Bill breathes life into Karl Marx
Karl Marx
Editor's note: Michael Ackley's columns may include satire and parody
based on current events, and thus mix fact with fiction. He assumes
informed readers will be able to tell which is which.
The Soviet Union is long gone. Fidel Castro is in his dotage.
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez is a harmless clown. Therefore, international
communism no longer is a threat, right?
How else can one explain Senate Bill 1322, which would delete language
in the California law barring public school teachers from "teaching
communism with the intent to indoctrinate or to inculcate in the mind
of any pupil a preference for communism"?
The bill is the work of state Sen. Alan Lowenthal, D-the Los
Angeles/Long Beach sprawl. Unlike many pieces of legislation, SB 1322
lacks a list of whereases and wherefores explaining and justifying the
measure. Perhaps this is because the need for the bill is self-evident.
Perhaps this is why the senator's press guy didn't return our call
seeking elucidation.
Perhaps this is why Lowenthal was comfortable with deleting from state
law such tired, Cold War verbiage as: "Within the boundaries of the
State of California there are active disciplined communist
organizations ... more »
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Tuesday, March 11
by
Publisher
on Tue 11 Mar 2008 07:23 AM AKDT
by
Publisher
on Tue 11 Mar 2008 07:14 AM AKDT
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By: - Robert Maginnis A series of erupting international crises may force the presidential candidates to change the focus of their campaigns this fall. There are so many developing situations that a sort of geopolitical “perfect storm” could hit them when they would rather be talking about economic and social issues. Weather phenomena rarely combine in predictable harmony: geopolitical events are more predictable. The forces behind a 2008 perfect storm would likely be terrorists or foreign governments creating a mass of challenges that overwhelm the candidates and place the debate squarely on how the Bush White House is dealing with the world in the president’s final months. A major terrorist attack at home, the start of another war and the emergence of a threatening nuclear enemy are examples of geopolitical crises that could occur simultaneously. Such a confluence of events would severely stretch our government’s resources, torpedo the political rhetoric of the presidential campaigns and, thereby, expose the country to dangers that have kept us at war since 2001. A peaceful fall campaign bodes well for the Democrats but a ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 11 Mar 2008 07:11 AM AKDT
Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, speaking to a local Iowa radio station, said
that terrorists would dance in the streets if Sen. Barack Obama,
D-Illinois, is elected president -- precisely because of not only
Obama's position on withdrawing US troops from Iraq, but because
Obama's middle name is "Hussein," his father's Muslim roots, and his
appearance -- or "optics," as King put it.
You can read about it HERE or listen to it HERE. "I don't want to disparage anyone because of their, their race, their ethnicity, their name - whatever their religion their father, father might have been," King said just before doing just that. "I'll just say this that when you think about the optics of a Barack Obama potentially getting elected President of the United States -- and I mean, what does this look like to the rest of the world? What does it look like to the world of Islam? "And I will tell you that, if he is elected president, then the, the radical Islamists, the, the al-Qaida, and the radical Islamists and their supporters, will be dancing in the streets in greater numbers than they did on September 11…. "It does matter, his middle name ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 11 Mar 2008 07:07 AM AKDT
Reporter denied permission to hear defense of Mexican truck program
Mary Peters The Department of Transportation today barred WND from attending a news conference in which Secretary Mary Peters defended the controversial Bush administration program allowing Mexican trucks to travel freely on U.S. roads. Agency spokesman Duane DeBruyne, who was screening reporters at the security entrance of the federal building at the Navy Yard in Washington, D.C., said he did not have the authority to allow entry to WND senior staff writer Jerome Corsi, who has reported extensively on the program and attended other news conferences on the subject. DeBruyne telephoned his supervisor, DOT spokeswoman Melissa DeLaney, who declined permission without explanation, requiring WND to leave the premises. In a phone call to the DOT public affairs office, the agency explained it was requiring "press credentials" for admittance, and no one without them was allowed to participate. The news conference was only for "credentialed members of the media," spokesman Bill Moseley told WND. "There's a specific credential. He did not have a media credential." And how can a reporter obtain such a credential providing permission to attend? "I don't know," Moseley responded. But Corsi said he was never asked to ... more » |
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