Displaying posts published in

2013

THE BROTHERHOOD-BENGHAZI CONNECTION ON THE GLAZOV GANG

The Brotherhood-Benghazi Connection — on The Glazov Gang
Tiffany Gabbay, Nonie Darwish and Adib Ghobrial zero in on Morsi’s fall — and the revelations it may trigger.
http://frontpagemag.com/2013/frontpagemag-com/obamas-longing-for-the-brotherhood-on-the-glazov-gang/

DANIEL GREENFIELD: THE AMERICAN DEEP STATE

http://sultanknish.blogspot.com/ Few myths are as beloved among liberals as the idea that wars could be put down to a conspiracy of defense contractors. Throw together Haliburton, Northrop Grumman and GE along with some retired generals and you have the makings of your next war. The fabled military-industrial complex was a dimwitted descendant of the WW1 […]

Milbank’s Mountebank Defense of Samantha Power by DIANA WEST

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/milbanks-mountebank-defense-of-samantha-power?f=puball On July 3, Frank Gaffney organized a press conference at the National Press Club to oppose the nomination of Samantha Power to become US Representative to the United Nations. In addition to Gaffney, Lt. Col. Allen West (USA ret.), Amb. Jose Sorzano, Lt. Gen. Jerry Boykin (USA ret.), Mort Klein of the Zionist Organization […]

‘BETRAYED’ Exposing the High Cost of the War on Terror: The Shocking Sacrifice of America’s Special Ops Forces :MAJ. GEN. PAUL E. VALLELY, US ARMY (RET)

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/betrayed-exposing-the-high-cost-of-the-war-on-terror-the-shocking-sacrifice-of-americas-special-ops-forces The Tragedy of Extortion 17 (the demise of Navy SEALs and other Special Ops) On August 06, 2011, Taliban forces ambushed the US Army helicopter CH-47, call name “Extortion 17,” in the Tangi River Valley of Afghanistan. This transport helicopter was moving an American reaction force in a relief operation of US Army Rangers […]

SHARI GOODMAN: THE SEEDS OF JIHAD

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/the-seeds-of-jihad Not a day goes by when I venture out to any local shopping or recreational area when I am not confronted by many Muslim women in their traditional hijabs or on occasion full burkas.  Sometimes they are alone, but more often than not they are in groups and totally oblivious to the non-Muslims within […]

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: PRESIDENT OBAMA’S NEW AMERICAN VOCABULARY ****

http://pjmedia.com/victordavishanson/new-american-vocabulary/?print=1

Of all the many changes that the Obama administration has enacted over the last five years, the least remarked upon are the strange changes in our vocabulary. To fathom the shifting meaning of words [1], here is a guide to the new Obama lexicon.

Affordable Care Act: Mostly unaffordable, uncaring, and inactive [2].

Assault Weapon: Paint your .22 black and add a plastic handle [3].

Associated Press: Leakers who dared to challenge [4] the White House monopoly.

Baby: Punishment for a mistake [5].

Benghazi: We won’t have any more because one video-maker is now in prison [6].

Berlin Wall: Analogous to the Cold War fence [7] that kept out German illegal aliens from entering a free East Berlin.

Biden: Buffoonery after it becomes boring.

Buffett: He alone built that [8].

Carney: Ron Ziegler lives [9]!

Cashing in: A practice finally ended when Hillary Clinton and Lisa Jackson left office.

Coal: A toxic rock that the crazy Chinese believe makes heat [10].

ROBERT COSTA ON REP. TIM COTTON R-ARKANSAS…..SEE NOTE

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/353386/picking-tom-cotton-robert-costa

STAY TUNED TO TIM COTTON ONE OF MY FAVES IN THE GOP LINEUP OF BRIGHT NEW FACES….RSK

On immigration, a freshman speaks for the right flank of the House GOP.

HC-5, a drab, wood-paneled conference room in the Capitol basement, was quiet last Wednesday as Paul Ryan pushed for immigration reform. All eyes were on the Wisconsin Republican as he touted the economic benefits of bringing illegal immigrants into the work force. He assured his colleagues, who were clustered in cliques — moderates here, old bulls there — that stronger border security remains the leadership’s priority.

As Ryan spoke, freshman Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who was behind him in line, listened carefully. He was calm and upright, and unlike a handful of conservative rabble-rousers in the back, he didn’t sigh as Ryan made his points. Instead, he clasped his hands and focused on his coming speech. After Ryan stepped away, Cotton, a 36-year-old former Army officer, moved forward, and soon his clipped drawl filled the room.
The crowd of 200-plus Republicans took notice. From the start, Cotton’s message was a contrast with Ryan’s. He sliced into the Senate’s immigration bill and dismissed the idea of a compromise. He urged Republicans to oppose a conference with the Senate, and warned that any formal negotiations with the upper chamber would lead to disaster. He then turned to Speaker John Boehner, who was standing nearby, and advised him to tread carefully. For a moment, they engaged in a terse back-and-forth.

“We are not worlds apart from the Senate, we are galaxies apart,” Cotton told the speaker. Boehner responded that Cotton shouldn’t worry. “We’re not going to conference until we’re ready,” he said. The speaker coolly explained to Cotton that it’s important to pass legislation that reflects the position of House Republicans.

JOHN FUND: INJUDICIOUS CRIMINAL JUSTICE

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/353410/injudicious-criminal-justice-florida-john-fund The prosecutorial misconduct in Zimmerman’s trial reveals a judicial system run amok. The trial of George Zimmerman should be taught in law schools and elsewhere as a prime example of one of the most mishandled and politically motivated prosecutions in recent U.S. history. If we want to reserve the criminal-justice system for deciding guilt […]

DOROTHY RABINOWITZ ON EDWARD SNOWDEN: A SONG OF VICTIMS

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323734304578541121465226816.html?KEYWORDS=DOROTHY+RABINOWITZ

For the school of believers certain that an all-powerful American government regularly plots to invade their lives and subvert their freedom, these are heady days—or so they seemed. News of data mining looked to be irresistible proof of that faith—their darkest vision of an America at the mercy of a government secretly gathering all sorts of personal information and subverting the Constitution. And there was Edward Snowden, the latest addition to the pantheon of anti-government leakers, releasing a tonnage of classified data about the NSA surveillance programs.

For this he was, not unexpectedly, acclaimed as a hero both in the precincts of the Progressive Left and its anti-terror war warriors, and some quarters of the Libertarian Right—two groups, it has long been obvious, with much in common.

Trouble is, this latest face of self-sacrifice for a higher cause (Snowden has let it be known he considers his life as a free man pretty much over now) hasn’t been greeted with anything remotely like admiration among Americans, other than sympathizers in the aforementioned groups. From all indications, he’s an object of general contempt well deserving of prosecution—another in the line of socially deranged seekers who found the self-definition they long for in their obsessed vision of their government as the central source of evil in the world. It didn’t help that Mr. Snowden’s explanation for what he did came brimming odiously with virtue—he had, he said, decided to leak material because he thought Americans should be informed so that they could debate the questions he raised.

ADMIRAL GARY ROUGHED: HOW WE LOST THE SEAS ****MUST READ REVIEW OF SETH CROPSEY’S “MAYDAY:THE DECLINE OF AMERICAN NAVAL SUPREMACY”

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323368704578595783263740510.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEFTTopOpinion

What will happen should American sea power wane and China replace the U.S. as the guarantor of maritime security?

Adm. Roughead, a former chief of naval operations, is a fellow at the Hoover Institution.

The American strategist Alfred Thayer Mahan (1840-1914) characterized naval power as “more silent than the clash of arms.” His emphasis on the centrality of this “silent” power in world affairs captured the interest of a young visiting lecturer at the Naval War College in the late 1880s. That lecturer, Theodore Roosevelt, would go on to be president and transform the U.S. Navy into the global force that has underpinned international security and prosperity for a century.

The sort of thinking about naval power that informed Mahan’s and Roosevelt’s work now appears anachronistic. When the U.S. Navy is discussed today, the conversation leaps immediately over strategy to commentary on budgets and the number of ships. Those are aspects of sea power, to be sure, but the ability to command the seas is much more than comparisons with other navies and much more complexly tied to our place in the world. Sea power sets conditions for stable world trade, as some 90% of commerce moves on the oceans. The Navy’s persistent presence far from our shores enables effective diplomacy and provides regional influence without the burdens and sensitivity of deploying ground troops on foreign lands.

In “Mayday: The Decline of American Naval Supremacy,” Seth Cropsey, a former deputy undersecretary of the Navy, argues that the end of unchallenged U.S. supremacy at sea may be closer than American policy makers would like to think. In a well-structured narrative, Mr. Cropsey provides a concise and compelling summary of the evolution of American and other great powers’ application of and dependence on sea power. He chronicles the waxing and waning of that power and the global order that has come with our nation’s ability to command the seas.