Es ist ein’ Ros’ Entsprungen is an early German Christmas carol and Marian hymn performed in a harmony written by Praetorius in 1609 by the Dresdner Kreuzchor.
If…. Then.
J.K. Rowling, Logic, Transgenderism, Winston Churchill
The thing is, @IndiaWilloughby, I really do enjoy cigars, whisky and facing down totalitarians, so by the same arguments that make you a woman, I am indeed Winston Churchill.
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) December 19, 2024
This Guy Nails It
Congress, Congressional Operations, Elon Musk, Federal Budget, The Right Stuff, Transparency and Accountability
Incredibly well said
pic.twitter.com/wQloRXMuUP— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 20, 2024
Buying Books
Books, Umberto Eco, Wretched Excess
Umberto Eco, who owned 50,000 books, had this to say about home libraries:
“It is foolish to think that you have to read all the books you buy, as it is foolish to criticize those who buy more books than they will ever be able to read. It would be like saying that you should use… pic.twitter.com/s9iTNtcLIR
— Reads with Ravi (@readswithravi) December 19, 2024
So Much For Charles Martel’s Bravery
Britain Sinking into the Sea, Charles Martel, Decline and Fall, Der Untergang des Abenlandes, Islam
RIP London. pic.twitter.com/Q5vz1NVzVe
— RadioGenoa (@RadioGenoa) December 19, 2024
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Edward Gibbon on the Victory of Charles Martel at Poitiers, 732 A.D., in his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Chapter 52:
A victorious line of march had been prolonged above a thousand miles from the rock of Gibraltar to the banks of the Loire; the repetition of an equal space would have carried the Saracens to the confines of Poland and the Highlands of Scotland; the Rhine is not more impassable than the Nile or Euphrates, and the Arabian fleet might have sailed without a naval combat into the mouth of the Thames. Perhaps the interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in the schools of Oxford, and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people the sanctity and truth of the revelation of Mahomet.
It wasn’t enough for the treasonous intelligentsia to give away the British Empire, they next proceeded to give away Britain, too.
What do you suppose would Nicholson or Napier say, if you predicted that one fine day, Labour would be in power, the former Conservative Prime Minister would be a Merchant caste Punjabi and the head of the opposition Tory Party would be a female Yoruba?
Kamala Voter Complains
Education Failure, Inadvertent Humor, Left Think
When someone asks you why the Department of Education should be abolished… pic.twitter.com/2wutgzuxrI
— I Meme Therefore I Am (@ImMeme0) December 19, 2024
Nice Gesture
Donald Trump, The Right Stuff
BREAKING NEWS:
Former part-time McDonald's fry cook donates his next 4 years salary ($1.8 million) to support Homeless veterans.
He starts his new job in January. pic.twitter.com/8wNVo5TQxx
— Brigitte Gabriel (@ACTBrigitte) December 17, 2024
HT: Karen L. Myers.
Historical Cycles and the Woke Movement
Environmentalism, Heresies, Historicism, Marc Andreessen, Puritanism, Religion, Woke Insanity
My theory: The US experiences generational waves of a form of secularized puritan Great Awakening, continuing the prior pattern of religious Protestant awakenings. The waves hit every 20-30 years. Four in the last century: actual Communism in the 1920's-30's ("Red Decade"),… https://t.co/fxKYhoAeDh
— Marc Andreessen (@pmarca) December 15, 2024
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I don’t think this pattern is quite so predictable and regular as all that, but I think Marc Andreessen is on to something real.
Religion, in both its better and worse forms, even including the famous heresies, strikes a chord in humanity by embodying universal truths and by satisfying perpetual human emotional needs.
The satisfaction of some of these emotional needs, consolation for mankind’s inevitable death and so on, are healthy and life-giving functions. Others, however, the fire-and-brimstone, penitential, and fanatical satisfactions leading to prohibition of pleasures, intolerance, and even bonfires of art and unbelievers are pathological yet equally regularly present.
The whole Environmental Movement, and especially its Catastrophist Junk Science component, obviously has all the features of the standard dualist heresy.
Splitting the G
Drinking Games, Gen Z, Guinness
Zoe Strimpel laments one more appalling cultural contribution from the worst-ever generation.
If there’s one thing Generation Z can be relied on to do, it’s make things creepy and weird where they were previously straightforward and commonplace. Having weirded out romantic intimacy, they’ve come for Guinness. It has become so popular among Gen Z that pubs this December are experiencing a Guinness shortage. …
[Now] there is “splitting the G,” in which drinkers attempt a single first swig so the remaining liquid ends up intersecting the Guinness logo. It’s a trend that combines a lackluster approach to downing a pint with something that sounds vaguely sexualized. No doubt we’ll soon be told that “splitting the G” is problematic.
Sales of this bog-standard staple have been helped along by the sorts of influences (and influencers) that would have the dyed-in-the-wool pub-goers of old Dublin turning in their graves. Take Kim Kardashian and pop star Olivia Rodrigo, the former very publicly sporting a pint of Guinness while in London last year, and the latter wearing an excruciatingly uncool-cool T-shirt reading “Guinness is good 4U.”
The Guinness obsession is part of a wider fetishization of the mundane. There are now TikTok accounts that teach women how to dress their boyfriends in old-people clothes, the so-called “grandpa core” aesthetic. Young women are also increasingly searching out goodwill store interior fittings, in the hope that a battered old lamp will help them appear quirky. For those not involved, it looks more like an attempt to intellectualize the boring task of filling your home or dressing yourself.
Part of the reason for this is the explosion in university education. Teach millions of young people to analyze their lives, and they’ll start treating everything as though it must be filled with meaning. Each decision is now part of an aesthetic, a conscious choice to be a “Guinness drinker,” which no doubt comes laden with semiotic irony, rather than choosing things because — you know — you like them?
Recycling is Stupidity
Environmentalism, John Stossel, Recycling
Plastic recycling is a “dead-end street."
That quote…unbelievably…is from @Greenpeace.
In my new video, we debunk the recycling religion. pic.twitter.com/loe7F7gS2L
— John Stossel (@JohnStossel) December 12, 2024
HT: Ed Driscoll.
Javier Milei Celebrates One Year in Office
Argentina, Javier Milei, Libertarianism, The Right Stuff
Javier Milei campaigned promising to “take a chainsaw to government regulations” in Argentina.
Kate Andrews, in the London Spectator, profiles Argentine President Javier Milei as he celebrates the completion of a triumphant first year in office,
‘I never wind down,’ says Argentina’s President Javier Milei when we meet in his Presidential Office at the Casa Rosada. ‘I work all day, practically… I get up at 6 a.m., I take a shower and at 7 a.m. I am already at my desk working. And I work all the way until 11 p.m. I enjoy my job. I enjoy cutting public spending. I love the chainsaw.’
It was a photo of Milei with a chainsaw – who was then the insurgent candidate – that propelled him to international fame last year. He waved it on the campaign trail as a symbol of what he would do to government regulations and bureaucracy if elected to the presidency. He had previously gone viral in a video showing him shouting ‘Afuera!’ (‘Out!’) while ripping names of government departments off a whiteboard.
‘That level of joy is too much for me. Removing 44 regulations within a single day is sheer bliss’
These stunts drew attention to his election promise: to wage war on socialism and bring free markets to Argentina. He started at 16 per cent in the polls, but his pledges to curb inflation, abolish price controls, shrink the state and get the country back on a strong fiscal footing won over the majority of Argentinians, who were ready for change. …
This month marks one year since Milei took office, elected with a mandate to overhaul 100 years of socialist rule – and he’s eager to trumpet the results.
‘Let me tell you a fun story. I was in a bilateral meeting with Indian Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi,’ he tells me through his official interpreter. In the meeting at the G20 in Brazil last month, Milei sang the praises of his deregulation minister Federico Sturzenegger, who was also in attendance. Milei told Modi that the minister had cut four regulations in Argentina that very day.
‘Minister Sturzenegger didn’t correct me, because if I had known the actual figure, I would probably have started to celebrate on top of the table. Because he hadn’t removed four regulations, but 44 of them.’
A proud, grateful look spreads across the President’s face. ‘I can assure you that if he had corrected me on the spot, I would have got up and given him a big hug, because that kind of level of joy is too much for me. Removing 44 regulations within a single day is sheer bliss.’
Slashing bureaucracy is his idea of a good time. ‘I derive pleasure from removing the state,’ he says. ‘I feel, that way, we become more free, that I am giving freedom back to the people.’
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How’s Milei doing?
Townhall: Argentina’s Javier Milei Ends Deficit for the First Time In 123 Years
MILEI: ARGENTINA ENDS DEFICIT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 123 YEARS
"The deficit was the root of all our evils—without it, there’s no debt, no emission, no inflation.
Today, we have a sustained fiscal surplus, free of default, for the first time in 123 years.
This historic… https://t.co/uszEgPd493 pic.twitter.com/nt5jJGQM1V
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) December 11, 2024
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Breitbart: Argentina’s Javier Milei Announces 90% Tax Reduction in 2025
President of Argentina Javier Milei announced Wednesday that his administration is preparing a structural tax reform that will eliminate 90 percent of existing taxes in 2025.
Milei announced the plan, alongside other policies he seeks to implement in his second year in office, while marking the end of his first. Among them was a plan to negotiate a trade deal with President-elect Donald Trump’s administration once he takes office in January.
Tuesday marked one year since Milei took office on December 10, 2023, and became Argentina’s first libertarian president, succeeding socialist former President Alberto Fernández. At the time he took office, Argentina faced a severe economic crisis that dramatically worsened as a result of Fernández’s disastrous socialist policies. Milei implemented a series of drastic “shock therapy” measures to avert the collapse of the country’s economy and avoid a hyperinflation spiral.
Milei’s policies successfully reduced the inflation rate in Argentina, dropping it from 25.5 percent in December 2023 to 2.7 percent in October 2024 while also allowing the nation to experience ten months of continued trade surplus as of November.
Additionally, Milei spearheaded a dramatic overhaul of the Argentine government during his first year, reducing the number of ministries from 18 to nine on his first day and outright replacing other institutions — such as Argentina’s bloated AFIP revenue service, which was dissolved and substituted with a much smaller agency in November. The Argentine president also introduced a series of sweeping reforms that Congress passed in late June.
Milei marked his first year in office by delivering a speech in the evening hours of Tuesday in the company of his ministers and members of his administration. He reviewed the results of his policies and announced a series of upcoming measures.
Donald Trump should do so well!
If I were younger, I’d be brushing up my Spanish and packing to move to Argentina.