Webster

The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)


Thursday, June 11, 2026

"Folklore Law and the Death of Equality"

 

Something that I had noticed from the "Urban Denizens" and their "AAAAACTIVIST", is that they want a 2 tier justice system, for example, if the defendant is sub-Saharan nubian American, they want an all black Jury as to understand the "African American Experience here in America".  and if the victim is black, they want the jury to be all black because only they can understand the feelings of the victim and have empathy for them.  I remember way back when Justice was colorblind, that is why she wears the blindfold and holds the scale. now they want to put the thumb on the scale and permanently tilt the scales in favor of one group over all others because of past transgressions.  The problem is that they expect the people of today to pay for the sins of their ancestors while not holding their progeny accountable for their own sins. eventually the others will get tired and the balkanization of the United States will be complete.  Right now Ireland is getting spicy because some migrant tried to decapitate some local and when you get the catholics and protestants on the same side and they are trashing migrant hotels and businesses because they have a case of the ass because they know that their "betters" have sold them out and they are pissed.


Karmelo Anthony was found guilty of murder.
And even though the “only good cracker is a dead cracker” chorus immediately cast the case as just another example of white unfair “white” jurisprudence putting down the black man, it was not because Anthony is a black teenager and four hundred years ago black Africans were enslaved and shipped to the Western Hemisphere as chattel to satisfy a rapidly growing need for labor.
Anthony was found guilty because he was guilty. He murdered another 17-year-old student, Austin Metcalf, who was white.
Anthony’s case was an overt example of trying to defend the indefensible. Based on accounts I read overnight, his defense did more to confirm his guilt than exonerate him, appearing to a great extent to corroborate the prosecution’s positions.
I have followed with a high degree of interest my friend, Jefferson Knight, and his analysis of law versus what he calls “folklore law”, the process wrapped around an invented metanarrative that, in the Anthony case, meant that the white kid was an oppressor, little different than a slave master, and the black kid was just seeking to escape the oppression of a white society and therefore justified in his actions.
Thomas Sowell, one of the most underappreciated public intellectuals of our times, once noted that blacks were not forced into slavery because they were black, they were made slaves because they were available.
There is considerable evidence supporting Thomas Sowell’s observation. Slavery existed throughout human history long before modern concepts of race emerged. Romans enslaved Europeans, Arabs enslaved Europeans and Africans, and African kingdoms enslaved rival tribes. In most cases, the determining factors were military defeat, vulnerability, geography, or economic opportunity rather than skin color. The Atlantic slave trade developed in part because existing African slave-trading networks could supply large numbers of laborers to meet the demands of plantation economies in the Americas.
That said, European societies generally viewed sub-Saharan African cultures as less technologically and organizationally advanced than their own. This perception was not based on skin color alone but on differences in political institutions, military technology, literacy, industrial development, and economic organization. Throughout history, civilizations have often equated cultural differences with civilizational superiority, whether Greeks describing outsiders as “barbarians” or other societies drawing distinctions between the civilized and the uncivilized. Such attitudes can easily evolve into viewing other peoples as less fully human.
The crucial distinction is that racial inferiority was not necessarily the original cause of African slavery, but it became an increasingly important justification for it. As the plantation economies of the New World grew dependent on African labor, a moral and political problem emerged: how do you defend the permanent enslavement of millions of people and their descendants? One answer was the development of racial theories that portrayed Africans as naturally suited for servitude or inherently inferior. Those ideas helped reconcile the contradiction between Western ideals of liberty and the reality of slavery.
Africans entered the Atlantic slave system largely because they were available through existing trade networks because the economics of the era demanded a large labor force. As the institution of slavery continued, economic interests and racial theories reinforced one another, transforming slavery from a common human institution into a distinctly race-based system.
Race was less the original cause of slavery than the rationale developed to sustain it, but that racialization has, over centuries, led to a tension between two competing concepts of equality that have been battling for dominance in American life for decades.
This is where Knight’s concept of “folklore law” enters the picture. Globally, there is no shortage of people who intentionally cast Western culture and its morality as a predominant evil and the cause of the world’s problems—but that requires ignoring the bulk of human history and how unequal treatment of each other was based on real and imagined differences.
Race is just a useful sociopolitical tool right now.
It seems evident that if Karmelo Anthony is a victim, he was not a victim of white racism but of black racism which promotes a narrative that blacks must never allow a white person to challenge them. He was also the victim of a set of terrible parents and a culture that taught it was acceptable to take a deadly weapon to a high school track meet and then use that weapon to stab another teenager to settle a meaningless high school dispute.
In the scope of this specific event, there is no larger context here other than a murder—but there surely is one in the aftermath and it has to do with a collision between two principles: individual equality and group equity. One treats the individual as the fundamental unit of society; the other views individuals through the lens of group membership and historical disparities. Supporters of the latter argue that ignoring group differences perpetuates inequality. Critics argue that assigning benefits, burdens, or moral standing based on identity undermines equality before the law and revives the very distinctions the civil rights movement sought to eliminate.
The traditional American understanding of equality, rooted in the Declaration of Independence and reflected in the Constitution, holds that individuals possess equal moral worth and equal standing before the law. Under that framework, race, class, religion, and ancestry are irrelevant to justice. People are judged by their actions and character, not by the groups to which they belong.
Over the past several decades, a competing view has gained influence. Rather than focusing primarily on equal treatment, it seeks more equal outcomes among groups. Under this approach, race, ethnicity, sex, and class become relevant considerations in public policy, education, employment, and even the interpretation of social conflicts.
The question is not whether Americans still believe that all men are created equal, the question is what that phrase means. Does equality require treating people equally regardless of identity, or does it require treating people differently in a futile attempt to produce more equal outcomes?
The former is the basis for what is perhaps the most equal society and culture in history, the irony of the second is that it produces inequality through a series of cascading intended and unintended consequences, but which is chosen may well decide our fate as a nation.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

"Observable Cues and Taking a Prat Fall"

 


I have heard people on the left side of the aisle complaining about *Orange Man bad* and the reflecting Pool, and that he trashed the landmark just like he is trashing the White house by building the ballroom.   The ballroom is for Formal occasions unlike the basketball court the messiah built for his own edification but that part gets glossed over.  Looks like the same pattern of ballot harvesting, no chain of custody, unattended ballot drop boxes are in play again instead of in the United States, they are running the same play in california...Hey it worked before, let's roll the dice again.

     I shamelessly clipped this off farcebook, the photo's came from my "stash"  'cept for the last one.


People (Democrats) are harping and carping about President Trump’s efforts to clean up DC, both literally and figuratively.
And Democrats in the terminal stages of TDS are taking the lead in opposition to cleaning of statuary that were defaced by their constituents, parks filled with the detritus of industrially manufactured “protests” (curiously, tarnished by people who allegedly love the environment), and returning things that are supposed to be beautiful and functional to a state of being beautiful and being functional.
Democrats need DC and our public spaces to look like the aftermath of a nuclear blast to support their OMB (Orange Man Bad) narrative even though the unprecedented level of neglect reached its nadir during the Biden regime.
What President Trump is doing makes a lot of sense even if we weren’t less than a month from celebrating America’s 250th birthday.
And in many (if not most) cases, neglect costs more than keeping things in good condition.
As is often true with neglect, ugly and expensive go hand in hand.
By any account, as Trump 2.0 began, the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall, between the Washington monument and the Lincoln memorial, looked more like the retention pool of a sewage treatment facility than an architectural feature designed to reflect and magnify the beauty and solemnity of monuments to two of America’s most consequential presidents.
In truth, the retention pools of a sewage facility were cleaner than what was once a national treasure. Some accounts say that close to 20 dump truck loads of garbage were removed from the Pool. The National Park Service estimated that maintaining the pool required about 17 million gallons of replacement water per year, or around 327,000 gallons a week (and rising)—and that was after Obama took two years to “fix” it in 2010 to 2012.
You may still be wondering why the Reflecting Pool is important, so allow me to present some facts and ideas to help your understanding.
Many of you will remember that I have written several times about something called observable cues—the visible, audible, and measurable signals people use to interpret situations, behavior, and intent. They include facial expressions, body language, posture, eye contact, tone of voice, word choice, clothing, physical appearance, actions, and interactions with others.
Observable cues can also extend beyond people to environments and events, such as neglected property suggesting a lack of maintenance, a long line outside a restaurant indicating popularity, or a person’s hurried movements suggesting urgency. While these cues often provide useful information and help us make quick judgments, they are not infallible because they reveal only what can be directly observed and may not accurately reflect underlying motives, circumstances, or beliefs. Effective reasoning requires recognizing observable cues as evidence to be considered rather than conclusions to be accepted without further examination.
We can draw inferences from other observable cues to help us understand our current social and political landscapes.
Two major, immediate, and informationally rich cues are a person, Graham Platner, the presumptive Democrat candidate poised and a thing, actually an activity - the California voting and post-election vote counting process.
Platner is extremely valuable as a walking, talking example of the massive degree of hypocrisy that exists within the Democrat Party ranks and the sheer magnitude of cognitive dissonance it takes to ignore the logically crippling levels of contradiction that exist within their ideology. John Kerry revealed much about his party when he expressed his being “for it before he was against it” ethos those many years ago because he revealed a core principle of his party, one that allows them to turn on a dime when faced with any issue that might prevent them from achieving or retaining power.
In a sane world, the “for it today, against it tomorrow” contemporary Democrats would be relegated to wearing sandwich boards emblazoned with “The End Is Near” printed on them while wandering the streets.
And then there is the other observable cue, the Great State of California.
California is in many ways, the Reflecting Pool of America, and like the one in DC, has become filled with neglect, waste, and corruption. The difference is that nobody in California is interested in cleaning it up.
As much as I will admit I personally have no conclusive evidence that an already mentally compromised Joe Biden didn’t get 81 million votes in 2020, I can also admit I have no direct evidence that the Democrat controlled machine is manipulating the LA vote counts to eliminate Spencer Pratt (who is NOT MAGA or even a Republican) from contention in the runoff—but I also don’t have direct evidence that they aren’t.
Cuban trained Comrade Karen “Let it Burn” Bass was always expected to take the lead, and we know the California system was designed not for legitimate competition but to decide how much of a communist Democrat to elect. As a result, outside challenger Pratt has lost his second place standing, falling due to some statistically impossible ballot drops that have pulled the supposed third place Democrat into second place.


My observation is that the Pratt Fall is eerily similar to the late hour “anomalies” that propelled Biden into the Oval.
Voters for change have apparently been Californicated once again.
Combine that with the constant “anomalies” that the longer election counts go on, the more the Democrat candidates benefit from it, and if anomalies keep happening with the same outcome, one might legitimately question if they are really anomalies at all.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the American jurist, legal philosopher, and U.S. Supreme Court justice, once wrote “Even a dog distinguishes between being stumbled over and being kicked.”
I guess the real question is whether we are as smart as Holmes' dog and if we have any bite left.






Monday, June 8, 2026

Monday Music "Tusk" by Fleetwood Mack



I have stated many times on my blog, I am a huge fan of Fleetwood Mac as a group and with the individual ventures...I consider them one of the greatest groups of all time.   But I am a bit biased, not all would agree with me.  I have the LP in my record collection...I paid a pretty penny for it back in 1979, I had a good lawn cutting business, I had a bunch of houses I would cut the yard for $5.00 no matter the size...and I had a lot of regular customers....it kept me in comic books and the occasional album.  It taught me the value of work and money...I had to measure the sweat equity for the goodies I wanted...so for a kid...I was careful.  I liked the album...and it helped that there was a "nekked" pic inside the jacket.   , b the pic was rumored to be that of Stevie Nicks and it was pretty nice pic.(I looked at it again, and no, the "nekked" pic was more *busty* than Stevie Nicks)  I don't know...but when you are 13/14 years old...you remember such things...   I enjoyed playing the album, it was a dual LP and I liked the Songs especially "Sara" and "Tusk"
                        Here is the actual album I bought back in 1979


"Tusk" is a song by Fleetwood Mac from the 1979 double LP of the same name. The song peaked at #8 on the U.S. charts for three weeks, reached #6 in the UK (where it was certified Silver for sales of over 250,000 copies) and #3 in Australia and Canada. It was one of the first songs to be released using a digital mixdown from an original analog source.
Looking for a title track for the as yet unnamed album, Mick Fleetwood suggested that they take the rehearsal riff that Lindsey Buckingham used for sound-checks. Producers Richard Dashut and Ken Caillat hence created a drum-driven production.
The single was recorded live together with the supporting video at Dodger Stadium (without an audience) in Los Angeles, California in collaboration with the University of Southern California Trojan Marching Band. The performance was also filmed for the song's music video. John McVie was in Tahiti during the Dodger Stadium recording, but he is represented in the video by a cardboard cutout carried around by Mick Fleetwood and later positioned in the stands with the other band members.
The band's part both set a record for the highest number of musicians performing on a single and earned the marching musicians a platinum disc. Lindsey Buckingham, Stevie Nicks and Mick Fleetwood presented it to the Trojan band on October 4, 1980 during a game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, this time in front of a huge crowd. The song was also performed live during Fleetwood Mac's concert in 1997 in conjunction with the USC Band.
The single was released with two different picture sleeves in many territories: The first featured the black and white picture of producer/engineer Ken Caillat's dog Scooter snapping at a trouser leg, the same as that used for the album cover, whilst the second featured a plain cover with the same font as the album cover but without the dog picture. A very limited promotional 12-inch version, featuring mono and stereo versions, was also released to US radio stations.


Thursday, June 4, 2026

"Narrative Crash"

 


I remember a quote from Goebbels the Nazi propaganda minister "Put 1 part truth and 2 part lie in a statement, it makes the total lie easy to swallow.  And in my mind, that is what the left does, they put a kernel of truth in their statement and build a whole narrative around it making it easy to push it through friendly news outlets and influencers and other gatekeepers of the media industrial complex.



There is an old rule of politics that deserves to be carved in granite above every newsroom, faculty lounge, and activist headquarters in the Western world: never let facts get in the way of a perfectly good narrative. If recent years have taught us anything, it is that many of our institutions have become less interested in discovering the truth than in selecting it. Increasingly, events are not examined to determine what happened. They are examined to determine how they can be made to fit an existing ideological framework. Once the framework is established, facts become optional accessories, useful if they support the narrative and disposable if they do not.
If you are paying attention, you are watching some of the global left’s favorite narrative streams fall apart in real time. The problem is not that they occasionally get things wrong, it is that the mistakes seem remarkably consistent. The errors almost always lean in the same direction, reinforce the same assumptions, flatter the same worldview, and advance the same political objectives. After a while, coincidence begins to look suspiciously like a business model.
Consider Canada’s residential-school “mass graves” scandal. For a brief period, the story became an international sensation. Headlines and politicians alike spoke as though thousands of murdered Indigenous children had been discovered in hidden burial grounds, evidence of a national crime so monstrous that it demanded a collective reckoning. Churches were vandalized and burned. Public officials issued apologies. Entire institutions were condemned. Yet beneath the tidal wave of certainty was a rather inconvenient detail: no mass graves had actually been found. Ground-penetrating radar had identified anomalies beneath the soil. Such anomalies may indicate graves, but they may also indicate rocks, roots, or other disturbances. Excavation and forensic verification were required before conclusions could be drawn. The narrative, however, could not wait for something as mundane as evidence.
The accusation had already served its purpose.
I think Nancy Pelosi called it a “wrap-up smear.”
A similar pattern emerged recently in Britain with the death of Henry Nowak. Initial reporting focused heavily on allegations that Nowak had uttered a racial slur. The implication was unmistakable. The public was invited to view the story through the familiar lens of hate speech and prejudice. The fact that Nowak had been stabbed and was bleeding to death while police restrained him seemed almost secondary. Subsequent reporting cast doubt on whether the alleged slur had occurred at all, but by then the narrative machinery had already done its work. The public had been instructed on what lesson to take away from the event long before all the facts were known.
This pattern is hardly confined to those two examples. Americans will remember Jussie Smollett, whose alleged hate-crime victimhood became a national symbol of racial and political tensions before investigators concluded that the attack itself had apparently been fabricated. They may remember Covington Catholic, where a few carefully selected seconds of video transformed a group of Kentucky teenagers into national villains before fuller footage revealed a far more complicated reality. They may recall how questioning whether COVID originated in a laboratory was once treated as evidence of dangerous conspiracy thinking, only to watch that same possibility later become a legitimate subject of scientific and governmental investigation. In each case, certainty arrived first and evidence wandered in much later looking confused and underdressed.
What makes these episodes remarkable is not merely that the narratives collapsed. Narratives have always collapsed. The remarkable thing is that virtually nobody responsible ever seems to suffer any consequences. The journalists who promoted the story remain journalists. The experts remain experts. The politicians remain politicians. The activists remain activists. The correction receives a fraction of the attention devoted to the original claim, and then everyone proceeds to the next moral emergency as though nothing happened. There is never a serious accounting of how the mistake occurred, why basic skepticism was abandoned, or what safeguards might prevent a recurrence. The institutional memory appears to last approximately as long as a mayfly.
The late H. L. Mencken famously observed that the aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary. One suspects he would find modern politics both familiar and deeply amusing. Our hobgoblins are now distributed globally, amplified electronically, and repeated continuously by institutions that increasingly resemble advocacy organizations wearing the borrowed clothing of objective inquiry. Every week presents a new crisis, a new villain, a new demand that the public suspend judgment and place its trust in authorities who seem to have misplaced theirs.
Yet reality remains stubborn. It is the great enemy of ideological storytelling because it possesses no loyalty to political tribes. Facts have an irritating tendency to survive contact with narratives. They refuse to stay buried, no matter how much effort is devoted to shoveling dirt on top of them. They resurface months or years later, often after reputations have been destroyed, institutions have been damaged, and public trust has been squandered.
Perhaps that is why confidence in so many of our major institutions continues to decline. People are not losing trust because institutions occasionally make mistakes. They are losing trust because the mistakes increasingly appear to be motivated, predictable, and protected. Citizens can forgive honest error. What they find much harder to forgive is the growing suspicion that many of the people charged with informing the public have decided that persuasion is more important than truth.
The truth, unfortunately for them, is a difficult thing to suppress permanently. It may take its time, but time is a narrative’s worse enemy. While it may arrive late and not generate headlines as dramatic as the original accusation, eventually it does show up.
When it does, it usually finds the architects of the narrative already searching for the next one.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

"Heirs of the Red Guard: The Left's War on God and Family"

 






Heirs of the Red Guard: The Left's War on God and Family
---
In the summer of 1966, Mao Zedong launched a spiritual and political campaign of terror.
Mao knew that to seize a civilization you must start with the altar and the hearth. On August 18 of that year, before a million Red Guards assembled in Tiananmen Square, he gave the order to "Destroy the Four Olds": old ideas, old culture, old customs, and old habits.
The campaign was authorized at the rally and unleashed across the country within days.
The Red Guards didn't stop at renaming streets or smashing statues. They stormed the sanctuaries. In Baoding, Hebei, junior high students sacked the cathedral, dragged the religious articles into the square, and built a pyre.
Clergy and nuns were forced to stand around the flames.
Across the country Bibles were confiscated and burned, churches were stripped and converted into warehouses, and pastors were beaten in public struggle sessions. By the early 1970s, Christianity in China had effectively been driven underground.
The Marxist logic is that a father who governs his home and a congregation that bows only to Christ are rival jurisdictions. A confession of any sovereign above the State, and of any natural authority below it, is an obstacle to the total ideological monopoly that this kind of revolution demands.
So the home and the altar had to come down together. Sixty years later, the uniforms are different. The objective is not.
---


On July 4, 2025, as the rest of the country celebrated independence, the Democratic Socialists of America convened a panel in Chicago titled "The Left and the Family: A Roundtable" at the annual Socialism 2025 conference.
Olivia Katbi, co-chair of Portland DSA, told the room that her movement argues "for abolition of the family in general," on the grounds that the household operates as part of the carceral system by treating children as property.
The panel description, posted by the DSA on YouTube, called the nuclear family "an inherently repressive, racist, and hetero-sexist institution that functionally reinforces and reproduces capitalism."
Sophie Lewis, whose 2022 polemic Abolish the Family: A Manifesto for Care and Liberation (Verso) traces the family-abolition tradition from Charles Fourier through Marx and Engels to Alexandra Kollontai and on into the present, has been platformed by Current Affairs and welcomed onto Ivy League campuses.
Lily Sánchez, managing editor at Current Affairs, has written sympathetically of the same project. The argument is out in the open. The institution of the family "privatizes care."
It must be dissolved into the collective.
---


The home is a "little Church." It's the school of catechesis where children first learn to recognize truth, to love rightly, and to honor God. The marriage itself is iconic, an image of Christ and His Church. Strip any of this away and the State doesn't simply acquire a new ministerial portfolio. It acquires the children.
Mao's Red Guards and America's family abolitionists operate on the same premise. You can't construct an all-powerful State so long as the people answer to God and defend their children. The traditional household is the last unconquered jurisdiction inside the regime. The apostolic congregation is the last institution that will not bow.
The modern socialist sees this perfectly. That's why they intend to burn it down.
What do you think the coordinated assault on parental rights in public education actually is? What is the apparatus of cancel culture? What is the unrelenting hostility toward Christian morality?
This is the new "Destruction of the Four Olds." The aim is the same. Strip away faith, family, and inherited memory until the citizen has no allegiance left except to the Party and to whichever ideology the Party happens to be preaching that month.
"For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places" (Ephesians 6:12).
We will not surrender our children to the heirs of Mao. We will not hand the little churches of our homes to the commissars of a godless revolution. We stand on the rock of apostolic truth.
Against that rock, every Marxist delusion shatters.
Deus Vult.

Average Conservative Couple

 

This is from the same place where I got the ""Prototype Lefties from" he did an average conservative couple.  I thought it was hilarious.




A few days ago I posted a caricature of a typical liberal couple that drew over 1,000 views and comments.
I think it's worthwhile to characterize the typical conservative couple I see in America.
They work hard, often multiple jobs, to achieve the American Dream for their family.
They save their money and stretch their budget, but get sick to their stomach when they go to the grocery store and see people who don't speak English buying steaks with EBT cards.
They love their kids and neighbors and take pride in their home and yards. They are angry when gang bangers, drug addicts, and homeless people take over the city park.
Their daughter worked hard to earn a track scholarship, but lost it to a young man pretending to be a girl.
They don't understand how a Congresswomen making $175,000/year can become a multimillionaire after five years in office. They KNOW there is something rotten about her partnering up with the owners of Somali daycare centers with no students.
They know what they know and they know that there is no way on GOD’S GREEN EARTH that Joe Biden got 23% more votes than Obama without cheating.
They don’t call themselves MAGA, that's something the left-wing media created to marginalize them.
But they do still believe America can be GREAT AGAIN one day…
PS: I adjusted his hat😂