A DETAILED LIST . . .


Hey that looks just like the list I made out … lol

Making America “Great” Again


Post by Paul Eidelberg

Donald Trump’s political leadership in the presidential race may be attributed to what Lou Harris calls “orneriness,” which he attributes to the American character in his book The Next American Civil War.

Harris foresees a revolution of the American middle class against the “Establishment,” or what men like Ted Cruz terms the “Washington Cartel.” This cartel is led by the intellectual elite, a product of American universities like Harvard, Yale, and Stanford.

Just as this elite scorned Trump in the New Hampshire primary, which he won because of the more decisive votes of the less educated, this political bias of academia may propel Trump to the White House. None of his rivals exhibit “orneriness.” They are more or less milquetoast politicians.

Although Trump lacks class, his orneriness endears him to the unwashed populists. This reminds me of Truman’s victory over New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey in the 1948 election.

Dewey appeared as a stuffed-shirt “establishment” man. Of course, unlike the egotistical Donald Trump, Truman was a plain or humble person from Independence Missouri, in contrast to the big-time New York attorney.

Also, today’s voters are more susceptible to showmanship, which Trump displays far more than his “nebbish” rivals – to use a Yiddish word for a milk-and-toast politician. Americans want to be entertained, especially today when America, under Obama, displays anything but manliness, let alone aggressiveness, vis-à-vis Islamic contempt for America.

Trump capitalizes on this Islamic arrogance, its insult to American greatness. Hence he doesn’t need to discuss issues, which, after all, are hardly discussed by his rivals.

And so, this 2016 presidential campaign is a “made-in-Hollywood” affair. Personality reigns supreme, larded with  democratic vulgarity.

The great 19th century French novelist, Gustav Flaubert, foresaw that this vulgarity would hold center stage in this era of triumphant democracy, which, he said, would make “any man of taste want to vomit”!

No one should be surprised, therefore, if Trump wins the presidency. How ironic! Democracy, or the rule of the many, of those who have to work for a living, elects a vulgar plutocrat to make America great again”!

Amid Growing Backlash Pope Francis and The Vatican Back Down Urgently – (W/ Viral EU Video)…


The Pope’s comments were totally out of line with a mam of the cloth of any religion — but this was “Totally” inappropriate for the catholic Pope. I glad I’m Russian Orthodox not a Catholic.

Whither Are We Going?


Post By Prof. Paul Eidelberg

Mankind is tottering on an abyss. Violence punctuates daily life in a world increasingly portrayed as meaningless. We are strangers, not only to each other but to ourselves. The “crisis of identity” has become a cliché. Familial and national ties have been eroded; we are homeless cosmopolitans. Indeed, no less than the President of the United States boasts of being a “cosmopolitan”! He emulates the Swedes, who replaced their heritage with multiculturalism.

Creación_de_Adán_(Miguel_Ángel)

Not knowing who or what we are, we lack the hauteur and confidence of cosmopolitans of the past. They believed in Universal Man, in man sub specie aeternitatis; we believe in nothing.  Our humanism is empty; we can’t even take our own humanity seriously. Nihilism has rendered the distinction between man and beast problematic. What, indeed, is noble about man that anyone should boast of being a “humanist”?

When man becomes problematic, enter civilizational decay, but also the possibility of renewal. Such was the case some twenty-four hundred years ago when Greek sophists like Protagoras exulted in teaching youth that “man is the measure of all things.” This unheard of and skeptical doctrine (the dogma of today’s universities), signifies that all ideas concerning the True, the Good, and the Beautiful are human creations, relative to time and place. Socrates saw that this secularism and relativism would eventually destroy the Olympian gods and was even then undermining public morality in Athens. The sophists, the Greek counterparts of today’s “value-free” social scientists, were broadcasting the death of Zeus, the pagan god of justice. Without Zeus, what would hold society together?  Without the traditional understanding of right and wrong, men would devour each other like animals.

Enter Socrates. His task, completed by Plato and Aristotle, was to substitute a restrained skepticism for the sophists’ unrestrained skepticism, lest men revert to beasts. The world-historical function of these Athenians was to construct a philosophy of man and a world view that would replace the no longer credible mythology of the Homeric cosmos. Accordingly, and as dramatized in The Republic (when the god-fearing Cephalus leaves the dialogue), philosophy replaces religion and the philosopher replaces Zeus. No longer are the gods to rule mankind, but reason – unaided human reason – would henceforth determine how man should live.

Of course, neither Plato nor Aristotle was so naive as to expect the generality of mankind to defer to the rule of philosophers. Apart from other considerations, philosophers are not only as quarrelsome as the offspring of Zeus and Hera, but, unlike the Olympians, they are mortal: here today, gone tomorrow. Something impersonal as well as immutable and eternal was therefore needed to command the obedience of man. What else could this be but Naturenature divested of Homeric deities. Neither the gods nor man but all-encompassing Nature was to be the measure of all things.  And this Nature, far from being arbitrary and mysterious, was fully accessible to the human mind.

The magnitude of Aristotle’s program has not been surpassed in the history of philosophy. He merely set out to comprehend the totality of existence, to reduce heaven and earth to an organized system of theoretical, practical, and productive sciences. To borrow the terminology of Rabbi J.B. Soloveitchik in Halakhic Man’ Aristotle would tolerate no randomness or particularity, no mystery to obscure the fleeting events of existence. Everything had to be fixed, clear, necessary, ordered. Nothing was beyond the grasp of the human mind because Nature, or the Cosmos, was an intelligent and therefore intelligible whole.

With Greek philosophy a new type of man appeared in the forefront of world history, Cognitive Man. Cognitive Man is a secularist who deifies the intellect. He must therefore be distinguished from his secular rivals, Volitional Man and Sensual Man. Whereas Cognitive Man seeks to understand the world, Volitional Man wishes to conquer and change it, while Sensual Man simply wants to enjoy it. Only with the ascendancy of Volitional Man, personified by Machiavelli, did secularism come into its own as the regnant force of history.

Of course, Machiavelli had collaborators: Hobbes, the father of modern psychology: “The thoughts are to the desires as scouts and spies to range abroad and find the way to the things desired”; Hume: “Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions.” The influence of these two harbingers of Sensual Man explains why we are not used to thinking of Platonic-Aristotelian philosophy as secular.

Plato and Aristotle pay nothing more than lip service to the divine. True, the refinement of their writings conveys great piety. What gives the lie to this impression is that neither philosopher regarded piety as a virtue. We must also bear in mind their caution and civic-mindedness. Socrates, the master of irony, was given the hemlock for atheism. And what with the widespread corruption in Athens resulting from affluence, a disastrous war, and the unabashed atheism of so many intellectuals, it would have been reckless for these aristocrats of the mind to have joined the scoffers of a religion which, whatever its shortcomings, did provide some salutary restraints on the passions of men.

There are refined and vulgar forms of secularism. Plato and Aristotle’s is couched in pious language not only for political and pedagogical reasons, but because, in their species of humanism, the philosopher is virtually divine. By no means is the philosopher to be confused with the academic professor of philosophy. No one has portrayed the difference more powerfully than Nietzsche in Beyond Good and Evil (Part VI, “We Scholars).” For these giants of the intellect, Cognitive Man is the passionate lover of wisdom, where wisdom is nothing less than knowledge of the organizing principles of the universe.

But what is most distinctive of Cognitive Man, whether philosopher or scientist, is his attempt to reduce the fleeting phenomena of existence to lawfulness. This is as true of Platonic-Aristotelian philosophy as it is of Galilean-Newtonian physics, despite their very different conceptions of lawfulness. Both schools seek to discover the riddle of existence in some scientific order or pattern of the world. This is the aim of Cognitive Man.

However refined the quest of Cognitive Man, what unites him with his secular counterparts, Volitional and Sensual Man, is that, like them, he does not pursue the object of his desire to glorify God.  The reason is quite simple: for Cognitive Man such a God does not exist. Aristotle, like Spinoza, is a “pantheist.” His Prime Mover is an extrapolation from the principle of motion (Physics 251b17-25, 266a5).  As for Plato, his Demiurge is not a creator but an artificer that imposes order on a preexisting chaos (Timaeus 30a, 52d-55, 69b). One thing is clear: both philosophers rejected the idea of a personal God. Otherwise piety would be a virtue.

To be sure, the human psyche is not so easily compartmentalized. Cognitive Man may shade into Volitional Man. Thus Aristotle taught Alexander the Great political science; and politics. However, for Aristotle politics is but the application of philosophy to action. Let us see how Aristotle deals with this issue.

When Aristotle inherited the concept of nature from his teacher Plato, that concept had already been demythologized and transformed into the impersonal and immutable standard of how man should live. Aristotle enriched and systematized the idea by developing an organic and teleological theory of nature. Such was the success of this theory that it had no serious rivals in abodes of learning until the seventeenth century.  Vestiges of organicism may be found even in Kepler. However, not until the mechanistic theory of nature fathered by Galileo and Newton was organic concept of nature laid to rest.

What made the organic (and teleological) theory of nature so alluring and enduring is that it appealed to common sense.  Observe the growth of a tree from its seed and it will seem that the processes of nature are inwardly directed toward an end or telos. The end is that toward which a living thing strives in order to reach its completion. So it is with man.  Neither force imposed from without, nor chance, so much as an immanent impulse prompts man to form associations that can fulfill his potentialities. The most self-sufficient and comprehensive association is the political community, the polis, which alone can complete or perfect man’s nature. Whatever contributes to that end is called “good.” Nature is thus the standard for judging what is good (or bad); there is no other.

Could there be a more impersonal yet intimate and benign substitute for the Olympian gods?  Must we not marvel at Aristotle’s genius?  By creating a new foundation for morality, Aristotle became one of the greatest “legislators” of mankind.

This organic and teleological conception of man and nature was shattered by Galileo and Newton, the founders of modern science. Their mechanistic conception of nature left nature devoid any moral compass. Neither the quantum theory of Plank nor Einstein’s general theory of relativity provides a scintilla of light on how man should live.

When Nietzsche announced that “God is dead,” he was also announcing, wittingly or otherwise, the death of man. Modern man had become “human-all-too-human.” Thus was born Nietzsche’s desperate idea of the ubermensch. He asked “whither are we going?” and we are living today without an answer. This will compel us to return to Israel.

Judge Tells Apple To Help FBI Unlock San Bernardino Terrorist’s Phone Data – Apple Says No…


The Federal Government itself created the situation where the San Bernardino Islamic terrorists preforming Jihad were allowed to do so even though they knew of their activities. Now they want Apple to make a back door into a product they make so they can try and do the job they should have done before this happened when they could have stopped this from happening. This can not be allowed no matter what the case. I was in military intelligence (G2) and I was a special Operations officer and I know what the government is capable of doing believe me you do not want them to have that power.

EVIDENCE POINTS TO SCALIA ASSASSINATION


I agree his death is just to convenient to the progressive movement so its hard to believe that it is not an assassination!

White House Begins Selecting Scalia Replacement – Short List Includes Current AG Loretta Lynch…


I would not want to bet that McConnell doesn’t cave and confirms anyone that Obama picks no matter who it is. A more important question than Obama’s pick would be why wasn’t an autopsy preformed on Scalia?

Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia Died In His Sleep


Antonin Scalia

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia has died at the age of 79 in his sleep. He was on a hunting trip in Texas with friends and he went to bed Friday night commenting to his friend that he wasn’t feeling very well. He died peacefully in his sleep. I know many people despised him claiming he was a crazy conservative. I have read many of his opinions where he was in dissent and well as wrote for the majority. I must say, I believe his reasoning was the most UNBIASED of anyone on the court. He believed in STRICT CONSTRUCTION and had others on the Supreme Court maintained that position, Americans would not be taxed on worldwide income today unlike the rest of the world, who out of desperate economic conditions, now seek to hunt their citizens on a worldwide basis as well. Those applying to the Supreme Court go through a voting process. I believe I made it through that process and understanding the reasoning of Scalia, I knew that if I could capture his interest, I would get in. It was when the Supreme Court ordered the government to respond in my case, I made it. They government knew it would lose and the net result, they had to release me and tell the Supreme Court the case was moot for I was released.

Scalia was a STRICT CONSTRUCTIONIST. That means that judges do not make the law, the people do. Some of his lobbying within the court really pushed government abuse backward. I have written how the most notorious trial in English history was that of Sir Walter Raleigh who was convicted on a written statement of a threatened witness who was not presented in court. Raleigh demanded to confront his accuser and the court denied that request and found him guilty for political purposes. This is our 6th Amendment Right to Confrontation. It was Scalia who wrote the opinion for the court providing the full history of this write and overturning a case in the State of Washington that entered recordings but denied the accused exactly the very same right to cross-examine the State’s witness. (Crawford v. Washington 541 U.S. 36 (2004)).

It was also Justice Scalia who overturned the sentencing guidelines in criminal case in Blakely v. Washington. The fundamental was the prosecutor got the jury to find someone guilty of a crime on minimum proof, and then the judge would enhance the sentence of facts never presented to the jury. This was a bitter fight, but who was on the government side was the so called “liberal” justices who voted in favor of the government. This is what Scalia wrote in Blakely:

 Whether the Sixth Amendment incorporates this manipulable standard rather than Apprendi’s bright-line rule depends on the plausibility of the claim that the Framers would have left definition of the scope of jury power up to judges’ intuitive sense of how far is too far. We think that claim not plausible at all, because the very reason the Framers put a jury-trial guarantee in the Constitution is that they were unwilling to trust government to mark out the role of the jury. 

In the case authorizing the government to take personal property if someone else will improve it for a better use, KELO et al. v. CITY OF NEW LONDON, Scalia was in dissent.

Today the Court abandons this long-held, basic limitation on government power. Under the banner of economic development, all private property is now vulnerable to being taken and transferred to another private owner, so long as it might be upgraded 

Scalia has been perhaps the most outspoken Justice to ever sit on the court. He recently stated in dissent that “… to say, as the court does, that Arizona contradicts federal law by enforcing applications of the Immigration Act that the President declines to enforce boggles the mind.”

When it came to Obamacare in King v. Burwell, the Supreme Court upheld it as a tax which was totally unconstitutional. It was clear that the decision was wrong but the court wanted to uphold it without any foundation of precedent. Scalia dissented and called it for what it was:

“We should start calling this law SCOTUScare … [T]his Court’s two decisions on the Act will surely be remembered through the years … And the cases will publish forever the discouraging truth that the Supreme Court of the United States favors some laws over others, and is prepared to do whatever it takes to uphold and assist its favorites.”

While many will disagree with me simply because they were on the other side of the question, the problem is this becoming a very undemocratic process where appointed judges make the law, not the people and the constitution is reduced to a scrap of paper referred to in selective parts that fit the current desire. Scalia was a STRICT CONSTRUCTIONIST. It is what it is. There should be no room for changing the Constitution. Both the LEFT and the RIGHT have not followed that road of Strict Construction. They criticized Scalia for have wit and a sharp tongue. I admired him for that for who always understood his reasoning regardless if you agreed or not.

Obama now gets to leave his mark on the court and we can expect probably a pro-government socialist who will steer the court in the favor of government, much like Brussels, because we are too stupid to know what is best for us. Unfortunately, Scalia’s death is going to be our undoing. He kept even the “conservatives” in check as he did Roberts in the healthcare issue. This was not a good weekend.

Your Rights Do Not Come By Grant Of The Courts Or Government


The citizens of today have no concept of how bad it can get once the federal government gets too big; meaning just about where it is right now. The 10th Amendment is very clear as to the limits placed on the Federal government and right now almost all of it is in direct violation of the constitution. Whether Trump can reverse this or not is yet to be seen but none of the others even want to try. The bottom line is that we have nothing to lose by electing Trump!

Michael's avatarSword At-The-Ready

CommieCourt

Your Rights Do NOT Come From The Constitution Either. The Constitution exists to PROTECT Them FROM the government

As the country heads into the abyss of complete totalitarianism under the color of law, the following two wallpapers are provided as a public service to the truth most Americans are now willfully ignorant and willfully blind to.

RIGHTS&LIBERTYNoLegitAuthority

View original post

Libya is “Hillary’s War” – Released emails Show Depth of Hillary Clinton Ownership…


We had four clowns playing games that they had no idea what the rules even were; Obama, Clinton, Rice and Powers. I would bet that Michelle Obama and Valerie Jarrett were also involved so it was the blind leading the bind and Obama was not capable of going up against five women. So we got what we got and lots of people died and the media covered this up so we also got 4 more years of Obama — what a deal!