Wednesday, February 4, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News








from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals
The Stories Behind the News

Link to Sultan Knish





You Can't Win the Argument if You Can't State the Problem


Posted: 03 Feb 2009 07:01 PM PST




A conversation on the deck of a Politically Correct S.S.
Titanic.

"Sir, there's an iceberg headed for us!"

"Is it dangerous?"

"While icebergs are generally not dangerous if they're left
alone, there are extreme parts of this iceberg which if
collided with might potentially damage our ability to
stay afloat.

On the other hand the iceberg was here before us, and if
we do collide with it we might merge together with it into
a stronger Iceberg\Titanic combination that would
bring diversity to our superstructure."

"Perhaps, we should change course."

"We could do that, but we wouldn't want the iceberg to
think we were discriminating against it."



It's a joke, but there are no shortage of real life
analogs for it. If you make plain language into
a forbidden thing so that saying anything is a
process that begins with careful self-censorship,
and ideas are expressed in a doubtful apologetic
way to avoid giving offense, you can be sure that
people will not be able to state the nature of the
problem.




And if you can't state the
nature of the problem,
there's no hope of a
solution. And that
is why conservative
politicians continue
losing the debate
over foreign threats
and domestic social
issues. While grass
roots level conservatives
can state the nature of
the problem, conservative

politicians very rarely do.

In the 2008 American Presidential Election a
candidate who boasted of straight talk, left the
straight talk at home, and worded everything vaguely
and focused on assuring everyone what a nice guy he
was. He lost the election to a candidate who
had worked even harder to assure everyone what a
nice guy he was, and was even vaguer about his plans.

Conservatives win elections when they can clearly state
the nature of the problem in plain talk. Because common
sense is on the side of Conservatives, while vagueness is
on the side of Liberalism.

That ability to plainly state the problem was behind the success
of such late 20th century leaders as Ronald Reagan and Margaret
Thatcher. It is what garnered Palin a following in the first place.

The War on Terror is in such a dismal state because of a President
who could sort of state the nature of the problem and then lost
the ability to state it at all. Israeli and European heads of state
long ago lost the ability to state the nature of the problem. Not
only did they lose the ability, it is now actively illegal.

And when Conservative politicians can't state the nature of the
problem, but instead begin talking around it, apologize for their
half-hearted views before they even state them, and leave the
general public confused as to what they mean, and unable to
see the difference between them and their liberal opponents.

Why was the cartoon of Mohammed with a burning bomb fuse
sticking out of his turban so explosive? Because in a few simple
lines of ink and some limited coloring, it aptly stated the
nature of the problem. Stating the nature of the problem
is a very dangerous thing. In a political culture built on
confusing the issue, stating the nature of a problem plainly
is about as explosive as free speech can get.

The public is prepared to hear the problem plainly stated.
Most of them understood the nature of the problem on their
own, or at least did until the newspapers, the evening
newscasts and the rest of the garbled newspeak of
liberalism got hold of them, and left them thinking
that maybe black really is white, and terrorists are
just misunderstood people angry at injustice.

But the problem is not extremism. The problem is
not injustice or lack of communication or not enough
Americans wearing keffiyehs as a fashion statement.
The problem is Islamic terrorism. The problem is
Muslims. Islam is not a Religion of Peace. It is an
ideology built on violence, deceit and terror, and
perpetuated by violence, deceit and terror.



Immigration allows more and more Muslims to enter
America and Europe. Every Muslim who crosses the
border increases the risk of terrorism and Muslim
violence. That is the nature of the problem.

The problem is not capitalism. The problem is that the
endless expansion of government has made entire
domestic industries unprofitable, and overregulated
the rest. Global treaties have swung trade
balances over to favor countries using slave labor
for cheap manufacturing, while leaving civilized countries
in the dust.

The real problem is the social cost of immigration. A national
health care safety net is viable for working class citizens, but
it will always be overloaded beyond sustainability by the
dysfunctional overgrown families of third world immigrants.
So will all other forms of social services, not to mention the
justice system. Immigration drives organized crime, drug
trafficking, sex trafficking, terrorism and a hundred other
social ills. There are only two reasons that the immigration
portals remain open, dirt cheap labor and votes for liberal
politicians. And we'd be better off without both.

You can't win the argument, if you can't state the
problem. When Conservative politicians are ready to begin
stating the problem, they'll be ready to start winning elections.













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