Johnson launches Libertarian presidential bid


Gary Johnson

Gary Johnson.

(Credit:
AP)

Presidential candidate Gary Johnson on Wednesday made his switch to the Libertarian party official, finalizing the paperwork in a press conference and expressing his disappointment about how he was treated by the Republican establishment throughout the 2012 political cycle.

“This feels good,” Johnson said on Wednesday in Santa Fe, while signing papers to make the switch official. “I really believe that the fastest-growing segment of the Republican party are those that have a Libertarian bent. I really believe in this agenda; it is about the agenda.”

Johnson had previously been running in the race as a Republican. But the fiscal conservative barely registered in the national polls and was excluded from all but two of the 13 Republican presidential debates.

“I really had hoped to do this within the Republican party,” he said. “I got snubbed by the Republican party.”

Johnson, if he receives the third-party nomination, would be the only official Libertarian on the ticket. But Ron Paul also identifies strongly with that party’s values, and has a fervent base of Libertarian-leaning supporters.

The former two-term governor of New Mexico said he wished Paul “luck” in the GOP primary, but suggested he had little faith in the Republican’s ability to earn his party’s nomination.

“I endorsed Ron Paul in 2008,” Johnson noted. “But at the end of the Republican primary I don’t think he’s going to prevail.”

Despite his relative support for Paul, Johnson and the Texas congressman differ on a number of issues – particularly when it comes to social issues, where Johnson tends to be more liberal. Johnson supports abortion rights, the legalization of marijuana, and gay marriage; he also differs with Paul on foreign policy with regards to Israel and opposes a fence along America’s border with Mexico.

In a statement on Wednesday, Johnson said his decision to switch parties was, in a sense, an easy one.

“It was difficult because I have a lot of Republican history, and a lot of Republican supporters. But in the final analysis, as many, many commentators have said since watching how I governed in New Mexico, I am a Libertarian – that is, someone who is fiscally very conservative but holds freedom-based positions on many social issues,” Johnson said.

He also seemed baffled that some of his fellow competitors for the Republican ticket “were allowed to participate” in GOP presidential debates despite having “no national name identification” and “no executive experience.”

Meanwhile, he said, “I, a successful two-term governor with a solid record of job creation, was arbitrarily excluded by elitist media organizations in New York. My appeals to the Republican National Chairman for basic fairness were ignored.”

The candidate appeared to have few illusions about his chances at winning the presidential election — when asked who he would choose as his running mate he said, “I hope to have that problem” – but said his candidacy was a shot at expanding America’s two-party political system.

“We are fed up with the two-party system,” he said. “And the ability to be in the game, to be on the ballot in all 50 states, is an opportunity to advance this agenda which I really think resonates with most people in this country.”

Despite Johnson’s marginal national support, he could plausibly have an impact on who wins New Mexico’s five electoral votes. A recent survey by Public Policy Polling (a Democratic polling firm) of New Mexico found that in a race between Johnson, Mitt Romney and President Obama, the president would get 44 percent, Romney would get 27 percent and Johnson would get 23 percent. (Mr. Obama won the state 57-42 in 2008.)

Johnson’s campaign has been meeting for months with Libertarian party officials, and he has been publicly flirting with seeking the Libertarian nomination as it became increasingly clear he would not rise above the level of footnote in the GOP race.

He said on Wednesday he didn’t see himself as having left the Republican party. Rather, he said, “the Republican party has left me.”

How Ron Paul Should Address The Newsletter Controversy

Michael Tomasky of the Daily Beast helpfully suggested that Rep. Ron Paul could quiet the furor over the newsletters that bore his name by giving an Obama-style “race speech.”

It’s not a bad idea.

In particular, Paul should adopt the following passage from Obama’s speech and make it his own:

[blockquote]The profound mistake of Reverend [Jeremiah] Wright’s sermons is not that he spoke about racism in our society. It’s that he spoke as if our society was static; as if no progress has been made; as if this country … is still irrevocably bound to a tragic past.[endquote]

Libertarianism in America is bound to that same tragic past.

[Read Washington Whispers: Ron Paul's Surge in Iowa Isn't a Fluke]

Dr. Samuel Johnson famously asked, “How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?”

To read the racialist screeds found in Paul’s newsletters of the late ’80s and early ’90s is to be reminded that, in the darkest corners of the libertarian right, that yelping has never really stopped.

It’s a deeply rooted, Virginian-English yelp that grates on the ears of modern liberals and Burkean Yankee conservatives alike.

In Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America, historian David Hackett Fischer wrote:

The libertarian ideas that took root in Virginia were very far removed from those that went to Massachusetts. In place of New England’s distinctive idea of ordered liberty, the Virginians thought of liberty as a hegemonic condition of dominion over others and—equally important—dominion over oneself. … It never occurred to most Virginia gentlemen that liberty belonged to everyone. It was thought to be the special birthright of free-born Englishmen—a property which set this “happy breed” apart from less fortunate people in the world.

[Check out 2011: The Year in Cartoons.]

In his hypothetical race speech, Ron Paul could acknowledge this “tragic past”—but insist that 21st-century American libertarianism need not be bound to it. Paul could say that the black community is being harmed by the sort of paternalistic government that, 50 years ago, secured their political liberty.

Granted, since he remains adamantly opposed to the letter of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, this would be an awkward straddle for Paul. But he has made a version of this argument in the context of the war on drugs.

Paul could remind us, too, that the Virginia conception of liberty was only half-hierarchical. Re-read the above citation and Fischer’s phrase “dominion over oneself.” This points to the libertarian ethos of self-reliance and independence that doesn’t require historical de-odorizing.

I doubt Paul would seriously consider giving such a speech. Yet even though I trace my conservatism to New England rather than Virginia, I’d still like to see him deliver something like it.

All conservatives have a dog in this fight.

Former Aide: Ron Paul ‘Personally Uncomfortable’ Sharing Bathroom Facilities …

Eyebrow

Eric Dondero, a former Senior Aide and Campaign Organizer for Ron Paul offers his view of the candidate’s alleged racism, anti-Semitism, and homophobia that has been brought to light by media via his old newsletters.

DonderoDondero says Paul is not a racist, nor an anti-Semite, though he disagrees with the state of Israel. He calls Paul “out of touch” with Black and Latino culture. As for Paul’s homophobia?

Well, yes and no. He is not all bigoted towards homosexuals. He supports their rights to do whatever they please in their private lives. He is however, personally uncomfortable around homosexuals, no different from a lot of older folks of his era.

Dondero offers two stories. The first is one that involved him directly:

In 1988, Ron had a hardcore Libertarian supporter, Jim Peron, Owner of Laissez Faire Books in San Francisco. Jim set up a magnificent 3-day campaign swing for us in the SF Bay Area. Jim was what you would call very openly Gay. But Ron thought the world of him. For 3 days we had a great time trouncing from one campaign event to another with Jim’s Gay lover. The atmosphere was simply jovial between the four of us. (As an aside we also met former Cong. Pete McCloskey during this campaign trip.) We used Jim’s home/office as a “base.” Ron pulled me aside the first time we went there, and specifically instructed me to find an excuse to excuse him to a local fast food restaurant so that he could use the bathroom. He told me very clearly, that although he liked Jim, he did not wish to use his bathroom facilities. I chided him a bit, but he sternly reacted, as he often did to me, Eric, just do what I say. Perhaps “sternly” is an understatement. Ron looked at me directly, and with a very angry look in his eye, and shouted under his breath: “Just do what I say NOW.”

The second involved two other staffers and may have caused one of them to resign:

“Bobby,” a well-known and rather flamboyant and well-liked gay man in Freeport came to the BBQ. Let me stress Ron likes Bobby personally, and Bobby was a hardcore campaign supporter. But after his speech, at the Surfside pavilion Bobby came up to Ron with his hand extended, and according to my fellow staffer, Ron literally swatted his hand away.

Dondero adds:

Again, let me stress. I would not categorize that as “homo-phobic,” but rather just unsettled by being around gays personally. Ron, like many folks his age, very much supports toleration, but chooses not to be around gays on a personal level. It’s a personal choice. And though, it may seem offensive to some, he has every right in my mind to feel and act that way.

Statement from fmr. Ron Paul staffer on Newsletters, Anti-Semitism [right wing news]

Ron Paul: The new teflon candidate? | Presstitution

(The New Republic) 

Nearly four years ago, on the eve of the New Hampshire Republican presidential primary, The New Republic published my expose of newsletters published by Texas Congressman Ron Paul. The contents of these newsletters can best be described as appalling. Blacks were referred to as “animals.” Gays were told to go “back” into the “closet.” The “X-Rated Martin Luther King” was a bisexual pedophile who “seduced underage girls and boys.” Three months before the Oklahoma City bombing, Paul praised right-wing, anti-government militia movements as “one of the most encouraging developments in America.” The voluminous record of bigotry and conspiracy theories speaks for itself.

And yet, four years on, Ron Paul’s star is undimmed. Not only do the latest polls place him as the frontrunner in the Iowa Caucuses, but he still enjoys the support of a certain coterie of professional political commentators who, like Paul himself, identify as libertarians. Most prominent among them is Daily Beast blogger Andrew Sullivan, who gave Paul his endorsement in the GOP primary last week, as he did in 2008. But he is not alone: Tim Carney of The Washington Examiner recently bemoaned the fact that “the principled, antiwar, Constitution-obeying, Fed-hating, libertarian Republican from Texas stands firmly outside the bounds of permissible dissent as drawn by either the Republican establishment or the mainstream media,” while Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic argues that Paul’s ideas cannot be ignored, and that, for Tea Party Republicans, “A vote against Paul requires either cognitive dissonance—never in short supply in politics—or a fundamental rethinking of the whole theory of politics that so recently drove the Tea Party movement.”

Ron Paul takes lead in latest Iowa poll

To be sure, these figures, like the broader group of Paul enthusiasts, don’t base their support on the Congressman’s years-long record of supporting racism, homophobia, anti-Semitism, and far-right militias. Quite the opposite: Like the candidate himself, they manage to mostly avoid making any mention of his unsavory record at all. It’s an impressive feat of repression, one that says volumes about the type of enthusiasm Paul inspires.

Ultimately, Paul’s following is closely linked with the peculiar attractions of the libertarian creed that he promotes. Libertarianism is an ideology rather than a philosophy of government—its main selling point is not its pragmatic usefulness, but its inviolable consistency. In that way, Paul’s indulgence of bigotry—he says he did not write the newsletters but rather allowed others to do so in his name—isn’t an incidental departure from his libertarianism, but a tidy expression of its priorities: First principles of market economics gain credence over all considerations of social empathy and historical acuity. His fans are guilty of donning the same ideological blinders, giving their support to a political candidate on account of the theories he declaims, rather than the judgment he shows in applying those theories, or the character he has evinced in living them. Voters for Ron Paul are privileging logical consistency at the expense of moral fitness.




But it’s not simply that Paul’s supporters are ignoring the manifest evidence of his moral failings. More fundamentally, their very awareness of such failings is crowded out by the atmosphere of outright fervor that pervades Paul’s candidacy. This is not the fervor of a healthy body politic—this is a less savory type of political devotion, one that escapes the bounds of sober reasoning. Indeed, Paul’s absolutist notion of libertarian rigor has always been coupled with an attraction to fantasies of political apocalypse.

A constant theme in Paul’s rhetoric, dating back to his first years as a congressman in the late 1970s, is that the United States is on the edge of a precipice. The centerpiece of this argument is that the abandonment of the gold standard has put the United States on the path to financial collapse. Over the years, Paul has added other potential catastrophes to his repertoire of dark premonitions. In the early 1990s, it was racial apocalypse, with Paul dispensing “survivalist” tips to the readers of his newsletter like the admonition to stock up on guns and construct fall-out shelters. More recently, he has argued that America’s foreign policy was a “major contributing factor” to the terrorist attacks of 9/11, an argument that has earned him admiration from some liberals. The 2008 financial crisis, the Obama administration’s continuation of many Bush anti-terror policies (and the launching of the Libya War), and the formation of the Tea Party have all boosted Paul’s image as a prescient sage.

And so it’s not hard to see why Paul’s more ardent supporters stand by him: They too find it seductive to believe  that the United States is on the verge of utter collapse. The benefit of indulging in such visions is that it sets the stage for the arrival of a savior: This is the role that Paul himself plays, of course. Fiercely independent, uncorrupted by the “establishment,” speaker of unpopular truths, only Paul is capable of saving the country. What are a handful of uncouth newsletters really worth when the stakes are so high?

What’s important to realize is that this sort of political myopia is endemic to libertarianism. The movement’s obsession with consistency is actually a mark of paranoia. If you’re already persuaded by Paul’s suggestions that fiat money is what ails our economy, that our country’s foreign policy is rotten to its very core, it’s tempting to take the next step and interpret his failure to be nominated as the result of political persecution. Sullivan, thus, complains of a deliberate media blackout against the Texas Congressman, blaming “liberals who cannot take domestic libertarianism seriously and from neocons desperate to keep the Military Industrial Complex humming at Cold War velocity.” There is a bitter irony of course in the fact that a movement so devoted to individual responsibility is so apt to be on the search for others to blame. Paul of course is the prime example: Here is an absolutist libertarian who advocates the ideals of individual rights and responsibility, yet cannot own up to the words that were published under his name, instead blaming it on a variety of as yet unnamed aides.

Some Paul supporters acknowledge the newsletters but dismiss them as “old news,” arguing that there is no trace of the racist and conspiratorial ideas he promoted for decades in his speeches today on the campaign trail. But while it’s true that Paul has not said anything explicitly racist in public, the same cannot be said for his promotion of conspiracy theories.

He appears regularly on the radio program of Alex Jones, perhaps the most popular conspiracy theorist in America (profiled by TNR in 2009), where he often indulges the host’s delusional ravings about the coming “New World Order.” He continues to associate with the John Birch Society, the extreme-right wing organization that William F. Buckley denounced in the early 1960’s after it alleged that none other than President Dwight D. Eisenhower was a “dedicated, conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy.” Asked about the group in 2007, Paul told the New York Times, “Oh, my goodness, the John Birch Society! Is that bad? I have a lot of friends in the John Birch Society.” Indeed, Paul delivered the keynote address at the organization’s 50th anniversary dinner in September. In May, Paul said President Obama’s order to execute Osama bin Laden “was absolutely not necessary.” This statement earned a rebuke from Judson Phillips, founder of Tea Party Nation, a movement one would presume would be quite favorable to Paul. “If there is any doubt that Ron Paul should not even get near the Oval Office, even on a tour of the White House,” Phillips said, “he has just revealed it.”

If Paul is responsible for conjuring the apocalyptic atmosphere of a prophet, it’s his supporters who have to answer for submitting to it. Surely, those who agree with Paul would be able to find a better vessel for their ideas than a man who once entertained the notion that AIDS was invented in a government laboratory or who, just last January, alleged that there had been a “CIA coup” against the American government and that the Agency is “in drug businesses.” Why, for instance, do these self-styled libertarians not throw their support to former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson, who, unlike Paul, can boast executive experience and doesn’t have the racist and conspiratorial baggage? At this late stage, that Ron Paul’s supporters haven’t found an alternative candidate says more about them, and the intellectual milieu they inhabit, than it does about the erstwhile publisher of racist newsletters.

Bio: James Kirchick is a contributing editor for The New Republic. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

Ron Paul: The new teflon candidate?

(The New Republic) 

Nearly four years ago, on the eve of the New Hampshire Republican presidential primary, The New Republic published my expose of newsletters published by Texas Congressman Ron Paul. The contents of these newsletters can best be described as appalling. Blacks were referred to as “animals.” Gays were told to go “back” into the “closet.” The “X-Rated Martin Luther King” was a bisexual pedophile who “seduced underage girls and boys.” Three months before the Oklahoma City bombing, Paul praised right-wing, anti-government militia movements as “one of the most encouraging developments in America.” The voluminous record of bigotry and conspiracy theories speaks for itself.

And yet, four years on, Ron Paul’s star is undimmed. Not only do the latest polls place him as the frontrunner in the Iowa Caucuses, but he still enjoys the support of a certain coterie of professional political commentators who, like Paul himself, identify as libertarians. Most prominent among them is Daily Beast blogger Andrew Sullivan, who gave Paul his endorsement in the GOP primary last week, as he did in 2008. But he is not alone: Tim Carney of The Washington Examiner recently bemoaned the fact that “the principled, antiwar, Constitution-obeying, Fed-hating, libertarian Republican from Texas stands firmly outside the bounds of permissible dissent as drawn by either the Republican establishment or the mainstream media,” while Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic argues that Paul’s ideas cannot be ignored, and that, for Tea Party Republicans, “A vote against Paul requires either cognitive dissonance—never in short supply in politics—or a fundamental rethinking of the whole theory of politics that so recently drove the Tea Party movement.”

Ron Paul takes lead in latest Iowa poll

To be sure, these figures, like the broader group of Paul enthusiasts, don’t base their support on the Congressman’s years-long record of supporting racism, homophobia, anti-Semitism, and far-right militias. Quite the opposite: Like the candidate himself, they manage to mostly avoid making any mention of his unsavory record at all. It’s an impressive feat of repression, one that says volumes about the type of enthusiasm Paul inspires.

Ultimately, Paul’s following is closely linked with the peculiar attractions of the libertarian creed that he promotes. Libertarianism is an ideology rather than a philosophy of government—its main selling point is not its pragmatic usefulness, but its inviolable consistency. In that way, Paul’s indulgence of bigotry—he says he did not write the newsletters but rather allowed others to do so in his name—isn’t an incidental departure from his libertarianism, but a tidy expression of its priorities: First principles of market economics gain credence over all considerations of social empathy and historical acuity. His fans are guilty of donning the same ideological blinders, giving their support to a political candidate on account of the theories he declaims, rather than the judgment he shows in applying those theories, or the character he has evinced in living them. Voters for Ron Paul are privileging logical consistency at the expense of moral fitness.




But it’s not simply that Paul’s supporters are ignoring the manifest evidence of his moral failings. More fundamentally, their very awareness of such failings is crowded out by the atmosphere of outright fervor that pervades Paul’s candidacy. This is not the fervor of a healthy body politic—this is a less savory type of political devotion, one that escapes the bounds of sober reasoning. Indeed, Paul’s absolutist notion of libertarian rigor has always been coupled with an attraction to fantasies of political apocalypse.

A constant theme in Paul’s rhetoric, dating back to his first years as a congressman in the late 1970s, is that the United States is on the edge of a precipice. The centerpiece of this argument is that the abandonment of the gold standard has put the United States on the path to financial collapse. Over the years, Paul has added other potential catastrophes to his repertoire of dark premonitions. In the early 1990s, it was racial apocalypse, with Paul dispensing “survivalist” tips to the readers of his newsletter like the admonition to stock up on guns and construct fall-out shelters. More recently, he has argued that America’s foreign policy was a “major contributing factor” to the terrorist attacks of 9/11, an argument that has earned him admiration from some liberals. The 2008 financial crisis, the Obama administration’s continuation of many Bush anti-terror policies (and the launching of the Libya War), and the formation of the Tea Party have all boosted Paul’s image as a prescient sage.

And so it’s not hard to see why Paul’s more ardent supporters stand by him: They too find it seductive to believe  that the United States is on the verge of utter collapse. The benefit of indulging in such visions is that it sets the stage for the arrival of a savior: This is the role that Paul himself plays, of course. Fiercely independent, uncorrupted by the “establishment,” speaker of unpopular truths, only Paul is capable of saving the country. What are a handful of uncouth newsletters really worth when the stakes are so high?

What’s important to realize is that this sort of political myopia is endemic to libertarianism. The movement’s obsession with consistency is actually a mark of paranoia. If you’re already persuaded by Paul’s suggestions that fiat money is what ails our economy, that our country’s foreign policy is rotten to its very core, it’s tempting to take the next step and interpret his failure to be nominated as the result of political persecution. Sullivan, thus, complains of a deliberate media blackout against the Texas Congressman, blaming “liberals who cannot take domestic libertarianism seriously and from neocons desperate to keep the Military Industrial Complex humming at Cold War velocity.” There is a bitter irony of course in the fact that a movement so devoted to individual responsibility is so apt to be on the search for others to blame. Paul of course is the prime example: Here is an absolutist libertarian who advocates the ideals of individual rights and responsibility, yet cannot own up to the words that were published under his name, instead blaming it on a variety of as yet unnamed aides.

Some Paul supporters acknowledge the newsletters but dismiss them as “old news,” arguing that there is no trace of the racist and conspiratorial ideas he promoted for decades in his speeches today on the campaign trail. But while it’s true that Paul has not said anything explicitly racist in public, the same cannot be said for his promotion of conspiracy theories.

He appears regularly on the radio program of Alex Jones, perhaps the most popular conspiracy theorist in America (profiled by TNR in 2009), where he often indulges the host’s delusional ravings about the coming “New World Order.” He continues to associate with the John Birch Society, the extreme-right wing organization that William F. Buckley denounced in the early 1960’s after it alleged that none other than President Dwight D. Eisenhower was a “dedicated, conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy.” Asked about the group in 2007, Paul told the New York Times, “Oh, my goodness, the John Birch Society! Is that bad? I have a lot of friends in the John Birch Society.” Indeed, Paul delivered the keynote address at the organization’s 50th anniversary dinner in September. In May, Paul said President Obama’s order to execute Osama bin Laden “was absolutely not necessary.” This statement earned a rebuke from Judson Phillips, founder of Tea Party Nation, a movement one would presume would be quite favorable to Paul. “If there is any doubt that Ron Paul should not even get near the Oval Office, even on a tour of the White House,” Phillips said, “he has just revealed it.”

If Paul is responsible for conjuring the apocalyptic atmosphere of a prophet, it’s his supporters who have to answer for submitting to it. Surely, those who agree with Paul would be able to find a better vessel for their ideas than a man who once entertained the notion that AIDS was invented in a government laboratory or who, just last January, alleged that there had been a “CIA coup” against the American government and that the Agency is “in drug businesses.” Why, for instance, do these self-styled libertarians not throw their support to former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson, who, unlike Paul, can boast executive experience and doesn’t have the racist and conspiratorial baggage? At this late stage, that Ron Paul’s supporters haven’t found an alternative candidate says more about them, and the intellectual milieu they inhabit, than it does about the erstwhile publisher of racist newsletters.

Bio: James Kirchick is a contributing editor for The New Republic. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

Reply

This goes along with my last post What is this a sign of: While half of Americans have descended into poor/low income, congress only puts effort into writing deceptively titled un-Constitutional legislation taking away more of our freedoms and way of life, censoring us, creating a police state, cutting aid to the increasing numbers of poor Americans, and tricking us into bombing more countries. Basically, just about everything you hear from U.S. politicians and pushed by their mainstream media presstitute whores are LIES. The 9/11 official story was a LIE. The official Oklahoma City bombing was a LIE. The 1% are above the law and don’t go to jail and they OWN the U.S. government and the mainstream media who cover for them.

Hedge Fund Managers Get Insider Info from Senators

Gerald Celente on the Corzine MF Global hearings: The ROTHSCHILDS would be jealous of what Goldman Sachs has done:

Former MF Global Holdings Ltd. Chief Executive Jon S. Corzine testified Thursday that he knew about an overseas transfer of funds that has come into focus in recent days as regulators and Congress seek to find out what became of an estimated $1.2 billion in missing customer cash.

JPMorgan Ordered Corzine to Pillage Personal Accounts at MF Global: Jami Dimon threatened to kill Corzine

Establishment Reverts Back to Pretending Ron Paul Doesn’t Exist

Occupy Wall Street: A Holiday Survival Guide

The best song EVER by Graham Nash, it’s about Bradley Manning:

9/11 EXPOSED, Researched facts and analysis- Full Documentary.

Trailer for new film “A NOBLE LIE” – the Oklahoma City Bombing

What did Sgt. Terrance Yeakey know?

Murder of Suicide? Looks like MURDER to me!!!

Sgt. Terrance Yeakey: tytruth.com

Big Dan's Big Blog: Corzine, Insider Trading, 9/11 … | Presstitution …

This goes along with my last post What is this a sign of: While half of Americans have descended into poor/low income, congress only puts effort into writing deceptively titled un-Constitutional legislation taking away more of our freedoms and way of life, censoring us, creating a police state, cutting aid to the increasing numbers of poor Americans, and tricking us into bombing more countries. Basically, just about everything you hear from U.S. politicians and pushed by their mainstream media presstitute whores are LIES. The 9/11 official story was a LIE. The official Oklahoma City bombing was a LIE. The 1% are above the law and don’t go to jail and they OWN the U.S. government and the mainstream media who cover for them.

Hedge Fund Managers Get Insider Info from Senators

Gerald Celente on the Corzine MF Global hearings: The ROTHSCHILDS would be jealous of what Goldman Sachs has done:

Former MF Global Holdings Ltd. Chief Executive Jon S. Corzine testified Thursday that he knew about an overseas transfer of funds that has come into focus in recent days as regulators and Congress seek to find out what became of an estimated $1.2 billion in missing customer cash.

JPMorgan Ordered Corzine to Pillage Personal Accounts at MF Global: Jami Dimon threatened to kill Corzine

Establishment Reverts Back to Pretending Ron Paul Doesn’t Exist

Occupy Wall Street: A Holiday Survival Guide

The best song EVER by Graham Nash, it’s about Bradley Manning:

9/11 EXPOSED, Researched facts and analysis- Full Documentary.

Trailer for new film “A NOBLE LIE” – the Oklahoma City Bombing

What did Sgt. Terrance Yeakey know?

Murder of Suicide? Looks like MURDER to me!!!

Sgt. Terrance Yeakey: tytruth.com

Big Dan's Big Blog: Corzine, Insider Trading, 9/11 …

This goes along with my last post What is this a sign of: While half of Americans have descended into poor/low income, congress only puts effort into writing deceptively titled un-Constitutional legislation taking away more of our freedoms and way of life, censoring us, creating a police state, cutting aid to the increasing numbers of poor Americans, and tricking us into bombing more countries. Basically, just about everything you hear from U.S. politicians and pushed by their mainstream media presstitute whores are LIES. The 9/11 official story was a LIE. The official Oklahoma City bombing was a LIE. The 1% are above the law and don’t go to jail and they OWN the U.S. government and the mainstream media who cover for them.

Hedge Fund Managers Get Insider Info from Senators

Gerald Celente on the Corzine MF Global hearings: The ROTHSCHILDS would be jealous of what Goldman Sachs has done:

Former MF Global Holdings Ltd. Chief Executive Jon S. Corzine testified Thursday that he knew about an overseas transfer of funds that has come into focus in recent days as regulators and Congress seek to find out what became of an estimated $1.2 billion in missing customer cash.

JPMorgan Ordered Corzine to Pillage Personal Accounts at MF Global: Jami Dimon threatened to kill Corzine

Establishment Reverts Back to Pretending Ron Paul Doesn’t Exist

Occupy Wall Street: A Holiday Survival Guide

The best song EVER by Graham Nash, it’s about Bradley Manning:

9/11 EXPOSED, Researched facts and analysis- Full Documentary.

Trailer for new film “A NOBLE LIE” – the Oklahoma City Bombing

What did Sgt. Terrance Yeakey know?

Murder of Suicide? Looks like MURDER to me!!!

Sgt. Terrance Yeakey: tytruth.com

Big Dan's Big Blog: Corzine, Insider Trading, 9/11, OKC: FASCISM

This goes along with my last post What is this a sign of: While half of Americans have descended into poor/low income, congress only puts effort into writing deceptively titled un-Constitutional legislation taking away more of our freedoms and way of life, censoring us, creating a police state, cutting aid to the increasing numbers of poor Americans, and tricking us into bombing more countries. Basically, just about everything you hear from U.S. politicians and pushed by their mainstream media presstitute whores are LIES. The 9/11 official story was a LIE. The official Oklahoma City bombing was a LIE. The 1% are above the law and don’t go to jail and they OWN the U.S. government and the mainstream media who cover for them.

Hedge Fund Managers Get Insider Info from Senators

Gerald Celente on the Corzine MF Global hearings: The ROTHSCHILDS would be jealous of what Goldman Sachs has done:

Former MF Global Holdings Ltd. Chief Executive Jon S. Corzine testified Thursday that he knew about an overseas transfer of funds that has come into focus in recent days as regulators and Congress seek to find out what became of an estimated $1.2 billion in missing customer cash.

JPMorgan Ordered Corzine to Pillage Personal Accounts at MF Global: Jami Dimon threatened to kill Corzine

Establishment Reverts Back to Pretending Ron Paul Doesn’t Exist

Occupy Wall Street: A Holiday Survival Guide

The best song EVER by Graham Nash, it’s about Bradley Manning:

9/11 EXPOSED, Researched facts and analysis- Full Documentary.

Trailer for new film “A NOBLE LIE” – the Oklahoma City Bombing

What did Sgt. Terrance Yeakey know?

Murder of Suicide? Looks like MURDER to me!!!

Sgt. Terrance Yeakey: tytruth.com

Media Lens Message Board: Mark Perryman … | Presstitution …

I sent along some of the comments made by the eds and other posters to Mark Perryman. His responses are below in bold:

Mmm. I’m a great admirer of medialens, we’ve reviewed your their at Philosophy Football but in this instance Im tempted to ask if there has been a sense of humour bypass. Responses below.

“I doubt the Guardian’s journo has ever read Chomsky, at least he seems quite ignorant on the subject from his article. But he feels intellectually superior to the footballer. That’s interesting, in my view.”

I’m not a journo. A quick check of my biog would have confirmed this but hey don’t let facts get in the way of the argument. I have not only read Chomsky but organised a sell-out lecture he gave a few years back. I don’t feel in any way intellectually superior to a class of people such as ‘footballers’, I may be brighter than some and less bright than others, who knows? The piece is an affectionate musing on what the influence of Chomsky might do for Joey Barton’s football.

“The article… [is] mocking the idea of a footballer – traditionally reckoned to be dumb by those very smart people writing in the media – showing interest in the work of a radical intellectual.

Ditto. In what way does the piece mock footballers. It is a light-hearted imagining of how reading Chomsky might affect playing football.

This kind of mockery is a very familiar theme in the Guardian (and other media, to be fair) that stretches way back…”

What am I mocking?

“You could fill a volume with this kind of mockery in the media, especially the Guardian – directed at anyone and everyone who goes ‘too far’ in thinking for themselves. It works wonderfully well. From this I’m guessing the writer has not a clue about Chomsky’s work beyond book titles.”

Again the use of the idea of ‘mocking’. I don’t comment at all on whether it is a good idea Joey Barton reads Chomsky, on balance I think it is, the piece imagines what Chomskyite football might look like. And as I only had 500 words going beyond the book titles was nigh on impossible.

“The comment is also clearly intended to belittle Chomsky, suggesting that hes a lone crackpot theres only one Noam Chomsky. What unnerves Guardianistas is that there might be, in fact, millions (the 99%) of Chomskys and Assanges, and that The Guardian might be revealed as the presstitute (to the 1%) that it really is.

Oh for goodness sake, Have you ever been to a match? ‘There’s only one..’ is a chant to show affection and respect for the target!