Saturday, August 3, 2019

The science was once settled
How Government Prolonged the Lobotomy
Liberal Law Prof Jonathan Turley
Democrats demonize wealthy to deflect from disastrous agendas
CBS Baltimore: By Golly, Our Murder Rate Actually IS Higher Than Guatemala, Honduras And El Salvador
Nick Mulvaney
How do we drain the swamp? Move Fed agencies out of D.C. and swamp creatures will quit.
On this day in 1949,

NBA Formed With Merger of NBL and BAA


Impetus comes from Ice Hockey Arena Owners looking for More Revenue


Sheboygan loses its NBL team


On this day in 1948,

Whittaker Chambers Accuses State Dept Employee Alger Hiss of being a Commie Spy

Nixon uses to boost his political career.  Hiss convicted of perjury.  

The Pumpkin Papers and Woodstock Typewriter.



Some people were obsessed with the Hiss case.  Others were not.
A highlight from the Imus in the Morning Show.  Charles McCord, "Stop it, I'm telling you, stop it!!"



Friday, August 2, 2019

Victor Davis Hanson:

The Continual and Dangerous Invective Against Trump

Peter Thiel NYT editorial 8/1/19:

Google helps China with military tech but not U.S.


"The flip side of China’s huge trade surplus has been America’s huge current account deficit. All of the dollars we send abroad that never get used to buy American goods have to go somewhere, and most go through New York’s money center banks on their way to buying financial assets. Since upsetting this imbalance is a threat to profits, Wall Street would prefer to cave on trade and keep Google’s stock price high while they’re at it.

But the banks’ experience of the last few decades of globalization has not been representative. The trade deficits that brought flows of money to Wall Street took jobs and bargaining power away from the median worker.

Wages have been stagnant since the 1970s. The difference between our post-1971 era of globalization and the post-1945 midcentury boom is a breakdown in the relationship between the parts and the whole: An archipelago of inward-looking, parochial places like Wall Street and Silicon Valley have done exceedingly well for themselves while their fellow citizens have been left behind in a stagnant economy."

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Glenn Loury: Al Sharpton is an ambulance-chasing, anti-Semitic, anti-white race hustler.


HUD administrator Lynn Patton blasts Ocasio-Cortez for prioritizing border over rat problem in her own district
Cummings' Baltimore Home Burglarized Saturday Before Trump Tweet
Baltimore Ranked ‘Most Dangerous Big City’ by USA Today in 2018
Cummings Declines Trump Admin’s Invitation To Tour Baltimore Federal Housing Facility
Trump once donated $5,000 to Kamala Harris
AOC Justifies Palestinian Rioting: "White Supremacist Jews" and "Criminal" Israel To Blame
Dem Pollster Mark Penn:
Democrats' debate was a panderfest

Joe Biden: I will kill all coal jobs

More liberal fascist violence



Sunday, July 28, 2019

On this day in 1914,

World War I - "The War to End All Wars" - Begins

9 Million Soldiers Killed.  9 Million Civilians Killed.


Video: A crash course on how WWI started

Baltimore Sun 11/9/16

Trump's right: Declare Baltimore a 'disaster' and rebuild it

The paper founded by Alexander Hamilton
NY Post: Trump is right about Baltimore and the Dems know it
Democrat Mark Penn
Impeachment is out of the question - the Trump investigation was politically motivated
As not reported on CNN

Bipartisan Senate Report: Obama Failed to Secure U.S. Election Systems, Trump Admin Making Progress

Baltimore Police Deputy Commissioner Robbed at Gunpoint Last Friday Night
Richard Grenell Calls Out Left’s Hypocrisy on Baltimore: Just Read the New York Times for Corroboration
Liberal Law Prof Jonathan Turley

Why did Mueller Ignore Mifsud Lies (was he working for Obama's FBI/CIA?)

On this day in 1932,

Federal Troops Rout 

WWI Veteran Bonus Marchers from D.C. Camp

MacArthur, Patton and Eisenhower Lead Attack



From The Sad Tale of the Bonus Marchers:
Following World War I, the U.S. federal government anticipated that its war-risk insurance plan would adequately protect American soldiers and sailors who had served during the war, and that there would be no demand for compensation to those who had suffered no injury during their service in the army or navy. In 1924, however, Congress enacted a law, over the veto of President Calvin Coolidge, providing for a system of adjusted compensation based on length of service, with a distinction made in favor of service overseas. Under this plan, veterans entitled to receive $50 or less were to be paid in cash; those entitled to receive more than $50 were to receive certificates maturing in 20 years.
Veterans up to the rank of major with at least 60 days service each received a dollar for each day of domestic service up to $500 and $1.25 for each day of overseas service up to $625. The bond that each received in 1924 (in lieu of cash) would accumulate compound interest, resulting in an average payment of about $1,000 for each veteran in 1945.
In order to meet full payment of these certificates when they matured in 1945, Congress provided that a trust fund be created through the appropriation of twenty annual installments of $ 112 million each. This would yield a total of $2.24 billion. Interest compounded annually would increase this sum approximately to the amount required to meet the face value of the certificates at maturity. By April 1932, there were 3,662,374 of those certificates outstanding, bearing an aggregate face value of $3.638 billion. By this time eight annual installments of $ 112 million had been paid into the fund by Congress, making a total of $896 million, and accrued interest had added $95 million, bringing the fund to $991 million. 
However, because of the national depression, in 1931 Congress expanded the privilege of borrowing with an amendment adopted over the veto of President Herbert Hoover, increasing the loan value of the certificates from 22 1/2 per cent to 50 per cent of face value. 
By April 1932, loans amounting to $1.248 billion were outstanding. The difference between this figure and the total face value of the certificates, $3.638 billion, was $2.390 billion. This was the additional sum which the veterans would receive if Congress, again over the President's veto, approved a new proposal for immediate redemption of the certificates at face value, thirteen years before maturity in 1945. 
This early redemption capability came to be referred to by members of Congress and veterans groups as a bonus, and during the early months of 1932 the bonus was a topic of ongoing discussion in the legislature. Because of the opposition of President Hoover and many senators and members of the House, due primarily to the fact that the country was trying to work its way out of the depression and this action would put a severe strain on the federal budget, veterans groups began to organize around the country with the idea of marching on Washington, D.C. to press their demands. 
Beginning in May, 1932, groups of World War I veterans began difficult journeys across the country, traveling in empty railroad freight cars, in the backs of trucks, in cars, on foot and by any other means that became available. By mid-June it was estimated that as many as 20,000 veterans and some family members had arrived in Washington, and were camping out, often in dirty, unsanitary conditions, in parks and military bases around the city, depending on donations of food from a variety of governments, churches and private citizens. On June 16, the House passed the bonus bill by a vote of 209-176, but on June 18, the Senate defeated the bill 62-18. 
At this point, the federal and district governments began to make arrangements to force the veterans to go home, but very few accepted the offer, vowing to stay until they received their bonus. Throughout July the veterans, known as the Bonus Expeditionary Force, continued to hold marches and rallies despite the fact that they were receiving ultimatums to leave, with the White House proposing use of troops to force an evacuation. 
Then on July 29, 1932, troops did storm several buildings that the veterans were occupying as well as their main camp, setting tents on fire and forcing an evacuation. When it was over, one veteran had been killed and about 50 veterans and Washington police had been injured in various confrontations. Over the next several months, a much smaller group of Bonus Expeditionary Force members continued to pressure Congress, and in May 1933 about 1,000 veterans marched again on Washington. Newly-elected President Franklin Roosevelt also opposed the bonus but demonstrated his concern for the unemployed veterans by issuing an executive order permitting the enrollment of 25,000 of them in the Citizens' Conservation Corps for work in forests. When the veterans realized that President Roosevelt would also veto the bonus bill but was offering an alternative solution they gradually backed away from their demands, and the issue of the veterans' bonus eventually faded from the news. 
Source Artice 
Wikipedia
History.net