Big Trouble in Calamitous Cairo: Ginsburg’s Egyptian Odyssey


Equally as loathsome when actor and malcontent Sean Penn criticizes America while praising the Arab Spring, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg disparaging the US Constitution rivals treason.

Ginsburg’s ACLU convictions shadow her in old age. Conjoined in mindset with Barack Obama, both believe the Constitution is an outdated allegory, no longer sufficient as a guiding vehicle to the norms of contemporary society.

Like a vulture awaiting a carcass to further decompose before gorging its remains, Ginsburg shared her ill-timed and progressive views on social equality in the appropriately moldering venue of Egypt last week.

A proponent of foreign charters and treaties to better liberate the world, Ginsburg on Christian Arabic Alhayat television, said, “I would not look at the US Constitution if I were drafting a Constitution in 2012, instead suggesting a more modern version, namely South Africa’s, in laying more fundamental human rights and an independent judiciary.

In Cairo on the one-year anniversary of the Friday of Rage, marking the uprising leading to the ouster of Hosni Mubarak, Ginsburg called it “a very inspiring time, that you have overthrown a dictator, and that you are striving to achieve a genuine democracy. Americans are hoping that this transition will work.”

In the streets below her hotel overlooking Tahrir Square, Islamists and liberal secular-leaning protesters were seen divided on how to achieve that genuine democracy.

Also among the activists on the Square, where in 2011, three world newswomen on assignment were sexually assaulted and molested, including CBS News’ Lara Logan who was raped, were members of the rancorous Muslim Brotherhood, unsullied from a 50-seat parliamentary election victory, now in the driver’s seat of the country’s conscience.

While Ginsburg espoused “listening and learning from others,” referencing amended protocols from the European Convention on Human Rights, CBC Egypt was simultaneously broadcasting the carnage and subsequent rioting with police in the aftermath of a Port Said soccer match where 74 people were trampled to death.

Ginsburg’s sojourn was tainted as 19 Americans; some from US funded pro-democracy organizations were accused of inferring in the country’s internal politics, and are now being held hostage by Egypt’s military-appointed government.

Choosing not to contradict the objective of her visit, the normally outspoken Ginsburg had no comment on the wave of crime and internal turmoil in a region where the anti-Western Muslim Brotherhood calls the shots following Obama’s call one year ago for Mubarak to step down.

Since Ginsburg won’t use the US Constitution as an archetype model for Egypt, she can’t preach to the new choir inserted there
either; ones with as little regard for American ideals as Ginsburg herself.


Signed, Sealed, Undelivered


Flawed as a presidential candidate, Rick Perry’s hunger to debate the man he called “the smooth politician in the White House right now,” will have to wait now until,  maybe never.

What a showdown it might have been.

On the topic of border security, Barack Obama would have fired blanks. The barrel of Perry’s Kimber 1911 would still be smoking after contesting Obama’s March 2011 assertion, “the Texas border with Mexico is safer than ever.” Back then, Perry countered, saying Obama had “either the poorest intel of a president in the history of this country, or is an abject liar to the American people.”

Perry’s first-hand attestation to ten years of being ignored by the federal government in stemming the flow of illegals and battling back the drug cartels is indefensible. In a dual, Perry could duly pin the death of Border Patrol Agent, Brian Terry, a victim of the Fast and Furious debacle, on Obama and the mendacious Eric Holder’s tapered shoulders.

The payback among all gotcha moments might have seen Perry reminding Obama of the royal snub given him at Austin Airport in August 2010. Unlike Governor Jan Brewer’s tense exchange with Obama at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport on Wednesday, Perry’s fell flat.

There, on the tarmac, Perry waited to welcome Obama. In his hand was an envelope containing a personally written letter detailing in great specificity the border problem. In it Perry wrote, “American lives, jobs and safety depend on a more robust federal commitment to border safety and security and request for more federal assistance.”

Descending the steps from Air Force One, Obama curtly gestured to Perry that the envelope be given to Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, trailing the rung behind him. Their cursory meet-and-greet handshake was brief, a few words exchanged, and within moments Obama was whisked into an awaiting limousine heading for a fundraiser.

Forsaking veracity, Obama’s arrogance carried into El Paso nine months later with a made-for-the-moment spoof of Republicans wanting a moat with an alligator to protect American citizens this side of the Rio Grande.

In skirting Perry in Austin, Obama exposed his vulnerability on an issue he could neither mess about nor come up with any real solutions for.

Beginning in Charleston, SC, Perry’s decision to run was an all too brief ascendency. His “oops” moments became too commonplace for a seasoned politician. Perry’s greatest gaffe came at the Orlando debate after defending his reasons for signing into law in-state tuition policy for illegal immigrant students. He was never able to recover the ardor of the Conservative base after that, being a hanger-on the last three months.

To Perry’s credit he never wavered on the border theme, saying there’d be sufficient boots on the ground, drones and aerial surveillance to prevent illegal entry.

That scenario will never play out with Barack Obama in the White House, nor has Obama received, and if so, read Perry’s letter.


Retreading Teddy: Obama in Osawatomie


Whacked from so many gigs in States he can’t remember the names of, Barack Obama’s
running low on original material.

Then again, Teddy Roosevelt is a tough act to follow.

Nowadays, Obama infers Lincolnesque-style passion into his empty, collective agenda. Or,
the other day in Osawatomie, Kansas, Obama retreaded the modus operandi and static from Roosevelt’s New Nationalism speech; one given 101 years ago in Osawatomie that laid the foundation for TR’s unsuccessful 1912 run to retake the White House.

Stumping in Osawatomie, Obama modernized the 20th century icon, contrasting TR’s call for social justice by a powerful federal government regulating the economy. Obama will be remembered for believing in an even stronger ‑- as TR penned, “National Government.” Up until Obama, it was TR who prided himself in taking great license with executive power.

Comparing the political divide in America, Obama said TR was labeled a Marxian for many of the same political proposals he too has put forward. If Obama is taking cues from TR’s ghost, maybe he prepped for Osawatomie by reading historian George E. Mowrys, Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Movement, calling TR’s speech there, “the most radical speech ever given by an ex-President.”

The “collective amnesia” Obama spoke of in Osawatomie, reminding Kansans this is the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression; one he bears no culpability for, is for many, the collective amnesia so many Americans threw caution to the wind in voting for someone so skilled in the artful guise of sanguinity.

Kansans though, are not so easily led. The state hasn’t gone Democrat in a presidential race since 1964. Being a non-battleground state, they won’t likely go blue when the unemployment rate there sits at 6.7% compared to the national average of 8.6.

Channeling the raw verve of TR can’t shroud Obama’s abysmal record of failed initiatives, appointing czars with no accountability to the American people, super committees created to flop, and, as so definitively put by Allen West, “a progressive mantra of equal achievement.”

The Cheshire Cat is out of the bag. Even adopting TR’s, “Believe you can and you’re halfway there,” as a 2012 campaign slogan wouldn’t be enough to veil Obama’s stark inadequacies.

It might at the very least, break the long fall down the Rabbit Hole of hope and change.

http://youtu.be/6AsBDZScs6c

 

 


A Convenient Amnesty


After being booked, most felons want to speak to a lawyer. Not this cat.

Two decades of falsely assimilating into the American milieu entitled Onyango Obama a call to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue to make bail. Or so he thought. Framingham police weren’t as accommodating.

Obama’s pleading not guilty to driving under the influence was hardly unexpected for someone who’d been flying under the radar since ignoring a 1992 deportation order.

In that time, Onyango Obama, or Uncle Omar as the president calls him in the campaign-biopic Dreams from My Father, acquired a valid Massachusetts driver’s license, social security card and with Immigration and Customs Enforcement mum on the subject, what other amenities did Uncle Omar’s quasi-citizenship come with?

While millions of government dollars shred like confetti over abuse of illegal ingress, Uncle Omar, half-brother of Barack Obama’s father, likely found a timely reprieve from his half-nephew. Through executive fiat, Barack Obama’s new backdoor amnesty plan, illegal immigrants facing deportation can embed themselves into America by applying for work permits.

The caveat for Uncle Omar is Homeland Security’s role in the regime’s supposed focus on removing convicted criminals posing a threat a threat to national security and public safety.

In July, Obama told the National Council of La Raza he couldn’t go around Congress and implement immigration ‘reform’ or grant amnesty because ‘that’s not how our democracy functions.’

What a difference two months make in Barack Obama’s world. With Congress gone for the summer, his surreptitious Dream Act provides hope for Uncle Omar and 20 million illegal aliens already here, and more on the way though the daily entryway of America’s southern border.

Changing immigration policy without Congressional approval is a vain attempt by Obama’s handlers to play the electoral card game by pandering to, and hopefully boosting the Latino vote in states like Florida with 25 electoral votes. If only creating jobs came with that much side-stepping, or the president had a fortuitous plan of sorts, his poll numbers wouldn’t be tanking.

It’s an insult POTUS cares so little for American citizens that he’s willing to usurp the legislative process to implement his own plans. Hopefully Congress catches up to Obama, overturning the misuse of executive order he employs whenever the need to pacify special interest groups he can’t facilitate through normal lawmaking channels arises.

According to the September 9th edition of The Boston Globe, Uncle Omar was “quietly released from jail,” although ICE isn’t saying whether he posted bond, or whether he still faces deportation.

The Obama family tree casts a long shadow against the light of supremacy: Uncle Omar’s blatant disregard of American law, the dissident socialist Barack Obama Sr.’s divergence during the post-colonial rule of Jomo Kenyatta, and finally Barack Obama, methodic in the art of class warfare, and chief-circumventer of constitutionality whenever the mood strikes him.

It’s a safe bet Uncle Omar long resides in the Land of the Free.


Post-Obama: Restoration of a Nation


Sifting through the rubble of weakened nationalism, remnants from the steep learning curve of a dogmatic, bereft-of-centricity ideologue are the harsh reality the next President of the United States inherits as part of rebuilding all that’s been compromised in the disquieting four years of Barack Obama.

Developing America’s natural energy resources, tapping into the most innovative minds and cognizance leading to job creation will be unharnessed.

Drilling moratoriums will be lifted, assets like ANWR and the Northeastern states Marcellus Shale depositories explored, and the hiatus of NASA technology, stymied by the Obama Regime, given a chance to launch again.

Hyped during the final space shuttle Obama sees for America, was recovering Congresswoman Gabby Giffords bidding temporary goodbye to husband, Endeavour Captain Mark Kelly, swapping wedding rings before liftoff.

While a moving gesture, the discourse for restoring NASA, whether as a private sector incentive in the form of tax credits or revamped on the national level is worth exploration.

Whether she ever returns to Congress as a conscientious voice, Gifford’s amazing recovery and link to Kelly bears witness NASA shouldn’t have been scrapped by a bellicose president calling for more spending on climate science, America becoming Brazil’s best petroleum exporter, or the building of a national high-speed rail line.

If NASA has to better define its role in future projects or assigned production takes over space exploration, Florida Senator Marco Rubio believes halting the program harms local economies as, “many industries exist because of the space program.

The black hole Obama will leave defunding NASA’s is what CEO of the Space Foundation Elliot Pulham says “[will] cost America the vital edge in economic power and national security,” the latter Obama showed little concern here on Earth for, given his mendacious claim in El Paso of all places, that “America’s southern border is safer than ever.”

Contradictory to marginalizing NASA was Obama’s 2011 SOTU address referencing Sputnik’s conquest of space, and how America’s technological future depends on advancements drawn from the next generation of educated minds competing with formidable global counterparts.

Allowing China and India the fact track in scientific innovation is reprehensible. The mentality of the Obama/Mickey D’s economy where 9.1% unemployment would be higher if not for the Golden Arches suggest this President put politics and polls ahead of science, engineering and the innovation to even compete against overseas development.

Shutting down Gulf oil production, irresponsible energy policy such as like releasing 30 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve prove Obama’s deliberate caliphate.

Discovering new reserves, space travel and America’s defense needn’t have been forsaken as an academic motivator.