John Coltrane
Central Park West
[Fascism]'s a nice clear system, and it's got some logic behind it, but it doesn't work very well. It was tried and it lost. For that reason, the liberal solution won out.I comment on this:
That solution is a bit more complicated. It starts by noting that all our purposes are equally purposes, and infers that everybody's purposes equally confer value. Each of us is equally able to make things good or bad just by thinking of them as good or bad. That makes each of us in a sense divine. Our will creates moral reality. Instead of the wonder-working leader of fascism you get the divine me of liberalism. It's every man his own Jesus.
So how do liberal leaders get all these equally stationed demi-gods to follow them? It is still sheer will, I would think, of maintaining a semblance of liberal equality, but working with (and secretly ruling with) brute fascistic superiority, through a lot of lying and deceiving.The sooner people realize that their (liberal) elites really don't have their backs, the better.
[This is] a show for the 21st century with an unprecedented global and local story. The Latin culture is a tapestry that is rich in passion, tradition and artistry. This journey for me and Marc is going be exciting and groundbreaking.Christina Aguilera keeps showing up in tight tights and bulging thighs, having given birth recently. Something tells me that she will keep this "look."
Zakaria is an alien in our midst, building his career on his identity as a fashionable alien who lectures the natives on the need to give up their country and adapt to the global community, particularly to Islam. He represents the "New Society" that globalists are attempting to turn American into. Every step in America's weakening and loss of identity, means the strengthening and advance of Zakaria and his career and his importance.VFR Commentator Vivek G.:
Zakaria started out as a member of the neocon circle. Then in the late 1990s he began to move left. Then, when he made himself the journalistic representative of the new, non-white, non-Western, Islamified America, his career really took off.
This Fareed Zakaria is also quoted by a leading Indian politician. The politician has been criticized here. Zakaria was born in India, a non-Muslim nation; migrated to U.S., another non-Muslim nation; married a non-Muslim woman (he must have converted her); and preaches tolerance, secularism, and assimilation to these non-Muslims. Isn't it ironical? Shouldn't he rather do this preaching in Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and such countries?
Pardon my acerbic tone, but I find this as if a beggar seeks help from a household, gets to stay there for sometime, and soon after that he starts preaching on self-reliance to the hosts!Zakaria is now going through "rough patches" with his "stunning" wife Paula Throckmorton. That doesn't sound like an Indian, much less Muslim, name, so I looked her up. She is indeed stunning (at least tall and statuesque) and blonde. So much for her being a "representative of the new, non-white, non-Western, Islamified America." Zakaria of course is the ultimate Third World (non-white), elitist, hypocrite, who want the best the West has to offer him, but cannot tolerate what the West actually is.
William Shakespeare
King John, Act 4, Scene 4
To gild refined gold, to paint the lily,
To throw a perfume on the violet,
To smooth the ice, or add another hue
Unto the rainbow, or with taper-light
To seek the beauteous eye of heaven to garnish,
Is wasteful and ridiculous excess.
Dunkel's motivation for putting the gowns up for auction isn't known but she filed for bankruptcy protection in January 2010 after HRH Ventures LLC sued her and the People's Princess Charitable Foundation Inc. claiming they defaulted on $1.5 million in loans that were secured by the gowns. HRH Ventures asked a court for five of the dresses, alleging that Dunkel and her foundation weren't able to "adequately care for these irreplaceable dresses." Dunkel countered that she had agreed to repay the loans no sooner than 2012. The lawsuit was stayed by the bankruptcy filing.It is apt that these dresses, which are estimated to fetch about 3 million dollars, should be exhibited in a design hall whose building was once the center of speculations on money.
A lilac silk dress with a bodice embroidered overall with pink and white flowers, green & star shaped sequins, gold glass beads and gold braid in Mughal motifs. The long sleeved bolero jacket embroidered overall en suite with the dress.
Designed for Diana’s State Tour of India in 1992...Embroidered in the Mughal fashion, it is a tapestry of flowers, sequins and gold, giving the appearance of encrusted jewels.
‘My Decade With Diana: The Perpetual Power of the People’s Princess’, G.A. McNulty, 2007, pg 46
Designed by architects George and Moorhouse with associate S.H. Maw and completed in 1937, the Toronto Stock Exchange building combined streamlined moderne, art deco and stripped classicism styles. Although it is commonly labeled an art deco building, the dominant style is streamlined moderne...Its design was revered as an architectural and technological marvel, a "masterful expression of its time, place and function" with "the most up-to-date trading floor in the world."More information is available at the Design Exchange website.
The Exchange building was a major construction project for its day. The Depression had hit Toronto's building industry hard, causing public and private sector spending on building construction to plummet. The $750,000 TSE building represented a significant portion of the city's total construction activity in 1936-37.
The TSE building was designated a heritage property in 1978 because f its "architectural value and historic interest." in 1983, the Exchange moved to its current headquarters at the corner of King and York. The original building has remained wholly intact and parts were fully restored by the developer. The specific heritage components surviving today are the building's exterior, the facade and frieze, windows on all levels, two sets of stainless steel doors, the Vale Inco Grand Staircase and detailing, the trading floor, eight murals by Charles Comfort, and the only surviving post from the trading floor.
In 1994, Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects (KPMB) incorporated the historic Trading Floor and the TSE structure into the unique Toronto-Dominion Centre complex, creating a blend of old and new spaces to be used for the purposes of the Design Exchange.
In 1969 the Toronto Star headlined this 1937 limestone relief of the Stock Exchange building’s 22.5 metre-long frieze “a bay street joke preserved in granite.”
Painter, Charles Comfort who designed the engraving denied any forethought to the seeming parody, in which a well suited stockbroker is depicted lingering his hand over the pocket of an oblivious common labourer, as if greedily taking what does not belong to him.
At the time this little discovery stirred quite a fuss within the city’s financial district. The relief was also implemented during the Great Depression, when a lot of society shared overwhelming feelings of economic betrayal.
To this day, there is debate over just how suggestive the artist wanted to be, or if it was all just blown out of proportion years later.
Obika does not boast the clichéd hallmarks of an Italian eatery. There are no red-checkered tablecloths, cans of tomatoes or garlic braids. In fact, the southeast corner of Brookfield Place in the heart of Toronto’s financial district looks more like a Japanese restaurant with its black and red color scheme, stark calligraphy typeface and sushi bar set-up where fresh ingredients are featured front and center in the glass display.Of the four formal restaurants, two are Asian. Three of the six Asian (formal and fast food) restaurants are Japanese (I will include Obika in this group since visitors will assume Obika is Japanese from its signage, and part of its menu includes Japanese-style foods such as zucchini sushi).
They're making stuff that you see being sold all the time on Fifth Avenue, copying various, you know, whether it's Chanel or whatever it may be, the brands, and just selling it ad - ad nauseum. I mean this is a country that is ripping off the United States like nobody other than OPEC has ever done before.At the end, Wolf Blitzer asks Trump if he's going to run for the US presidency. Trump answers that he's "giving it serious thought." Since then, Trump has said that he will officially announce his bid for the presidency on the finale of his show "Celebrity Apprentice," a show which I'm sure taught him some hard lessons about race reality in America, and in the West in general. Trump may seem to have brushed off all those ugly "celebrity" incidents, but as a hardened businessman, I don't for a (New York) minute think he will take any of them lightly.
These are not our friends. These are our enemies. These are not people that understand niceness. And the only thing you can do, Wolf, to get their attention is to say either we're not going to trade with you any further or, in the alternative, we're going to tax your products as they come into the United States...
We would - I would lower the taxes for people in this country and corporations in this country and let China and some of the other countries that are ripping us off and making hundreds of billions of dollars a year, let them pay...
They're going to make General Motors build the cars in China. They're not going to let China - they're not going to let General Motors take their cars from this country and sell them in China. They want General Motors to give up all of its intellectual rights and at the same time have Chinese workers build the cars, something which we are not doing, to that extent. If you look at what's happening with China and what they're selling to this country - or take South Korea, with the television sets and everything else, they're making it over there. China wants General Motors to build the cars in China.
I Skyped Blogger and enquired, only to be told:
"No one to talk with,
All by myself...
No one to walk with,
But I'm happy on the shelf...
Ain't misbehavin',
I'm savin' my love for you!
I know for certain,
The one I love,
I'm through with flirtin',
It's just you I'm thinkin' of...
Ain't misbehavin',
I'm savin' my love for you!"
There are still some superior street musicians around. I wonder if they make enough money, or if they use these street venues to practice, or if they have simply had hard lives and are just making do. There is a really talented rock drummer at the popular Eaton Square, and he sometimes brings in a young partner. His crowds are always large. And recently, a young guitarist (he looks like he's in his early teens) is there playing classical music.I've posted above photos of the drummer.
"The problem is, as a manager in the Western world...."Now, this unfinished sentence may not be enough to make any conclusions, but what true Westerner, living in Canada, would start a sentence like that? The expected introduction to a problem on management styles would be: "The problem with management is," or "Our problem with management is," etc. What this Asian was emphasizing was not problems with management, but problems with management in the Western world.
Speaking to Kay [of the Canadian National Post], Wilders makes this interesting and amusing remark:Mr. Auster is very generous in accepting this move to the right (direction). I, on the other hand, am a little impatient. I see every day in our Toronto streets Muslims inching into our society, whose ideology is clearly intertwined with, and fueled by, their religion. There would be no Muslim "ideology" without Islam. I've written about this here:
"I see Islam as 95 percent ideology, five percent religion--the five percent being the temples and the imams. If you would strip the Koran of all the negative, hateful, anti-Semitic material, you would wind up with a tiny [booklet]."
Readers may remember that I have disagreed with Wilders's statements in the past that Islam is not a religion but only a political ideology.
Now he has moved in my direction. Even if it's only five percent, that's enough. I'm not concerned about the percentage. The point is that our side sounds silly when we claim that Islam, one of the world's major religions, is not a religion. To say that Islam is not a religion is like saying that a rhinoceros is not a mammal.
My purpose is not to promote hostility against Muslim persons or to spark civilizational warfare between the West and Islam, but to reduce and end the current increasing civilizational warfare, by separating Islam from the West. We respect the right of Muslims to follow in peace their religion in their lands. But in order for us Americans to follow in peace our religions and flourish in our way of life, the followers of sharia need to leave our country and return to the historic lands of Islam.I agree, promoting direct hostility toward Muslims living in the West will at some point turn into a civilizational warfare, especially where their numbers are large. But, I don't think Muslims have any qualms about exacerbating such a civilizational war with us, so we had at least better be prepared for this. Here is a blog I wrote at my "sister" blog Our Changing Landscape (whose topics I'm now integrating into my Camera Lucida blog): Christian Tolerance, Islamic Jihad. It is abridged from my article of the same title, (also published at VFR).
Lars Hedegaard was today [May 3. 2011] found guilty of hate speech under Article 266b of the Danish penal code...
§ 266b of the Danish penal code:
“Whoever publicly or with the intent of public dissemination issues a pronouncement or other communication by which a group of persons are threatened, insulted or denigrated due to their race, skin colour, national or ethnic origin, religion or sexual orientation is liable to a fine or incarceration for up to two years.”