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Friday Feast #170

Here it is again, this week’s Friday Feast:

Appetizer: What is your favorite carnival/amusement park ride?

The beer stand. What?

Soup: How do you react in uncomfortable social situations?

What is this thing called “social situation?” I tend not to invite too many into my cave at once so as to avoid such things.

Salad: On a scale of 1-10 with 10 being highest, how much do you enjoy discussing deep, philosophical topics?

I’m not sure how “deep” politics is. It seems so obvious to me that government is evil, but many people seem to like government controlling their lives, so I guess I do…

Main Course: Did you get a flu shot this year? If not, do you plan to?

Oh, I do NOT want to get started on this government screw-up. Yes, again, this is a problem that government has CREATED while trying to “solve” another problem.

Dessert: Approximately how many hours per week do you spend watching television?

What is this thing called “television?” ;) Well, okay, I guess a couple. I watch a little of football games and baseball games when they’re on — but I don’t watch much else. I try and catch House when I can, but I don’t get it every week.

Popularity: 23% [?]

TV: Before and After

What if there was a strike and no one noticed?

TV Strike

Popularity: 14% [?]

Yikes!

Because of this, I think I need to ask for a raise today.

Popularity: 23% [?]

Government Support Of…

Quick question — how is it that a library that’s paid for with my taxpayer government cash is somehow not responsible and those pictures are NOT an endorsement by government — but an employee of the government, for example, a school teacher, who simply carries a Bible with them, or says, “Merry Christmas” IS a complete and total representative of all government everywhere and must be banned?

Popularity: 21% [?]

Edwards and Romney: Same on Healthcare

I’m sure by now you realize that there’s almost no difference between Hillary and Rudy. In fact, in one debate, Rudy was asked the direct question: what’s the difference between you and Hillary? Rudy did not give one single example (instead saying, “Oh, there’s lots of differences). Now it appears that John Edwards and Mitt Romney are alike in at least one area: they both want to force you to buy health insurance, or they will jail you.

Edwards just announced his details, while Romney has supported that in Mass, who has recently started forcing people to buy insurance. Anyone who seriously believes that the power of government should be used to FORCE people to buy insurance, or will literally jail them for refusing to is a serious danger to freedom.

Popularity: 19% [?]

Alaska Air: Gay Discount Airline

So hey, did you know that if you claim that you’re gay that Alaska Airlines will give you a discount? Or you can look at this in the opposite direction and note that if you’re not gay, you have to pay more to fly on this airline. Is that okay with you? I mean, could you do it for other things?

Think I could sell things at my store and ask people at the register, “Hey, if you say you’re queer, I’ll give you 10% off.” Maybe I could say, “Hey, if you say you hate women, I’ll give you a 7% discount on all your purchases today.” What if I said, “You there, tell me Mohammed is gay and I’ll give you 10% off right now.” Is there anything wrong with any of that?

Now personally, I don’t think any of those actions are illegal. In other words, government should not care, nor be involved in any of those transactions at all. But want to bet they would? How long do you think I’d last as a store if I were doing that in a big city? I bet government officials would be in to visit me in no time. Heck, I wouldn’t be surprised if someone tried to charge me with a hate crime or sue me.

But apparently when Alaska Airlines decides to base their prices on perceived actions of people who like to have sex with members of their own sex, that’s perfectly okay — but only because they’re giving a discount to gays. Imagine what would happen if they were charging gays more. Just be aware of this policy if you happen to be flying Alaska Airlines and are bringing your children with you.

Popularity: 27% [?]

Max Borders on North Carolina Insurance

I happened across this article in the Fayetteville Observer written by Max Borders. Hey, is that a real name? For some reason that reminds me of Homer Simpson the time he became “Max Powers.” Anyway, Mr. Borders really gets it. He writes about the high cost of insurance in North Carolina — and has a very quick, simple, easy way to reduce costs of insurance in North Carolina. And it will cost zero taxpayer dollars.

How? As Mr. Borders mentions — buy just giving the people permission (yes, I know, sounds crazy) to buy insurance from elsewhere. And yes, right now, North Carolina citizens are barred by law from purchasing insurance from anyone other than Democrat government-approved insurance agents. Why? “For your own good.” You see, you’re too dumb to be able to buy health insurance on your own, so the Democrats in the North Carolina legislature will tell you what you can buy. Why does that make it expensive? Two reasons:

1. Competition. Since only government-approved insurance companies can do business in North Carolina, the government can ensure there are only a limited number of choices for you, the consumer. This is what Democrats do today (they’re actually really communists, completely controlling the means of production in this industry). And the insurance companies love them for it because the insurance companies don’t have to compete! The insurance companies bribe make campaign donations to Democrat legislators, who ensure no other companies can enter the North Carolina market. Nice and cozy.

2. Mandates. As Mr. Borders points out, the state of North Carolina says that if you want to buy health insurance for one thing, you must buy it for 46 things. Seriously. In order to sell insurance in this state, you have to sell the whole package of 46 things, even if the buyer doesn’t want them! For example, I want what’s called “catastrophic coverage.” This is insurance that only covers serious injuries and things like long-term hospital stays. It doesn’t cover doctor visits, or anything else. But I am prohibited by law from buying this type of insurance. Instead, the state forces me to purchase things like “alcohol outpatient rehabilitation coverage” — even though I do NOT want it.

That’s wrong, plain and simple. But the Democrats that have run this state for over 100 years don’t care about freedom, they care about power, control, and money. As long as the insurance companies keep paying the Democrats, they’ll artificially keep the price of insurance high. Remember that next time your company tells you that the costs of insurance have gone up. It’s not the insurance companies alone doing it — they can only do it with the help of Democrats and others who hate freedom in government.

Popularity: 23% [?]

Hillary’s Position

This is quite accurate — no matter the issue under discussion. At least she’s consistent.

Hillary’s Position

Popularity: 13% [?]

You Forgot Ron Paul

This is a funny song — with a catchy tune! Yes, it’s the same guy that introduced the candidates at the YouTube debate. The author on the YouTube page adds: “You Ron Paul fans asked for more lines about Ron Paul, so here it is. Be careful what you ask for next time.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfPbEMGtAQM&rel=1]

Popularity: 21% [?]

Republican YouTube Debate

Well, if you missed the debate, you didn’t miss much. While I didn’t live blog it, I did watch the whole thing (and managed to stay awake). I didn’t see any surprises and there really was nothing new. A quick review of what I remember from left to right as they were on the stage.

Tancredo was happy that the others were talking about finally enforcing the borders. I think he’s happy and feels he has won because many of the candidates are finally talking about actually having national borders. Of course Hunter is the only one who really has done anything about borders. Wouldn’t it be neat to have a president we could nickname “Tank?”

Huckabee continued to be consistent — socially conservative, financially more liberal than anyone else. He promised to spend more money every chance he got. He really scares me. He denied raising taxes, sort of, after being shown a clip that had him saying that he was okay with raising taxes. Nice guy, but someone needs to tell Chuck Norris that this guy is a HUGE government guy.

Romney worked hard on perfecting the art of waffling. He smiled a lot and looked very, very slick. He evaded many answer, but also promised to continue big government spending. I think the press enjoying him arguing with Rudy. I still simply cannot vote for this guy — he is also a big government controlling politician. But he does seem better than Rudy.

Rudy, I think, looked bad (and not just because I can’t vote for him). He kept talking, over and over again, about what he had done with New York. When Romney hit him a few times, it became more clear that he appears to be in over his head. He knows what he did in New York that worked, and he seemed to imply that what he did there he would do for America — not really realizing that America is quite a bit bigger than just New York. And he continued to never actually answer ANY question asked of him. Hey Rudy — you ran a sanctuary city, no matter how many times you deny it.

Thompson looked tall. After the opening, the cameras were very careful to never show Thompson standing next to Rudy. And Thompson appeared to be going after the audience demographic — he started almost every answer off with an attempt at a joke and really looked like he was just going for total entertainment value. He had some decent answers, but again, really didn’t seem to focus on issues as he wanted to entertain.

McCain was in a war, did you know that? And he’s talked to the troops constantly. In fact, I think he had some active duty members backstage to talk to. That’s pretty much all he said. Over and over again. I think he really got slammed by Paul when McCain said that “we never lost a battle in Vietnam,” and Paul quoted some other guy who said, basically, “yeah, and how’d that work out for you?”

Paul was next — I think he was placed next to McCain this time so they’d fight for the entertainment value, and they did. Paul stayed on his usual themes and did quite well. Tancredo told Paul that he just didn’t think getting out of the Middle East would do any good — but know what? In the past 60 years, it simply hasn’t been tried. We have had troops deployed all over the planet. No one can say what would happen if we brought our troops home simply because it’s never been tried. And Paul really schooled McCain when he had to again explain the difference between “isolationist” and “non-interventionist.” There’s a big difference and I think Paul might have the right idea here.

Hunter was on the far right, but he didn’t get to talk much. That’s too bad because he really does have a lot of good things to say. He promised that he would build the fence that Bush is too chicken to build, creating a border on the southern edge of this country. That would be a very good thing. I could actually vote for Hunter, but he’s really having trouble getting traction, and this debate just didn’t help him any.

So there you have it, Ogre’s 2-hour debate wrap up in 5 minutes!

Update: Peter Porcupine has another quick review up.

Popularity: 14% [?]

Cyberbullies?

How do you know you’re spending too much time on the computer? When you’re responding to “cyber-bullies” AND trying to get government to pass laws to punish those who are “bullies.” Here’s a clue, lawmakers: you don’t have a clue. Any law passed regarding “cyber bullies” is going to be 100% worthless. You don’t have the jurisdiction! And yes, I’m aware this will just be another reason the controlling leftists will demand a one world government.

But hey, look at the data used in this report:

As many as one in three U.S. children have been ridiculed or threatened through computer messages, according to one estimate of the emerging problem of cyberbullying.

Another new study found the problem is less common, with one in 10 kids reporting online harassment.

Oh, in other words, we have no idea how many are “reporting” this stuff. But wait, where did the data come from?

Wolak’s study was a telephone survey of 1,500 Internet users, ages 10 to 17.

Um, what? How many 10-year old phone numbers does this guy have access to? Maybe it’s just me, but I don’t know a whole lot of 10-year olds who have their own phones. But well, he’s a government researcher, so he must be right. Oh, but how does this compare to other places?

The schoolyard continues to be a source of in-person bullying: Studies indicate roughly 17 percent of early adolescents say they are victims of recurring verbal aggression or physical harassment.

So let me make sure I understand this — when the government forces children to gather in a place where they do not want to be, under penalty of prison, and where the children are directly supervised at all moments by government, SEVENTEEN percent are victims of bullies. But this very same government things that they can pass a law regarding the internet — a place where government has no control and zero possibility of supervision — and they think they can reduce a number that may already only be at TEN percent?

This is yet another example that shows how utterly and clueless government bureaucrats and legislators can be. They honestly have no idea what they’re doing. Government is not the solution to ANY problem — they are only capable of creating MORE problems. Stop turning to government for a solution — they don’t have ANY.

Popularity: 15% [?]

NC Government Road Math

Be careful when you ask government to do math. Keep in mind, just about anything government does, they WILL screw it up. Experts claim (that should be a signal that you’re dealing with bureaucrats who have no goal other than to get more control and spend more money):

Several transportation advocates pointed to four factors stressing the transportation system and its funding:

* huge population growth

* tremendous inflation costs that add hundreds of millions of dollars to delayed construction projects

* stagnant revenue

* more people traveling more miles

So there’s a huge population growth — who all have cars. And there’s a giant “impact fee” on every car brought into the state. And most of the new residents will be working, right? If so, they’ll be paying taxes. And more people paying more taxes = stagnant revenue. At least according to “government experts.”

Oh, and there will be “more people traveling more miles.” And there is a state tax that has to be paid on ALL gasoline purchased in the state. So unless these people are running their cars on vegetable oil (for which the state will arrest you) or air, they’re paying MORE in taxes. And yet using the “government expert” math, this means LESS money, somehow. No, I don’t think government bureaucrats could add one and one to get two. Thank you, government public school system.

Joines suggested ending annual transfers of hundreds of millions of dollars from the state’s Highway Trust Fund to the General Fund. The 2007-2008 budget transferred $172 million.

Obviously Mr. Joines doesn’t know how the Democrats in the legislature work. They have transferred over three BILLION dollars over the past 20 years from the gas taxes to their pockets the general fund. They are addicted to that money and will not give it up. Besides, as long as they can claim that they “need” more money for roads, they can justify (at least to themselves) raising taxes even more.

But don’t worry — they’re working on state toll roads — because Democrats in the North Carolina legislature are so bad at managing your money, they just need more of it! And hey, if that’s STILL not enough money, they’ll just take more via county taxes. That way they can claim they didn’t raise taxes, too.

I wish there were some sense of fiscal responsibility in Raleigh. But when one party runs the state government for over 100 years, they literally do whatever they want, no matter what.

Popularity: 19% [?]

Democrat Positions

Democrat Positions

And remember — to Democrats, “rich” means anyone working for more than minimum wage.

Popularity: 17% [?]

From Toilet to Tap

I know, yuck. Sure, that’s quite a natural reaction to any plan to recycle, well, sewage. I know Raven just about threw up. But I’ll tell you, it’s not that bad. I think the only reason this really hasn’t been done before it that simple reason: it sounds nasty. But it really isn’t.

What do you think happens to your sewage, anyway? Where do you think it goes? Do you think it just magically disappears once it gets flushed? It goes through the pipes (unless you have a septic system in your yard — you’ll know by the green spots) and to a wastewater treatment plant. And know what they do with it after they take all the nasty stuff out? They dump it in a river or the ocean! In Florida, they just pump it 3 miles offshore and dump it in the ocean. It’s fine.

Think about it — many people have wells and septic tanks. What you think is going on there? Yup, the sewage is treated, then released back into the ground, where the people pick it up with their well! Other than the “ick” factor, there’s absolutely no reason to NOT recycle this waste. Yes, provisions have to be made (and are, in both situations) for the solid waste, but that’s all. And in this case, they’re not even considering actually using the wastewater (after it’s cleaned) — they just want to pump it back into the ground where it will get naturally filtered and head back into the aquifer.

I’m not sure spending $481 million of government money is needed, but the concept is there and we’ve been doing it for a long time. And if you really don’t like it, just keep buying that bottled water stuff!

Popularity: 15% [?]

Memorial Blogburst

Mary Bomar’s fraudulent investigation

In April 2006, Park Service Director Mary Bomar ordered an internal investigation into claims that the planned Flight 93 Memorial is actually a terrorist memorial mosque, built abound a giant Mecca-oriented crescent. Bomar’s investigation was a total fraud, concluding, for instance, that it isn’t possible to calculate the orientation of the crescent because the site-plan has not been geo-referenced. (Page 2, PP2 of September 2006 summary report. Page 1 here.)

In fact, the original Crescent of Embrace site-plan was drawn on a topo map that the Memorial Project provided to all participants in the design competition. A topo map is the epitome of a geo-referenced map. North marked on a topo map is true north, which is the only piece of information needed to calculate the orientation of the crescent. Just connect the tips of the crescent, form the perpendicular bisector, and calculate how many degrees it points from north (53.4).

Also known are the crash-site coordinates, which is all that is needed to calculate the direction to Mecca (55.2° clockwise from north). All of this is trivially easy to verify. Just use the Mecca-direction calculator at Islam.com to get a graphic of the direction to Mecca from the crash site and place it over the crescent site plan:

Giant crescent pointst to Mecca

Somerset PA is ten miles from the crash-site. The “qibla” is the direction to Mecca. Red lines show the orientation of the crescent. The crescent points 1.8° north of Mecca. (Click for larger image.)

A request for oversight

Because it is the director’s office that has been covering up the Mecca-orientation of the crescent, oversight can only come from Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne himself. Several people sent letters to Secretary Kempthorne two weeks ago, showing how the giant Mecca-oriented crescent remains completely intact in the so called redesign. But Mr. Kempthorne also needs to know that he is getting bad information from his subordinates in the Park Service. Thus a request for all readers of this post: if you have a minute, please copy and paste this entire post into an email for Secretary Kempthorne.

We don’t need for the secretary to understand all the terrorist memorializing features in the design, or the numerous proofs of intent that architect Paul Murdoch included so that his accomplishment will be undeniable once it is a fait accompli. It is enough that he be concerned about features that can be readily interpreted as terrorist memorializing, whether they are intended or not. As Congressman Tancredo put it: we need “a new design that will not make the memorial a flashpoint for this kind of controversy and criticism.”

But even getting to the most basic facts about what is in the present design requires getting past Mary Bomar’s fraudulent report, which tries to pretend that there is nothing that can even be interpreted as untoward.

Mary Bomar’s intellectually dishonest “experts”

In addition to claiming that topo maps are not geo referenced, Mary Bomar’s internal investigation cites a small number of academic experts, all of whom spout nothing but the most absurd non sequiturs. One is Dr. Daniel Griffith, professor of “geo-spatial information” at the University of Texas. About Alec Rawls’ analysis of the Mecca orientation of the giant crescent, Dr. Griffith writes:

… Mr. Rawls’s arithmetic calculations appear to be correct … [but] … just because calculations are correct does not make the resulting numbers meaningful.

Dr. Griffith’s point, it seems, is that the mere fact of Mecca orientation does not imply intent. Who said it did? The way Murdoch proves intent is by repeating his Mecca orientations (scroll down to the last section here). But intent is not the only thing that matters. Even without terrorist memorializing intent, it is inappropriate to plant a giant Mecca oriented crescent on the crash site.

The Memorial Project knows this, but it is committed to defending the crescent design, so it keeps using its doubts about intent as an excuse for denying the facts. Dr. Griffith, for instance, is telling every reporter who will listen that there is no such thing as the direction to Mecca. “Anything can point toward Mecca,” he told the Pittsburgh Post Gazette, “because the earth is round.” One billion Muslims face Mecca five times a day to pray, and Griffith pretends there is no such thing as facing Mecca!

Of course he knows better. The first thing that Griffith’s report does is calculate the direction to Mecca:

I computed an azimuth value from the Flight 93 crater site to Mecca of roughly 55.20°.

Bomar expert #2

Dr. Kevin Jaques, specialist in Islamic sharia law from the University of Indiana, acknowledges that the Mecca-oriented crescent is similar to the mihrab around which every mosque is built, but says:

…just because something is ’similar to’ something else does not make it the ’same’.

Yes, well, similar–very, very similar–is exactly the problem.

Like Daniel Griffith, Mr. Jaques is trying to make hay of the fact that Mecca orientation does not by itself imply intent. So what? Intentional or not, it is unacceptable for the central feature of the Flight 93 memorial to be a geometric match for the central feature of a mosque. Jaques is pretending that the questions he raises about intent somehow make the facts irrelevant.

Professor Jaques also dismisses the likeness between the Mecca-oriented crescent and a traditional Islamic mihrab by noting that lots of religious structures have prayer-direction indicators, not just mosques:

The biggest hole in [Rawls'] argument is that all of the elements he points to are common architectural features that one would find in a church or synagogue. The mihrab originated in pre-Islamic buildings and can be found in temples, churches, and synagogues around the Mediterranean.

This is logic? Because Christian churches are often oriented to the east, that somehow makes it okay to build the Flight 93 memorial around a half-mile wide Mecca oriented crescent? If this is “the biggest hole in [Rawls'] argument,” then there are no holes in Rawls’ argument.

Project spokesmen know the truth, and are lying about it

Memorial Project spokesmen have followed the lead of these academic frauds, using doubts about intent as a pretext for denying the facts. Asked about Rawls’ Mecca orientation claim, Patrick White, vice president of Families of Flight 93, denied it:

Rawls’ claims are untrue and “preposterous,” according to Patrick White, Families of Flight 93 vice president. “We went through in detail all his original claims and came away with nothing.”

In fact, Patrick White is fully aware of the Mecca orientation of the giant crescent. At the Memorial Project’s public meeting in July he argued that the almost-exact Mecca orientation of the giant crescent cannot be intended as a tribute to Islam because the inexactness of it would be “disrespectful to Islam.”

Joanne Hanley has done the same:

“Alec Rawls bases all of his conclusions on faulty assumptions,” said Joanne Hanley, the superintendent of the Flight 93 National Memorial. “In addition, the facts are twisted and people are misquoted, all to serve his intended purpose.”

But she too has admitted the Mecca-orientation of the giant crescent, telling Mr. Rawls in a 2006 conference call that she wasn’t concerned about the almost-exact Mecca orientation of the crescent because: “It isn’t exact. That’s one we talked about. It has to be exact.” (Crescent of Betrayal, download 3, page 145.)

These are your subordinates Mr. Kempthorne. Please do not let them get away with this fraud. Congressman Tancredo is demanding answers from Director Bomar and many of us are hoping that you will do the same. There is not much time. Construction on Paul Murdoch’s terrorist memorial mosque is about to begin.

Popularity: 15% [?]

A Port in the Mountains

Yes, brought to you by the Democrats in the North Carolina General Assembly. They are actually spending taxpayer money (a LOT of money) to study whether they should build a port in the mountains of Western North Carolina. For those who aren’t aware of the geography of western North Carolina, let’s start at the west side of the state. Here is the French Broad River Drainage Basin:
French Broad River Basin
See all those exits to the Atlantic Ocean? Oh, and this river flows into the TVA Dam, so that might block a little river traffic…

How about a little further east? Here is the New River Drainage Basin:
New River Drainage Basin
Note all the different ways one can navigate a ship to the Atlantic Ocean. Yes, there are none. But hey, maybe a port could move things from one spot on the river to another…since it’s such a big river and all…

Maybe that’s not the one they’re talking about. How about we move a little more east. The next one over is the Santee Drainage Basin. And at this point, it’s not so much “Western” Carolina, as it is considered the piedmont area:
Santee Drainage Basin
Well, at least this one goes to the Atlantic — but did you notice how it got there? Yes, that’s lovely South Carolina down there. Do you think for a minute that South Carolina is going to allow unfettered access to a “port” on those rivers? And again, there’s more than a few damns there that might make navigation a little difficult. So why are these people spending over $350,000 of taxpayer cash to study building a “port” in the North Carolina mountains?

An area in northern Virginia surrounding an inland port in Front Royal, the first of its kind, has added more than 7,000 jobs since its creation in the 1980s, said Hercik, a commission adviser.

Well, there you have it: the primary purpose of government in America today: create jobs. No, the jobs don’t have to have any meaning, they’re just there to create jobs. You see, if the Democrats can create 7,000 jobs in a backwoods area of North Carolina, they’ll get more votes and more power. And it won’t matter to anyone that they’re building a port on a river that no ships can get to. Welcome to American government bureaucracy today.

Popularity: 14% [?]

How Tough is Edwards?

I know Teach will like this one:

Edwards is Tough

Popularity: 15% [?]

New City Journal

City Journal’s Autumn Edition is up and online, ready for your reading pleasure. What is City Journal?

City Journal is the nation’s premier urban-policy magazine, “the Bible of the new urbanism,” as London’s Daily Telegraph puts it. During the Giuliani Administration, the magazine served as an idea factory as the then-mayor revivified New York City, quickly becoming, in the words of the New York Post, “the place where Rudy gets his ideas.” The Public Interest goes further, calling City Journal “the magazine that saved the city.”

Go take a peek, if you dare.

Popularity: 14% [?]

Child Welfare Endangerment?

One of the great dangers of allowing government to do anything is that they will change, morph, and re-define anything they like to obtain more power and control. That’s what government desires — power and control. The more they can take, the happier the government bureaucrats are. See, they start with words that have actual meanings: “Child Welfare Endangerment.” That sounds scary, right? There’s no way anyone could be opposed to stopping such a horrible thing, right? Then they just take the next step and re-define “Child Welfare Endangerment” to be anything they don’t like: for example Homeschooling. No, not here in America (not yet), but in Germany.

Now you may not know much about Germany, but you have to realize — they’re even less free than America (if you can imagine). They have issued fines of thousands of dollars for people who DARE to homeschool. They have found cities have failed their duties — by “permitting” homeschoolers to move out of the country. They have deported missionaries that refused to send their children to state schools. And they have locked kids up in psychiatric wards for desiring to be home schooled.

This is all done by the government. Why? Because the government in Germany has decided that they have a vested interest in brainwashing “countering the rise of parallel societies that are based on religion or motivated by different world views and in integrating minorities into the population as a whole.” In other words, you are simply not permitted to have any views in opposition to the state. Does that sound familiar? 1936, Hamburg State Court:

Custody rights shall be terminated for parents who, as fanatical Bible students, cannot rear their children in accordance with today’s State and because this endangers the mental wellbeing of the children, who are thereby prevented from participating in the national community.

And you can be sure that the left in America is watching this battle carefully — they’d love nothing more than to get every last one of those home schooled children in America back into the government schools where they could be denied learning anything but what the left wants them to know.

Popularity: 15% [?]

Babies: The New Pollutant

P.T. Barnum said that there’s one born every minute. Perhaps he was thinking of Toni Vernelli when he said that — or at least someone like her. You see, Ms. Vernelli honestly believes that a baby is a pollutant. Yes, the worst thing anyone can do on this planet is to have a baby — because it’s selfish and polluting — so says Ms. Vernelli. And she’s gone so far as to sterilize herself so she won’t “accidentally” pollute.

What would be interesting is to see the world that Ms. Vernelli envisions. In her version of the world, having babies would be outlawed, I imagine. After all, if babies are pollution, I’m sure she’d want everyone to be sterilized. Then everyone can have sex as often as they want without ever getting pregnant. Then in a couple generations, people would just cease to exist. Then there’d be no more pollution on the planet.

Now there’s nothing wrong with not wanting to have children. But to imply a baby is pollution borders on insanity. Then again, one commenter on the news site says:

I really think it’s great - less nuts about to breed and spread their lunacy to children.

Popularity: 21% [?]