Bio

I grew up in the suburbs immortalized in such films as Gentlemen's Agreement, The Ice Storm, and The Stepford Wives, however, I don't recall ever having encountered institutionalized anti-Semitism, wife-swapping, or lifelike robots.  I hold degrees in hard science and finance and currently toil in the financial sector.


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Johnny Dubya's Profile

Johnny Dubya
Name:
Johnny Dubya
Hometown:
Specialton
Joined:
Aug 2, 2010

Recent Comments

Johnny Dubya

This is reminiscent of Michael Moore's post 9/11 lament that the terrorists targeted the wrong areas, because the majority of the people killed were not Republican voters.

Liberals seem to have a sick tendency to make unwarranted and insensitive political conclusions about atrocities and tragedies.

Johnny Dubya

But Rob doesn't have a wimpy voice and/or a speech impediment.

Johnny Dubya

He is undeniably talented, but he is also an imbecile. Wealth and fame at an early age are almost always destructive to the personality, as demonstrated by the kid's narcissism. There are rare exceptions, such as Bieber's friend Taylor Swift, who is intelligent and humble.

Johnny Dubya

I had one teacher that could be described as the best and the worst, at the same time.  Mr. Bates, my 6th grade science teacher in the early 1970s was the worst in the sense that, to an observer from the outside, not a lot of teaching appeared to be going on.  That was not the case.

There were games, such as "Something Is Different", which involved the students closing their eyes while Mr. Bates changed something in the room.  Invariably, the final round entailed him making the most obvious change imaginable:  Clipping a giant clothes pin, dubbed "The Big Deal", on his nose.  But this taught us the importance of observation. 

Then there were the kickball sessions that Mr. Bates periodically held during the second half of our two-period class.  But these taught us the importance of work/play balance. 

Then there was the bullwhip.  Students who were unruly had to bend over while Mr. Bates cracked the whip millimeters from their behinds.  It didn't really teach us anything, but it was hilarious.

This post is quite timely, as I learned today that Mr. Bates passed away several months ago.  My tribute is here.

Johnny Dubya

And here's James Taranto on the subject:[QUOTE]Suppose the IRS's abuses were not ordered or explicitly encouraged by the White House. That would mean, as Commentary's Jonathan Tobin puts it, that the agency "has so thoroughly absorbed the views of its political masters that it doesn't even recognize when it has crossed the line into illegal activity."In other words, if this is the case, the left's hateful and slanderous campaign against its political foes, especially the Tea Party--the demagoguery of Obama, his fellow Democrats and their supporters in the media, led by the New York Times editorial page--was sufficient to prompt the IRS agents to cast aside their professional obligations and embark on a campaign of political abuse whose effect was to ease Obama's re-election.[END QUOTE]

Johnny Dubya

The most transparent administration in history--transparently sleazy.

Johnny Dubya

Thank you, Lord Vader. I just read the WSJ piece. Great job by Kim. I was waiting for someone to call the president out on this.

Johnny Dubya
Jimmy Carter: "Conserve toilet paper: Use both sides!" ยท 2 hours ago

That's one form of conservatism I cannot get behind.

Johnny Dubya

Brutally accurate.

Johnny Dubya

This is an action, rather than a statement, but it's definitely crazy and nuts.  It occurred when I was living in the neighborhood, years ago.  Highly amusing to see liberals targeting other liberals because they were deemed insufficiently liberal.

Addendum: Here is the PDF of the ticket that was placed on SUV windshields.  I had forgotten what really ticked me off about it:  This was merely weeks after 9/11/01, and the "penalty" listed on the "ticket" for a fourth "violation" was "BLOW YOURSELF UP (PLEASE)".  Disgusting.

Edited on May 15, 2013 at 9:00pm
Johnny Dubya

Good lord.

First of all, Doug, it is my fervent hope that your investment of blood, sweat, tears, and capital will result in the financial success of your business.

The story about your HOA illustrates why I will never again subject myself to onerous restrictions on the use of my property.  I had bad experiences in NYC with an apartment and a townhouse. 

With regard to the former, an overzealous co-op board rejected the prospective buyer who had offered me more money, because the arrogant chairman deemed him "financially insecure"--even though this buyer had a higher salary that I did, and had a higher salary than the person who ultimately did buy the apartment from me, at a lower price! 

With regard to the latter, a liberal neighbor ratted me out to the overzealous Landmarks Preservation Commission, which served me notice that the windows installed by the previous owner were the wrong kind--because they were flat on top, rather than curved.  I kept stringing them along until I sold the property, and the only reason I was able to do so was that the LPC made a bureaucratic error as to the address.

Bastids.

Edited on May 15, 2013 at 8:34pm
Johnny Dubya

It's not the cost that bothers me as much as the segregation itself.  Sure, kids will self-segregate in social situations, but official school events should not be exclusive.  Gay graduation ceremonies and black proms are a sad commentary on our "melting pot" which has become (in Adam Carolla's words) more of a "fruit salad" (no pun intended), wherein there is proximity of diverse elements but no blending.  The symbolism of the "rainbow" is a joke when the reality is that the rainbow is fractured.

Edited on May 15, 2013 at 8:07pm
Johnny Dubya

From yesterday's WSJ Best of the Web Today column by James Taranto:

John Yoo, widely vilified for his work in the Bush Justice Department, weighs in at Ricochet.com:

I deplore the Obama administration's assault on freedom of the press. But [...] [i]f the AP's editors and reporters and their colleagues at other newspapers had been more adversarial toward this President, as they were with President Bush, they would [have] been treated with far more respect.

Perhaps the sudden deluge of scandal, and especially the invasion of the AP's operations, will change the press's attitude toward Obama. But it's going to be a slow and painful process. Just ask National Journal's Ron Fournier, who as an AP executive during the Bush years championed what he called "accountability journalism": "Events of the past week likely will lead to one or more long-running scandals," he writes, "which would be unfortunate for anybody, including me, who wants Obama to succeed."

That yearning for Obama's success has cost the press dearly. Yoo is right to think the press's abject treatment of Obama has encouraged his administration's disrespectful treatment of it.

Edited on May 15, 2013 at 3:09pm
Johnny Dubya

viruscop

 

He does not attempt to drive "the national conversation."

 

My liberal friends on Facebook seem to think otherwise, as their constant posting of Stewart video clips attests.

It's like saying Marilyn Monroe did not attempt to tittilate.

Edited on May 14, 2013 at 11:12pm
Johnny Dubya

The Daily Show is a satirical program whose left-leaning host reports news stories of the day and comments on them for the dual purposes of comedic effect and political persuasion, and whose audience members are entertained, informed, and--if weak-minded--persuaded by his efforts.

Glad I could clear that up.

The show is most certainly a partisan source of news, humor, and opinion.  In order to see how it is not merely a "comedy show", consider The Tonight Show during the days of Johnny Carson (for those old enough to remember).  Carson was truly "only a comedian"--an equal-opportunity humorist--and a political slant was never discernable.  He just poked fun at whomever was in power.  Needless to say, this is not the model Stewart follows.

Many people today, particularly the young, get their news from The Daily Show (left viewpoint), Twitter (left and right), Red Eye (right), and even The Onion (center-left).  It's simply a fact. 

Edited on May 14, 2013 at 11:15pm
Johnny Dubya

This will in all likelihood be less damaging to the Obama presidency than Iran-Contra was to Reagan's, and certainly no more damaging.  For goodness sake, a Democrat can even survive a scandal featuring sex with an intern in the Oval Office!

I do believe, though, that this will attain real scandal status, whatever that's worth; I guess it will mean that the families of those who died may get the answers they deserve.

The MSM has turned against the White House, big time, now that they've realized they were played for fools.  On Friday, NBC Nightly News sounded far more harsh than Fox News.

There are still "Obama Bobs", such as Jon Stewart and NPR.  I heard an NPR news roundup that assured listeners by repeating the far-left/Stewart talking points that (a) GOP focus on Benghazi is politically-motivated, and (b) there were numerous attacks on diplomatic facilities, with fatalities, during the Bush administration.

Regarding (a): "No duh."  This is Washington.  Regarding (b), that is the rhetorical equivalent of "Look, a squirrel!"  Furthermore, did the Bush administration ever cover up that an ambassador was killed by terrorists--on a 9/11 anniversary, no less?

Edited on May 13, 2013 at 8:16pm
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