Monday, August 31, 2009

I Got Mail

I've gotten a lot of feedback - some negative, mostly positive - on my two Kennedy-centric post from last week. I would have to say that the most disturbing response came via email (and yes, it was sent all in CAPS:

"IT'S AMAZING HOW TERIBLE (sic) YOU RIGHT WING FREAKS ARE. YOU LIE ABOUT EVERYTHING TO FIT YOUR SLIMY AGENDA. YOUR LIES ABOUT KENNEDY ARE JUST THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG AND YOU SHOULD ALL JUST DROP DEAD. SENATOR KENEDY (sic) NEVER KILLED NOBODY! IT WAS ALL A RIGHT WING SMEAR JOB BY THE NIXON PEOPLE TO KEEP HIM OUT OF OFFICE!

EAT SH*T AND DIE YOU FASCIST JEW SCUM!

Aside from his terrible spelling, I rather like this guy. He obviously is brilliant, deducing I am Jewish and I'm thinking he probably believes Elvis and Michael Jackson are living next door. I bet he'd be real fun at parties.

Of course, while I have his (her?) email address, I will assume it's not accurate. It seems the email came through my website and I can't trace it. But no matter. I'm sure the coward who wrote it has either been tucked into bed by him mommy, or somewhere they don't allow sharp objects.

This isn't the first time I've received these kind of emails and I suppose I should be honored that someone - other than my inner circle - reads my blog. But all these things do is make me realize that I am doing something right.

Recently, I was talking to a potential lady friend (OK, someone I went out with, happy?) and she did seem interested in what I was writing about and the passion I had for it. However, as is sometimes the case, things didn't work out with her. But, she left me with an unsolicited parting shot, which was neither deserved or expected:

"...You only deal with things like Israel, because it is easier to spout off your opinions, but you are not actually physically DOING anything to improve the State of Israel!"


This got me thinking. Am I not doing anything for what I believe in? Is my writing about what I believe not accomplishing anything? What about all the other bloggers? Is their writing and opinionating meaningless?

I came to the conclusion that yes, she was a crazy lady. I mean, I honestly did nothing to warrant a verbal assault. In fact, all I did was send her flowers and tell her I was also interested in getting to know her further. When I didn't hear back from her (except for one quick phone call telling me she was in the car and would call me again in a few hours - she didn't, by the way), I wrote her a nice email stating that I was still interested and wondered if she was OK, or if there was anything I could do for her. In response, I got an earful about how horrible I am as a human being.

I wonder if my ex-wife had anything to do with this? Hmmm (sarcastic joke, folks - she and I get along great. That's why I never write about her here).

Anyway, back to the point, I concluded that she was absolutely wrong. Writing about what I believe in - whether it be about the State of Israel, politics or music, or really, anything else, allows me to help educate those who may not know what I know. It also adds a voice, even if it's only heard by 20 people a day, in support of conservative values and in support of Israel.

I am not of the means to send a lot of money to Israeli institutions, or even conservative ones. The tuition I pay for my children to receive a quality education is quite a sum and as most of you know, I'm still living on permanent disability. So, I do exactly what I can to promote what I believe and am passionate about.

I don't care if that lady, or that 10-year-old dweeb who wrote me thinks I'm a waste of time and effort. I know what I'm doing is right and just and I'm going to keep doing it as long as I'm physically able. So keep the letters - good and bad - coming and who knows, maybe you'll learn a thing or two.

In the mean time, here are two wonderful articles that I read today that I thing explain some of my Kennedy-centric posts much better:

Things Only a Kennedy Could Get Away With -- Mark Steyn

Kennedy Once Meant 'Tax-Cutter' -- Jeff Jacoby

And one more for you. This is in response to the remarkably offensive Huffington Post article that dared wonder if Mary Jo Kopechne would feel it was "worth it:"

Drowning In Amorality -- Arnold Ahlert

Perhaps for no better reason is this why I absolutely despise today's progressive (read: liberal) movement.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Following the Wrong People

There is a failing campaign out there to boycott all the advertisers of the Glenn Beck show on FOX News, Aside from the absurdity of it all, this smacks of Marxist theology. Even though these radicals have managed to strong arm their way into causing certain companies to drop Beck, for the most part, this is a losing proposition. It's becoming increasingly clear - at least to those who have followed the latest Nielsen ratings - that the ore publicity this boycott receives, the higher Beck's ratings become.

It is so ridiculous that had Beck been a liberal talk show host, I would accuse him of starting this boycott himself to generate ratings.

But what is it about Glenn Beck (or Sarah Palin, or any other passionate conservative) that scares liberals so much?

Oh yes, I've heard it all from the left - "Glenn's a crybaby", "Palin wants to de-legalize abortion", "Beck only cares about rich white people" and my favorite "Palin isn't really a woman."

Seriously! People, listen to yourselves. Do you know why you believe these things to be true? Honestly, ask yourself this question - "Have I actually watched and listened to Glenn Beck?" "Have I actually listened to what Sarah Palin has said, or seen for myself what she has accomplished?"

Chances are, most of you have these impressions of conservatives from listening to liberals. You may have watched Katie Couric, when she wittingly edited her interview to make Sarah Palin, a woman thrust into the spotlight so quickly that she faulted a bit in an interview. Or you may tend to think Keith Olbermann is cool because he used to be on Sportscenter.

But these voices in the mainstream media have never been even handed. Much of what you hear - especially the majority of this country who get our news from Jon Stewart or Perez Hilton - is left-wing propaganda to begin with.

All I can ask is that you open your eyes and see what is happening. I'll give you five questions to ponder:

1. Why does Obama have the need for 27 "czars?" Isn't a czar by definition an "autocratic ruler?" Wasn't the Russian ruler the Czar? Is that what this country is trying to emulate?

2. Haven't we been taught, since a very young age, that if you really want to know who a person is, look at those he follows and befriends? Have you ever seen one friend of Obama - whether it be as a child, or as an adult, who was not a radical - or greatly influenced by one?

3. If you are personally $10,000 in debt, how is spending $100,000 more going to make you solvent? Isn't that what Obama is doing to this economy?

4. If universal health care is really the answer, why are Canada, the United Kingdom and a number of other nations strongly considering abandoning theirs?

5. This last question is something you need to consider even more intensley: If humans truly are the cause of global warming, what then caused the globe to warm before man was even on the earth? If "everyone" agrees that climate change is man-made and can be reversed, why are there still so many scientists who disagree? Furthermore, we have always been told that in investigating an issue, follow the money. So why do we ignore it now with Al Gore, and the amount of money he's earning to peddle his "sky is falling" rhetoric?

People, it's time to educate yourselves. It's really time to get your heads out of your asses and begin to understand what is transpiring. As Don Henley said (whether it was about Republicans or not doesn't make a difference), "we get the government we deserve."

Instead of allowing ourselves to be called "hate-mongers", "racists", "right-wing thugs" or "Nazis" by our elected representatives, take a stand and remind them that they work for us, not the other way around. Congress has become so arrogant and self-serving that it has long ago become a joke. They take you for fools because they know when the time comes, Jon Stewart or Oprah Winfrey will make sure you vote for the "right" people.

They are the wrong people to listen to. You don't have to listen to me, either. Just open your eyes. The pain of reality is much, much less painful then the pain we will experience if we don't stop them.

If you have the courage to understand what I mean, I urge you to watch this video:

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Before posting my weekly top 10 list, I wanted to thank everyone again who voted for their favorite "Sad Song". This week, I received 16 votes with "Even Now" by Barry Maniilow and Billy Vera and the Beaters "At This Moment" tied, with 3 votes each.

I'm going to suspend the polling until I complete my top 100, beginning this week. However, I would love to hear from you if you have any special top 10 lists you would like me to write.

Ten Great Songs From One Great Year

Shayneblog All-Time Top 100

Over the years, many of my friends and I have talked about the best songs ever written, or what our favorites were. I think, over the course of this past year, I have shared many of my favorites, as well as yours on this blog.

Now that this is the one-year anniversary of my “Ten Great Songs From One Great Year” list, I decided to open my memories a bit more and allow you to see exactly what the soundtrack of my life sounds like.

Over the next ten weeks, I will countdown my top 100 favorite songs – some hits, some misses – ten each week, until we reach number one. I’m sure some songs will surprise you that they ranked so low, high or even made the list at all (or didn’t). I can promise you that I paid no attention whatsoever to the songs charting success. These are simply my all-time favorite songs.

I hope you enjoy reading this as much as I did writing it.

#100 Sweet Pea – Tommy Roe

This was my very first favorite song. I was only 2, but I’m told I sang this song over and over until my siblings were driven mad (that does explain some things).

#99 Without Me – Eminem

I never cared for rap and I can only stomach some of Eminem’s music. But I have to admit; this song (and the video) is great!

#98 The Red Strokes – Garth Brooks

I remember watching the “This Is Garth Brooks” special on NBC one night in early ’92. When he performed Billy Joel’s “Shameless” with such passion and emotion, I knew I was hooked for life.

#97 Tweeter and the Monkey Man – The Traveling Wilburys

George Harrison, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Roy Orbison and Bob Dylan walk in to a bar…

#96 You Can't Change That - Ray Parker Jr. & Raydio

She was a 14-year-old cutie and I’ll never forget that special night, kissing on the beach (no, I wasn’t in my 20’s yet!)

#95 Do You Remember? – Phil Collins

Such sadness, such despair. I always regret when a rock icon sells out to his softer side. But for one song, I’ll give Phil Collins a pass.

#94 Georgy Girl – The Seekers

Another old memory. I went shopping with my mom late one day in Knoxville; looking for the toy I desperately wanted. We didn’t stop till we found it.

#93 Interstate Love Song - Stone Temple Pilots

I spent 3 years trying to figure out who sang this song and what it was called. Living in Detroit in the mid 90’s gave me a new perspective in the day’s music scene. This was among the best.

#92 Magic – Pilot

The summer of your 13th birthday means your no longer a kid, and not yet a man. I felt like a kid until I met Laura P. in Miami Beach. Now I was a man (in my brain, anyway).

#91 Real Men – Joe Jackson

Moving to New York (and college) introduced me to different sights and sounds. My roommate introduced me to Joe Jackson. Thanks, YAG.

Next week --- #81 - #90!

Friday, August 28, 2009

It always amazes me when people excuse the inexcusable and defend the indefensible. Especially when it's only to promote their own warped ideology. For instance, when O.J. Simpson was acquitted, there was not one sane person alive who believed he was innocent. Yet, because the kangaroo court let him off, his supporters were fervent in their animosity towards the rest of civilized society - even going so far as to claim "race" was the reason he was arrested in the first place.

It's no different 15 years later. Not one sane person today believes Ted Kennedy was not responsible for the death of Mary Jo Kopechne. Yet the fact that a corrupt legal establishment, with Kennedy fame and fortune lining its' pockets, sent him off with a slap on the wrist, we can not ostracize, criticize or demean this drunk murderer.

Y'know, we never actually saw Adolph Hitler kill anyone, either. Plus, he was never indicted. Therefore, it would be slanderous to call him an evil butcher. Right? No, I am not equating the Holocaust with Chappaquiddick. However, if it swims like a duck, looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, then it is a duck.

Need more proof of Kennedy's perifidy?

From NRO's The Corner:

'One of his favorite topics of humor was Chappaquiddick' [Mark Hemingway]

Jules Crittenden mentioned on his blog he heard Ed Klein, former foreign editor of Newsweek and editor-in-chief of The New York Times Magazine, recalling on air that Ted Kennedy liked to joke about Chappaquiddick. It seemed to defy belief, so I listened to the episode of The Diane Rehm Show in question and sure enough — I've transcribed what Klein told guest host Katy Kay (Here's a link to the audio in WMA format, relevant portion starts at about 30:15):

I don't know if you know this or not, but one of his favorite topics of humor was indeed Chappaquiddick itself. And he would ask people, "have you heard any new jokes about Chappaquiddick?" That is just the most amazing thing. It's not that he didn't feel remorse about the death of Mary Jo Kopechne, but that he still always saw the other side of everything and the ridiculous side of things, too.

EXCUSE ME? If that's true, it makes Kennedy kind of a monster. The odd thing is that if you listen to the whole show, the tone of everyone involved is nauseatingly hagiographic and reverential. Klein apparently let his guard down a bit; after he lets it slip Kennedy liked to joke about the woman he killed you can actually hear in his voice that he's trying to backpedal. The show actually cuts to a break as he's trying to explain himself, and I seriously wonder if it wasn't the producers trying to do Klein a favor. But I'm sorry, there appears to be little to that could explain this. It goes way beyond "you had to be there."

Kennedy, along with most of the other lying, hypocritical scum that pollute the Democrat Party, was a sick son of a bitch. His father was an ardent anti-Semite who sided, and aided Hitler's Final Solution and the legacy of "Camelot" is a myth, created by a sycophant media. It's bad enough they turned Michael Jackson into some sort of hero/role model.

He didn't deserve that and neither does the "Lying" of the Senate. Defending him only proves a lack of intelligence and class. Instead of honoring Kennedy (or Jackson), how about we honor their victims, instead?

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Camelot died with King Arthur, not Prince Teddy

So the big news is the death of Senator Edward M. "Teddy" Kennedy and wouldn't you know it, the press is treating this as if it's the biggest tragedy to face mankind ever. Look, I do feel bad for his children and the rest of his family. The loss of a parent/grandparent is always tragic. But in Kennedy's case, it wasn't as if it was sudden.

My mother passed away last March and while again, the loss of a loved one is certainly sad, I was comforted in the knowledge that after so many tortuous years of living with dementia and other ailments, she was finally in a better place.

While I know many on the left will freak out over what I'm about to say, but I'm not sure Teddy is in that same "better"place.

Yes, I know he was the "Lion of the Senate" and all that. But he was also a drunk, a horrible role model to his nephew, who was arrested for rape - only to get out of it because of his uncle's connections and most notably the man responsible for the death of Mary Jo Kopechne.

A liberal friend of mine was aghast when I mentioned her name today. He asked, "how long are you going to hold THAT over his head?"

My answer was to ask him a question. "If a poor southern - maybe white trash - guy did what Kennedy did that night in Chappaquiddick, do you think he would ever spend a free day again in his life?

His first reaction was that Kennedy was never charged with murder. But I think he knew enough not to try to put that one out there.

Look, Teddy Kennedy was a demagogue. He consistently put his party above the country he vowed to serve. What he did to Robert Bork back in 1987 was nothing short of criminal and unethical. Based on the way he lived his life - both in 1969 and since - leads me to believe that this man best be sure to bring something very cool to wear where he's going.

I never believed in the Camelot hyperbole and was sick to my stomach when various news agencies referred to his death as the "end of Camelot." The only reason the Kennedy's became American royalty is because the mainstream media put them there. They hated the Nixon and the Republicans in 1960 and so they fell in love with this young, handsome man (JFK) who was going to bring "hope" and "change" to the White House.

Ironically, JFK was actually a right-wing zealot, compared to his younger brother. John Kennedy believed in a strong military, fiscal responsibility and true bi-partisanship. But where JFK often triumphed, Teddy failed miserably.

Conventional wisdom states that the Chappaquiddick issue sunk Teddy's run for the White House (pardon the very good pun). But those who remember the 1980 election know that as unpopular as Jimmy Carter was, he was still endeared by his own party. It is almost impossible to unseat an incumbent President nowadays and while the Kopechne murder played a role, his part pretty much had already forgiven him.

But that doesn't serve the press' purpose of demonizing the Republicans, does it? So explain how the Republicans killed Kennedy's Presidential aspirations (another good pun) when they don't vote in the Democratic primaries?

Of course you can't. And the reason is that most people don't really bother to understand the facts. Not when we have "the most trusted man in America" - a personal friend to all the Kennedy's, Walter Cronkite - telling us that "that's the way it is" every night at 6 pm.

And you know I'm right because you see the same damn thing happening today with Obama. Well, that is unless you watch Chris Matthews on MSNBC. I swear, Matthews should not be on a news channel and instead he should be doing one of those Cinemax shows where people call a "love line" and talk about their steamiest fantasies. I'm beginning to think the "tingles" that went up his leg when Obama won have now reached the groin.

Teddy Kennedy was no hero. He was a drunk and a murderer and he does not deserve to be eulogized so beautifully. At least not until Mary Jo starts getting better treatment from the press.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

I don't know when it became normal, or mainstream, to consider the demise of the human race as a "forward thinking" and accepted idea. Maybe it started in Berkeley, back in the late 60's, when it seemed that everyone there just hated themselves (ironic when you consider this was borne out of the summer of love - this just goes to show you the slippery slope or immorality).

What makes me nervous is that not only do these people have a friend in the Progressive movement (or liberalism, if you will), but they also have the ear of the President of the United States. Keep in mind, the President's chief adviser to health care is Rahm Emanuel's brother, Ezekiel (E Z Kill?). This man has stated the the elderly with dementia and the young who have neurological disorders should be sacrificed for the common good.

But leave it to the World's Worst Commentator to prop this monster up:

MSNBC's Best Person in the World Regards Human Race as "Malignant Ecotumor"

Late-term abortionist and media darling Warren Hern has been named The Best Person in the World by MSNBC's inexpressibly vile Keith Olbermann. Here's what he thinks of the human race:

"The human species is an example of a malignant ecotumor, an uncontrolled proliferation of a single species that threatens the existence of other species in their habitats," he wrote in a paper published in Population and Environment in 1990. He concluded that, "The idea that the human population is a planetary cancer is a profoundly disturbing conclusion, but the observations of the scientific community over the last 20 years have provided massive support this hypothesis and little, if anything, to refute it."
His opinion didn't change over the course of 18 years. "From the point of view of a physician, the expanding, invasive, colonizing urban form with highly irregular borders resembles a malignant lesion," wrote Hern in a 2008 paper published in the International Journal of Anthropology. "Malignant neoplasms have at least four major characteristic: rapid, uncontrolled growth; invasion and destruction of adjacent normal tissues (eco systems); metastasis (distant colonization); and de-differentiation." …
It's Hern's "humans as cancer" hypothesis that drives him to perform abortions. He told [Esquire magazine's John H.] Richardson, "I do think that helping people control their fertility is highly consistent with helping people be responsible citizens of the planet. If somebody misunderstands it or tries to distort it, I don't give a s---."

Here The Best Person in the World describes how he served Gaia by murdering the child of a woman in her 17th week of pregnancy:

I inserted my forceps into the uterus and applied them to the head of the fetus, which was still alive, since fetal injection is not done at that stage of pregnancy. I closed the forceps, crushing the skull of the fetus, and withdrew the forceps. The fetus, now dead, slid out more or less intact.

But don't call him an abortionist…

Hern explained to Richardson that the "abortionist" label is now "a degrading and demeaning word that has the same negative connotations as the most despicable racial epithet."

Actually, abortionist is a euphemism. Hern is a professional murderer.

In an astonishing display of liberal hypocrisy and projection, Hern denounces anyone who objects to the industrial scale murder of children of adhering to "a fascist ideology." The guy who crushes babies' skulls for a living also accused conservatives of being "willing to use violence."

There is a misperception that liberal ideology is foolish but well-meaning. In truth, it is evil. Thank you liberal media, for setting the record straight by glorifying this psychotic, antihuman fiend.







Courtesy of Van Helsing

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Gawd, I love our soldiers...




courtesy of ZIP

Also, I just have to share this with you. I found it at Doug Ross' blog, and although I am certain the Speaker of the House will never read it, the more this gets passed around, the better off we all are:

By the way, please excuse the lines in the middle of the document. It was the only way I could shrink it to fit in my page.


Papa B forwards a genuine snail-mail letter sent to Speaker of the House Nancy "Stretch" Pelosi (D-CA).


Saturday, August 22, 2009

Before posting my weekly top 10 list, I wanted to thank everyone who voted for their favorite summer song of the 70’s. This week, I received 10 votes and the winning song last week was a tie between “Afternoon Delight” - by the Starland Vocal Band and “Magic” – by Pilot.

This week, I’m going to get a bit more introspective and share some personal experiences with you. As always, I appreciate your votes.


Ten Great Songs From One Great Year

Songs To Make You Cry

As I’ve mentioned numerous times before, my life has a soundtrack. Sometimes, when the mood is right, I can hear a great driving tune playing – especially when I’m on the open highway (among my favorite places to be. Other times, I hear the music of America, the Eagles or even Billy Joel, as I go through my day..

But there are those times when the situation calls for songs that make me cry. Whether it be over the loss of a loved one, a bad breakup or simply when things seem to be their bleakest, I always commiserate with the likes of Barry Manilow, the Carpenters or even some horrifically sad country music – which is what put me over the edge back in 2004, when I suffered Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (following my heart transplant).

Elton John once sang, “sad songs say so much” and Billy Ocean lamented, “there’ll be sad songs to make you cry.” These songs I’ve chosen is music that at various times in my life, helped me cope and “cry it out,” as they say. I won’t delve too much into the details, but I think each of us has had moments in our lives where we felt exactly the same way.

If you would like to share some of your sad song moments with us, I would be thrilled to post them – even anonymously, if you prefer. Sometimes, misery really does love company.

Even Now – Barry Manilow

There is no way I can start a list like this with anyone other than Barry Manilow. His music, especially when I was a child, was often the first I turned to in order to bring the tears out. “Even Now” had two different meanings in my life. The first was that it reminded me of a difficult stage when I left home for the first time. The other was when I was recovering and memories of lost love were breaking my heart all over again.

Whiskey Lullaby– Brad Paisley with Alison Krauss

In my 46 years, I have never heard a sadder song than “Whiskey Lullaby.” Aside from the agonizing lyrics, Alison Krauss sings this song like no one else can. I must warn you, though. If you are sensitive to heartbreaking songs, you may wish to pass over this tune, which tells the tale of terrible mistakes and merciless regret. When I was suffering my depression post-transplant, I began to listen to a lot of country music. After hearing this song (and watching the video), I knew if I didn’t snap out of it, I would not survive. This song seemed to shock me to live.

Sons About Rain – Gary Allan

Another country song from 2004, this song was the first country song I listened to and seemed to start my path to deep despair. I didn’t know it at the time, but my fears of my marriage failing was what this song signified. Gary Allan’s tale of regret and lost love proved to be the starting point to my recovery and well-being. I considered another song by Mr. Allan, titled “Best I Ever Had” (originally recorded by Vertical Horizon), as Allan dedicated this song to his wife’s memory, after she committed suicide.

Alone Again (Naturally) – Gilbert O'Sullivan

When I was 10 years old, my brother and sister both moved out of the house and went to away to school. For the first time in my short life, I was alone with my parents and I was terribly lonely. Along comes this song and all I could think about was the possibility of my parent’s dying and my being alone. As I researched songs for this list, I found most similar lists included this at or near the top. No surprise there.

Superstar - The Carpenters

There is something wonderfully tragic about the late Karen Carpenter’s voice. Like a number of artists on this list, I could have chosen any number of songs from her. But I chose this one because he haunting vocals often put tears in my young eyes. I was horrified when she passed away and to this day, whenever I hear this song, I still choke up.

All By Myself – Eric Carmen

Like “Alone Again, Naturally,” this song reminded me of my loneliness when my siblings left. I’ve never been a big fan of Carmen’s music, but this was an exception. How could it not make the list?

Cat's in the Cradle – Harry Chapin

Boy, does this song hit hard. As you may have assumed, I was very close to my father. But, as a Rabbi of a congregation, he had very different work hours than most fathers and a more demanding schedule. I should note that he did have time for me and some of my favorite memories are of our family trips to Florida and going to ball games. But still, I felt lonely. I had few friends growing up and I felt the pain of being ignored.

At This Moment - Billy Vera & the Beaters

When this song appeared in the TV show “Family Ties” (when Alex, played by Michael J. Fox, breaks up with his girlfriend), it also happened to be at a time when the love of my life (so far) broke my heart as well. I spent many hours crying over the sound of this song.

The End of the World – Skeeter Davis

I always knew I was a depressed child. Many of the pictures my father took of me were without a smile on my face. I don’t really recall having a bad first few years, but for some reason, this song, which came out when I was just a baby) always brought me to tears. Obviously, when I was so young I had no clue what the song was about. But her voice and the passion she sang with helped me to understand what pain and sadness were all about.

Hurts So Band – The Lettermen

The same could be said for this tearjerker from the Lettermen. I would love to say that I had certain painful memories of the song, but all I can tell you was whenever I heard it, all the joy melted away. I guess the line about “begging you please” really did me in.

Bonus Track

Puff, the Magic Dragon – Peter, Paul and Mary

I cannot think of any other sing from my childhood I could not listen to, other than “Puff.” The sadness of the story, the sorrow in which Peter Yarrow sings it, or the haunting harmonies of Paul Stookey, and Mary Travers bring this children’s tale to life for me. Of course, as I’ve gotten older, I’ve been able to deal with the song and it’s meaning. But for an overly sensitive child as myself, this was just way too much.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

When this began
I had nothing to say
And I'd get lost in the nothingness inside of me
I was confused
And I let it all out to find/That I'm
Not the only person with these things in mind
Inside of me
But all the vacancy the words revealed
Is the only real thing that I've got left to feel
Nothing to lose
Just stuck/Hollow and alone
And the fault is my own
And the fault is my own

I want to heal
I want to feel
What I thought was never real
I want to let go of the pain I've held so long
[Erase all the pain 'til it's gone]
It's gone]
I want to heal
I want to feel
Like I'm close to something real
I want to find something I've wanted all along
Somewhere I belong

And I've got nothing to say
I can't believe I didn't fall right down on my face
I was confused
Looking everywhere/Only to find that it's
Not the way I had imagined it all in my mind
So what am I
What do I have but negativity
'Cause I can't justify the
Way everyone is looking at me
Nothing to lose
Nothing to gain/Hollow and alone
And the fault is my own
The fault is my own

I will never know
Myself until I do this on my own
And I will never feel
Anything else until my wounds are healed
I will never be
Anything 'til I break away from me
And I will break away
I'll find myself today

I want to heal
I want to feel like I'm
Somewhere I belong

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Do any of you realize that these same brainiacs who created the "Cash for Clunkers" program are the very same Mensa people who want to run (ruin?) health care?

From the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel:

A growing number of auto dealers say the process of getting paid under the government’s “cash for clunkers” plan increasingly resembles some of the wrecks accumulating on their lots as part of the program.

The slow payments coming from the federal government are reinforcing the paradoxical nature of the program for dealers: It has generated the most showroom traffic they have had in months while at the same time heaping unease, frustration and worry onto the industry’s worst-ever downturn.

As of the close of business Friday, there was talk in the industry that some dealers are considering pulling out of the clunkers program altogether.

“A number of dealers have floated $100,000 to upwards of $1 million or more” on the clunkers program, said Bill Sepic, president of the Wisconsin Automobile & Truck Dealers Association.

Dealers say they want to see at least some sign that they will be able to recoup that money. Still others need the money to pay bills and meet payroll.

“This is not a Wisconsin problem,” Sepic added. “This is going on across the country.


Let's review, shall we?

Obama (or his people, since I have no idea if he's ever had an independent idea) decides it will be a good idea to give people $3,500-$4,500 vouchers to buy a new car, if in return they trade in their old "gas-guzzling" models. Here is the deal in a nut shell:

1. Trade in your used clunker (an old car that gets poor gas mileage)
2. Buy a new car that gets better gas mileage

So far, so good. Except for a few little problems - probably not really worth mentioning...

Who are the ones who generally own old clunkers? Well, it doesn't take a genius to know that the majority of those who would be interested in a deal like this would be those in the bottom half of the financial pie.

Now, understanding that a new car is not inexpensive. Even the cheapest new car will run you at least $12,000. So what is happening is that many of these people, who had cars that were probably all paid for, are now taking on additional debt.

Anybody see a problem here?

And let's suppose these people are able to afford the additional debt. Chances are, these people would be in the market for a new car anyway. Therefore, all the government has done is given people the incentive to purchase these new cars sooner.

So what happens next year? While these auto dealers are making more sales today, they will see a sharp decline tomorrow. Is that worth the billions we, the taxpayers, are spending on this problem?

To top it off, one of the goals of Obama's plan was to infuse Chrysler and GM with much needed capital. Yet, over 70% of the new cars sold through this program is going to foreign car companies! And now, the dealerships are finding that the bureaucracy of the federal government is causing many of these dealers to either borrow money to meet payroll, or go bankrupt anyway.

Hey, here's an idea. Why don't we let these guys run our health care industry, too? After all, didn't Obama say that private insurance will still be available for those who want it? Don't you believe him?

After all, he seemed so honest when he compared this to the differences between Fed EX, UPS and the post office. Right? If we just ran government health care the way the post office is run (or the DMV, or Amtrack or even the "cash for Clunkers" program) we would all be happy and sing praises to the ONE.

It really pisses me off when it is so blatantly obvious this administration either doesn't have the country's best interests, or is so horribly incompetent to serve. Forget about the sheer hypocrisy of the left - with their sudden believe that dissent is now "racist."

Honestly, I could not care less whether Obama was black, white, purple or green. He is leading us down the wrong path at such a breakneck speed, we may never recover.

(thanks to Say Anything)

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Before posting my weekly top 10 list, I wanted to thank everyone who voted for their favorite song of 1980. All told, I received 19 votes this past week, which were considerably more than I have have gotten in the past (even though these lists generate about 100 hits a weekend). It's nice to know some of you do appreciate these lists and I do take great pleasure in creating them for you.

The winning song last week was "Sailing" by Christopher Cross, followed by "Heartbreaker" by Pat Benatar.


Ten Great Songs From One Great Decade

'70's Summer Songs

Ah, summer – it turns me upside down. Summer, summer, summer – it’s like a merry go round. Ok, even though The Cars hit big in 1984 with that song (“Magic”), it well represents my feelings towards the season of the hot sun, cool waves and my body sticking to the vinyl seats in my old ’77 Pontiac Grand Prix.

Nothing told a better story of my adolescence quite like the summer songs of the 1970’s. At the beginning of this list, I was a mere 7 years old and while that first summer was spent at the Caribbean Hotel in Miami Beach (as was every other summer that decade), it was the first time I had a summer “crush.” I remember it well. She was a friend of my brother and she was a goddess – ok, she was a1 11-year-old goddess.

Throughout the 70’s, we traveled to Miami every year and also to Europe and Israel. My father led tours to the Holy Land and each year one of us got to travel with my folks. My first trip to Israel was the summer of 1973 – which was also the first summer that we fly exclusively for our vacations. As much as I loved going to Israel and seeing Europe, I missed the road trips. Starting again in 1975, we once again took to the highway in my dad’s brand-spankin’-new 1975 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Royale, with the landau roof and of course, an 8-track player.

By the end of the decade, I was a 17-year-old man with facial hair and a girlfriend – which of course, ended the moment we promised to stay in touch. I guess that’s where I earned by reputation as the king of the 3-week relationships. But they’re longevity (or lack thereof), was rarely my fault. Of course, that speaks volumes as well! Ah, good times!

(They Long To Be) Close To You – The Carpenters (1970)

The songwriting team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David wrote this. Richard Chamberlain originally released it as the B-side of “Blue Guitar” in 1963. Dusty Springfield recorded an early version of this in 1964, which was originally scheduled for release as a single, and potential follow-up to her hit "I Just Don't Know What To Do with Myself." However, it wasn't until 3 years later, in 1967, that it finally was released on her album Where Am I Going? The Carpenters signed with A&M Records in 1969, which was co-owned by Herb Alpert. Burt Bacharach asked Alpert to record the song himself, but he didn't feel comfortable with the lyrical content "Moondust in your hair," and instead produced a new arrangement for The Carpenters.

It's Too Late – Carole King (1971)

Carole King wrote this with Toni Stern, a painter who worked on several songs on the Tapestry album. This was released as the B-side to "I Feel the Earth Move." After a few weeks of continuous airplay with "I Feel the Earth Move," many DJs all over the States decided to give "It's Too Late" an equal amount of airplay. Soon, it came to the point where everyone preferred "It's Too Late," which ended up topping the charts by May of 1971. "I Feel the Earth Move" never charted. This song won a Grammy for Record Of The Year in 1972. In addition, her song "You've Got a Friend" won a Grammy for Song Of The Year, and her album Tapestry won Grammys for Album Of The Year and Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female.

Lean On Me – Bill Withers (1972)

In an interview, Bill Withers said (about this song): "This was my second album, so I could afford to buy myself a little Wurlitzer electric piano. So I bought a little piano and I was sitting there just running my fingers up and down the piano. In the course of doing the music, that phrase crossed my mind, so then you go back and say, 'OK, I like the way that phrase, Lean On Me, sounds with this song.' So you go back and say, 'How do I arrive at this as a conclusion to a statement? What would I say that would cause me to say Lean On Me?' At that point, it's between you and your actual feelings, you and your morals and what you're really like. You probably do more thinking about it after it's done."

Shambala – Three Dog Night (1973)

Tibetan Buddhists believe that Shambala is a mystical land hidden somewhere in the Himalaya Mountains. Although the lyrics of "Shambala" draw on a theme from Eastern mysticism, Allmusic notes the "very strong gospel feeling" of the album Cyan is most evident on this song. This comment was probably based on both the instrumentation (including the characteristic gospel keyboard organ sounds that accompany the chorus) and the bluesy vocals of Cory Wells. Allmusic calls this hit single "one of the group's finest later period records." This was written and originally recorded by Texas songwriter B.W. Stevenson. Stung by not having a hit with the tune himself, Stevenson recorded and released a carbon copy single called "My Maria" a few months after Three Dog Night hit the Top 10 with their cover of "Shambala."

Rock The Boat – Hues Corporation (1974)

The Hues Corporation was a Los Angeles band formed in 1969. They were a black vocal group comprised of Hubert Ann Kelly, St. Clair Lee and Fleming Williams. Their name was a pun on billionaire Howard Hughes' corporation. This was arguably the first Disco song to hit #1 in the US. The instrumental hit "TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)" also had a Disco sound and was released 3 months earlier. In an interview with Classicbands.com, Hues Corporation member St. Clair Lee "It was a song that you could do anything on. You could cuddle or you could get crazy if you wanted to. It was a love song without being a love song. But, it was a Disco hit and it happened because of the discos." After the success of "Rock the Boat" the Hues Corporation's other charted singles on the Billboard Hot 100 included "Rockin' Soul" (1974, #18), "Love Corporation" (1975, #62), and "I Caught Your Act" (1977, #92). Despite their initial success, the group was unable to duplicate the success of their earlier hits and disbanded in 1978. But with renewed interest in disco music throughout the 1990s, the group reunited for tour dates and special events, including the PBS special “ Get Down Tonight: The Disco Explosion.”

Love Will Keep Us Together – The Captain & Tennille (1975)

Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield wrote this in 1973 - it was the last song the longtime songwriting partners put together. They wrote it about their collaboration since their high school days. Sedaka recorded this for his Sedaka's Back LP before Captain & Tennille did their version. Toni Tennille loved it when she first heard the song. This was almost not the first from their first album because Daryl Dragon (The Captain) wanted "I Write The Songs," written by Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys (and later recorded by Barry Manilow), released instead. Dragon was formerly a keyboard player for The Beach Boys. This song was the first of 8 top 10 singles by the married couple. Four years later, they topped the charts again with “Do That To Me One More Time.” That turned out to be their final top 40 entry.

Afternoon DelightStarland Vocal Band (1976)

This was the only hit for The Starland Vocal Band, who won the Grammy for Best New Artist of 1976, beating out the band Boston. In a VH-1 special on One-Hit-Wonders, Bill Danoff of Starland Vocal Band said: "We got two of the five Grammys - one was Best New Artist. So that was basically the kiss of death and I feel sorry for everyone who's gotten it since." The Starland vocal band was Bill Danoff, his now ex-wife Taffy Nivert Danoff, Jon Carroll and his now-ex wife Margot Chapman. The group split up after their 4th album. This was used in two 2004 movies that were set in the '70s: Anchorman and Starsky and Hutch. The Anchorman DVD contains a video of the cast performing the song, with an intro by Will Ferrell, who in his Ron Burgundy character says: "If you don't think this song is the greatest song ever, I will fight you.

I Just Want To Be Your Everything – Andy Gibb (1977)

Andy Gibb was the brother of Barry, Maurice and Robin Gibb of The Bee Gees, and Barry wrote this song. It's a fairly dramatic love song, with the singer declaring his unending passion and stating that without her, he would die. This was the first of 3 #1 singles for Gibb, which made him the first male solo artist with 3 consecutive #1 singles in the US. The next single was "(Love Is) Thicker Than Water," which was released when The Bee Gees were scoring huge hits from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack. That song replaced "Stayin' Alive" at #1 and was bumped by "Night Fever." Gibb's next single was "Shadow Dancing," which he wrote with his brothers and also went to #1. In March 1988, Andy celebrated his 30th birthday in London while working on a new album. Soon after, he entered John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, complaining of chest pains. He died on March 10, 1988, just five days after his 30th birthday as a result of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle due to a recent viral infection. His brothers acknowledge that Andy's past drug and alcohol use probably made his heart more susceptible to the ailment. Just before Andy's death, it was decided by the group that Andy would join them, which would have made the group a quartet. This did not come to pass, however. The Bee Gees' following album, One (1989), featured a song dedicated to Andy, "Wish You Were Here."

Baker Street – Gerry Rafferty (1978)

This is the most sentimental of all Gerry Rafferty's songs. It is about a man who dreams of owning a house and living away from his neighborhood, but he is a drunk, and cannot achieve that goal. He drinks to forget what he doesn't have, and never realizes he's a rolling stone with no direction. Rafferty was a member of Stealers Wheel, who had a hit in 1973 with "Stuck In The Middle With You." His first band was a Folk duo called "The Humblebums." His singing partner was the famous Scot comedian Billy Connelly. Baker Street is a real street in London. Rafferty often stayed with a friend who lived there. Raphael Ravenscroft played the sax solo. Rafferty wrote the song with an instrumental break, but didn't have a specific instrument in mind. Hugh Murphy, who produced the track, suggested a saxophone, so they brought in Ravenscroft to play it. Ravenscroft has played on records by Pink Floyd, Marvin Gaye, Abba, Alvin Lee and many others.

Boogie Wonderland – Earth, Wind and Fire with the Emotions (1979)

This is one of the more complex and misinterpreted songs of the Disco era. Written by Jon Lind and Allee Willis, it was inspired by the movie Looking For Mr. Goodbar, which stars Diane Keaton as a very lost woman who goes to clubs every night to dance and forget how miserable she was. Says Willis: "When I saw Mr. Goodbar, I got kind of fascinated with people who did go to clubs every night, whose life was kind of falling apart, but they lived for the night life, though it didn't seem to be advancing them as humans in the end. So if you really look at the lyrics of 'Boogie Wonderland,' unlike 'September,' it's not a happy song at all. It's really about someone on the brink of self destruction who goes to these clubs to try and find more, but is at least aware of the fact that if there's something like true love, that is something that could kind of drag them out of the abyss. So for instance, the first verse is: 'Midnight creeps so slowly into hearts of men who need more than they get. Daylight deals a bad hand to a woman who's laid too many bets. The mirror looks you in the face and says, 'uh-uh baby, it don't work.' You say your prayers, though you don't care, you dance to shake the hurt.'” The Emotions provided the female vocals on this song, which is credited to Earth Wind & Fire with The Emotions. The Emotions were a female vocal trio from Chicago: the sisters Wanda, Sheila and Jeanette Hutchinson. Maurice White had previously worked with them and produced their 1977 #1 single "Best Of My Love."

Bonus Track

Magic – Pilot (1975)

For some reason, no song screams “SUMMER” like this one. As a one-hit wonder, it was not easy to discover who sang it and for many years it remained that song that everyone remembers, but only in passing. When I was introduced to the Alan Parsons Project, around late ’79 or early ’80, I discovered that not only had Parsons been an engineer on the Beatles’ Abbey Road, but he had produced Pilot’s debut LP, as well. So, I decided to look up what song Pilot sand and lo and behold, I found this one. Apparently, others also share my nostalgia, as this song has recently popped up in Herbie Fully Loaded (2005), Doogal (2006) and Magicians (2007), as well as in a commercial for Pillsbury.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Since the inception of this blog, I have consistently pointed out my strong desire for fairness and honesty regarding Israel and the Middle East. As a traditional Jew, the State of Israel is a huge part of my life and without question, its survival is foremost in my heart and mind.

It is for this reason that it brings me such bitterness to see the blatant lies and hostility this little nation has forced upon it. It honestly makes no sense, in a global way, that such a small county can cause so much hatred.

And why? Why is it that so many of the nations in the UN despise Israel so much? It can not possibly because of the size of the country. After all, Israel is smaller that the state of New Jersey, while all the Arab countries surrounding it is larger than the rest of the United States.

The only rational reason Israel causes so much animosity is because of her success. Surrounded by vast wastelands of sand and dirt, the Israelis have built an oasis where their neighbors have only destroyed. Israel has built a thriving democracy - where Jew, Muslim, Christian and even Atheist can live in peace and own their own land. In Israel, a Muslim can run for a government position. In the neighboring thugocracies, the idea of a Jew (or a Christian) owning anything is a sad joke. Jews and Christians are regularly beaten and murdered for their beliefs.

And yet the world turns a blind eye. And why? Is it because of oil? That's part of it. But mostly its because of fear. Fear that by not hating Israel and the Jewish people, you'll be also targeted by the rampaging mobs of Muslim extremists.

Need proof? Ask the Danes after the Mohammad cartoons came out. Ask Salmon Rushdie. Ask Theo van Gogh.

It's in this vein of thought that brings me to a recent post by Steven Plaut, who is a professor at the Graduate School of the Business Administration at the University of Haifa, as well as someone I've frequently quoted in the past. The post, which was published in Front Page Magazine, is a must read for anyone with an open mind and a thirst for honesty.

I urge you to forward this to as many people as possible and when needed, refer to it when questioned by those whose interest in Israel and the Middle East is insincere at best, anti-Semitic at worst.

The 14 Lies Blocking Peace in the Middle East

If a Martian were suddenly to land on earth and started listening to and reading the mainstream media, he would form the impression that the entire Middle East conflict were due to Israel building some settlements in land that much of the world thinks should become a Palestinian state. A near-consensus exists among the governments of the world and among media writers that peace has yet to break out in the Middle East because of three principle reasons. The first is that the Jews and the Arabs have been unable to agree about whether there should be a Palestinian state. The second is because Israel has obstinately refused to withdraw its troops from (so-called) “occupied Arab” lands. The third is because Israel behaves cruelly towards the Palestinians.

The Martian could easily carry these beliefs back to its home planet, as long as it did not bother to learn the background and the history of the Middle East conflict. Those three reasons cannot survive an antibiotic of familiarity with Middle East history.

President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton seem to think the idea of Palestinian statehood is the most wonderful idea to come along since the Thirteenth Amendment. And almost all world politicians, along with the Israeli Left, insist that all Israeli settlements must be removed from the West Bank because they serve as the main obstacle to peace. The reality is that the Middle East conflict has very little to do with debate over Palestinian statehood and even less to do with Israeli “settlements.” In fact Israel has agreed in principle, somewhat foolishly, to the erection of such a Palestinian state, at least subject to some security conditions and other concessions from the Palestinians -- like recognizing Israel’s right to exist. As it turns out, even so-called “moderate” Palestinians reject any such idea.

Meanwhile debate about the Middle East conflict is based on an incredible absence of historic information and on a series of stylish misconceptions about Middle East history. The anti-Israel Lobby, which grows by the day in its maliciousness and anti-Semitism, counts on the ignorance of much of the public concerning how the Middle East got to where it is.

Here are just a handful of popular misconceptions and their antidotes:

1. Falsehood: Israel was erected on land that belonged to Palestinian Arabs.

Truth: Before Israel was created its territory never belonged to Palestinian Arabs and had not been ruled by any Arabs at all since the Middle Ages. It had been a Turkish province for centuries until it was captured by Britain during World War I. The League of Nations awarded governance of “Palestine” to Britain at the end of the war in exchange for its commitment to turn the area into a Jewish homeland. The lands on which Jewish immigrants settled before Israel was created were purchased by Jews at above-market prices and in most cases had no Arabs living on them. Virtually no Arabs were evicted.

2. Falsehood: The Jews came to Palestine as foreigners and aliens whereas the Palestinians were the indigenous people of the territory.

Truth: Jews lived in “Palestine,” which is the Land of Israel or "Eretz Yisroel," continuously from the time of the Bible. Most families of “Palestinians” migrated into “Palestine,” during the same period as the Zionist waves of immigration, starting in the second half of the 19th century. The largest ethnic group in the country at the time was the Turks. The “Palestinian Arabs” in 1948 were primarily families of migrants from Lebanon and Syria. Ironically, they were motivated to become “Palestinians” in the first place thanks to the Zionist movement, which brought capital and labor into “Palestine” and improved living conditions there. Huge numbers of the names of “Palestinian” Arab villages and towns are slightly-modified Hebrew names. It is difficult to dig in the ground of “Palestine” without uncovering Jewish artifacts, some thousands of years old. Meanwhile, two-thirds of Mandatory Palestine’s territory had been sliced off in the 1920s and used to set up Jordan, an Arab Palestinian state much larger than Israel. The remaining territory, Western Palestine, was to become the Jewish homeland. That was the original “two-state solution,” the same "innovation" now being promoted for the Western third of the remaining part of Palestine.

3. Falsehood: There is no Palestinian state today because of Israeli aggression and obstinacy.

Truth: There is no Palestinian state today because of Arab aggression and obstinacy. In late 1947, the United Nations approved by a two thirds majority a proposal to create in to create in Western "Palestine" two states to replace the British Mandatory regime there. One would be Jewish and the other a Palestinian Arab state. The Jews agreed. The Arabs rejected the idea. The Arab states launched an attack of genocidal aggression against the Jews, invaded “Palestine” and gobbled up the lands earmarked for the Arab Palestinian state. Most of those lands were then held illegally by Jordan and semi-legally by Egypt until 1967 when they were liberated by Israel in the Six Day War. The Arab world has maintained a state of war with Israel since 1948, refusing to recognize its legitimacy, and attacking Israel over and over in a series of wars and terrorism campaigns. The Arab states attacked Israel in 1948, 1956, 1967, 1973, 1982, 2006, and sponsored terrorist atrocities against Jews in Israel since it was created. The reason for the attack which produced the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948 is exactly the same thing that stands in the way of any real peace settlement today.

4. Falsehood: Israel conducted “ethnic cleansing” of the Palestinian Arabs in 1948-49.

Truth: The Arab states conducted ethnic cleansing of Jews after 1948. About a million Jews were expelled by Arab states, their property stolen, and most then became citizens of Israel. Palestinian Arabs became refugees in 1948-49 as a direct result of the Arab war of aggression against Israel, in which the Palestinians participated. The estimated number of such Arab refugees varies between 400,000 and 750,000, with the former the more likely correct estimate. Afterwards, many were quietly allowed to return to Israel. Hundreds of thousands of Arabs from other Arab countries then declared themselves “Palestinian refugees” in order to get handouts from the UN and other international relief organizations. The actual Palestinian Arabs became refugees for the same reason that ethnic Germans living in Eastern Europe became refugees after World War II: because they were on the losing side of the war of aggression launched by their own political leaders.

5. Falsehood: Israel is an apartheid regime and mistreats Arabs.

Truth: Israel is the only Middle East country that is NOT an apartheid regime. Arabs living under Israeli rule are the only Arabs in the Middle East who enjoy freedom of speech and of the press, free access to courts operating with due process, legal protection for property rights and the right to vote. Israeli Arabs have higher standards of education and health than any other group of Arabs in the Middle East. Israeli Arabs are quite simply the best-treated political minority in the Middle East and are in some ways better treated than are minority groups in many European countries. Israel is the only country in the Middle East that does NOT deal with Islamist terror through wholesale massacres of the people in whose midst the terrorists operate.

6. Falsehood: Arabs engage in aggression and terrorism because Israel occupies territories.

Truth: Israel occupies territories (that had been controlled by Jordan and Egypt before 1967) because of Arab aggression and terrorism. Had the Arabs made peace with Israel after 1949, the West Bank and Gaza would have remained under the hegemony of Arabs and they could easily have erected a Palestinian Arab state there any time they wished. Instead, they attacked Israel in an attempt at genocidal extermination in 1967 and they lost.

7. Falsehood: The Middle East conflict is and has always been based on Israeli opposition to Palestinian self-determination.

Truth: The Middle East conflict is and has always been based on Arab opposition to Israeli-Jewish self-determination. There is one and only one cause of the Arab-Israeli conflict, even if that single cause is buried beneath an avalanche of media mud designed to obfuscate and confuse. That single cause is the refusal of the Arab world to come to terms with Israel’s existence within any set of borders whatsoever. The cause of the war is Arab refusal to come to terms with Jewish self-determination in any form whatsoever. The Middle East conflict is not about the right of self-determination of “Palestinian Arabs,” but rather it is about the Arab rejection of self-determination for Israeli Jews. For a century, the Arabs have attempted to block Jewish self-determination, using violence.

No Palestinians before 1967 demanded any “homeland,” although they did demand that the Jews be stripped of theirs. That is because Palestinians are not a “people” at all and do not consider themselves such, any more than do the Arabs of Paris or of Detroit. Palestinians never had any real interest in their own state, and in fact rioted violently in 1920 when “Palestine” was detached from Syria by the European powers. Indeed the original term “Nakba” (“catastrophe” in Arabic and in leftist NewSpeak) was coined to refer to the outrage of Palestinians separated from their Syrian homeland. Immediately after the Six Day War a sudden need for a Palestinian state was fabricated by the Arab world, as a gimmick to force Israel back to its pre-1967 borders. Israel would then again be ten-miles wide at its narrowest, and so prepped for the new Arab assault of annihilation and genocide.

The Arab world invented the “Palestinian people” so that it would serve the same role as the Sudeten Germans did in the late 1930s. That role was to provide a pretense of legitimacy for the war aims and aggression of a large fascist power. The term “self-determination” has been repeated as a rhetorical “inalienable right” for so long that few people recall that pursuing “self-determination” can also serve as a tool of aggression by barbarous aggressors and totalitarian powers. When Hitler decided to go on a war of conquest in the late 1930s, he dressed up his intentions in the cloak of legitimacy, merely “helping disenfranchised and oppressed people attain self-determination.” He distorted the plight of ethnic Germans living in the Czech Sudetenland and elsewhere in Eastern Europe, inventing tales of mistreatment. In reality of course these ethnic Germans already had the option of “self-determination” within the neighboring, sovereign German nation-states, and in fact enjoyed far more freedom and rights than did Germans inside Germany. Germany’s invasion of Czechoslovakia was prepared through postured indignity over the mistreatment of Germans by Germany’s neighbors. Hitler insisted he was simply seeking to relieve the “misery of mistreated ethnic Germans,” supposedly suffering inside democratic Czechoslovakia. “Self-determination” was also the pretense when Germany attacked Poland and other countries.

The Arab world decided that the “Palestinians” must play the role of Sudetens, serving as the political and moral pretense for Arab aggression and Islamofascist imperialism. The Arab fascists then misrepresent themselves as pursuing noble efforts at protecting a mistreated oppressed minority group of Arabs in need of “self-determination.”

8. Falsehood: Palestinian terrorism has been a response to Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and as a response to Israeli settlements there.

Truth: Palestinian terrorism against Jews began in the 1920s, escalated in the 1930s, continued non-stop in the 1940s even in the midst of World War II, and reached heights of barbarism in the 1950s. All this was long before Israel “occupied” anything. The PLO was set up long before the Six Day War, meaning before Israel “occupied” the West Bank and Gaza, and before those areas held a single Israeli settlement.

9. Falsehood: Israel has no right to build settlements in the West Bank.

Truth: Israel has as much right to build settlements in the West Bank as France has to build towns in Alsace and Lorraine, or as Poland has to build in areas that once held ethnic Germans. The Arabs launched a series of wars of aggression against Israel and lost. Aggressors who lose a war also lose territory. The bulk of Jewish “settlers” are actually Israelis living in the suburbs of Jerusalem that were constructed after 1967. A handful of small rural “settlements” have been constructed in empty West Bank lands from which no Arab civilians were evicted. In any real peace settlement, Jews would have as much right to live in the West Bank as Arabs have to live inside Israel. A peace accord that rules out such an arrangement would be no peace accord at all.

10. Falsehood: The Middle East conflict continues because Israel refuses to share its land and resources with Palestinians.

Truth: The Middle East conflict continues because the Arab world refuses to share its land and resources with Jews. It is about the absolute refusal of the Arab world to acquiesce in the existence of any Jewish-majority political entity within any set of borders in the Middle East. The Arabs today control 22 countries and territory nearly twice the size of the United States (including Alaska), whereas Israel cannot be seen on most globes or maps. Arabs as an ethnic group control more territory than any other ethnic group on earth. They refuse to share even a fraction of one percent of the Middle East with the Jews, even in a territory smaller than New Jersey. Without the West Bank, Israel at its narrowest point is less than 10 miles wide, about the length of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. The main reason the Arab world demands that Israel relinquish the West Bank to Palestinian terrorism is so that it can be used to attack Israel again and so that Israel can at last be militarily annihilated. The Arab world controls such vast amounts of territory and such vast amounts of wealth (thanks to petroleum) that it could have created a “homeland” for Palestinian Arabs anywhere within its territories at any time.

11. Falsehood: Israel deals with Palestinian violence and terrorism using excessive disproportionate force.

Truth: The number of innocent Palestinian civilians intentionally killed by Israel is exactly zero. The number of civilians injured in Israeli anti-terror operations is tiny when compared with NATO and Allied military operations in Serbia, Bosnia, Afghanistan, or Iraq. Given the near universal support among Palestinians for terrorist atrocities against Jews, the self-restraint and moderation used by Israel in dealing with the threat has no precedent in the world. Israel’s own Arabs make little attempt to hide their open identification with the genocidal enemies of their own country and they by and large support the annihilation of the state in which they hold citizenship. No other democratic country facing such open sedition and identification with the enemy in time of war ever responded with anywhere near the same restraint as shown by Israel. In World War II, when faced with a far less-dangerous problem, the United States locked up its ethnic-Japanese domestic population in internment camps. Democratic Spain set up teams of death squads to deal with its separatist terrorists. Democracies in war have junked habeas corpus and treated their internal Fifth Columns as the enemy, with no hesitation or squeamishness.

Democratic Czechoslovakia and India (as well as non-democratic countries throughout Eastern Europe) undertook wholesale expulsions of millions of members of their internal ethnic minorities who had sided with the enemy. Greece and Turkey and the two sections of Cyprus simply expelled altogether their minority populations. Israel, in contrast, operates affirmative action programs that benefit Arabs, finances Arabic-language schools in which Israeli Arabs preserve and develop their culture, overfunds Arab municipalities, and turns a blind eye to massive Arab sedition and lawbreaking, including with regard to illegal mass squatting on publicly-owned lands. Israel is a Western democracy with a Scandinavian style social welfare system, the only democracy in the Middle East. It is hard to come up with words to mock satisfactorily the ludicrous nature of the complaints about Israeli “mistreatment” of Arabs. These complaints come from the very same people who are apologists for genocidal Islamofascist terrorist movements and for the Arab fascist states, regimes that are among the most barbarous and openly war-seeking on earth. The endless complaints about “human rights violations” of the “Palestinians” by Israel are a rhetorical part of the broader campaign of aggression against Israeli survival. Arabs living under Israeli rule are the world’s foremost illustration of “Moynihan’s Law,” which holds: “The amount of violations of human rights in a country is always an inverse function of the amount of complaints about human rights violations heard from there. The greater the number of complaints being aired, the better protected are human rights in that country.”

12. Falsehood: Israel can achieve peace by trading “Land for Peace” and by relinquishing territories that it “occupies.”

Truth: Every time Israel relinquishes territory it “occupies” it triggers an escalation of terror and violence by Arabs against Jews. The main cause of anti-Israel terrorism today is the removal of Israeli occupation from Arabs. This is so obvious that it is a major intellectual challenge to explain why so few people understand it. Israel ended its occupation of the Gaza Strip in its entirety in 2004 and evicted all Jews who had been living there. The complete Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip produced a barrage of thousands of rockets aimed at Israeli civilians inside Israel (NOT in the “occupied territories”), a barrage that eventually forced Israel’s reluctant leaders to carry out the “Cast Lead” operation against Gaza terrorism. The Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon was unilaterally ended in the year 2000 by then-Israeli socialist Prime Minister Ehud Barak. The direct result of that fiasco was the launching of 4,000 Katyusha rockets from Lebanon against northern Israel in the summer of 2006, and several times that number now poised to strike Israel. The worst waves of Palestinian suicide attacks were directly triggered by the early Oslo withdrawals — before which there had been no suicide bombings. There can be no doubt that a complete Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank and a return to pre-1967 borders would trigger a massive rocket and terror assault against the remaining areas of Israel, launched from the "liberated" lands in the West Bank. The same thing would result from Israel relinquishing the Golan Heights to Syria.

13. Falsehood: The Zionist Lobby exercises excessive influence and dictates policies to the United States, protecting Israel from just criticism.

Falsehood: The anti-Zionist Lobby exercises excessive influence and dictates policies to the United States, protecting Palestinians, Arab fascist regimes, and Islamofascism from just criticism. While the media overflow with nonsensical talk about a “Zionist/Israel Lobby,” it would only be a small exaggeration to claim that there is no such thing at all. The anti-Zionist lobby binds together anti-Semites and fanatics, ranging from Islamists, to the radical Left to the Neo-Nazi Right. There is little today that separates anti-Zionism from anti-Semitism and I have never met an anti-Zionist who was not also an anti-Semite. (Jewish leftist anti-Zionists are the self-hating moral equivalents of Taliban John and Tokyo Rose).

14. Falsehood: The Middle East conflict can be resolved through “Two States for Two Peoples.”

Truth: The “Two States for Two Peoples” idea is not a solution at all but simply a strategy for weakening Israel and forcing it behind indefensible borders. Right after “Two States for Two Peoples” would be implemented, the new “Palestinian state” would invite the rest of the Arab world to finish off what remains of Israel. Even the “moderates” within the PLO insist that any “Israel” left standing within “Two States for Two Peoples” must be flooded by Arab migrants and stripped of its Jewish majority, in effect converted to yet another Arab Palestinian state. The Arabs still condition any “two-state solution” on Israel agreeing to being flooded with Arab immigrants purporting to be Palestinians, so that it will morph demographically into the 24th Arab state. Israel obviously cannot agree. Israel would be blanketed in rocket and mortar fire from “Palestine” and waves of Arab terrorist infiltrators into Israel would raise the carnage to unprecedented levels.

That such a “two-state solution” will not end the conflict, but only signal the commencement of its next stage, has long been the quasi-official position of virtually all Palestinian groups. These have long insisted that any two-state solution is but a stage in a “plan of stages,” after which will come additional steps ultimately ending Israel's existence as a Jewish state. The “two-state solution” is no more realistic an option today than it was in 1948, when it was militarily squashed by the Arab states, terrorists, and armies. It is ultimately as much of an existential threat to Jewish survival in the Middle East today as the so-called “one-state solution,” favored by the anti-Semitic Left, in which Israel is replaced by a Rwanda-like bi-national entity controlled by Arabs, in which the Jewish problem will be resolved in a Rwanda-style manner.

Creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel would be a major step in the escalation of the Arab war against Israel's existence, even if that war is delayed for a brief time while the world celebrates the outbreak of a Potemkin “peace” in the Middle East produced by the end of Israeli "occupation" of “Palestinians.”

Since the Oslo “peace process” began in the early 1990s, the working hypothesis endorsed by nearly everyone on the planet (including large numbers of IQ-challenged Israeli politicians) has been that the most urgent task at hand is to end the Israeli "occupation" of Palestinian Arabs. The problem is that ANY Palestinian state, regardless of who rules it, will produce nothing but escalated violence, terror and warfare in the Middle East, certainly not stability or peaceful relations. It will seek war with the rump Israel, and will seek to draw the entire Moslem world into that war. It will be indifferent to the economic and social problems of its own citizens.

Humans seem to have a basic impatience with hearing the truth repeated over long periods of time. In an era in which technology, politics, and science change so rapidly, many consider it to be implausible that a statement that had been true 60 years ago could still be true today. Surely, they insist, explanations from the past, such as those of the Middle East conflict, must be obsolete by now, replaced with new updated “theories” and more-modern perceptions of reality.

The result of all this is pseudo-history, where people invent new “theories” about some of the most widely-accepted truths of history. No subject has been subject to quite so much pseudo-historic revisionism and denial of “out-of date” truths as the Middle East. George Orwell once said that the first duty of intelligent men is to restate the obvious. Obvious truths need to be restated because they are under assault by so many dishonest men.

The Palestinians have no legitimate claim to a right to set up their own state, and creation of such a state would result in escalated warfare and bloodshed, not peace. There was never in history an Arab Palestinian state. Even if such a right ever existed, the Palestinians – like the Sudeten Germans - would have forfeited it thanks to decades of terrorism, savagery, mass murders and barbarism. Their pacification today requires reimposing of martial rule by Israel and a thorough program of De-nazification.

The promotion of a “Two States for Two Peoples” solution has radicalized and Nazified most Israeli Arabs, who now identify with and openly support Arab parties and politicians openly calling for violence against Jews and for the destruction of Israel. The “solution” is a recipe for more bloodshed and strife.


Any questions, or further proofs that you may need are available. There is nothing that I'm trying to hide here. Unlike Israel's critics, I'm not trying to deceive you, or to force you to believe what I've written (or copied, as it may be). I simply wish you to know the facts and understand for yourself the real truth and the lies they'd prefer you to know.