Tuesday, February 4, 2014

LBCC Tiered Tuition Scheme Scam Makes Front Page at the Los Angeles Times

As long as the State of California remains ostensibly committed to the 1960 Master Plan for Higher Education any two-tiered tuition scheme's a perverted scam. That was basically my argument when I spoke last semester at the campus progressives' discussion on the "privatization of education." (The event video is here, "LBCC - United States of ALEC, Part 1.") (Interestingly, the whole deal was an anti-Koch brothers bash-fest, although there's no evidence that the Kochs helped pass the tiered-tuition legislation. More interestingly, I was invited to speak because the campus progs thought I'd parrot some alleged right-wing talking points on "privatization." The dopes, lulz. Perhaps there's some utility in developing more rational, cost-based pricing systems for the community colleges, but as long as the state says it's still committed to "open access" higher education --- which when I attended Santa Ana College in the late-'70s was just $5.00 for a student health fee --- then I'm not going to endorse a policy that's essentially predicated on lies.)

Another point I make (at the end of my discussion at the clip) is that the policy's largely an in-house career boosting bid for LBCC Superintendent-President Eloy Oakley. He lacks a Ph.D., so if he ever hopes to move on to another college, he'll need some dramatic policy innovations to augment his measly creds.

It's all a scam. Oakley nearly admits so much at the Los Angeles Times today, "Long Beach City College experiments with tiered pricing":
Educators and experts say colleges nationwide may be watching the Long Beach experiment, one of the only such programs in the country, as a way to get around budget cuts and high demand for required courses.

The five higher-priced winter courses at Long Beach included offerings in environmental science and geography. The college had to cancel a business course because of lack of interest. Four of the courses are needed to fulfill requirements in a major or to transfer.

College President Eloy Ortiz Oakley said he wasn't concerned that some of the classes didn't reach capacity. The school didn't have much time to plan which courses to offer.

"We're going to learn as we go," he said.

The college also couldn't offer in-demand lower-level math and reading courses during the winter session because it is too short. Those courses may be available at a higher cost during the longer summer session, although Oakley said he was unsure how long the school would continue the pilot program.

Critics decry the idea, saying it gives wealthier students an unfair advantage.

"It creates two types of students: those who can pay and those who cannot. And it's unfair to the students who have to feed families and are unemployed," said Andrea Donado, the student representative on the Long Beach Community College District Board of Trustees.

"Philosophically it is the mission of our community colleges to provide accessible education. By making some courses [more expensive], that equality is no longer honored," said Lynette Nyaggah, president of the Community College Assn., which represents faculty and staff throughout the state.

Oakley, meanwhile, defends the tiered pricing option, saying that it's a way to offer students more choices and that he was surprised by the outrage over it.

"If our college can provide a solution — that may not be an optimal solution but gives our students options — then we're going to keep doing that," he said.
Yeah, who knows who long this will continue, but as long as Eloy gets his name in the paper it's all good!

Sony World Photography Awards 2014

This is really cool.

At the Atlantic.



Robert Pattinson for 'Dior Homme'

This is cool.

Ran during last night's, "Sports Illustrated Swimsuit: 50 Years of Beautiful."



Background: "Robert Pattinson broods brilliantly in Dior Homme ad."

Conservative Superstar Dana Loesch on 'The View'

At Twitchy, "‘Dana Loesch is my hero’: Conservative superstar totally kills it on ‘The View’ [pics]; Update: Video added."


Coca Cola's 'America the Beautiful' Super Bowl Commercial

Honestly, it's just a commercial, not the last hill to die on.

That said, the idiot leftists sure went after this like Philip Seymour Hoffman after a cooked spoon. Losers.

At Reason, "Whose Fake Outrage Are We Faking Being Outraged About Today?" (At Memeorandum.)

More at LAT, "Coca-Cola Super Bowl ad stirs controversy."

Watch it: "Coca-Cola - It's Beautiful - Official :60."

Shouting Barbara Walters Defends Woody Allen Against Dylan Farrow

Disgusting shrieking harpy!

Via Louise Mensch.

Be sure to click through to the video. Dana Loesch made a guest appearance on the show yesterday, Walters' own "The View":



Majority of Betting Public Counted on Fairy-Tale Ending to Peyton Manning's Magical Season

Yeah, and the bookie's made out big.

As I said before, Denver's poor play was literally shocking.

At NYT, "Minus Some Surprises, Sports Books Strike Gold in Wreckage of Broncos":

It was a good day at the office for Nevada sports books as the Seattle Seahawks’ 43-8 destruction of the Denver Broncos defied the expectations of the square money, representing the general betting public, which wanted to see a storybook ending to the record-breaking season of Denver quarterback Peyton Manning.

Two in three bettors put money on Denver, which closed as a 2 ½-point favorite, according to data provided by four online sports books and a survey of bookies. It meant the Nevada sports books were not only likely to surpass last year’s record of $98.9 million worth of action, but they could surpass the $15.4 million in profit the books won in 2005, or a healthy 17 percent hold margin, when New England beat Philadelphia, 24-21.

Last year, the sports books made $7,206,460 and held 7.3 percent of the total handle on the Baltimore Ravens’ 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers. The Nevada Gaming Commission will release final figures later this week. Books have lost just twice in the game since the Nevada Gaming Commission started keeping records in 1991.

“Recreational bettors backed the quarterback they knew from TV commercials — while the wiseguys took an elite defense plus the points,” said R. J. Bell, the founder of Pregame.com, a handicapping website that tracks the industry.

The books were hurt on a couple of proposition bets, most notably on the first play from scrimmage when Broncos center Manny Ramirez snapped the ball past Manning for a safety. Several books offered 50-to-1 odds on the first scoring play being a Seahawks safety. It was the third straight Super Bowl in which there was a safety and the second time in three years that it was the first score of the game.

William Hill wrote at least one $25 ticket at 50 to 1, and the L.V.H. Las Vegas Hotel & Casino took some hits at 60 to 1.

“They bet there will be a safety every year, and any time there is one, the books get hurt,” said Nick Bogdanovich, the director of trading at William Hill U.S. “I think that’s three of four years now where there’s been one, so maybe we need to adjust the odds. But there’s also 50 years of data behind it. When crazy things happen, you pay for it. It’s not fun starting the day getting six figures in the hole.”
Keep reading.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Former Teacher Andrea Michelle Cardosa Arrested: Faces Sex Crimes Charges After YouTube Video Allegations

Well, we're seeing an increasing number of stories like this, as reported numerous times of late at the Other McCain.

Now, from the Los Angeles Times, "Former teacher charged with 16 felonies in YouTube sex abuse case":
Riverside County prosecutors filed felony charges Monday against a former teacher accused of sexually assaulting two students, one of whom made her accusations public in a video posted on YouTube.

A $5-million warrant has been issued for the arrest of 40-year-old Andrea Michelle Cardosa, the Riverside County district attorney's office said. Cardosa has been charged with 16 counts related to aggravated sexual assault and lewd acts on a child under the age of 14, officials said.

Prosecutors said the charges relate to two female victims: One who was allegedly assaulted between 1997 and 2001 while she attended middle and high school in Riverside, and one who allegedly was abused in 2009 or 2010 as a high school student in Perris.

[Updated, 6:58 p.m. PST, Monday, Feb 3, 2014: Prosecutors said Cardosa was arrested about 5:45 p.m. Monday by Riverside County deputies in Perris. She is expected to be arraigned Thursday.]

The case against Cardosa "came to light" after the first victim learned she was a vice principal at Alhambra High School, prosecutors said. The woman called Cardosa, secretly recorded the conversation, and posted it Jan. 17 on YouTube.

The video was viewed more than 1 million times within a week. It appears to have since been taken down.
The video allegations are here, "A Call to My Childhood Rapist Teacher." (Very intense. Viewer caution advised.)

Also at KTLA, "After YouTube Video Alleges Sex Abuse, Teacher Charged With 16 Felonies."

UPDATE! Robert Stacy McCain was working on a report simultaneously, "Lesbian Teacher Could Face Life Sentence for Molesting Two Girls in California."

What Happens When a Magnet is Dropped Through a Copper Conducting Pipe?

This is really cool.

At Truth Seeker, "Here Is What Happens When a Magnet Is Dropped Through a Copper Pipe [W/VIDEO]" (via Instapundit).

Nina Agdal for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit 2013

Via Theo Spark.



BONUS: At Extra!, "Sneak Peek! Sports Illustrated Swimsuit: 50 Years of Beautiful." The show's airing tonight (right now if you're on the East Coast).



Philip Seymour Hoffman Planning for Massive Heroin Binge

At TMZ, "PLANNING FOR LONG HEROIN BINGE."

Also, "‘Deadly Heroin’ In Play in Philip Seymour Hoffman Death Investigation."

More from Robert Stacy McCain, "The Needle and the Spoon":
When I was a long-haired freak back in the 1970s, everybody knew heroin was a bad drug. There are no “recreational” heroin users, and a junkie will sell his soul to get another taste of slow-motion suicide. Somebody forgot to warn Philip Seymour Hoffman...
Well, either that, or the dude just couldn't give a f-k and threw it all away, like a loser.

See Bethany Mandel, at PJ Media, "Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death: The Height of Selfishness":
Over the weekend, Philip Seymour Hoffman was found dead in his apartment of an apparent drug overdose. Immediately stars and fans began to express their remorse over the loss of an incredibly talented, Oscar-winning actor. One star, however, bucked the trend. With Supernatural star Jared Padalecki tweeting:
Jared Padalecki photo ku-xlarge_zps45817852.png
He very quickly deleted the tweet after massive backlash, “clarifying” his stance by saying, “I didnt mean PSH is stupid or that addiction isnt a reality. I simply meant I have a different definition of “tragedy”"

It’s a shame that Padalecki buckled to the outrage police, because he was one of the few prominent voices calling Hoffman’s death what it was. While Hollywood and the media were mourning the loss of an actor, three children aged 10, 7 and 5 lost a father yesterday.

Hoffman’s friends and family were alerted to something being amiss yesterday morning when he didn’t arrive as scheduled to pick up his children. During the subsequent investigation by the NYPD it was found that Hoffman had 50 bags of heroin in his possession at the time of his death, with TMZ assuming that the star was planning to go on a long binge.

With all of the adjectives thrown around regarding Hoffman’s death: tragic, sad, and so on, I would suggest a politically incorrect alternative: selfish.
Still more at the link.

And at the Los Angeles Times, "Philip Seymour Hoffman dies amid major comeback of heroin in the U.S."

PREVIOUSLY: "Philip Seymour Hoffman Found Dead."

Middle East Scholar Barry Rubin Has Died

I listened to Barry Rubin speak in Los Angeles in March, 2011, shortly after the revolution in Egypt. I blogged many of his articles over the years, but looking at my archives one of the last times I wrote of him was when he announced his lung cancer in 2012. Professor Rubin has now died.

The Times of Israel reports, "Barry Rubin, Middle East scholar, dies at 64." Also at JPost, "'Jerusalem Post' columnist Barry Rubin dies." (And Memeorandum.)

David Swindle has this as well, at PJ Media, "RIP Barry Rubin: You Changed My Life and Your Ideas Will Change the World."

And from Bruce Kessler, at Maggie's Farm, "Barry Rubin, my friend, was a Mensch":

Photobucket
About a year and a half ago, Barry was dignosed with lung cancer. He had never smoked. Israel has a generally well-working state-run health insurance system and good doctors, but costs are escalating and care getting slimmer. Barry was given a very short time to live and told to go home. Barry was, naturally, depressed. His mother-in-law, a doctor in the US, went to work researching and discussing, and came up with a medication that put Barry into full remission. Barry told me he felt it was like a rebirth, and that he should work all the harder to educate others about Israel and the Middle East. Our time on earth is limited but the potential of our contributions isn't.

At dinner in Tel Aviv, Barry said to me that the number of Americans collecting benefits from the government was the primary cause of President Obama's reelection. I replied that was secondary to the impact of the liberal dominated major media influencing swing voters. He sat back and thought a moment, and answered that was primary to Obama adding to his base supporters to be elected. Barry was always open to additional information and flexible to incorporate what was true into his own views. Civilized discourse was Barry's guiding star.
There's much more from Bruce, and you should read it all at the link.

Requiescat in pace, Barry Rubin.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Seattle Destroys Denver, 43-8 — #SuperBowlXLVIII

I'm kinda shocked how poorly Denver played. It was almost a shutout.

Here's the Los Angeles Times, "Seattle lowers the boom on Denver, 43-8."

And at Sports Illustrated, "First Down/Fourth Down: Seahawks demolish Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII":

Despite employing something of a makeshift unit, the Broncos protected Peyton Manning better than any O-line guarded any QB in the league. Denver allowed all of 20 sacks in 16 regular-season games, easily the lowest number in the league.

“We are confident in what we can do,” Seattle defensive end Cliff Avril said confidently on Thursday. “We feel like we can definitely rush him. Whenever we get the chance we’re going to try to make it happen.”

Make it happen, they did in a 43-8 win over the Broncos.

Avril came up with one of the most important plays of all up front. The game was still somewhat in the balance at 15-0 in the second quarter when Avril pushed his way into the pocket and hit Peyton Manning’s arm as he went to throw. Manning’s pass attempt fluttered out of his hand and into the arms of Seattle’s Malcolm Smith, who raced back 69 yards for a touchdown — turning the game from an early mismatch into a complete laugher.

Manning took just one sack in the game overall, resulting in a fumble, with 3:50 left in the game. He also had little time to set in the pocket and scan the field. That was a focus for Seattle’s aggressive defensive front entering the game: moving Manning off his spots.

From the outset, Manning struggled to find any sort of a groove, even whipping passes to no one in particular when he had time to throw. Both of his interceptions came on account of heavy pressure.

“This was an amazing team. I’m so proud to be part of them,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said after receiving the Vince Lombardi Trophy. “These guys would not take anything else but a win in this ballgame.”

More at the New York Times, "Poor Game Seals Manning’s Season but Not Debate on Legacy."

Super Bowl XLVIII: Best Offense Against Best Defense

Still in the first quarter and initial expectations are telling.

At NYT, "Denver’s Offense (Unstoppable) vs. Seattle’s Defense (Unmovable)":

For the first time in 23 years, and the fifth time over all, the game will feature the league’s top-ranked offense against its top-ranked defense. And the 23.5-point disparity between the Broncos’ average scoring output (37.9) and the Seahawks’ average points allowed (14.4) is the largest in Super Bowl history, according to FootballPerspective.com. No team was more efficient inside the red zone than Denver. No team was stingier inside the red zone than Seattle.

“I don’t think they’ve played a defense like us,” Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner said.

Nor, though, have the Seahawks played an offense like that of the Broncos, whose quarterback, Peyton Manning, at 37, set the N.F.L. single-season record for passing yards and touchdowns. Manning has a unique capacity to decipher defenses and upload information before the snap, then adjust by calling a play that exploits a weakness.


Peyton Manning Unfazed by Questions About Legacy

With a win today he'll be the only QB to have won the Super Bowl with two different franchises.

At LAT, "Peyton Manning and the legacy question":

Peyton Manning photo photo3_zps4b4a833c.jpg
At 37 and two years removed from four neck surgeries, Peyton Manning had a record-breaking regular season, throwing for more yards, 5,477, and more touchdowns, 55, than any quarterback in league history. He also set a record for distributing the ball, with five players around him scoring 10 touchdowns or more en route to being named the league's most valuable player for a fifth time.

Among the more popular debates during Super Bowl week was how Manning's legacy would be affected by Sunday's game, a conversation that rankles Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway.

"I don't think this game, one way or the other affects his legacy the way that he has played," said Elway, the Broncos' executive vice president of football operations. "So he's going to be one of the all-time greats no matter what.… The bottom line, this year that he's had — legacies don't get great until you're done. That's when people start talking."

Reasonable and informed minds can be on both sides of the argument, and two-time Super Bowl-winning coach Jimmy Johnson has a different opinion than Elway.

While conceding that Manning is "already one of the best to ever play," Johnson, a Fox analyst, said: "Obviously, winning more rings gives him more credibility. In professional football, and even college football, putting up numbers just doesn't do it. You've got to have the championships. Because a guy can go and throw for a tremendous amount of yardage, but because they're not running the football, or they don't have balance, or they're throwing interceptions, they lose games. So the real credibility comes from winning a ring."

Manning shrugs off the legacy question, noting he isn't even quite sure what legacy means.
More at the link.

Seattle Seahawks Cheerleader Alicia Quaco is First Lieutenant in U.S. Air Force

She's a good lady!

At the New York Post, "Air Force first lieutenant also a Seattle ‘Sea Gal’."

Alicia Quaco photo Alicia-Quaco-Sea-gals-us-air-force-1st-lieutenant-pic1_zps1f840d80.jpg
Before taking on the demanding double life, she first had to convince her military higher-ups in a formal presentation to let her moonlight as a Sea Gal after trying out for the squad last year, she said.

“I told them it’s good for recruitment. It shows that the Air Force is well-rounded, that we can do other things, too. It’s great for women recruits to know that,” said Quaco.

“Ultimately, they ended up agreeing.”

The San Diego-born blond bombshell was inspired to become a service member by her Green Beret brother — but her mom insisted she first go to college.

So Quaco enrolled in the Air Force Academy, where she also took up cheerleading. Graduating in 2010, she moved to Mississippi, then Seattle, where she tried out for the Sea Gals — a job that requires tricky midair splits, choreographed dancing and endless enthusiasm.

She now stands out on the squad of 32 women, most of whom have second jobs in the fields of beauty, fashion and fitness.
The Sea Gals have spent the past week prepping a special routine for the big game, in which the Seahawks will battle the Broncos at MetLife Stadium, in East Rutherford on Sunday, Quaco said.

“We’ve had to step up our game, too. We’re running through new routines with new music. We also had to get matching new winter coats to prepare for the cold,” she said.

A structured military life has helped her hone her on-field skills, she said.

“[In both jobs], there is a lot of standing in lines and doing the same thing as the person next you, working in unison as a team,” she said.

The toughest part of both jobs, Quaco said, is the sense of responsibility that comes with being part of a team.
“In uniform, you’re expected to act a certain way. People are always watching,” she said.
Still more at the link.

Students Who Take Longhand Lecture Notes Do Better Than Laptop Transcribers

Not mentioned here is that those using a laptop are easily distracted by opportunities for web surfing. I'd rather my students had their textbooks out, leafing through pages, while I cover material on the whiteboard and engage students in discussion. Indeed, I get less eye contact and material awareness from students who use computers. I don't like them in the classroom at all.

Professor Dan Drezner tweets this PuffHo piece, and from the article:

The findings, which Mueller and Oppenheimer describe in a forthcoming issue of the journal Psychological Science, were a bit surprising. Those who took notes in longhand, and were able to study, did significantly better than any of the other students in the experiment -- better even than the fleet typists who had basically transcribed the lectures. That is, they took fewer notes overall with less verbatim recording, but they nevertheless did better on both factual learning and higher-order conceptual learning. Taken together, these results suggest that longhand notes not only lead to higher quality learning in the first place; they are also a superior strategy for storing new learning for later study. Or, quite possibly, these two effects interact for greater academic performance overall.

The scientists had an additional, intriguing finding. At one point, they told some of the laptop users explicitly not to simply transcribe the lectures word-by-word. This intervention failed completely. The laptop users still made verbatim notes, which diminished their learning. Apparently there is something about typing that leads to mindless processing. And there is something about ink and paper that prompts students to go beyond merely hearing and recording new information -- and instead to process and reframe information in their own words, with or without the aid of asterisks and checks and arrows.


#Sochi Safety Questions Linger After 2010 Luge Death Nodar Kumaritashvili

He died instantly. The IOC played hush-hush so his death wouldn't affect the television ratings.

The full run is here, with bloody photos.

At the New York Times, "A Swift and Fatal Luge Plunge, and Then an Abyss of Sorrow":
BAKURIANI, Georgia — To reach this tiny skiing village, carved into the north side of the Trialeti mountain range, one must weave through a long progression of switchbacks rising more than a mile above sea level. When it is snowing — which is often — the trip from the capital city of Tbilisi can take nearly three hours.

Dodo Kumaritashvili makes the journey back and forth almost every week. Her daughter has a baby girl, and so Dodo goes to Tbilisi to help take care of her granddaughter. Upon returning home one weekend recently, Dodo entered her house and called out, “I’m home, son.” Then she began cooking.

Dodo’s son, Nodar, has been dead for four years. But she makes food for him every day, usually fruit or cake or meat but never soup, not even on the coldest days. Her son hated soup. When she finishes cooking, she brings the food into her son’s room and sits among the photographs and trophies and posters on the walls. After a few hours, she clears the food away and gives it to children who live nearby....

Of the three Olympic sliding sports — luge, bobsled and skeleton — luge is generally considered the most dangerous. Riders lie back on their sleds and zoom down icy tracks while peering through the space between their feet. To steer, they shift the runners of the sled with their legs or shoulders.

Generally, speeds are 80 to 90 miles per hour. Crashes are not uncommon, but according to luge’s governing body, which is known by its French acronym, FIL, the crash rate for Whistler’s track was in line with other tracks around the world. In the three years before the 2010 Olympics, there were 203 crashes there over more than 30,000 runs in luge, bobsled and skeleton, FIL said.

Still, the track at Whistler was different. Speeds were higher among all riders and, at least anecdotally, the chance of a serious crash seemed greater. Armin Zoeggeler, the Italian legend who has won two Olympic gold medals, had a rare crash on the same day as Kumaritashvili’s accident. A female luger from Romania had a bad crash two days earlier and was knocked unconscious.

A year before the Olympics, when a luger set a world record of 95.65 m.p.h. at Whistler, Josef Fendt, the president of FIL, was blunt about his concern. “It makes me worry,” he said then....

According to the report, Kumaritashvili committed “driving errors” that led to his sled’s catapulting out of control. Generally, when a luge hits a wall, it either breaks or pushes the rider toward the opposite wall. In either situation, the rider stays inside the track. In Kumaritashvili’s case, however, he flew out of the track and slammed into a metal support pole. The cause of his death, according the coroner, was “multiple blunt force injuries” after a “collision with fixed structures.”

Red Hot Chili Peppers Rock New York Super Bowl Parties

At Billboard, "Foo Fighters, Red Hot Chili Peppers Rock NYC Saturday Super Bowl Concerts."

And at Rolling Stone, "Red Hot Chili Peppers Play 'One Last Blowout' Before Super Bowl":
Of all the rock'n'jock concerts capitalizing on New York City's proximity to the Super Bowl this weekend, only one had the cheerleaders of both the Denver Broncos and the Seattle Seahawks shaking their pompoms simultaneously to Red Hot Chili Peppers' "Give It Away," as balloons repping each band's team showered down on the revelers. That's because Saturday night's "Big Hello to Brooklyn," the first Chili Peppers concert in New York City since 2006, was a rock'n'jock concert put on by a company that could pull off such a feat: sports-radio station WFAN.


I'm hoping the band plays "Police Station," but then there's this, "Red Hot Chili Peppers deny band will cover Led Zeppelin at Super Bowl."

Alessandra Ambrosio at 'Leather and Laces' Party in New York


 photo article-2550362-1B2480E800000578-965_634x761_zps0fd18f16.jpg
Game Day partying, at London's Daily Mail, "Where Angels go! Alessandra Ambrosio dazzles in low-cut red dress with beautiful in black Adriana Lima at Leather & Laces party."

Also at NYDN, "Celebrities, athletes, supermodels mingle at Super Bowl pregame parties":
Magic Johnson brought the funk, Robin Thicke brought the fun and Justin Bieber brought the finger.

As the clock wound down this weekend on the plethora of Super Bowl pregame parties, a celebrity-studded roster of revelers popped up at a succession of gridiron galas.
More here.

Montreal Woman Killed When Her Hijab Became Trapped in Escalator

What a way to go.

At London's Daily Mail, "Pictured: The woman killed in horror accident when her scarf became trapped in escalator and strangled her":
The coroner's office is seeking to determine what led to Rharouity's death.

She was wearing a hijab at the time of her death, but it is unclear which item of her clothing became stuck.

'The investigators looked at the different views of the cameras of the STM and they weren't able to determine exactly the sequence of events that led to the death of the woman,' Constable Daniel Lacoursiere told CTV.

Witnesses told police they saw the unnamed victim struggling to free her scarf after it got lodged in the teeth of an escalator on her way down to the subway platform.

‘While she was trying to pull up her scarf from the escalator, her hair got caught too and from there, everything got tied up at the end of the escalators,’ said Constable Jean-Pierre Brabant, of the Montreal police.

Commuter Bassam Joubarani told CBC.ca he saw two Good Samaritans rushing to the aid of the 48-year-old woman, who was lying unconscious on her back at the bottom of the moving stairs.

Joubarani recalled seeing the trapped victim still breathing, with half of her body resting on the escalator.
This is similar to a few years back when a woman in Australia was killed when her burka got caught in the wheels of a go-cart.

Petroswickonicovick Wandeckerkof da Silva Santos

A Brazilian soccer prodigy with a big name, heh.

At NYT, "His Friends Know Him as Petroswickonicovick."
Some countries, like Germany and Iceland, strictly regulate the names parents can choose. Officials in Portugal, Brazil’s former colonial ruler, provide a list of approved names requiring parents to stick to tradition, allowing a name like Neóteles but eliminating Neptuno.

But Brazil, unhindered by such hang-ups, ranks among nations where naming has evolved into something resembling a competitive sport. Neighboring Venezuela is also a contender, with its Stalins, Nixons, Hiroshimas, Tutankamens and Taj Mahals. Honduras has Llanta de Milagro (Miracle Tire). Zimbabwe has its Godknows, Lovemores and Learnmores.

Brazil is much less freewheeling, however, for the unfortunate souls stuck with names they do not like. Changing one’s name requires the approval of a judge who can rule whether it is ridiculous or offensive. But the process is often drawn out and laborious, as are many bureaucratic matters in Brazil, requiring a lawyer....

Then there is Petroswickonicovick Wandeckerkof da Silva Santos, a 12-year-old soccer prodigy who has begun training with Corinthians, one of Brazil’s leading teams. Even in a country flooded with amazing names, his 19-letter first name and 12-letter middle name have raised eyebrows.


Philip Seymour Hoffman Found Dead

Just seeing the news on Twitter.



And at WSJ, "Award-winning Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman Found Dead in Manhattan: The New York Police Department is investigating, and the Office of the Medical Examiner."

More:


Added: The New York Times has the obituary, "Philip Seymour Hoffman, Actor, Dies at 46."


Progressivism Kills

From Kevin Williamson, at National Review, "Detroit is not healthy for children and other living things":
There are many horrific stories to be told about the implosion of Detroit, once the nation’s most prosperous city, today its poorest. There is the story of its corrupt public institutions, its feckless leaders, its poisonous racial politics, its practically nonexistent economy, the riots that have led to its thrice being occupied by federal troops. The most horrific story may be that of the death of its children.

Detroit has the highest child-mortality rate of any American city, exceeding that of many parts of what we used to call the Third World. The rate of death before the age of 18 in Detroit is nearly three times New York City’s, and its infant-mortality rate exceeds that of Botswana. The main cause of premature death among the children of Detroit is premature birth — the second is murder. While the city’s murder rate among adults is nothing to be proud of, more horrifying is the fact that between 30 and 40 children are murdered in Detroit in a typical year. Some of those children are nine-month-olds killed by rifle fire in their beds; some are budding criminals in their late teens — and each of those situations offers its own unique horrors. So dangerous is the city that children are being armed by their parents, which has predictable consequences. “I work in the Wayne County Juvenile Court, and these children are obtaining guns from adults,” children’s-law attorney Lynda White told the Detroit News, which has been conducting an in-depth investigation of how Detroit’s children are dying. “They’re obtaining guns illegally from people who are supposed to be responsible and people who are supposed to protect them. And if that person who has a huge influence in your life is giving you a gun, some of them tend to think it’s okay to carry it. And they’re being told, ‘You need this for your protection, you live in Detroit.’”

Detroit represents nothing less than progressivism in its final stage of decadence: Worried that unionized public-sector workers are looting your city? Detroit is already bankrupt, unable to provide basic services expected of it — half the streetlights don’t work, transit has been reduced, neighborhoods go unpatrolled. Worried that public-sector unions are ruining your schools? Detroit’s were ruined a generation or more ago, the results of which are everywhere to be seen in the city. Worried that Obamacare is going to ruin our health-care markets? General-practice physicians are hard to find in Detroit, and those willing to accept Medicaid — which covers a great swath of Detroit’s population — are rarer still. Worried about the permissive culture? Four out of five of Detroit’s children are born out of wedlock. Worried that government is making it difficult for businesses to thrive? Many people in Detroit have to travel miles to find a grocery store. This is the endgame of welfare economics: What good is Medicaid if there are no doctors? What good are food stamps where there is no food? What good are “free” schools if you’re so afraid to send your children there that you feel it prudent to arm them first?

Detroit is what Democrats do. The last Republican elected mayor of Detroit took office during the Eisenhower administration. The decay of Detroit is not the inevitable outcome of the decline of the automotive industry: The automotive industry is thriving in the United States — but not in Detroit. It isn’t white flight: The black middle class has left Detroit as fast as it can. The model of Detroit politics is startlingly familiar in its fundamentals, distinguished only by its degree of advancement: Advance the interests of public-sector unions and politically connected business cronies, expand the relative size of the public sector remorselessly — and when opposed, cry “Racism!” When people vote with their feet, cry “Racism!” When the budget just won’t balance, cry “Racism!” Never mind that the current mayor of Detroit is the first non–African American to hold that job since the 1970s, or that, as one Detroit News columnist put it, “black nationalism . . . is now the dominant ideology of the [city] council” — somewhere, there must be a somebody else to blame, preferably: aged, portly, white, male, and Republican. No less a fool than Ed Schultz blamed the straits of this exemplar of Democratic single-party rule on “a lot of Republican policies.” Melissa Harris-Perry, “America’s leading public intellectual,” blames Detroit’s problems on its conservatism and small government, oblivious to the fact that Detroit maintains twice as many city employees per resident as do larger cities such as Fort Worth and Indianapolis, and three times as many as liberal San Jose...
Melissa Harris-Perry. Pfft. She might as well have blood on her hands, the clueless twatwaddle.

More at the link.

Diver Killed Working on Shipwrecked Costa Concordia in Italy

Gnarly.

At London's Daily Mail, "Costa Concordia claims another life after diver working on salvage operation 'cuts leg on sheet metal and bleeds to death'":
According to reports the victim gashed his leg on metal sheeting underwater and was unable to get free, bleeding profusely, until a fellow diver helped him to the surface.

Conservatives Rally for Dana Loesch — #IStandWithDana

Freakin' unreal.

At Twitchy, "#IStandWithDana: Moms Demand Action rallies against Dana Loesch’s appearance on ‘The View’."

And at the Other McCain, "#IStandWithDana Gun-Control Freaks Try to Bounce @DLoesch from ‘The View’."



They're relentless. With burning hatred when confronted with decency and self-empowerment.



Missing Texas Woman Leanne Bearden May Not Be Missing: 'There is evidence that Leanne may have voluntarily left the area, and we understand this is a strong possibility...'

She and her husband travelled the world for two years, and damn, it's not farfetched to suggest she'd say "f-k this" after getting back into the daily humdrum.

I feel terrible for the dude, though. In seeking more adventure, she abandoned him, and that's pretty terrible and selfish.

At CNN, "Family: 'Strong possibility' missing woman meant to leave."

And at London's Daily Mail, "Revealed: Woman who went missing after two-year trip around the world may have run away over stress at returning to 'normal' life in U.S."

And at the family's Facebook page:

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The Garden Ridge Police, Comal County Sheriff’s office, the Texas Rangers, and other agencies as well as a private investigator have conducted an extensive investigation including talking with many of Leanne’s family members and friends as well as many other people living in this area. They also examined Leanne’s computer and telephone, including emails, text messages, and phone records and contacts. The pressure of transitioning from her two year trip back into what we consider “normal” life seems to have left her very anxious and stressed. As a result of this investigation there is evidence that Leanne may have voluntarily left the area, and we understand this is a strong possibility.

If Leanne has indeed fled this area, she is extremely vulnerable. She left with only a few assets and is traveling very light. Although she is athletic, she is small in stature. Her mental and physical status is uncertain. We fear for her greatly. We urge anyone who might have any information about Leanne to contact the Garden Ridge Police department at 210-651-6441 or Private Investigator Charles Parker at 210-826-4052.

Please remember Leanne, the Bearden and Hecht families, and all of Leanne’s friends in your thoughts and prayers.

Alyssa Milano for Maxim's 2014 Big Game Weekend

Robert Stacy McCain's gotten multiple Alyssa Milano RTs, so I sent him this:


Plus, that's the smokin' April Rose seen with Alyssa, and below.

More here, "Hometown Hotties Showdown: Seattle vs. Denver."

Justin Bieber Photographed with Topless Stripper

Look, at least someone's still heterosexual out there in entertainment land.

At TMZ.


Also at London's Daily Mail, "Justin Bieber flips bird at party hours after being questioned by police... as explicit photo of him with topless 'stripper' emerges."

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Former Communist Rebel is Frontrunner in El Salvador's Presidential Election Sunday

Salvador Sanchez Ceren, a former rebel with the Marxist Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, is considered a more doctrinaire hardliner than current FMLN President Mauricio Funes. Backed by Cuba and Nicaragua at end of the Cold War, Sanchez Ceren is the epitome of the far-left Latin American terrorist guerrilla.

At LAT, "El Salvador presidential election polls show tight race":

Salvador Sanchez Ceren, photo Salvador_SC3A1nchez_CerC3A9n_zpsaeb8d0b0.jpg
MEXICO CITY — Salvadorans vote Sunday in a presidential election that may give former leftist rebels a second chance at government — or return national leadership to the right-wing party that ruled the country for two decades.

Opinion surveys have shown an extremely tight race, especially with the entrance of a new third party run by a former conservative president with family members tied to notorious corruption cases.

More than 20 years after the end of a civil war in which more than 75,000 people were killed, choices remain stark in El Salvador, the tiny Central American country that, after Mexico, is the leading source of Spanish-speaking immigrants in Southern California.
When the left won the presidency in 2009 for the first time in modern Salvadoran history, there were high expectations about change and progressive policies after a generation of conservative rule.

But many Salvadorans now express disappointment in a country where international drug-trafficking has made great inroads, gangs control entire neighborhoods, and economic growth has plummeted.

Salvador Sanchez Ceren, vice president and candidate for the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, the guerrilla group that became a political party after the war, appears to have a slight lead going into Sunday's vote. Close behind is Norman Quijano, a popular former mayor of San Salvador, the capital, who represents the once-dominant Arena party.

Both are polling at about 30%, according to most surveys. A candidate must receive more than 50% of the vote to avoid a runoff.

Another candidate, Antonio Saca, heads a coalition called Unidad. He was accused of suspicious enrichment during his 2004-09 presidency under the Arena banner. Even though he is polling at less than 10%, it is thought he is siphoning votes from his erstwhile right-wing colleagues.

Sanchez Ceren, the FMLN candidate, was one of the guerrilla movement's founding commanders, and thus is seen as more hard-line than President Mauricio Funes, who led the FMLN to victory in 2009. Funes, a former journalist, never joined the guerrillas.
Funes remains popular, having sponsored social programs, including affordable education. But after taking a stab at police reform, he turned to the military for security, which eroded some of his support.

A controversial gang truce under the Funes government succeeded in reducing the number of homicides but did little to curb other major crimes, such as extortion. Some Salvadorans have criticized the truce as an undesirable negotiation with criminals.

To what extent Sunday's vote will serve as a plebiscite on the Funes and FMLN performance remains to be seen...
More at AFP, "Former guerrillero tipped for presidency in El Salvador."

And from Otto Reich, at National Review, "El Salvador in Peril":
Twenty-five years ago, U.S. policy consisted of defeating violent extremists on both right and left, enabling democratic Salvadorans to build a political center. In 1992, after a dozen years of bloodshed and about 70,000 dead, Salvadoran democracy achieved an important victory over what had been a Soviet- and Cuban-supported Marxist-Leninist guerrilla force known by its initials, FMLN.

That democracy is again at risk, this time because one of the military leaders of the erstwhile-defeated FMLN, Salvador Sánchez Cerén, the current vice president, is a leading candidate for president. Sánchez Cerén is no ordinary contender. For example, he has admitted to participating in the brutal execution of members of his own guerrilla force, the Popular Liberation Forces, or FPL, who did not comply with his orders and rules.

Witnesses and survivors accuse him of ordering the torture and subsequent murder of hundreds of alleged “traitors” and of guerrilla soldiers accused of desertion. Anywhere else in the world, Sánchez Cerén would be condemned for his record on human rights. In El Salvador, he is at the top of some polls.

Sánchez Cerén is no friend of the U.S. In September of 2001, he enthusiastically participated in an anti-American political rally in the Salvadoran capital shortly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The event featured the burning of the American flag and the display of handmade signs that justified the carnage at the hands of al-Qaeda....

Should Sánchez Cerén manage to win, the future of El Salvador is clear. It will follow the “21st-century socialist” model of Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua, and Ecuador. As they have in varying degrees in those countries, political repression and food shortages will follow; Castro’s Cubans will arrive, establishing control of national-security agencies, strategic communications, passport control, the electoral registry, and lists of potential enemies.
PHOTO: Wikimedia Commons.

Democrat Barnacle Henry Waxman Decries 'Extremism of Tea Party Republicans' in Pathetic WaPo Op-Ed

The retiring dirtbag loser's all indignant about toiling in the minority. Well, as idiot leftists always say, elections have consequences.

DLTDHYOTWO.

See, "Rep. Henry Waxman: The reason I’m leaving Congress":

Waxman photo RepHenryWaxman_zps9e58cee7.jpg
I announced this past week that I will be retiring after having the honor of serving my Los Angeles constituents in Congress for 40 years.

Immediately, speculation began that I am leaving because I am frustrated with a broken institution. But the exact opposite is true: I am leaving Congress with my conviction intact that the legislative branch can be a powerful force for good.

Voting over and over to repeal the Affordable Care Act, shutting down the government and threatening default are other deplorable examples of the extremism of tea party Republicans.

But even in this polarized environment, there are important opportunities to advance the public interest....
Well, you can read the rest, but it's mostly about how Waxman did all these great legislative things while clinging to power like a barnacle for 40 years in Washington: "I worked on the Clean Air Act blah blah. I worked on the MediCare blah blah. I worked on MediCaid expansion blah blah. But I just can't tolerate this anymore. Those damned Republicans are primed for another go as the majority party because tea party extremism!"


A Workers' Comp Blitz May Cost #NFL

Front-page at today's Los Angeles Times, "NFL workers' comp victory comes at a price":
Publicity from a fight over state law prompts players across the country to file more than 1,000 injury claims before a September deadline; that could cost top pro sports leagues hundreds of millions.

Last fall, the National Football League scored a huge victory in California, helping push through a new law barring most professional athletes from filing workers' compensation claims in the state.

But that win has come at a cost.

Publicity from a high-profile battle over the legislation prompted players from around the country to file more than 1,000 injury claims just prior to a September deadline — a huge influx that could cost the nation's top professional sports leagues hundreds of millions of dollars to resolve.

In the first two weeks of September, current and retired players filed 569 claims against NFL franchises, 283 claims against Major League Baseball clubs, 113 against National Hockey League teams and 79 against NBA squads, a Los Angeles Times analysis of state workers' compensation data found.

Nearly 70% of the filings include allegations of head or brain injuries caused by repetitive trauma. Most of these athletes appeared to have never played for a California team; they filed claims based on repetitive injuries they say were sustained in part during road games played in the state. It is those claims that are now barred under the new California law.

Among the athletes rushing to beat the deadline were sports legends such as Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino, Baltimore Orioles pitcher Jim Palmer and Houston Rockets center Hakeem Olajuwon, as well as many lesser-known retirees, some suffering serious physical impairment. A number of active players, including San Francisco 49ers standouts Michael Crabtree and Frank Gore, also filed claims.

The six sports leagues affected by the new law — a group that includes Major League Soccer and the Women's NBA — had predicted a jump in filings before the deadline. Still, the size of the increase was surprising. The volume of claims in September was about 10 times higher than average monthly levels since 2011...
Keep reading.

An Open Letter From Woody Allen's Adoptive Daughter Dylan Farrow

Via Kathleen McKinley on Twitter.



Sick Kids Denied Specialty Care Due to #ObamaCare in Washington

At the Weekly Standard.



Israel-Hating Roger Waters Trolls Scarlett Johansson in Facebook Screed

Remember, this is the guy who flies anti-Semitic pig balloons at his concerts.

At the Times of Israel, "Roger Waters rebukes Scarlett Johansson in Facebook post":

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Former Pink Floyd front man Roger Waters, one of the more prominent celebrity faces of the boycott Israel movement, says he has contacted Scarlett Johansson “a couple of times” over the A-list actress’s decision to represent an Israeli company that operates in a West Bank settlement.

Last week Johansson announced that she was ending her relationship with the humanitarian organization Oxfam, after the group criticized her decision to sign on as the first global brand ambassador for at-home soda maker SodaStream and star in a Super Bowl ad for the company, which maintains a large factory in Ma’ale Adumim.

In a post to his Facebook page on Saturday, Waters also wrote that he had contacted Neil Young, who is slated to perform in Israel in July.

“In the past days I have written privately to Neil Young (once) and to Scarlett Johanson (a couple of times). Those letters will remain private,” he said. “Sadly, I have received no reply from either. And so I write this note on my Facebook page somewhat in bewilderment. Neil? I shall ponder all of this long and hard. We don’t really know each other, but, you were always one of my heroes, I am confused.”

Waters then went on to evoke a meeting with Johansson, “a year or so ago” at a Cream reunion concert in New York. “She was then, as I recall, fiercely anti Neocon, passionately disgusted by Blackwater (Dick Cheney’s private army in Iraq), you could have been forgiven for thinking that here was a young woman of strength and integrity who believed in truth, human rights, and the law and love. I confess I was somewhat smitten,” he said. “There’s no fool like an old fool.”
More at that top link.

Apology Not Accepted You Racist Scumbags!

From Lonely Con, "Kira Davis to MSNBC: Apology Not Accepted."



Syrian Toddler Pulled From the Rubble in Aleppo

A freakin' miracle.

At JPost, "WATCH: Syrian toddler rescued from rubble."



Amanda Knox Interview at 'Good Morning America'

Previously, "Amanda Knox 'Frightened and Saddened' as Acquittal Reversed."

And at ABC News:



'Oxfam has shown its public face of being part of the boycott, divestment, and sanctions movement against Israel...'

From Professor Michael Curtis, at American Thinker, "Oxfam is Wrong on Israel":

Scarlett Johansson photo SodaStream-SuperBowl-2014-Scarlett-Johansson-620x392_zpsfe0e0c15.jpg
On January 29, 2014 the 29-year-old actress Scarlett Johansson announced she was quitting her role as an ambassador of Oxfam, the international charity organization, whose mission is to help alleviate poverty, because of "fundamental differences" between them. She had worked for Oxfam since 2005, and became one of its ambassadors in 2007 engaging in highlighting the impact of natural disasters and helping raise funds to save lives and to fight poverty. After the Indian Ocean earthquake, she travelled to India and Sri Lanka to aid the tsunami survivors, and also went to Kenya to help provide support for the poor.

The basis for the fundamental differences is now well known. Oxfam is opposed to all trade involving products from Israeli settlements which it holds are illegal under international law. Ms. Johansson signed a contract to be the first brand ambassador and spokesperson for SodaStream, the Israel business making products that allow people to produce carbonated sodas. The company makes those drinks in 25 factories throughout the world, and another one is being built in Israel in the Negev where Bedouins will be employed. The problem for Oxfam is this SodaStream factory located in Mishor Adumim, in the industrial area of the Israeli settlement of Ma'ale Adumim, a city of 40,000 people.

Oxfam has shown its public face of being part of the boycott, divestment, and sanctions movement against Israel, and has succumbed to the pressure of politically-correct leftists, anti-Semites, and the Palestinian Campaign for the Boycott of Israel. By taking this bigoted position Oxfam has departed from its declared humanitarian mission focused on alleviating poverty.

Oxfam is echoing, if in more subdued manner, the other bigoted organizations and people who call for a whole or selective boycott of Israel, or for cutting of ties with it. A prominent example of this is Roger Waters of Pink Floyd, who has called for a boycott of Israel, approved the boycott decision of Israel by the American Studies Association of December 4, 2013, and also declared that Israeli settlements are an obstacle to peace. This rock and roll singer went further, in an article on December 4, 2013 implicitly comparing Israel with Nazi Germany because of its "systematic racist apartheid." Waters found the parallels between the 1930s in Nazi Germany and Israel today are "so crushingly obvious."

But Waters, like others in the BDS movement, sometimes inadvertently reveal their outrageous true sentiments, which have little to do with Israel or its settlements. In his article he warned, "The Jewish lobby is extraordinary powerful here, and particularly in the industry in which I work... people are terrified (of it)."

Oxfam cannot be characterized as an anti-Semitic organization, but it might take care of the company it keeps. By contrast, Johansson, in her difference of opinion with Oxfam, has exhibited qualities of grace and courage, and confirmed her principled advocacy of peace. She replied to Oxfam that she never intended to be the face of any social or political movement, distinction, separation, or stance. She believes in economic cooperation and social interaction between democratic Israel and Palestinians.
She's definitely classy, especially for an Obama-shilling Democrat, lol.

More at the link.

Also, "Sex, Politics, Scarlett Johansson, and the Middle East."

New York Times Shocked That Tea Party 'Rebels' Outraising Establishment Sellout Karl Rove and His Ilk

How many times has the lamestream media dissed the tea party as finished, kaput? Grassroots conservatism was supposed to be dead in the water, having turned the GOP into a gang of "hostage takers." So you get snickers at this headline at the Times, "Rebel Conservatives Excel in G.O.P. Fund-Raising, Heralding a Tug Right." (At Memeorandum.)

The problem, now, however, is that the establishment GOP is still trying to throw the tea party under the bus. Ed Driscoll has that, "They Don’t Call ‘em the Stupid Party for Nothing." It's all about "immigration reform" now, which is why Marco Rubio's supposedly moving to the top of the presidential heap, or something. At the Hill, "GOP insiders back Rubio in 2016." I personally was never very impressed by Rubio He was  tea party favorite but now seems the candidate of the open borders crowd. Lame.


More at Memeorandum.

Inequality Godzilla

Via People's Cube.

Inequality Godzilla photo 28986-godzillakingposter2_zps65637375.jpg

Related: From Virginia Postrel, at Bloomberg, "Obama Fails Art History and Economics":
President Obama had a perfectly fine message for young people when he spoke at a General Electric plant in Wisconsin yesterday: Learning a skilled trade can be just as lucrative and worthy of respect as getting a college diploma. Unfortunately, that’s not what he said.

Instead, he took a cheap shot at the favorite punching bag of people who deride higher education in general and the liberal arts in particular. He attacked art history. “I promise you, folks can make a lot more potentially with skilled manufacturing or the trades than they might with an art history degree,” he said....

In fact, the reason pundits instinctively pick on art history is that it is seems effete. It’s stereotypically a field for prep school graduates, especially women, with plenty of family wealth to fall back on. In fact, a New York Times analysis of Census data shows that art history majors are wildly overrepresented among those in the top 1 percent of incomes. Perhaps the causality runs from art history to high incomes, but I doubt it.
Yeah, the "evil" one percent. We'll be hearing a lot about them this year as the left escalates its pogrom on wealth creators.

Standing Up Against Wealth-Shaming

From Michelle Malkin:

Tax the %1! photo zz10070858_zpsebb21e01.jpg
America, we have a bullying epidemic. No, not the school bullying issues that get constant attention from Hollywood, the White House and the media. No, not the “fat-shaming” and “body-shaming” outbreaks on Facebook. The problem is wealth-shaming. Class-shaming. Success-shaming.

The State of the Job Creator is under siege.

Last week, a prominent self-made tech mogul dared to diagnose the problem publicly. His passionate letter to The Wall Street Journal decried the “progressive war on the American 1 percent.” He called on the left to stop demonizing “the rich,” and he condemned the Occupy movement’s “rising tide of hatred.”

The mini-manifesto was newsworthy because this truth-teller is not a GOP politician or conservative activist or Fox News personality. As he points out, he lives in the “epicenter of progressive thought, San Francisco.” No matter. The mob is shooting the messenger anyway. But maybe, just maybe, his critical message in defense of our nation’s achievers will transcend, inspire, embolden and prevail.

The letter-writer is Tom Perkins, a Silicon Valley pioneer with an MIT degree in electrical engineering and computer science and a Harvard MBA. He started out at the bottom at Hewlett-Packard, founded his own separate laser company on the side and then teamed up with fellow entrepreneur Eugene Kleiner to establish one of the nation’s oldest and most important venture capital firms, Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers.

A hands-on dynamo, Perkins immersed himself in the science and technology of the companies in his portfolio. He even accompanied them on sales calls. He poured his heart and soul into the business of business. Perkins achieved great wealth for himself, his partners and his clients — and the world is a better place for it. Kleiner Perkins’ groundbreaking investment in Genentech planted the seeds of the biotech revolution. An MIT profile notes that in its first three decades, the firm “made more than 475 investments, generating $90 billion in revenue and creating 275,000 jobs” and “funded 167 companies that later went public, including Amazon, AOL, Genentech, Google and Netscape.”

Because he dared to compare the seething resentment of modern progressives to Kristallnacht and Nazi Germany, the grievance industry attacked Perkins and dismissed his message. His former colleagues at the venture capital firm he founded threw him under the bus. Left-wing punk journalists immediately branded him “nuts” and a “rich idiot.”

Please note: Not one of those sanctimonious grievance-mongers had anything to say about the Molotov cocktail-fueled riots and fires set by the Occupy mobs at banks, car dealerships and restaurants in Oakland that provoked Perkins’ comparison in the first place.

While he regrets invoking Kristallnacht specifically, Perkins unequivocally refused to back down from his message defending the “creative 1 percent.” He reiterated his fundamental point in a TV interview on Monday: “Anytime the majority starts to demonize a minority, no matter what it is, it’s wrong. And dangerous. And no good ever comes from it.”

Perkins also chastised those who bemoan “income inequality,” including his erstwhile “friends” Al Gore, Jerry Brown and Barack Obama: “The 1 percent are not causing the inequality. They are the job creators. … I think Kleiner Perkins itself over the years has created pretty close to a million jobs, and we’re still doing it. It’s absurd to demonize the rich for being rich and for doing what the rich do, which is get richer by creating opportunity for others.”
More at that top link.

FLASHBACK: "Manifesto: Occupy for the Revolution," and "Racist Walter James Casper III Doubles-Down on Endorsement of Revolutionary Anti-Semitic Occupy Wall Street."

Israel Losing the Propaganda War?

Sometime back, my good friend Norman Gersman mentioned that he wasn't that worried about this or that depraved anti-Israel leftist spewing the latest anti-Semitic bilge against the Jewish state. I can't remember Norm's exact words, but I think he was remarking on Israel's confidence and dynamism, and how the country's strength and vitality would carry it through whatever momentary attack was in the news. I think that's true, to a point. The main reason to be confident is that Jews have their own state, a point Caroline Glick stresses repeatedly. And when people like Scarlett Johansson stand up and do the right thing it reminds me that basic decency in the face of regressive evil is the strongest bulwark against the left's delegitimation campaign.

That said, leftists won't relent in their depraved campaign of Israel hatred. And Hirsch Goodman, at the New York Times, helps their efforts with this clever piece of concern trolling, "Losing the Propaganda War":
JERUSALEM — ON Feb. 4, 1965, as a teenager, I left South Africa, the country of my birth, for a new home in a place I’d never been — Israel.

I loved South Africa, but I loathed the apartheid system. In Israel, I saw a fresh start for a people rising from the ashes of the Holocaust, a place of light and justice, as opposed to the darkness and oppression of apartheid South Africa.

Now, almost 50 years later, after decades of arguing that Israel is not an apartheid state and that it’s a calumny and a lie to say so, I sense that we may be well down the road to being seen as one. That’s because, in this day and age, brands are more powerful than truth and, inexplicably, blindly, Israel is letting itself be branded an apartheid state — and even encouraging it.

In apartheid South Africa, people disappeared in the night without the protection of any legal process and were never heard from again. There was no freedom of speech or expression and more “judicial” hangings were reportedly carried out there than in any other place on earth. There was no free press and, until January 1976, no public television.

Masses of black people were forcibly moved from tribal lands to arid Bantustans in the middle of nowhere. A “pass system” stipulated where blacks could live and work, splitting families and breaking down social structures, to provide cheap labor for the mines and white-owned businesses, and a plentiful pool of domestic servants for the white minority. Those found in violation were arrested, usually lashed, and sentenced to stints of hard labor for a few shillings per prisoner per day, payable to the prison service.

None of this even remotely exists in Israel or the occupied territories. But, increasingly, in the mind of the world it does. This is because of Israel’s own actions and a vigorous campaign by those who oppose its occupation of Palestinians’ land and, in some cases, Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state. They understand that delegitimization is Israel’s soft belly and apartheid the buzzword to make it happen.

International isolation is potentially more dangerous for Israel than the Iranian nuclear program. The Palestinians and their supporters, particularly the young generation, some of whom have graduated from the best universities in the world, have come to realize that the stones of the first intifada and the suicide bombers of the second are yesterday’s weapons in yesterday’s war.

Boycott, divestment and sanctions are now the way they seek to end the Israeli occupation or Jewish Israel itself. Their message has started to resonate with trade unions, churches, universities and international companies in Europe and the United States, who see Israel as oppressing Palestinians and violating their human rights.

A Dutch pension giant’s decision last month to divest from Israel’s five largest banks because of their ties to occupation rang warning bells in Israel’s business community and the Treasury. According to the finance minister, even a partial European boycott would cost Israel 20 billion shekels (about $5.7 billion) in exports annually and almost 10,000 jobs. But the greatest damage is self-inflicted.

The “apartheid wall,” “apartheid roads,” colonization, administrative arrests, travel restrictions, land confiscations and house demolitions are the clay apartheid comparisons are made of, and cannot be hidden or denied, for as long as Israel continues with the status quo...
More at the link.

Frankly, Goodman's examples are just that much more propaganda. And none of those examples will stand the scrutiny of close examination. He's just recycling the lies of the Israel-bashers he's purporting to criticize. I don't like that kind of commentary. It's sleazy.

Jessica Perez for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit 2013

Man, they work really hard to get these pictures.

'I'm going up the country, babe don't you wanna go...'

School starts Monday, so I'll be spending a lot more time commuting.

From yesterday afternoon's drivetime, on the way home from picking up my syllabi at the campus copy shop, at the Sound L.A.

Canned Heat, "Going Up the Country."





Going Up the Country
Canned Heat
1:27 PM

New Sensation
INXS
1:24 PM

She's So Cold
The Rolling Stones
1:19 PM

Lovin', Touchin' Squeezin'
Journey
1:09 PM

Ticket to Ride
The Beatles
1:06 PM

Smokin' In the Boys Room
Brownsville Station
1:03 PM

Evil Woman
Electric Light Orchestra
12:58 PM

Whole Lotta Love
Led Zeppelin
12:53 PM

Bad Moon Rising
Creedence Clearwater Revival
12:51 PM

South African Grant 'Twiggy' Baker Wins 2014 Mavericks Invitational Surf Contest

At NBC Bay Area:



With the best of conditions under sunny skies, the Mavericks Invitational, the so-called Super Bowl of surfing, was won by South African Grant "Twiggy" Baker.

Baker also won the title in 2006 and reclaimed the title on Friday afternoon, with Hawaiian Shane Dorian coming in second in  his first Mavericks contest and Ryan Augenstein of Santa Cruz coming in third.

Fellow Californians Tyler Fox of Aptos, Greg Long of San Clemente  and Anthony Tashnick of Santa Cruz rounded out the six surfers who made the finals.

“I got lucky today. I didn't get bucked off," Baker said.

Now Baker takes home the $12,000 -- and a lot of respect from fellow surfers.

"Mavericks is a one-of-a-kind wave that you've got to prepare for, for life and for years,” competitor Rich Peters said. “So it's not something to take lightly. I really respect these guys. They're athletes just like any other athlete."

The competition kicked off Friday morning off the coast of Pillar Point north of Half Moon Bay, Calif.

As predicted, the big waves reach astounding heights of between 40 and 50 feet...

#Democrat Exodus Has a Common Thread: #ObamaCare

From Ed Morrissey, at Hot Air, "Dem exodus from Washington has a common thread – ObamaCare."

Waxman's announcement signals that veteran Democrats, with years, if not decades, of healthcare policy experience, are abandoning the sinking ObamaCare ship like rats.

Evel Knievel

Ed Morrissey tweeted last night:


Check the thread.

Then Dan Riehl sent this one.


And that had snippets of the Caesar's Palace crash, which is iconic.



.@MSNBC's Racial Hypocrisy

Jason Riley interviewed at WSJ Digital.



Riley's wife is Naomi Schaefer Riley, who is white.

Conservatives More Likely to Live in Mixed-Race Households Than Leftists

At Expose Liberals, "MSNBC hates this: More conservatives than liberals belong to biracial families."

 photo BfPIAdaCUAAH6b0_zpse0412635.jpg

Following the links takes us to Jim Lindgren, at Volokh, "MSNBC flap: New evidence on the political views of mixed-race adopted and step-families":
Not surprisingly [in the General Social Survey], there is no statistically significant left-right political differences in the proportion of adopted or step-families that are in mixed race households. Indeed, among families with step-children or adopted children, 11 percent of conservatives were living in mixed race households compared to 10 percent of liberals living in mixed-race households.

Similarly, 9.4 percent of Republicans living in step- or adopted families were in mixed-race households, compared to only 8.8 percent of Democrats in such families. (Again, this small advantage for Republicans is not large enough to be statistically significant). If one breaks things down further by both party and political orientation, only 7.7 percent of liberal Democrats and 3.6 percent of moderate Democrats lived in mixed-race adopted or step-households, compared to an insignificantly different 10.6 percent of conservative Republicans.

Thus, there is no evidence in the GSS data that Republican, conservative, or conservative Republicans who were living with step-children or adopted children were less likely to live in mixed-race households than Democrats, liberals, liberal Democrats, or moderate Democrats in adopted or step-families. Indeed, in each instance the point estimates for living in a mixed-race household were insignificantly higher for the right side of the spectrum than for the left side.
Indeed, that's why MSNBC is Walter James "Kleagle" Casper's favorite channel. F-king racist jackboot thug.

Unlimited Free Image and File Hosting at MediaFire

Confessions of a Former TSA Agent

You gotta read this, at Politico, "I Saw America Naked - Confessions of a TSA Agent":
I hated it from the beginning. It was a job that had me patting down the crotches of children, the elderly and even infants as part of the post-9/11 airport security show. I confiscated jars of homemade apple butter on the pretense that they could pose threats to national security. I was even required to confiscate nail clippers from airline pilots—the implied logic being that pilots could use the nail clippers to hijack the very planes they were flying.

Once, in 2008, I had to confiscate a bottle of alcohol from a group of Marines coming home from Afghanistan. It was celebration champagne intended for one of the men in the group—a young, decorated soldier. He was in a wheelchair, both legs lost to an I.E.D., and it fell to me to tell this kid who would never walk again that his homecoming champagne had to be taken away in the name of national security.

There I was, an aspiring satire writer, earnestly acting on orders straight out of Catch-22.

I quickly discovered I was working for an agency whose morale was among the lowest in the U.S. government. In private, most TSA officers I talked to told me they felt the agency’s day-to-day operations represented an abuse of public trust and funds.
RTWT.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Former Mayoral Candidate Wendy Greuel Announces Run for Henry Waxman's Seat

Last I heard she was considering a run for county supervisor, but no doubt a congressional bid is way more attractive.

At LAT, "Former Los Angeles mayor candidate Wendy Greuel to run for Waxman seat."