Another Poverty-Stricken Terrorist, Lashing Out at the Hopelessness of Life By David French —

Here’s the sad and desperate tale of Nadir Soofi, one of two terrorists killed in Garland, Texas, before he could launch a Charlie Hebdo-style massacre:

Soofi studied at the $20,000-a-year International School of Islamabad from 1992 to 1998, where contemporaries said he was funny, popular and charming and showed no inclination towards extremism.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, one told AFP Soofi was “quite suave and charismatic” and something of a “ladies’ man” as a student . . . Soofi’s mother taught art at the heavily-guarded school, which is popular with diplomats and rich Pakistanis, several of his contemporaries said.

He took part in theatre productions, and another schoolmate said Soofi starred as the lead in “Bye Bye Birdie”, a musical inspired by Elvis Presley, transforming him from a sweet, shy boy into “a confident heartthrob”.

Rain on Putin’s Parade Behind his Push to make May 9 a Glorious National Holiday is an Effort to Whitewash Atrocities of the Soviet Era. By Marion Smith

On Saturday, 15,000 Russian troops, 200 tanks and trucks, and 150 airplanes and helicopters will parade through Red Square in the largest military spectacle held in Moscow since the collapse of the USSR. Songs will be sung. Speeches will be made. New weapons will be unveiled. Clouds will even be seeded with silver iodide to prevent rain. All of Russia will stop for a day to remember the victory of Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union over Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich, 70 years ago to the day.

Russian president Vladimir Putin’s historic spectacle will be the latest in a long line of cynical and systematic attempts by the Kremlin to minimize the horrors of Soviet Communism — and the decades of occupation it imposed on millions of human beings throughout Europe and Eurasia. In glorifying the totalitarian rule of the Soviet era, it is also a not-too-subtle effort to justify the cruel realities of Putin’s Russia today.

America’s Politicized Tax Enforcement Is a Harbinger of Decline : Victor Davis Hanson

Why did Rome and Byzantium fall apart after centuries of success? What causes civilizations to collapse, from a dysfunctional fourth-century-B.C. Athens to contemporary bankrupt Greece?

The answer is usually not enemies at the gates, but the pathologies inside them.

What ruins societies is well known: too much consumption and not enough production, a debased currency, and endemic corruption.

Americans currently deal with all those symptoms. But two more fundamental causes for decline are even more frightening: an unwillingness to pay taxes and the end of the rule of law.

Al Sharpton is again prominently in the news, blaming various groups for the Baltimore unrest. But Sharpton currently owes the U.S. government more than $3 million in back taxes, according to reports. His excuses have ranged from insufficient funds to pay them to sloppy record-keeping and mysterious fires.

Dempsey: Global Security ‘as Uncertain as I’ve Seen in 40 Years’ By Bridget Johnson

President Obama’s outgoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff warned Congress today that the global security environment “is as uncertain as I’ve seen in 40 years of service.”

Appearing before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense for the last time, Gen. Martin Dempsey added that “we are at a point where our global aspirations are exceeding our available resources.”

“We’ve heard the Congress of the United States loud and clear that we have to become more efficient and we have to do the rigorous strategic thinking to determine the minimum essential requirements that we believe — that is to say, the uniform military — are essential to protect our national interests across the globe,” he said, testifying for a budget proposal that “represents a responsible combination of capability, capacity and readiness. But we are at the bottom edge of our manageable risk in achieving and fulfilling our national security strategy, as it is currently designed.”

WORM IN THE BIG APPLE

De Blasio Gearing Up to Release Nationwide ‘Progressive Agenda’ By Bridget Johnson

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said he’s borrowing from the tactics of Newt Gingrich in putting forward a left-wing version of the Contract with America: The Progressive Agenda.It will be unveiled on May 12 on the steps of the Capitol with lawmakers at his side from the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

“The bottom line here is that we are in a moment of history where we need to hear a clear vision for addressing the economic reality. A number of us have put together such a vision that’s going to go right at the question of income and equality, which I think is the crisis of our times,” de Blasio told MSNBC this morning, adding the plan will include “raising the minimum wage, providing the kinds of benefits families need like paid sick leave that are rare for many families.”

Netanyahu Squeaks Through with Tiny Coalition By P. David Hornik

Last March 17th, Benjamin Netanyahu won big in the Israeli elections. His own right-of-center Likud Party came out well ahead of the pack with 30 Knesset seats (out of 120). The right-wing/religious bloc of parties came out with 67, compared to 40 seats for the left-wing parties (an Arab party that is unfriendly to Israel as a Jewish state rounded it out with 13 seats).

Yet, on Wednesday night, after 42 days of grueling coalition negotiations, Netanyahu squeaked through two hours before an extended deadline with a 61-member coalition — that is, razor-thin and the smallest possible.

How did it happen?

For one thing, reportedly, Netanyahu offered a place in the coalition to his opposite number Isaac Herzog, leader of the center-left Zionist Union that came in second in the elections with 24 seats, and was rebuffed.

History-in-the-Making-Saudi-Airliner-Lands-in-Israel-for-Maintenance

The arrival of jumbo jet with the logo “Saudia” to Ben-Gurion Airport overnight Tuesday generated a stir in the Israeli media on Wednesday after surprised airport workers spotted the plane.

The plane in question, an Airbus A330-300 devoid of passengers, arrived from Brussels to Tel Aviv for routine maintenance work with the Bedek Aviation Company, a subsidiary of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), officials said. A European client that works with Bedek for plane maintenance happens to lease its jets to various corporations, including Saudia, they explained.

“IAI confirmed that the Airbus came to IAI facilities in order to have maintenance work done due to an agreement that IAI has with a European company that leases the plane to Saudi Arabia,” a spokeswoman for IAI told The Jerusalem Post.

Typically, routine maintenance on such planes takes about a few weeks, officials said.

MY SAY: MUSIC HATH CHARMS TO SOOTHE THE NEWS JUNKIE

With apologies to William Congreve (24 January 1670 – 19 January 1729)who wrote “Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast”…..

Last night I went to the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, in New York City. The occasion was a performance of the Bach Mass in B Minor, which is, to my mind, the most glorious and magnificent music ever composed- and that tops a list of many favorites. There were no savage breasts in the audience which was enthralled and respectful and enthusiastic from the minute the baton was raised to the coda two and a half hours later, despite sitting on hard wooden pews.

The Sacred Music in a Sacred Space, of the Church of Saint Ignatius Loyola, is directed by the conductor, composer and organist K.Scott Warren with outstanding orchestra and chorus and solo performers.

He is also chief Organist and Choirmaster at Congregation Emanuel in New York and the Shabbat, and Holy Day servies which include choral performances that are webcast year round. Also, the superb bass Enrico Lagasca hails from the Philippines, and among his other operatic and oratorio performances has toured internationally with Israel Philharmonic Orchestra.

Below the main level of the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, on Park Avenue and 84th Street, lies Wallace Hall, one of Manhattan’s most beautiful and versatile rental spaces. Or Zarua, a conservative synagogue nearby uses Wallace Hall for high attendance services on Rosh Ha-Shana and Yom Kippur.

New York, New York it’s a wonderful town.

‘I Gotta Pay Our Bills’ Hillary and Bill Clinton Appear Oblivious to the Power of Modern Media. Daniel Henninger

Staring at identical Rorschach blots of the Clintons’ now-famous foundation, their 24-karat speeches, the missing emails and nonstop nonanswers about all of it, Republicans and Democrats come to separate conclusions.

Republicans keep asking: Will she get away with it? Democrats alter one word in this question: Will she get by with it? Conservatives think the liberal media will cover for Hillary. Liberals expect the Clinton machine will beat the rap, again.

Some bipartisan advice for aging elephants and donkeys: You’re not in 1993 anymore.

The Snowden Blindfold Act Congress Moves to Weaken Antiterror Surveillance While France Expands It.

At least one of the gunmen who shot up a Texas free speech event on Sunday was known to the FBI as a potentially violent radical and was convicted in 2011 on a terror-related charge. The Islamic State claimed credit for this domestic attack, albeit an unproven connection. So it is strange that Congress is moving to weaken U.S. surveillance defenses against the likes of shooters Elton Simpson and Nadir Soofi.

Two years after the leaks from Edward Snowden’s stolen dossier, a liberal-conservative coalition is close to passing a bill that would curtail the programs the National Security Agency has employed in some form for two decades. Adding to this political strangeness, France of all places is on the verge of modernizing and expanding its own surveillance capabilities for the era of burner cell phones, encrypted emails and mass online jihadist propaganda.