November 26, 2012 - 12:29 am
- Twilight Struggles, Then and Now: A Review of The Party Line, by Bruce Bawer. Walter Duranty meets Pim Fortuyn and Aleister Crowley in the new play by Sheryl Longin and Roger L. Simon, with a foreword by Ron Radosh.
- Announcing THE PARTY LINE, by Roger L Simon. From Moscow to — with a little luck and your help — Broadway.
- Marco Rubio and the Progressive Atheist Orthodoxy, by Paula Bolyard. “How old do you think the Earth is?”
- The Reality of Living as a Gay Man in Egypt, by Robert Wargas. That someone like Gloria Steinem is still considered an appropriate choice to pronounce on human rights is one of the reasons why the Arab Spring Dreams of this book’s title may remain unrealized.
- Aw Shucks, Why Not Let the UN Control the Internet? By Claudia Rosett. Look at the bright side: letter-writing could make a comeback.
- A Closer Look at Hispanic Voting Trends, by Patrick Reddy. From now on, both parties have a new priority.
- 7 Principles That Will Guarantee Constant Misery, by John Hawkins. Being unhappy takes a lot of work!






I understand fully that apparently we must now apparently kowtow to a community–Mexican-American–whose strength has large roots in illegality. I understand fully that this community to date has hardly evinced any ability to give a damn about anyone but themselves. I understand fully that this community has shown no signs of being, in the main, anything but a drain on the United States. I understand fully that members of this community will be warmly welcomed and encouraged by the establishment, whereas me and mine will, at best, get the red-headed stepchild treatment, unloved and unwanted, and more likely will be demonized the second they or I question the right of the Mexican-American community to rule, and that furthermore myself and my progeny will be seen–automatically–as racist mouth-breathing, ill-educated yokels, especially if we are from the South, whereas the progeny of the border-jumper will be saints of the Earth. I understand many in the Left will take great delight in this, and I fully understand that my side does not yet have the strength to materially affect things.
Considering all the above, people better pray it never does.
Let the GOP do as it wishes–the influence of the Mexican-American community on American affairs is by and large the result of illegality and I thus do not acknowledge its legitimacy. I expect nothing but calumy for this, but then, with greater influence of Mexican- Americans, I expect nothing anyway, for myself or the nation.
The Left loves to point out the “original sins” of America. Well, the Mexican-American community has one too, and it will be pointed out just as Western civilization’s is. Why should it not be?