Favorite poster from NR's "The Corner"

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srlsy these guys.... "WELL MORE PEOPLE WATCHED REAGAN'S SO THERE!!!"

mark cl, Friday, 23 January 2009 20:42 (seventeen years ago)

where's Derbyshire these days? We need him.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Friday, 23 January 2009 20:43 (seventeen years ago)

Obama could get wounded by a crazed Anne Hathaway devotee in a few weeks after his inauguration, say, and they would insist that Reagan's comparable ratings were better.

(I would also believe that Hilary would happily say "I'm in charge here" at that point.)

I assume Derbyshire threw up his hands at figuring out whether to despise those in power or those he found himself hanging out with.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 23 January 2009 20:44 (seventeen years ago)

Crying in a cupboard somewhere. xp

Nicolars (Nicole), Friday, 23 January 2009 20:44 (seventeen years ago)

Given that many voters were born after Reagan's presidency ended, it's "to;dr lol" for the NRO again.

Ned, dare I recommend a "New Right" thread re: Frum and NextRight? I have a feeling a Corner thread on ILE will become as stagnant as NRO will become in the near future.

Ashee Bolanalli (Mackro Mackro), Friday, 23 January 2009 20:48 (seventeen years ago)

re: the March [Kathryn Jean Lopez]

I was struck by how prevalent the themes of "mercy" and "healing" were. In my experience of it (both the march itself and some surrounding events), the crowd was overwhelmingly concerned with saving lives, helping those who are hurting, and hoping that those on the other side of the debate might reconsider. Anger and despair were hard to find. Smiling faces were all around. I can't remember the last time I was wall-to-wall with people for a few hours and did not hear one foul word or see one inappropriate incident among young people (in fact: I even experienced both in the Catacombs in Rome last year!)

This is almost too Teasdale to be real.

Nicolars (Nicole), Friday, 23 January 2009 20:49 (seventeen years ago)

Ned, dare I recommend a "New Right" thread re: Frum and NextRight?

Do it. I'm enjoying a temporary (and possibly extended) break from regularly trawling the usual sites so a tracking thread for the winners would be good.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 23 January 2009 20:51 (seventeen years ago)

i'd like that, too. a la douthat, salam et al, too? i enjoy reading those guys

mark cl, Friday, 23 January 2009 20:51 (seventeen years ago)

what march is she talking about

the gush of yesterday (omar little), Friday, 23 January 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

For a second I thought Lopez was talking about the inauguration and I was all "Strangely generous of her." (Right to life march in DC the other day, omar.)

Ned Raggett, Friday, 23 January 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

lol i thought that too, i was like, "zuh?" i should have known this wackjob was on some roe v wade shit.

the gush of yesterday (omar little), Friday, 23 January 2009 20:54 (seventeen years ago)

"I can't remember the last time I was wall-to-wall with people for a few hours and did not hear one foul word or see one inappropriate incident among young people (in fact: I even experienced both in the Catacombs in Rome last year!)"

What is she talking about with Rome here?

Alex in SF, Friday, 23 January 2009 21:01 (seventeen years ago)

This incident, I think:

http://www.theonion.com/content/node/34198

Ned Raggett, Friday, 23 January 2009 21:02 (seventeen years ago)

My vote for the most grotesque post ever.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 26 January 2009 19:54 (seventeen years ago)

i can set up a household of affection and sexual favors now?

MIRV Griffin (goole), Monday, 26 January 2009 20:04 (seventeen years ago)

best president ever!

MIRV Griffin (goole), Monday, 26 January 2009 20:04 (seventeen years ago)

i can set up a household of affection and sexual favors now?

Only in Nevada, I'm pretty sure?

nabisco, Monday, 26 January 2009 20:05 (seventeen years ago)

Michael Novak must enjoy shouting at that one wall.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 26 January 2009 20:17 (seventeen years ago)

man, nixon style revenge on the populars is always a hit with these guys:

Kristol vs Damon [Mark Steyn]

Big Hollywood is offering to put their money where Matt Damon's mouth is, and sponsor a debate between Mr. Damon, a renowned foreign policy analyst, and Bill Kristol, his bête noire.

Okay. But, after the Iraq round, let's really clean Damon's clock and have Bill sing "Scottie Doesn't Know" from Eurotrip.

01/26 02:38 PM

MIRV Griffin (goole), Monday, 26 January 2009 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

Insight of the Day [Mark Steyn] (...no, Mark, post of the day)

Rebecca Goodwin of Danvers, Mass., writes to The Boston Globe's letters page:

"I WAS running around with typical errands - picking kids up from school, cleaning the house, laundry, paying bills, getting dinner - all the chaotic daily chores of a working mother. In the middle of my self-induced whirlwind, my 6-year-old son handed me a letter he wrote to the president at school: "Dear President Obama, Congratulations! Please make no more wars. I will not litter. Sincerely, Michael Goodwin."

In times such as these, with the economy struggling, people out of work, our healthcare and schools in disarray, and global turmoil, his letter made me stop in my tracks. As I hugged him, glad for this brief moment of peace, I thought, why not? It should be as simple as that. Make no more wars and I promise not to litter. Give everyone a job and I promise to clean my room."

Great! Surrender in Iraq and I promise to recycle. Let the mullahs go nuclear and I promise to carpool when I go to buy fair-trade coffee. Stand idly by while those goofy foreigners slaughter everyone in Sudan and I promise to sign up for an authentic African-style interpetative dance fundraising event commemorating the Rwandan genocide. It really is that simple!

Vichitravirya_XI, Monday, 26 January 2009 20:42 (seventeen years ago)

uh

Barack You Like A Husseincane (HI DERE), Monday, 26 January 2009 20:57 (seventeen years ago)

"We learn, second, that this president’s guiding light in matters of national security is not a realistic assessment of the national interest but personal concern for what kind of figure he is cutting in the international eye."

3 sentences later

"Moreover, it is a mistake to think that people in most other nations love, honor, and respect the secularist preoccupation with abortion."

¯\(º o)/¯

bnw, Monday, 26 January 2009 20:58 (seventeen years ago)

Remind me, is Steyn still arguing that there were no gay people involved with the golden age of the Broadway musical?

Ned Raggett, Monday, 26 January 2009 20:58 (seventeen years ago)

The first week did not have to begin this way. These first steps were unworthy of a great nation and unworthy of a serious leader. These decisions humiliated those who voted for President Obama because they had been assured, and assured others, that the new president would take seriously the culture of life. It is now clear that the new president was willing to allow those who risked their moral reputations to support him to feel in retrospect like liars.

I thought all pro-life people thought Obama wanted to abort living babies????

Mordy, Monday, 26 January 2009 20:59 (seventeen years ago)

unlikely, sky-is-falling worst case scenarios and "stuff white people like" mixed in with received wisdom = a+ corner post

the gush of yesterday (omar little), Monday, 26 January 2009 21:01 (seventeen years ago)

"Stand idly by while those goofy foreigners slaughter everyone in Sudan and I promise to sign up for an authentic African-style interpetative dance fundraising event commemorating the Rwandan genocide."

had to be intentional, right????

bnw, Monday, 26 January 2009 21:01 (seventeen years ago)

i can understand African-style interpretative dances, i think...but how is fair-trade coffee something evil & liberal?

Vichitravirya_XI, Monday, 26 January 2009 21:03 (seventeen years ago)

as if all the 'pro-lifers' or catholics who voted for O were all fanatics like novak who somehow got fooled. no dummy, they thought he'd be a good, if pro-choice president. who has been SuRpRiSeD, exactly, by obama's reversal of bush policy on this?

love when these dudes dramatically pull away the curtain on shit everyone can already see plainly

MIRV Griffin (goole), Monday, 26 January 2009 21:03 (seventeen years ago)

eh that "fair trade" kinda shit is just liberal strawman stuff. if i was a liberal columnist i might start up some strawman campaign about how conservatives only drink coffee made from crystals or specifically seek out coffee made by companies whose workers are paid not with money but with the promise of fewer beatings.

the gush of yesterday (omar little), Monday, 26 January 2009 21:06 (seventeen years ago)

steyn's choice of opponent is kinda hilarious. like, "TAKE THAT you harried mom from Danvers, MA. you can stick your reader's digest sentimentality up your ass! oo, burn!"

fight the power, yeah.

obi don quixote (elmo argonaut), Monday, 26 January 2009 21:07 (seventeen years ago)

i mean these dbags have no actual rational ideas so they bust out the starbucks and "these people actually are interested in other cultures, what useless assholes" argument.

the gush of yesterday (omar little), Monday, 26 January 2009 21:08 (seventeen years ago)

well they must be hard up for arguments because dude is squaring off against a letter 7 year old kid wrote to the prez

obi don quixote (elmo argonaut), Monday, 26 January 2009 21:14 (seventeen years ago)

in related news, mild righty culture blog Culture11 is out of money but goldberg fave, david horowitz style Big Hollywood seems to be going strong... gop votes all-0 against the stimulus... a republican rep tries to put some distance between the gop and rush limbaugh, and a day later is forced to genuflect before the man. i think these ppl are just going to get more and more rancid, and, one day, for some reason, return to power exactly as they always were. i don't think there's any 'reforming' the gop.

don't really know why i'm writing this here.

MIRV Griffin (goole), Thursday, 29 January 2009 15:04 (seventeen years ago)

Fair amount of the tone is insufferable but the anecdotes are good:

It is into this new world order, this Washington version of an existential whorl, that a steadfastly loyal group of Republicans descend this week, skidding into an iced-over landscape and holing up at the Capital Hilton beginning yesterday for a four-day winter meeting of the Republican National Committee. (Not to be missed on the restorative agenda: a "Reboot the RNC" open house.) They've themed the whole get-together "Republican for a Reason," and left it at that.

"Republican for a reason?" says Stephen Scheffler, a committeeman from Iowa, pausing before a banner carrying the slogan. "I don't know what that means."

...

All the Obama love in the air isn't helping their moods, either. Jim Bopp, a committeeman from the Great State of Indiana, grumbled before coming into town that "there's kind of a 'Kumbaya' feeling in the country."

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 29 January 2009 15:07 (seventeen years ago)

(Also not-Corner but hey, it's good for a baseline indicator.)

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 29 January 2009 15:07 (seventeen years ago)

I didn't wanna start a new thread for this, and I could think of a better place to post this. Think of it as a NRO thread/ILM crossover!

http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/dtennapel/2009/01/31/republican-is-the-new-punk/#more-36278

The real gold is in the comments.

Mordy, Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:12 (seventeen years ago)

This is the mainstreaming of the bad boy, complete with rat-pack suit and cigarette in hand. A snappy skin spread over the boring, failed, liberal Democrats of the sixties.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:17 (seventeen years ago)

http://www.variety.com/graphics/photos/variety100/sinatra_kennedy.jpg

Peter "One Dart" Manley (The stickman from the hilarious "xkcd" comics), Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:20 (seventeen years ago)

Maybe we need a Big Hollywood thread. That place is a huge trainwreck.

Mordy, Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:27 (seventeen years ago)

Earthworm Jim was shit btw

McAlmont and I'll Get You Butler (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:28 (seventeen years ago)

?

Mordy, Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:30 (seventeen years ago)

Doug TenNapel is a graphic novelist, video game designer and writer. His
video game creation EARTHWORM JIM enjoys unmerited respect in the world of gaming.

McAlmont and I'll Get You Butler (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 1 February 2009 20:32 (seventeen years ago)

Please No More Super Bowls for NBC [Andy McCarthy]

A game so fantastic it even overcame the coverage by the awful NBC — Al Michaels and John Madden honorably excepted.

People tuning in to football for an escape were treated, as they have been all season, to Keith Olbermann. I used to like Olbermann as an ESPN sportscaster when sports was all he did, but that was a long time ago. Now, just the sight of him turns off a lot of the audience — though I am nut for football, I generally just don't watch, turn off the sound, or switch to something else when he's on, and I know I'm not alone. If I'm stupid enough to watch his nightly rant on MSNBC and succeed in getting myself aggravated, then fine — he's got a right to his views, they have a right to put him on the air for the 15 or so people who evidently watch, and everyone knows what the deal is, so I should just change the channel or not turn on the TV in the first place. But the Super Bowl is a national event and (is supposed to be) a non-political event for a captive audience. Why Olbermann?

But even he was not as blood-boiling as Matt Lauer's cloying interview with President Obama. It would have been mildly annoying, but par for the course, if we had only had to endure Dear Leader's views on football (Matt Lauer's he's-so-cool gape as POTUS wows us with his intimate knowledge of flaws in the BCS system, his breakdown of the Steelers/Cardinals, and Look, mom, he even uses his own Blackberry!). But lapdog Matt, of course, couldn't leave it at that. So minutes before gametime, we were treated to the correspondent's observation that "many people were disappointed" when not a single one of those awful Republicans voted for the "stimulus" bill in the House — remarkably, of the two guys in the room, Obama was the only one who approached fair-and-balanced, telling a seemingly incredulous Lauer that Republicans had "a lot of good ideas" which he hoped to incorporate. (I found myself cheering when NBC had technical trouble and lost the audio feed for stretches of the interview.)

Years ago, before Fox started and NBC finally dove headlong to the Left — to the point that they are more agitprop than news network anymore — NBC did nearly half of all pro-football coverage (the old AFL and, after the two leagues merged, the NFL's American Conference) and they were just terrific — all game no politics. They then dropped football for many years and they haven't been missed because all their best people got snapped up by other networks. They had also dropped baseball, so for the past several years, as they've hyper-politicized, we've only needed to endure their making the Olympics unwatchable every couple of years. But now they've got a slice of the football coverage pie back. Again, the Madden/Michaels duo that calls the game is great, and I guess that's the important thing. As for the rest, though — yuck! Fox may be the conservative news network, and CBS obviously leans Left, but when they do football, they do football. For NBC, it's just part of the permanent campaign.

Pancakes Hussein Obama (Pancakes Hackman), Monday, 2 February 2009 15:44 (seventeen years ago)

So did Andy give up on the 'he wasn't really born here' crusade, then?

Ned Raggett, Monday, 2 February 2009 15:51 (seventeen years ago)

remarkably, of the two guys in the room, Obama was the only one who approached fair-and-balanced, telling a seemingly incredulous Lauer that Republicans had "a lot of good ideas" which he hoped to incorporate.

lol at this, it's like they've never actually seen or heard Obama speak and just know him from the "most liberal liberal who ever liberalled" propaganda

HI DERE, Monday, 2 February 2009 16:05 (seventeen years ago)

I imagine they hop around the room with their hands clapped over their ears, chanting "I can't hear you! I can't hear you!" when he's on tv.

Nicolars (Nicole), Monday, 2 February 2009 16:09 (seventeen years ago)

I also love this backhanded rhetoric where they get to grudgingly praise Obama while still maintaining an appropriate level of frothing outrage

HI DERE, Monday, 2 February 2009 16:10 (seventeen years ago)

Al Michaels and John Madden honorably excepted

^^ all you need to know, really

obi don quixote (elmo argonaut), Monday, 2 February 2009 16:12 (seventeen years ago)

Oh boy:

Obama's Cool Clothes [Michael Ledeen]
He lectured us about "virtue" in his Inaugural Address, and he was quite right to do it. But ever since, he has thrown virtue under the campaign bus—an attorney general who lied under oath, tax cheats at Treasury and HHS, and now (h/t Instapundit), despite all the pious talk about putting an end to torture, he seems to be retaining what is arguably the worst component of our "interrogate the terrorist" programs: rendition.

I well remember the first time I heard about this noxious practice. An intelligence-community official told me, with evident satisfaction, "We're sending these guys to places where they don't have Miranda rights. Or lawyers." I didn't like it then, and I don't like it now. It's a total moral copout: We enable torture while claiming to have abolished it.

This is what appears to be the SOP of the Obama administration—moral lectures, immoral practices. They pose as virtuous citizens and tell us what to do in myriad ways, and then install serial offenders in the highest positions. They pose as human-rights defenders, and then turn over our prisoners to some of the worst human rights offenders.

This is a prescription for moral and political disaster, because either the electorate will figure it out, and deliver a stinging rebuke to Obama and his people (with considerable disruption at a time when we need to seriously address our many problems), or there will be an immoral free-for-all, to the ruin of the common good.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 2 February 2009 16:36 (seventeen years ago)

...sounds more like Morbsy than the Corner, wtf.

i fuck mathematics, Monday, 2 February 2009 16:38 (seventeen years ago)


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