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Do Democrats Really Care About The American People?


As I’ve always said, you can’t listen to a Democrats words, you watch their actions. While their words lie, their actions tell the truth.

September 11, 2001

Hard to believe that it's been 23 years.

This message board was an interesting place with tremendous info that was passed on here before it was released via MSM.

Someone here posted pictures they took as they were going down the fire escape in the WTC. The images of the faces of the firemen going up the stairs was haunting. I think they ended up being pretty famous photos.

We all estimated that America would never be the same and that we would never forget.

Have we learned anything from the experience? Or have we forgotten?

NS - 23 years ago

Sometime after 9:00 am on the morning of Tuesday, September 11, I was sitting in my office at George Washington University at the beginning of the day, and as I often do when a Pokes game is coming up, I was on OSTATEILLUSTRATED reading posts, when somebody wrote "they just flew an airplane into the World Trade Center."

Then the Pentagon, that I had just passed on my way in to work. Then sitting here waiting for the all clear and traffic to be permitted to drive past the smoldering wreck of the Pentagon on the way home that afternoon.

I was supposed to leave on Thursday (or Friday? memory gets fogged up) to take up a gig as "expert" for a Smithsonian Institution tour from Prague to Berlin along the Elbe river. Of course we didn't fly on the scheduled day, but since one-half of the tour group was already on the ground in Europe, they didn't cancel it and flew us out as soon as they could. Flying over Manhattan it was still a column of smoke towering into the sky where the physical towers should have been.

On that tour, at every stop, every local person - guide, hotel manager, transfer drivers, food service people, whoever - started out before their "job" by saying how much they wanted to express their horror and sympathy with us, and how they hoped their country would support us. I don't think the US had been that popular since the end of WWII (or since, probably). And I don't think the US had ever been that united.

Of course what happened after happened. And most of that capital was expended, whether necessarily or needlessly, I'm not in a position to judge - leave that to history written by other historians.

But it was a day, and it's worth remembering the bravery, sacrifice, and innocent suffering that was a consequence.

And now, back to regularly scheduled sports programming. But maybe we can still search for ways to find unity besides the Pokes.

We simulated Oklahoma State vs. Tulsa in 'College Football 25.' Who won the Week 3 game?

We simulated Oklahoma State vs. Tulsa in 'College Football 25.' Who won the Week 3 game?​

Portrait of Justin MartinezJustin Martinez
The Oklahoman

The "EA SPORTS College Football 25" video game has taken the nation by storm, and it'll now take a shot at predicting the future.

With No. 14-ranked OSU set to face Tulsa in a real-life road game at 11 a.m. Saturday, we ran 100 simulations of the Week 3 contest on the game to see which team is projected to win.

Here are the results, including average points scored for both teams and Most Valuable Player projections:

Results of Oklahoma State vs. Tulsa simulations on 'College Football 25'​

Out of 100 simulations, OSU won 76 times. The average score was 31-20 in favor of the Cowboys.

A total of 44 games were decided by one possession, and six games went into overtime. Of those overtime games, OSU won four of them.

The highest-scoring combined game was OSU's 52-31 win in Game 76, while the lowest-scoring combined game was Tulsa's 10-3 win in Game 42. Here are some more notable stats for both teams:

Oklahoma State​

  • Average points: 31
  • Average yards per game: 398
  • Biggest win: OSU won by 43 points in Game 85 (50-7)
  • Biggest loss: OSU lost by 21 points in Game 19 (41-20)
  • Highest scoring game: OSU scored 56 points in Game 40 (56-20)
  • Lowest scoring game: OSU only scored three points in Game 90 (21-3)
  • Most Valuable Player: Alan Bowman won MVP 33 times. The redshirt senior quarterback's best performance came in Game 40 when he completed 17 of his 25 passes for 426 yards and five touchdowns during a 56-20 win.
  • Outlier performance: Trent Howland earned his lone MVP selection during a 45-16 win in Game 22. The redshirt junior running back replaced Ollie Gordon II, who got injured on the first drive. Howland recorded 13 carries for 107 yards and three touchdowns.

Tulsa​

  • Average points: 20
  • Average yards per game: 334
  • Biggest win: Tulsa won by 21 points in Game 19 (41-20)
  • Biggest loss: Tulsa lost by 43 points in Game 85 (50-7)
  • Highest scoring game: Tulsa scored 42 points in Game 45 (42-40 in 2OT)
  • Lowest scoring game: Tulsa went scoreless in Game 83 (29-0)
  • Most Valuable Player: Kirk Francis, a former Metro Christian star, won MVP 14 times, including once in a losing effort. The redshirt freshman quarterback's best performance came in Game 37 when he completed 12 of his 21 passes for 295 yards and four touchdowns during a 31-30 win.
  • Outlier performance: Braylin Presley, the younger brother of OSU's Brennan Presley, earned his lone MVP selection during a 10-3 win in Game 42. The junior wide receiver caught five passes for 108 yards and one touchdown.
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The Democrat Party Dilemma

Do what most of its voters want or do what its billionaire Jewish donors demand.


Netanyahu’s Insanity Burrows Deeper

Netanyahu’s Insanity Burrows Deeper

The USA Has Transformed

From the arsenal of democracy into the arsenal of genocide. What has happened to us? What will happen to us? May God have mercy on our national soul.


Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing, and Israel

September 10, 2024

Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing, and Israel​

By Civis Americanus

Israel’s enemies have falsely accused it of genocide and ethnic cleansing, so it is necessary to discuss exactly what these mean. Both are simply large-scale hate crimes, in which the motive consists of a dislike of the subjects’ race, religion, or ethnicity. “Genocide is an internationally recognized crime where acts are committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group.”

A behavior or ideology is not, however, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. Displacement of an entire population may in fact be a reasonable and necessary act of self-preservation. The Sullivan Expedition is a prominent example.

When Are Large-Scale Actions Reasonable and Necessary Self-Defense?

There is no such thing as a justifiable murder, because murder is, by definition, without justification. There is, however, such a thing as justifiable homicide, in which you kill somebody to prevent him from killing you or other innocent people. When church shooter Dylann Roof gunned down black people in a church, he committed a hate crime because his motive was a dislike of black people. Had one of Roof’s intended victims put a bullet through Roof’s head, the motive would have been self-preservation rather than hatred of white people, and thus justifiable.

You may even justifiably kill innocent bystanders, as our Air Force was ordered to do on 9/11, to stop hijackers from using airplanes as weapons. Science fiction stories, which are models for human behavior, are full of examples in which the heroes destroy or seek to destroy entire societies for similar reasons.

  • In the movie version of Robert A. Heinlein’s Starship Troopers, a man who is about to have his brain sucked out by an arachnid space alien tells it with profanity that, some day, somebody like him will come along and “kill you and your whole race.” Wiping out a race would indeed be genocide by definition if the motive were a dislike of “bugs,” as humans call the arachnids. A dislike of creatures that suck out people’s brains and drop asteroids on cities, on the other hand, is reasonable and allows for necessary self-preservation.
  • Heinlein’s The Puppet Masters ends with the line, “Puppet masters! The free men are coming to kill you!” Heinlein’s human protagonists get along quite well with plenty of extraterrestrials, but not with parasites that enslave humans by taking over their nervous systems.
  • In the Andromeda TV series starring Kevin Sorbo, the good guys use a nova bomb to exterminate an alien species known as the Magog. The problem with the latter is their habit of laying eggs in people, with fatal results similar to those in the Alien movies.
In no case did readers or audiences take offense at the prospect of killing off entire races that were threats to humans or peaceful extraterrestrials.

If we return to the real world, the United States deters Russia from using nuclear weapons on our cities by threatening to wipe out Russia’s population. Maybe the folks in the Middle East who keep talking about “annihilating the Jews” need to remember that the Jews in question now probably have nuclear weapons, and if another Holocaust does occur, it won’t be the Jews who go up the chimneys — or, in this case, the mushroom clouds. This is a horrible way to talk, but it is the only language Hamas, Hezb’allah, and Iran’s ayatollahs understand.

Justifiable Population Displacement

Ethnic cleansing is, like genocide, a large-scale hate crime whose motive involves the subjects’ race, religion, ethnicity, or other protected characteristic. The Trail of Tears was ethnic cleansing of Native Americans from their lands so the latter could be taken over by white settlers. On the other hand, the Sullivan Expedition, whose express purpose was to drive certain Native Americans off their lands, was reasonable and necessary self-defense. “The American destruction of the Six Nations’ homelands came as a result of the destructive raids carried out by the Indians and American loyalists [Tories, loyal to Britain] on the frontiers of New York and Pennsylvania in 1778. The raids crippled the American Continental Army by depriving it of food and manpower, and spread terror by destroying frontier settlements and taking prisoners.”

The Natives in question had done to American settlements pretty much what Hamas did to Israel on October 7, 2023, although perhaps not to the extent of Hamas’s atrocities. George Washington decided accordingly that the Natives in question had to go. “The goal of the expedition would be to completely destroy the principal villages and food supplies of the Cayuga and Seneca Indian Nations.”

The Sullivan Expedition was highly successful, and nobody apologizes for it, in contrast to the Trail of Tears. Pennsylvania Route 115 includes a historical marker for Sullivan’s Trail, whose path it follows. Pennsylvania Route 92, which runs from Tunkhannock to Pittston along the Susquehanna River, is also known as Sullivan’s Trail. Sullivan County, N.Y. is named for General John Sullivan, and nobody seems to be trying to “cancel” him. His biographical entry in Wikipedia adds that he probably killed off half the Iroquois population, mainly through privation, and this might have been an even higher percentage than the Trail of Tears. The motive was nonetheless “them or us” rather than animosity toward anybody’s race.

Relocation of Palestinians Is Reasonable and Necessary

Gaza’s genocidal attack on October 7, 2023 was preceded by a long litany of mindless terroristic violence against Israel, including rocket attacks on Israeli cities and treaties and truces broken almost before the ink was dry on them. The Charter of Hamas calls openly for the annihilation of Jews and speaks of a time when rocks will speak and say, “There is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.” Hamas has said it will repeat October 7 over and over. Israel is under no obligation to tolerate a neighboring society of this nature.

Emigration of the Gazans might be achieved peacefully and voluntarily. Israel could, for example, offer Gazans one-way plane tickets to European countries that sympathize with their cause, along with bilingual information about how to obtain welfare benefits from the countries in question. Spain (al-Andalus to the terrorists), Norway, and Ireland, all of which have recognized a Palestinian state, come to mind immediately, along with Turkey, Qatar, and Iran. It might cost Israel several billion dollars for the plane tickets, but it would fix the problem and reduce spending on costly Iron Dome interceptors. The same comes to mind for the inhabitants of Judea and Samaria, where the Palestinian Authority gives stipends to terrorists who murder Jews. Let them go somewhere that is nowhere near Israel or, for that matter, the United States. Then they won’t have to live next to infidels and peaceful Muslims who do not share their depraved ideology, and the infidels and peaceful Muslims won’t need to live next to them.

The bottom line is that the Sullivan Expedition was a reasonable and necessary reaction to terroristic violence. The same standards can and should apply to populations whose majorities support murder, rape, and violent discrimination against Jews, Christians, peaceful Muslims, women, and LGBT people and teach this depraved Dark Age culture to their children, as the Hamas-run and UNRWA-run schools in Gaza have done.
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