#324476
NEW YORK (AP) — New York education officials are poised to scrap a test designed to measure the reading and writing skills of people trying to become teachers, in part because an outsized percentage of black and Hispanic…
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#324477
This is the debate made (in)famous by widespread ridicule of its safe space "equipped with equipped with cookies, coloring books, bubbles, Play-Doh, calming ...
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#324478

Double T double E double R...

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

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#324479
(Deborah Tavares) The rest of this lecture is on the Youtube video "Who's Running America and the CAP." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PcruyJTfnCQ I only ma...
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#324480
Basile said the vandalism is likely due to his opposition to the Muslim community center.
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#324481
Obamacare defenders think insurance is just 'sharing,' as if all they need to know they learned in kindergarten and the field of economics didn't exist.
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#324482
The confirmation bias: The reason some people will never accept being wrong.
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#324483
Lets start at the beginning. Human beings are tribal.
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#324484
CONSENSUS IS NOT SCIENCE, whether we're talking about climate or transgender youth. As often as not, it's simply greed and stupidity grossly magnified.
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#324485
People associated with Hillary Clinton's campaign also met with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak, according to Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman. Well, if you look at some people connected with Hillary Clinton during her campaign, you would probably see that [the Russian ambassador] had lots of meetings of that kind, Dmitry Peskov told CNN's Fareed Zakaria in an interview that aired Sunday. Peskov said that none of the meetings between campaigns and Kislyak were about the election. President Trump has faced constant questions about his campaign's communications and connections with Russian officials during and after the election. Trump's national security adviser was forced to resign less than a month on a job for mischaracterizing his conversations with the ambassador. In early March, Attorney General Jeff Sessions admitted he had meetings with Kislyak that he had not disclosed during his confirmation hearing.
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#324486
Famine in South Sudan. When I was growing up in the 1970s, it would have been an unremarkable headline. In those days, we were horribly habituated to images of African kids with matchstick legs and bloated bellies. Now, though, such headlines are startling, and for the best of reasons: Famines are slowly being eradicated. According to the Danish academic Bjorn Lomborg, 1.7 million children died from malnutrition in the first decade of this century. A shocking number, to be sure; but it had fallen by 60 percent since the 1950s, despite the world population more than doubling in that time. As usual, few saw the good news coming. The battle to feed all humanity is over, wrote Paul Ehrlich in 1968. Hundreds of millions are going to starve to death. In fact, when he wrote those words, hunger was already in retreat. New strains of cereals, resistant to parasites and capable of growing at broader latitudes, were transforming food production. Chemical fertilizers enabling vast gains in yield. No less important, countries which had pursued food security as a paramount policy goal began to open up their economies, buying at world prices and so, paradoxically, making their food supplies more secure.
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#324487
Mean Girls Versus Western Civilization Versus Savages ? by Kate Paulk I’m quite sure I’m not the only person who finds the whole spectacle of waving bits that ought to be kept between oneself…
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#324488
House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz and former President Barack Obama may have similar views regarding American spending on health care. Chaffetz caught major flack from the media Tue
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#324490
A majority of online and social media defenders of Obamacare are professionals who are paid to post, according to a digital expert. Sixty percent of all the posts were made from 100 profiles, posting between the hours of 9 and 5 Pacific Time, said Michael Brown. They were paid to post. His shocking analysis was revealed on this weekend's Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson, broadcast on Sinclair stations and streamed live Sunday at 9:30 a.m. Her upcoming show focuses on information wars and Brown was describing what happened when he had a problem with Obamacare and complained online. Brown said that social media is used to manipulate opinion, proven in the last presidential election. Sharyl: What areas of the Internet are used to shape and manipulate opinion?
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#324491
Watch as they get caught in their own hypocrisy!
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#324492
The Democratic Party once produced presidents such as Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy. Major party leaders were fierce opponents of mass immigration because they recognized the negative impact it had on wages. And America’s center-left party presented itself as a friend to American workers, fighting for their interests against corporate bosses. But the Democratic […]
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#324493
Prosecutor Preet Bharara was fired by the attorney general a day after he refused to return a phone call from President Trump, a report alleges. An assistant to the president of the United States c…
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#324494
Attorney General Jeff Sessions requested the resignations of Obama holdovers in the Department of Justice. Predictably, the Dishonest Media went crazy. Liberals said there's something bad behind this. They said Trump must be wanting to stop corruption investigations. They said this is an affront...
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#324495

Word Games

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

Every few years, a word or bit of terminology comes along and captures the political imagination. During the George W. Bush years, the magic word was “neocon.” For years, it was used as a term of abuse by the Left; later, it was adopted as a term of abuse by some elements of the Right. What they had in common is that neither camp had the faintest idea of what the word meant. “Neoconservative” was first brought to popular usage in the American context by left-wing intellectuals (the socialist Michael Harrington most prominent among them) to describe the thinking of a few critics of American progressivism and the American Left — especially Irving Kristol and Daniel Patrick Moynihan — who didn’t smell like conservatives. The classical conservative — the cartoon conservative — was Babbitt, a Midwestern businessman who was Republican, conformist, and, above all, anti-intellectual. Kristol was a Jewish intellectual from New York and a former Trotskyist; Moynihan was a Kennedy confidante, a diplomat, and, eventually, a Democratic senator. The neoconservatives, in essence, were those who began criticizing progressivism from within. Eventually Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz, among others, would embrace the label. There were and are many prominent Jewish neoconservatives, and as the neocons turned their attention more intensely to foreign policy and the Middle East in the post-9/11 era, the word “neocon” acted as a kind of catalyst enabling a political reaction that revived a great many stupid and ugly myths about Jewish bankers orchestrating wars for profit, and so by 2005 or so, “neocon” in the mouth of a man of the Left came to mean “Jew with politics I don’t like.” Google what’s been written about my friend Jonah Goldberg for a taste of that sort of thinking. Before the neocons were the neocons, they were in more fanciful minds “the Illuminati.” For Henry Ford, the neocon was “the international Jew.” (The Stalinists called them “rootless cosmopolitans,” a term recently revived by Donald Trump enthusiasts.) The idea is always the same: that somebody, somewhere, is operating secretly behind the scenes, that there is a covert, monolithic enemy pulling the strings of history in ways that are obscure to the uninitiated. The reality of George W. Bush’s “democracy project” program for the Middle East — to bomb the Arabs until they became Canadians — just wasn’t crazy enough for his critics. There needed to be something more. But it is a complicated family tree. The neocons used to be the Illuminati, but then, so did the new favorite conservative bugbear: the Deep State. On Wednesday, Sean Hannity spent a portion of his radio program raving about the “Deep State” and the “shadow government” that purportedly is maneuvering against President Trump. Hannity went so far as to suggest that the hacking and phishing shenanigans conducted against the DNC weren’t the work of foreign hackers at all but rather might have been (conspiracy theorists love the “Is it possible?” formulation) perpetrated by American intelligence agencies. No, that does not make sense as a conspiracy theory (undermine Hillary Rodham Clinton and help elect Donald Trump so that you can . . . covertly oppose him?), but the Right’s talking heads stopped making sense a long time ago. On Thursday, Rush Limbaugh insisted that the New York Times account of the investigation into possible links between Trump associates and the Russians was based on “Deep State sources.” In case it is not clear enough, Limbaugh published an article headlined: “Barack Obama and His Deep State Operatives Are Attempting to Sabotage the Duly Elected President of the United States.” Wreckers and saboteurs! If only there were some kulaks around to liquidate as a class! “Deep State” is a term that has been around for a while, often being used to describe extralegal political action in authoritarian regimes, especially in Turkey. The “Deep State” became a favorite conspiracy villain of the American Left, who described it as a nexus between the military, militarized law-enforcement agencies, the intelligence community, Wall Street (of course), and a few powerful political and business figures. An invisible enemy is very handy for the Left: It could not possibly be socialism that has reduced Venezuela to its current condition — it must be Goldman Sachs colluding with the CIA. The “Deep State” is sometimes conflated with what the political theorist (and, later in life, outright kook) Sam Francis called the “permanent government,” the bureaucrats and apparatchiks and such who remain in power irrespective of the outcome of any given election. They were a lot less scary back when they were “the civil service.” “Deep State” and “permanent government” of course refer to real things. The federal government really does have employees, and those employees do not change every time the composition of Congress changes, every time there is a presidential election, or every time there is a change in policy. And as we have seen everywhere from the LAPD to the IRS, government agents have interests of their own — political and economic — and will, from time to time, go to extraordinary and even criminal lengths to frustrate the intent of the people’s elected representatives, to flout policy, to undermine real or perceived opponents, etc. That’s what Mrs. Clinton’s e-mail shenanigans were really about: The chief bureaucrat in the State Department had (and, I suppose, has) political ambitions, and she was willing to go to great lengths to avoid ordinary oversight in order to pursue those ambitions. It isn’t the ‘Deep State’ that is making President Donald Trump look like an amateur. It is amateurism. Where the current critics on the right go wrong — where they veer from criticism into conspiracy theory — is in assuming that the aims and ambitions of the various power centers within the federal bureaucracy are identical or aligned, that they represent a monolithic interest group that is both capable of coordinating efforts across the vast federal apparatus and inclined to do so. That creates exactly what the kooks and quacks and demagogues of the world most need: a nice, vague enemy that can be blamed for practically anything. It isn’t the “Deep State” that is making President Donald Trump look like an amateur. It is amateurism. It is not the “Deep State” that prevents, say, serious reform of the financial-services industry. If you want to understand why Wall Street reform seems so difficult, you should begin by considering the fact that Wall Street’s most energetic critics do not understand what Wall Street does and have no interest in taking the time to learn. The most concrete banking-reform measure Bernie Sanders ever proposed before the financial crisis was a cap on ATM fees. You don’t need a “Deep State” to outmaneuver enemies like that. Bernie Sanders couldn’t outmaneuver Mr. Magoo. Watching Barack Obama careering around Syria policy was enough to make one wish there were some highly capable men in black behind the scenes pushing him in the right direction — they could hardly have done worse. Neocons, globalists, the Deep State, the shadow government, the International Jew, the Illuminati — it is nice to have someone to blame, especially if that someone does not exactly exist. (Any errors in this column are the fault of my intern, Skippy.) This is sloppy and stupid, and it is counterproductive, too. Team Trump’s first-down fumble on immigration and congressional Republicans’ apparent surrender on the Affordable Care Act are not the result of arcane and shadowy forces acting against the American interest — they are the result of choices made by identifiable people, and those people have got to go. But that is not going to get done if you spend your days hunting the political equivalent of the Loch Ness Monster. President Trump likes to read the tabloids, but presumably it was not Bat Boy advising him on that first executive order on refugees. The irony is that all this chasing after shadows instead of undertaking the hard and thankless business of governing is one of the things that empower those unaccountable bureaucrats and the time-servers in the alphabet-soup agencies. You think they’re sitting around having debates about how many neocons can dance on the head of a pin? There is an ancient superstition that to name something is to assert power over it. (The members of some ancient tribes kept their real names secret and had secondary names for public use.) But giving the figments of your imagination a name and an involved back-story doesn’t make them real. It just makes you nuts. — Kevin D. Williamson is National Review’s roving correspondent.
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#324497
Conservatives may want to take another look at Sen. Rand Paul's bill before concluding that it is a better alternative.
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#324498
Ever the victim, I see.
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#324499
American colleges and universities are rife with safe-space clinging, ungrateful Social Justice Warriors (students and educators alike) who habitually lament racist and sexist America. One of their chief complaints is that women choose not to enter fields of science and math, which has been used as evidence of our allegedly massive "diversity problem." But now, Southern Illinois University has devised a brilliant plan to help heal this great ill: Take naps and literally dream about diversity! No, seriously. 
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#324500
by Joe Audritt With the Labour party at its weakest in living memory and set to be decimated in the 2020 general election it could really use new leadership. Unfortunately, the only person prepared…
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