Why I Oppose George Soros


Soros, I believe, is trying to do the same thing as Karl Marx. He is funding an experiment to alter society into what he thinks it should be. I believe in Adam Smith and the best way to help society is to rid it of people like Soros who think they have the right to reshape society into what they believe it should be. The invisible hand works fine and it is the essence of nature. People like Soros admit they do not believe in God, so that means they also assume the universe is theirs to manipulate and play the role of  God. People like Soros always want to rule the world through central planning. It is just not possible, for humanity is the inventor driven by the mother of everything — necessity — never the rulers.

lions-killing-elephantSorry, I have studied the world through the eyes of our clients globally, watching how we all act in our own self-interest just as animals in the wild also have a survival instinct. The design of nature is that one species survives by consuming another. The idea that we can create utopia where everyone enjoys perfect harmony is against the design of nature.

In trading, Soros was quick to recognize a currency peg that was against the natural cycle and thus was overvalued. He jumped on that currency and devoured it just like a lion. Then he wants to pretend to be God and make it an open society?

Soros needs to first study his own actions that are the same as a lion and its prey. He is not competent to judge the world while he bribes or supports politicians who will agree to his idea as long as he hands them the money.

Sorry, I believe in laissez-faire because the system is far too complicated for man to try to change it.

Mutually Beneficial Leverage – Nigel Farage Visits Trump Tower Today…


It is somewhat funny, perhaps quizzically so, that people cannot see the mutually beneficial play amid the strong relationship formed between Donald Trump and Nigel Farage.   Essentially and substa…

Source: Mutually Beneficial Leverage – Nigel Farage Visits Trump Tower Today…

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The Many Times Russian Hackers Didn’t Damage Hillary’s Campaign


WOW those Russians are real good!

Why Feminists Hate Men: What They Won’t Tell You!


Why Civilizations Rise and Fall | Michael Woodley of Menie and Stefan Molyneux


An Honest Conversation About Race and Gender Differences


The War Against Men | Tom Golden and Stefan Molyneux


“You Haven’t Succeeded Once”: State Department Slammed By AP Reporter Over Failure In Syria


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The battle for Aleppo is over, and Assad has won, with AP quoting the Syrian leader that “history is being made with the defeat” of the insurgents contained in the city.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said on Thursday the events taking place in the city of Aleppo are a historic moment, and said the world will be different after what he called the “liberation of Aleppo”.

“What is happening today is the writing of a history written by every Syrian citizen. The writing did not start today, it started six years ago when the crisis and war started against Syria,” Assad said in a video statement published on the Syrian Presidency’s Twitter account.

 

And while Syria and Russia enjoy the spoils from his biggest victory since the start of the Syrian conflict, the US State Department is being slammed for losing the Syrian proxy war. Meanwhile, after three years of backing and arming rebels brought no major progress in the Syrian war, Washington has accused Moscow of “failure” to achieve peace. Yesterday, the State Department was finally called out by AP on the lack of progress in Syria, forcing department spokespersons John Kirby to once again blame Russia.

As caught on the recording below, the daily briefing at the State Department started off with a verbal sparring match between AP reporter Brad Klapper and department spokesman John Kirby. Klapper asked Kirby why the US was “laying all the blame” for developments in Aleppo on Russia, while also questioning what Washington was doing different than Moscow. The US, Klapper said, “failed repeatedly, doing the same thing over and over again” but continued to accuse Russia of war crimes “when things go badly.”

“You [the US] haven’t succeeded once,” Klapper said.

Kirby did not answer the latter of Klapper’s questions, instead offering his explanation of why Russia bears responsibility. “The failure is on Russia for not putting the proper pressure on the Assad regime to stop the brutality, the gassing, the surrender, the starvation of their own people. That’s the real failure here,” Kirby said, claiming that the US, unlike Russia, has been pursuing only political solutions.

“You don’t think the US has failed?” the reporter continued to press on.

Refusing to take any blame for America’s actions, Kirby continued to dodge the question.

“You talked about the United States failure. What I would say is the international community has remained focused on trying to bring about a better outcome in Syria,” he said, stressing that the US “is a leader in that effort.”

Then several minutes into the exchange, Kirby would not admit the possibility of the US approach as it is failing to achieve a peaceful solution despite years of attempts.

“Secretary [of State John Kerry] would be the first to tell you that he’s enormously frustrated that we are still where we are with respect to what’s going on the ground in Syria. Nobody’s happy about that,” he said, praising Washington’s efforts on the diplomatic front.

After his response did not seem to satisfy Klapper, Kirby commented: “Look, you can shake your head in disgust about the answer all you want.”

Showing a sense of humor, Klapper argued that it was “too late” for any changes to be made given that the Obama administration and Secretary John Kerry’s tenures are coming to an end in just over a month.  “You’re not describing any different kind of approach or anything you’re going to do to somehow change the equation,” he said. “It’s too late for that. You have no time left and you’re saying you’re not going to telegraph something that we know is not going to happen.”

However, according to Kirby, despite what Klapper or the AP might “feel,” Secretary Kerry remains eager to try to find a political solution to the conflict.

Meanwhile, having taken over Aleppo, the Syrian proxy war is now in its final stages, with the Assad government, thanks to Russian backing, now assured a victory, especially since Trump has repeatedly stated that he is looking forward to de-escalating the middle east conflict, and no longer is looking to “change heads of state”, a development which will infuriate Qatar, whose gas pipeline to Europe appears doomed to never be constructed.

What Was Really Behind The Trial Of Geert Wilders?


Tyler Durden's picture

Submitted by George Igler via The Gatestone Institute,

  • If Europeans are ever to stand a chance of unravelling the coils of laws constricting their throats, preventing their ability to speak out against the demographic redrawing of their countries or any other potential danger they may note, it may prove helpful understanding how this slow strangulation took shape.
  • Although the gross unfairness of Geert Wilders’s prosecution is clear when compared with other Dutch politicians who have articulated far worse, there is also compelling evidence that much that is preached from the Koran in mosques daily would clearly fall under such a definition of hate speech — also remaining curiously outside the attention of public prosecutors.
  • Are not elected Member of Parliament even more responsible to for the safety of the public than are other citizens? If elected officials are criminalized for speaking out, at what point do such restrictions start posing a national security problem?
  • How are ordinary, decent, native Europeans ever likely socially and politically to articulate how they never consented to being part of a “grand experiment,” without incurring the stain of bigotry accompanying this reasonable assertion, from friends and co-workers alike?
  • Would it not be a remarkable irony if, instead of burying Wilders, as the conviction seemed intended to do, it propelled him instead to victory?

Much has been made of the 2016 populist revolt in the West, beginning with Britain’s June 23 decision to leave the European Union, and culminating with the victory of president-elect Donald Trump on November 8. The narrative of change is understandably seductive, but has recently been dealt successive blows by the domestic circumstances that so characterize European politics.

Despite traditions of liberty being placed at the heart of the successful Trump campaign, the promise of a new economic approach also enabled him to cross the line on election day.

The Brexit vote similarly took place under a referendum that allowed Britain’s voting populace to defy the stated preference of the majority of their elected parliamentarians.

The most disturbing recent development on the European continent, however, was Friday’s conviction of Geert Wilders on two charges, “inciting discrimination and insulting a minority group,” for asking supporters whether they wanted “fewer Moroccans” in the Netherlands, at a small public rally in a bar in The Hague, on March 19, 2014.


Geert Wilders during his March 2014 speech, where he asked “Do you want more or fewer Moroccans?” (Image source: nos.nl video screenshot)

This “hate speech” case against Wilders similarly pits popular alarm over the consequences of mass migration plus a principled politician who for years — in the face of threats against his life, has agitated for genuine change — against an untrustworthy, politicized legal system which appears at odds with both Wilders and popular alarm. Several Dutch Labour Party politicians, who said far more damaging things about Moroccans than Wilders did, yet were never prosecuted:

  • “We also have sh*t Moroccans over here.” — Rob Oudkerk, a Dutch Labour Party (PvDA) politician.
  • “We must humiliate Moroccans.” — Hans Spekman, PvDA politician.
  • “Moroccans have the ethnic monopoly on trouble-making.” — Diederik Samsom, PvDA politician.

Although Wilders’s trial clearly appears an orchestrated miscarriage of justice, it is arguably not helpful to view the basis for his prosecution through an absolutist defense of freedom of speech, intuitively understandable to Americans. No constitutional equivalent of the First Amendment, which prohibits Congress from passing laws abridging the freedom of speech, exists in Europe.

This right, however, even in the U.S. is somewhat qualified, as laid out in Brandenberg vs. Ohio, but none of those exceptions would apply to Wilders (imminent danger and individual personalization). Under the strictures of the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR), freedom of expression is a “qualified” right in much broader terms — from which “left-wing” members of the Dutch Labour Party issuing the far more objectionable statements quoted above are apparently excluded: “the state may lawfully interfere with the right to freedom of expression in certain defined and limited circumstances.”[1]

The arguments qualifying the conviction of Wilders, in the courtroom of the military base at Schiphol Airport, according to the presiding jurist Hendrik Steenhuis, were that the PVV leader’s comments were “unworthy” of an elected member of parliament — as Judge Steenhuis denied any assertion that the trial was politically motivated. Yet, are not elected Members of Parliament even more responsible to for the safety of the public than are other citizens? If elected officials are criminalized for speaking out, at what point do such restrictions start posing a national security problem?

Submitting to the questionable tenets of the ECHR, however, is a condition of EU membership. Dutch prosecutors expressed themselves “very satisfied” with the verdict, a spokeswoman adding, “the standard is set.”

If Europeans are ever to stand a chance of unravelling the coils of laws constricting their throats, preventing their ability to speak out against the demographic redrawing of their countries or any other potential danger they may note, it may prove helpful understanding how this slow strangulation took shape.

The most compelling defense of hate speech laws was articulated by Prof. Jeremy Waldron, in 2012, who took issue with those believing that, “the bigoted invective that defiles our public environment, should be of no concern of the law.”[2]

In a passage dedicated to expressions of opposition to Muslim immigration, in The Harm in Hate Speech, the NYU School of Law professor questioned those who maintain that:

There is nothing to be regulated here, nothing for the law to concern itself with, nothing that a good society should use its legislative apparatus to suppress or disown. The people who are targeted should just learn to live with it.

He counters:

…there is a sort of public good of inclusiveness that our society sponsors and that it is committed to. We are diverse … And we are embarked on a grand experiment of living and working together despite these sorts of differences. … And each person, each member of each group, should be able to go about his or her business, with the assurance that there will be no need to face hostility, violence, discrimination, or exclusion by others.

 

This sense of security in the space we all inhabit is a public good … Hate speech undermines this public good, or it makes the task of sustaining it much more difficult than it would otherwise be.

Although the gross unfairness of Geert Wilders’s prosecution is clear when compared with other Dutch politicians who have articulated far worse, there is also compelling evidence that much that is preached from the Koran in mosques daily would clearly fall under such a definition of “hate speech” — also remaining curiously outside the attention of public prosecutors.

Given that “hate speech” damages the maintenance of dignity between groups and public safety, can a compelling case therefore not be made that “hate speech” laws mandated by the European Union are doing considerably more harm than good?

Is it not high time that lawmakers grasp how mass Muslim immigration, and the importation of the sectarianism unfortunately inherent in Islamic doctrine, undermine even more significantly these noble principles of “public good”?

How exactly are the terrorism, rape and crime waves that have accompanied such migration into Europe, likely to be addressed by the democratic process — within the confines of such originally benign legislation — when across the continent fundamental notions of security are already being so comprehensively undermined?

How are ordinary, decent, native Europeans ever likely socially and politically to articulate how they never consented to being part of a “grand experiment,” without incurring the stain of bigotry accompanying this reasonable assertion, from friends and co-workers alike?

Are loyal citizens being cowed into silence, as in the world’s most totalitarian nations, by prosecutions that can justifiably be seen as “making an example” of those who fail to toe whatever is the current political line?

More sinisterly, with three months until the polls open in the Netherlands, the verdict against Wilders may have had little to do with either incitement or “hate speech,” and everything to do with a desire to curtail precisely the sort of public rallies which were hallmarks of both victories led by Nigel Farage in Great Britain and Donald Trump in the United States.

It is precisely these kind of public gatherings that do so much to convince those with entirely legitimate grievances that they are not alone.

Would it not be a remarkable irony if, rather than burying Wilders as the trial seemed intended to do, it instead propels him to victory?

Hatred of the Left Continues to Set Stage for Revolution


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The hypocrisy of the left continues to brew and set the stage for the break-up of the United States. The left is always the most dangerous throughout history and the most intolerant of all groups. They simply do not allow for disagreement.

Trump said if Hillary won he would “absolutely support her” which makes it very hard for Hillary to join these protests, yet she does not speak out against them. The schools are some of the worst sectors fueling the discontent and fermenting a future destruction of the United States. There is no unity. After every previous election, people accepted the result and moved on. This time, the left will not let it go.

2-yr-olds-fightingSchools are continuing to ferment revolution as exemplified by the Calera High School in Washington that has refused to to allow its Marching Band to perform during the Presidential Inaugural Parade in Washington, DC. For the first time in 20 years, no Washington, D.C., public school marching band will perform at the inaugural parade. This is illustrating how even public schools continue to protest about losing the election. This is like two year-olds who do not get their way and decide to break the toy rather than share it. All the teachers supporting such protests should be immediately fired for interjecting politics into education for personal gain.