YubNub Social YubNub Social
    Advanced Search
  • Login

  • Night mode
  • © 2026 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Jobs Offers
© 2026 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Jobs

Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs ·Youtube Music

YouTube
Nirvana, Guns N Roses, Bon Jovi, Metallica, Queen, ACDC ? Best Classic Rock Songs 70s 80s 90s
Like
Comment
Share
NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
2 yrs

HIDE THE SLAP! Nets STILL Suppressing Dating Violence Claims Against Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff
Favicon 
www.newsbusters.org

HIDE THE SLAP! Nets STILL Suppressing Dating Violence Claims Against Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff

Allegations of dating violence against Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff remain unreported across the major media dial. NONE of the network evening newscasts covered the very serious allegations as reported by The Daily Mail. As reported by Josh Boswell: Vice President Kamala Harris's husband assaulted his ex-girlfriend, three friends have told Dailymail.com. The Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, 59, allegedly struck the woman in the face so hard she spun around, while waiting in a valet line late at night after a May 2012 Cannes Film Festival event in France. One of her friends told DailyMail.com that the woman called him immediately after the incident, sobbing in her cab, and described the alleged assault. As our colleague Curtis Houck noted earlier, NewsNation led the way in significantly covering the Emhoff scandal which, it should be noted, is not his first. As Boswell also pointed out in his reporting, Emhoff admitted to impregnating his nanny, who also served as his daughter’s second grade teacher. There were also these disturbing details with regard to the way the nanny’s pregnancy ended, which many assumed was via an abortion: Emhoff told Jane that the nanny accused him of causing her to have a miscarriage, the friends claimed. According to the friends, Emhoff did not say how he was allegedly responsible for the miscarriage, and he told Jane that the nanny's claims were false. But the Second Gentleman allegedly confessed to Jane that he paid Naylor a settlement of around $80,000, and had the nanny sign a non-disclosure agreement (NDA). How, exactly, does one cause a miscarriage? Why was there the need to tie it all up around an NDA? We don’t know, because we have a Regime Media that is uninterested in doing such things as the most basic journalism, which consists of asking questions. Contrast l’affaire Emhoff with the incessant coverage of every lurid detail pertaining to Donald Trump’s business records trial, especially the salacious portions of the trial. The viewing public over at ABC, NBC, and CBS were force-fed this bilge. Not so with Emhoff. There’s even a denial on the record, which the evening newscasts could have cited as a last word. But no. Per Semafor’s Max Tani: In a statement to Semafor, a spokesperson for Emhoff said “this report is untrue,” and that “any suggestion that he would or has ever hit a woman is false.” In a sane world, we’d have actual journalists interested in performing actual journalism. Instead, we have courtiers and sycophants either scraping for Regime access or trading off of it.  Speaking of which, has Regime propagandist and professional prevaricator Jen Psaki ever circled back on whether (allegedly) slapping your girlfriend, so hard that she spins like a top, is an element of redefined masculinity?  
Like
Comment
Share
The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
2 yrs

Exposing Diddy’s deep ties to the Kardashians
Favicon 
www.theblaze.com

Exposing Diddy’s deep ties to the Kardashians

Abusing a 9-year-old boy. Drugging partygoers with horse tranquilizers.The allegations against Sean "Diddy" Combs grow darker by the hour. While most teens this age are navigating high school, Khloé was already rubbing elbows (and Lord knows what else) with the most disgusting people imaginable. Of course, Diddy didn’t operate in isolation. By all accounts, the bulk-buying baby oil buff's behavior was an open secret, shielded by some of the most influential people in America. Like members of a certain reality TV dynasty, for instance. You see, while the world was busy keeping up with the Kardashians, Hollywood’s most famous family was busy keeping up with the Diddler.Down the K-holeFor years, the Kardashian clan — masterminded by the matriarch, Kris Jenner — has been an integral part of Diddy’s network. As the uncrowned queen of ruthless opportunism, Kris didn’t just attend Diddy’s infamous parties; she strategically placed her entire family at their center. Her longtime boyfriend, Corey Gamble, maintains a conspicuously close relationship with Diddy. Gamble, it’s important to note, played a key role in managing Justin Bieber during his most vulnerable years. He had unprecedented access to the young star as he skyrocketed to global fame. As I’ve previously discussed, there seems to be a particularly troubling history between Diddy and Bieber. If Diddy did in fact abuse the Canadian-born pop star, it’s reasonable to assume that Gamble is fully aware of it. Or worse still, stood by as it happened.Khloé's tragic upbringingKris has five daughters, including Khloé, who was first introduced to Diddy's world at the age of 16. While most teens this age are navigating high school, Khloé was already rubbing elbows (and Lord knows what else) with the most disgusting people imaginable. To be clear, this was a kid catapulted into a world crawling with child predators. And Kris Jenner allowed it to happen. This isn’t just questionable parenting — it’s dereliction of duty. A Faustian bargain of epic proportion, trading her child’s innocence for a chance at empire-building.Interestingly, Khloé has dated both Trey Songz and French Montana, two close pals of Diddy who have been accused of all sorts of awful sexual transgressions. Of course, accusations alone don't prove guilt. Yet with Diddy, it seems, the rotten apples never fall far from the tree.And then there's The Game — not just a close member of Diddy's inner circle but a rapper who Khloé reportedly moved in with at the age of 17. This is the same guy who was later ordered to pay $7 million in a sexual assault lawsuit. What kind of mother hands her teenager over to such a "guardian"? The notion that Khloé might have been groomed by The Game, with Diddy orchestrating things from the shadows, is not at all far-fetched. In this clip, Khloé recalls her time at one of Diddy's notorious parties with an unnerving nonchalance. "I got on a plane at 5:30 a.m. Well, this party ... I think half the people there were butt naked," she says, smirking as if sharing an inside joke. With a sly glint in her eye, she teases her confidant, "You would have loved it." Khloé casually mentions that Justin Bieber was there, along with someone named "Quincy." It’s likely she’s referring to Quincy Brown, Diddy's son.Kanye warned usYou're no doubt familiar with Khloé's sister Kim, who gained fame not through talent or hard work but by exploiting the scandal of a leaked sex tape. She, too, seems to have close ties to Diddy; she also previously dated The Game. More notably, Kim was married to Kanye West, another figure with strong connections to Diddy. Yet, unlike the rest, West is in the anti-Diddy camp. In 2022, West stirred the online pot by claiming that LeBron James "sold his soul" for $100 million and had a sexual relationship with Diddy. West further accused Diddy of being a "fed" and insinuated that powerful elites manipulate influential figures like James within the industry.It sounded wild at the time. It still does. But not quite as wild as it did two years ago ... or two weeks ago. An awful mother Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty ImagesWest has also gone on record expressing his distrust of the aforementioned Corey Gamble, calling him an "industry plant" sent to control the Kardashian family. Whether or not Gamble is a plant is of course up for debate. What’s not up for debate, however, is his girlfriend's role in the whole sordid affair. What kind of mother is Kris, really? By any normal, healthy measure, she falls short — far short. But in the warped world of Hollywood, she’s probably a success story. After all, in this ethical wasteland, the only currency that matters is fame. Kris has proven she’s willing to pay any price for it. Morality, family, even her daughters' well-being — all of it takes a backseat to her relentless pursuit of the spotlight. The kids are simply objects to be traded and passed around.In the end, as Diddy’s empire crumbles, it drags with it those who chose to stand by him, bask in his power, and ignore the horrors staring them in the face. The Kardashians may have built their legacy on glamour, fame, and trash TV, but their connection to the Jeffrey Epstein of rap reveals a much darker reality. Is Kris comparable to Ghislaine Maxwell? Only time will tell, but it's likely the coming revelations will reveal far more about her than she'd like.
Like
Comment
Share
Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
2 yrs

NYT: Could Donald Trump Really Use the DOJ to Jail His Rivals?
Favicon 
twitchy.com

NYT: Could Donald Trump Really Use the DOJ to Jail His Rivals?

NYT: Could Donald Trump Really Use the DOJ to Jail His Rivals?
Like
Comment
Share
History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

Trafficker sentenced to way too little federal prison for looted Syrian mosaic
Favicon 
www.thehistoryblog.com

Trafficker sentenced to way too little federal prison for looted Syrian mosaic

A California man who illegally imported a Roman mosaic looted from Syria has been sentenced to three months in federal prison after being convicted on one count of entry of falsely classified goods. The maximum possible penalty was two years in federal prison. Even that would have been going way too easy on him. The charge is that he lied on customs forms to import an illegally acquired object, which he certainly did, but that doesn’t even begin to describe the filth he was wallowing in when he trafficked this 3rd/4th century floor mosaic. The timing is what struck me as particularly disgusting. In August of 2015, Mohamad Yassin Alcharihi, who is of Syrian origin, smuggled a Syrian mosaic into California during the period when ISIS was actively engaged in the destruction and traffic of Syria’s ancient heritage for profit. Literally the same month that Khaled al-Asaad was tortured and executed, sacrificing his life to save the cultural patrimony of Palmyra, this … person … only saw the slaughter and cultural erasure as an opportunity to make a buck. A quick summary of the charge he was sentenced for: Alcharihi declared to his customs broker that the shipment contained 81 modern vases and ceramic tiles from Turkey worth a total of $2,199. In actual fact, he had paid $12,000 for an ancient mosaic that he had declared to customs was nothing but “ceramic, unglazed tiles” valued at $587. The false classifications occurred months after the United Nations Security Council adopted a resolution condemning the destruction of cultural heritage in Syria, particularly by the terrorist organizations Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and Al-Nusrah Front. The mosaic was placed inside a large metal shipping container holding many vases and two other mosaics. An x-ray image of the container taken by CBP showed that the mosaic was hidden in the front of the container – away from the rear access doors – behind a pile of vases. After passing through customs, the mosaic was shipped via truck to Alcharihi’s home in Palmdale, California. Alcharihi then spent $40,000 to have the mosaic restored so he could resell it for hundreds of thousands of dollars, but before he could arrange the sale, FBI and Homeland Security agents executed a search and seizure warrant on Alcharihi’s home on March 19, 2016. The mosaic was found in his garage and confiscated. (As a mildly entertaining aside, the forfeiture portion of a case is structured as the government versus the object being confiscated, so going through the court motions you get to read things like: “IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that upon the arrest of the defendant One Ancient Mosaic….”) The mosaic is 15 feet long, eight feet tall and weighs one ton. It depicts Herakles liberating the Titan Prometheus who had been chained to a rock on the Caucasus Mountains, condemned by Zeus to have a giant eagle eat his liver all over again every day for the transgression of having stolen fire from Olympus and given it to humanity. In this scene, Hercules is about to shoot his arrow into the eagle, while Zeus and another figure (Hermes?) watch from a cloud. To the left is a woman with child looking backwards as they flee, probably from the eagle. There’s a missing section on the left side between the leg of the woman and the partial eagle. I’m guessing the gap in the tesserae originally a tree, balancing the one on the right, that anchors Prometheus’ chains. I’m not sure who the woman is. My potentially cockamamie theory is it’s Io with her son by Zeus, Epaphus. In the version of the myth recounted by Aeschylus in his tragedy Prometheus Bound, Io encounters the chained Prometheus who foretells her future. In the play, Io is no longer in human form when she meets Prometheus, and her son isn’t born yet. She’s been transformed by vengeful Hera into a heifer and hounded by the goddess’ minions until she reaches Egypt where she is finally restored to her human form and gives birth to Zeus’ son, which is what Prometheus told her would happen. I think the mosaic is compressing different parts of the myth, a compositional technique which people who saw the mosaic back then would have recognized. After his arrest, Alcharihi quickly admitted under questioning that he had indeed falsified the customs information, that the mosaic was ancient, not modern tile, and that he had paid 12 grand for it, not less than $600, and that he had poured another $40,000 into the restoration with the prospect of selling it for much more than that. A government expert who examined the mosaic estimated its market value at $450,000. Even with him readily confessing to the one crime he was ultimately convicted of, four years passed between the seizure of the mosaic and the indictment. Another three years passed between indictment and trial. Finally, a year after that, on August 28, 2024, he was sentenced. The mosaic is still in secure storage in Los Angeles where it will remain until repatriation is arranged. This was going to be a single post, but after reading a number of court documents and being flabbergasted at the many stages of sheer stupidity behind so foul a crime, I’ve decided to split it into two. The full background story and chronology of events deserves its own spotlight. Tune in tomorrow for the sequel: Sometimes, Evil Is Just Really, Really Dumb.
Like
Comment
Share
Science Explorer
Science Explorer
2 yrs

Location of Impulse Control Found in Brain, May Help Parkinson's Patients
Favicon 
www.sciencealert.com

Location of Impulse Control Found in Brain, May Help Parkinson's Patients

This could mean better treatments.
Like
Comment
Share
The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
2 yrs

Musician son adds real trombone sound effects to his mom's daily life and it's hilarious
Favicon 
www.upworthy.com

Musician son adds real trombone sound effects to his mom's daily life and it's hilarious

Peet Montzingo and his mom have the most delightful relationship, as evidenced by their joint videos on Montzingo's social media platforms. And one viral video sums up the sort of fun Montzingo and his unique family engage in.The video is a compilation of clips of Montzingo following his mom around with a trombone, making silly sound effects as she goes about doing chores and normal daily life things. It's simple and silly, which is what makes it so wholesome. People can't get enough of their gentle bantering.Watch:The impromptu Star Wars duel is the best, isn't it?Montzingo has millions of followers on YouTube and TikTok, where he regularly shares videos about life in his family. At 6 foot 1 inch tall, Montzingo stands out—literally—from his parents and siblings.As his mini bio from IMDB reads:"Peet is from Seattle, Washington. He is the only average height member of his family (his mom, dad, brother and sister are little people), which immediately put him in the media spotlight growing up. In February of 2019, he scored a spot as a touring/recording artist in the band 5WEST, touring South Africa, Spain, and Europe. They did their first arena tour as the supporting act for Boyzone autumn of 2019. During the pandemic in 2020, Peet cultivated a massive presence on Tiktok and continues to post his wholesome videos alongside his singing career."Montzingo advocates for little people in a way that is humorous and light-hearted in addition to being educational. For instance, watch him and his mom illustrate how to (and how not to) talk with short people: @peetmontzingo i actually get this question all the time so hope this helps!!! @queenmamadrama #little "I actually get this question all the time so hope this helps!!!" he wrote in the caption of the video demonstrating various cringey ways to talk to a little person before ultimately showing that you should just stand normally. Montzingo addresses lots of questions people have in his videos, including whether or not he's actually adopted. This makeover video with his mom is surefire proof that he's got her genes, as the resemblance at the end is uncanny. @peetmontzingo low key this process was traumatizing? @queenmamadrama What makes Montzingo's videos so popular is the way he and his family use humor to destigmatize dwarfism and normalize the lives of little people. His mom's house is designed for little people living, with short counters, sinks and furniture, and Montizingo laughs at his challenges as a tall person when he visits her. It's what he grew up with, however, and he shows how much he loves his family and the physical differences between them. Montzingo's unique role in his family means he can help bridge gaps as an advocate for little people, and it's great to see him doing so in such a wholesome and entertaining way. This article originally appeared on 12.9.21
Like
Comment
Share
Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

The Nine Inch Nails album Trent Reznor thought has no focus: “I was afraid about what was happening”
Favicon 
faroutmagazine.co.uk

The Nine Inch Nails album Trent Reznor thought has no focus: “I was afraid about what was happening”

Not as linear as he had once thought. The post The Nine Inch Nails album Trent Reznor thought has no focus: “I was afraid about what was happening” first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

Unchecked Immigration Has Transformed America
Favicon 
spectator.org

Unchecked Immigration Has Transformed America

The United States is deep into a season of severe discontent. Our politics are polarized, our Congress is moribund, and our purchasing power has tumbled. A Gallup poll in early 2024 showed that only 20 percent of Americans are satisfied with the “way things are going.” Nearly 70 percent believe the country is on the “wrong track.”  Subscribe to The American Spectator to receive our fall 2024 print magazine, which includes this article and others like it. While innumerable failures of government factor into this public cynicism, evidence suggests that U.S. immigration policy is among its most powerful components. Despite our self-image as a “nation of immigrants” and our public celebration of “diversity,” a growing number of Americans sense that immigration, especially in its most frenzied illegal form of the past three years, is implicated in some of the country’s most vexing problems.  Significantly more Americans name immigration as the most important problem facing the U.S. (28 percent) than any other single issue, including “government.”  This article is taken from The American Spectator’s fall 2024 print magazine. Subscribe to receive the entire magazine. Given President Joe Biden’s widely disparaged policies on the southern border — U.S. Customs and Border Protection numbers show 12.5 million border crossers from 2021 through 2024 — this could hardly be otherwise.  While net totals are difficult to parse, the bottom-line data from the Census Bureau’s monthly Current Population Survey shows that since Biden took office in 2021, the nation’s foreign-born population has grown from 45 million to 51.4 million as of February 2024 — an increase of 6.4 million. This number excludes most of those whom the U.S. Border Patrol calls “gotaways,” the estimated 1.8 million people who were detected making it across our southern border but were not caught. Altogether, roughly 8.2 million newcomers have come into the country and stayed in the past three and a half years, an estimated 3.7 million of whom are here illegally. Today, the foreign-born make up an estimated 15.5 percent of the total population, surpassing the record set in 1890 of 14.8 percent. Though Americans have reason to affirm the familiar immigration platitudes — such as that immigration accelerates economic growth and spurs the production of more and cheaper goods and services — the deleterious effects of recent in-migration have become too obvious to ignore, dividing Americans and shaking our trust in government and in each other. While higher-paid workers continue to enjoy the benefits of cheap immigrant labor — new restaurants, well-coiffed golf courses, bountiful residential landscapes, and affordable nannies — it is now undeniable that the entry into the labor market of millions of low-skilled laborers has dampened the wages of the poorest native-born and established immigrant workers, those who compete against newcomers for jobs. As immigration economist George Borjas puts it, “Competition from immigrants dramatically reduces the wages of the workers whose qualifications most resemble theirs.” In the U.S., immigrant workers have accounted for more than half of the seven million workers added to the labor force over the past 15 years, and many of these workers lack a high school diploma. Thus, the foreign-born account for 19 percent of workers overall, but 32 percent of those in occupations with median earnings below $30,000 per year.  The result has been a sharp decline in overall wages and salaries as a percentage of total national income. The think tank American Compass has shown that the compensation accruing to labor as a percentage of gross domestic product has declined from 63.3 percent in 2000 to 56.7 percent in 2020. According to American Compass, when adjusted for inflation, the average wage of production and nonsupervisory workers was $28 per hour in 2022, the same as it was in 1972, offering fairly definitive proof that when employers face a growing market of low-skilled laborers, there is little incentive to raise wages. Evidence that nonselective mass immigration hurts low-wage workers is so overwhelming that even longtime pro-immigration organizations have begun to concede this fact. The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, for example, reported in May 2024: “Sectors with some of the highest immigrant workforce growth, such as construction and manufacturing, saw the sharpest deceleration in wage growth (specifically, average hourly earnings) from 2021 to 2023.” If the wall of silence surrounding the harm to low-wage workers has begun to crack, it would be a mistake to think the damage ends there. Tech industry salaries, for example, have long been smothered by H-1B and other college-related visa programs, which have pitted young American college graduates against overseas tech workers desperate to work for less.  And economists have long suspected that the endless infusion of cheap labor has discouraged investment and automation in industries such as agriculture, keeping productivity growth — the “mother’s milk” of rising incomes — low.  Less talked about, however, is mass immigration’s substantial contribution to a more universal crisis: affordable housing. Home prices have doubled in the last decade, with much of that growth happening in just the last four years, and homeownership is increasingly out of reach for the average American. In February 2024, the median home price nationally was $400,500, and, according to real estate giant Zillow, the minimum income required to afford that home rose to $106,000, up from $59,000 in 2020. It’s little wonder, then, that a March 2024 Harris poll found that 61 percent of renters who want to own a home agreed that “no matter how hard they work, they’ll never be able to afford a home.”  While numerous factors contribute to the seemingly inexorable rise in housing costs, it is obvious that large numbers of new residents — from anywhere — put upward pressure on prices and rents. Consider the numbers.  The U.S. currently builds around 1.5 million housing units annually, barely enough to meet the demand for the 1.5 million new households formed in a typical year, often when people move out of their families’ homes. Even if residential vacancy rates were unusually high (they are not), the arrival of around 2.5 million newcomers from abroad each year would generate a need for more housing than can reasonably be built. Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist Albert Saiz estimates that an “immigration inflow equal to 1 percent of a city’s population is associated with increases in average rents and housing values of about 1 percent.” This rate of increase, according to Saiz, “suggest[s] an economic impact that is an order of magnitude bigger than that found in labor markets.”  Given the close relationship between homeownership and family formation, the housing crisis is implicated in another troubling crisis: the “birth dearth.” Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that the number of births in 2023 (3.59 million) was lower than in any year since 1979, while the number of children a woman in the U.S. is expected to have in her lifetime has declined to 1.62, the lowest rate ever recorded.  Once again, while there are numerous factors involved in record-low birth rates, recent declines in marriage and childbirth correlate inversely with the financial inability to house large families. At stake in all of this, writes urbanist Joel Kotkin, “is the future of America as an aspirational country,” a nation where if a person works hard, stays out of trouble, and manages to save a little, they and their children will have a stake in national prosperity.  The truth is that since 1965, the year the Immigration and Nationality Act kicked off the enduring wave of 70 million people to the U.S., the country has become starkly more unequal. Numerous data points bear this out, but a chart appearing at the website Statista seems most salient. It makes the point that in 2022, CEOs at the nation’s 350 largest publicly owned companies received 344.4 times the annual average salary of production and nonsupervisory workers in their industry. In 1965, CEOs earned 20.4 times the annual average salary of workers.  In a review of economist George Borjas’s 2016 book We Wanted Workers: Unravelling the Immigration Narrative, author Christopher Caldwell writes, “A big problem with the mass immigration that began in the United States in the 1970s was that it bred inequality.” In fact, the most enduring attribute of non-selective mass immigration, Caldwell concludes, “is not wealth creation. It is not entrepreneurship. It is not diversity. It is redistribution from the poor to the rich.” If recent immigration’s effect on American economic life is less sanguine than we have been led to believe, its adverse effects are not limited to economics. While more difficult to gauge, demographic changes resulting from successive immigrant waves have undoubtedly played a part in the radicalization of American political life that first became apparent in the 2010s with the rise of the Occupy Wall Street and the Black Lives Matter movements.  This shift to the extreme left was recently made most evident in the paroxysm of anti-Israel, antisemitic, and anti-American sentiment on college campuses after the October 7, 2023, attack by Hamas on Israel.  After the attack, U.S. campuses exploded in a virulent mix of the familiar progressive extremism and revolutionary anarchism. However, perhaps for the first time in the U.S., the protests included a generous helping of Islamism and Arab nationalism. Exhortations to “globalize” Palestinian terrorism “from New York to Gaza” and “from the river to the sea” were accompanied by a deluge of 505 antisemitic incidents in the first three months following the attacks.  Americans, 80 percent of whom remain strongly supportive of Israel, were genuinely shocked that so many protesters could support Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist group established in 1988 with a charter calling for the murder of Jews and the establishment of a fundamentalist Islamic society where Israel now stands.  It was also difficult not to notice the large contingent of foreign students involved in and sometimes even leading the protests. Up until that point, the more than one million foreign students enrolled at American universities had rarely come up as a topic of public concern. Neither had the fact that 5.8 million students, as of 2022, were immigrants or children of immigrants. But after October 7, it seemed reasonable to ask what influence the foreign and immigrant students (and faculty) had in the political transformation of American campuses.  Higher education researcher Neetu Arnold of the National Association of Scholars wrote:  [P]rotests are now havens for foreign students, especially those from Arab and Muslim countries, with their own set of nationalist and tribal grievances against Israel and the United States. In some cases, such foreign students appear to lead the protests in their pro-terrorism chants — some of which are in Arabic, or translations of Arabic slogans. It is hard not to conclude that the growth in the percentage of immigrants and their children from 19 percent of the student population in the 1990s to 32 percent now has contributed in some ill-defined way to the evident political extremism.  This is especially so in light of the stunning recent book by George Mason University economist Garrett Jones, The Culture Transplant, which documents mounds of evidence that immigrant groups hang onto substantial parts of their native cultures even after four generations of residing in the U.S. One assumes this non-assimilation includes those groups from the democracy-hating Muslim-majority countries. The marked decline in support for free speech among college students — and the general public — may be another indication that this is so.  The pro-Hamas protests solidified the growing perception that our immigration and student visa policies have failed America. More Americans, for example, now say legal and illegal immigration make the United States “worse off” (38 percent) than say it makes the nation “better off” (28 percent). It also helps explain why a Gallup poll from July 2024 found that 55 percent of American adults would like to see the number of new arrivals decrease. This is the first time since 2005 that a majority of Americans have said this. That the preference of a majority of Americans for a more cautious approach to immigration has not been reflected in policy is a scathing indictment of our political system and its uneven distribution of power and representation.  Those searching for a reason why only one in ten adults “give high ratings to the way democracy is working in the United States or how well it represents the interests of most Americans” need look no further.  Subscribe to The American Spectator to receive our fall 2024 print magazine. The post Unchecked Immigration Has Transformed America appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
Like
Comment
Share
Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

RIP Pete Rose — Few Played the Game Even Remotely Like Him
Favicon 
spectator.org

RIP Pete Rose — Few Played the Game Even Remotely Like Him

Charlie Hustle went to that great clubhouse in the sky Monday. He died unattended in his La Vegas home. No cause of death was given, though it’s known he had cardiac procedures done. He was 83. Pete Rose’s life contained both triumph and tragedy. It was splendid on the baseball field between first pitch and the end of the game, but often a train wreck off of it. Most fans of the Grand Old Game are familiar with Pete’s gaudy list of accomplishments as a player, his awards, his records, his endless highlights. In 23 seasons as a player and player-manager, most of them in his native Cincinnati as a member of the Reds, Pete collected more base hits, 4,256, than any Major League player ever. Before he accomplished this in 1985, Ty Cobb’s previous record of 4,191 was thought to be unreachable. In his prime, Pete was a perennial .300 hitter. He won three batting titles and one MVP award and helped Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine to two world championships. He led both teams with 10 base hits and a .370 batting average. His Reds beat the Boston Red Sox in 1975 in what many consider the greatest World Series of all time. He was a regular starter in the National League’s All-Star lineup. He finished his career with a .303 lifetime batting average. But it wasn’t just the numbers he put up that will imprint Pete’s memory on the minds of baseball fans forever. It was also the way he played the game. He richly deserved the sobriquet “Charlie Hustle,” as he knew only one way to play the game. That was all-out, flank-speed, attack on all fronts, take no prisoners. Had all players approached the game like Pete did, America would suffer productivity losses in spring and summer as most of the population would be watching baseball games. Pete played both football and baseball in high school, and brought the football mentality to the diamond. On base, he was a ballistic missile. He played in an era when baseball, especially around second base and home plate, was still a contact sport. (Kinder, gentler rules lately have eliminated much of this carnage.) Opposing infielders and catchers knew not to get in his way unless they had their affairs in order. Catcher Ray Fosse of the Cleveland Indians famously learned this when Pete knocked him into low earth orbit to score the winning run in the 1970 All-Star game. Pete was criticized for doing this in an All-Star game, which is basically an exhibition game, nowadays not taken seriously at all. But it was a baseball game, and Pete took all baseball games very seriously. He didn’t have a soft pedal. But when the shouting was over and the fans went home, life wasn’t as rosy for Rose. Addiction is a slippery concept, often used loosely. I don’t like to use it at all. But it’s fair to say after putting his body on the line in a ball game, Pete like to put his money down after hours. The man did like to gamble. Had he stayed with the slots and the ponies, all would likely have been well. But when he extended his betting to baseball games, including those involving the Cincinnati Reds he was managing at the time, his sure Baseball Hall of Fame selection was derailed. Then–Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti cast Pete into baseball outer darkness in 1991, suspending him for life. No more jobs in baseball. No Hall of Fame. For the sin of gambling on the game, which has always been verboten, he was made a baseball non-person, which he remained until his death. Pete’s personal life was otherwise messy, with two divorces, and a lost paternity suit. He leaves behind two ex-wives and five children. A man shouldn’t be judged by the comments of his ex-wife, which of course represent only one side of the case. But I recall his first wife Karolyn appearing on a talk show. From memory, two of her comments stick out: “As a human being, Pete was a great ball player.” And, asked about Pete’s intellectual interests, she replied: “The only book I ever saw him read was The Pete Rose Story, and he skipped parts of that.” Funny, but Pete had no chance for on-air rebuttal. For all the post-game missteps, baseball fans would rather focus now on his heroics on the field than on the various ways he ran amok off of it. Giamatti’s decision to ban Rose for life, especially the no Hall-of-Fame part, was controversial with fans. I was fine with banning him from jobs in the game, which fans have to believe is straight on the field. But banning him from the Hall seems as much like punishing the fans as punishing Pete. Pete finally admitted betting on baseball, but insisted he never bet against the Reds when he was managing, which he could have choreographed to his advantage. Out of the game, Pete kept body and soul together very nicely selling autographs and meet-and-greet sessions with his estimable self. It’s reported he made in the neighborhood of a half million dollars yearly doing this. Took a bit of the sting out of not having a plaque in Cooperstown. In fact, he was at a sports show in Tennessee the day before his death. Charlie Hustle. Hustling to the end. RIP. And thanks for the memories. The post RIP Pete Rose — Few Played the Game Even Remotely Like Him appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 9528 out of 56670
  • 9524
  • 9525
  • 9526
  • 9527
  • 9528
  • 9529
  • 9530
  • 9531
  • 9532
  • 9533
  • 9534
  • 9535
  • 9536
  • 9537
  • 9538
  • 9539
  • 9540
  • 9541
  • 9542
  • 9543

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund