Rabbi: After Trump at AIPAC, rejecting hate and standing up for our values

Rabbi Jonah Dov Pesner is the Director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism:

Despite the several thousand cheering in the arena, hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Jews across America reject the divisive and hurtful messages that have been central to Mr. Trump’s campaign. As a community, we know what it is to be targeted because of our faith and to be treated unfairly. We know what it is to experience a dearth of compassion.
As this presidential campaign continues, people of good will have a responsibility to resoundingly reject disrespect and xenophobia coming from any candidate. We must lift our voices in support of inclusion, equality and the dignity present within every individual.
When a candidate abandons our shared commitment to the spirit of pluralism that underpins our democracy and engages in hateful rhetoric, we must speak out. Though I am appalled by what I saw and heard at AIPAC, I have the utmost faith in our community’s ability to respond to the moral imperatives our tradition sets out, even in this fraught election season.

Has the rabbi ever read the Torah? It is filled with divisive, hurtful and xenophobic messages. One essential part of Jewish law is separating Jews from gentiles. Is that not divisive and hurtful and xenophobic? The Torah does not know of such moral categories as racist, bigoted, hurtful (when gentiles say things about other gentiles), and xenophobic.

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Ferguson Effect Detractors Are Wrong

Heather Mac Donald writes:

Violent crime in many American cities began rising in the second half of 2014, after two decades of decline. The Major Cities Chiefs Association convened an emergency session in August 2015 to discuss the double-digit surge in violence besetting its member police departments. Homicides at that point were up 76% in Milwaukee, 60% in St. Louis, and 56% in Baltimore, compared to the same period in 2014; the average homicide increase among 35 cities surveyed by the Association was 19%. “Crime is the worst I’ve ever seen it,” said St. Louis Alderman Joe Vacarro in May. July 2015 was the bloodiest month in Baltimore since 1972, with 45 people killed in 30 days. Arrests, summons, and pedestrian stops had dropped in many cities, where data on such police activity were available.

The violence surge continued into fall. Homicides in Baltimore reached their highest per capita rate in the city’s history. In October, Attorney General Loretta Lynch brought together over one hundred police chiefs, mayors, and federal prosecutors in another emergency meeting to strategize over the rising homicide rates. FBI Director James Comey noted in an October speech that “Most of America’s 50 largest cities have seen an increase in homicides and shootings this year, and many of them have seen a huge increase.”

The media confirmed the experience of law enforcement officials. In September, the data blog FiveThirtyEight found a 16% increase in homicide in the 60 largest cities so far that year. The Washington Post found a nearly 17% increase in homicides in 2015 in the 50 top cities, the largest one-year increase since 1993. (Had homicides dropped 17% in one year, mayors and police chiefs across the country would have been popping champagne corks.) The Brennan Center for Justice estimated a nearly 15% increase in homicides in 25 of the 30 largest cities in 2015. This year, many cities are still struggling with crime increases: the number of homicides in Chicago through March 11, for example, had nearly doubled from the same period in 2015, notwithstanding that homicides had already increased nearly 13% in all of 2015. Homicides in Los Angeles were up nearly 28% through March 9 and violent crime up 13%.

I first noted the rising violence in a Wall Street Journal op-ed in May 2015. And having spoken with police officers across the country, I posited a reason for it: officers were backing off of proactive policing in reaction to the hostility they were encountering in urban areas. Officers had told me about being surrounded by angry, jeering crowds who cursed and threw water bottles and rocks at them when they tried to make an arrest. Suspects and bystanders stuck cell phones in officers’ faces and refused to comply with lawful orders. Officers were continuing to answer 911 calls with alacrity, but in that large area of discretionary policing—getting out of a squad car at 1 a.m., for example, to question someone who appears to have a gun or may be casing a target—many officers were deciding to simply drive on by rather than risk a volatile, potentially career-ending confrontation that they were under no obligation to instigate.

I dubbed this latest outbreak of depolicing and the resulting emboldening of criminals the “Ferguson effect,” picking up on a term first used by St. Louis police chief Sam Dotson. The police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., in August 2014 had triggered riots, die-ins, and cop assassinations. It gave rise to the angry Black Lives Matter protest movement, which asserts that racist (insert “white” whenever circumstances allow) cops are engaged in a killing spree against unarmed black men. Activists and academics denounced pedestrian stops and public order policing (otherwise known as Broken Windows policing) as racially biased and oppressive. As a result, officers were doing a lot less of such discretionary enforcement. Arrests in St. Louis city and county, for example, dropped a third after the Brown shooting; misdemeanor drug arrests in Baltimore dropped a third through November 2015.

The relationship between depolicing and crime was hardly a novel discovery; a 2005 University of Washington study of depolicing in Cincinnati following the anti-cop riots of 2001 had found a drop in arrests and a surge in crime in the city’s black areas. And I was hardly the only person to hear from police officers about their reluctance to engage in proactive enforcement. FBI director Comey reported that cops in one big city precinct “described being surrounded by young people with mobile phone cameras held high, taunting them the moment they get out of their cars.” The cops told Comey: “’We feel like we’re under siege and we don’t feel much like getting out of our cars.’” In November 2015, the acting head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Chuck Rosenberg, said his own conversations with police officials had persuaded him that cops were worried about becoming the “next viral video,” because even if they did everything right, they could “still end up on the evening news.”

Despite the ample evidence of officers pulling back from discretionary enforcement, my May op-ed unleashed considerable opposition. The American Society of Criminologists sent out an unprecedented alert to its members in June 2015, asking them to try to disprove the Ferguson effect. The ASC helpfully provided sample rebuttals of my op-ed prepared by The Sentencing Project, an anti-incarceration advocacy group. The ASC worried that my article would somehow impede the push for federal “sentencing reform.”

Criminologists David Pyrooz of the University of Colorado Boulder, Scott Wolfe of the University of South Carolina, and Scott Decker of Arizona State University were among those who responded to the op-ed, publishing a complex econometric analysis of the Ferguson effect. They later defended their analysis on this site against criticism by me and others. Pyrooz and his co-authors modelled monthly rates of change in crime rates in 81 of the 105 largest cities in the country in the twelve months before and after Ferguson. Though the rate of change in violent crime increased ten times after Ferguson, that tenfold increase was not enough to be deemed statistically significant, they say. The authors concluded that “there is no systematic evidence of a Ferguson Effect on aggregate crime rates throughout the large U.S. cities . . . in this study.”

But that 81-city average masked important changes in the nation’s crime picture. Before Ferguson, individual cities’ crime rates were largely moving downwards together; after Ferguson, crime trajectories were all over the map. Crime in some cities was still down; in others, it was way up. Variance in homicide rates increased nearly six times. And the cities with the highest homicide surges were exactly what the Ferguson effect would predict: cities with large black populations, smaller white populations, and already high rates of violent crime.

Recall that the Black Lives Matter movement has sent out a relentless message that cops are the biggest threat facing young black men today. It directs a non-stop flow of racially-tinged animus at the police profession. A typical march that I observed this Fall on Fifth Ave. in New York City featured “Fuck the Police” and “Racism Is the Disease, Revolution Is the Cure” T-shirts, “Stop Police Terror” signs, and “Hey Hey, Ho Ho, Racist Cops Have Got to Go” chants. Such rhetoric has influenced street behavior. During Black Lives Matter demonstrations in Ferguson, Mo., in August 2015, 18-year-old Tyrone Harris opened fire at police officers, and was shot in response. A crowd pelted the cops with frozen water bottles and rocks, wounding three officers, while destroying three police cars and damaging businesses. “We’re ready for what? We’re ready for war,” some protesters chanted. In Cincinnati, a small riot broke out in late July 2015 when the police arrived at a drive-by shooting scene, where a 4-year-old girl had been shot in the head and critically injured. Bystanders loudly cursed at officers who had started arresting suspects at the scene on outstanding warrants.

A recent poll of New York City officers found that active resistance to arrest had increased over the last two years. “There’s a total lack of respect out there for the police,” a female sergeant in New York told me last year, echoing cops across the country. It is in predominantly black neighborhoods where police worry that a videoed use of force will land them on TV in the role of racist cop of the week and where officers tell each other: “‘If you get out of your car, you’re crazy, unless there’s a radio call,’” in the words of a cop in the Los Angeles Police Department’s Newton Division.

In short, it is in high-crime black neighborhoods where the police are backing off the most under the relentless charge that they are racist. And it is in high-crime neighborhoods where a fall-off in proactive policing is going to produce the biggest negative impact. It is in those neighborhoods where informal social controls — above all families — have most broken down and where policing most critically takes up the slack. The per capita rate of shootings, for example, is 81 times higher in predominantly black Brownsville, Brooklyn, than in nearby Bay Ridge. Not surprisingly, the per capita rate of pedestrian stops is also higher in Brownsville than in Bay Ridge—15 times higher—because every shooting will call forth a police response geared to interrupting retaliatory gunfire. There is less public order policing to begin with in low-crime areas, because there is less disorder, but even if police have become equally gun-shy about discretionary enforcement in low-crime areas, the consequences would be less.

The Pyrooz study confirms the relationship between depolicing and an increase in violent crime. Not only have homicides spiked in predominantly black cities, but robberies — the quintessential urban street crime — registered what even the authors deem a statistically significant increase in all 81 cities. Pyrooz and his colleagues struggle mightily against their own findings, however. They attribute the sharp post-Ferguson rise in homicides in predominantly black cities not to depolicing but to the fact that such cities were somehow “primed” for a homicide increase. This is a circular, pseudo-explanation. How do we know that those cities were “primed” for a post-Ferguson crime increase? Because they had such a post-Ferguson crime increase. And why did they have a crime increase? Because they were “primed” for it. They offer a strange analogy to explain their ad hoc “priming” hypothesis: It’s like a “stock portfolio,” they say, “where some holdings increase even in a down market.” But the post-Ferguson crime increases were not random and unpredictable fluctuations among a diversified market basket of data points; they were predictable effects of a racially-driven depolicing phenomenon. If being a high-crime city “primes” that city for further crime increases, the authors need to explain why crime dropped in those same high-crime cities over the previous two decades. (Answer: because of the data-driven proactive policing revolution that started in New York City and spread nationwide.) And if it was obvious that the crime drop in black cities was about to reverse itself—by coincidence at exactly the moment when the Black Lives Matter movement kicked into high gear — the authors might have alerted us to that reversal ahead of time.

The authors claim that their study refutes my Ferguson effect hypothesis because the title of my original Wall Street Journal op-ed was: “The New Nationwide Crime Wave.” Since the post-Ferguson crime increases were not uniform across all 81 of their modelled cities, the title of the op-ed was wrong, they say, and therefore the Ferguson effect hypothesis was also wrong. I did not write the title of my op-ed, consistent with the usual practice, nor did I see it before publication. But in any case, nothing in that first op-ed or in its several follow-ups implied that crime needed to go up uniformly in every American city for there to be a Black Lives Matter-generated pull-back from proactive enforcement and a resulting effect on crime.

Pyrooz, Wolfe, and Decker repeatedly put themselves on the side of “science” against some presumed group of science-deniers. But their analysis of the motivations of people concerned about depolicing is anything but “scientific,” consisting merely of a dizzying set of non sequiturs and ungrounded speculation.

The trio alleges that their critics “want a Ferguson effect to exist” (emphasis in original) and that those critics somehow want a Ferguson effect to exist because they “believe that police are not professional enough, not trained well enough, and too hesitant under pressure to withstand the new reality that their actions can be caught on camera.” Such a belief, they say, is the true “anti-cop” position, compared to the “pro-cop” belief that “a vast majority of officers are well-trained professionals who can withstand pressure from public scrutiny.” The trio then asserts: “If one accepts this premise, we would certainly not expect large groups of officers to de-police and cause higher crime rates in our communities.”

As an initial matter, it is impossible to tell here and elsewhere whether they are arguing that depolicing is not going on, or that it should have no effect on crime rates, or that depolicing would cause higher crime rates but officers are too professional to cut back on discretionary enforcement. In any case, it is an empirical matter whether it is going on or not, regardless of whether acknowledging it is “pro-cop” or “anti-cop.”

Pyrooz, Wolfe, and Decker need to get out there and talk to some officers. “Public scrutiny,” as they call it, is not the problem impeding urban policing today; the problem is hatred, aggression, and sometimes violent resistance to arrest. A police officer in Los Angeles tells me: “Several years ago I could use a reasonable and justified amount of force and not be cursed and jeered at. Now our officers are getting surrounded every time they put handcuffs on someone. The spirit and the rhetoric of this flawed movement is causing more confrontations with police and closing the door on the gains in communication we had made before it began.” Cops are human. It is wholly unrealistic to think that the relentless propaganda campaign against them, accompanied by a volatile, hostile street environment, is not going to lead many to hesitate before initiating encounters that politicians and the press have labelled as racist and that they are under no mandate to undertake.

Moreover, policing is political. The outrage among Black Lives Matter allies at the mere suggestion that the police may be backing off of proactive enforcement is the strangest aspect of this whole episode. A decline in pedestrian stops and Broken Windows policing is exactly what the activists have been demanding. Now they’re getting it. Isn’t that how political pressure is supposed to work?

The authors suggest that “we should spend more time worrying about the legitimacy crisis rather than a Ferguson effect on crime.” But it is the falsehoods about a police reign of terror spread by the Black Lives Matter movement that has brought on that “legitimacy crisis.” Since Wolfe, Decker, and Pyrooz pride themselves on their fealty to “science,” perhaps they could “scientifically” analyse police shootings in the context of crime. They would discover that police shootings of blacks are lower than what black violent crime rates would predict. Police shootings constitute a much lower share of black homicide deaths than of white and Hispanic homicide deaths. And police officers are two and a half times more likely to be fatally shot by a black man than a black man is to be fatally shot by a cop.

The three criminologists’ final argument against the Ferguson effect is the least “scientific” of all. They accuse their critics of “threatening people with the prospect that violent crime will increase if they protest police behaviours,” and of thereby implying that “the police should not be accountable for their behaviour.” No one is “threatening people with the prospect” of a violent crime increase; the violent crime increase was well underway before anyone noticed it and hypothesized a reason. It is a question of fact whether violent crime is rising in urban areas, regardless of any untoward implications the authors think such a fact would have for the Black Lives Matter movement. And no one is saying that “the police should not be accountable for their behaviour.” What analysts such as myself are saying is that the current frenzy of cop hatred is affecting proactive policing. If that effect somehow delegitimates the Black Lives Matter movement in the eyes of Pyrooz and his colleagues, so be it. “Science” is silent on such a matter.

 

Heather Mac Donald is the Thomas W. Smith fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the author of the forthcoming The War on Cops.

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The West, In the Conservatory, With A Shotgun In Its Mouth

The Journal of American Greatness:

How many times since 9/11 has some pundit—some of them very learned and experienced—asserted “Here, finally, is the wakeup call that will change everything”? The calls keep coming and no one ever wakes up.

Why not? The reasons are legion. For the moment, let’s try to understand just one. Decades of self-hating propaganda have been not merely internalized but in a very real sense have replaced religion as a source of unquestionable faith. There are many sources for this self-hatred. Probably the most significant is what Peter Brimelow calls “Hitler’s Revenge.” The West emerged from World War II less with a triumphant sense of its own victory (a sizeable portion of the conflict was after all intra-Western and one of the victors was non-Western, over a Western power) than with a tremendous sense of guilt. One part of the West had perpetrated the Holocaust while another came to feel that it could have stopped it but didn’t.

In his memorable preface to Natural Right and History, Leo Strauss writes of the Allied victory and subsequent German intellectual victory that “It would not be first time that a nation defeated on the battlefield, and as it were, annihilated as a political being, has deprived its conquerors of the most sublime fruit of victory by imposing on them the yoke of its own thought.” (The other times Strauss has in mind, we speculate, would include the Romans and the Greeks, the Romans and the Jews, and the rest of Europe and Revolutionary France.)

No doubt German nihilism is a contributor to our present malaise. We wish to focus here on another, not unrelated, German import.

The left, in the aggregate and within its various subdivisions, has perfected the art of projecting its own internal conflicts outward. This has the double benefit (for them) of avoiding civil war while enhancing in-group cohesion by focusing hostile energy on an external enemy. As Steve Sailer has put it, whatever wounds the left inflicts on itself or on the rest of us are “the fault of the traditional white male power structure and people in Peoria better feel guilty about it, even if they are not exactly sure what they did.”

Something similar resulted from World War II. David Goldman has written than Angela Merkel’s insistence on welcoming millions more “refugees” even after her initial hospitality has proved a disaster to her country, coupled with her fellow Germans’ unwillingness to stop her, amounts to a German death wish. Germany wishes to die because it thinks it deserves to die.

Why do we wish to die? Slavery, of course. Jim Crow. The Indians. Japanese internment. Colonialism. There is no shortage of reasons, and the rest of the West shares in all of them or at least in something like some of them. We are all guilty and so we feel in some subconscious way that we deserve to die. It’s surely odd that nations which liberated Nazi camps feel particular guilt about the Holocaust. But as noted, the hectoring that we could have done more and didn’t has taken its toll and now we feel that we are only a few rungs below the Germans on the guilt ladder. Besides, from the 30,000 foot level, it’s the West itself that’s guilty; intra-Western apportionment of degrees of guilt is a trivial detail.

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Some people aren’t very spiritual

I was telling a friend about all the wonderful things God was doing in my life and he said, “Can you get sex with desirable women?”

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How Are You Enjoying The Vibrancy?

CeahxzNWEAAn1wT

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WP: Cruz: National Enquirer story is ‘garbage’ from ‘Donald Trump and his henchmen’

I think the Washington Post is the first MSM outlet to cover this story.

David Weigel writes: OSHKOSH, Wis. – Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) blamed “Donald Trump and his henchmen” for planting a National Enquirer story that accused him of extramarital affairs. Vehemently denying the story as “garbage” and “complete and utter lies,” the Republican presidential hopeful took his longest step yet toward refusing to back Trump if he won the party’s nomination…

On Friday, after a crowded rally at a parking cone factory here, and after attacking Trump from the stage for his tweets, Cruz himself brought up the Enquirer’s story that accused the senator of having had five mistresses – a subject some of the reporters covering him were loath to even raise. “It became clear as the campaign went on that Donald was a whole lot of sizzle without any substance,” said Cruz. “When he’s scared, when he’s losing, his first and natural resort is to go to sleaze and to go to slime.”

That was how Cruz introduced the subject of the Enquirer story, which alleged that the candidate had carried out affairs with five women – women who bloggers and political activists were starting to “identify” as prominent political pundits. The story had bubbled up on social media, with the hashtag #TedCruzSexScandal appearing in tweets that asked reporters to follow the story.

The Post has not been able to confirm any of the allegations made by the Enquirer…

hen Cruz opened the floor to questions, each was about the allegations. First, addressing the inevitable “pledge” to back Trump if he won, Cruz said that he didn’t “make a habit” of supporting people who smeared his family. Then a local reporter seemed to irritate Cruz by asking if both he and Trump were “childish” and degrading the tone of the campaign.

“Sir, let’s be clear,” said Cruz. “One person has been childish, and that’s been Donald Trump.”

“I’m watching it every day,” said the reporter. “Both of you are going back and forth with this childish stuff.”

“Sir, I understand that the media the game wants to play is when Donald attacks my family to say that everyone is guilty,” said Cruz. “I have never attacked Donald’s family. I do not intend to. Indeed, when Donald sent a second tweet attacking my wife, I responded by saying ‘Donald, real men don’t attack women. Your wife is lovely.’ So not only did I not attack his wife, I praised his wife. Heidi is the love of my life. I’m sorry, sir, if you believe that defending your wife and defending your family is childish. But it is not.”

Cruz tried to wrestle the subject back to Trump’s refusal to debate him, accusing him of “hiding in Trump Tower” instead of campaigning in Wisconsin. (Indeed, on March 29, Trump will make his first public appearance of any kind since his March 21 speech to the American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee.)

“He sits in Trump Tower and sends tweets late at night,” said Cruz. “We need a president who is fighting for the people of America and not battling his personal demons on Twitter.”

Cruz turned and left the news conference, ignoring a shouted question that seemed to say everything about what Trump had done to the campaign’s tone.

“Senator Cruz, have you been faithful to your wife?”

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For Purim, French Jew goes to synagogue dressed as jihadist

AFP: A 40-year-old Jewish man tempted fate by walking into a Paris synagogue dressed as a jihadist, carrying a fake rifle and shouting “Allahu Akbar”, a police source said Friday.

For the soldiers guarding the Habad Loubavitch synagogue in Vincennes in southeastern Paris it came as “a surprise”, was the deadpan verdict of the police source.

The incident happened on Thursday evening when members of the synagogue were celebrating the festival of Purim, during which followers often dress up in costumes and give each other presents.

The source said the man arrived wearing long North African robes, carrying a fake Kalashnikov and crying “Allahu akbar”, Arabic for “God is greatest”.

“It created a certain emotion among the soldiers,” the source said.

The initial shock passed quickly when members of the synagogue realised they knew the man, and that it was only a joke.

He was nonetheless ordered to present himself at his local police station on Friday.

Soldiers have been posted outside many Jewish buildings and other sensitive locations around France in the wake of deadly jihadist attacks last year.

Purim celebrates a story from Hebrew scripture in which the Jews of the Persian empire were rescued from annihilation. Every year, Jews celebrate by giving each other presents and wearing costumes.

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Who Runs This Town?

Comment: “You know who runs this town, don’t you?”
“The Jews?”
“The gay Jews!”

Gary Shandling’s interview with Ricky Gervais is something special. I think that after that they cancelled Ricky’s interview show.

* Shandling was a definite contender to succeed Johnny Carson at the Tonight show, having been a popular guest host during the Carson years, so he was hardly an exotic talent.

I don’t think Shandling had the durability of a Leno to do 5 shows per week for decades. So it was probably wise of him to go the weekly sitcom rather than daily talkshow route. As it was, Shandling seemed pretty worn out by his six years doing “Larry Sanders.”

Part of the high regard he was held in by the other pros was related to how it didn’t come easy for him.

* I come from a family full of good-looking people. One kid in our family started modeling at 5 years old. We used to marvel at the fact that we didn’t have any “clunkers.”

Then a couple of my cousins moved out of state, and married some really shitty looking men. They could marry anyone they wanted. They picked inbred-looking losers. Result was some depressingly ugly babies, who are growing into offensive looking children. We were hoping my cousin’s genes would overwhelm the ugly spouse’s genes, but no such luck! One of my cousins looked just like Liv Tyler, I still can’t believe her husbands genes overruled hers. But they did.

They keep posting pictures of their ugly dullard-looking children on Facebook, and it bums me out every time. I guess I’m just spoiled, but I despise looking at people’s ugly kids, and being expected to act as if they don’t repel me. I’m not exaggerating. These kids are fucking ugly. If you woke up in the middle of the night, and saw one of them standing at the foot of your bed, you’d hit the fucking ceiling.

Every time my cousins post yet another fucking Facebook photo of their genetic malapropisms, I want to say, “Nobody forced you to marry that ugly man, and now you have ugly kids, and you want me to pretend they’re NOT so you’re not constantly reminded of your stupid ass mistake!”

Anyway, there’s plenty of ugly kids around, and if you “can’t see it,” you’re neurotic.

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Trump v Cruz

Comments:

* Trump’s reaction isn’t part of any strategy. It’s an alpha male gut reflex with the intention of smacking Cruz right back down into beta malehood. Trump is saying, ‘I have the supermodel wife and you don’t because I’m the higher quality male.’

* The thing about Cruz’ dear little wife, guys, is, she isn’t a dear little wife. She’s a traitorous architect of the North American Union. I’m stunned that anyone here who’s not an open borders cuck would be doing anything but cheering to see someone tear her a new one.

* As for Trump, he is right that Cruz’s wife is … problematic. As a big time Goldman Sachs VP she was Hillary! right down to the cattle futures to Cruz’s Bill Clinton. In other words, the very model of the modern power couple corruption. See Andrea Mitchell and Alan “Animal Spirits” Greenspan, or Julie Chen and Les Moonves, etc. The problem with power couples is that it makes graft and corruption so easy. No need to buy the Senator. Just buy his wife.

Melania Trump being mere arm candy and a trophy wife is a better deal for the American Aristocracy. Less covert, back-door corruption. It it is done, it will be done out in the open. Not by bribing the wife (see Michelle Obama as University of Chicago’s Medical Center “advisor” at $300K a year while Obama was a Senator — position abolished when he became President and she moved to DC).

As for the measure of each man, well men are judged by men and women alike on the quality of the woman they marry. Melania Trump is real life supermodel, so Trump has achieved Tom Brady levels of Alphadom. Cruz’s wife is … a Goldman Sachs VP and looks it. A junior Hillary. Which does not reflect well on the Alphadom of Cruz.

Plenty of supremely ugly men do very well with women: Rick Ocasek, Steven Tyler, Mick Jagger, and Tom Petty all come to mind. Fame, charisma, charm, and sheer talent that has people worshiping an ugly man on stage can do the trick nicely. Ted Cruz is none of that, and yes that matters. To both men and women who judge a man by the quality of the woman to whom he is married.

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What Is Pol/Pos/Poz?

Comment: pol refers to 4chan.org/pol and 8ch.net/pol, the latter being more nazi than the former. As you would expect, pol has also come to refer to the people, ideas, and trolling activity common on those boards.

pos = piece of shit

poz = HIV positive, usually with an implication that 1) “I’m alright with that,” 2) “I’m sexually active anyway,” and 3) “I’m alright with *that*” By implication, it refers also to the cultural marxist ideology which caused AIDS and to those people who hold that cultural marxist ideology. It’s quite clever, actually, since cultural marxism is the AIDS of society. The latter, metaphorical, definition is the more common one by far in radical right discourse. This one, I believe, originates at mpcdot.com. Here is a thread where they discuss its meaning.

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