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Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   soc.culture.france      More than just arrogance and bland food      5,647 messages   

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   Message 4,482 of 5,647   
   Alistair_Sim to nicolai.vladirmirescu@gmail.com   
   Re: Warning: Not for the politically cor   
   08 Sep 05 01:13:42   
   
   XPost: alt.culture.cyprus, soc.culture.french, soc.culture.netherlands   
   XPost: soc.culture.polish   
   From: nicolai.vladirmirescu@gmail.com   
      
   --   
      
      
   Nicolai   
      
      
   "I am the Whistler, and I know many things, for I walk by night. I   
   know many strange tales, many secrets hidden in the hearts of men and   
   women who have stepped into the shadows. Yes, I know the nameless   
   terrors of which they dare not speak."   
      
      
      
      
   They seek him here   
   They seek him there.   
   Those Frenchies seek him everywhere.   
   Is he in heaven?   
   Or is he in hell? That damned elusive Pimpernel!   
      
      
   "How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the   
   impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?"   
      
      
      
      
   The little things are infinitely more important."   
      
      
      
      
      
   "I am an omnivorous reader with a strangely retentive memory for   
   trifles."   
      
   "Alistair_Sim"  wrote in message   
   news:...   
   >   
   > By Steve Sailer   
   >   
   > It was the Perfect Storm.   
   >   
   > No, not Hurricane Katrina. That could have been much worse. Back in   
   > the 1990s, my friend Rob Brennan wrote an unpublished novel called   
   > Category 5 about a ferocious hurricane that strikes New Orleans at   
   > the worst possible angle. Katrina, in contrast, was a Category 4   
   > hurricane and hit New Orleans only a glancing blow.   
   >   
   > No, the perfect storm was actually the combination of social and   
   > governmental incompetence at local, state, and federal levels-and   
   > unmentionable racial reality.   
   >   
   > Republican Presidents are supposed to provide adult supervision for   
   > crooked Democratic urban machines. But the White House is now   
   > occupied by George W. Bush, a politician so irresponsible, so   
   > uninterested in proficiency and honesty among his minions that late   
   > last year he tried to appoint as Secretary of Homeland Security the   
   > egregious Bernie Kerik.   
   >   
   > Mr. Bush shows no evidence of holding his appointees accountable, so   
   > long as they remain loyal to him personally. Just as he has never   
   > vetoed a bill, he almost never fires anyone for poor performance.   
   >   
   > VDARE.com readers are familiar with the contempt with which Mr. Bush   
   > treats his sworn duties to uphold the laws against illegal   
   > immigration. Now the whole country is starting to catch on to his   
   > disregard for his duties in his pursuit of image over effectiveness.   
   >   
   > His invade-the-world-invite-the-world policies have left America   
   > unprepared for predictable domestic troubles, as Paul Craig Roberts   
   > recently pointed out here.   
   >   
   > The ineptitude displayed by the Louisiana state government is also   
   > unsurprising. The state is unique in having a Latin political   
   > tradition (it uses the Code Napoleon rather than the English common   
   > law, even though Napoleon didn't release his code until the year   
   > after he sold Louisiana to Thomas Jefferson), a culture in which the   
   > Argentinean demagogue Juan Peron would have felt at home.   
   >   
   > The unofficial state motto is "Laissez les bons temps rouler" or   
   > "Let the good times roll." Compare that to New Hampshire's official   
   > motto of "Live free or die," which display a rather different   
   > understanding of freedom. Louisiana's reigning philosophy is freedom   
   > from responsibility.   
   >   
   > It's a general rule that the tastier the indigenous cuisine, the   
   > lousier the government. Its culture has provided America with jazz,   
   > A Street Car Named Desire, and the great American comic novel of the   
   > 20th Century, A Confederacy of Dunces. New Orleans is a nice place   
   > to visit. But you wouldn't want to raise your kids there.   
   >   
   > All this is now common parlance, more or less. What you won't hear,   
   > except from me, is that "Let the good times roll" is an especially   
   > risky message for African-Americans. The plain fact is that they   
   > tend to possess poorer native judgment than members of   
   > better-educated groups. Thus they need stricter moral guidance from   
   > society.   
   >   
   > New Orleans itself is two-thirds black. It has had nothing but black   
   > mayors since 1978. All four of them are from the light-skinned   
   > "creole of color" elite, including the notorious Marc H. Morial, now   
   > head of the National Urban League. The city government is corrupt   
   > and lackadaisical. While the police department has perhaps rebounded   
   > from the depths it reached a decade ago when an officer was   
   > condemned to death for having a mother of three rubbed out by drug   
   > gangstas in his employ, nobody should be surprised that last week   
   > numerous officers ran away, and some even freelanced as looters.   
   >   
   > In a racially diverse democracy like New Orleans, voting for good   
   > government takes a backseat to voting for your tribe's   
   > representatives in the eternal ethnic tussle over slices of the pie.   
   > As the ultra-competent but not terribly democratic founder of the   
   > state of Singapore, Lee Kwan Yew, noted in a recent interview:   
   >   
   > "In multiracial societies, you don't vote in accordance with your   
   > economic interests and social interests, you vote in accordance with   
   > race and religion."   
   >   
   > For instance, after blacks took control of New Orleans, they   
   > required new police recruits to live in the city itself as a way to   
   > exclude white cops. Dean M. Shapiro writes for Court TV's "Crime   
   > Library":   
   >   
   > "The department was being depleted of experienced officers and the   
   > numbers within the ranks were decreasing as crime stats were rising   
   > at an alarming rate. In order to beef up the rapidly dwindling   
   > numbers of NOPD, the department was forced to lower its acceptance   
   > standards. Recruits with criminal records, DWIs, unfavorable   
   > employment records and dishonorable discharges from the Armed Forces   
   > were allowed to enter the Police Academy, whereas they had   
   > previously been excluded. Their records were expunged and, on   
   > completion of their training, they were issued badges, guns and   
   > patrol cars and turned loose on the street. These new officers were   
   > expected to suddenly straighten up and begin enforcing the laws they   
   > had not-so-long-ago been breaking. They were expected to arrest   
   > those suspected of crimes, even if those accused had once been their   
   > street buddies. But this was an unrealistic expectation."   
   >   
   > The state's Southeast Louisiana Hurricane Evacuation and Sheltering   
   > Plan made all the right noises about evacuating residents without   
   > cars by school bus. But state and local authorities apparently   
   > failed to execute, as the famous picture of about 200 New Orleans   
   > school buses neatly lined up in a flooded parking lot shows.   
   >   
   > It also should have been expected that a large fraction of New   
   > Orleans's lower class blacks would not evacuate before a disaster.   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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