Monday, February 28, 2011

There is, of course, no November 31, and no such event

There is, of course, no November 31, and no such event. "Latisha Freeman" is Horowitz-speak for any old

schvartze; I leave it to you to figure out why they named the fictional superpatriot "K. Ike." None of

the groups listed have this event mentioned on their websites, and a Google search produces only

results from the original hoax article. But this failed effort at satire will almost certainly be taken

as fact by Horowitz’s vicious, drooling followers. And the insinuation that Ron Paul, in particular,

has any affiliation with Communist or Neo-Nazi groups is laughably false.

I see Putin is going ahead with his trip to Tehran in spite of rumors that he’s to be assaulted by

suicide bombers or captured. One has to say, however, that if the Russian president is assassinated, he

’ll probably be blamed for plotting his own demise. After all, he’s been blamed for the death of

practically every Russian “dissident” and half-baked journalist, from the nuclear poisoning of

Alexander Litvinenko to the shooting death of Anna Politkovskaya.

Republican presidential candidate and current front-runner, Rudi Giuliani, has named seven more people,

including four prominent neo-conservatives, to his already-neocon-dominated foreign policy team. The

neo-conservatives include Ruth Wedgwood of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies;

terrorism analyst and free-lance writer often published in the Weekly Standard and the National Review

Online, Thomas Joscelyn; and two scholars at the mbt shoesn Enterprise Institute (AEI) and prot?g?s of

Richard Perle “ Michael Rubin and David Frum (with whom Perle wrote the ultra-hawkish An End to Evil

in 2004). Combined with such incumbent team members as Norman Podhoretz, Martin Kramer, NIKE SHOX

Pipes, and Robert Kasten, the team increasingly resembles the cheer-leading squad for the MBT section

of the international Bibi Netanyahu fan club.

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