the elite boarding school in New Hampshire. He is brought to campus by Kathy Brownback, who teaches religion at Exeter and is also affiliated with the Center for Integral Wisdom. She said that she finds Gafni’s writing extremely useful, and has included one of his articles on her syllabi. And according to a blog post she wrote, in 2012 Gafni spoke to students, met with a faculty book group, and led a retreat for the whole Exeter religion department.

“He’s come [to Exeter] two or three times,” Brownback said. “In person, he’s very intense, and he’s got a bit of, some would say more than a bit of, the charismatic evangelical preacher about him. He is really forceful about his ideas—some kids were completely drawn to that, and some kids were put off by it. In person, he’s not as helpful as the ideas are. The ideas really speak to kids.” She uses one Gafni article in her class Interdisciplinary Approaches to Epistemology, where he is taught alongside Plato, Aristotle, and Kant.”

“I have learned a lot from him and talked with him on a bunch of occasions, and been involved with the Center for Integral Wisdom board, so I know his work pretty closely,” Brownback said.

I asked if she worried about the sexual allegations against Gafni.

“I don’t,” Brownback said. “He’s never alone with any kids anyway, so that’s not an issue. It feels to me like there’s not a lot of distortion with him. But I don’t have any direct knowledge of that stuff, so I can’t say.”

Later, Brownback sent a follow-up email in which she wrote, in part: “I know about the stuff on the web, and as I mentioned in my earlier email people at Exeter have sometimes asked me about the web. I’ve talked with Marc and with others involved who have reviewed all the material. I trust them and I trust Marc. I know him well and have full confidence in his integrity.

Later in the email, Brownback wrote: “In a way Marc reminds me of Jacob—not always orthodox (though more than the rest of us), and most assuredly wrestling with God. If his work had ever been thought to be racist, or sexist, or anti-Semitic, or anything else along that line, the criticisms would land completely differently with me. But the attacks on him are of a very different nature, and I am not concerned about them. I trust him and trust the very strong group that he has gathered.”

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