Showing posts with label Republican. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Republican. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

World Can't Wait and the most consistent protest of Election 2012

The radicals of World Can’t Wait had what [Pajamas Media] consider[s] the best sign of the day [an October 9th fundraising event that President Barack Obama attended in liberal bastion, friendly San Francisco -- or so he thought], a 12-Step program for Obama voters:
    1. Admit you are in a self-destructive relationship with the Democratic Party.

    2. Remove conflicting bumper stickers from your collection. “Shut Down Guantanamo” and “Obama 2012” are mutually exclusive.

    3. Understand that kill lists and more unjust war is the wrong kind of change to believe in.

    4. Stop lying to yourself. The President is not sucking up to the most powerful interests in the world because he loves you.

    5. Cut off all contact with Obama, Holder, Clinton and Pelosi. No more phone calls or writing letters. They are aware of what they are doing and they just don’t care what you think.

    6. Realize Obama is standing up and fighting. Unfortunately, he’s fighting Afghans, Pakistanis, Yeminis, Somalis…in your name.

    7. No more excuses. The Republicans are not making Democrats increase domestic spying or deport record numbers of Latinos.

    8. Get over your romantic feelings for Democrats and their supposed commitment to poor people. This election cycle, poverty is not on the agenda.

    9. Make a list of all war crimes committed under Bush. Cross out “Bush” and write in Obama. Add support for indefinite detention without charge, expanded drone wars, and invasions of two more countries. It’s healthy to gag at it.

    10. Come to grips with this: The only thing scarier than the Republican Party (a party full of climate-change deniers, fundamentalist woman-haters and gay-bashers, election stealers and racists) is a party who continually moves to the right to accommodate them and gets Americans to go along in that direction.

    11. Forgive yourself for being taken in by promises that were not delivered, and for ignoring troubling signs, because you wanted to believe in change. But remember, insanity is doing the same thing over again and expecting different results.

    12. As a result of these steps, you can now carry the message to those who still suffer from an addiction to the Democratic Party. Nothing is as liberating as resisting an evil when you know it’s wrong.

Throw 'em all!!!
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Thursday, May 24, 2012

Finally, someone in the left is trying to make the leftists live to their own set of rules...

Scumbag Male Chauvinistic Pig
Nikki Haley and S.E. Cupp prove that the left is OK with misogyny. As long as the woman is a conservative or Republican, baby, she had it coming (according to the left). It happens everytime with so-called liberals demeaning women with a different worldview... and getting away with it (and with the applause of the liberal women).

Therefore I congratulate Sandra Fluke and Planned Parenthood for their rapid response to Larry Flynt's lame attempt at ingratiation with their liberal peers when he decided to share with the world his vision of making his enemy S.E. Cupp shut up: with a phallus. He might see this as satire, but damn it if it doesn't look like male chauvinistic pig sexism.

NOW and NARAL involvement in these stories? Voting present. Both organisations seem to protect only the rights of orthodox feminists.

Rachael Larimore and XX Factor from Slate.com deserve the kudos, too; for denouncing the obvious and notorious flaw in the behavior of Bill Maher, Alec Baldwin, David Letterman and several other misogynists that get a free pass because of their "progressive" views.

A good way to start this "agree to disagree"  and "civil tone" thing.
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Friday, March 16, 2012

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Mitt Romney: unfit for command (As clueless as a John Kerry can be?)

Mitt Romney statement about being “not being concerned about the very poor” is not a Kinsley gaffe, nor a Freudian slip: Although he was inadvertently revealing his ill-advised “marketing strategy”, he wasn’t being disdainful or scornful of his non-target audience: just plain naïve about how well this revelation would play after his Florida Primary victory. Anyhow, the direct result of this stupid error is an element of truth in the Obama 1%-against-99% narrative that will be played 24/7 in case he secures the Republican nomination.

Such gaffes are inexcusable for a seasoned politician with an 8-year presidential campaign, because they reek of incompetence. The “It's not worth getting angry about” dismissive response to Rick Santorum in a debate doesn’t seal his posture about repealing Obamacare but reveal how out of touch with the base he is. It almost looks like Romney informed himself about the TEA party reading the MSM.

Two reckless statements show Romney he can’t take the pulse of the media nor his own party base, maybe because being sheltered by a big portion of the party bigwigs and figures has given him a false sense of security. He doesn’t seem to realize he’s getting easy until now, but if he secures the nomination, the mainstream media will hit him with everything it gets, and real hard. His big-time supporters seem to be distracted of this by something else we can’t still grasp.

In the meanwhile, the GOP chances in this presidential election seem to diminish, no matter who secures the nomination. Cain, Perry, Bachmann… everyone that seemed able to compete against Romney has experienced immediately what is to be in the meat grinder. Paul and Santorum have being left alone in the last days because they’re considered harmless, but they’ve felt the heat when they get near the “Inevitable”. Gingrich lost in Florida not only by being subject of a massive negative campaign, but by being outspent by Romney, who had to use the 99% of his ad budget to crush the former Speaker of the House. Looks like a pyrrhic victory to me.

If this is all the might Mitt Romney has, if this is all the political wisdom he can use, if this is the best he can do, and if he needs so badly too many people to carry the water for him in the press and still persists digging a deeper hole by uttering more gaffetastic statements, then he is clearly unfit for command.


Just like John Kerry.
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Thursday, January 26, 2012

GOP’s own EMP and the Eleventh Commandment




Every politician is an egotist (duh). Barack Obama is famous for taking himself in very high regard. But Newt Gingrich has raised the bar. Obama’s infatuation with himself is dwarfed by the way the architect of the 1994 Republican Revolution sees himself. Never timid with the use of grandiloquent statements (sample quote: “we helped defeat the Soviet empire”), Newt is the Republican answer to Obama’s “fundamental transformation of America.”

That said, Gingrich’s second surge in the Republican primaries has hit a very delicate nerve in some GOP sectors, enough to provoke an all-out attack against him in order to derail his presidential candidacy for good. The instrument for this assault is none other than the Gipper, Ronald Reagan, the most beloved Republican president of the 20th century. According to sources, in the 1980s, the candidate repeatedly insulted the Great Communicator, never afraid to predict that Reagan’s policies would fail. Even Viagra spokesperson Bob Dole decided to pile on Gingrich, hours before the 19th debate at the University of North Florida.

It is not risky to assert that Gingrich is driving his detractors insane; otherwise Ann Coulter, The National Review and a long list of pedigreed GOPers wouldn’t be so unambiguously breaking Reagan’s eleventh commandment: Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican. I don’t need to be a conservative or register myself as Republican to see where this absurd game is leading: the Republican nomination winner will emerge so weak and disminished after this slugfest that he won’t stand a chance against a full-of-internal-support Barack Obama. This in-house dispute (I refuse to call it civil war) is a Democrats’ dream come true. Like Christmas in January.

Gingrich’s many weaknesses are for all to see now, but absolutely nobody recognizes his true strength. Nobody’s praising his moon base plans, or his immigrant policy, but his followers sure dig the way he fights the biased media and his willingness to pin Obama for every wrongdoing of his tenure. Next to him, Romney is the android that SNL and countless others like to portray. Ron Paul’s foreign policy is way wackier than any Gingrich proposal could be (His EMP warning is not a delusional one, like it or not, it could really happen). Santorum is the only true social conservative of the bunch, and because of that, no matter how well he performs, he’s considered unelectable, because of his perceived “extremist views.”

But like Gingrich, he’s for big government and therefore more akin to the GOP elite, forever disconnected from the base, in fear of having to dismantle spendthrift federal agencies and stopping for once the derail-menacing gravy train of government runaway spending. So many sinecures and crony businesses opportunities lost forever…

The “United States of Greece” is derided as an exaggerated, silly boogeyman, but the spending party has to end. Europe keeps walking on the tight rope, and nobody wants to face the music in the first world.

In the meanwhile, the GOP detonates its own EMP device against itself and smiles pretending to know exactly what it is doing.

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

Mocking Rick Santorum's pain for his dead baby is despicable. Rectify your evilness. NOW!

It is a rule for all the members of the sipmac team not to write or speak about their personal lives in any of our blogs. We’re bloggers, not divas. In the libertarian sense, we feel we don’t need no badge to be considered with the same rights as journalists, specially if we follow the same rules. Two hundred years ago, no journalist asked the state for permission to publish (their publications just got closed when they became uncomfortable enough).

But I digress. I will make an exception for the “personal live rule” today because I want to use this modest podium to energically protest the unspeakable way the mainstream press in the USA is cruelly mocking the way presidential hopeful Rick Santorum handled with her wife the death of their baby Gabriel a few years ago.

You may disagree with Santorum’s ideology, but this mockery is way beyond the line. It is pure depravity distilled. For people that claim to be sensitive, that take pride in their alleged empathy, it is truly their lowest point in their careers so far. It happened before with Trig, Sarah Palin’s son with Down syndrome, now it happens to a baby that was born alive but died after two hours.

As a father whose only son died two days after being born, words fail me to describe the disgust and the ire I feel reading and watching those considering themselves the voice of reason, more sophisticated than those clinging-to-their-guns-and-their-religion "troglodytes", but somehow petty and dishonest enough to score a paltry and shallow political victory by demeaning and defiling the pain a grieving father feels, just because he is a political adversary.

It is not a story about cultural divide. It is a story about how partisan journalists won’t stop at virtually nothing to advance their agendas and destroy their perceived enemies.

The end justifies the means. Is this your creed? Is this the way you want to get Obama reelected?

Shame on you!
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Saturday, August 27, 2011

Sarah Palin - myths and reality - The video

Hi there! We're the sipmac team, we want the world and we want it now! We continue to expand through other venues, such as... video. Now we proudly present our Youtube channel, the jokerizepaul channel. Our goal is to post all the original material we can produce. This time, Paul Maršić, a.k.a. jokerizedpaul (yours truly) produces and presents a special report on Sarah Palin, the "perceived truth" and the reality. And the music.

Jokerizedpaul on Sarah Palin

by: jokerizedpaul





Enjoy!

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Saturday, July 2, 2011

If you really, really want to know a firsthand account about conservatism...

… not a biased one, and you don’t have time even for a crash course then you should check the #tcot:

Ann Coulter: sarcasm with a no-prisoners approach. With 8 New York Times-listed bestsellers, and not a single review by them. Why?

Iowahawk: best living satirist in the USA! People in the other team wish they were with them!

Mark Steyn: Irony combined with erudition.

Rush Limbaugh: A William F. Buckley with humor and charisma for the masses. Feared by the left because of his alleged “hypnotic” powers that keep tuned to his radio show about 20 million listeners from Monday to Friday. Biggest radio personality in the States. Bigger than Howard Stern.

Dennis Miller: he found out that life was more than “Saturday Night Live”.

Greg Gutfeld: his humorous 3AM show “Red Eye” has MORE audience than MOST CNN shows.

Cynthia Yockey: a conservative lesbian that learned the hard way that the left was not for her. And she knows a thing or two about neuroscience!

And maybe you should read…


Advanced Readings:

Fiat Money Inflation in FranceAndrew Dickson White
The Road to SerfdomFriedrich A. Hayek
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Monday, December 13, 2010

Is Obama feeling the heat now?

Dr. sipmac doesn't really know by now. But the far left is enraged because Obama, their anointed one, decided to back up the Bush tax cuts for two more years (talk about heresy!). Some people think this is another clever and democrat ruse, but the democratic congressional caucus already said "F&% the president". The shockwave hit so hard, that Saturday Night Live couldn't resist sending Fred Armisen to make the cold opening:

Why Obama suddenly realized that a growing economy is the best job creation policy? Why does he favor now the Bush tax cuts as a way to stimulate the economy? Why does this tax break have a duration of only two years? Why did he leave Clinton talking in *his* podium like he were still president?

Stay tuned next week, same bat-hour, same bat-channel.
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Monday, November 22, 2010

Midterm Elections: an open letter to Arlene B. Tickner

Respected Dr. Tickner:

You have several very big advantages against me; you are a professor of the Universidad de los Andes for starters, a Ph.D. in International Relations from the University of Miami and a MA in Latin American Studies at Georgetown University. Besides, you are an American also. I am just a blogger, but I dare to question (perhaps unwisely) a few things about your column, "Losing is winning?" Published on October 26, 2010 El Espectador.

The TEA Party is not a radical faction

If they would behave like a new "John Birch Society”, I would accept the point, but the political platform of the Taxed Enough Already people is precisely no new taxes, no more waste, fiscal responsibility, putting an end to the runaway bureaucracy, make government officials actually more accountable to voters and not to a coterie of lobbyists and colleagues, that is, unless things have changed so much that those simple things are meant to be considered radical.

Andrew Breitbart, the director of new media of conservative orientation, offered $ 100,000 for evidence to prove racism in the TEA Party. No one was to claim the money. A favorite banner of the TEA Party said: "No matter what I say this poster, it will be considered racist anyway."

I think "Organizing for America" is even more radical, which it seems they want to make a group of popular pressure astroturfed by the same government.

No bipartisan collaboration: Republicans are to blame

The bipartisanship ended the very day Obama met with Republicans and said "I won", just after the congresspersons made a few suggestions (quite surprising for a non-sectarian, post-partisan President, isn’t it?). One of the lamest arguments to decry the current state of affairs is the lack of cooperation from the Republicans, a/k/a the "party of no." Democrats control until January the two chambers of Congress with large majorities, enough to pass any legislation they want. Pelosi and Reid used all the muscle and resources to pass health care reform (by any means necessary, the election of Scott Brown in Massachusetts was futile), not because of Republican obstructionism but because of the doubts and objections that housed many of their fellow party members on the relevance and viability of that particular 2.000-pages plan. Now, the "blue dogs" are discarded by their own party machine after having served for the purposes set forth.

The debate is unfair to compare Obama to Lenin and Hitler as leaders and totalitarian ends.

It seems that comparing Bush to Hitler for eight years is fair, but you cannot do the same to Obama, God forbid. Let's see: the reform of the health system may end up giving the state the total control of one-sixth of the U.S. economy. General Motors and Chrysler were virtually nationalized, rather than allowing them to undergo restructuring under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Act. Chavez, who knows what he's talking about, did not miss the opportunity to comment that Obama was further to the left than he is.
On the other hand, Democrats should not allow that a great portion of its history could be explained only with the words "George Soros", who undeniably through his contributions and organizations supported by him, have a strong influence on party decisions. Just as Republicans have been criticized for being nurtured by corporations and corporate power, I really don’t see why the Democrats can’t be held accountable for the same reason.

Obama also has failed to sell successfully his accomplishments.

This is puzzling for someone with the oratorical skills that is supposed to have. Obama has delivered so many speeches; he has held so many meetings with the electorate at the Town halls and has made so many television appearances, including Letterman, The View and The Daily Show (lowering the dignity of the office as not much different than it did Uribe to appear on Big Brother), it is very difficult to believe there has been a communications problem.

I would like to be corrected if wrong, but before taking office as President, at least 40% of US taxpayers pay no income tax, so it is plain appalling to present that the 95%-tax-cut-figure. Everyone knows that so-called Bush tax cuts are still in the new government's sight, and the creation of a federal VAT (to finance health care reform!) is not indifferent to it, either. Thus, the unemployment figure of over 9% makes more sense. Who wants to create businesses and expand them, and create jobs in such a toxic environment as toxic, full of regulations?

The press begins to shake off the hypnotic trance that was sunk by the election of the first African American to the presidency, disqualified by more than one of his own ethnicity because he didn’t have "no slave blood (!)" Speaking of racism ... well, the mainstream media also has its peccadilloes to be recognized in its daily news coverage. The media can acrimoniously claim its objectivity, but when a scandal like Journolist hits the road, it would be better to recognize once and for all their partisanship, and thus we would know what to expect.

Faced with a Republican Congress the President will have someone to put the blame in

I agree completely, the most paradoxical of all is that most of the Republican establishment, ignoring the will of their constituents, is more than willing to lend a lifeline to the Obama presidency, which could eventually help in his re-election, leaving the GOP flat and wondering why.

Sincerely,


Dr. sipmac

P.S. I also find unacceptable the disqualification made by RCN’s Francisco Santos to you and Laura Gil, and let me please extend my solidarity.
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Sunday, November 7, 2010

"Shellacked" by the Republicans? Obama, go ask Mr. Penn "crisis manufacturer"

In a way that nobody, absolutely nobody in their right mind and with a conscience can condone or justify, the Democratic pollster Mark Penn appeared on MSNBC’s "Hardball" offering his "advice" to a self-described "shellacked" Obama on how to recover lost ground with public opinion, after November 2 elections, nonchalantly released his pearl of wisdom: Bill Clinton reconnected with the American nation after his speech on the attack in Oklahoma City, so Obama needs a similar situation to do the same.

What a sick, perverted bastard! Do you think that terrorist attacks are to regain the approval and popularity? Of course Dr. sipmac was not born yesterday (and isn’t as crooked as many people think): there are extremely opportunistic politicians to capitalize on disaster situations, or like Rahm Emanuel, former chief of staff for Obama said:
"Never let a serious crisis go to waste. What I mean is that it is an opportunity to do things that they could not do before."
What kind of sick fantasy is that of the of the interviewer: like a sinister white knight to rescue him, what Obama needs is a right-wing terrorist to do well again in the public eye (and incidentally, that would tear appart the Tea Party and the Republicans). Penn will not be able to claim candor or having been misunderstood, much less a severe case of stupidity, because he knew what he was saying (he knows it doesn’t take a "real" terrorist to do it): a fire in the Reichstag, just as a gift for Obama.
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Friday, November 5, 2010

HotAirPundit: Michael Moore Puts Democrats on Probation: "If You...

"If You Move One More Inch to the Center or To The Right, You Will Never Get Our Vote Again", said Moore on the Last Word. He is angry with the Dems for not being left wing enough, says about Republicans: 'I secretly admire them, because they are ruthless, and go straight for the killing."

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


Didn't know that Michael; in fact, that's the image Dr. sipmac always had of the extreme left (witness Stalin, Pol Pot, Ceaucescu and a very long et cetera). I should have known about your commie remarks and beyond pinko background when I saw your TV show called "The awful truth". It was a lot of fun then, but not now.

A
nyway, I think you'll be more disappointed than you wish any time soon. And you should do something with your obesity, fatboy. You look like a... greedy capitalist pig!
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Saturday, January 17, 2009

The Artificial Reality of the Matrix Media

Mr. Selwyn Duke allowed me to post his essay "The Artificial Reality of the Matrix Media", originally published on American Thinker on January 15th, 2009. Dr. sipmac is proud to host in his blog the following article:

A common defense of error today is to say, with due indignation, "I have a right to my opinion!" Legally this is true, given that our First Amendment is extant. But as G.K. Chesterton once said, "Having the right to do something is not at all the same as being right in doing it." There is no moral right to an immoral opinion -- nor to one bred of emotionalism unconstrained by reason -- nor to a deceitful one.

More than ever, Americans are realizing that this isn't a sentiment to which the mainstream media subscribes. In fact, with how it shamelessly carried water for Barack Obama during the election, 2008 has been dubbed "the year journalism died" (Sean Hannity is fond of this label). Yet, while such pronouncements make for compelling commentary, nothing could be further from the truth.

The reality is that journalism is alive and well -- outside the mainstream media. As for the latter's journalism, by the third millennium it was not only dead, not only laid to rest, but fossilized and buried under the stratum containing the hula hoop and pet rock. And it would take a Jurassic Park-like effort to reconstitute its DNA and resurrect the ancient beast. Thus, a more accurate statement about 2008 is: It was the year that many more illusions about the validity of mainstream journalism died. Let us now take a look at a media that has made malpractice an art.

During the budget battles in the 1990s between the Republican Congress and Clinton Administration, we heard much talk about "cuts" in spending. While this was a time when the GOP still stood for fiscal responsibility, in reality there rarely if ever were any cuts; rather, at issue were merely reductions in the rate of spending growth. How it worked was that the government would start with a "current services baseline" that would automatically raise the budget by a certain percentage annually; then, any reduction of that already inflated budget projection would be called a "cut." It's like this: Let's say your son receives an allowance of $10 a week and, in a spirit of entitlement, assumes it should automatically be raised 10 percent per annum, which would give him $11 after New Year's. When the time comes, you do give him more, but settle on the figure of $10.50. He then protests, calling it a "cut." What does this mean? Your boy has a future in politics and knows Washington-speak well.

Despite this being a consistent theme in the 90s, I only remember one instance in which a mainstream media reporter broached the topic. The scene was a press conference with President Clinton, and a reporter -- I can't quite remember who it was, but he must have woken up on the right side of the bed that day -- asked the President why he was characterizing spending increases as cuts. Talk about hitting a nerve. Clinton, at his petulant, red-faced best, chastised the newsman, saying something to the effect of "Don't ask me! This is the language you people were using when I came to Washington!"

In other words, how dare you confront me with the truth after making lies the norm?

Really, though, I can't place too much onus on Clinton. Sure, we all have an obligation to speak the Truth, but a liar only rises to prominence in a culture of lies. And if the so-called watchers in the media deal in deceit, how can we expect the watched to be any different?

The budget con of the 90s is just one of innumerable deceptions. The reality is that the mainstream media are thoroughly corrupt -- manifesting itself in a lack of both conscientiousness and honor -- which leads to incompetence and duplicity. It deals in half-truths, the suppression of facts, the exaltation of evil and savaging of the sublime, and outright lies all the time. And we could use up countless gigabytes compiling examples.
During the 2008 campaign, for instance, CNN correspondent Drew Griffin interviewed Sarah Palin and, to discredit the governor with the notion that even conservatives were lambasting her, said,
"The National Review had a story saying that, you know, I can't tell if Sarah Palin is ‘incompetent, stupid, unqualified, corrupt, or all of the above.'"
What is the truth? Those words were taken grossly out of context. The point of the NR writer, Byron York, was that the media coverage of Palin was so biased that based upon it one couldn't tell if she was "incompetent, stupid, unqualified, corrupt, or all of the above." And the irony is bittersweet. By taking words designed as a defense of Palin and indictment of the media and using them to impugn the governor, CNN reinforced the very point York was making. That is, among the small minority of the population that actually heard the truth from alternative media sources.

This is reminiscent of the Dan Rather forged-documents scandal. They both were, I believe, the result of incompetent and biased underlings handing off misinformation to incompetent superiors, yet the latter's culpability is greater than this characterization indicates. For conscientiousness is an imperative of morality and a prerequisite for competence; thus, the more immoral the person, the less he will care and the more incompetent he will tend to be.

But while we can argue about what percentage of the media's untruths are actually lies (when you tell an untruth knowing it's untrue), the number of untruths - as well as half-truths and distortions -- is staggering. Here are a few off the top of my head.

The media used to disseminate a statistic that 150,000 women a year die from anorexia, but when the originally-cited source was tracked down, the real number was found to be about 52. We continually hear that the male/female wage gap is caused by discrimination, when in reality it's a function of the sexes' different career choices. The press widely disseminated the statistic that there were 3 million homeless people in America and John Edwards' claim that 200,000 veterans were "sleeping under bridges" yet failed to report that these figures were wildly exaggerated. 

The media never pointed out that what they were calling "assault rifles" -- a term conjuring up images of machines guns in laymen's minds -- were merely semi-automatic firearms (one shot is fired every time the trigger is pulled). Diane Sawyer once did a report on the low crime rate on the isle of Fiji and attributed it to the absence of guns; the truth is that native Fijians were brutal and warlike -- even though they didn't have guns -- until Christian missionaries came to their island many years ago. 

The media demonize "racial profiling" but never place it in perspective by mentioning how it is no different from sex profiling, which is when authorities view men more suspiciously than women. They will report any allegation of Republican voter fraud -- no matter how specious -- while ignoring stories about where it is rampant, Democratic strongholds in the inner cities. 

They perpetuate the Malthusian myth that the world faces inexorable population increases, when the truth is that man is poised to experience a "demographic winter," a population implosion. The media inundated us with stories about the relatively minor Abu Ghraib affair, which hurt our nation's image, while ignoring the huge oil-for-food scandal, in which foreign nations were complicit. They publicize fabrications about transgressions against Islam -- such as the story about the Koran being flushed down a toilet -- while suppressing news about Moslem atrocities. They gleefully impugned Pope Pius XII by promoting the "Hitler's Pope" myth, when the truth is, as Rabbi David Dalin says, that Pius saved more than 800,000 Jews from the Holocaust and, consequently, was hailed as a "righteous gentile" by prominent WWII-era Jews such as Golda Meir, Albert Einstein and Moshe Sharett.

The above is a set of truly disparate examples with a very definite pattern -- one of deception. The hard, cold, sad truth is that the mainstream media distort virtually every important issue of the day. 

This is tragic because the media have a sacred trust. It's a cliché, but it's said that knowledge is power, and the media are the relaters of knowledge. In fact, we rely on them for even fairly basic information about current events and the world. After all, virtually none of us will ever meet our prominent politicians or travel to war zones; thus, how many would even know of these leaders' existence (as it is, most Americans can name precious few office holders) or much about the war in Afghanistan were it not for reportage? Sure, there is word of mouth, but it only goes so far and relates so much, and the grapevine tends to distort matters even more than Moveon.org on a million-dollar George Soros bender. Without a vibrant media, we cannot have a vigilant populace. This is why freedom of the press is enshrined in the Constitution.

Unfortunately, also powerful is misinformation, as it engenders a misshapen world view. For how can people make correct decisions regarding what policies and politicians to support if they aren't given correct information? Why would they defend the good if they were lead to believe it was bad and fight the bad if they were lead to believe it was good?

It's much like a computer. If the data input is incorrect, so will the output be (the same is true if the data is incomplete, yet we still encourage people with insufficient data to vote). If, for instance, stories about how guns are used to commit crime are showcased but those about how they're used to thwart it are suppressed, people will be more likely to conclude that firearm ownership should be prohibited. If the electorate is made to believe that climate change is the handiwork of man, their very logical conclusion will be that man can and should do something about it. If you convince people that the symptoms are something they're not, they will make the wrong diagnosis and prescribe a drug that doesn't treat what truly ails us but often has some very nasty side effects.

If I've been a bit verbose, perhaps it's because I'm trying to describe something for which words are insufficient. It's much like when the Morpheus character in the movie The Matrix said that no one could be told what the Matrix is, that you have to see it for yourself. Our matrix media (along with academia and the popular culture) has constructed an all-encompassing faux reality that cannot truly be understood unless you step outside of it. For the average person this means, first, being willing to question all his basic suppositions about political and social reality, as these have been shaped by the matrix media. The second requirement is to embark upon a Reality 101 course on the Internet, where the wheat can at least be found amidst the chaff. You see, unlike the movie, our virtual world is in a way more real than the "real" world. 

If this sounds dark and conspiratorial, know that it is the former but not the latter. In truth, what is so dangerous about the matrix media isn't so much that they're akin to a cabal of calculating sentient programs but that they cannot think outside the box themselves. They are like an insane man who knows nothing of the world beyond his insane asylum and thus can relate only insanity. You might say they have become one with their mistaken notions. Call it, The Zen of Being Wrong.

Yet, where does the real blame lie? Some may say that since the media deny us the information necessary to render good decisions, it's not fair to claim that people get the government they deserve. But it must be remembered that people get the media they deserve, too. After all, there is a reason why a celebrity gossip piece might get ten times the readership of incisive social commentary. If people want sweet lies and stories about Paris Hilton, bread and circuses, there will always be "journalists" willing to provide them. It's just as with politicians, only here people vote for demagogues by clicking a mouse, pressing the remote or buying a paper. 

So journalism isn't dead -- not any more than the readership, anyway. It's just that those practicing the authentic variety are seldom elected to high office.
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