Oh, wait, it's not Earth Day, it's Vladimir Lenin's birthday. Wait, no, it IS Earth Day. Hold on, it appears to be BOTH! Yes, folks, Earth Day is on Lenin's birthday. You know, Communist, mass-murderer, all that good stuff? If this wasn't so disturbing it would be hysterically funny. Apparently, when Earth Day was started, the ones who started it said, "What better day than Lenin's birthday, since capitalism destroys the environment?"
Riiiiiiight. And Communism has such a sterling track record. Frankly, I don't feel like going on a long rant (I know what you're thinking: "Drake doesn't feel like ranting?! Take cover, the world is ending!") so I'll just recommend a great book.
The Really Inconvenient Truths: Seven Environmental Catastrophes Liberals Don't Want You To Know About-Because They Helped Cause Them
If you just want quick proof of socialism's environmental record, Google "Aral Sea Dried Up."
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Defense of the Confederacy is racism
At least according to this guy.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Southern Discomfort
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CloseLinkedinDiggFacebookMixxMySpaceYahoo! BuzzPermalink By JON MEACHAM
Published: April 10, 2010
IN 1956, nearly a century after Fort Sumter, Robert Penn Warren went on assignment for Life magazine, traveling throughout the South after the Supreme Court’s school desegregation decisions. Racism was thick, hope thin. Progress, Warren reported, was going to take a while — a long while. “History, like nature, knows no jumps,” he wrote, “except the jump backward, maybe.”
Last week, Virginia’s governor, Robert McDonnell, jumped backward when he issued a proclamation recognizing April as Confederate History Month. In it he celebrated those “who fought for their homes and communities and Commonwealth” and wrote of the importance of understanding “the sacrifices of the Confederate leaders, soldiers and citizens during the period of the Civil War.”
The governor originally chose not to mention slavery in the proclamation, saying he “focused on the ones I thought were most significant for Virginia.” It seems to follow that, at least for Mr. McDonnell, the plight of Virginia’s slaves does not rank among the most significant aspects of the war.
Advertently or not, Mr. McDonnell is working in a long and dispiriting tradition. Efforts to rehabilitate the Southern rebellion frequently come at moments of racial and social stress, and it is revealing that Virginia’s neo-Confederates are refighting the Civil War in 2010. Whitewashing the war is one way for the right — alienated, anxious and angry about the president, health care reform and all manner of threats, mostly imaginary — to express its unease with the Age of Obama, disguising hate as heritage.
If neo-Confederates are interested in history, let’s talk history. Since Lee surrendered at Appomattox, Confederate symbols have tended to be more about white resistance to black advances than about commemoration. In the 1880s and 1890s, after fighting Reconstruction with terrorism and after the Supreme Court struck down the 1875 Civil Rights Act, states began to legalize segregation. For white supremacists, iconography of the “Lost Cause” was central to their fight; Mississippi even grafted the Confederate battle emblem onto its state flag.
But after the Supreme Court allowed segregation in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, Jim Crow was basically secure. There was less need to rally the troops, and Confederate imagery became associated with the most extreme of the extreme: the Ku Klux Klan.
In the aftermath of World War II, however, the rebel flag and other Confederate symbolism resurfaced as the civil rights movement spread. In 1948, supporters of Strom Thurmond’s pro-segregation Dixiecrat ticket waved the battle flag at campaign stops.
Then came the school-integration rulings of the 1950s. Georgia changed its flag to include the battle emblem in 1956, and South Carolina hoisted the colors over its Capitol in 1962 as part of its centennial celebrations of the war.
As the sesquicentennial of Fort Sumter approaches in 2011, the enduring problem for neo-Confederates endures: anyone who seeks an Edenic Southern past in which the war was principally about states’ rights and not slavery is searching in vain, for the Confederacy and slavery are inextricably and forever linked.
That has not, however, stopped Lost Causers who supported Mr. McDonnell’s proclamation from trying to recast the war in more respectable terms. They would like what Lincoln called our “fiery trial” to be seen in a political, not a moral, light. If the slaves are erased from the picture, then what took place between Sumter and Appomattox is not about the fate of human chattel, or a battle between good and evil. It is, instead, more of an ancestral skirmish in the Reagan revolution, a contest between big and small government.
We cannot allow the story of the emancipation of a people and the expiation of America’s original sin to become fodder for conservative politicians playing to their right-wing base. That, to say the very least, is a jump backward we do not need.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Let's discuss this loopy idea. Let me address his, quite frankly, stupid next-to-last paragraph first. In this paragraph he acts as if the war was originally about the fate of the slaves. It was not, it was not, it was not. My gosh, how historically clueless can this man be? If it was actually about slavery somebody PLEASE explain the bizarre phenomena known as "border States." The most prominent of them is Kentucky, and these had slavery and yet sided with the dang Yankees. Also, how on earth do you explain the generals? Lee and Jackson (CSA) were both anti-slavery. Lee freed all his slaves, and Jackson helped run, illegally, a Sunday school for slaves, in which they taught them how to read. Yet these two sided with the Confederacy. Grant, meanwhile, owned slaves but fought for the freakin' Yanks.
Now let's look at his little talk about Confederate symbols. Let's see... Yes, the KKK does use Confederate imagery. They also use Christian imagery, but are clearly not representative of Christians as a whole. Mississipi putting the CSA flag into its State flag? It's called "defiance," buddy. Ever heard of it? Conquered people tend to not accept the conquerer. Also, he does not demonstrate -at all- that the flag-waving in the 60's had anything to do with racism. It was the War's centennial, for Heaven's sake. This "point" of his needs no further discussion.
Why don't we take a look at the history of Virginia and slavery now? After all, the article was inspired by its governor decreeing Confederate History Month. Let's look at the Old Dominion's past. *Ahem* Before Independence from the British Empire, the State made no less than TWENTY-EIGHT attempts to abolish the slave trade, but all were struck down by the Brits. Afterwards, in the mid-1800's, the Virginia legislature nearly passed a compensated emancipation measure, however Nat Turner's Slave Rebellion pretty much killed that. Earlier that century, Thomas Jefferson, a Virginian and a slave owner, actually created a plan for emancipation that -sadly- never made it to the legislature.
Heck, the Confederacy itself wasn't near as racist/slavery-oriented as this guy makes it out to be. Up to 8% of the Confederate Army at any given time was composed of blacks, including combat troops. I know of several stories about black Confederates, and I'll share one here. During one battle, a shotgun-wielding black Confederate cornered a Yankee cavalryman. The Yank wrote in his diary, "Here I was fighting to free this man [this was after the Emancipation Proclamation] and if I had made one false move on my horse, he would not have hesitated to blow my head off." Doesn't exactly fit the mold, does he? Also, the CS Constitution actually banned the slave trade. Sorta yanks the moral high ground from the North, doesn't it?
This entire post can be summed up in one sentence: This guy doesn't have the vaguest idea what he's talking about.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Southern Discomfort
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Share
CloseLinkedinDiggFacebookMixxMySpaceYahoo! BuzzPermalink By JON MEACHAM
Published: April 10, 2010
IN 1956, nearly a century after Fort Sumter, Robert Penn Warren went on assignment for Life magazine, traveling throughout the South after the Supreme Court’s school desegregation decisions. Racism was thick, hope thin. Progress, Warren reported, was going to take a while — a long while. “History, like nature, knows no jumps,” he wrote, “except the jump backward, maybe.”
Last week, Virginia’s governor, Robert McDonnell, jumped backward when he issued a proclamation recognizing April as Confederate History Month. In it he celebrated those “who fought for their homes and communities and Commonwealth” and wrote of the importance of understanding “the sacrifices of the Confederate leaders, soldiers and citizens during the period of the Civil War.”
The governor originally chose not to mention slavery in the proclamation, saying he “focused on the ones I thought were most significant for Virginia.” It seems to follow that, at least for Mr. McDonnell, the plight of Virginia’s slaves does not rank among the most significant aspects of the war.
Advertently or not, Mr. McDonnell is working in a long and dispiriting tradition. Efforts to rehabilitate the Southern rebellion frequently come at moments of racial and social stress, and it is revealing that Virginia’s neo-Confederates are refighting the Civil War in 2010. Whitewashing the war is one way for the right — alienated, anxious and angry about the president, health care reform and all manner of threats, mostly imaginary — to express its unease with the Age of Obama, disguising hate as heritage.
If neo-Confederates are interested in history, let’s talk history. Since Lee surrendered at Appomattox, Confederate symbols have tended to be more about white resistance to black advances than about commemoration. In the 1880s and 1890s, after fighting Reconstruction with terrorism and after the Supreme Court struck down the 1875 Civil Rights Act, states began to legalize segregation. For white supremacists, iconography of the “Lost Cause” was central to their fight; Mississippi even grafted the Confederate battle emblem onto its state flag.
But after the Supreme Court allowed segregation in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, Jim Crow was basically secure. There was less need to rally the troops, and Confederate imagery became associated with the most extreme of the extreme: the Ku Klux Klan.
In the aftermath of World War II, however, the rebel flag and other Confederate symbolism resurfaced as the civil rights movement spread. In 1948, supporters of Strom Thurmond’s pro-segregation Dixiecrat ticket waved the battle flag at campaign stops.
Then came the school-integration rulings of the 1950s. Georgia changed its flag to include the battle emblem in 1956, and South Carolina hoisted the colors over its Capitol in 1962 as part of its centennial celebrations of the war.
As the sesquicentennial of Fort Sumter approaches in 2011, the enduring problem for neo-Confederates endures: anyone who seeks an Edenic Southern past in which the war was principally about states’ rights and not slavery is searching in vain, for the Confederacy and slavery are inextricably and forever linked.
That has not, however, stopped Lost Causers who supported Mr. McDonnell’s proclamation from trying to recast the war in more respectable terms. They would like what Lincoln called our “fiery trial” to be seen in a political, not a moral, light. If the slaves are erased from the picture, then what took place between Sumter and Appomattox is not about the fate of human chattel, or a battle between good and evil. It is, instead, more of an ancestral skirmish in the Reagan revolution, a contest between big and small government.
We cannot allow the story of the emancipation of a people and the expiation of America’s original sin to become fodder for conservative politicians playing to their right-wing base. That, to say the very least, is a jump backward we do not need.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Let's discuss this loopy idea. Let me address his, quite frankly, stupid next-to-last paragraph first. In this paragraph he acts as if the war was originally about the fate of the slaves. It was not, it was not, it was not. My gosh, how historically clueless can this man be? If it was actually about slavery somebody PLEASE explain the bizarre phenomena known as "border States." The most prominent of them is Kentucky, and these had slavery and yet sided with the dang Yankees. Also, how on earth do you explain the generals? Lee and Jackson (CSA) were both anti-slavery. Lee freed all his slaves, and Jackson helped run, illegally, a Sunday school for slaves, in which they taught them how to read. Yet these two sided with the Confederacy. Grant, meanwhile, owned slaves but fought for the freakin' Yanks.
Now let's look at his little talk about Confederate symbols. Let's see... Yes, the KKK does use Confederate imagery. They also use Christian imagery, but are clearly not representative of Christians as a whole. Mississipi putting the CSA flag into its State flag? It's called "defiance," buddy. Ever heard of it? Conquered people tend to not accept the conquerer. Also, he does not demonstrate -at all- that the flag-waving in the 60's had anything to do with racism. It was the War's centennial, for Heaven's sake. This "point" of his needs no further discussion.
Why don't we take a look at the history of Virginia and slavery now? After all, the article was inspired by its governor decreeing Confederate History Month. Let's look at the Old Dominion's past. *Ahem* Before Independence from the British Empire, the State made no less than TWENTY-EIGHT attempts to abolish the slave trade, but all were struck down by the Brits. Afterwards, in the mid-1800's, the Virginia legislature nearly passed a compensated emancipation measure, however Nat Turner's Slave Rebellion pretty much killed that. Earlier that century, Thomas Jefferson, a Virginian and a slave owner, actually created a plan for emancipation that -sadly- never made it to the legislature.
Heck, the Confederacy itself wasn't near as racist/slavery-oriented as this guy makes it out to be. Up to 8% of the Confederate Army at any given time was composed of blacks, including combat troops. I know of several stories about black Confederates, and I'll share one here. During one battle, a shotgun-wielding black Confederate cornered a Yankee cavalryman. The Yank wrote in his diary, "Here I was fighting to free this man [this was after the Emancipation Proclamation] and if I had made one false move on my horse, he would not have hesitated to blow my head off." Doesn't exactly fit the mold, does he? Also, the CS Constitution actually banned the slave trade. Sorta yanks the moral high ground from the North, doesn't it?
This entire post can be summed up in one sentence: This guy doesn't have the vaguest idea what he's talking about.
Friday, March 26, 2010
NASA gets a spanking of epic proportions
Some British dude spent $747 and got excellent space photos and videos. NASA has been put to shame with its gigantonormous budget.
Article: http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-balloon-home-photos-space,0,5393976.story
Photos and video: http://www.flickr.com/photos/30721501@N05/collections/72157621244472915/
Article: http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-balloon-home-photos-space,0,5393976.story
Photos and video: http://www.flickr.com/photos/30721501@N05/collections/72157621244472915/
Monday, March 22, 2010
We're done for...
I'm sure you already know about this, but the health "care" bill passed. It was a somewhat close vote, and good 'ol Virginia didn't let me down. To nobody's surprise, North Carolina had mostly "Yes" votes. Where does it all end?! Souther States voting FOR this horrible, unconstitutional expansion of government? What has the world come to? Curse the Radical Republicans and their Reconstruction. Oh well. The one positive thing about this is it will help bankrupt the Feds. Once they can no longer keep States restrained with funding, maybe we'll start seeing a secession movement getting somewhere. After all, nullification movements are making real progress, and the next step is a successful nullification of the HEALTH CARE BILL. This bill may have some unpleasant and unforeseen consequences for Washington... I can't remember which State, but one or more has a bill under consideration nullifying the health bill if it passed. Y'know, this bill is sorta like a kidney stone. It sits there for what seems like ages, but inevitably passes. Next up, I guess, is cap-and-trade.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Random Babbling About Various Random Things
Sorry I haven't posted in so long. This is just an assortment of things that I meant to post weeks ago. Brace yourself.
CHICKEN PICTURES!!!
These are our four-egg-a-day hens.

Here we have a chicken captivated by the camera...

...And here we have one terrified of it.

In other news, here's this funny video.
And here's something funny and completely random. I recently bought the video game, The Conduit, and it has lots of unintentional humor. First, as you play through one level, you discover a neuro-toxin that turns people into mind-controlled "puppets." The guy giving you orders, John Adams (yes, as in the 2nd president) tells you that if the toxin enters the water supply, it could infect the entire DC area. Think about that for a minute. DC area full of mindless puppets. Apparently the toxin has already gotten into the supply, just look at Congress. Second, you find out that Adams is evil and leads an organization called "The Trust," which is behind the toxin. Turns out, there IS an actual "Trust" in real life, except that it is nongovernmental and has to do with government schools. Funny, both "Trusts" involve manufacturing drones and mindless puppets.
Further randomness. What is my opinion on conspiracy theories? I don't think the government caused 9-11, but it is entirely possible that they ignored warnings about the attacks. Don't say our government is above that, it happened on December 7, 1941 as well. I believe that global warming is a HOAX. I think Abraham Lincoln engineered the Fort Sumter incident. I don't think HAARP is some kind of weather-altering superweapon. I don't believe in 2012 doomsday. I don't think the world is run by shapeshifting alien lizard people. I don't know anything about the JFK murder. Area 51 doesn't hold aliens. I don't have a clue why I listed all these conspiracies, except that I had been planning to do an in-depth analysis of some of them a few weeks ago. Sometime I'll go on a rant about the atom bomb.
CHICKEN PICTURES!!!
These are our four-egg-a-day hens.

Here we have a chicken captivated by the camera...

...And here we have one terrified of it.

In other news, here's this funny video.
And here's something funny and completely random. I recently bought the video game, The Conduit, and it has lots of unintentional humor. First, as you play through one level, you discover a neuro-toxin that turns people into mind-controlled "puppets." The guy giving you orders, John Adams (yes, as in the 2nd president) tells you that if the toxin enters the water supply, it could infect the entire DC area. Think about that for a minute. DC area full of mindless puppets. Apparently the toxin has already gotten into the supply, just look at Congress. Second, you find out that Adams is evil and leads an organization called "The Trust," which is behind the toxin. Turns out, there IS an actual "Trust" in real life, except that it is nongovernmental and has to do with government schools. Funny, both "Trusts" involve manufacturing drones and mindless puppets.
Further randomness. What is my opinion on conspiracy theories? I don't think the government caused 9-11, but it is entirely possible that they ignored warnings about the attacks. Don't say our government is above that, it happened on December 7, 1941 as well. I believe that global warming is a HOAX. I think Abraham Lincoln engineered the Fort Sumter incident. I don't think HAARP is some kind of weather-altering superweapon. I don't believe in 2012 doomsday. I don't think the world is run by shapeshifting alien lizard people. I don't know anything about the JFK murder. Area 51 doesn't hold aliens. I don't have a clue why I listed all these conspiracies, except that I had been planning to do an in-depth analysis of some of them a few weeks ago. Sometime I'll go on a rant about the atom bomb.
Labels:
chickens,
conspiracy theories,
Pointless posts,
self-reliance
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Chris Matthews hates freedom
He doesn't like states' rights. Of course, anyone who says "nullification" is a racist. Good grief.
Allow me to tear his amusingly silly arguments to pieces.
First off, he says "Who does she think she is, John Calhoun?" I wish! He'd come in handy right now.
Apparently, Martin Luther King Jr. is an authority on what nullification means. Riiiight. Hey, Matthews, all these "firearms freedom" acts are nullification. Last I checked, the second amendment wasn't racist. This guy is utterly clueless. So what if some freakshow racist governor said favorable things about nullification 40 FREAKIN' YEARS AGO?! That doesn't make it racist.
One of the other folks with him talks about the "racial aspect" of secession/nullification. What racial aspect? It has nothing to do with race at all! Unless you count the fact that for some obscure, probably silly reason certain people associate states' rights with racism even though it is purely political. The New England states in the 1800's favored secession. Last I checked, they didn't have slaves. Another claim was that if Democrats were running around screaming "SECESSION!" they would be denounced as anti-American. Wrong. It's called Vermont. Y'know, little obscure state in the Northeast, trying to secede, filled with, um, FLAMING LIBERALS. And yet, by most secessionists, they are admired despite their liberal ideas. And to top the insanity off, Matthews, a liberal and major Obama worshipper, comments that people who support secession/nullification think they are more American than people who want to abide by the Constitution. My response: Hey, genius, where ya been for the past 250 years? You're the one who is abusing the Constitution. Nullification and secession are specifically to GET RID OF unconstitutional laws. Frankly, secession is fully justified as of right now. Nullification is nice, but secession is better.
Finally, I would like to make one last statement. Hey, Matthews, ever heard of these neat little things called the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions? By Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. What? Never heard of 'em? How 'bout the Declaration of Independence? It's a document of secession, and arguably the most American document ever written. Stop making silly blanket statements. I'm not racist, nobody I know personally who supports secession is racist. Do your research next time.
As an amusing side note, somebody pointed out that one of the guys says that the Texas voters aren't a diverse crowd. He says this while on a show with two other white, liberal, middle aged guys. Go figure.
Allow me to tear his amusingly silly arguments to pieces.
First off, he says "Who does she think she is, John Calhoun?" I wish! He'd come in handy right now.
Apparently, Martin Luther King Jr. is an authority on what nullification means. Riiiight. Hey, Matthews, all these "firearms freedom" acts are nullification. Last I checked, the second amendment wasn't racist. This guy is utterly clueless. So what if some freakshow racist governor said favorable things about nullification 40 FREAKIN' YEARS AGO?! That doesn't make it racist.
One of the other folks with him talks about the "racial aspect" of secession/nullification. What racial aspect? It has nothing to do with race at all! Unless you count the fact that for some obscure, probably silly reason certain people associate states' rights with racism even though it is purely political. The New England states in the 1800's favored secession. Last I checked, they didn't have slaves. Another claim was that if Democrats were running around screaming "SECESSION!" they would be denounced as anti-American. Wrong. It's called Vermont. Y'know, little obscure state in the Northeast, trying to secede, filled with, um, FLAMING LIBERALS. And yet, by most secessionists, they are admired despite their liberal ideas. And to top the insanity off, Matthews, a liberal and major Obama worshipper, comments that people who support secession/nullification think they are more American than people who want to abide by the Constitution. My response: Hey, genius, where ya been for the past 250 years? You're the one who is abusing the Constitution. Nullification and secession are specifically to GET RID OF unconstitutional laws. Frankly, secession is fully justified as of right now. Nullification is nice, but secession is better.
Finally, I would like to make one last statement. Hey, Matthews, ever heard of these neat little things called the Kentucky and Virginia resolutions? By Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. What? Never heard of 'em? How 'bout the Declaration of Independence? It's a document of secession, and arguably the most American document ever written. Stop making silly blanket statements. I'm not racist, nobody I know personally who supports secession is racist. Do your research next time.
As an amusing side note, somebody pointed out that one of the guys says that the Texas voters aren't a diverse crowd. He says this while on a show with two other white, liberal, middle aged guys. Go figure.
Monday, February 8, 2010
This is supposed to be a good thing...?
Oh. My. Gosh. The freaks who made this commercial are portraying "green police" as a good thing. Yes, I called them freaks. That wasn't harsh enough. Fascist, Communist loopy environmentalist maniacs! There. I feel better now.
Yes, I am aware that this is a car commercial. That doesn't take away from the fact that they're freaks. Seriously, this is disturbing even as a joke. The fact that most Americans wouldn't be infuriated by the mere suggestion of "green police" scares the living daylights out of me.
Yes, I am aware that this is a car commercial. That doesn't take away from the fact that they're freaks. Seriously, this is disturbing even as a joke. The fact that most Americans wouldn't be infuriated by the mere suggestion of "green police" scares the living daylights out of me.
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