I still have my Che Guevara poster. Che Guevara was a freedom fighter. (Bob Beckel on FoxNews The Five Sept. 5th)
If Bob Beckels freedom-fighter had been allowed his fondest bit of freedom-fighting Bob Beckels incinerated remains would fit in a gin bottle today. America is the great enemy of mankind! Against those hyenas there is no option but extermination!...If the missiles had remained, we would have fired them against the very heart of the U.S., including New York City.
For the record: Ernesto Che Guevara was second in command, chief executioner, and chief KGB liaison for a regime that jailed more political prisoners per capita than did Stalins during the Great Terror and murdered more people (out of a population of 6.4 million) in its first three years in power than Hitlers murdered (out of a population of 70 million) in its first six. Many, perhaps most, of those murdered and jailed by the regime Che Guevara co-founded were Batista opponents.
The Stalinist regime Che Guevara imposed on Cuba also stole the savings and property of 6.4 million citizens, made refugees of 20 percent of the population from a nation formerly deluged with immigrants and whose citizens had achieved a higher standard of living than those residing in half of Europe. Many opponents of the regime Che Guevara co-founded qualify as the longest-suffering political prisoners in modern history, having suffered prison camps, forced labor and torture chambers for a period three times as long in Che Guevaras Gulag as Alexander Solzhenitsyn suffered in Stalins Gulag. Most of these had been Batista opponents.
Don't put him in a list of fascists. The fascists (Batista) were the ones he was trying to get rid of. (Bob Beckel on FoxNews The Five Sept. 5th)
For the record: According to the Cuba Archive Project, the Castro regime with firing squads, forced-labor camps, torture and drownings at sea has caused an estimated 102,000 Cuban deaths. According to the Harper Collins Atlas of the Second World War, Nazi repression caused 172,260 French civilian deaths during the occupation. France was nation of 42 million in 1940. Cuba was a nation of 6.5 million in 1960. My calculator reveals that Beckels freedom-fighter caused an enormously higher percentage of deaths among the people he freed than the Nazis caused among the French they enslaved and tortured with the SS and Gestapo.
Beckel tells the Fox Five that the CIA killed many more people than Che and implies that in the 50s the agency was Ches enemy.
In fact during the late 1950s the Castro brothers and Che Guevara had no better friends--and Fulgencio Batista few worse enemies--than the CIA. Me and my staff were all Fidelistas, (Robert Reynolds, the CIAs Caribbean Desks specialist on the Cuban Revolution from 1957-1960.)
Everyone in the CIA and everyone at State was pro-Castro, except (Republican) ambassador Earl Smith. (CIA operative in Santiago Cuba, Robert Weicha.)
Dont worry. Weve infiltrated Castros guerrilla group in the Sierra Mountains. The Castro brothers and Ernesto Che Guevara have no affiliations with any Communists whatsoever. (crackerjack Havana CIA station chief Jim Noel 1958.)
Listen, we (the U.S.) did not have the most stellar reputation in Latin America and South America during the 1950s and '60s .when the CIA was complicit in the assassination of Allende, that was killing a head of state. (Bob Beckel)
Ground control to Major Bob: Allende died in the 70s. But whatever. The leftist proverb that he was assassinated by the CIA was spun and spread only by the hardest of hard-left wackos. Not even Allendes own family believed it. An investigation including an autopsy by Chilean authorities just last month confirmed that Salvador Allende committed suicide. Surely you read the New York Times, Bob?
(Che) did help Fidel Castro get rid one of the biggest thugs and murdering bastards there ever was, and that was Batista in Cuba. (Bob Beckel)
Batista was a mulatto grandson of slaves born on the dirt floor of a palm roofed shack in the Cuban countryside. As President (via honest elections 1940-44, bloodless coup 1952-58) he always enjoyed the support of Cubas labor unions. And under Batista, according to a study by the International Labor Organization, the Cuban workforce was more highly unionized than the U.S. work force, with Cubas Industrial laborers earning the 8th highest wages in the world.
Cubas laborers always maintained a stony indifference to Fidel Castros movement, admitted Cubas richest man and Fidel and Che bankroller Julio Lobo, who knew because he employed thousands of them.
So heres Bob Beckel bashing a black politician of lowly origin who enjoyed overwhelming unionized labor support--while hailing the lily-white rich-boys, Fidel and Che, who outlawed labor unions and sent such as Richard Trumka and Jimmy Hoffa to the firing squad or prison. Wheres Trumka, Hoffa and Maxine Waters on this? Using liberals own standards Beckel sure sounds like an elitist--and a racist to boot.
No doubt Beckel picked up the leftist proverb about Batista as one of the biggest murdering bastards there ever was from a meme hatched in 1957 by a Fidelista Cuban magazine publisher named Miguel Angel Quevedo. The meme asserts that Batistas police and army murdered 20,000 Cubans and is still parroted by the MSM/Academia axis.
For the record: Ten years after he hatched and spread the lie, Quevedo (from exile, he scooted out just ahead of a Fidelista firing squad) confessed to the lie and greatly regretted how the lie helped the propaganda campaign to put Fidel and Che in power. The regret for the calamity he helped bring upon Cuba was such that, that right after signing the letter, Miguel Angel Quevedo put a gun to his head and blew his brains out.
The idea of picking Che Guevara and calling him a mass-murder is crazy. (Bob Beckel)
Certainly we execute! boasted Che Guevara while addressing the hallowed halls of the U.N. General Assembly Dec. 9, 1964. And we will continue executing as long as it is necessary! According to the Black Book of Communism, those firing-squad executions (murders, actually; execution implies a judicial process) had reached 14,000 by the end of the 60s, the equivalent, given the relative populations, of almost a million executions in the U.S. I dont need proof to execute a man, snapped Che to a judicial toady in 1959. I only need proof that its necessary to execute him.
#1
If the nuclear missiles had remained,we would have fired them against the heart of the U.S. including New York City. The victory of socialism is worth millions of atomic victims."
-- Che Guevara to the London Daily Worker,
November, 1962
#3
And to remind everyone, some of the empty suit's campaign offices prominently displayed Che posters.
If everyone can remember, I and several others on this board went ballistic over the posters.
Guevera was a murderous psychopath. There is no way around the fact that he was a horrifically delusional and completely crazy anti social personality. If Che had been in the California health care system, he would have been locked up at Atascadero or Patton.
I just want to vomit every time I see a Che tee shirt or a Che poster. Can someone ever talk sense to these idiots that they need to pick their heroes more carefully.
Posted by: Bill Clinton ||
09/10/2011 12:10 Comments ||
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#11
I assume you mean Ms. Deen she was a neighbor on Wilmington Island when I lived in Savannah. The old Lady and Sons was to me better than new incarnation. She used personally go around passing out her cheese biscuits.
#13
Yes indeed Beavis, and a fine neighborhood to have lived in.
Y'know, that bourdain guy mentioned she was the worst thing to have happened to American cuisine. I have been to a lot of places, had a lot of food, Ms. Deen had a recipe for a lime shrimp lettuce wrap that had me drooling so much my wife got mad. After 10 minutes of one of boudain's show all I wanted to lick was an electric outlet.
#14
Beckel's brother Graham is a character actor and conservative. Yeah you've seen him before. Hannity loves to have them on together to argue. Graham eats Bob's lunch.
Posted by: Frank G ||
09/10/2011 20:05 Comments ||
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She made three interlocking points. First, that the United States is now governed by a "permanent political class," drawn from both parties, that is increasingly cut off from the concerns of regular people. Political dynasties are nothing new, as John Quincy Adams, James Harrison, and G.W. Bush would likely be willing to agree. The number of political dynasties, oligarchs, and Representative- and Senators-for-Life seems to have grown almost to the point of saturation.
Second, that these Republicans and Democrats have allied with big business to mutual advantage to create what she called "corporate crony capitalism." These are the guys Teddy Roosevelt used to refer to as "Malefactors of Great Wealth." There's a difference between them and the guy trying to make a living with his grocery store or shoe shop.
Third, that the real political divide in the United States may no longer be between friends and foes of Big Government, but between friends and foes of vast, remote, unaccountable institutions (both public and private). Monopolies are like that. Being the only game in town, they'll make sure no other games come into town. Meanwhile they'll charge all the traffic will bear and they'll do as they damned well please. It doesn't matter whether the monopoly is a utility, an investment bank, a labor union, or government.
In supporting her first point, about the permanent political class, she attacked both parties' tendency to talk of spending cuts while spending more and more; to stoke public anxiety about a credit downgrade, but take a vacation anyway; to arrive in Washington of modest means and then somehow ride the gravy train to fabulous wealth. She observed that 7 of the 10 wealthiest counties in the United States happen to be suburbs of the nation's capital. There used to be a theory of "convergence" among political "scientists" who were against U.S. military spending, that the Soviet Union was becoming more capitalist and the U.S. was becoming more centrally planned. Eventually both sides would meet in the middle and we'd all have whirled peas. The Soviet Union went out of business, but the party who was pushing "convergence" continued trying to make the U.S. "converge." My own opinion is that we're now "converging" with Bangladesh. I'm thinking of adding a "Corruption & Degeneracy" subject heading.
Her second point, about money in politics, helped to explain the first. The permanent class stays in power because it positions itself between two deep troughs: the money spent by the government and the money spent by big companies to secure decisions from government that help them make more money. Money is power. It doesn't matter if it's your money as long as it's your power. In fact, it's easier to spend other people's money than it is to spend your own.
"Do you want to know why nothing ever really gets done?" she said, referring to politicians. "It's because there's nothing in it for them. They've got a lot of mouths to feed -- a lot of corporate lobbyists and a lot of special interests that are counting on them to keep the good times and the money rolling along." The function of government -- call it Chicago style or Tammany style or Washington style -- is to let contracts. Campaign donors and supporters get contracts, heavy duty donors become ambassadors. Politicians' relatives get consulting contracts to make sure that permits are issued and mountains of paperwork are complied with. "Government services" are doled out by hard-eyed time servers to people sitting docilely in hard plastic chairs holding strips of paper with a number on them.
Because her party has agitated for the wholesale deregulation of money in politics and the unshackling of lobbyists, these will be heard in some quarters as sacrilegious words. Constitutionally, protecting the free speech rights of one group while suppressing the rights of others is a no-no. If politicians are for sale a proper government doesn't discriminate among buyers. If We the People are lucky the information on who owns a particular politician will be available for perusal.
Ms. Palin's third point was more striking still: in contrast to the sweeping paeans to capitalism and the free market delivered by the Republican presidential candidates whose ranks she has yet to join, she sought to make a distinction between good capitalists and bad ones. The good ones, in her telling, are those small businesses that take risks and sink and swim in the churning market; the bad ones are well-connected megacorporations that live off bailouts, dodge taxes and profit terrifically while creating no jobs. "Merchants" are looked down upon by the snotty classes. They have been since at least the days of Homer. Today they're dismissed as Babbits or Rotarians or Shriners, not good for much other than kicking in campaign funds. "Profits" are dismissed as mere "greed," rather than as a reward for hard work. Proper young liberals are aghast at the idea that corporations are treated as persons in limited respects under the law. But once you're "too big to fail" you've got a lock on the government udder. For some reason nobody ever brings up the idea of breaking up any organization that's "too big to fail."
Posted by: Fred ||
09/10/2011 00:00 ||
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#1
So much for Palin not being smart....Course the MSM and elites of all stripes never acknowledged her policy's, just that she looked too good, her voice was too high, quitter (because the lawsuits were bankrupting her family) and making too much money on her books and speeches. Jealousy you think?
#3
For some reason nobody ever brings up the idea of breaking up any organization that's "too big to fail." Not so! See Barry Ritholz's blog post of 2009 for a long list of people who have proposed just that. Also see Bloomberg 9/13/2009: Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize- winning economist, said the U.S. has failed to fix the underlying problems of its banking system after the credit crunch and the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
In the U.S. and many other countries, the too-big-to-fail banks have become even bigger, Stiglitz said in an interview today in Paris. The problems are worse than they were in 2007 before the crisis.
Stiglitzs views echo those of former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, who has advised President Barack Obamas administration to curtail the size of banks.
Somehow their message makes no impression.
#4
Any enterprise/organization that is deemed too big to fail...is to big. Period.
Posted by: Secret Asian Man (New Delhi) ||
09/10/2011 4:49 Comments ||
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#5
It would be pretty easy to dramatically slow down the growth in the size of businesses. Eliminate pooling of interest (stock swaps) in mergers and acquisitions.
Too big to fail is easy also. Next time they fail, break them up as a condition of bailout.
#6
Ms. Palin's third point was more striking still: in contrast to the sweeping paeans to capitalism and the free market...
Ah, yes the NYT. There is a difference between capitalism and free markets. In practice 'capitalists' don't like 'free markets' because they have to compete. As the piece points out, capitalists seek to maximize their market through means other than open competition. Buying and operating their own agents at the points of governance is one of them. In that manner they're the same as their mirror image unionists. Two wolves discussing how to divide the sheep.
#7
WADR, these are not Ms. Palin's "ideas". A safe assumption is they are indeed her "beliefs". It's an important distinction because these beliefs are niether of Ms.Palin's orginal conception nor are they new. And as the author implies these beliefs are not carved out by partisian ideals. Moreover, the basis for what's often described as "Tea Party principels" is derived from some of these beleifs. The reason symantics matter here is because of the coordinated effort to demonize the Tea Party. The cynic in me suspects the NYT's agenda headline is not portray Palin as resonable but to negativly associate those shared beliefs with a person they have worked so hard to denigrate. Just sayin...
#9
I wish I could find that chart which illustrated a spectrum of political beliefs, I think maybe it was Zombie but I can't find it, which showed that Classical Hippy has more in common with Tea Party than Collectivism; minimalism and self-sufficiency, than one had to be able to care for themself before being able to effectively help others. The latest crop of self-identified hippies are knowing or unknowingly posers of collectivism in antiquated costume, with more in common with winehouse than Constanada where the chief of the fire circle plasma screen is totally awesome at Kevin Bacon, as well as a shift from organic ponderants toward hyper-reality.
Where rural agrarian and communism meet is really the mashing of similar words of concepts, where community sharing and assistance is similar in objectives and a communism sales pitch but the difference being is one is voluntary (or guided by spiritual laws) and the other is mandatory (guided by human laws).
Being the NYTs I would agree to be aware of the word mashing, especially since the new big lie began in earnest about 3 months ago is that prosperity begins with government and its decisions, and is being perpetuated more and more and goes relatively unchallenged.
I would think that anyone over 24 years old or has been out of college for a couple years expecting a Palin hit piece would read this and be confused. Those younger or on the battery backwards sales team may see the view as antithesis on the new lie, that the big government ran by dynasties such as the sebelius and kennedy actually make better conduits of tax money out as they are not there to make decisions, but make decisions look good.
[LA Times Blog] Speaking on behalf of millions of Americans who've grown angry and frustrated over the president's 32-month ineffective inactivity on the job creation front, President B.O. on Thursday told members of Congress they really have to do something about the crummy employment situation -- and do it quickly.
Citing the plight of millions of struggling Americans whose wishes for jobs Obama ignored for most of the 961 days he's been in office while chasing shinier healthcare and financial reforms, Obama said it was time that Congress stop blaming others. He said it was time members take responsibility for their inaction and halt their phony partisan games and political circus acts that pervade Washington culture.
Because the Americans Obama hasn't been listening to are really hurting now. And -- who's counting? -- but it's only 424 days until Nov. 6, 2012. No plan yet to pay for Obama's ideas. But he wants immediate passage of his American Jobs Act anyway.
Obama, whose Democratic spending priorities have pushed the national debt beyond $14,000,000,000,000, said it was important to curb spending and keep to the deficit reduction plan agreed to earlier this summer while also investing in, you know, many important things.
He then provided a joint session of Congress with a broadly ambitious list of goals that sounded to many people very much like a lot more spending, like, say, the $787 billion economic stimulus bill of 2009 that didn't stimulate much of anything except that national debt.
With the national debt already increasing $3 million every minute of every day, Obama wants to repair and modernize 35,000 schools. Obama wants $35 billion to go toward salaries for teachers, firefighters and police.
Obama wants $140 billion largely to update roads and bridges. Obama wants another $245 billion in business and individual tax relief. Obama also wants to extend unemployment benefits.
And Obama wants it all right now. Seriously. Now that his Martha's Vineyard vacation is over, this situation is urgent.
Obama didn't have room in his 4,021 word speech to mention how he intended to pay for all this new sounds-an-awful-like-increased-new-stimulus-spending-but-we're-not-using-that-word-anymore.
Aides said Americans should trust the president and sometime soon he would be outlining the finances that would not increase the national debt by one dime, honest.
Today in Virginia and next week in Ohio, Obama begins an aggressive autumn of travels selling his sounds-like-new-spending plans by day and fundraising by evening, bashing guess who for not solving the job crisis long ago.
Because like pretty much every sentient American, he knows full well there isn't one chance in Haiti of the divided Congress approving this package.
In fact, Obama's counting on that because grandiose program-proposing like this costs nothing-zero-nada, except the limo gas to the Capitol. Yet it gives perpetual candidate Obama tons of swell-sounding details to talk about during the 2011-12 reelection campaign.
Because he can't blame his mother-in-law for the nation's economic mess. When's the last time you heard a Harvard grad say, "Boy, did I blow that!" So, the only culprits left are in Congress, especially those Repugnicans.
But here's the catch that Obama and his Windy City wizards missed: Most Americans are not politically obedient machine Chicagoans. Like a linebacker reading the quarterback's eyes, they've already figured out this South Sider's game.
Posted by: Fred ||
09/10/2011 00:00 ||
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[Dawn] BEYOND the loss of life it caused -- 28 at last count -- Wednesday's attack in Quetta on the residence of the Frontier Corps' deputy inspector general was disturbing for its choice of target. Not content with detonating one bomb outside the house, its criminal masterminds put his family at risk by planning a follow-up suicide kaboom that struck even closer to the residence, if not inside it. The DIG's wife was among the victims. The incident has likely done serious damage to the morale of security forces and the willingness of new recruits to join them. But it also takes to a troubling level the increasingly indiscriminate nature of terrorist attacks: once aimed at security installations, they have over the years been expanded to mosques, bazaars, funerals and now to the personal residence and family of a security official. While sectarian attacks have long crossed these boundaries, Wednesday's incident demonstrates how this has increasingly become a feature of terrorist acts that do not have a sectarian basis.
Across the border that same day, at least 11 people were killed in a kaboom at New Delhi's high court. It was the second deadly terrorist attack in India in two months after a series of kabooms in Mumbai on one day in July. If the terrorist organization claiming responsibility is to be believed, Wednesday's bomb was targeted at the judicial system to protest a death sentence passed for the 2001 Indian parliament attack. But it was planted near a reception desk for litigants, and the Mumbai blasts targeted crowded urban areas during the evening rush hour. In both cases, ordinary citizens bit the dust because of differences gunnies have with the state.
Wednesday's attacks brought into stark relief how this is a crisis Pakistain shares with its neighbours on both sides; Afghan civilians, too, are living with violence. But while they have paid lip service to the concept of joint efforts against terrorism, the three countries do not even agree on who to classify as a terrorist or jihad boy as opposed to a freedom fighter. Successfully fighting terrorism in the region will require them to come closer on the issue; they could jointly commit, for example, to fighting all those who target non-combatants. Beyond that, useful coordination would have to go beyond exchanging lists of those wanted or lodging protests with each other regarding safe havens and cross-border attacks. Wednesday's carnage should be an indication of how much value an active coordination mechanism could add in a region where three countries in close proximity to one another are facing very similar threats and some of the same enemies.
Golly, that's a lot of passive voice. Who, pray tell, is the sponsor, trainer, controller of all those wild terrorists? Should they -- all right, I admit it's the ISI-- do something in the active voice to call their dogs to heel?
Posted by: Fred ||
09/10/2011 00:00 ||
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#1
From the last paragraph: And so we commemorate an act of war as a tragic event, and we retreat to equivocation, cultural self-loathing, and utterly fraudulent misrepresentation about the events of the day.
#2
I don't agree with this. Chances are the denizens of 911day.org and Yidori Mashimoto and the quilters spent their weekends out on their deck smiling at clouds and waiting for the unicorns to show up and shit rainbows a long time before 9/11. And Yoko? Please...
Dipshits will always be dipshits. Most people I know don't forget and know 9/11 wasn't a "tragedy". It was a premeditated mass murder by a bunch of Muslim psychopaths. And they have no qualms about how those psychopaths are dealt with.
#3
The entire Arab world is in turmoil.
All the dictators in the region are either dead, in jail or on the run.
Massive social unrest, food and water shortages are on the horizon.
And the lesson here?
Don't screw with us again or weâll really get mad!
#4
Did the US overthrow
Saudi Arabia? No, we quadrupled their oil income.
Pakistan? No, we gave them $20 billion and rescued them from internal implosion.
Iran? No, we invaded and gave them dominion over their #1 enemy and influence over another enemy on their opposite border.
So where does this "Don't screw with us crap come from"? I see in open invitation for Islamic imperialists to attack the US in the worst way possible. We will then go over there and overthrow their worst enemies and make them rich in the process.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.