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Honor-Killings, Islam, and Christendom

Posted by R. Cort Kirkwood on June 18, 2007

The Koran is explicit on the subject of disciplining women in general and wives in particular, as critics of Islam, former Moslems in particular, observe. And while the Koran may not suggest “honor killing” per se, Islamic societies and culture, as well as its men, have absorbed its sacred injunctions on the subject of women. No wonder a “French” Moslem gouged out his wife’s eyes for refusing sex. [Read More]

An Old Soldier Who Hasn’t Faded

Posted by Matthew Rarey on June 14, 2007

"The first time I was here was in '41, for Roosevelt's inauguration," Lt. Gen. Edward Rowny reminisced as we walked through the lobby of a hotel in Northwest Washington. The blind man's hand was on my shoulder as I escorted him into a gray afternoon brightened by several glasses of wine over a lunch that was a bracing brush with history. [Read More]

Drive a Stake Through Bush’s Amnesty

Posted by Paul Weyrich on June 13, 2007

My longtime friend Richard A. Viguerie issued a press release congratulating grassroots America for killing the Immigration Bill. I hope Richard is right. I fear he is not. In all of the years I have been here I never have known a time when the establishment really wants something that the establishment cannot obtain it. And the establishment really wants this bill. [Read More]

Why I Kissed a G-Man

Posted by Taki Theodoracopulos on June 12, 2007

Her vulgarity and crassness aside, Paris Hilton is butt ugly, tout court. With her, it was go from the very minute her white trash parents began to exhibit her in New York nightclubs. She has neither charm nor looks, lives in a drug and alcohol-induced haze and disguises her emptiness with impudence and nudity. The media love it. Murdoch millions await her. [Read More]

The Death of American Empire

Posted by Patrick Foy on June 11, 2007

We do not live in a perfect world. We live in a world of the possible, the tolerable, and/or the just barely manageable. We cannot go back to the dream of the Founding Fathers of the American Republic or to its original Constitution. To attempt to halt the present day free-for-all in America and begin anew would likely make matters worse, opening the door to greater demagoguery and perhaps complete chaos. The truth is, the U.S. Constitution no longer exists. It is long gone, and nobody is particularly concerned. [Read More]

Chain of Fools: Nepotism as Immigration Policy

Posted by E. Ralph Hostetter on June 10, 2007

An uncontrolled influx of immigrants, as now exists at the Mexican Border, and legal immigration through presently accepted chain-immigration policies, with no language requirements or assimilation into the culture, will change the status of the host nation to that of the immigrants. In other words, if America kept its doors open, as at present, the Third World would continue to send its millions to the United States until a balance were reached when America would join the Third World itself. [Read More]

Take My Computer, Please

Posted by Kevin Michael Grace on June 07, 2007

Computers are like women because only a fool pretends to comprehend their immense mystery and complexity. One day they’re happy (as far as one knows) helpmeets, the next they’re making disquieting noises, sending you inscrutable error messages or simply packing it in. When a man buys a new computer, he is in the throes of a new passion. You are the one, he says. All your predecessors were as nothing compared to you. You are younger, sexier and cleverer. You understand me. [Read More]

Happy Birthday, Dr. Hank

Posted by Taki Theodoracopulos on June 06, 2007

Kissinger has had a lousy rap about the greatest foreign policy disaster of American history. For starters, he had nothing to do with it. Wolfowitz and Feith convinced Cheney who convinced W. When Kissinger was brought in for advice, it was already much too late. All the good Dr Hank says now is that America cannot suddenly pull out because there will be a regional crisis. In this he's in agreement with Gates and Rice and the generals in the Pentagon who have long been skeptical that the Iraqi government would use the opportunity created by the troop increase to reach genuine political accommodations. Kissinger thinks that the goal should not be a military solution which cannot be imposed, but a way to provide security so the Iraqis can move toward political reconciliation. [Read More]

The Right to Shirk

Posted by Andrei Navrozov on June 05, 2007

Stalin, who espoused the profound rationalism of a Constitution that made socially useful labour into universal law, lost out on Europe’s scientific genius and therefore on world domination. So did Hitler, who espoused no less remarkable a rationalism of his very own. History has shown that neither the White Sea Canal nor Zyklon-B gas was an innovation on the level of “Jewish physics.” But even in the United States of Roosevelt’s day, Einstein had only just slipped through the loophole of vain-dream dreaming, useful-work shirking and unearned-income slacking which a militarising democracy had left open in the confusion of mobilisation. Today he would be lucky to get a green card, to say nothing of university tenure. [Read More]

The Victory that Wrecked Israel

Posted by Taki Theodoracopulos on June 04, 2007

On June, 5 Israeli fighter jets launched a strike which caught the Egyptian air force on the ground, effectively destroying it. Exploiting its dominance of the skies, Israel won its greatest victory. One thing is for sure: The Arabs had done their worst as usual to provoke the Israelis, but there was never the slightest chance that they would have attacked Israel. Nasser had closed the Straits of Tiran in an act of folly and brinkmanship, but he was as likely to attack the Jewish state as Saddam Hussein was ready to launch his WMDs on New York City. [Read More]

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