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e-cigarettes

Researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health said a flavoring chemical linked to a dangerous respiratory disease was found in more than 75% of flavored electronic cigarettes and refill liquids. Diacetyl is associated with a debilitating respiratory disease called bronchiolitis obliterans (BO), also known as “popcorn lung” because it first appeared in workers who inhaled artificial butter flavor in microwave popcorn processing facilities.

The study, which was published online Wednesday in Environmental Health Perspectives, also found two other potentially harmful compounds in many of the tested flavors, including cotton candy, “Fruit Squirts,” and cupcake.

“Recognition of the hazards associated with inhaling flavoring chemicals started with ‘popcorn lung’ over a decade ago. However, diacetyl and other related flavoring chemicals are used in many other flavors beyond butter-flavored popcorn, including fruit flavors, alcohol flavors, and, we learned in our study, candy-flavored e-cigarettes,” said lead author Joseph Allen, assistant professor of exposure assessment sciences.

According to the research, at least 1 of the 3 chemicals was detected in 47 of the 51 flavors tested. In 39, diacetyl was detected above the laboratory limit of detection, while acetoin and 2,3-pentanedione were detected in 46 and 23 and of the flavors, respectively.

In 2004, The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported multiple cases of popcorn disease in workers in a microwave popcorn plant in Missouri in 2000. It is a serious and irreversible disease in which the tiny air sacs in the lungs become scarred. After investigation by the NIOSH (National Institute of Occupation Safety and Health), it was discovered that a flavoring agent, diacetyl, was used to give the popcorn a buttery taste, and that inhalation of this flavoring likely contributed to the development of the illness.

The disease that results often is associated with cough and shortness of breath, similar to that seen in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This process is irreversible by current therapy.

“Since most of the health concerns about e-cigarettes have focused on nicotine, there is still much we do not know about e-cigarettes. In addition to containing varying levels of the addictive substance nicotine, they also contain other cancer-causing chemicals, such as formaldehyde, and as our study shows, flavoring chemicals that can cause lung damage,” said study co-author David Christiani, Elkan Blout Professor of Environmental Genetics.

Researchers said a flavoring chemical linked to

What should we do about terrorism?

Paris-New-York-Terrorism

New York Police Department patrol in Times Square, left, on December 31, 2014 in New York City. Police forces, right, gear up in Paris after reports of a shooting in the northern suburb of Saint Denis on Nov. 18, 2015. (Photos: Andrew Theodorakis/GettyAP/Francois Mori)

After the attacks on Paris, the French government passed a law that allows anyone suspected of being a security threat to be placed under house arrest and searches to be conducted without warrants.

Reason’s Anthony Fisher reports that this can lead to nasty experiences for anyone who associates with people from the Middle East.

A Halal-Mexican restaurant near Paris “was raided by upwards of forty police armed with rifles and clad in body armor, helmets, and riot shields. After terrifying diners, who were ordered to sit still and not touch their phones, officers proceeded to the basement, where they smashed several doors with battering rams, reportedly in search of a ‘hidden prayer room.'”

The restaurant owner asked them not to break down doors because he would simply unlock them, but he was ordered to “lay on the floor and stay silent.” The raid did not find weapons or anything “linked to terrorist activities.”

France also decided that it now has a right to copy data from anyone government deems of interest. By “anyone,” though, the politicians didn’t mean politicians. They exempted themselves — and journalists, lawyers and diplomats. Insiders protect their own. Of course, this will inspire terrorists to pose as — or become — politicians, journalists, lawyers and diplomats.

France also claims the right to control TV, radio and theater content that might incite violence. France has long had “hate speech” laws that make it a crime to encourage hatred against a specific minority. Actress and animal-rights activist Brigitte Bardot was fined $23,000 for “provoking racial hatred” after she criticized Muslims for being cruel to sheep. Somehow this hasn’t stopped hatred or terrorism in France. More likely, it drives hate underground and chills speech that might eventually resolve differences.

In the U.S., despite Attorney General Loretta Lynch’s ambiguous and poorly timed comments the day after the San Bernardino attack about the need to punish anti-Muslim hate speech, it remains legal to say hateful things so long as you do not incite imminent violence, such as by telling a crowd, “Go kill that guy.” Good.
Politicians’ tendency when people are scared is to keep expanding government. The Department of Homeland Security is now nearly twice the size it was when it was created in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.

Panic can cause bad spending and management decisions even in our private lives, but the problem is far worse in government, where it’s other people’s money being spent. Almost any waste can be justified by calling it necessary for “national security.”

Homeland Security spent billions on grants to tiny local police departments to help them purchase military equipment and vehicles — and put covert listening devices in public places.

The agency also assigns itself tasks that appear to have little or nothing to do with what most people consider “homeland security.”

An elderly man in a theater in Columbus, Ohio, was subjected to a terrifying hour-long interrogation by a DHS official because he wore Google Glass and the theater thought he might be illegally taping the film. They didn’t believe him when he explained that the glasses were prescription glasses.

The man told the Gadgeteer, “a guy comes near my seat, shoves a badge that had some sort of a shield on it, yanks the Google Glass off my face and says, ‘Follow me outside immediately.'” After an hour, they let the man go.

It turns out DHS considers fighting movie piracy to be part of its responsibility. DHS agents also investigate pickpocketing, expose counterfeit NBA merchandise and teach nightclub strippers about sex-traffickers. Meanwhile, the TSA confiscates shampoo and tweezers but fails test after test using dummy bombs smuggled through airport security.

Your tax dollars at work. Yet now, after the latest terror attacks, Republicans and Democrats both claim Homeland Security still needs more money.

Keeping Americans safe from terrorism is an important, basic function of government. But government doesn’t stick to its basic functions.

Terrorists are a real threat. So is government with a blank check.

Keeping Americans safe from terrorism is a

There’s No Epidemic of Anti-Muslim Violence in the U.S.

Obama-Lynch

Attorney General Loretta Lynch, left, speaks at the U.S. Mission in Geneva, while President Barack Obama, right, speaks in the Oval Office in the wake of San Bernardino. (Photos: Getty)

In the wake of the terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., President Barack Obama chastised Americans from the Oval Office and warned against anti-Muslim backlash. Attorney General Loretta Lynch promised radical supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood last week that she would bring legal action against “anti-Muslim rhetoric” that “edges toward violence.”

Lynch was speaking at the 10th Anniversary Dinner of Muslim Advocates, the same group that lobbied the Obama administration to scrub all references to Islam and jihad in training manuals and courses used to train agents in intelligence agencies.

According to the Uniform Crime Reporting Program, which is used by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to collect data about both single-bias and multiple-bias hate crimes, there were and are far more anti-Semitic crimes committed against Jews than anti-Muslim crime. In fact, the latest data from 2014 doesn’t at all reflect growing anti-Muslim sentiment spewing from white America, or any demographic group in the U.S. for that matter.

Of the 1,092 offenses reported as a hate crime motivated by religious bias, 58.2% were anti-Jewish crimes. On the other hand, 16.3% were anti-Islamic (Muslim); 6.1% were anti-Catholic; 4.7 percent were anti-multiple religions, group; 2.6% were anti-Protestant; .2% were anti-Atheism/Agnosticism/etc.; and, 11.0% were anti-other (unspecified) religion.

The data clearly show that the two religious (or anti-religious) groups that the Left champions with the loudest voices–Muslims and Atheists–really don’t have much of a gripe, relatively speaking. In reality, considering the events in Europe, record Islamic immigration and the president’s decision to take in more Middle East refugees, the future and security of American Jews is a far more pressing question. Last week, the Chief Rabbi of Brussels announced that there was no future for Jews in Europe in the wake of mass Muslim migration.

Serious U.S. policy-makers should consider the potential for a similiar anti-Semitic backlash in the homeland, rather than political correctness.

Speaking of a lack of seriousness, Republican frontrunner Donald Trump was catching a tremendous amount of heat on Tuesday after he proposed on Monday to put a ban on Muslim immigration into the United States. According to the statistics, Muslims account for only about 1% of the U.S. population, yet account for about half of terrorist attacks since 9/11. That means Muslims in the United States are about 5,000% more likely to commit terrorist attacks than non-Muslims.

Despite the narrative from the mainstream media

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The weapons used in the San Bernardino attack. (Photo: Courtesy of San Bernardino PD)

In 2012, I shared some important observations from Jeffrey Goldberg, a left-leaning writer for The Atlantic. In his column, he basically admitted his side was wrong about gun control.

Then, in 2013, I wrote about a column by Justin Cronin in the New York Times. He self-identified as a liberal, but explained how real-world events have led him to become a supporter of private gun ownership.

Kudos to both gentlemen for putting accuracy ahead of ideology (just like I applauded the honest liberal who wrote how government programs subsidize dependency).

Well, we can add another person to our list of honest liberals. Jamelle Bouie, chief political correspondent for Slate, just authored a piece that says it is downright silly to fixate on so-called assault weapons and to try to deny people their 2nd-Amendment rights based on the TSA’s no-fly list.

Although well-meaning—supporters genuinely want to keep military-style weapons “off the streets” and guns out of the hands of suspected threats—both measures are wrongheaded.

Here’s some of what he wrote about scary-looking rifles.

 assault weapons—there’s no official definition for the term, which makes identifying them for prohibition difficult, if not impossible—are scary to many Americans, especially with their presence in high-profile shootings like the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut, or the theater killings in Aurora, Colorado. But out of 73 mass killers from 1982 to 2015, just 25 used rifles of any kind, including military-style weapons. Most used revolvers, shotguns, and semi-automatic handguns. Which gets to a related point: We might feel safer if we ban “assault weapons,” but we won’t be safer. Of the 43,000 Americans killed with guns since 2010, just a fraction—3.5 percent—were killed with rifles.

Mr. Bouie points out that almost all murders are with handguns, but – to his credit – he says you can’t try to confiscate those weapons because “A ban would be unconstitutional.”

He then addresses the use of the no-fly list as a means of imposing gun control.

…civil libertarians—and liberals, at least during the Bush administration—think it’s constitutionally dubious. They’re right. …If you’re on these lists, you’re presumed guilty until proven innocent, with no due process and little recourse. The list is conceptually flawed, and using it to deny gun ownership is wrong on its face. Add racial and religious profiling to the mix—the people on the list, including Americans, are disproportionately Arab or from Muslim countires—and you have an anti-gun measure with deep disparate impact.

Bouie isn’t actually a supporter of gun rights, as you can see from some of his concluding thoughts, but he at least recognizes that much of what we’re getting from Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton is empty posturing.

The sooner Democrats abandon ineffectual gun control measures, the sooner they can turn their attention to ideas that would actually limit gun accidents, suicides, and murders. …In all of this, however, gun control supporters should keep one fact in mind: The United States is saturated with guns, and barring confiscation or mandatory buybacks, there’s no way to end mass shootings. …You can read that as futility, but it’s not. It’s a recognition of reality and a plea for perspective.

I wonder if “a recognition of reality” is the first step on the path to being libertarian.

By the way, I can’t resist adding my two cents on the topic of Obama wanting to deny constitutional rights to folks who wind up on a list.

I recognize that there are plenty of people who should not be allowed on planes (and since I have to fly a lot, I have an interest in keeping nutjobs on the ground), but government lists leave a lot to be desired.

Consider, for instance, this tidbit from an article in the Washington Free Beacon.

Rep. Stephen Lynch (D., Mass.) disclosed that a congressional investigation recently found that at least 72 people working at DHS also “were on the terrorist watch list.”

Does this mean the federal government is so brain-dead that it has terrorists on the payroll?

Maybe, but another item from an editorial in the New York Times should make us wonder about the quality of these lists.

A 2007 audit found that more than half of the 71,000 names then on the no-fly list were wrongly included.

And I remember several years ago when – on multiple occasions – I wasn’t allowed back in the country until bureaucrats had taken me into windowless room for interrogation.

I never learned why this happened. Was there another Dan Mitchell with a sketchy pattern of behavior? Did the bureaucrats actually target me for unknown reasons?

More important, what if I had bitched and whined during one of these episodes and some spiteful bureaucrat decided to put me on one of the government’s lists?

And most important of all, can any of us trust that President Obama (or perhaps a President Hillary Clinton) wouldn’t misuse and/or expand these lists to arbitrarily deny constitutional rights?

By the way, Reason exposes some dishonest and hypocritical leftists.

Even though the ACLU opposes the no-fly list—and is suing the federal government for violating the due process rights of several people on it—the civil liberties advocacy group is theoretically okay with depriving people on the list of their gun rights.

But I’m digressing. Today’s topic is supposed to be how some honest liberals acknowledge the silliness of gun control efforts.

P.S. Let’s close with some good news on guns. It’s from a liberal who is reflexively hostile to the 2nd Amendment, but is quasi honest in that she’s willing to discuss polling data she dislikes.

Here’s some of what Catherine Rampell wrote in the Washington Post.

…millennials seem to have neither the desire nor the willpower to pressure our political leaders… Which does not bode well for liberals hoping that the arc of history will eventually bend toward greater gun control. …statements about protecting gun rights generally elicit at least as much support from younger Americans as from older ones. …This is a bit puzzling, given that younger Americans are less Republican in their political leanings than older people are and are also less likely to own a gun — two factors that are usually strong predictors of opposition to gun restrictions. These survey data suggest, then, that younger people might be especially predisposed to oppose gun-control measures, after controlling for these variables. …for the most part, young people reveal themselves to be at least as pro-gun-rights as their elders, if not more so.

I’m a skeptic of polling on this issue, largely because the questions often seem designed to elicit pro-gun control answers.

That being said, it’s good to see young people being more rational. Particularly since – as explained in this video – millennials have been at times hopelessly naive about the downside of bigger government.

[brid video=”21816″ player=”2077″ title=”How Big Government Undermines Your Future”]

P.P.S. If you want good news about public opinion and gun rights, click herehere, and here.

P.P.P.S. The best polls are the ones on election days.

Yet another liberal has decided to be

Donald Trump’s Muslim Moratorium Won’t Hurt Him, or the Republican Party

Donald-Trump-USS-Yorktown

Donald Trump speaks at the USS Yorktown in Mt. Pleasant, S.C., on Dec. 7, 2015. (Photo: Getty)

Since Donald Trump announced in June he was running for president, the conventional “wisdom” from tired pundits and Establishment elites has held the current Republican frontrunner will cost the party the White House in 2016. The argument, so it goes, contends the billionaire real estate mogul’s brash, not-so politically correct tone will alienate minorities and damage the party brand.

While it may seem simple enough to the casual observer and voter, considering the demographic shifts in the American electorate, the aggregate and latest polling data simply do NOT support their argument. The fears they have been trying to project on GOP primary voters in order to place doubt on Trump’s electability appear to be rather unfounded, at least in the short-term.

First, immediately after his announcement at Trump Tower, during which he promised to crack down on illegal immigrants and make Mexico pay for a wall on the southern border, we conclusively showed that Americans agreed with him and couldn’t understand the media backlash. Then, when he released his immigration plan, we showed you point-by-point that a majority of Americans supported the specifics of the plan.

The latest controversy came Monday night when Trump called for a total moratorium on Muslim immigration. With the Establishment in both parties believing it is their best chance yet to put big donors back in the driver seat, everyone from former vice president Dick Cheney to longtime Clinton aide and “proud Muslim” Huma Abedin (who has family ties to the Muslim Brotherhood), condemned Trump for the proposal.

Even his fellow Republican rivals who had previously taken a pass on criticizing him, took to Twitter or the press to trash the frontrunner. But we find again that those condemnations don’t exactly echo where voters stand, and not just Republican voters.

In a Rasmussen Reports survey taken prior to the attack in San Bernardino, Calif., half of all likely voters said they did not want the U.S. to take in any Muslim immigrants from the Middle East, at all. Zero. On the refugee issue–again, prior to California–60% said they did not want the president’s program to relocate “asylum-seekers” from the Middle East to their state.

The latest FOX Poll showed a majority of Republicans, Democrats and independents believed at least one Syrian refugee will come to the U.S. intending to carry out a terror attack, and will succeed.

Contrary to the assertions heard in the media and the Oval Office, Americans–including Trump supporters–are not xenophobic. They have common sense.

According to a new Gallup survey, the number of Americans expressing confidence in the government to protect the nation from future terrorist attacks was at the lowest level ever recorded in the history of this trend question, which began in late 2001. Overall, public concerns about the possibility of future terrorist attacks in the U.S. rose this year by 12 percentage points, up from 39% who expressed “a great deal of concern” in 2014 to 51% in 2015.

Terrorism has become the third-highest on the list of 15 concerns posed in the Gallup poll, placing behind only healthcare and the economy. It was number one in the minds of voters in the latest FOX Poll released just before the San Bernardino terror attack. The same poll found only 33% approved of Obama on the issue, while nearly two-thirds disapproved.

Now, the latest Gallup tracking on party preference shows the Republican Party has steadily made gains relative to the Democratic Party since Trump announced, despite the repeated controversies and doom-and-gloom predictions that never came to fruition. The GOP closed a 7-point deficit during the “Summer of Trump” to a tie at 42%.

What seemed most interesting in the latest survey to someone who has been arguing the party’s brand issue comes from within, is that they’ve modestly lost ground relative to Democrats last month in the wake of the constant Establishment barrage and backlash against Trump. During the same period, The Donald extended his lead over his closest rival in the crowded Republican field to 20 points.

“While some observers may have predicted that the controversial statements and positions of leading GOP candidates such as Trump and Ben Carson could hurt the party’s image, these results show that on the contrary,” said Jeffrey Jones of Gallup. “The Republican Party’s standing relative to the Democratic Party has improved since the spring. Given usual Republican advantages in election turnout, having party preferences closely divided among national adults would be a sign of a potentially strong Republican year.”

Worth noting, a large majority of American voters also agreed with Ben Carson when he said central tenets of Islam are not compatible with the U.S. Constitution, thus they would not vote for a Muslim for president.

That’s not to overplay the GOP’s hand this cycle, as Jones also noted how the 2015 trend shows “party preferences can shift over the course of a year, and one party can gain, or lose, an advantage fairly quickly.” Following the 2014 midterm blowout, voters’ party preference predictably shifted dramatically toward the GOP. That tends to happen after a party has a big year, as was the case following the 1994 Republican Revolution.

But it quickly faded as the party’s base and independent-leaning voters began to turn on party leadership in D.C., as it became crystal clear they were unwilling to keep campaign promises.

Donald Trump had nothing to do with that. Tarnishing the party brand in the aftermath of a historic landslide victory was all Establishment. Karl Rove and Jeb Bush can make all the anecdotal arguments they want and, who knows, perhaps the party gets wiped out in the end. Political events can shift public opinion wildly, so very little surprises me anymore.

However, as of now, the polls simply do not support these arguments. Polls and the campaign trail show Trump is drawing in new voters to the party and energizing crucial elements of the base. If the party comes unglued this fall–or, even before at the convention–I would put my money on the Establishment tearing it apart, not Donald Trump.

Since Donald Trump announced in June he

Obama-San-Bernardino-Guns

President Barack Obama pauses while making a statement on Wednesday’s mass shooting in San Bernandino, Calif., in the Oval Office of the White House, left, while law enforcement, right, searches for a suspect in a mass shooting at a social services center Wednesday in San Bernardino, Calif. (Photo: AP /Evan Vucci/Chris Carlson)

Traumatic national events often lead promoters of various causes to attempt a product tie-in. The terrorist attack in San Bernardino, California, was no exception.

The agendas may be worthy of support, but trying to Scotch-tape them onto only vaguely related circumstances comes off as phony. This is done across the political spectrum, but in the recent tragedy, the left has gotten especially sloppy.

Yes, America needs to ban weapons of war and the sale of all guns to crazy people. But the gun control advocates’ campaign to make the outrage in San Bernardino about the free flow of guns is disingenuous.

Gun control laws do not deter terrorists who can make bombs out of common household chemicals. France has strict gun laws, and look at the weaponry the Paris monsters got their hands on. The Sept. 11 hijackers used box cutters. It’s not that our uncontrolled flow of guns isn’t a serious problem. It’s just that it is not this story.

About admitting the Syrian refugees: Our ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, made a counterproductive argument in favor during an interview with PBS’ “NewsHour.” She noted in reassuring tones that “the vast majority of those who’ve come to the United States — too few from Syria, a number that we’d like to increase, as you know — have been families, very few single, unattached men, unattached to families and so forth.”

Just moments before, on the same program, a report highlighted the unsettling fact that the San Bernardino terrorists, Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, headed a model family unit. They were husband and wife with a brand-new baby. Yet Farook helped mow down the co-workers who had recently thrown him a baby shower.
If the State Department wants to argue that the vast majority of these refugees are desperate people needing sanctuary and that very few harbor radical Islamic beliefs, that would be an honest position (if not an easy sell). But Power did the cause no good by acting as though the public would be too dim to notice that the couple fit the profile of families she was promoting for entrance.

After the massacres in Paris, the French economist Thomas Piketty wrote on Le Monde’s website that economic injustice in the Islamic world had propelled the perpetrators to lash back at the society. Piketty authored “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” a much-discussed book on economic inequality.

Economic inequality is his subject; we get that. But pulling if off the shelf as the stock explanation for these terrorist attacks seems unwise.

Nearly all the poor immigrants streaming into Europe and the United States come from places characterized by stark divides in wealth, but only those from certain cultures are striking out against their new neighbors in lands of opportunity.

Piketty does note, and with accuracy, that Muslim immigrants in France are often subjected to discrimination in hiring. But how would he explain the targeting of San Bernardino, a Californian blend of struggling people from everywhere? And Farook and Malik were economically better off than most Americans.

There are those on the right, meanwhile, for whom sending large numbers of young Americans onto chaotic battlefields — where even allies aren’t always allies — has become a standard response to outrages committed on domestic soil. There are times for that, but President Obama deserves applause for not jumping on the bandwagon in his Sunday address.

What’s clear is there are no easy answers here. Those who want to supply answers are welcome, but they would do everyone a favor, themselves included, by staying on topic.

Froma Harrop chastises the Right and Left

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President Obama speaks during an address to the nation from the Oval Office of the White House on Sunday Dec. 6, 2015. (Photo: Getty Images)

Once again, President Obama emerged from his permanent sabbatical on the war on terror to inform us, in a bizarre address from the Oval Office, that he has things firmly under control and there’s no need for us Americans to be concerned. Excuse me if I’m not comforted.

Obama has made quite clear that he is blind to the threat that radical Islam represents to America and the rest of the civilized world. He obviously believes that Islam produces no more or worse terrorists than any other religion or cult and that it is wrong to focus on the radical strain of Islam because it leads to discrimination against other Muslims — discrimination he seems to see under every rock.

We’ve repeated to the point of cliché that to effectively wage war, one must identify his enemy, and no one can rationally dispute this. But Obama can’t bring himself to identify radical Islam, Islamism or Islamic terrorism as our enemy. His blindness may be from his sentimental childhood attachment to Islam. It may be that his leftist ideology compels him to see conservatives, Republicans and Christians as America’s true enemies. But whatever it is, he is crippling the United States in this war and is making us increasingly vulnerable.

You could tell from Obama’s body language and his hurried tones that his heart was not in his speech. He didn’t want to be there. I suspect his advisers pressured him to make this speech because he had to do something to deceive the American people into believing that he is actually engaged and that we can trust him to lead us in this war. But he convinced no one with that lackluster address, in which he gave empty assurances that we are following a strategy that we all know to be nonexistent.

It’s easy to recognize when Obama is passionate about something, such as when he talks about alleged Christian atrocities against Muslims hundreds of years ago during the Crusades, gun control, health care, income redistribution or global warming. But with the exception of gun control, those issues were not part of his speech, so he was noticeably indifferent and disengaged.

It took him four days to respond formally to the greatest terror attack on our soil since 9/11, and he acted as though he was just now devising a strategy to deal with Islamic terrorism, except that he actually didn’t. He still didn’t identify Islamic terrorism as the enemy. Instead, he was careful to narrowly define our enemy as ISIL, his annoying acronym for the Islamic State group, which most Americans refer to as ISIS.

Obama is so adamant about protecting the image of Islam that he bends over backward to remind us that there is no conclusive evidence that the murderous Islamic couple were acting on behalf of the Islamic State. It is amazing that he thinks that denying this link is somehow reassuring to us. To the contrary, we have more reason to be concerned about threats to our homeland if these two jihadis were radicalized and acting solely on their own, though that appears to be unlikely.

It’s hard not to believe that there is something in the actual religion of Islam that motivates a disturbing number of its adherents to wage war against others inside or outside the religion of Islam who will not submit to their view of it. Obama can talk until he’s blue in the face about how peaceful the religion is, but clearly, many Muslims worldwide don’t subscribe to his view, and this has been the case since the inception of the religion.

This doesn’t mean we should in any way discriminate against Muslims, most of whom, of course, don’t subscribe to the radical version. But it does mean that we can’t turn a blind eye to the radicalized elements of their religion, which are not limited to al-Qaida or the Islamic State. Try Boko Haram, for starters. It also does not mean that every time there’s an Islamic act of terror, our putative commander in chief should rush to the lectern to assure Muslims that we are not at war with them and lecture the rest of us not to mistreat Muslims — which we are not doing. Obama is obviously far more interested in creating this straw man to knock down than in defining and destroying our enemy.

Obama keeps telling us not to give in to fear, but it’s not so much fear of terrorism that is haunting us as it is the realization that our commander in chief is doing nothing to combat the threat. His entire tenure in office has been a saga of a president usurping and abusing authority, yet the one clear constitutional duty he has — to keep America safe and secure — he abdicates with striking disgrace. So no, President Obama, we are not afraid that we are incapable of defeating the enemy; we are mortified that we have a leader who won’t lead and who has created a vacuum in the world and in the United States where our enemy can flourish.

President Obama, you underestimate the American people just as egregiously as you ignore the reality of our enemy. Please don’t insult us anymore with your lies that you have a strategy to defeat an enemy you won’t even acknowledge. No one with half a brain believes you anymore.

[mybooktable book=”the-emmaus-code-finding-jesus-in-the-old-testament” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

Once again, President Obama emerged from his

Obama-Oval-Office-IS-Terror

On Sunday, December 6, at 8:00 pm ET, President Obama addressed the nation from the Oval Office about the his plan to address terrorism.

When the President of the United States asks the television networks to set aside time for him to broadcast a speech from the Oval Office, we can usually expect that he has something new to say. But President Obama’s speech Sunday night was just a rehash of what he has been saying all along, trying to justify policies that have repeatedly turned out disastrously for America and our allies.

This was not a speech about how the Obama administration is going to do anything differently in the future. It was a speech about how Obama’s policies were right all along. Obama is one of those people who are often wrong but never in doubt.

The president struck a familiar chord when he emphasized that we shouldn’t blame all Muslims for the actions of a few. How many people have you heard blaming all Muslims?

Even if 90 percent of all Muslims are fine people, and we admit 10,000 refugees from the Middle East, does that mean that we need not be concerned about adding a thousand potential terrorists — even after we have seen in San Bernardino what just two terrorists can do?

The first responsibility of any government is to protect the people already in the country. Even in this age of an entitlement mentality, no one in a foreign country is entitled to be in America if the American people don’t want them here.

Obama’s talk about how we should not make religious distinctions might make sense if we were talking about handing out entitlements. But we are talking about distinguishing between different populations posing different levels of danger to the American people.

When it comes to matters of life and death, that is no time for the kind of glib, politically correct rhetoric that Barack Obama specializes in.

Obama may think of himself as a citizen of the world, but he was elected President of the United States, not head of a world government, and that does not authorize him to gamble the lives of Americans for the benefit of people in other countries.

The illusion that you can take in large numbers of people from a fundamentally different culture, without jeopardizing your own culture — and everything that depends on it — should have been dispelled by many counterproductive social consequences in Europe, even aside from the fatal dangers of terrorists.

Most refugees in the Middle East can be helped in the Middle East, and many Americans would undoubtedly be willing to financially help Muslim countries like Jordan or Egypt to care for these refugees in societies more compatible with their beliefs and values.

The history of millions of European immigrants who came here in centuries past was fundamentally different from what is happening in our own times.

First of all, those immigrants were stopped at Ellis Island to be checked medically and otherwise, and were allowed to get off that island to go ashore only after they had met whatever legal standards there were. Otherwise, they were sent back where they came from.

More fundamentally, people came here to assimilate into the American society they found, not to become isolated enclaves of aggrieved foreigners, demanding that Americans adjust to their languages, their values and their ways of life.

Like so much that President Obama says, his talk of “stronger screening” of people coming into the United States is sheer fantasy, when even his own intelligence officials and law enforcement officials say that we have no adequate data on which to base a meaningful screening of Syrian refugees.

When Obama spoke of the danger of our being “drawn once more into a long and costly ground war in Iraq or Syria,” that was yet another fantasy, that wars are optional.

When terrorists are at war with us, we cannot simply declare that war to be over, whenever it is politically convenient, as Obama did when he withdrew American troops from Iraq, against the advice of his own generals. That is what led to the rise of ISIS.

Our only real choice is between destroying ISIS over there or waiting for them to come over here and start killing Americans. As in other cases, Obama has made a choice that reflects politics and rhetoric, rather than reality.

The President's speech was just a rehash

Donald Trump Holds Campaign Rally In Dallas

DALLAS, TX – SEPTEMBER 14: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump greets supporters during a campaign rally at the American Airlines Center on September 14, 2015 in Dallas, Texas. More than 20,000 tickets had been distributed for the event. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Donald Trump, the Republican frontrunner for president, called Monday for a complete and total moratorium on Muslim immigration to the United States. In a statement, Trump cited a recent poll from the Center for Security Policy showing “25% of those polled agreed that violence against Americans here in the United States is justified as a part of the global jihad” and 51% of those polled, “agreed that Muslims in America should have the choice of being governed according to Shariah.”

“Without looking at the various polling data, it is obvious to anybody the hatred is beyond comprehension,” Donald Trump said in the statement. “Where this hatred comes from and why we will have to determine. Until we are able to determine and understand this problem and the dangerous threat it poses, our country cannot be the victims of horrendous attacks by people that believe only in Jihad, and have no sense of reason or respect for human life. If I win the election for President, we are going to Make America Great Again.”

Shariah authorizes such atrocities as murder against non-believers who won’t convert, beheadings and more unthinkable acts that pose great harm to Americans, especially women.

Donald Trump, the Republican frontrunner for president,

Lt. Col. Ralph Peters: “This Guy is Such a Total Pussy, It’s Stunning”

[brid video=”21764″ player=”2077″ title=” Lt. Col. Ralph Peters on Obama “This Guy is a Total Pussy It’s Stunning””]

Retired U.S. Army Lt. Colonel Ralph Peters called President Obama a “total pussy” on live television during an interview with Stu Varney on FOX Business Network. Let’s face it, Lt. Col. Peters said what millions and millions of Americans were thinking.

“First of all, he keeps speaking about ‘we can’t give in to our fears. Don’t be afraid,'” Lt. Colonel Peters said mockingly in reaction to his Oval Office address Sunday night. “We’re not afraid! You are. I mean this guy is such a total pussy! It’s stunning.”

In fact, according to PPD’s “War Hawk Index,” the American people are more willing to go to war with U.S. ground troops now more than any other point in President Obama’s presidency. A majority now supports such a move in the latest CNN Poll, which was taken prior to the San Bernardino, Calif., terror attack. Rasmussen Reports Poll and Gallup show a split, while others also show a majority supports ground troops to fight the Islamic State.

Retired U.S. Army Lt. Col. Ralph Peters

People's Pundit Daily
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