Follow-Up on the Falling-Down

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Two things:

First, a while back I mentioned a journalist in Malta, murdered by corrupt elements in the government (one of them). She was back in the news following yet another politically-motivated hit job.

A popular Bulgarian journalist who had reported on an investigation into alleged corruption involving European Union funds was raped and beaten to death, authorities said.

The semi-nude body of 30-year-old Victoria Marinova was found in a park in the Danube town of Ruse on Saturday. She’d been beaten with such force that she was unrecognizable, according to the Federation of European Journalists.

Marinova is the fourth high-profile journalist to be killed in Europe since the beginning of 2017. Her death follows the alleged slaying of a Washington Post journalist in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

Second, recently I mentioned Robert Redford and the end of an era, an American era. Now, Redford says he doesn’t recognize his own country. Our reasons, I suspect, differ, but we can agree on that. Actually, there’s probably little in common except for acknowledging the era passing.

And, so it did. Terrible shame out of the EU (and upon it).

Two-Thirds of Americans May Not Actually Be So

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Based on a study of “citizen” results on the citizenship test: only a third pass.

Just a third of Americans can pass a multiple choice “U.S. Citizenship Test,” fumbling over such simple questions as the cause of the Cold War or naming just one thing Benjamin Franklin is famous for.

And of Americans 45 and younger, the passing rate is a tiny 19 percent, according to a survey done for the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation.

Worse: The actual test only requires that 60 percent of the answers be correct. In the survey, just 36 percent passed.

Magic dirt, LOL.

Telling, with the poorer than the already horrendous norm scores from the young people, given the late demographic shift. And, as to the norm, given a Constitutional Posterity definition of “citizens, the third statistic may actually be about right.

For reasons all my own, I have devised a beta-version test of what I call “basic” American civic knowledge. It needs work; initial norming indicates that most US law school professors could not pass it. We’ll see how the Posterity performs sooner or later.

2033, anyone?

“C-O-R-R-U-P-T-I-O-N”

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568 pages of it. Here’s your reward for waking up this fine Monday:

DOJ IG (CYA) Report on FBI BS (OMG!!!)

In a nutshell, it says, “blah, blah, need more money, blah.”

Seriously, of interest (to someone) may be the “notes” from page 294:

Screenshot 2018-10-07 at 8.25.26 PM

Thanks, Q.

If that’s too much reading, then, here:

4a5371399b8b8e21a9b81a4a62f8915a74cf446acb56843a9c1269178efa70b3

Thank you, Legs Network.

Carry on.

Is Jordan Peterson Your Favorite ‘Conservative’?

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If so, you may be beyond hope.

I’ve paid exactly .001% attention to Peterson since I first heard of him – my only source has been Vox Day’s warnings that the goofy professor is a nut job, a socialist, and a con artist. I trust Vox. I trust that Peterson is an unstable lefty.

So it was that I wasn’t at all surprised last weekend when my interview subject, Ms. X, named him as her favorite conservative. The fact of little Benny’s presence was a fitting coincidence.

The interview issue was, of course, Brett Kavanaugh. And now we know what Peterson thinks about that. Thanks again, Vox:

Screenshot 2018-10-06 at 3.03.05 PM

I understand the madman is popular. And he’s being pushed by the MSM – as is Shapiro. That, by itself, should tell you everything.

BTW: Early congratulations and welcome to our newest Supreme Court Justice, Mr. Brett Kavanaugh!

It’s the Culture

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Not so much dying as rotting. Thus, the smell and putrid look.

The ever-surprising Camille Paglia addresses one noticeable facet, the mainly female obsession with posting idiocy on Insta and other social spy sites.

One of the greatest photographs ever taken of a Hollywood star was Edward Steichen’s 1924 close-up of Gloria Swanson through a lavishly embroidered black veil. It conveys tremendous power, dignity and enigmatic reserve. If women want respect in society, they must do their part to raise their own value. Stop throwing it away on empty display.

Yeah. Kim K. has those ass-ets. But(t) all the time??? Hmmm. Paglia also roundaboutly admits a few of the faults of her g-g-g-generation. Those faults have infected subsequent generations with predictable results.

The pitiful, moronic state of the socials I partly covered in today’s PNW:

Perrin/YouTube.

The #MeToo mania, helpful to some I’m sure, has also helped fuel the decline. Today, women who do not report alleged crimes to the police, happily report them to SJW shame lists. Defamation is a real thing as some young women are now finding out. The aggrieved boy in the last link, I don’t like his odds. His story is probably true. But few care, as evidenced by the DA’s actions and those of the “school.” Tisk.

Back on the socials, I just today deleted by Gab account. Two years ago I hailed Gab and the free and intelligent alternative to Twitter. It isn’t. The only viable options to the socials might be going social free. You know, like we were only 20 years ago.

But you, you with the cat videos, you stay on FB. Perfectly safe and sane.

Possible wrap for the week.

Darned Good Journalism: ANOTHER Kavanaugh Accuser Tells Her Tale – from TPC

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This is a C.F. Floyd first. Previously I had not contemplated the use of interviews. However, when something like the following comes along, I simply cannot pass on passing the portent along to the eager masses. And, heck, everyone loves a victim, right?
This particular woman chooses to remain anonymous, a condition I will honor. And, rather than drafting an article which, let’s face it, might be at odds with my column of two weeks ago, I decided to merely provide the transcript of my weekend encounter with “Miss. X.” Please read the whole thing and then draw your own conclusions.
The following story required me to travel a considerable distance into strange, undisclosed territory. Fans, you’re welcome. MB, expense report inbound.
Advisory: The following, which totally happened, may contain adult language.
——

 

THE WHOLE INTERVIEW AT TPC

Screenshot 2018-10-01 at 11.18.12 AM (1)

Facebook’s ‘Token’ Fools

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If you’re still on Zuckerberg’s spy site, then you only have yourself to blame. You can’t say people didn’t warn you.

And the news gets worse every day. More on the 50 – 90 million account breaches the other week:

Remember the Facebook hack last week that compromised at least 50m accounts? It’s worse than you think.

Last Friday, the social media company revealed a vulnerability that allowed attackers to steal automated log-in credentials (or “tokens”).

The tokens make it easier for people to log into popular apps and services like Spotify, Pinterest or Yelp. The flaw, which has been present since July 2017, was discovered last month after Facebook engineers noticed unusual login activity.

While the scope of that attack is still being discovered, independent researchers say the damage could extend far beyond Facebook’s borders.

Jason Polakis, an assistant professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Chicago, recently co-authored a paper on vulnerabilities in Single Sign-On (SSO) systems, similar to the one used by Facebook.

Polakis says the token breach affects far more than Facebook – it’s a potential backdoor to thousands of third-party apps and websites.

Odds are, you may have a lot of apps to clean up – after you delete the old FB account.

Equal Time at the Atlantic

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Yesterday, Mr. Witte babbled fear to injustice. Today, Emily Yoffe speaks truth to hysteria. Powerful, thoughtful stuff:

We are now in a time of chronic national convulsions, and the latest, over the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court, has resulted in the wrenching public and private testimony of women who have been sexually assaulted and who have never before spoken about it. Of course, this outpouring has a hashtag: #BelieveSurvivors. Women who tell their stories should have the support, and belief, of loved ones, friends, and a therapeutic community.

But when a woman, in telling her story, makes an allegation against a specific man, a different set of obligations kick in.

Even as we must treat accusers with seriousness and dignity, we must hear out the accused fairly and respectfully, and recognize the potential lifetime consequences that such an allegation can bring. If believing the woman is the beginning and the end of a search for the truth, then we have left the realm of justice for religion.

Due process, who’dathunkit?

Failing the “Reasonable Man” Standard

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Big shilling over at The Atlantic courtesy of Benjamin Wittes. Please read THIS ARTICLE. It’s an article I never imagined myself reading, that I never wanted to read, that I wish I could unread. But I did so here’s the analysis.

This is an article I never imagined myself writing, that I never wanted to write, that I wish I could not write.

[Read Caitlin Flanagan on Christine Blasey Ford: “I believe her.”][See a trend here???]

I am also keenly aware that rejecting Kavanaugh on the record currently before the Senate will set a dangerous precedent. The allegations against him remain unproven. They arose publicly late in the process and, by their nature, are not amenable to decisive factual rebuttal. It is a real possibility that Kavanaugh is telling the truth and that he has had his life turned upside down over a falsehood. Even assuming that Christine Blasey Ford’s allegations are entirely accurate, rejecting him on the current record could incentivize not merely other sexual-assault victims to come forward—which would be a salutary thing—but also other late-stage allegations of a non-falsifiable nature by people who are not acting in good faith. We are on a dangerous road, and the judicial confirmation wars are going to get a lot worse for our traveling down it.

Despite all of that, if I were a senator, I would vote against Kavanaugh’s confirmation. I would do it both because of Ford’s testimony and because of Kavanaugh’s. For reasons I will describe, I find her account more believable than his. I would also do it because whatever the truth of what happened in the summer of 1982, Thursday’s hearing left Kavanaugh nonviable as a justice.

A few days before the hearing, I detailed on this site the advice I would give to Kavanaugh if he asked me. He should, I argued, withdraw from consideration for elevation unless able to defend himself to a high degree of factual certainty without attacking Ford. He should remain a nominee, I argued, only if his defense would be sufficiently convincing that it would meet what we might term the “no asterisks” standard—that is, that it would plausibly convince even people who vociferously disagree with his jurisprudential views that he could serve credibly as a justice. His defense needed to make it possible for a reasonable pro-choice woman to find it a legitimate and acceptable prospect, if not an attractive or appealing one, that he might sit on a case reconsidering Roe v. Wade.

No, it does not get any better. There’s a real possibility the claim is false, asserted with no evidence whatsoever. Yet, of course, Brett should (must) refrain from attacking his attacker. (NO SELF DEFENSE ALLOWED!) Blah, blah, blah, she’s still more believable than him…

“His defense needed to make it possible for a reasonable pro-choice woman to find it a legitimate and acceptable prospect…” What. The. Actual. Hell? Wittes isn’t a moron, or so I think. I could be wrong. It’s more likely that he’s working his game extra hard while assuming the people are stupid. Many wouldn’t disappoint him.

When defending yourself against baseless allegations, made at the most opportune time, by a shameless and obvious liar, one in league with your sworn enemies, kindly structure your defense in such a manner as to coddle a nonexistent other sworn enemy. Got that?

When I read the “reasonable pro-choice woman” thing it stuck in my mind. A few paragraphs later I was still pondering it. I thought to return once I finished but, as luck would have it, Witte (rhymes with sh!t) repeated it. He even added, “reasonable Democrat, or a reasonable liberal of any kind…”

He quoted known traitor James Comey, “If a witness is shown knowingly to have testified falsely about any material matter, you have a right to distrust such witness’ other testimony and you may reject all the testimony of that witness,” regarding Kavanaugh – though the quote much better fits Ford. How many lies have been confirmed from her concocted story now? Is it not safe to believe that nothing she said was safe to believe?

The Senate Dems have conclusively demonstrated there are no reasonable democrats or liberals on Capitol Hill. In fact, reasonable persons are hard to find anywhere in D.C. Reasonable pro-choice women simply do not exist. How reasonable could one be who actively desires to murder her own offspring?

I recently, maybe a week ago, had a conversation with an attorney about the “reasonable man” standard. In legal proceedings (trials, hearings, etc.) many decisions and questions are framed in terms of what a reasonable man, in similar circumstances, would do or would have done. The standard is all but dead; there are nearly no reasonable men left in America. Witte, through his pandering, demonstrates that – strangely but reframing the standard into impossibility.

We know these people by their works, their words in this case. Thankfully these were offered in a slanted publication very few read. Witte ends, “As much as I admire Kavanaugh, my conscience would not permit me to vote for him.” Great. Good. Thankfully, you don’t have that option. Now, take your “conscience” and your incomprehensible snake oil and go.

PS: Perhaps Trump shall mention some of this in his (delayed) cellphone address to the nation? Maybe with mention of arrests starting? We can only hope.

PPS: Judge K. is going to make it. I understand 53-47 is floated as the breakdown, which will mean confirmation. It’s reasonable.

Non Aiuta il Nemico

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An Italian criminal politician found out how serious the new leadership is about preserving civilization.

The mayor of a small town in southern Italy that became a model for immigrant integration was placed under house arrest Tuesday for allegedly aiding illegal immigration, a move that brought a well-spring of support for the mayor.

Salvini has his law. We have 8 U.S.C. § 1324. Time to use it.