Saturday, April 26, 2014

The establishment, the left, and FBI asset Glenn Beck: merciless, vindictive campaign to destroy Cliven Bundy, Alex Jones, and the liberty movement as a whole

The establishment media's framing of and attitude toward the federal Bureau of Land Management directly threatening U.S. citizens peacefully protesting is deeply disturbing and appalling. 

Cliven Bundy asserts that the federal government has overstepped what rightfully is the jurisdiction of Nevada local and state officials. This is based on the Constitutional principle of and framework for a limited federal government and largely autonomous individual states. Of course, the federal government has become vastly bloated since the Bundy ranch was established in the late 1800's, when there was no BLM. The establishment media and, most heinously, Senator Harry Reid, have not even acknowledged that this is complex, multifaceted legal issue. Instead, they have acted and spoken as if the BLM's authority is a given and so all of their actions are right, upstanding, and lawful. Thus, thinly-veiled socialist operations like MSNBC have repeatedly referred to the Bundy family and their supporters as "unlawful", and, even more inaccurately and vindictively, as "domestic terrorists". Harry Reid -- who is a major player in the effort to take out the Bundys, entangled with a Chinese solar energy company who've signed a "deal" with Reid's son to seize a huge chunk of Nevada land that includes Bundys' ranch -- has himself spewed the "terrorist" line.  In light of his personal interests in removing the Bundys' from the picture, his sniveling, snake-like, duplicitous, vengeful, malevolent nature is all too apparent.

Many of the east coast (and probably many in California, as well) are unfamiliar with the concept of grazing rights. I grew up in a small Massachusetts town where dairy farmers (as they're called here) kept their cow herds fenced in on their own property. But I've seen and read westerns -- I know that all herds were free to roam across the rangeland wherever they so pleased. Herds would end up intermingling, and were at times unsupervised -- hence the reason for branding. And hence why the villains in many a western are cattle thieves rebranding herds in the dead of night. The Bundys are the last ranch family standing, after all of the others giving in over the past couple of decades to aggressive pressure from the federal government. Bundy's use of the land for grazing is merely the continuation of a practice that was instituted generations ago and has continued since. It's not as if he just started using others' property out of nowhere without permission a couple of months ago. But, of course, MSNBC, Harry Reid and their allies behind the scenes and in the media have left of all of this out, and shamelessly and maliciously pushed the erroneous claim that Bundy is an unrepentant deadbeat mooching off of "government" land.

Leftists so despise property rights and the traditions of rugged individualism and free market farming, that they've cheered on the BLM surrounding the Bundys' homes armed, amongst their ranks actual snipers, poised to shoot. Outraged to see a nice old man threatened with lethal force by virtual military squadron, reportedly around 1,000 fellow citizens, most of a libertarian/Constitutional bent, gathered at the Bundy ranch to stand with the family in protest. When they marched on the corral where some of Bundy's cattle that the BLM had stolen, the BLM's mercenaries repeatedly warned, "If you take one step forward, we'll shoot." Heroically and bravely, the protesters marched on, and for reasons unknown, the invading enemy military unit received orders to stand down. Liberals on Twitter reportedly expressed lament that the Bundys and the protesters hadn't been murdered. One liberal even Tweeted at Dirty Harry himself, "Senator, wouldn't it be easier to just take [the Bundys and the protesters] out with a drone strike?" 

Myself and many other libertarians objected to the tactics police used against Occupy protesters in late 2011. Even though we disagree with that movement's heavy socialism, we still recognize the right to protest/redress one's grievances and their civil liberties. Clearly, the feeling is not mutual. MSNBC, Reid, et al are pushing the Southern Poverty Law Center's "domestic terrorists" line so as to dehumanize the Bundys and their supporters, so that if and when they are killed Waco-style, they'll have little sympathy from the public. Liberals are either buying this farce, or want to take out their opposition by any means necessary, and so are happily pushing it, hoping to see conservatives and libertarians executed. 

To justify the "terrorists" moniker, they point to the fact that SOME of the protesters were armed. They ignore that it was the BLM who aimed first, issued verbal threats to kill, and that the protesters who were armed, and who -- except one -- never aimed or raised their weapons, and that they had their guns with them as a safety precaution, since it was very likely that they would need to defend themselves from those who were unjustly, tyrannically lording over them with and promising lethal force. Of course, liberals don't understand or just don't care about such distinctions. They care about the results suiting their "cause", a part of which seems to be killing innocent people. MSNBC's twerpy Chris Hayes has played oblivious to the violence imposed upon the Bundys and their supporters. In his broadcasts, its implicit that anything the BLM does is in the right because its acting on behalf of the federal government. Therefore, pointing their firearms in the protesters' faces is okay. It's the protesters who have holstered guns on their hips who are "lawless" "terrorists", Hayes would have it.

And then there's the New York Times story that came out earlier this week "breaking" Bundy's "supposed" racism. This very weighted smear was based on an out-of-context quote in which Bundy used the word "negro" -- because he's old and was using it the way we now use "black" people" -- and appeared to be saying that black people should be made slaves again. If you look at his actual -- and much longer -- unedited statements, he was actually lamenting the plight of poor black and Hispanics in the U.S. He was essentially comparing two forms of slavery, not comparing slavery to freedom and saying that blacks, or anyone, rightfully belong to the former. Of course, the usual suspects have ignored how kind-hearted Bundy's sentiments actually were and the socioeconomic issues he raised. They're giddy with joy to run with the line that Bundy's non-existent "racism" has been "exposed" and that he and his supporters are "finished". (See? The easier for the BLM or another federal agency to kill them.) 

Glenn Beck, who has always vacillated between claiming to be and kind of sounding like a libertarian and towing the establishment line, has actually acted in accordance with Reid and MSNBC, throwing out without hesitation the "domestic terrorist" and "racist" Scarlett Letters. With insurmountable ill will, he has even mercilessly painted Alex Jones' InfoWars as "wanting a violent overthrow of the government", the type of people who would lock up Beck up "in a kangaroo court without a trial" if they "took over" (despite the fact that Jones and his staff are very vocal in their support of the right to due process), and outright stating -- out of thin air, with no supporting evidence -- that InfoWars is a racist organization itself and that they're "embedded" on the Bundy ranch and knew of his racism before the New York Times story, but had been covering it up. Deliberately intending harm and even death, this is possibly the most disingenuous, deceitful, vicious, heartless, malicious behavior Glenn has ever indulged in -- and he already had quite a track record. All the while, again, he's acting in lockstep with MSNBC, Harry Reid, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and Media Matters -- for all intents and purpose, with the Obama administration.

Their is legitimate reason to be worried for the Bundys. What's happened to them thus far is a grave injustice, and it may get worse. That their mistreatment has been cheered on by certain segments of the population is endemic of a societal mental illness. This situation should not be taken lightly.

-- Ryan










Sunday, February 9, 2014

Food Babe is winning. Duh!

(To paraphrase Charlie Sheen. And to be out-of-step with by pop culture by about five years.)

Great coverage from Aaron Dykes and Melissa Melton's Truthstream Media about Vani Hari, the Food Babe, and her recent victory in getting the Subway chain to promise to remove a particular ingredient from its bread (an ingredient that, by the way, isn't food in the least). Here:



Incidentally, last Tuesday, 2/4/14, Hari went on The Alex Jones Show to be interviewed about her campaign. By Thursday, her petition -- which had already been up for a while -- had surged to over 58,000 signatures, and Subway suddenly announced the planned (eventual) removal. (No official timeline yet.) In other words, exposure via Alex Jones brought her nearly overnight success. That alone speaks to his reach and popularity, despite the efforts of establishment media (MSNBC, CNN, Bill O'Reilly, ABC) to marginalize and discredit him with ridicule and smears.

Tuesday's interview:








And, on Thursday, 2/6/14, Hari returned to Alex's show for a few minutes, to break the great news:




As I regularly enjoy Subway's veggie pattie (preferably with avocado, when available), you can be sure that I signed Hari's petition. Now, they better announce a date soon.

-- Ryan

Monday, January 20, 2014

The Creeping Distorting and Obliteration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s True Legacy

I grew up understanding what racism was: making decisions or judgments based solely on race. One should always recognize shared humanity, but take into the contents of one's character.

However, we now live in an age in which up is down and down is up. The age of MSNBC editing George Zimmerman's 911 call, omitting entire chunks so as to make it sound as though he was preoccupied with the fact that Trayvon Martin was black. (Zimmerman acting rash and following Martin, when Martin walking down the street was none of Zimmerman's business, is a separate issue). The age of pundits equating being pro-limited government, pro-2nd Amendment, and pro-life as being "racist". The age of shutting out well-founded opposition to the president's policies with the ad hominem "racist". 

Dr. King, however, got it. From his famous "I have a dream" speech, given on August 28th, 1964:

"When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the 'unalienable Rights' of 'Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.'" [Emphasis mine.]

This spirit of unity is lost on the veritable racists of today: those who asserted to me, in arguments online, absurdities like, "Not one white person has good intentions for black people. Not one." Those who consider ALL white males "privileged", whether they're a billionaire or a dying homeless junkie. (At this point, I'm sure one of these virulent racists wants to tell me, "Check your privilege, white boy.") Or those who partake in the Knockout "Game".

In this video, posted on YouTube in January 2012, the ever-driven, ever-passionate Luke Rudkowski of We Are Change interviews Dr. Benjamin Chavis, one-time assistant to Dr. King. Chavis tells Luke that Dr. King "felt that economic injustice was so acute in 1968", and hoped to "assemble the masses of poor people" in Washington, D.C. Chavis continues, "So, Dr. King was also in transition, evolution himself. He was very clear, up until the time of his assassination, that economic inequality, economic justice, was what we all should be working on." 




And we should expect no less of Dr. King, as he fundamentally understood and spoke favorably of the Bill of Rights. With the media and academia denigrating the Bill of Rights, and the military-industrial complex and global power brokers trampling all over it, a mind and spirit like Dr. King's should indeed be commemorated. 

-- Ryan

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

NSA stuff. (Just by typing "NSA", does that set off some sort of red flag in their system?)

So, a federal judge has given the NSA his thumbs-up. I'd say that he's a no-good rat, but for some reason, a voice in the back of my head is telling me that to remain ethical, I need to remain objective ( as if the establishment plays by the same rules).




He gave some half-assed, over-warmed excuse in which he used the trigger phrases "9/11" and "war on terror" ... and so, no one can resisting exclaiming, "WOOOOO HOOOO!!! Gimme SECURITY, NOT that lame-ass ol' (pffft!) 'freedom'!!!" (...umm, I guess. Does anyone actually buy even that crap anymore? Does the general public even understand words anymore?)

Hmm...are Chris Matthews and Ed Schultz protesting, "Huh, huh, wuh, HUHHHNNHH??!! Obama killed Bin Laden way back when (praise the salvation he has bestowed upon us!) he was first in office! So al-Qaeda isn't an issue anymore! What's the NSA on about?! How dare they operate as if he-who-sends-tingles-down-our-legs hasn't stopped everything bad, for all time, forever?!" Yeah, I know -- they're probably not saying that. They're probably just saying that poor besieged Obama isn't in the position to undo a holdover from the evilness that was the Bush era. And, in the sense that the sneakiness which the NSA is up to has some pretty damn firm roots in the Bush era (ALL the way back in it, as we'll see below), they're not wrong. But, the thing is, the next time there's a president wearing the "Republican" sash, they'll act like all that stuff just started and be all worked up about what an evil new thing this is evil new Republican president is doing. Meanwhile, Republicans will be pro-war and pro-police state again.  (You'd think people who are adults would stop playing this silly game, get over their "team" allegiances, admit that Bush and Obama should be spending the rest of their days as cellmates, and urge their fellow Americans to seek a president who'll put an end to all drone strikes, the use by the CIA of al-Qaeda as a proxy, the NSA surveillance grid, and repeal the last few NDAA's, as well as the Patriot Act. But that's just me.)

Anyway, time to address Judge Pauley phoning in the ol' "Afer 9/11, it's a WHOLE [BRAVE] NEW WORLD!" trope. (Pre-2008, any liberal pundit or blogger would've said, "ol' neocon trope". I certainly once would've, too. By every right, it still applies -- with people like Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly having uttered many variations of that line, it's what what makes neocons statists and not libertarians. But at this point in time, if I use it, the die-hard left will just think, "Yeahhhh, that's that RIGHTWING stuff that Obama doesn't do any of!" But then, by not using it, it's not as though I'm causing them to wake up. So, I'll just leave it at that on the eve of 2014, it's an irrelevant term.)

The thing is, your honor(?), according to this documented, dated December 2000, the NSA was already committed to and geared up for implementing a mass surveillance grid.

Here's some choice excerpts:

"NSA must respond quickly and comprehensively to the deployment of new information technology into global networks."

"This vulnerability extends beyond classified and national security networks to the the private sector infrastructure on which all depend. At the same time, because of the communications environment described above, availability of critical foreign intelligence information will mean gaining access in new places and in new ways."

At other points in the document, there are cryptic references to the NSA's "customers" and to the NSA finding "new lines of business". And don't even get me started on the outlined "strategies" that explicitly call for fostering cozy, "We'll scratch your backs..." relationships with Congress and the news media.


"News media representatives were invited inside NSA along with the families of employees during last September's NSA Faily Day."

No comment.

-- Ryan

Sunday, December 15, 2013

The Southern Poverty Law Center IS a hate group.

The Southern Poverty Law Center is a disingenuous, dishonest, deceitful, malicious organization. Ostensibly, it's a watchdog group that "monitors" and profiles racists and hate groups. (I thought profiling was reviled as the prerogative of racists...)

In reality, their purpose is to drag through the mud and tarnish the name of every remotely well-known libertarian that they can. The SPLC are, at heart, authoritarian social engineers. Peaceful, civil liberties-advocating groups like the Oath Keepers and We Are Change are classified by them as "hate groups" because they are genuine humanitarians. Such group steadfastly stand in opposition to oppression and human beings being subjected to brutality and murder at the hands of the establishment, whether it be illegal, unwarranted molestation and/or beatings at the hands of the police or the TSA, or children being the victim of drone strikes in unjust, aggressive acts of war.

You would think that a supposed liberal group would join the Liberty Movement in opposing such ugly acts of hate and oppression, but in truth, the SPLC doesn't care. They're communists preoccupied with denigrating, vilifying in the minds of the public, discrediting, and marginalizing libertarians. Not because they're racist or part of any group, as that is in no way the case, but because the SPLC disagrees with them politically and economically. And rather than fighting them with intellectual honesty and integrity, they fight as dirtily and dishonestly as possible. When you see Mark Potok pop up toward the end of a History Channel documentary on the Ku Klux Klan to assert with no proof that contemporary citizen militias are the Klan in a new, disguised form, you know that there's no low to which snakes like him and his cohorts won't sink to (and probably have).

In summation, the SPLC doesn't care about civil rights. They want the public to believe that libertarians are racist and that libertarian organizations are "hate groups". They don't care that they're wrong, and if they destroy the names of innocents. That, I know, is hate.

_______________


The headline and lead from Kurt Nimmo's article posted yesterday at InfoWars says it all:

Colorado Shooter "Opinionated Socialist" and "Keynesian"
"Don't expect Mark Potok to get on MSNBC and dissect the ideological background of the latest high school shooter."
Read full article.

...the question is, how long before the shooter's actual identity have fallen into an Orwellian memory hole, and MSNBC, CNN, and the rest of the establishment media will be pushing the "fact" that he was/is "a right-wing extremist"?

-- Ryan

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Bashir fired? Good. Maddow's long overdue.

During last Wednesday night's Ground Zero, subsequently titled  "History Deletes Itself" groundzeromedia.org, host Clyde Lewis justifiably and accurately censured MSNBC's Rachel Maddow for feigning moral outrage at the prospect of the Sandy Hook 911 calls being played on national TV. They were actually already accessible on the Internet, but establishment "news" outfits still like to pretend that they're relevant.

Lewis focused on one of the 911 callers frantically relaying to the operator that he had just seen "two shadows". He postulated that Maddow has a vested interest keeping the audio of that call under wraps, because it would suggest that the establishment media that she represents got the story wrong. The caller may well have been mistaken, but still, Maddow should ask questions and do an investigative report on the discrepancies? Maybe track down and interview the caller (and other witnesses), hmm? Wouldn't that resemble journalism?

Despite such negligence and her lack of integrity, Lewis asserted that there are reasons for which he "still likes" Rachel Maddow. What reasons? Beas me.  I lack even a sub-shadow of a sub-shadow of a doubt that the most disgusting, unethical, dishonest, disingenuous contemporary television "news" anchor is Rachel Maddow. More style than substance, she plays to the hilt her facade of "skeptical", "independent", "witty", "scrupulous", "idealistic", glasses-sporting hipster-nerd dynamo fighting for truth, justice, and sticking it to  "The Man". This has earned her the admiration and allegiance of vapid, myopic, psuedo-intellectual trendies ... you know, trust fund brats who pretend to be vagabond hippies, and the like.

(Most of her audience, with their limited understanding of the world -- which Maddow has only exacerbated --  believe that the there is no more a totalitarian force on Earth, and no greater a threat to civil liberties, than Christianity. Thus, if their precious government were to suddenly vanish out of thin air -- depriving the world of not just roads, but of swaggering, swell-headed,  fat-assed TSA agents raping and beating up innocent men, women, and children --  then their imaginary army of swamp-dwelling, "redneck", Bible-thumping, abortion clinic-bombing, bloodthirsty oppressors would immediately storm the marginalized outposts of reason and knowledge that are New England and California, savagely placing unwanted babies in good homes and assuring gay couples that now that the government's gone, they won't need it to legitimize their relationships with a piece of paper, and they're free to live their life as they see fit .) 

Remember the charade of several weeks ago that was the "government shutdown"? You know, the pointless farce of a "impasse" that voices in establishment media kept wailing as "all the Republicans' fault!"? As in, the joke of an "emergency" that Obama administration tried to substantiate by declaring select national parks and monuments "closed", as if they can nullify, or outright "shut off", the autonomy of U.S. citizens and veterans to go for a stroll and stop and look at things?

Let us not parse words: war memorials in Washington, D.C. were declared "closed". The pussyfooting of the mass media -- and the outright duplicity of the likes of Rachel Maddow -- resulted in the simple facts of this scenario, let alone the gravity of it, not really registering with the American public. Take into account: On my eighth grade field trip to D.C., my friend Sean's father, Mr. Weaver, was one of our chaperones. Mr. Weaver was a veteran of the Vietnam War. During our visit to the National Mall and its outlying sites, our stop at the Vietnam Wall did not facilitate nearly enough time for Mr. Weaver to comb over the nearly 60,000 names for that of his brother who had died in the Vietnam War. So, that evening, while we were given a formal tour of the other monuments along the Potomac, Mr. Weaver and his son verged away from the group at large and made their way back to the Vietnam Wall. And there they stayed, until locating Mr. Weaver's brother's name. When they rejoined us, I couldn't have been happier for them ... in fact, I couldn't have been more proud of them; something in my gut and heart told me that I'd just witnessed someone doing the right thing, without any compromise.

So, at the age of 13, I learned: no one fucks with war veterans ... least of all some pencil-necked statist tour guide.

Thus came October 2013 and the infamous "shutdown". After the Obama administration made the decision to arbitrarily deny access to war memorials, and then a park ranger called in police when war veterans wouldn't listen to his embarrassing attempt at telling them they can't be at the memorial for the war in which they served, I applauded, vocally promoted and supported, and was encouraged by World War II veterans stepping forth and standing up for themselves.

Ever dependable, during the October 13th, 2013 broadcast of The Alex Jones Show, the D.C. veterans' protest was covered and documented in real time. Starting at 0:13 in the video below, you can see someone in some sort of police uniform (whatever the case, who does he think he is?) for some reason using his baton to push a man wearing a baseball cap, provoking him to push back. In other words, a policeman is using physical force against a protesting veteran:




If I were a journalist of any stripe, I would report on this story by, of course citing my sources and to every possible extent, identifying both parties and the reasons for their actions: what is the man in the baseball cap protesting? Who is the man in the police uniform with the baton? Who does he work for?

But if I were Rachel Maddow, I would equate World War II veterans with the Tea Party, omit the part of the video where the man in the police uniform with the baton does the pushing, and claim that he and his fellow policemen were "due to the shutdown, working without pay". I would feign disgust at the barbarism of the protesters who I'm claiming that, without qualification, attacked the police officers and affect exasperated moral indignation at what I'm implying is the "fact" that these police folk -- whoever they are and whatever their affiliation is -- are "working without pay". And I would go on with my life not caring that there is no official record of any police outfit having been denied pay -- let alone consenting to work without pay -- as a result of the "shutdown" circus I continuously harp was caused by Republicans.

But I'm Rachel Maddow, so I just spew whatever shit I think works, so long as it characterizes Democrats as good and Republicans as bad:





Of course, if you live in the cute little world that Rachel Maddow wants you to, you know not take Alex Jones seriously. After all, he's said stuff, and she's able to quote him as saying that stuff in a mocking, incredulous tone of voice. Like she does in the clip at @06:28-06:55 below:




Maddow's "expose", or whatever it can be called, of Jones was created of sheer cynicism and arrogance, and completely devoid of journalistic integrity or intellectual honesty. All she's doing is, in her energetic, quirky, leering way, signaling that she finds amusing in how its worthy of the contempt of her cartoonish cocked eye and exaggerated, disbelieving "Okayyyyyyyyy"-type facial expression. She doesn't actually have to address anything that anyone she's out to get says. She just has to, with as much feigned incredulity and whimsy as she can muster, exclaim, "THIS is The. Person. who actually thinks that when you turn on your sink, WATER(!!!), of ALL things, actually COMES OUT OF IT!!! Bwa-HA!!!"

And so, her smug, vapid, worldly, naive viewers are cued that the random premise of there being "wasps living under the Pentagon" should be equated with knowing, wondering, and asking about:


  • 2012 Colorado movie theater shooting poster boy James Holmes' having been "treated" by a psychiatrist who'd worked for the Air Force.
  • The tragic, brutal bombing of the 2013 Boston Marathon coinciding with a bomb drill.
  • The 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, regarding which Maddow frivolously snorts out that Alex Jones "thinks didn't happen". First of all, Jones has never said anything of the sort. Furthermore, if Maddow were an actual journalist, like James Lane and his peers at Free Mind Films who culled together the documentary A Noble Lie, she'd interview witnesses and survivors like Glennn Wilburn and Jane Graham.
  • 9/11 "never happening". It happened, and Alex Jones thinks it happened, too, and ... oh, blatherin' blatherskites, I'm waiting with bated breath for Maddow to bring all of, at once, the Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth. If anything, though, she'll just have on those snickering rats from Popular Mechanics, as being assigned by their bosses to ignore a bulk of evidence and data and make up some bullshit placeholder explanation makes them credible experts.


Oh, and then we have Maddow raving about how "Alex Jones believes that Obama sent the tornado". It doesn't matter to her that in the apparently damning (they're not) clips of him making such a claim (he doesn't), he's responding off the cuff to a caller, citing DARPA research and speculating as to ways in which the then-contemporary tornado could have been manipulated. No, all she has to due is crow that he's talking about "made up" stuff.

Geez, you'd think a Rhodes Scholar would be less ignorant of the military-industrial complex than that.

-- Ryan