Sunday, February 28, 2021
Link Dump 3: The Conclusion of a Trilogy!
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Link Dump 2: Electric Boogaloo
I'm traveling this weekend to pick up two cats MamaGeek and I adopted, so behold: more links!
The False and Exaggerated Claims Still Being Spread About the Capitol Riot,
by Glenn Greenwald
The January 6 Capitol Riot was bad. But as Greenwald explains, it was not an "armed insurrection," the rioters didn't beat a cop to death with a fire extinguisher, and they didn't plan ahead of time to take lawmakers hostage. The left is spreading lies to justify unconstitutional crack downs on their political opponents. Don't let them get away with their BS.
Orwell’s Cookbook,
by Rod Dreher
Bon Appetit and its related website Epicurious are editing articles and recipes in their archives to suit the tastes of exquisitely sensitive SJW's by editing out suddenly "bigoted" words like "exotic" or "ethnic". Dreher points out correctly that altering records like this makes it difficult for scholars of social history to do their jobs. (I would add that it also conveniently allows media companies to escape accountability for uncomfortable aspects of their pasts.)
FISKING THE WAPO EDITOR WHO IS SAD HE DOESN’T GET TO ACT LIKE THE MAFIA ANYMORE, by Larry Correia
I highly recommend Larry's fisks. They're always way funnier than mine. Here, he takes down journalists in the mainstream media for being ridiculously biased -- and, of course, really effing bad at their jobs.
This is an excellent blog post that chides establishment cons like Jonah Goldberg for obsessing over the faults of the Trumpian wing of the GOP in the face of the left's active attempts to destroy our country. As James Lindsay has tried to emphasize over and over again, the current situation is not normal. If we continue to abide by Marquess of Queensberry rules in the vain hope that the folks over at ABC/NBC/CNN/DNC will one day some day actually start to like us, we will be squashed.
How Identity Politics Revives Slaveholders’ Argument For Group Rights,
by Katharine Gorka
This article brings up a fantastic point: southern slave holders adopted the same historicist critique of our classically liberal founding principles that is now being deployed by the totalitarian left. That said leftists aren't disturbed about that connection says quite a bit about their diabolical designs.
COVID Rules Force Us To Trade Substance For Sterility,
And Will Change Our Culture Forever,
by Elle Reynolds
"There are things in life worth risking our safety for. Those judgments will and should be different for different people — but valuing security above all else can trick us into forgetting what those things are. And if you have nothing in your life for which you would risk your comfort and safety, for what are you truly living?" Precisely the same point I've been trying to make!
Sunday, February 14, 2021
Link Dump Extraordinaire!
Yes, I know: I need to get back to writing my long think pieces. Soon, guys! Soon.
The Outrageous, Totalitarian, Aggressively Stupid Left
Our Animal Farm, by Victor Davis Hanson
The left was all for free speech when it wasn't in charge. But now that leftists have captured the commanding heights of our culture? Their supposed liberal values, Hanson observes, have been thrown out the window for the sake of maintaining their power. They are pigs dressing in man's clothes.
The N-word as slur vs. the N-word as a sequence of sounds, by John McWhorter
McWhorter comments on the latest firing at the New York Times, noting the lurking insulting assumption beneath the "controversy": that black people are very, very dim and therefore can't understand the difference between usage and reference.
Andrea, Jennifer, and the 2 Williams, by Ann Althouse
In which Althouse hilariously spanks Andrea Mitchell and Jennifer Rubin for being morons who don't understand literary allusions. But remember, readers: RuBiN aNd MiTcHeLl ArE mOrE eLiTe ThAn YoU aNd ClEaRlY kNoW bEtTeR.
Impeachment Nonsense
WATCH: Trump Legal Team Obliterates Dems’ Impeachment Case With Videos Of Their Violent Rhetoric
The ‘Sound And Fury’ Of Trump’s Impeachment Trial Signifies Something Sinister For America, by John Daniel Davidson
The links above argue (correctly) that the House impeachment managers' case against Trump in their now-concluded show trial relied on emotional reasoning, outright lies, and politically-motivated hypocrisy -- not on recognized legal or moral standards. Those of us who operate on principle, on the other hand, know the truth: as I pointed out several posts ago, on the day of the riot, Trump urged rally-goers to march to the Capitol and peacefully make their grievances known. That's the one fact that's relevant in this entire sordid affair, and it absolutely exonerates Trump. Period. End of discussion. All else is simply an evil attempt to tar half the country with the "violent traitor" brush in order to justify unprecedented attacks on our civil liberties. So don't get sucked into the left's ginned-up moral hysteria. Trump was rightfully acquitted.
Edited on 2/15 to add:
Michael van der Veen Destroying the Media &
Unspeakable Truths about Racial Inequality in America, by Glenn Loury
"Where is the self-respecting black intellectual to take his stand? Must he simply act as a mouthpiece for movement propaganda aiming to counteract 'white supremacy'? Has he anything to say to his own people about how some of us are living? Is there space in American public discourses for nuanced, subtle, sophisticated moral engagement with these questions? Or are they mere fodder for what amount to tendentious, cynical, and overtly politically partisan arguments on behalf of something called 'racial equity'?" Here, Loury lays out facts the left - and a lot of guilt-ridden white people - would rather ignore.
Sunday, February 7, 2021
My Video: Discussing Fahrenheit 451
The stream above is the start of a new series discussing mid-20th century dystopian literature and its concerning parallels with today's political landscape. In said stream, we talk about Ray Bradbury's ability to anticipate censorship's true origins -- with, of course, many tangents thrown into the mix.