Welcome to Medary.com Saturday, November 23 2024 @ 12:05 PM CST

Ho. Lee. Crap. ("Gunwalker" Scandal)

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 2,328
If you are not familiar with the term "Gunwalker," you will be.

It is entirely possible that it will enter the American and world political lexicon in the same category as "Watergate." Except, of course, that people actually died as a result of "Operation Fast and Furious."

Gunwalker: The ATF’s Kenneth Melson Blows the Whistle on the Justice Department

What did the Attorney General know, and when did he know it.

How high did this go?

What did the President know, and when did he know it?

A Whip, If You Can Keep It

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,669
The Whip makes a surprise appearance, on a whim.

(The post title is of course a play on Benjamin Franklin's comment to a passing woman in Philadelphia in 1789 who inquired of the elderly statesman "Well, Doctor, what have we got—a Republic or a Monarchy?" Franklin replied "A Republic, if you can keep it.")

The term "republic" is not synonymous with "democracy." In fact, the American Founders were deeply distrustful of a pure democracy--nearly as distrustful of that form of government as they were of monarchy. They were concerned with the tyranny of the majority as they were concerned with the tyranny of a single man, or any group. This was the uniquely American innovation: a form of government so divided that no single institution was entrusted with the power to become tyrannical (the term "tyranny" meaning government by a person or group which is unconstrained by any law--in essence, the modern word for a tyranny is "totalitarian.")

The beneficence or cruelty of a totalitarian government is not the identifying feature of a tyranny--it is simply the disregard for the rule of law which marks a government as being tyrannical.

The problem with kindly tyrannies is that they can turn cruel upon--literally--a whim.

What kind of whim, you ask?

A SWAT team can break down a harmless elderly couple's front door and terrorize them for hours, simply upon the say-so of some shady underworld informant who gave the police the wrong address--and the SWAT team not only is not constrained to obtain a search warrant, the members of the SWAT team and the officials overseeing the team and ordering the lawless attack are never punished or disciplined effectively for the error.

That kind of whim.

The Whip:

A Father's Fiery Rage Against the Cold Machine--The family law system performed exactly as intended—and a despairing father set himself aflame.Tragedy? Or tyranny?

Politics Versus Reality -- The irreplacable Thomas Sowell:
It is hard to understand politics if you are hung up on reality. Politicians leave reality to others. What matters in politics is what you can get the voters to believe, whether it bears any resemblance to reality or not.

Not only among politicians, but also among much of the media, and even among some of the public, the quest is not for truth about reality but for talking points that fit a vision or advance an agenda. Some seem to see it as a personal contest about who is best at fencing with words.

Give Peace a Chance: Why does the media keep downplaying the violence at left-wing protests?

Pursuing Liberty -- from author Sarah Hoyt. I haven't read one of her books yet, but she just won an award for her latest. She blogs at Classical Values among other places. I may have to give her fiction work a look.
The French – and most other revolutionaries – fought for ideals of an abstract and high nature “Liberte, fraternite, egalite.” It doesn’t seem to have occurred to any of them – Lafayette included – that by mandating fraternite and egalite they were denying the liberte. And the fraternity and equality one being a lofty feeling, and the other an absolute measurement always prone to more and finer adjustment, both could be used as levers for the new upper classes to get more and more tyrannical power, until you could be executed as an “aristo” because you knew how to read or you wore glasses. Or you had one plate more than your destitute neighbor.

Americans, on the other hand, based their revolution on life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. You are free to pursue happiness. You have equality under the law on your right to pursue it.

No one guarantees you will catch it or that you’ll be happy when you do it. Well, at least we didn’t use to. In the twentieth century the statist excesses have infected even the US, and we’ve regulated more and more how equal you have to be and how much happiness you can attain and how much is “good for you.” This is a wrong path.

The more people know about science, the less they believe in global warming. -- The Instapundit, Glenn Reynolds, links to an academic study funded by the National Science Foundation, the lead author of which is from the Yale Law School. The conclusion does not "support the narrative" that "the science is settled."

The riddle of the missing US ambassador as London toasts Ronald Reagan centenary -- When all you see is politics, then everything becomes fair game. No behavior is outré, if it conforms to the appropriate political narrative. You can snub, shout down, or beat down your political opponents with wild abandon. Because they're ignorant, wrong and stupid. And you're intelligent, right, and care more than they do. Because "good guys" are never tyrants--at least in their own minds. They always have good and adequate reasons for the horrible things that they do.

If you don’t like the Casey Anthony verdict look in the mirror -- This will be the only mention of this case which will ever appear here at Medary. Because it simply isn't that important in the greater scheme of things. This case was, more than anything else, fodder to feed the insatiable 24/7 cable news channels' ratings. Outside its immediate locale, and outside the family involved, it has no value other than lurid, prurient, semi-pornographic emotional stimulation.

Obama really might have made it worse -- $278,000 per job created by the "Stimulus?" Yeah, I could have done better. Nearly anyone could have done better. But then, Obama has never spent a day working for a private company, has he?

The Difference Between Retaliation and Nation Building: About 10 Years

OK, I'm done here. I have to go pour off the homebrew into the secondary fermentation carboys. And see about the service indicator thingie on the car. And other stuff. That darn reality, you know.

The 2011 Danube River Cruise, part 4 of 4

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 7,895
The Legendary Danube, May 26-June 8, 2011, AMA Waterways Amadolce

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Four

(Remember to click "read more" if you're looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

June 5 (Sunday, Day 11, Budapest, Hungary, 182 forint to the dollar) -

Hungarian Parliament Building. Very spikey.

We cruised into Budapest in the morning and everyone went to the skydeck to see Budapest’s beautiful architecture. Budapest, population 2 million, used to be two cities, Buda (the hilly side) and Pest (the flat side), separated by the Danube. So, it really is ON the Danube and seeing it from a ship is quite a neat experience. We docked literally across the Danube from the Budapest Intercontinental which would be our hotel for our final two nights in Budapest.

More after the jump . . .

Happy Independence Day!

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 4,565

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.

That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.

Oh, and in case you'd like to know:

Obama’s Economists: ‘Stimulus’ Has Cost $278,000 per Job

The 2011 Danube River Cruise, part 3 of 4

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,799
The Legendary Danube, May 26-June 8, 2011, AMA Waterways Amadolce

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Three

(Remember to click "read more" if you're looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

June 4 (Saturday, Day 10, Vienna, Austria) -

Krems, in passing

Before we jump into Vienna, one picture of a town along the way from Melk to Vienna--Krems.

More after the jump . . .

The 2011 Danube River Cruise, part 2 of 4

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 5,333
The Legendary Danube, May 26-June 8, 2011, AMA Waterways Amadolce

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part Two

(Remember to click "read more" if you're looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

June 1 (Wednesday, Day 7, Regensburg, Germany) -

We woke up to rain and drizzle and mid-50 temps. We went on the 90-minute walking tour (tours are included in the cruise price). Pope Benedict XVI is from Regensburg and we saw the house that Oscar Schindler lived in for four years after World War II. We saw a bunch of other old stuff, too, including lots of towers since this town wasn’t hurt by World War II and a lot of it dates back to the 1100s.

More after the jump . . .

The 2011 Danube River Cruise, part 1 of 4

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 5,541
The Legendary Danube, May 26-June 8, 2011, AMA Waterways Amadolce

Text by Snookums, Pictures by Filbert

Part One

(Remember to click "read more" if you're looking at this from the main medary.com page to get the whole article!)

May 26 (Thursday, Day 1, Flying to Nuremberg, Germany) -

Over the top of the world

Our 1:30 PM flight to Chicago was on time and gave us just enough time to get to the Lufthansa gate while the flight was boarding. It was a completely full flight so we didn’t have an empty seat between us in economy class. Oh well. Lufthansa was generous with its beverages and Filbert enjoyed red wine throughout the flight. Our dinner choices were either Indian vegetarian or chicken. We each chose the chicken. It wasn’t too bad for airplane food and consisted of chicken and rice, a cold vegetable salad, a roll and a small brownie. The movies were the “Green Hornet” and “The Tourist” and since Snookums had no interest in either of them she tried to sleep.

More after the jump . . .

"The Undefeated" -- A Review

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 3,888
I had the opportunity tonight to watch Steve Bannon's new film The Undefeated chronicling the political career of Sarah Palin. My wife and I attended our local AMC theater, where a small group--a little over two dozen--activists and interested parties had been gathered on short notice to view a rough cut of the movie, which is coming out on July 15th.

(more after the jump)

The low, sloping foreheads of Missouri

  • Contributed by:
  • Views: 2,510
According to New York Times reporter David Carr, whose Midtown elitist forehead seems to be none too vertical either, since we're reduced to throwing around juvenile insults. The difference being of course that I've actually been to New York City.

Of course, he said it on something called HBO, which the rubes in Flyoverland do not have the technology (or wit) to receive, so all is well.

At least the guy has the remaining shred of decency to seem to realize what he said--after he reveals what he thinks, of course. Video after the fold . . .

Egregious comment about Bill Maher's sloping forehead added just for enhanced giggles when watching the below video. You could ski off of that thing.