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« on: May 04, 2011, 01:37:31 PM » |
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________________________________________ The Patriot Post Chronicle 5-4-2011 From The Federalist Patriot Free Email Subscription ________________________________________
The Foundation
"The cause of America is in a great measure the cause of all mankind." --Thomas Paine
Editorial Exegesis
"The killing of Osama bin Laden1 comes at a propitious moment in the history of the Middle East. ... Starting in Tunisia and spreading to Egypt, Syria and elsewhere, demonstrators have been energized by opposition to corruption and repression and a keen desire for jobs. Justice, modernity and democracy are very much earthly demands. As such, these movements contradict the aims of bin Laden and al Qaeda, whose goals are harsh and immovable regimes and a notion of freedom wholly at odds with these emerging Islamic societies. ... Yet al Qaeda's decline doesn't mean Muslim countries will embrace a recognizable form of liberal democracy or resist the pull of politicized Islam. Egypt offers an unsettling preview of what could emerge. Less than three months after the fall of the Mubarak regime, the caretaker government in Cairo has surprised with its radical shifts in foreign policy. Egypt has extended its hand to Iran and to the Palestinian terror group Hamas. ... A budding Arab democracy that wants the world to take it seriously should have little time for Hamas, much less the world's leading terror sponsor in Tehran. Hamas showed its true, if predictable, colors yesterday in its leader Ismail Haniyeh's response to bin Laden's killing: 'We condemn the assassination and the killing of an Arab holy warrior.' The Muslim Brotherhood, the best organized political group in Egypt, also condemned the bin Laden killing. ... The death of bin Laden disrupts but doesn't bring the death of bin Ladenism. Al Qaeda has a thriving franchise in Yemen and could gain other bases in the region -- for example, if Libya collapses into Somalia-like disarray. While bin Laden's death at least raises the possibility of the most extremist forms of Islam fading in the region, the early signs out of bellwether Egypt show how much close attention an interested world must still pay to these volatile nations." --The Wall Street Journal2
Upright
"No matter how often our leaders insist the enemy is al Qaeda and its destruction is our goal, the reality is different. We confront a larger array of adversaries who share such terrorists' goals -- the imposition worldwide of a politico-military-legal program they call shariah to be administered by a Caliph -- but pursue them via different, often stealthy means. Such enemies, including the Muslim Brotherhood, operate here as well as abroad. ... Ending the sort of obstruction of justice his department appears to have engaged in with respect to the prosecution of Brotherhood fronts and operatives is a good place to start the next phase of the War for the Free World." --founder and president of the Center for Security Policy, Frank Gaffney Jr.
"We are living in strange times indeed when it's not laughable to suggest that President Obama will be difficult to beat in 2012. Well, I'm not buying it, even considering any positive (but inevitably temporary) surge Obama may receive with Osama bin Laden's death. ... Provided Republicans don't forget they're in a fight for the survival of the nation and don't allow their stark policy differences with Obama to be diluted by failing to aggressively articulate their positions, 2012 will be the GOP's presidential election to lose." --columnist David Limbaugh
"The government that tracked bin Laden to a compound in distant Pakistan and took him out with an incredibly talented, trained and brave team of SEALs could surely secure our border, too. The difference is our political leaders took their constitutional duty to protect our country seriously when it came to finding bin Laden over there. They do not take it seriously when it comes to protecting our borders here." --columnist Terence Jeffrey
"So much of this administration's talk about energy sounds similar to a bull session in the faculty lounge, or what we would expect from lifelong bureaucrats and public functionaries who have never experienced long commutes or struggles in the harsher, profit-driven private workplace. Now the global economy is recovering and energy use is climbing, as the U.S. dollar sinks. The oil-rich Middle East is in chaos. And more than 2 billion people in India and China are desperate for imported oil. The result is that American gas prices are astronomical, and the public is furious and starting to demand relief from the administration. Its answer? Simple: Since re-election looms, the administration now insists that high energy prices are no longer good, but suddenly bad. And the evil oil companies are mostly to blame!" --historian Victor Davis Hanson
Insight
"The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him." --English writer G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936)
"It was self-serving politicians who convinced recent generations of Americans that we could all stand in a circle with our hands in each other's pockets and somehow get rich." --American radio broadcaster Paul Harvey (1918-2009)
The Demo-gogues
It's all about me: "Shortly after taking office I directed Leon Panetta, the director of the CIA, to make the killing or capture of [Osama] bin Laden the top priority. ... Last August, after years of painstaking work by our intelligence community, I was briefed on a possible lead to bin Laden. I met repeatedly with my national security team. I determined that we had enough intelligence to take action. Today, at my direction, the United States launched a targeted operation against that compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan." --Barack Obama
It's all about Obama: "This [the killing of Osama] was a direct result of President Obama's efforts to refocus on Afghanistan and Pakistan as a central battleground in our fight against terror. Over the past two and a half years, the Obama administration has significantly escalated our military, diplomatic intelligence and economic efforts to disrupt, dismantle and defeat al-Qa'ida." --Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV)
If Clinton had tried this might be valid: "If Bush had gotten Osama after Clinton had failed do you think [Congressman Eric] Cantor would have given Clinton credit and said: 'Oh good. Bush got Osama bin Laden, he showed the same vigilance as Bill Clinton?'" --Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) criticizing Eric Cantor for "politicizing" the death of Osama by thanking George Bush as well as Obama
Bizarre: "This is a country that was built by immigrants ... that became a superpower because of its immigrant population, and unless we continue to have immigrants, we cannot maintain as a superpower. Take a look at the big, old, industrial cities, Detroit, for example. They've got a great mayor, Mayor [Dave] Bing, but the population has left. You've got to do something about that. And if I were the federal government, assuming you could wave a magic wand and pull everybody together, you pass a law letting immigrants come in as long as they agreed to go to Detroit and live there for five or ten years. Start businesses, take jobs, whatever. ... You would populate Detroit overnight because half the world wants to come here."--New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg
Dezinformatsia
Wipe the drool off your chin: "Leading off tonight, the president who caught bin Laden. The triumph of justice over evil. ... Barack Obama. The cool hand directs the operation step by step. All this time, the crazies were talking birth certificates, he was working. Planning, leading, bringing America's strength and brains to the enemy hideaway. Tonight, we see how it worked from the inside. We see how Obama now looks from the outside. We weigh the impact in this country of what happened yesterday in far off Pakistan. Will this make the Republicans look for someone who can do what Obama can do? Or will they keep on celebrating the clown show? Will they stop enjoying their passion and go from cheering their buffoon parade to finding a real pick to put up against a proven master and commander?" --MSNBC's Chris Matthews
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