 A Message From Lucianne
Now More Than Ever Get Your Eagles Up! Lucianne Tees - in Black or White Click to Buy
|
|
Don’t Mythologize Christopher Dorner
New York Times, by Charles M. Blow
|
|
Original Article
|
|
Posted By:StormCnter, 2/17/2013 6:28:45 AM
|
| I am no stranger to people’s glomming on to deadly criminals and celebrating them as heroes. Bonnie and Clyde were killed just south of the town where I grew up. There was that movie made about the couple, as well as a musical and more songs that I can count. And every year the town celebrates the duo and their killing with a festival and a shootout. Last year, one Web site promoting the festival read: “Bring your family and friends and join us each year as we remember the historical ambush of the infamous outlaws Bonnie & Clyde
|
Reply 1 - Posted by:
planetgeo, 2/17/2013 6:48:43 AM (No. 9181060)
Interesting. Not your typical Blow-J from the NYT. Actually thoughtful and properly assessed.
OK, so while we´re in thoughtful mode, let´s assess the real issue of police brutality with regard to our black fellow citizens. Are police brutal with them because they´re just sadistic racists, or are they brutal and hyper-suspicious in dealing with them because the black people they come in contact with on a daily basis are disproportionately aggressive, combative, and engaged in criminal activity? Perhaps Professor Marc Lamont Hill might ponder that possibility before unchaining his inner Django.
|
Reply 2 - Posted by:
Spidey, 2/17/2013 7:06:50 AM (No. 9181079)
The left really made up a lot of the storyline as they went along on this story.The ymade it about slavery,police brutality,discrimination and all their standby racial gripes. This was a simple matter of the guy getting revenge on people he thought wronged him and his manifesto was just an excuse.
As far as I can tell,I can´t see if he got shot,shot himself or burned up in a fire.Seems to me a crime lab could figure this out.
|
| |
|
Reply 3 - Posted by:
provide, 2/17/2013 7:22:07 AM (No. 9181099)
Sharpton should be on the street with his rent a mob demanding "Justice for Christopher".
|
Reply 4 - Posted by:
rabbit, 2/17/2013 7:27:25 AM (No. 9181106)
Not really fair to compare to Bonnie and Clyde. Older people who grew up in Dallas know that Bonnie & Clyde were responsible for feeding quite a few starving kids in West Dallas during the Great Depression. Were Bonnie and Clyde bad apples? Absolutely. But there weren´t food stamps and food pantries back then. I´ve heard firsthand accounts of the excitement when Bonnie and Clyde would come back through West Dallas with bags of food to distribute, courtesy of the money from their bank robberies. They were far more complex characters than Dorner.
|
Reply 5 - Posted by:
StormCnter, 2/17/2013 8:00:50 AM (No. 9181171)
"They were far more complex characters than Dorner."
They were remorseless thugs. Ask the descendants of Grapevine police officers Wheeler and Murphy who were shot down in the same kind of cold blood as the Dorner shootings.
|
Reply 6 - Posted by:
Scottyboy, 2/17/2013 8:48:03 AM (No. 9181248)
The scary thing is that Blow and the limp-wristed NYT pseudo-intellectuals that post there just assume that Dorner was wronged by the system. I think it´s much more likely that he had that black victim mentality which the left has indoctrinated these people with and used that as justification to do this. Thanks to the anti-American left, a majority of people of color in our country assume that any perceived injustice is due to their skin color. The left is in the process of doing the same things to Muslims as we speak.
|
Reply 7 - Posted by:
southernboy, 2/17/2013 8:55:31 AM (No. 9181255)
Robbing banks is a crime…as is killing people, even if some of the stolen money is used to ‘feed the poor.’
It’s not a ‘balance scale of justice’ situation.
|
| |
|
Reply 8 - Posted by:
lasvegaslou, 2/17/2013 9:44:33 AM (No. 9181343)
What a name the author has! Charlie Blow sounds like a Brooklyn mob guy or something some screenwriter came up with.
|
Reply 9 - Posted by:
JAN, 2/17/2013 10:28:36 AM (No. 9181411)
Twin heroes of the criminal left.....
Oscar and Christopher.
They get a twofer. How wonderful.
/s
|
Reply 10 - Posted by:
LittleRedHen1, 2/17/2013 10:46:27 AM (No. 9181454)
Read the article. I remember the outcry when the movie on Bonny and Clyde came out. Blow struck a blow (pun intended) for reasoned criticism in his denunciation of Dorner and those who make/made excuses for him.
He is right on Bonny and Clyde. I remember the rage at the Bonny and Clyde movie, which portrayed those evil doers as morally good.
|
Reply 11 - Posted by:
killerbee, 2/17/2013 12:29:53 PM (No. 9181620)
#10: did you read the article. For once Blow is making sense. I´m actually shocked that he came to this simple and non-racist conclusion as he is usually completely delusional about race.
That the LAPD is littered with corruption is no secret, even as it´s been nearly impossible to do anything about it. But Dorner is no hero in the cause. He gave up that title when he became a murderer.
|
Below, you will find ...
Most Recent Articles posted by "StormCnter"
and
Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)
|
Most Recent Articles posted by "StormCnter"
|
How America Lost Its Four Great Generals
|
|
Commentary Magazine, by Max Boot
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 3:01:19 PM
Post Reply
|
|
The quasi-official ideology of the U.S. armed forces holds that generals are virtually interchangeable, that individual personalities don’t matter much, that ordinary grunts are in any case more important than their leaders, and that what really counts are larger systems that make a complex bureaucracy function. There is some truth to all of this. But for all of the bureaucratic heft of the services and the heroism of ordinary soldiers, it is hard to imagine the Civil War having been won without Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan—or World War II without Marshall, Eisenhower, Patton, Bradley, Arnold, LeMay, Nimitz, Halsey,
|
|
King of Fearmongers
|
|
Weekly Standard, by Charlotte Allen
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 2:56:23 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Last August a 28-year-old gay-rights volunteer named Floyd Corkins entered the office lobby of the Family Research Council (FRC), a Christian traditional-values group headquartered in Washington that condemns homosexual conduct and opposes same-sex marriage. Corkins took a gun from his backpack and fired three shots at building manager Leo Johnson, one of them wounding the unarmed Johnson in the arm before he wrested the gun from Corkins. On February 6 Corkins pleaded guilty to three felonies: committing an act of terrorism while armed, interstate transportation of a firearm and ammunition
|
Grapevine man went to great lengths to cover up dual marriages
|
|
Star-Telegram [Ft. Worth, TX], by Deanna Boyd
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 1:36:14 PM
Post Reply
|
|
FORT WORTH -- For 21/2 years, Germain Gardea kept his wives in the dark. The 38-year-old flight instructor spent weekdays in Arlington with his first wife, Jennifer Saldivar, and their young son. On weekends, he left town for his job as an instructor at a flight school, residing in Grapevine with his second wife, Leslie Gardea, who traveled during the week. To keep the women from finding out about each other, he created fake divorce documents on the Internet and filed his first wife´s taxes, marking her as single without her knowledge. But the deception came crashing down in May after Leslie Gardea
|
Is the U.S. becoming a sham democracy?
|
|
Power Line, by Paul Mirengoff
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 6:04:56 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Eliana Johnson reports that four Republican members of the Senate Judiciary — Jeff Sessions, Chuck Grassley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz — are calling for transparency from their GOP colleagues in the “Gang of Eight” that is drafting immigration reform legislation. In a letter to John McCain, Lindsey Graham, Marco Rubio, and Jeff Flake, the four Judiciary Committee members express concern that an immigration reform bill will be rushed through Congress without proper oversight in the form of hearings and robust debate. They note that the Gang has “secretly met for months” without consulting
|
Fight for the right to grow raisins
|
|
USA Today, by James Bovard
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 6:00:51 AM
Post Reply
|
|
The Supreme Court could soon end one of the federal government´s most archaic practices. Since the 1930s, the Agriculture Department has turned California raisin growers into pawns of its Raisin Administrative Committee, which can commandeer up to half of the farmer´s crop and then pay them little or nothing for the product. Marvin Horne, a 67-year-old raisin farmer in Fresno, Calif., was fined almost $700,000 for refusing to surrender control of much of his harvest to the government committee in 2002. Horne, who has been growing raisins for more than 40 years,
|
| |
|
|
Dirty pols sink Andy
|
|
New York Post, by Michael Goodwin
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:55:50 AM
Post Reply
|
|
There are many who scoff at Andrew Cuomo’s chances in a presidential primary campaign, but I am not among them. His name is an iconic Democratic brand, he’s forceful on the stump and a prodigious fund-raiser. Besides, somebody has to win the nomination. Of course, there are hurdles. Saint Hillary is gearing up to run, and there will be a scrum among contenders, probably including Vice President Joe Biden, competing just to be Clinton’s top rival. The scenario, then, is daunting but doable — or at least it was,
|
Discovery Of A 17th Century Spanish Shipwreck Yields Awesome Treasure
|
|
LiveScience, by Marc Lallinilla
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:40:58 AM
Post Reply
|
|
A great superpower, weakened by economic calamity at home and staggering under the debt from years of war in the Middle East, finally collapses. A new political best-seller, or an apocalyptic Hollywood blockbuster? Neither — it´s the story told by a 1622 shipwreck whose treasures were desperately needed to shore up the finances of the struggling Spanish Empire. The galleon Buen Jesus y Nuestra Senora del Rosario was one of 28 ships in the Tierra Firme fleet; all were sailing from the New World back to Spain, laden with colonial treasures,
|
How the ´indispensable man´ became America´s only six-star general
|
|
Washington Examiner, by Joseph Dooley
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:35:55 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Historian James Thomas Flexner referred to George Washington as "the indispensable man." Americans all know he was a general, but have you ever wondered what grade of general? How many stars did Gen. Washington have? In today´s Army, a one-star general is a brigadier; two stars is a major general; three stars is a lieutenant general; four stars is just plain general. During World War II, Congress created the five-star general, the modern rank of general of the Army. There had been an earlier grade that was called general of the Army,
|
|
South Korea has already won
|
|
Washington Post, by Max Fisher
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:26:19 AM
Post Reply
|
|
On March 30, three days after North Korea severed a military hotline with the South and announced that South Korean President Park Geun-hye “will meet a miserable ruin,” the country declared a state of war. “The time has come to stage a do-or-die final battle,” an official statement said. Meanwhile, many of South Korea’s youth were worried about something else. A 25-year-old pop star named Seo In-guk had appeared on a popular reality TV show the night before and, in a misstep that quickly dominated online conversations, had washed his strawberries incorrectly. Ilbe, a conservative Web forum —
|
The Rutgers Scandal Now Has an F.B.I. Extortion Investigation
|
|
Atlantic, by Connor Simpson
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:18:30 AM
Post Reply
|
|
If you had an extortion investigation in your "what twists the Rutgers basketball scandal will take next" pool, well, collect your winnings. Also, buy a lottery ticket because you may be telepathic. Because the F.B.I. is investigating Eric Murdock, the whistleblowing former assistant coach, for extortion. University officials let it slip to The New York Times´ Steve Eder that Federal Bureau of Investigation officers recently visited the campus and met with athletic director Tim Pernetti sometime before Pernetti was fired on Friday. They´re trying to determine whether or not Murdock, the former director of player development,
|
| |
|
|
Hollywood’s Come to Jesus Moment?
|
|
American Spectator, by Marta H. Mossberg
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:07:42 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Imagine the pitch to a History Channel executive for the smash hit The Bible. Here’s one scenario: Producers Roma Downey and Mark Burnett: “Hi, we want to produce a story that appeals to all age groups. It’s has everything: love, lust, greed, war, self-sacrifice and redemption. It’s called ‘The Bible.’” Executive: “Could you repeat that? You said ‘The Bible’?” RD and MB: “Yes – we want to retell the Bible for this generation. And we think we can make money doing it. We’ve done a lot of market research —there is no competition out there.”
|
|
Rolling Out
|
|
Weekly Standard, by Geoffrey Norman
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:04:35 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Since the Shermans of General Patton´s Third Army crossed the Rhine on March 22, 1945, there have been American tanks in Germany. No more, as John Vandiver of Stars and Stripes reports. The U.S. Army’s 69-year history of basing main battle tanks on German soil quietly ended last month when 22 Abrams tanks, a main feature of armored combat units throughout the Cold War, embarked for the U.S. The departure of the last M-1 Abrams tanks coincides with the inactivation of two of the Army’s Germany-based heavy brigades.
|
Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)
|
´My bangs are getting a little irritating´: Michelle Obama admits she already regrets her high-maintenance hairdo
|
|
Daily Mail (UK), by Margot Peppers
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: pineledger- 4/7/2013 7:43:42 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Michelle Obama has admitted that she is already tired of the bangs she first sported in January. The First Lady said in an interview with Entertainment Tonight: ´Bangs are a day-by-day proposition. They´re starting to grow out, get a little irritating.´ Still, she hasn´t let her hairdo woes get her down. ´It´s okay,´ she said after her initial complaint. ´We´ll be good.´ The first indication that her hairstyle was becoming a burden came about last weekend, when Malia, 14, was spotted adjusting her mother´s hair during the White House Easter Egg Roll.
|
McCain: ´I don´t understand´ GOP filibuster on guns
|
|
Politico, by Jennifer Epstein
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: JoniTx- 4/7/2013 12:18:14 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Sen. John McCain says he doesn´t understand the threats from some of his Republican colleagues to filibuster a bill on background checks to buy guns. "I don´t understand it," the Arizona Republican said on Sunday of the threat coming from Sen. Rand Paul,Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Mike Lee and nine other Republicans. "The purpose of the United States Senate is to debate and to vote and to let the people know where we stand.” "What are we afraid of? ... If this issue is as important as we all think it is, why not take ... it up and debate?"
|
Why Obama´s ´Best-Looking Attorney General´ Comment Was a Gaffe
|
|
The Atlantic, by Garance Franke-Ruta
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Oblio- 4/6/2013 6:51:15 AM
Post Reply
|
|
President Obama´s biggest gaffe yesterday when speaking of California Attorney General Kamala Harris was not in flirtatiously complimenting her as "the best-looking attorney general," but in introducing an observation from the system of beauty into a forum that was about the system of power.What´s that, you say? Irin Carmon does a great job in Salon in laying out the bounds of propriety for when it´s appropriate to talk about a woman´s looks as a general matter. But I´ve long felt we lack a solid theoretical underpinning for easily discussing these issues, and why precisely it is that
|
Christians, here´s why we´re losing our religion
|
|
Fox News, by Craig Groeschel
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: STLstudent- 4/7/2013 5:13:55 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Recent research indicates that the number of people who do not consider themselves a part of an organized religion is steadily on the rise. Interestingly enough, though the number of those religiously unaffiliated is increasing, there is little to no trend in the number of those who express atheist or agnostic beliefs. People aren’t saying they don’t believe in God. They’re saying they don’t believe in religion. They are not rejecting Christ. They are rejecting the church. This begs the question, “Why are we losing our religion?”
|
Broadcasters worry about ´Zero TV´ homes
|
|
Associated Press, by Ryan Nakashima
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Ribicon- 4/7/2013 2:43:40 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Los Angeles — Some people have had it with TV. They´ve had enough of the 100-plus channel universe. They don´t like timing their lives around network show schedules. They´re tired of $100-plus monthly bills. A growing number of them have stopped paying for cable and satellite TV service, and don´t even use an antenna to get free signals over the air. (Snip) Last month, the Nielsen Co. started labeling people in this group "Zero TV" households, because they fall outside the traditional definition of a TV home. There are 5 million of these residences in the U.S., up from
|
Mother Of Slain Benghazi Officer To Sean Hannity: ‘They Want Me To Shut Up’
|
|
Mediaite, by A.J. Delgado
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:00:16 AM
Post Reply
|
|
On Friday, Sean Hannity brought Pat Smith, mother of the late Sean Smith, on his radio program. The 34-year-old information management officer was one of four Americans murdered in the Benghazi embassy attack on September 11, 2012. In the chilling interview, a distraught Ms. Smith, in tears, pleaded for answers and spoke of the efforts to silence her. Ms. Smith first relayed how her son, prior to the attack, requested additional security in advance and warned the State Department: He did tell them, ahead of time, he typed it into his little typewriter over there,
|
Vanishing workforce weighs on growth
|
|
Washington Post, by Jim Tankersley
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Dreadnought- 4/6/2013 11:28:59 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Put out an all-points bulletin: Millions of Americans have gone missing from the workforce. Every month that those would-be workers are gone raises the odds that they might never come back, dimming the prospects for future economic growth. The vanishing trend is more than a decade old, but it accelerated during the Great Recession. Throughout 2012, economists held out hope that it had stopped. But then came Friday’s jobs report, and hopes were dashed. The Labor Department reported that the U.S. labor force — everyone who has a job or is looking for one — shrank
|
Hillary Clinton Would Not ´Clear the Field´ for 2016
|
|
New Republic, by Tod Lindberg
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: StormCnter- 4/6/2013 5:22:36 AM
Post Reply
|
|
No one is more preoccupied these days with Hillary Clinton´s 2016 plans than the Beltway political class—not even the former presidential candidate herself. To hear some tell it, her decision will be dispositive for all other Democrats thinking of entering the race. And pundits and reporters aren´t the only ones positing the "The Hillary Factor": No less than the House Democratic whip, Steny Hoyer, told BuzzFeed, “I don´t know that anybody would run against Hillary…. If she runs, she clears the field.” It´s an understandable conclusion, given Clinton´s stature in the Democratic Party and her 70 percent
|
Obama critic apologizes for his ´poorly chosen words´ on gay marriage
|
|
The Hill [Washington DC], by Alexandra Jaffe
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: JoniTx- 4/6/2013 12:18:19 PM
Post Reply
|
|
Neurosurgeon Ben Carson, considered by some to be a potential Republican contender for president, apologized to Johns Hopkins University for the "poorly chosen words" he used in expressing his opposition to gay marriage last month.“I am sorry for any embarrassment this has caused,” Carson said in the letter, reported in New York Magazine.(Snip) "Although I do believe marriage is between a man and a woman, there are much less offensive ways to make that point. I hope all will look at a lifetime of service over some poorly chosen words.” Carson will remain as commencement speaker at Johns Hopkins,
|
The Secrets of Princeton
|
|
New York Times, by Ross Douthat
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Oblio- 4/7/2013 8:08:09 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Susan Patton, the Princeton alumna who became famous for her letter urging Ivy League women to use their college years to find a mate, has been denounced as a traitor to feminism, to coeducation, to the university ideal. But really she’s something much more interesting: a traitor to her class. Her betrayal consists of being gauche enough to acknowledge publicly a truth that everyone who’s come up through Ivy League culture knows intuitively —
|
Beyonce, Jay-Z celebrate 5th anniversary in Havana, Cuba
|
|
Los Angeles Times, by Nardine Saad
Original Article
|
|
Posted By: Fiesta del sol- 4/6/2013 8:20:04 AM
Post Reply
|
|
Beyonce and Jay-Z celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary in Cuba this week. The couple, who married on April 4, 2008, took in the sights of Old Havana, visited a school, dined on a rooftop terrace and strolled the fan-filled streets in their island best.(snip).The power couple declined to answer journalists´ questions about their visit to the island nation, but some outlets are reporting that the moguls are there as tourists, though that would be illegal because of the half-century embargo the U.S. has on the Communist country. However, the Miami Herald said Washington has issued special licenses for
|
| | |
|