Steyn Fisks Gov. Patrick...this could leave a mark.
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Mark Steyn has an excellent article up at NRO. He tells of a trip he took through Massachusetts listening to a talk radio host talk about a speech Gov. Deval Patrick gave commemorating 9/11. In the speech the Governor said the 9/11 attack was 'mean and nasty'. The Governor later said "9/11, was also a failure of human beings to understand each other, to learn to love each other.” Hearing all of this made Mark laugh so hard he lost control of the steering wheel, and the guy in the next lane had to swerve to avoid an accident. I won't paste the entire here, and I recommend the entire thing. Here is just a sample of Steyn.
Anyway I drove on to Boston and pondered the governor’s remarks. He had made them, after all, before an audience of 9/11 families: Six years ago, two of the four planes took off from Logan Airport, and so citizens of Massachusetts ranked very high among the toll of victims. Whether or not any of the family members present last Tuesday were offended by Governor Patrick, no-one cried “Shame!” or walked out on the ceremony. Americans are generally respectful of their political eminences, no matter how little they deserve it.
We should beware anyone who seeks to explain 9/11 by using the words “each other”: They posit a grubby equivalence between the perpetrator and the victim — that the “failure to understand” derives from the culpability of both parties. The 9/11 killers were treated very well in the United States: They were ushered into the country on the high-speed visa express program the State Department felt was appropriate for young Saudi males. They were treated cordially everywhere they went. The lapdancers at the clubs they frequented in the weeks before the Big Day gave them a good time — or good enough, considering what lousy tippers they were. September 11th didn’t happen because we were insufficient in our love to Mohammed Atta.
This isn’t a theoretical proposition. At some point in the future, some of us will find ourselves on a flight with a chap like Richard Reid, the thwarted shoebomber. On that day we’d better hope the guy sitting next to him isn’t Governor Patrick, who sees him bending down to light his sock and responds with a chorus of “All You Need Is Love,” but a fellow who “understands” enough to wallop the bejasus out of him before he can strike the match. It was the failure of one group of human beings to understand that the second group of human beings was determined to kill them that led to the crew and passengers of those Boston flights sticking with the obsolescent 1970s hijack procedures until it was too late.
Unfortunately the obsolescent 1970s multiculti love-groove inclinations of society at large are harder to dislodge. If you’ll forgive such judgmental categorizations, this isn’t about “them,” it’s about “us.” The long-term survival of any society depends on what proportion of its citizens thinks as Governor Patrick does. Islamism is an opportunist enemy but you can’t blame them for seeing the opportunity: in that sense, they understand us far more clearly than Governor Patrick understands them. The other day, you may recall, some larky lads were arrested in Germany. Another terrorist plot. Would have killed more people than Madrid and London combined but it was nipped in the bud so it’s just another yawneroo: Nobody cares. Who were the terrorists? Mohammed? Muhammad? Mahmoud? No. Their names were “Fritz” and “Daniel,” “Fritz,” huh? That’s a pretty unusual way to spell Mohammed.
Indeed. Fritz Gelowicz is as German as lederhosen. He’s from Ulm, Einstein’s birthplace, on the blue Danube, which, last time I was in Ulm, was actually a murky shade of green. And, in an excellent jest on western illusions, Fritz was converted to Islam while attending the Multi-Kultur-Haus – the Multicultural House. It was, in fact, avowedly unicultural – an Islamic center run by a jihadist imam. At least three of its alumni – including another native German convert – have been killed fighting the Russians in Chechnya. Fritz was hoping to kill Americans. But that’s one of the benefits of a multicultural world: There are so many fascinating diverse cultures and most of them look best reduced to rubble strewn with body parts.
Why do radical imams seek to convert young Canadian, British and even American men and women in their late teens and twenties? Because they understand that when you raise a generation in the great wobbling blancmange of Deval Patrick cultural relativism – nothing is any better or any worse than anything else; if people are “mean and nasty” to us, it’s only because we didn’t sing enough Barney the Dinosaur songs at them – in such a world a certain percentage of its youth will have a great gaping hole where their sense of identity should be. And into that hole you can pour something fierce and primal and implacable.
Indeed Mark Steyn's comments could leave a mark.
1. He reminds that many of the victims of the 9/11 attack were from MA.
2. He reminds that former NBA star Johnson beat the cr*p out of the shoe-bomber Richard Reid.
3. He lands a solid hit when he reminds how dangerous cultural relativism can be in leaving the youth with sense of identity void that evil is so ready to fill.
It's been nearly a week since Patrick gave that speech. Has the Boston Globe expressed any public displeasure with the governor's choice of words? How about any other element of Boston media, save the conservatve-leaning Herald? Any outcry from the 9/11 Massachusetts families?
Even if an outcry does develop, Ellen Goodman or Tom Oliphant will speak up to put the miscreants in their places.
I doubt Deval Patrick is very worried. If you were a Massachusetts Democrat, would you be?
"Who will stand/On either hand/And guard this bridge with me?" (Macaulay)
Demography is not going to be kind to MA. The more the Dems there work for unrestricted abortions and same sex marriage and high taxes, then the less number of people are going to be living there.
"We should scrap this “comprehensive” immigration bill and the whole debate until the government can show the American people that we have secured the borders -- or at least made great headway."
Fred Thompson
What are they sayin up there about the 2010 Census? Are they going to hold all of their CD's or give one up to Utah & Nevada?
"We should scrap this “comprehensive” immigration bill and the whole debate until the government can show the American people that we have secured the borders -- or at least made great headway."
Fred Thompson
if the flight of 22-35 year olds continues.
Bank on it.
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Diplomacy is the art of saying 'Nice doggie' until you can find a rock.
I've been looking for that picture and even though I'll have to do some perspective correction on it I think I can still make it into a great-looking logo, print it on a bumpersticker, and send it to John Edwards.
I will keep everyone apprised of my progress.
I was thinking that your alter-ego kowalski had blogged here about the Multi-Kultur-Haus, but maybe I'm dreamin.
"We should scrap this “comprehensive” immigration bill and the whole debate until the government can show the American people that we have secured the borders -- or at least made great headway."
Fred Thompson
He's too busy these days, and so I'm always the one he's bossing around, ordering around to go and pick things up, etc., etc.
;)
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
www.race42008.com
www.hinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
"One man with courage makes a majority" - Andrew Jackson
That I hope at this point more people are coming to appreciate: while it is true that if you compare certain things he said as governor to what he is saying now as Presidential candidate, you might be able to make the blunt-instrument case that he's a "flip-flopper."
But knowing this state, and living here, and reading about Deval Patrick (who was very enthusiastically elected to replace Romney) the better conclusion that I have reached is:
"Mitt Romney isn't so much of a flip-flopper as he is a *liberated man.*"
Romney can now say what he wants to say because he's *free*. And God bless him.
to be. Kind of like when Gore got liberated from Bill Clinton.
Our liberated guys are better!
What I fear would be a liberated Hillary.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
www.race42008.com
www.hinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
"One man with courage makes a majority" - Andrew Jackson
but I think his conversion is genuine. and while its great if a candidate was always on the right side, there's something to be said for the convert, both in his zeal to advance the issue, and his ability to carry the message to ears that otherwise might be closed.
stem cell research. I think what he converted on was what the law should be, not whether abortion was ok.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
www.race42008.com
www.hinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
"One man with courage makes a majority" - Andrew Jackson
I'm sorry, but if Mitt Romney truly had these beliefs when he ran for Senate and Governor in Massachussets, he would have stated them and governed by his core principles. This guy makes John Kerry look steadfast.
the promise. That's what matters. I know of no instance of Mitt breaking a promise. I trust him not to break the ones he makes now (esp given the example made of Bush41 and new taxes)
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
www.race42008.com
www.hinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
"One man with courage makes a majority" - Andrew Jackson
...he would have stated them and governed by his core principles.
In that, he would have been given no such opportunity to "govern" much of anything.
Just saying.
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Diplomacy is the art of saying 'Nice doggie' until you can find a rock.
However, in saying that, aren't you admitting that Romney was more enamored with power than principle? Gamecock is correct that he kept his campaign promises in MA. So, how can I trust a man that was willing to say what his audience wanted to hear and then govern based on those promises but now says that he has changed his mind on many major issues? In my experience, it is wiser to judge a man by his past performance than by his current statements.
Let's keep the focus on the idiocy of the current Governor of the Commonwealth. 'K?
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Diplomacy is the art of saying 'Nice doggie' until you can find a rock.
Feel free to take it over there.
HTML Help Central for Red Staters
Reality: Thompson/Romney Dream: Santorum/Watts.
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
www.race42008.com
www.hinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
"One man with courage makes a majority" - Andrew Jackson
Mine is as much about what on Earth is wrong when Democrats keep winning Senate seats in places like the Dakotas, while Republicans could conceivably be wiped out in New England, as it is about Mitt Romney.
HTML Help Central for Red Staters
Reality: Thompson/Romney Dream: Santorum/Watts.
we finally learned in Dixie where only 4 or 5 dem senators remain, and that is
Drawl and thats all: The Myth of the moderate southern democrat
Mike Gamecock DeVine @ The Charlotte Observer
www.race42008.com
www.hinzsightreport.com
www.theminorityreportblog.com
"One man with courage makes a majority" - Andrew Jackson

Magic Johnson? Ervin Johnson? (not Ervin "Magic" Johnson; the other Ervin Johnson)
Romney/Thompson 2008