Theme: Crisis

  • More Divided Than Ever? Try 1972?

    (FB 1540920393 Timestamp) THE WORM TURNS: THE OVERTON WINDOW MOVES CLOSER EVERY SINGLE DAY

    Is this worse than 1968?
    by Pat Buchanan Are we more divided than we have ever been? Are our politics more poisoned? Are we living in what Charles Dickens called “the worst of times” in America? Is today worse than 1968? Certainly, the hatred and hostility, the bile and bitterness of our discourse, seem greater now than 50 years ago. But are the times really worse? 1968 began with one of the greatest humiliations in the history of the American Navy. The U.S. spy ship Pueblo was hijacked in international waters and its crew interned by North Korea. A week later came the Tet Offensive, where every provincial capital in South Vietnam was attacked. A thousand U.S. troops died in February, 10,000 more through 1968. On March 14, anti-war Sen. Gene McCarthy captured 42 percent of the vote in New Hampshire against President Johnson. With LBJ wounded, Robert Kennedy leaped into the race, accusing the president who had enacted civil rights of “dividing the country” and removing himself from “the enduring and generous impulses that are the soul of this nation.” Lyndon Johnson, said Kennedy, is “calling upon the darker impulses of the American spirit.” Today, RFK is remembered as a “uniter.” With Gov. George Wallace tearing at Johnson from the right and Kennedy and McCarthy attacking from the left – and Nixon having cleared the Republican field with a landslide in New Hampshire – LBJ announced on March 31 he would not run again.

    Four days later, Martin Luther King, leading a strike of garbage workers, was assassinated in Memphis. One hundred U.S. cities exploded in looting, arson and riots. The National Guard was called up everywhere and federal troops rushed to protect Washington, D.C., long corridors of which were gutted, not to be rebuilt for a generation. Before April’s end, Columbia University had exploded in the worst student uprising of the decade. It was put down only after the NYPD was unleashed on the campus. Nixon called the Columbia takeover by black and white radicals “the first major skirmish in a revolutionary struggle to seize the universities of this country and transform them into sanctuaries for radicals and vehicles for revolutionary political and social goals.” Which many have since become. In June, Kennedy, after defeating McCarthy in the crucial primary of California, was mortally wounded in the kitchen of the hotel where he had declared victory. He was buried in Arlington beside JFK. Nixon, who had swept every primary, was nominated on the first ballot in Miami Beach, and the Democratic Convention was set for late August. Between the conventions, Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev sent his Warsaw Pact armies and hundreds of tanks into Czechoslovakia to crush the peaceful uprising known as “Prague Spring.” With this bloodiest of military crackdowns since the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Moscow sent a message to the West: There will be no going back in Europe. Once a Communist state, always a Communist state! At the Democratic convention in Chicago, the thousands of radicals who had come to raise hell congregated nightly in Grant Park, across from the Hilton where the candidates and this writer were staying. Baited day and night, the Chicago cops defending the hotel, by late in the week, had had enough. Early one evening, platoons of fresh police arrived and charged into the park clubbing and arresting scores of radicals as the TV cameras rolled. It would be called a “police riot.” When Sen. Abe Ribicoff took the podium that night, he directed his glare at Mayor Richard J. Daley, accusing him of using “Gestapo tactics in the streets of Chicago.” Daley’s reply from the floor was unprintable.

    Through September, Democratic candidate Hubert Humphrey could not speak at a rally without being cursed and shouted down. Describing the radicals disrupting his every event, Humphrey said, these people “aren’t just hecklers,” but “highly disciplined, well-organized agitators. … Some are anarchists and some of these groups are dedicated to destroying the Democratic Party and destroying the country.” After his slim victory, Nixon declared that his government would take as its theme the words on a girl’s placard that he had seen in the Ohio town of Deshler: “Bring us together.” Nixon tried in his first months, but it was not to be. According to Bryan Burrough, author of “Days of Rage, America’s Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence,” “During an 18-month period in 1971 and 1972, the FBI reported more than 2,500 bombings on U.S. soil, nearly 5 a day.” No, 2018 is not 1968, at least not yet Read more at https://www.wnd.com/2018/10/is-this-worse-than-1968/#tvuOzu3OV1eazsLt.99

  • More Divided Than Ever? Try 1972?

    (FB 1540920393 Timestamp) THE WORM TURNS: THE OVERTON WINDOW MOVES CLOSER EVERY SINGLE DAY

    Is this worse than 1968?
    by Pat Buchanan Are we more divided than we have ever been? Are our politics more poisoned? Are we living in what Charles Dickens called “the worst of times” in America? Is today worse than 1968? Certainly, the hatred and hostility, the bile and bitterness of our discourse, seem greater now than 50 years ago. But are the times really worse? 1968 began with one of the greatest humiliations in the history of the American Navy. The U.S. spy ship Pueblo was hijacked in international waters and its crew interned by North Korea. A week later came the Tet Offensive, where every provincial capital in South Vietnam was attacked. A thousand U.S. troops died in February, 10,000 more through 1968. On March 14, anti-war Sen. Gene McCarthy captured 42 percent of the vote in New Hampshire against President Johnson. With LBJ wounded, Robert Kennedy leaped into the race, accusing the president who had enacted civil rights of “dividing the country” and removing himself from “the enduring and generous impulses that are the soul of this nation.” Lyndon Johnson, said Kennedy, is “calling upon the darker impulses of the American spirit.” Today, RFK is remembered as a “uniter.” With Gov. George Wallace tearing at Johnson from the right and Kennedy and McCarthy attacking from the left – and Nixon having cleared the Republican field with a landslide in New Hampshire – LBJ announced on March 31 he would not run again.

    Four days later, Martin Luther King, leading a strike of garbage workers, was assassinated in Memphis. One hundred U.S. cities exploded in looting, arson and riots. The National Guard was called up everywhere and federal troops rushed to protect Washington, D.C., long corridors of which were gutted, not to be rebuilt for a generation. Before April’s end, Columbia University had exploded in the worst student uprising of the decade. It was put down only after the NYPD was unleashed on the campus. Nixon called the Columbia takeover by black and white radicals “the first major skirmish in a revolutionary struggle to seize the universities of this country and transform them into sanctuaries for radicals and vehicles for revolutionary political and social goals.” Which many have since become. In June, Kennedy, after defeating McCarthy in the crucial primary of California, was mortally wounded in the kitchen of the hotel where he had declared victory. He was buried in Arlington beside JFK. Nixon, who had swept every primary, was nominated on the first ballot in Miami Beach, and the Democratic Convention was set for late August. Between the conventions, Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev sent his Warsaw Pact armies and hundreds of tanks into Czechoslovakia to crush the peaceful uprising known as “Prague Spring.” With this bloodiest of military crackdowns since the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Moscow sent a message to the West: There will be no going back in Europe. Once a Communist state, always a Communist state! At the Democratic convention in Chicago, the thousands of radicals who had come to raise hell congregated nightly in Grant Park, across from the Hilton where the candidates and this writer were staying. Baited day and night, the Chicago cops defending the hotel, by late in the week, had had enough. Early one evening, platoons of fresh police arrived and charged into the park clubbing and arresting scores of radicals as the TV cameras rolled. It would be called a “police riot.” When Sen. Abe Ribicoff took the podium that night, he directed his glare at Mayor Richard J. Daley, accusing him of using “Gestapo tactics in the streets of Chicago.” Daley’s reply from the floor was unprintable.

    Through September, Democratic candidate Hubert Humphrey could not speak at a rally without being cursed and shouted down. Describing the radicals disrupting his every event, Humphrey said, these people “aren’t just hecklers,” but “highly disciplined, well-organized agitators. … Some are anarchists and some of these groups are dedicated to destroying the Democratic Party and destroying the country.” After his slim victory, Nixon declared that his government would take as its theme the words on a girl’s placard that he had seen in the Ohio town of Deshler: “Bring us together.” Nixon tried in his first months, but it was not to be. According to Bryan Burrough, author of “Days of Rage, America’s Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence,” “During an 18-month period in 1971 and 1972, the FBI reported more than 2,500 bombings on U.S. soil, nearly 5 a day.” No, 2018 is not 1968, at least not yet Read more at https://www.wnd.com/2018/10/is-this-worse-than-1968/#tvuOzu3OV1eazsLt.99

  • WORM TURNS: THE OVERTON WINDOW MOVES CLOSER EVERY SINGLE DAY

    https://www.wnd.com/2018/10/is-this-worse-than-1968/THE WORM TURNS: THE OVERTON WINDOW MOVES CLOSER EVERY SINGLE DAY

    https://www.wnd.com/2018/10/is-this-worse-than-1968/


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-30 13:26:00 UTC

  • You are either engaging in wishful thinking, don’t understand how few men it tak

    You are either engaging in wishful thinking, don’t understand how few men it takes to radically alter the status quo, the universal failure of ‘diversity’ in turing the west into another Levant, and the degree of anger in ENOUGH of those men to act. (I do.)


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-29 21:20:22 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1057019336186040320

    Reply addressees: @AliceTeller

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1056995360525246464


    IN REPLY TO:

    @AliceTeller

    “To me, the Civil War is as remote and irrelevant as the War of the Roses” Norman Podhoretz https://t.co/SHMOwzIGeD

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1056995360525246464

  • photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_SxeO6JU-xg/45119279_10156741213577264_219901608

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_SxeO6JU-xg/45119279_10156741213577264_219901608

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_SxeO6JU-xg/45119279_10156741213577264_2199016087251582976_o_10156741213572264.jpg —“You have all just made Gab a nationally recognized brand as the home of free speech online at a time when Silicon Valley is stifling political speech”— Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.comAndrey SokoloffI wasn’t using gab much before… will now. Also tired of 30 day band for minor ”violations.”Oct 29, 2018, 12:11 PMJeff UrizenTrump should switch to gabOct 29, 2018, 12:11 PMBernard HoltPretty sure Gab is downOct 29, 2018, 12:31 PMCurt Doolittlethis is the current homepage. they will be up shortlyOct 29, 2018, 12:40 PMRoy BlackheartAre you going to be on GAB when it comes back up?Oct 29, 2018, 12:47 PMCurt Doolittlei have an account yesOct 29, 2018, 12:49 PMVincenzo LaSalaVerified nobodies. Classic.Oct 29, 2018, 1:46 PMMiles KeenanGoing gabOct 29, 2018, 1:52 PMRafael AureliusIf only there were some kind of censorship resistant payment method that anyone in the world could use to pay for Gab.Oct 29, 2018, 2:44 PMJean LeonardI signed up last night, but I probably don’t have time for it.Oct 29, 2018, 4:11 PMBen HartselleAndrew is copeposting hereOct 29, 2018, 8:07 PMBen HartselleYa but even if they used it, the problem would be getting it into and out of fiat to pay employees, vendors, etc.

    It’s the choke points of ed entry and exit into the banking system.

    I always figured a major use case for crypto would be freedom from government interference, not an oppressive corporate theocracy.

    20012 libertarian me BTFOOct 29, 2018, 8:18 PMCurt Doolittlelink?Oct 29, 2018, 8:30 PMBen HartselleI mean that Andrew’s above post is probaby copeposting. Daily Stormer went through all this before, they broke completely new ground in getting censored, and were reduced to publishing on TOR periodically while Weev worked out solution after solution.

    If the eye of Sauron/big tech gets focused on you, it’s VERY difficult to continually come up with constant workarounds and maintain your business.

    If DS wasn’t essentially one publisher, a writing staff and one of the world’s top security researchers doing pro-bono work for the site full-time, they’d still be permanently off the Internet.

    If weev (ironically banned from Gab) and AA don’t see a long term solution after working on it for a year, and one of /ourguys/ trying to BUY A BANK to build a new payment processor with $100,000,000 and stopped from doing so, we’re running out of options within the current Internet ecosystem.

    But by all means, remove all other options for us to exert our will and spread our ideas.Oct 29, 2018, 8:52 PMMichael KabanoffWould make sense. Lure all the ‘extremists’ to one site where they are easier to monitorOct 30, 2018, 1:39 AMJim LeisWe expect this shit from the left. But it’s the libertarians who’s heads should be spinning while they argue that every private company has the right to deplatform Gab.Oct 30, 2018, 7:44 AMCurt Doolittle^ Never happen. Fiat = Shares in the Economy. What *WILL* happen is multiple fiat currencies for the multiple purposes. This will change economics dramatically. If necessary the states will crush competing currencies as otherwise they cannot respond to war and shock.Oct 30, 2018, 9:37 AMCurt Doolittleno. they are uninsured. the state insures. crypto doesn’t and cant. which is precisely why fiat money exists and is more advantagous than all other forms of money combined: insurability.Oct 30, 2018, 10:09 AM—“You have all just made Gab a nationally recognized brand as the home of free speech online at a time when Silicon Valley is stifling political speech”— Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.com http://Gab.com


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-29 12:04:00 UTC

  • photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_SxeO6JU-xg/45119279_10156741213577264_219901608

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_SxeO6JU-xg/45119279_10156741213577264_219901608

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_SxeO6JU-xg/45119279_10156741213577264_2199016087251582976_o_10156741213572264.jpg —“You have all just made Gab a nationally recognized brand as the home of free speech online at a time when Silicon Valley is stifling political speech”— Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.comAndrey SokoloffI wasn’t using gab much before… will now. Also tired of 30 day band for minor ”violations.”Oct 29, 2018, 12:11 PMJeff UrizenTrump should switch to gabOct 29, 2018, 12:11 PMBernard HoltPretty sure Gab is downOct 29, 2018, 12:31 PMCurt Doolittlethis is the current homepage. they will be up shortlyOct 29, 2018, 12:40 PMRoy BlackheartAre you going to be on GAB when it comes back up?Oct 29, 2018, 12:47 PMCurt Doolittlei have an account yesOct 29, 2018, 12:49 PMVincenzo LaSalaVerified nobodies. Classic.Oct 29, 2018, 1:46 PMMiles KeenanGoing gabOct 29, 2018, 1:52 PMRafael AureliusIf only there were some kind of censorship resistant payment method that anyone in the world could use to pay for Gab.Oct 29, 2018, 2:44 PMJean LeonardI signed up last night, but I probably don’t have time for it.Oct 29, 2018, 4:11 PMBen HartselleAndrew is copeposting hereOct 29, 2018, 8:07 PMBen HartselleYa but even if they used it, the problem would be getting it into and out of fiat to pay employees, vendors, etc.

    It’s the choke points of ed entry and exit into the banking system.

    I always figured a major use case for crypto would be freedom from government interference, not an oppressive corporate theocracy.

    20012 libertarian me BTFOOct 29, 2018, 8:18 PMCurt Doolittlelink?Oct 29, 2018, 8:30 PMBen HartselleI mean that Andrew’s above post is probaby copeposting. Daily Stormer went through all this before, they broke completely new ground in getting censored, and were reduced to publishing on TOR periodically while Weev worked out solution after solution.

    If the eye of Sauron/big tech gets focused on you, it’s VERY difficult to continually come up with constant workarounds and maintain your business.

    If DS wasn’t essentially one publisher, a writing staff and one of the world’s top security researchers doing pro-bono work for the site full-time, they’d still be permanently off the Internet.

    If weev (ironically banned from Gab) and AA don’t see a long term solution after working on it for a year, and one of /ourguys/ trying to BUY A BANK to build a new payment processor with $100,000,000 and stopped from doing so, we’re running out of options within the current Internet ecosystem.

    But by all means, remove all other options for us to exert our will and spread our ideas.Oct 29, 2018, 8:52 PMMichael KabanoffWould make sense. Lure all the ‘extremists’ to one site where they are easier to monitorOct 30, 2018, 1:39 AMDougium RingThat’s because the transition hasn’t happened yet. The whole point of crypto is to move beyond the necessity of fiatOct 30, 2018, 3:27 AMJim LeisWe expect this shit from the left. But it’s the libertarians who’s heads should be spinning while they argue that every private company has the right to deplatform Gab.Oct 30, 2018, 7:44 AMCurt Doolittle^ Never happen. Fiat = Shares in the Economy. What *WILL* happen is multiple fiat currencies for the multiple purposes. This will change economics dramatically. If necessary the states will crush competing currencies as otherwise they cannot respond to war and shock.Oct 30, 2018, 9:37 AMDougium RingProof of work and proof of stake in crypto are consistent with types of shares in the economy.Oct 30, 2018, 10:03 AMCurt Doolittleno. they are uninsured. the state insures. crypto doesn’t and cant. which is precisely why fiat money exists and is more advantagous than all other forms of money combined: insurability.Oct 30, 2018, 10:09 AMDougium RingI’m aware that the state insures. It is entirely possible, and I believe likely, that the creation of insured notes via trusted institution (state) based on crypto will be a form of fiat, similar to the gold backed dollar.Oct 30, 2018, 10:17 AM—“You have all just made Gab a nationally recognized brand as the home of free speech online at a time when Silicon Valley is stifling political speech”— Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.com http://Gab.com


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-29 12:04:00 UTC

  • photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/45119279_10156741213577264_21990160

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/45119279_10156741213577264_21990160

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/45119279_10156741213577264_2199016087251582976_o_10156741213572264.jpg —“You have all just made Gab a nationally recognized brand as the home of free speech online at a time when Silicon Valley is stifling political speech”— Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.comAndrey SokoloffI wasn’t using gab much before… will now. Also tired of 30 day band for minor ”violations.”Oct 29, 2018 12:11pmJeff UrizenTrump should switch to gabOct 29, 2018 12:11pmBernard HoltPretty sure Gab is downOct 29, 2018 12:31pmCurt Doolittlethis is the current homepage. they will be up shortlyOct 29, 2018 12:40pmRoy BlackheartAre you going to be on GAB when it comes back up?Oct 29, 2018 12:47pmCurt Doolittlei have an account yesOct 29, 2018 12:49pmVincenzo LaSalaVerified nobodies. Classic.Oct 29, 2018 1:46pmMiles KeenanGoing gabOct 29, 2018 1:52pmRafael AureliusIf only there were some kind of censorship resistant payment method that anyone in the world could use to pay for Gab.Oct 29, 2018 2:44pmJean LeonardI signed up last night, but I probably don’t have time for it.Oct 29, 2018 4:11pmBen HartselleAndrew is copeposting hereOct 29, 2018 8:07pmBen HartselleYa but even if they used it, the problem would be getting it into and out of fiat to pay employees, vendors, etc.

    It’s the choke points of ed entry and exit into the banking system.

    I always figured a major use case for crypto would be freedom from government interference, not an oppressive corporate theocracy.

    20012 libertarian me BTFOOct 29, 2018 8:18pmCurt Doolittlelink?Oct 29, 2018 8:30pmBen HartselleI mean that Andrew’s above post is probaby copeposting. Daily Stormer went through all this before, they broke completely new ground in getting censored, and were reduced to publishing on TOR periodically while Weev worked out solution after solution.

    If the eye of Sauron/big tech gets focused on you, it’s VERY difficult to continually come up with constant workarounds and maintain your business.

    If DS wasn’t essentially one publisher, a writing staff and one of the world’s top security researchers doing pro-bono work for the site full-time, they’d still be permanently off the Internet.

    If weev (ironically banned from Gab) and AA don’t see a long term solution after working on it for a year, and one of /ourguys/ trying to BUY A BANK to build a new payment processor with $100,000,000 and stopped from doing so, we’re running out of options within the current Internet ecosystem.

    But by all means, remove all other options for us to exert our will and spread our ideas.Oct 29, 2018 8:52pmMichael KabanoffSo Gab is essentially a honey pot operation 😏?Oct 30, 2018 1:39amMichael KabanoffWould make sense. Lure all the ‘extremists’ to one site where they are easier to monitorOct 30, 2018 1:39amMichael KabanoffLet’s all move to MySpace.Oct 30, 2018 1:39amDougium RingThat’s because the transition hasn’t happened yet. The whole point of crypto is to move beyond the necessity of fiatOct 30, 2018 3:27amJim LeisWe expect this shit from the left. But it’s the libertarians who’s heads should be spinning while they argue that every private company has the right to deplatform Gab.Oct 30, 2018 7:44amCurt Doolittle^ Never happen. Fiat = Shares in the Economy. What *WILL* happen is multiple fiat currencies for the multiple purposes. This will change economics dramatically. If necessary the states will crush competing currencies as otherwise they cannot respond to war and shock.Oct 30, 2018 9:37amDougium RingProof of work and proof of stake in crypto are consistent with types of shares in the economy.Oct 30, 2018 10:03amCurt Doolittleno. they are uninsured. the state insures. crypto doesn’t and cant. which is precisely why fiat money exists and is more advantagous than all other forms of money combined: insurability.Oct 30, 2018 10:09amDougium RingI’m aware that the state insures. It is entirely possible, and I believe likely, that the creation of insured notes via trusted institution (state) based on crypto will be a form of fiat, similar to the gold backed dollar.Oct 30, 2018 10:17am—“You have all just made Gab a nationally recognized brand as the home of free speech online at a time when Silicon Valley is stifling political speech”— Andrew Torba, CEO, Gab.com http://Gab.com


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-29 12:04:00 UTC

  • Revolution Comes. #trump

    Revolution Comes. #trump

    Revolution Comes.
    #trump https://t.co/0Uy2zHZUP4


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-28 21:03:43 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1056652757279670273

  • I’m a minor intellectual influence in the Libertarian, PaleoLibertarian, and Pal

    I’m a minor intellectual influence in the Libertarian, PaleoLibertarian, and PaleoConservative movements – and the shift in the Overton Window toward Revolution Post-Kavanaugh has been the greatest political change of my lifetime. Revolution Comes. #Trump @POTUS @realDonaldTrump


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-28 17:53:18 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1056604836840591361

  • THIS IS WHY THEY WANT TO REPLACE US: GENOCIDE

    THIS IS WHY THEY WANT TO REPLACE US: GENOCIDE


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-27 13:53:00 UTC