In this mailing:
- David C. Stolinsky: Progressives: The
Real World vs. Neverland
- Ruthie Blum: Palestinian
Refugees: Trump's Reality Check
by David C. Stolinsky • September
2, 2018 at 5:00 am
- Many of these children
in adult bodies were told, and actually believed, that better
health care for everyone, including an unlimited number of
illegal immigrants, would be attainable at a low cost, if only
the government were to run it.
- Many children in adult
bodies also seem not to know that Socialism failed in the Soviet
Union, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Romania,
Albania, Bulgaria, China, North Korea, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam,
and Cuba, and is now failing in Venezuela. The irrational wish
is evidently stronger than rational arithmetic.
- These victims of
arrested emotional development seem to confuse good motives with
good results. They want better health care for a greater number
of people at a lesser cost; so they fantasize that they can
achieve it without denying care to those who are too old, too
sick or too expensive to receive it. They kind-heartedly want a
"more equal distribution of wealth"; so they fantasize
that they can maneuver it without penalizing and discouraging
the productive members of society, while rewarding and encouraging
the unproductive ones.
(Image
sources: Pixabay, Wikimedia Commons)
"Not to know what happened before you were born
is to remain forever a child," Cicero astutely observed. For
many self-described progressives today, however, this seems not to be
a drawback. On the contrary, like adolescents -- insisting that they
are grown-ups when their parents get in the way of their fun, but
then running home for all their basic needs and creature comforts --
such people seem to give no thought to the past and equally little to
the future.
Many people like this are said to suffer from a
"Peter Pan Syndrome": the inability or unwillingness to
grow up. In thought, they seem to lean to the political left. They
want the government to take on the role of parent, even if that
involves maxing out the country's "credit cards," so that
even for a short time, they can live beyond what they earn.
by Ruthie Blum • September 2, 2018
at 4:00 am
- "They are not
necessarily doing things that would cause peace..." — US
Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley.
- "UNRWA has,
instead of resolving the problem, done everything in its power
to perpetuate it. Instead of peace and coexistence, it teaches
hatred and incitement. Instead of fighting terrorist
organizations, it collaborates with them..." — Ron Prosor,
former Israeli Ambassador to the UN.
- "Responsibility
for the Palestinians and the UNRWA budgets could be transferred
to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, which looks after
the rest of the world's refugees and, unlike UNRWA, works toward
solving the refugee problem instead of perpetuating it." —
Ron Prosor.
US
Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley. (Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty
Images)
The Trump administration's reported plan to overturn
US policy on the issue of Palestinian refugees is long overdue.
According, initially, to media reports, the new policy -- scheduled
to be unveiled in early September and based on sealed classified information
from the US State Department -- will reduce the number of
Palestinians defined by the UN as "refugees" from five
million to 500,000, thus refuting the figures claimed by the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East
(UNRWA). The UN figures include descendants (not only children, but
grandchildren and great grandchildren) of Palestinians across the
world who have never even set foot in Israel, the Gaza Strip or the
Palestinian Authority (PA). The new plan will also apparently include
a rejection of the Palestinians' so-called "right of
return" to Israel of refugees and their descendants.
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