The Manchester Free Press

Tuesday • November 26 • 2024

Vol.XVI • No.XLVIII

Manchester, N.H.

Senator Angus King Has an Idea on How to Prevent Another Lewiston ME But It’s the Wrong One

Granite Grok - Tue, 2023-12-05 01:00 +0000

US Senator Angus King, appalled by the bloodshed from the shooting in Lewiston, Maine (and who isn’t), has co-sponsored a different sort of gun regulation bill. He thinks it could survive constitutional scrutiny, but he’s looking in the wrong direction.

 

The bill would limit the number of rounds in a gun magazine and require gas-operated, semi-automatic firearms to have permanent or fixed magazines to prevent shooters from rapidly reloading.

Unlike other proposed assault weapons bans that he opposed, King said their bill focuses on the mechanisms that can make some semi-automatic guns so deadly rather than their appearance or model numbers.

The bill would also make it illegal to make certain modifications to semi-automatic guns. But it would exempt certain types of common gun used by hunters and for self-defense, such as semi-automatic shotguns and handguns that operate with a recoil mechanism.

During a video press conference, King and Heinrich said they have studied the constitutional concerns raised about past gun control measures and they are confident their bill will pass the test.

 

This slightly narrowed red-headed step-child of a gun-grabbing bill is, to borrow from Hamlet, sound and fury, signifying nothing. Democrats want more, Republicans want less, and it won’t stop mass shootings, certainly not like the one in Lewiston. Even a quasi-capable shooter with a ten-round magazine could cause significant injury and death in a barrel full of disarmed fish with just one weapon. (Related: Lessons from Lewiston, Maine.)

As with almost every other shooting to which the media and gun-grabbin’ pols append the word “mass,” the problem was -and always is – the lack of return fire. Robert Card’s targets were in a gun-free zone, and they did as asked. They disarmed themselves and were shot or killed. Angus figures that this must be the natural state of human beings because,

 

“The key here is in the midst of a mass shooting, it’s when the shooter needs to re-load that there’s an opportunity either for people to escape or for first responders or for people in the room to disarm the shooter,” King said during the press conference. “But if there’s not lapse in the firing, that can’t happen.”

 

Or, and here’s a crazy idea: you could stop disarming the “people.” Something that undoubtedly passes constitutional muster.

Ask proprietors to stop disarming them. This increases the likelihood of one or more law-abiding, armed “first responders” who can immediately return fire.

A strange thing happens when people are shooting at you. You have to find them and shoot back, or that plan to take a bunch of people with you goes sideways. If armed citizens spend any time at the range, the shooter may already be leaking precious fluid. They might be dead. A thing that is nearly impossible in a gun-free zone.

So far, that’s not been the case with successful gun-free-zone mass shootings.

State Rep Jim White has proposed legislation in Maine that actually makes sense. His bill would make proprietors of gun-free zones responsible for the safety of the people they disarmed by holding them fiscally liable for harm as a result of the restriction. It has no chance of passing Maine’s Democrat majority legislature or Democrat governor, and as luck would have it, congress won’t be passing the bill proposed by Angus King.

The question of constitutionality is moot. But the problem of disarming law-abiding citizens continues, and it is more nuanced than you’d like. A commenter on a past Lewiston post noted (and I’m paraphrasing) that by entering businesses that are gun-free zones, you enable them, support them, and disarm yourself. That doesn’t mean you deserve to get shot, but if armed citizens took their business elsewhere, and many do, you’d solve two problems. They wouldn’t get your business, and you wouldn’t be disarmed.

 

The post Senator Angus King Has an Idea on How to Prevent Another Lewiston ME But It’s the Wrong One appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Volcanos and Earthquakes and Flooding… Oh My!

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 23:30 +0000

As I see yet another volcano erupting – this time in Indonesia – it suddenly occurred to me: The Globalists want to dim the sunlight hitting the earth to, theoretically, fight climate change.  They’ve openly talked about it.

Stratospheric aerosol injection – Wikipedia

Let me don my foil hat for a moment and ASSUME that artificial induction of volcanos is possible. Note – ASSUME. But what a master stroke if true. They dim the sun – to cull us through food shortages and colder weather globally – and in a way that 99% of people will simply not believe. Remember, it was ONE eruption, albeit huge, that caused the “Year without a summer” that created food shortages and other effects.  (Bolding added.)

What was the “Year Without a Summer”? (history.com)

In the summer of 1816, the Northern Hemisphere was plagued by a weather disruption of seemingly biblical proportions. Following a relatively ordinary early spring, temperatures in the eastern United States plunged back below freezing, and communities from New England to Virginia experienced heavy snowfalls and crop-killing frost during June, July and August. Europe also found itself in the grip of an unseasonable chill. Winter snows refused to melt, and between April and September, some parts of the Continent were drenched by as many as many as 130 days of rain. The unrelenting gloom inspired author Mary Shelley to write her famous novel “Frankenstein,” but it also wreaked havoc on farmers. Crops failed across Europe and China, spawning deadly famines and outbreaks of typhus and other diseases. In India, the disturbances gave rise to a virulent new strain of cholera that eventually killed millions. The suffering in the United States was less pronounced, but many still felt the squeeze of soaring grain prices. Some poorer Americans were even reduced to eating hedgehogs and scrounging for wild turnips.

So what about all these volcanos popping up? Indonesia? Iceland? Kamchatka? Japan? Ecuador? Mount Etna in Italy?  Others I’ve missed?  All just in 2023. In searching, there was an article on under-ice volcanos in Antarctica possibly heating up and erupting, which would not just throw even more tons of dust into the atmosphere but, in melting the ice, cause calamities from water racing off the rocky continent into the sea – raising sea levels for real.  And let us not forget that the Yellowstone super-caldera is overdue, at least by some estimates, not so by others… regardless, it popping off would be double-plus ungood.

How will these cumulative dust clouds affect the sunlight hitting the earth?  Whatever impact they have, it will not be in a “good” direction.

But let’s assume they are induced. That’s a master-stroke. And I find the timing of the multiple volcanos all going off in one year mighty suspicious.  Again, I’m not saying that I am convinced they’re being artificially induced. And I’ll include the possibility that such a frequency of eruptions is completely normal in history and now, thanks to the internet, I’m merely seeing them rather than being blissfully unaware.

Global Volcanism Program | Current Eruptions (si.edu)

And it’s not just volcanos.  Earthquakes too seem to be “popping” a lot more than normal.  Not only do earthquakes do damage and kill people, potentially lots of people, but they can cause tsunamis which – pardon the term – can create ripple effects doing widespread damage.  Same caution again about whether this is a true uptick or just the magic of the information age making me aware of them now.

But it does fit in with the depopulation agenda.  Blocked sunlight leading to cold – and cold, not heat, kills in a widespread fashion.  Blocked sunlight leads to crop failures – hunger, starvation, and panic over dwindling food supplies.  Earthquakes kill, can create tsunamis, and a melting Antarctic ice shelf can flood coastal areas.  The image below is Gab’s AI to the request of “Map of US if the sea level went up five feet”:

 

 

So not precisely scientific and accurate, but it does show coastline disruptions.  Significant ones.  And while I don’t doubt this is alarmist, the number of feet is about right for my off-the-cuff guess.  But this would not a slow rise over years and years, but in a massive months-only pulse.

Here’s what rising sea levels mean for Boston, according to a new report

And all serve the purpose: create chaos, fear, and uncertainty.  Fear.  So while I do have strong skepticism about artificially-induced volcanos and earthquakes… and am deeply reticent to grant to the Globalists a credibility for more power than I’d want to give them… it does fit into a pattern.

One more thing, which I’ve said before.  Consider the tens of thousands of scientists that had to be involved in the development of the virus, and then the Jab.  Ever-so-carefully crafted and calibrated to create systemic damage to the human system.  Possibly editing the human genome.  Creating infertility.  And in such a “perfectly” calibrated rate and speed that few, even when faced with evidence, can wrap their minds around it.  Scientists.  Even more technicians.  Untold millions of experiments.  Now assume that the volcanos and earthquakes are, similarly, artificial.

Is there NOBODY of conscience willing to speak up?  What kind of hold over people is possible on this scale?  Across not just the virus, or the Jab, but literal manipulation of the earth itself.  Or is it simply a matter of this:

 

 

Because, even now, having made the case for how this would help the Globalists… I do not want to wrap my mind around their ability to do this.  For imagine if I’m right… the sheer hubris to think they can plan and control things this finely is just begging for Nemesis on bended knee for unforeseen consequences for all life on earth, not just human civilization.

The post Volcanos and Earthquakes and Flooding… Oh My! appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Putting A Number on How Much Joe Biden Has Made From His Criminal Activities

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 22:00 +0000

An amazing tweet from Charlie Kirk documenting the payoffs from Joe Biden’s criminal activities. The obvious question: WHY HASN’T THE GOP HOUSE IMPEACHED BIDEN? Another obvious question.

Why isn’t every GOP with a bully pulpit exposing Biden and demanding his impeachment? The ONLY way to make the voting public aware of the prodigious criminality of Biden, Inc. is impeachment. Replay the evidence over and over and over again on X. A side benefit of impeachment … exposing the complicity of the GOP RINOs.

The post Putting A Number on How Much Joe Biden Has Made From His Criminal Activities appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

ICYMI – Maine Says Chris Christie Didn’t Qualify to Be on Its GOP Presidential Primary Ballot

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 20:30 +0000

For all the talk amongst the never-Trumpers about keeping The Donald off state ballots, perhaps someone should have spent more time trying to get his challenger on them. Maine has announced that Chris Christie lacked the signatures needed to appear on its ballot, and so he will not.

 

In order to be on the ballot for Maine’s March 5, 2024, primary election, candidates must have 2,000 in-state signatures, but state officials said Saturday he didn’t make the cut.

“The deadline for candidates for president to turn in a sufficient number of signatures to be on the March 5, 2024, primary election ballot was 5 p.m. today,” Maine’s Secretary of State said in a press release.

Christie only received 844 signatures, Maine Director of Elections Heidi Peckham told CBS News.

 

Christie’s Maine Campaign claims they submitted over 6,000 signatures and has appealed though I’m not sure why. By all accounts, he’s polling badly there (Asa Hutchinson also failed to make the ballot), but he’s not spending his own money so what the heck. Appeal away.

The post ICYMI – Maine Says Chris Christie Didn’t Qualify to Be on Its GOP Presidential Primary Ballot appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

The Santos Expulsion … GOP Show They Are Cowards And Frauds

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 19:00 +0000

What are the two major accomplishments of the U.S. House GOP? Fully funding … repeatedly … the Biden agenda and expelling a solid conservative based merely on allegations of wrongdoing. Not convictions but merely allegations. Nearly ONE-HALF of the GOP Reps joined with the Democrats to expel George Santos.

Not a single impeachment, no end to the runaway, unsustainable, wasteful Ukraine-spending … but now the GOP’s razor-thin majority is even thinner. WHY? It is because the GOP is a Party of cowards and frauds.

Expelling George Santos was nowhere on the list of priorities of actual GOP voters. But it was very, very, very important to the Regime-media. So bye-bye Rep. Santos. Such cowards.

And such frauds. As but one example, insider-trading is rampant in Congress. Yet the self-righteous GOP Reps who voted to expel Santos have no problem with that. What frauds.

Reaction on X:

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Breaking: North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum Ends his Bid for the White House

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 18:17 +0000

North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum has suspended his presidential aspirations, taking a few potshots at the RNC and making sure the door doesn’t hit him in the ass on the way out.

In a statement and video released Monday morning, Burgum emphasized that he and his wife “are deeply grateful for each and every person who supported us with their ideas, prayers, advocacy, encouragement and enthusiasm. Kathryn and I will always remain committed to fighting for the people who make our nation so exceptional.”

The North Dakota governor becomes the latest White House hopeful call it quits, as the GOP field of contenders has rapidly shrunk after topping out at over a dozen candidates during the summer.

Burgum’s departure winnows the field to Trump, DeSantis, Haley, Christie, Ramaswamy, and Hutchinson. All the major national polls have them ranked in that order, with Trump’s lead still significant. Brugum was stuck at 0 or 1% in most national polls ( which is where Hutchinson also remains), though he may have done better in certain states where he has some name recognition.

I saw Burgum speak at the NHGOP First in the Nation Summit. He seemed sensible and practical, maybe even capable, but plenty of other candidates were working similar messages, so he was never going to get past that to higher polling. Here are two minutes of Gov. Doug at that event.

 

https://granitegrok.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/PXL_20231013_195509392.TS_.mp4

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

MONDAY MEMES

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 17:30 +0000

The memes flow…

Take heart – there will be both a Wednesday and Friday Edition.  Last week’s Friday Edition.

Remember, ridicule and mockery are effective weapons:

  1. Ridicule cannot easily be fought
  2. Ridicule makes the enemy angry, and angry people make mistakes
  3. For those in the “squishy middle” a Thought Splinter (and Part II and Part III and Part IV) can often be hidden inside humor.

Now, let the mockery and mayhem begin.

 

*** Warning, a few possibly off-color ones, in case tender eyes are about ***

 

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

 

 

They hate you.  They really, really hate you.

 

 

 

 

 

Seen similar memes.  Scary part is how true it is.

 

 

 

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

PSA – PSA – PSA – PSA – PSA

 

The world is watching this new “white lung” pneumonia spreading like wildfire globally.  Bill Gates’ next Plannedemic?  Again, notice the smirk and wry glance at each other at the end when discussing what should be a very serious subject:

 

https://granitegrok.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Bill-Melinda-Gates-Giggle-Smirk-Over-2nd-Wave-of-Pandemic_ZmP6_gy-MIE_360p.mp4

 

So take a look here as one example:

Denmark and Netherlands report surge in child pneumonia as China battles outbreak | Evening Standard

But… curiouser and curiouser, look at this page from the Pfizer adverse events document (and notice how many pneumonias there are – besides mycoplasmal):

 

 

To be found on the pages and pages and pages of adverse events:

 

Pfizer-trial-results-first-3-months

 

So the big question to ask – how many JABBED people are getting this vs. UNJABBED?  I know where my money is.  And look what pops on one of my Telegram channels:

 

 

And Jab-related is this short video statement by Dr. Ryan Cole about DNA contamination of ALL the Covid Jabs.  Pray for those who are Jabbed.

 

 

Dr. Ryan Cole on how DNA contamination may explain post-Jab cancer, etc. (rumble.com)

If this isn’t fraud and malfeasance then the words no longer have meaning.  Related:

Self-Amplifying RNA Shots Are Coming: The Untold Danger | ZeroHedge

Study finds genetic code in Covid’s spike protein linked to Moderna patent | Daily Mail Online

Notice two things:

  1. The timing, which is no surprise to anyone paying attention
  2. The immediate and included dismissal of this claim by “other experts”

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

 

 

 

I don’t know how many Jabbed people I’ve spoken to have said that.  My wife, my cousin, my sister, friends of the family…

 

 

 

There’s only one way to get that much copper.  Asteroid mining.

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

Kissinger section

 

 

 

 

One should only speak good about the dead.  OK.  He’s dead?  Good.

 

 

Now, I’ve seen purported newspaper clippings of this but I’m being skeptical and want a source I can check for myself.  But let’s assume this is true.  This puts him square into genocidal territory.  Satan, please turn the heat up on this one…

Oh, and on being Jewish – that has little note for me.  I read that he supposedly tried to throttle aid to Israel to force Israel into a more compliant mood when they came to the negotiating table.  He denied it of course.  But I do believe it.  Bolding added.

“I do not mean to imply that he wanted Israel to lose the war, he simply did not want Israel to win decisively. He wanted Israel to bleed just enough to soften it up for the post-war diplomacy he was planning,” Zumwalt wrote.

Remember, at its widest point Israel is 70-odd miles wide.  There is a notable hubris in thinking you can time and measure things that precisely, especially when the margin of error is so small.

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

 

 

 

That this doesn’t terrify everyone of every belief, whether Left, Right, or whatever… that terrifies ME!

 

 

 

 

Do these people not grasp that they, too, will be on the chopping block from this?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How?  When that majority is bought or compromised.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Virulent racist.  And the Left worships her.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Make no mistake.  The Left ARE insane… but they’re fanatics for the cause and fiendishly shrewd.

 

 

Cloward and Piven are laughing.

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

Pick of the post:

 

 

And so many want them here by the millions.  This represents a total lack of a survival instinct.

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

Palate Cleansers:

 

 

I’m such a punster.  I think people should pay me ohm-age, but they might resist the idea.

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

Come back Wednesday for another edition.  Same Meme Time.  Same Meme channel.

Please do consider buying me a coffee.

Buy Me a Coffee

 

>>>>>=====<<<<<

 

The post MONDAY MEMES appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

This Was Just a Little Bit Suspicious …

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 16:00 +0000

The other day, I was asked to do something that immediately struck me as suspicious, and I promptly declined.

As many of you know, one of the ways we raise funds to help cover operating expenses is sponsored content. We publish a post with backlinks that allow the linked page to get a lift from ‘Grok’s higher Page and Domain Authority. We charge a nominal fee for the time required to publish. I get hundreds of requests each month, most of them beginning with “Hello Dear,” and a few emails later with “I am a reseller with many clients, but your budget is too high.”

It’s a dance I’ve streamlined over the years to limit the amount of time I waste from “Hello, Dear” to “too high” to “OK, I send you an article,” which is code for F off, you pricey bastard, I’m done here.

Our sponsored content rates are not overpriced. A handful of our clients pay what we ask, and a few send enough volume yearly to warrant a slight discount. Everyone else wants something for nothing, and those are the ones I’m trying to shepherd out of my inbox as quickly as I’m able.

Of the hundreds of requests that hit my inbox each month, very few result in an exchange of published content for payment, but that’s not why I dragged you through that explanation. I got a query over the weekend that has me thinking I should contact the AG, PayPal, or someone.

The subject requesting the publication of sponsored content used the name Malik and asked for pricing.

 

Hello,Hope your are doing great.
I am interested in your website for a blog/guest post.

Can you please provide me the following details.
Price for blog/guest post.?
will you write the article.?

will the post shows on home page..??

 

I responded with a copy-and-paste response of our generic pricing, which they accepted without question, and that never happens. No haggling.

Not long after, I was presented with two articles to publish, which I did. I created an invoice and sent the live post links and PayPal invoice link to this new “customer,” going by the name Malik. This was the response.

 

I want you to create invoice of 500$ for me . My client will send you payment . You will deduct your amount and send the rest my webmaster paypal . Currently, I am not able to manage any transaction because of Paypal issue . I am asking for help . Can you manage transaction for me?

 

Lots of red flags were waving.

If you are having a problem with PayPal, how are you going to get money via PayPal? Not that ‘using Steve and the ‘Grok as a laundromat wasn’t higher on my list of reasons for not doing it. The scheme looked laugh-out-loud African Prince sharing their fortune obvious.

I replied, “Sorry, I’m not interested in doing that, and not just because of how sketchy it sounds. You can pay via debit or credit card through our donation portal via either GiveSendGo or PayPal.”

Malik asked me to take down the content, which I did, and our business was concluded, but it kept bugging me. The first thought is some low-dollar money laundering scheme that, had I accepted, would have resulted in more of the same. The second is that it was a setup to trap me if I did it and then string it along until the sum was significant enough to be of value or to create leverage.

I know it sounds a bit paranoid, but the world is full of tripwires, our government has increasingly gotten into the business of entrapment, and we can’t know every trick. We can only do the right thing, and I would never engage in this sort of transfer under any circumstance (NSA and IRS, if you are listening?).

I’ve moved on, but it is a curious enough request that I’m still wondering if this is something and someone I should identify to some “authority” other than this audience.

 

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Separate Tech and State

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 14:30 +0000

Some libertarians dismiss concerns over social media companies’ suppression of news and opinions that contradict select agendas by pointing out that these platforms are private companies, not part of the government. There are two problems with this argument. First, there is nothing unlibertarian about criticizing private businesses or using peaceful and voluntary means, such as boycotts, to persuade businesses to change their practices.

The second and most significant reason the “they are private companies” argument does not hold water is the tech companies’ censorship has often been done at the “request” of government officials. The extent of government involvement with online censorship was revealed in emails between government and employees of various tech companies. In these emails the government officials addressed employees of these “private companies” as though these employees were the government officials’ subordinates.

Government officials using their authority to silence American citizens is a blatant violation of the First Amendment. Yet some conservative elected officials and writers think the solution to the problem of big tech censorship is giving government more power over technology companies. These pro-regulation conservatives ignore the fact that it would be just as unconstitutional if a conservative administration was telling tech companies who they must allow to access their platforms as it is when progressives order social media companies to deplatform certain individuals. Furthermore, since the average government official’s political views are closer to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez than to Marjorie Taylor Greene, giving government more power over social media companies is likely to lead to more online censorship of conservatives.

Instead of giving government more power over social media, defenders of free speech should work to separate tech and state. An excellent place to start is pushing for passage of the Free Speech Protection Act. Unlike other legislation, such as the PATRIOT Act and the Affordable Care Act, this bill is accurately named. Introduced by Kentucky Senator Rand Paul and Ohio Representative Jim Jordan, this bill makes it a crime for any federal employee or employee of a federal contractor to use his position to communicate with a social media company to interfere with any American’s exercise of First Amendment protected rights. Violators of this law would face fines of at least 10,000 dollars as well as suspension, demotion, or even termination and a lifetime ban from working with the federal government.

In addition to working to pass the Free Speech Protection Act, those who object to the big technology companies’ “content moderation” policies should abandon big tech for more free speech-friendly platforms. Many of the newer social media companies were started to meet the demand for a “content moderation”-free alternative to the dominant companies. Senator Paul himself stopped posting videos on YouTube because of its suppression of free speech. While my Liberty Report still airs on YouTube, its main platform is Rumble. It is wonderful to do a show on any topic I choose without worrying about being canceled.

Big tech censorship is a problem created by big government. The solution lies not in giving the government more power but in separating tech and state. Passing the Free Speech Protection Act and making big tech pay a price for cooperating with big government by leaving to use sites like Rumble are two excellent places to start.

 

Copyright © 2023 by RonPaul Institute. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit and a live link are given.

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

COVID-19 Vaxx: Texas Sues Pfizer for Deceptive Trade Practices – How Many Other States Will Follow Their Lead?

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 13:00 +0000

New Hampshire loves itself some jackpot justice. They sued Exxon/Mobile over EPA-approved Fuel Additives and loved cashing tobacco settlement checks. But how about this? After preaching the 95% and safe and effective lies, does the State have the hutspa to follow Texas as it sues Pfizer for Deceptive Trade practices?

It’s a fair question because Florida began looking at this a year ago when Gov. DeSantis asked the state courts to impanel a grand jury to explore wrongdoing but has not yet (to my knowledge) formally filed a suit.

Texas AG Ken Paxton has pulled that trigger.

 

How did Pfizer’s vaccine achieve such widespread adoption, yet fall short of the stated goal of ending the pandemic? In a nutshell, Pfizer deceived the public. First, Pfizer’s widespread representation that its vaccine possessed 95% efficacy against infection was highly misleading from day one. That number was only ever legitimate in a solitary, highly- technical, and artificial way—it represented a calculation of the so-called “relative risk reduction” for vaccinated individuals in Pfizer’s then-unfinished pivotal clinical trial. But FDA publications indicate “relative risk reduction” is a misleading statistic that “unduly influence[s]” consumer choice. Indeed, per FDA: “when information is presented in a relative risk format, the risk reduction seems large and treatments are viewed more favorably than when the same information is presented” using more accurate metrics.

 

Who’s with me? There’s gold in them thar hills, boys! Potentially the largest class-action lawsuit in human history.

But not so fast. There are also problems aplenty. While even cash-strapped Democrat states have more reason than anyone to chase another pot of gold, they were the worst of the worst when it came to pronouncing the Pfizer/Moderna vaccine safe and effective. From scare tactics to fear tactics to mandates and vaccine passports, can those locales complicit in the lie (who put a rotten despotism cherry on top) sue Pfizer without getting sued themselves?

I hope they get sued, but their fallback response will be to blame the FDA, CDC, NIH, or NIAD. They approved emergency use repeatedly. Gave us public health marching orders.

Elected and public health officials, and everyone up and down either of those food chains, will point a finger toward DC while blubbering, but, but, well, they said it was okay! And if they told you to inject your citizens with poison, would you do that? Would you shout them down, shut them up, make fools of them in public, refuse them access to public spaces, even confine them for wanting nothing more than their right to both free speech, bodily autonomy, or fully informed consent?

Yes, because that is the entire pandemic vaccine policy tragedy in one run-on sentence.

And a private company guilty of fraud, injury, or even murder, as we’ve noted on these pages more than once, isn’t going to be able to hide behind immunity no matter who offered it.

 

The funny thing about getting politicians to promise you immunity from prosecution is that there are limitations to what can be excused. Take deliberate deception and fraud.

If you hide details that lead to harm, the political rats will abandon your ship faster than you can say mRNA Vaccines.

That’s the boat Pfizer may soon find itself in, and it should not expect its Pfederal Pfriends to lift a finger to help, noting that any who might have probably “retired” and have packed their”stipends” and inducements in their saddle bags as they ride into the sunset. Any still on the payroll (wink-wink) also got what they wanted. A full-scale global tyranny test that a majority of the Western World Pfailed.

 

Pfizer/Moderna got in bed with some of the dirtiest criminals on the planet. Politicians and bureaucrats who promised them they would protect them. Organizations and individuals with no intention of protecting the people from the known risks of harm from their products; so what chance would Pfizer have when things went sideways?

Sure, everyone kept lying. The drug companies, government, public and private health, the media, and big tech actively censored the truth to protect the fraud. And as Igor Chudov notes in the linked piece, don’t be surprised when they get sued, too.

Pfizer lied to everyone, but they had a lot of help. Deceptions that continued long after the Pfizer docs and internal emails explained what we saw in the real world. They knew early and not only released it to the public but engaged in one of the most deceptive promotional campaigns in history.

A lot of people need to be sued. Pfizer is likely doomed.

So, who is going to step up and follow Texas? Who will sue Pfizer before there’s nothing left on the carcass for these vultures to pick? And how much fun will it be for us to flog them ceaselessly for it? You called us deniers and accused us of spreading misinformation. And now that is the foundation of any claims against Pfizer.

Grab some popcorn, people.

 

HT | Igor Chudov

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Frank Edelblut Should Get Back in the Race

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 11:30 +0000

In September, Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut spoke to the Brentwood Republican Committee. I don’t hang out there, but Frank had just announced his non-candidacy for Governor, and a neighbor and fellow Grokster was aching to understand the skullduggery behind the move and offered me a ride to the event.

Frank gave a talk, not on himself or his aborted campaign but on education in New Hampshire. Before the talk, he told us he had not discussed pulling out with the Republican hierarchy, as they are not supposed to take a position in primaries. He did not talk about low name recognition and low odds against the Morse and Ayotte fundraising machines, but these are common knowledge.

Frank described demographic and cultural trends in New Hampshire. He called them “headwinds,” and I call them excuses. He said that government schools have been delivering poor results for decades, with more than half of students measured as not proficient. He said it started to trend worse in 2012, then drastically worse with the Covid outbreak. I asked him what happened in 2012, and he instantly said, “Common Core,”–though he added that people he views as credible have studied it and found no reason the federal curriculum standard would worsen outcomes. (Not directly, but mightn’t the imposition of federal mandates tend to drive bright and innovative people out of the field? And you don’t need Washington to mandate math and reading; if DC mandates other things, doesn’t teaching these take time away from teaching the fundamentals?)

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Turning to policy recommendations, Frank espoused thinking outside the box. He questioned the assumptions that we need buildings, rigid daily schedules, and children sitting at desks filling out forms. He described numerous experiments presented to the Board of Education for programs involving a small group of kids with shared interests, such as robotics–teaching kids what you want to teach them as offshoots of a project they want to build. Sometimes, teachers and parents want these options badly enough to consider leaving government schools. Sometimes local school committees agree with the plan. But repeatedly, “the bargaining unit wouldn’t go along with it.”

(Now, thinking way outside the box, the education industry probably doesn’t need a subsidized government option as the dominant provider, a single State Board, and a State Commissioner who talks about matching “my students” to “my schools.”)

But Frank was more engaging and more authentic than I expect Morse and Ayotte ever to be. Morse’s recent, content-free campaign revolved around “603 Values,” only I have my own values and they aren’t based on my phone number. Ayotte’s last content-free campaign had the slogan, “Listening, Learning, and Then Leading.” That’s right; I’ll know what I believe just after I chat with you. No sale.

In stating his non-candidacy, Frank wrote that he preferred to finish his current job rather than seek a new one. Of course, his content-free boss famously took him to the woodshed for communicating with “the silly fringe,” that is, us.

I disagree with Frank’s decision based on my interpretation of the facts as he presented them. He has been in the job for six and a half years, supervising a system that has always failed most of its kids and is now failing badly. He has an understanding of the current situation as an executive who studies things and incorporates what he learns. He knows exactly what needs to be done–and, for institutional reasons, the Education Commissioner can’t make it happen and won’t be able to for the foreseeable future.

School Town Meeting is locked down by those receiving, benefitting from, or massaging the loot, and these “bargaining units” hardly bargain; they dictate. Frank is ready for a new challenge–and we are ready for a candidate for Governor who is not the state’s Backslapper Emeritus, nor the latest NHGOP Year of the Woman gimmick who let NBC wedge her away from her party’s own President a full four years before loudly splitting from Trump became a fad. (Meanwhile, the Democrat candidates are less interested in education than in barring a conservative like Dennis Prager from offering even educational materials that they concede are not conservative.) Thinking outside the box suggests that Frank Edelblut could do more for New Hampshire and even more for education in a new role.

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Night Cap: Democrats, Property Taxes, and Vermont

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 02:30 +0000

It would be best if you never trusted anyone who sees no limit to how much the government can spend, always increases budgets, and then claims they want to lower your property taxes. They are lying to you. They have to tax you more, but they don’t want it showing up as a bill in your mailbox.

Taxpayers find it irksome, and legislators don’t want to have to explain to the peasants why they need more and more of your increasingly devalued dollars. Your role is to shut up and pay. If you must do anything, applaud all the services the state provides, none of which you use, while those you need, like plowed roads and public safety, take a back seat to things like making electricity unaffordable, gender-reassignment surgery, housing illegals, and buying needles for addicts.

There is no lowering of taxes under Democrats, ever, so any suggestion to the contrary is a bald-faced lie.

That’s the bait and switch New Hampshire Dems have been working for years. They can’t shut up about high property taxes but have never lowered a budget or cut a taxor spending in their political lives – unless forced by Republicans. Their ‘lowering the property tax scam’ is sleight of hand. Deflections and distractions. Were they to succeed, you might briefly see a lower rate in that next bill, but you’ll pay in more places and more often. Total taxes will rise, property values will follow (because they spent that money, too), and then those tax rates will increase, and before you know it, you’re Vermont with some of the highest total tax burdens in the nation.

And I’m not claiming that any Democrat in Vermont ever promised they’d lower property taxes; I’ll leave it up to our Vermont readers to clarify the history, but the spending that always follows a Democrat majority has come to call upon the Green (as in higher taxes) Mountain State, and it is an impressive abuse of Vermonters property rights.

 

This year’s letter projects property tax bills to increase by an average of 18.5 percent next fiscal year, driven largely by a forecasted 12 percent increase in year-over-year education spending. In addition, many districts are seeing changes in pupil counts due to implementation of the new pupil weights from Act 127 of 2022. Changes in pupil counts affect education tax rates, which are based on per pupil spending.

“I understand that this will not be welcome news for Vermonters,” said Commissioner Bolio, “This forecast predicts an unprecedented property tax increase next year, with very real financial impacts at a time Vermonters are already struggling to pay for housing.”

 

Governor Scott is less than pleased, not that he can do anything about it but bitch, which he has.

 

“Vermont’s tax burden is already, unfortunately, among the highest in the country, and families are bearing an incredible burden with increased costs of living across the board, including new and higher taxes and fees imposed by the Legislature. Put simply, a nearly 20% property tax increase would hurt Vermonters and our economy, and we cannot let it happen.

“At a time when housing costs and interest rates are elevated, higher property taxes will make our housing and workforce crises worse, and I sincerely hope the Legislature agrees.

“For years, I have warned that Vermont is unaffordable for too many families and small businesses. This is why for seven years I focused on holding the line on higher taxes and fees, while offering solutions to reduce the tax burden on Vermonters. And for six out of the seven years, we were successful in preventing new taxes and fees.

A warning that fell on deaf ears when whoever or whatever elected a veto-proof majority of spendaholic lefties to the legislature. True to their nature, they overbudgeted, over-regulated, and overspent, and the bill has come due. And this is not the end but the beginning, and I challenge anyone to find an example where this is not the case when Democrats get unobstructed control of a state budget.

For comparison, New Hampshire continues to have one of the lowest total tax burdens in the nation. In 2023, the Granite State was 48th lowest out of 50, while Vermont was 4th highest – before this considerable increase. (Related: Survey: New Hampshire Has Best Return on Taxes in the Nation.)

Vermont is also one of the least Free States (while NH is the most), and those two things are connected.

Vermont should expect to continue to become less free as its tax burden grows. When you rob people for that much, that often, you need to take their freedoms as well.

Still, on the bright side, councilors are available if you’d like help killing yourself – some conditions still apply, though we expect those to get less burdensome over time in relationship to the rise in taxes, regulations, and deliberate abuse of the citizenry.

Fewer peasants are bad for the tax base but good for the planet  – or, at least, that’s their excuse for wanting people to die.

 

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

The Legacy Of BLM — A Few Banked Millions While Literally Everyone Else Is Worse Off

Granite Grok - Mon, 2023-12-04 01:00 +0000

On Tuesday night, DC residents gathered to lament the state of their city.

“We are mad. We are scared in this community. There was a murder in our building just 10 days ago. A woman was shot in the face across the street on Saturday,” one resident told D.C. police Chief Pamela Smith at Tuesday’s town hall.

Smith did her best to respond to these frustrations, but real culprits — champagne race-baiters like Ibram X. Kendi and Patrisse Cullors — were nowhere to be found. Their ideas, however, are painfully present in the daily lives of Washingtonians.

In the capital of the most powerful nation the world has ever known, violent crime is up 38 percent in just one year. Gun violence breaks out in front of upscale restaurants. Eighty-five thousand people in the city’s poorest ward are about to lose their only grocery store due to unrestrained retail theft. Police gave up on stopping carjackers and started handing out free steering wheel locks instead.

And why? Partly because Black Lives Matter riots in major cities had a chilling effect on recruitment and policing. The result has been some 3,000 additional murders over a seven-year period, one study found. In D.C. alone, there is a shortfall of around 400 officers and no wonder. Who wants to be a cop in a city that rewards church-burning rioters by naming a street after them? (RELATED: Watchdog Reveals How Much DC Is Spending To Refresh BLM Mural As Violent Crime Surges)

 


In addition to creating these problems, the prophets of systemic racism have also made it nearly impossible to solve them. The D.C. council’s solution to this crime wave was to reduce the punishments for carjackings and robberies.

When Chicago and Los Angeles had the opportunity to elect pro-police mayors, they doubled down on BLM resentment politics instead. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson immediately set about rebranding teenage looting mobs as “large gatherings.” The idea of doing something to stop those mobs — which drive taxpaying, job-creating businesses out of the city — would never occur to him. That would be racist.

 

 

No matter who you are, this ideology has probably made your life measurably worse.

Are you an affluent white woman out for a nice city walk in your Canada Goose jacket? Or a Brooklyn hipster on your way home from a wedding? You may well find yourself robbed at gunpoint or stabbed to death in front of your girlfriend.

If you’re a poor black woman in Southeast D.C., then congratulations! You now live in a crime-ridden food desert. Isn’t life grand without all that “over-policing”?

Maybe you’re an Indian-American family living in a Connecticut suburb, far from the chaos of the inner cities. Sorry, there’s still no escape. They’ll punish your daughter for outperforming her classmates “of color” or maybe cancel her honors classes altogether. Even families in small-town Oklahoma aren’t safe from blue-haired teachers who want nothing more than to privilege-walk their sons down the hallways until they hate themselves, their families, and their country.

Are you a law student excited to hear a prominent federal judge speak on your campus? Too bad. Your classmates, who’ve spent the last few years huffing uncut CRT, can shout the speaker down while a highly paid administrator eggs them on. (RELATED: Federal Judges Won’t Hire Clerks From Stanford Law After Students Shouted Down Federal Judge)

Even major corporations are suffering. Target is so afraid of the next George Floyd dying in its aisles with some chicken thighs stuffed down his pants that it’s allegedly preventing law enforcement from arresting shoplifters in stores. And that’s despite retail theft topping $1 billion for the company this year and forcing nine stores to close. Rough deal for the employees, too.

But maybe you’re just a regular guy who believes in fairness and wants things to work like they’re supposed to. You think planes should be flown by the sharpest pilots, troops commanded by the ablest officers, Oscars awarded to the best movies, professorships and grants directed to the most promising candidates and so on. Sorry. Every organization, in addition to its stated purpose, now has an overriding trinity of metapurposes: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.

The FAA exists not to ensure safe air travel but to promote diversity. The military’s primary objective is to maximize equity, not warfighting capacity. The Academy Awards declare dogmatically that there can be no artistic excellence without full inclusion. Awards and positions flow not to the best qualified but to those who can most eloquently restate the DEI Creed. (RELATED: Entire University System To No Longer Require ‘Diversity Statements’ From Applicants)

Everything is like this now. And as a result, everything is worse.

The only real beneficiaries (other than shoplifters) are the priests and priestesses of the anti-racism cult. Kendi got to rake in millions of dollars for a Center for Antiracist Research that published jack shit. Cullors ended up with a $6 million party mansion. Colin Kaepernick compared the NFL to slavery, making him the only slave in history with a seven-figure sneaker deal. Regina Jackson and Saira Rao, a particularly entrepreneurial pair of anti-racist educators, charged white women $5,000 a pop to call them racist and then yell at them for crying about it.

 

 

And, of course, there are all the university diversicrats, HR harpies, and roving DEI educators whose names we don’t know but who are raking in cushy salaries with full benefits for their work as full-time crybullies.

The results are in: Black Lives Matter has been an unqualified disaster across every stratum of American society. Everyone has suffered except for a small handful of grifting opportunists. The wave may be rolling back in some places, but it won’t roll back all the way. Even if it did, the damage is already done.

Grayson Quay is an editor at the Daily Caller.

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

ICYMI – DHS Takes Down Video Asking Family Members to Rat Each Other Out

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 23:30 +0000

Remember that time at COVID censorship camp when the government was publishing propaganda encouraging you to rat out friends and neighbors for violating mandates (too many people at a party or not following other oppressive mandates)? They wanted you to rat out your family, too.

DHS, through The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), had a cute little video about countering COVID-19 information.

The animated video featured an instructor who provided instructions on “Countering Disinformation: Cybersecurity 101.”

“Since 2020, there has been a lot of false and inaccurate information about COVID-19,” the video stated.

The instructional video produced by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) featured an illustrated version of a social media feed from the perspective of the fictional character, Susan.

“Consider this post from Susan’s feed: It’s from her Uncle Steve, who claims everybody knows COVID is no worse than the flu,” the video continued.

In the fictional scenario, Susan’s uncle is accused of backing up his claims about COVID with unreliable sources, including a “fake news story”.

In contrast, Susan supports her stance with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website, which is regarded as a “trustworthy” and “fact-based” source due to its large government funding. …

“You can’t win every argument online, but you can protect yourself from disinformation. You can stop it from spreading, too,” the video stated.

That video came down this year, but only this year, and no, I’m not Uncle Steve, though I would happily sub for the role. Both of us were correct: The government was suppressing the truth and propagandizing lies. We all know that, but we are inside a sector of the sausage factory from which not every truth escapes to find life among the majority of disinterested voters.

But they’ve been warming up to the idea.

We see fewer folks practicing the old pandemic ways, and that’s a sign of hope. If we can turn that into something, maybe we aren’t wasting our time with the political primary posturing as we speed toward another attempted presidential election theft.

But I’m not holding my breath.

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Elon Musk’s Solar Panel Paradox

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 22:00 +0000

In a recent interview with Joe Rogan, Elon Musk claimed the United States could be supplied with electricity by a 10,000-square-mile solar array. Mr. Rogan did not critically press the iconic X-owner as to the logistical or environmental problems such an installation would present.

Mr. Musk is undoubtedly a scientific genius, but even geniuses are susceptible to conflicts of interest – like owning a massive company that manufactures and sells solar panels in America while extolling their salvific benefits.

It is clear what a 10,000-square-mile solar field would do for the bottom line of a company like Tesla (which acquired SolarCity, a leading manufacturer of residential and commercial solar panels in 2016). But what would it do for America or the ecosystem supposedly being rescued from destruction?

A Panoply of Panel Problems

Solar panels have steadily improved in efficiency since their introduction. Early efforts were about 6% efficient in capturing the sun’s fusion energy. Some prototypes now extend into the potential range of 35% or greater: Elon Musk makes panels that approach 20-23% efficiency. At 13-14% efficiency, it has been estimated that an array of 22,000 square miles would be required to energize America, an area roughly the size of Lake Michigan. Musk’s upgrade using “next generation” panels would reduce the required space by more than half to an area akin to Lake Erie.

Depending on panel efficiency, estimates of the number of solar panels this installation would require vary, but range between ten billion and 18.5 billion panels. When asked by Rogan whether it was feasible to install such an array, Musk was enthusiastically optimistic.

“Absolutely,” Musk responded. “We need batteries, but yes.” Musk explained that “it’s not hard” and “very feasible” to power the entire country with solar because the sun is converting more than four million tons of mass to energy every second and requires no maintenance. “That thing just works. We have a giant fusion reactor in the sky,” he said.

It could be that Elon has been staring at the sun too long, developing a blind spot. He concedes there is a battery problem to solve – a huge hurdle not easily surmounted. Unmentioned are grid carrying capacity, inefficiencies of transmission, or the ongoing problem of intermittency: When clouds scud across the sky, the energy flow from panel to grid fluctuates erratically. But the more immediate (and consistently sidestepped) inquiry is: How much energy and pollution would ten billion solar panels require to manufacture, install, and eventually dispose of? Solar panels deteriorate in efficiency by about .5% annually and thus last about 25-30 years before their (toxic, non-recyclable) disposal is required.

Elon Musk and Silicon

Elon Musk’s battery limitation acknowledgement is much akin to the Utopian social justice statement: “Every human on the planet can have their own personal Taj Mahal. We need the marble and jewels, yes. But let us not quibble.” A similar sleight of hand ignores the energy and pollution costs of manufacturing billions of panels. Musk’s Tesla (SolarCity) panels are a hybrid of crystalline and silicon models. Silicon requires fossil fuels to create, according to Thomas Troszak, director of research and development at Reciprodyne, a company specializing in custom machine and process design, fabrication, and consulting. In “Why do we burn coal and trees to make solar panels?” Troszak explains:

“… every step in the production of solar PV [photovoltaic (converting the sun’s energy to electricity)] power systems requires an input of fossil fuels – as the carbon reductants needed for smelting silicon from ore, to provide manufacturing process heat and power, for the intercontinental transport of materials, and for on-site deployment. The only “renewable” materials consumed in PV production are obtained by deforestation – by burning large areas of tropical rainforest for charcoal (another carbon reductant) and to provide the wood chips that are necessary for all silicon smelters to function. Additional mineral resources and fossil energy are needed for constructing factories, process equipment, and maintaining the PV manufacturing infrastructure itself. Silicon smelters, polysilicon refineries, and crystal growers all require uninterrupted, 24/7 power that comes mostly from coal and uranium.”

Calculating the greenhouse gas (GHG) and carcinogen tally of the manufacture of 10-20 billion panels was not part of Musk’s Rogan experience. Arguably the world should await even more efficient “next generation” panels – or perhaps the lagging battery materials and technology – before ramping up these installations, but “climate urgency” means pollution and waste are just a cost of saving the planet from pollution and waste.

Climate ideologues crow that America has reduced its GHG production, ignoring increases abroad attributable to “renewable” manufacturing. As China faces an environmental crisis disposing of its aging panels while manufacturing new ones, the better course may be to simply leave the things unmade rather than have to clean up the toxic disaster they have clearly become.

Saving the World?

Or ideologues and captains of industry could pitch a worldwide solar array before batteries or grids exist to capture the juice, and with no proposal to replace or dispose of them when they expire in a few decades. This would require an estimated 92.7 billion solar panels, enough to completely cover America’s 11 smallest states (South Carolina, West Virginia, Maryland, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, Delaware, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Hawaii and Rhode Island) plus another 4,000 square miles!

There would be far less chemical pollution generated for the planet if every human were provided with a personal Taj Mahal. But hey, who’s counting? Just build toxic solar panels in China, NIMBY-style.

When it comes to making money, Elon Musk is the prophet of profits. It is to be hoped this oddball genius can calculate not only rocket prop

 

 

John Klar is an Attorney, farmer, and author. Mostly farmer… And Regular Contributor to GraniteGrok and VermontGrok.

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Nikki Haley, This Koch is for You

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 20:30 +0000

You will have heard the news by now. Americans For Prosperity – the National mothership, not the local state groups – has endorsed warmonger Nikki ‘No Free Speech‘ Haley as their Insider of choice to keep Donald Trump from his all but certain nomination.

They would have been better off choosing DeSantis (Trump was never an option), but no. Nikki Haley, this Koch is for you. And it has not played well everywhere, including inside NH’s chapter of AFP. Former Grokster Chris Maidment took to X on December 1st to profess his outrage.

 

There’s a high likelihood I get fired for this, and I didn’t clean out my desk today, but here goes…

I joined @AFPhq and @AFP_NH because we were a principle based organization. 

I found them, almost accidentally, in 2017 when I was a keyboard warrior with no influence.

My wife, my 6-week-old baby, and I, ultimately attended. We found common cause and common allies. Folks that were dedicated to the same cause we were — making NH and America more free. 

Years of volunteering untimately led to a job. But not a job, a passion that paid.

A cause to fight for while still being able to supply for my family. A dream come true. 

I’ve disagreed with @AFPhq over the years on a number of things — COVID, for one — but ultimately believed that @AFPhq and @AFP_NH was such a force and principled enought that it was a place to stake my career. 

Earlier this week, we learned the opposite.

@NikkiHaley might have momentum, and she may even pull off the impossible and win the nomination, but with @AFPAction’s endorsement, I’ve lost all faith in @AFPhq. 

Nikki Haley is totally sideways on @AFPhq ‘s foreign policy stance. She’s anti free speech.  I respect my colleagues, many of whom will stay and do their jobs, and work to nominate and elect Nikki Haley.  I will not. In 10, 15, 20 years I want to look my children in the eye and tell them I did the right thing. The hard thing.  … (more from the thread reader unroll here.)

 

I’ll take exception to the ‘Keyboard warrior with no influence” jab. We don’t pay writers or offer insurance, but Chris was warring with us, and while that may ot have been the influence he was hoping for, it is there, and it is real. People wouldn’t be constantly threatening to expose, cancel, or shut us down if it weren’t. Democrats in the NH legislature even sponsored a bill that would have allowed them to lawfare us into obscurity (it failed). Otherwise, Chris is over the target and dropping truth bombs on the Koch endorsement and Haley.

To be clear as Vodka, Haley was a great UN ambassador, but she turned tail on her boss when the Left turned the heat up on everyone around him. That is a fatal character flaw and not uncommon among Republicans not named Trump. A point made in spades by Patricia McCarthy in a piece titled, “The Republican Party is saturated with abject cowards.”

 

They caved on Obamacare, a disaster by every account.  Along with their partners in crime, the media, some of them perpetrated the Russia collusion hoax for years, a colossal lie from the outset. They allowed the impeachment of President Trump twice on wholly fabricated and insignificant charges.

So malleable is this Republican Party, the Democrats stole the 2020 election with impunity.

And they’ve done nothing to bring those guilty to light. Why? Because they fear Trump’s promise to “drain the swamp” every bit as much as the Democrats do.

They are all, with the exception of a treasured few, committed members of that swamp.  They refuse to stop the extravagant spending that has put us $34 trillion in debt.

They will vote to expel one of their own but do nothing about the long list of criminals that currently sit in Congress:  James Bowman, Rashida Tlaib, Robert Menendez, Cori Bush, Ilhan Omar, etc.  Each of them has committed numerous crimes that should get them expelled from office.  Will the Republicans fight back? Not a chance. The few who do speak out are shouted down, silenced. Consider how Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene are treated by their fellow Republicans.

 

That’s Haley, and it is a portrait, perhaps not of individual Republicans, but certainly of Party impotence. As McCarthy notes, if it were Democrats, they’d be doing what they are doing to President Trump.

The default response to that is, well, we don’t want to be like them. The answer to that is that you are them when you enable it.

Stop being the bystander who records the serial gang-raping of Lady Liberty on your cell phone so you can use it to get more followers on Instagram (or get re-elected ‘cuz, look at what they are doing) and get in the fight.

Doing the right thing is hard, but we’ve got more seat-warmers than warriors, and if that doesn’t change, seat-warming is the only job they’ll let you have, and what scares me is that there are plenty of Republicans who would take it.

 

 

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

The Media and the Subtle Art of Manipulation

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 19:00 +0000

In a world drowning in information, I always find myself at the crossroads of truth and deceit, only hoping to get a front-row seat to a sinister ballet orchestrated by the unseen puppeteers of the deep state. This should not be labeled as the stuff of conspiracy theories.

Still, it is a collection of tales spun from our experiences, where we understand how deep connections with the media can birth monstrous offspring – fake news, lies, and propaganda.

From the trenches of my insider vantage point, I witness how the web of relationships between the deep state and media personnel paves the way for manufacturing distorted realities. It isn’t just about sowing seeds of disinformation; it is a meticulously crafted symphony conducted by puppet masters interested in manipulating public perception.

Behind the curtains of newsrooms, “deep connections” aren’t mere networking; they are lifelines of influence. Top media personnel become conduits, willingly or unknowingly, for disseminating propaganda. Imagine a world where news isn’t a mirror reflecting reality but a canvas painted with the hues of hidden agendas.

As an unsuspecting and mostly gullible audience, navigating a landscape fraught with half-truths and calculated deception is difficult.

“Repeating a lie a thousand times gives it a veneer of truth” – is a maxim that has become the mantra of every clandestine operation. As the whisper of deception echoes through the corridors of power, it gains strength, morphing into a shrill noise that drowns dissenting voices. How many lies, I wondered, have been thus engraved in the collective consciousness, shielded by the armor of repetition?

The process always begins with creating the lie that suits the narrative of the agenda to be unleashed, which could be a false news story, a misleading statement, or a distorted fact. This lie is then spread through various channels, such as social media, blogs, and traditional media outlets. The more times the lie is repeated, the more likely it is to be believed, especially if it aligns with a person’s pre-existing beliefs or biases.

The lie is often crafted to be as plausible as possible, using techniques such as sensationalism, fear-mongering, and appeals to emotion. It may also be presented as a fact or a widely accepted truth, making it seem more credible. Once the lie has been spread, it is often difficult to disprove, especially if it aligns with a person’s beliefs or biases. This is because people tend to ignore or downplay information that contradicts their beliefs, a phenomenon known as confirmation bias. Ask yourself the question – how did this bias enter into the head in the first place? It is through a long chain of trickery that you become a player.

The news ecosystem, that intricate web connecting publishers, information, and users, becomes the battleground. “Fake news” isn’t just a buzzword but a weapon meticulously wielded to sway public opinion. The manufactured narratives don’t merely stay confined within the traditional news outlets; they permeate every corner of the digital realm, finding refuge in blogs and social media platforms.

But how does this web of deception ensnare the unwitting masses? The answer lies in the interconnectedness of it all. The relationships, the influence, the repetition—it was a carefully orchestrated dance where each step led the audience deeper into the labyrinth of falsehoods. Have you ever questioned the news you consume, wondering if it’s a reflection of reality or a distorted mirage?

The power dynamics at play are both subtle and insidious. The relationships between the deep state and media personnel are the glue that holds this elaborate facade together. But who are these puppet masters, and what is their endgame? The answers may seem elusive, hidden behind secrecy and plausible deniability. But ask yourself, what is it they want? Simply put – they want it all for themselves – a few greedy at the top of the pyramid, with dumbed-down masses at the bottom. You know it all but want to look the other way or are ghastly callous, not thinking of the damage it is already doing to you and future generations.

As I navigate the delicate balance between revealing the truth and protecting my identity, I implore you to question the narratives presented to you. Are you a mere spectator in this dance, or are you an active participant, discerning the moves with a critical eye?

In the end, this isn’t just my story; it’s a cautionary tale for those who dare to peel back the layers of the media landscape. The web of deception is intricately spun, but with awareness and scrutiny, we can unravel its threads and reclaim the narrative that is rightfully ours.

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Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Politics and a Spontaneous International Trip

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 17:30 +0000

PORTLAND, OREGON – Following an exciting visit to Taiwan with a legislative delegation, I lingered here in the Rose City with Beth to visit family and experience the Pacific Northwest. The foliage colored up about a month behind New Hampshire, so it was still beautiful in late November.

Spontaneity is very important. Just let yourself go and see what happens.” – American actor Aron Eisenberg

I was lying on a couch after church on a Sunday morning when Beth surprised me by asking if I wanted to shoot up to Canada.

“Sure!”

I’d floated the idea several days earlier and didn’t get much of a response, but I’d planted a thought in her pretty head. And such trips are always better when suggested by the spouse.

“We’ll leave in an hour,” said Dr. B.

Spontaneous road trips—like spontaneous parties—can be exciting and fun. Or disastrous. But nothing ventured, nothing gained.

We threw our bags into the Prius.

“Got your passport?”

“Wait one!”

A minute later we were heading north on I-5. British Columbia, ahoy!

We did detailed planning in the car.

“Let’s go to Vancouver,” I suggested.

“How about Victoria Island? It’s closer.”

“Okay.”

Things work out better when spousal suggestions are adopted.

“Is there a bridge?” I asked.

“Ferry,” replied Dr. B from the passenger seat as she studied a map. Then, she reserved a BnB using her cell phone. The 21st Century has its wonders. It would take about four hours to drive through Washington State to Puget Sound. Then, the 90-minute ferry to Victoria.

Shortly thereafter, I heard an “Uh-oh.”

Never good.

“We’re going to miss the last ferry. I’ll have to make a reservation in Port Angeles for tonight, and then we’ll catch the early ferry tomorrow.”

That meant that we’d be paying for an empty BnB in Victoria that evening while getting a hotel room in Port Angeles. Spontaneity has its dangers.

The Scenery

We enjoyed the scenery while hurtling north. Off to our right, to the east, we soon saw the towering Mt. St. Helens. Old enough to remember the major eruption there in 1980, we marveled at how terrifying it must have been to so many who could see it from all directions for 100 miles.

Further north we could see Mt. Rainier, again to the east. Also an active volcano, at 14,411 feet, it’s the most glaciated peak in the lower 48 states, spawning five major rivers.

Then it got dark, and an incredible full moon arose, also to the east. We listened to ’60s music on Sirius Channel 73 and truly enjoyed the ride.

After finally arriving at Port Angeles, we tooled around town a bit and did some prep for our excellent, spontaneous Canadian adventure.

As an NH State Representative, it occurred to me that Victoria was a provincial capital and that a trip to the capital building might be fun. So, I googled an email address for the Legislative Assembly and messaged to ask if any visitors might be allowed.

The Boat

The next morning, we got in line early for the ferry. We decided to take the car even though that would be pricier—and even though our BnB was within walking distance of the landing. It was still dark at 7 a.m. as we were in the far western part of the Pacific Time Zone. We drove aboard and then went up above for the 90-minute passage. It was a rare, sunny day with maximum visibility.

Puget Sound was like a placid lake, and I wondered how far from shore indigenous peoples took their boats centuries ago. I also pondered how this very waterway was once simultaneously claimed by the Spanish, the British, the Russians, and the Americans—as well as, of course, those indigenous folks.  (Google “54-40 or Fight!”)

The City

The city of Victoria is the capital of the beautiful province of British Columbia, 62 miles southwest of Vancouver and 62 miles north of Seattle. Named for the iconic 19th-century British Queen, the city features many older buildings, giving it a slightly European ambiance in contrast to America’s west coast metropolises. Its “Chinatown” is the second oldest on the continent, behind San Francisco’s.

That the traffic was relatively light was a surprise. It then occurred to me that we were on an island, which protected the city from countless vehicles driving in—unless they wanted to pay for the expensive ferry ride that we’d just experienced.

The government buildings were impressive edifices completed in 1897. But equally impressive was the imposing Empress Hotel, which opened in 1908. This truly grand hotel beckoned us to visit and explore.

The Parliament

We checked in early to our BnB, which overlooked the harbor and a small fleet of tourist boats. I checked my phone for messages and was surprised and delighted to see a response to my query from the provincial legislative assembly.

“Great news!” I exclaimed to Beth. “We’re not only invited to visit the Provincial Parliament, but they want to give us a special guided tour and then have us sit in on a “Question Time” assembly session. Wow!”

As a legislator, a visit to the provincial parliament called to me somewhat more than it did to Beth.

“Did you tell them you were some sort of big deal to get this invitation?”

“Just the facts, ma’am,” I replied. “Just the facts.”

“Do you have the right clothes for such a visit?”

“I just happened to pack the suitcoat I wore to Taiwan.”

“Well, now there’s a surprise,” replied Dr. B, rolling her eyes. But she admitted being excited to witness “Question Time,” which was obviously based the British model where the Prime Minister takes direct questions from all parties in the House of Commons. We’d both watched that tradition on C-SPAN.

“America should have a version of ‘Question Time.’ Don’t you agree?” asked Beth.

“Absolutely,” I agreed. I wanted to point out that our current president rarely even has a controlled press conference, much less take direct questions from Congress, but I didn’t want to stir things up. Spontaneous trips are always smoother when political arguments are avoided.

We were met by David near the entrance to the historic parliamentary edifice. He conducted a wonderful tour and provided us with gallery tickets to watch Question Time.

The Drama

Legislative assembly sessions invite theatrics, as the elected officials play not only to their colleagues but also to the gallery and to the cameras. Multiple parties were represented, but the two major ones in B.C. were the New Democratic Party (NDP) and the British Columbia United party (BCP). As we looked down from the gallery, the NDP was to our left, and the BCP was to our right, literally and figuratively. There were also two Green Party members and two Conservatives. There were no Liberals, which I found interesting, given that Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a Liberal.

The questions mostly involved BCP members asking NDP leaders about healthcare shortcomings. Depending upon who said what, it was fun to watch one side or the other cheering and desk pounding—just like the Brits do in London on C-SPAN.

The Invite

After Question Time wrapped up at 11 a.m., Beth and I were the first to step out from the gallery. We wanted to head to the Empress Hotel for “Teatime.” We were surprised to run into David, who apparently was waiting for us.

“The Speaker would like to meet you,” he explained.

“Seriously?”  (The Speaker was still sitting on the throne in the legislative chamber.)

“Yes.”

David escorted us to the outer chamber of the opulent Speaker’s Office, where we waited and watched a screen showing a BCP member using some extra time to call out the Premier for what she felt was egregious behavior. After she finished, the session adjourned, and Speaker Raj Chouhan soon entered his chambers, followed by the Legislative Clerk, Kate Ryan-Wood. We followed them into the inner sanctum, where we all sat on some gorgeous furniture in front of a big fireplace and enjoyed some friendly small talk. Canadians obviously follow American politics—including the New Hampshire primary.

“I was just hoping to get a photo when I sent that email,” I explained. “We’ll never forget your extraordinary hospitality.”

“We know who you are,” responded Chouhan, which I found incredibly flattering. Someone must have googled me after I sent the message and saw that I was a House Committee Chair back in New Hampshire.

Rep. Mike Moffett and Dr. Beth with British Columbia Legislative Assembly Speaker Raj Chouhan at the provincial parliament building in Victoria.

We got a few more photos, and then Beth and I excused ourselves, leaving the Canadian lawmakers to go back to making laws.

“I’m glad I brought my tie and jacket,” I said to Beth as we walked toward the Empress Hotel.

“You knew they were going to invite you to the Speaker’s Office.”

“No way!”

“Yeah. Sure.”

The Tea The dining room at the Empress was also opulent, and I was glad we were dressed up for Teatime.  The pianist was playing the theme from Downton Abby as we entered, which somehow seemed apropos. I felt like we were walking into Highclere Castle, the building seen in the popular British series.

Being a country hoser from Groveton, I’d never done a “teatime,” but Dr. B had lots of class and knew how to proceed. Several pots were delivered over flaming heat sources with hourglasses so we could measure the appropriate amount of time for the giant teabags to do their things. The tea was accompanied by several courses of interesting and delicious food. I also ordered a large Merlot to celebrate our wonderful experience at the provincial parliament.

“I bought the ferry tickets so you can pay for teatime,” said Beth.

“Sure,” I replied.

“Don’t faint when you see the bill. It can be one of my Christmas presents.”

I’m glad she warned me. Teatime at the Empress turned out to be very pricey. But it was worth it.

The Return

We retrieved our Prius from the parliament parking lot and drove to the ferry. The passage back to the states was wonderful. After driving off the ferry we briefly chatted with a customs official who waved us along without even asking to see our passports. Nice.

The drive back to Portland was pleasant, as we found Christmas music on Sirius Channel 71. The first Christmas music of the holiday season is somehow the best.

After a couple hours Beth indicated she had a book on tape she could play. I was enjoying the music but wanted to be spontaneously open to a new experience. I had never listened to a book on tape before.

“Sure. What do you have?”

THE WATERGATE GIRL: My Fight for Truth and Justice Against a Criminal President by Jill Wine-Banks.”

I inwardly groaned. I was content to keep listening to “Silent Night” or “Joy to the World.” But after two hours of listening to the audio book I was completely pulled in. I wanted to drive another hour after we reached Portland just to keep listening. It confirmed the value of being spontaneous and trying something different.

It was almost midnight when we finally got “home” to unload the Prius.

“What are we going to spontaneously do tomorrow?” I asked.

“I don’t know about you but I’m going to spontaneously sleep in,” replied Dr. B.

As a great philosopher (Jennifer Aniston) once said about spontaneity, “The funnest stuff happens when you break away from the script.”

So true.

The post Politics and a Spontaneous International Trip appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

If China Can Build 8-10 Nuclear Power Plants a Year Why Can’t We?

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 16:00 +0000

You’d be hard-pressed to find a proper progressive who dislikes how China gets things done. Xi commands it, and everyone else, including the pretend legislature, lines up to make it happen. Failure could mean death and good fortune to someone needing an organ replacement.

China, China, Chi-Nah!

Democrats and their water carriers are forever telling us China is building and installing all that wind and solar we should, too. We must be like them, but China is also building nuclear power plants at a record pace.

 

To wean their country off imported oil and gas, and in the hope of retiring dirty coal-fired power stations, China’s leaders have poured money into wind and solar energy. But they are also turning to one of the most sustainable forms of non-renewable power. Over the past decade China has added 37 nuclear reactors, for a total of 55, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency, a un body. During that same period America, which leads the world with 93 reactors, added two.

Facing an ever-growing demand for energy, China isn’t letting up. It aims to install between six and eight nuclear reactors each year. Some officials seem to think that target is low. The country’s nuclear regulator says China has the capacity to add between eight and ten per year. The State Council (China’s cabinet) approved the construction of ten in 2022. All in all, China has 22 nuclear reactors under construction, many more than any other country.

 

And not to just be disagreeable with The Economist, but I do not believe for one second that China is building Nucelar to get away from dirty coal. I think it is building nuclear because its military-industrial complex needs more power, and dirty coal isn’t enough. I also believe the wind and solar are just window dressing to saddle idiot Western elites with unreliable energy when the time comes to take over the world – financially, commercially, culturally, and militarily, if necessary.

China is a communist nation. They don’t give a sh!t about the climate cult’s dogma except to feed it because it advances their geo-political goals. Everywhere around the world, they open mines and extract resources. They destroy the environment at the expense of indigenous populations. But the American Left loves them! So, how about we love some new nuclear power? That net-zero fantasy is impossible, but it is much more possible with Nucelar.

I’m sure they’ve streamlined the bureaucratic process for permitting and construction, and in China, thanks to all the coal-powered energy capacity they created, steel is likely cheap and abundant. You can’t make steel without burning coal. Their economy has been built to build back better.

Meanwhile, given the current economic conditions, America would have a hard time competing with China on energy infrastructure, but what possible excuse could the Progs have for not following China’s lead on Nuclear Energy? Do they want China to be stronger? Do they want America to be a weak country that can’t compete? Are they loving the idea of brownouts and blackouts and making everything we make and do cost more because of expensive fuel and electric rates so our products can’t compete?

Shouldn’t we be building more Nucelar to keep up?

I’m sure it will be amusing to watch the Left make excuses for not following China’s Nuclear push but how funny is that The Economist, a once reliable source for global news, clings bitterly to the idea that China is doing this to achieve Net zero by 2060 without suggesting we should too?

Or that the only net zero that interests the Chinese government is net-zero resistance to their political and military power.

China is building nuclear plants; we should, too. Lots of them – starting now. And you’ve no excuse. You can’t achieve your emissions cuts BS without them, nor can you excuse away why it is okay for China but not America.

But I know you’ll try.

 

The post If China Can Build 8-10 Nuclear Power Plants a Year Why Can’t We? appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

Is Masking the Public for the Good of Public Health Doomed Policy?

Granite Grok - Sun, 2023-12-03 16:00 +0000

On the heels of research that reported a 40% increase in COVID infections among regular mask users, the public masking menace has taken another shot to the McNuggets. This time, from a past that reinforces what we’re seeing now. Masks make matters worse.

Not to beat a dead horse dewormer narrative, but before the politicization of mask compliance and mandates, there was a respected body of evidence that was affirmed by science and scientists. Public masking was useless against the flu virus. But the Chinese do it, so Marxists decided that we should too. With few exceptions, the political and public health classes failed the test. They chose Marxism over science and rapidly embraced the totalitarian police state mentality about enforcement. It’s not a good look, and there’s no shortage of words on these pages about that, but our objection wasn’t just political. The science hasn’t changed, and more recent research affirms what UK Heath Minister Dame Jenny Harries has been saying since March 2020.

 

Professor Dame Jenny Harries, now the head of the UK Health Security Agency, explained that the policy wasn’t based on scientific reality and had the effect of instilling a “false sense of security,” convincing people that they would reduce their risk of becoming infected if they wore a mask.

She also told the inquiry that government advice on how to make a mask out of bits of cloth and old t-shirts was wholly “ineffective.”

 

Whatever your position was or is on public masking or reasonable exemptions from it, the problem (wholly aligning with what was passed for despotic mandates) was the false sense of efficacy and the increased likelihood of harm. While Norweigan researchers found that regular masking resulted in up to a 40% rise in COVID-19 infections – quite the opposite result of the stated purpose – there are numerous risks unrelated to flu that come with blocking your airway. But masked meant compliant, and new revelations about old science continue to damage the brand.

We’ll always have flu, and it will always be nasty for vulnerable populations, but if you can’t get everyone else to wear your gang colors, then the tyranny needs a new groove.

The WEFers, the UN, and its WHOs in Public Health Whoville need to find a replacement or a way to counteract the rise in “science” that contradicts their mask messaging. And while it doesn’t take much to get a local lib-majority council to impose one even now, if you’ve been paying attention, mask-wearing is less popular than the latest COVID booster. Useless Social Distancing is non-existent, and few, if any, give you the side-eye if you sneeze or cough in public.

“Bless you” is more likely than what we had from 2020-2022. Lane Nazis with hands shaking from rage, pointing at arrows on the floor in a direction opposite the one you travel. No arrows, no pointing, no angry eyes above even more useless cloth masks, but both fear and tyranny still lurk in the minds of weak men and women—Tin-pot local dictators on both sides of the aisle who keep running for and getting elected to office.

If we want mask mandates dead, those folks will need to be shown the door. Still, much like the complacency over meaningful election integrity reform outside what the left calls the radical right, that’s not happening to scale. Until it does, we can’t pronounce the policy doomed.

As much as we’d like to do that.

 

The post Is Masking the Public for the Good of Public Health Doomed Policy? appeared first on Granite Grok.

Categories: Blogs, New Hampshire

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