TWO 'U.S. POINT MEN' APPOINTED BY ME
ON THE FRANCO ALULIO ALGORITHM (BOTH
PUBLISHED IN THE OTTAWA SUN) DESERVE THEIR OWN SUB-HEADING RE THE
DIRECTION NOT ONLY THE U.S. BUT CANADA IS HEADED (N.B. Williams deceased in Dec.
2020 hence V.D. Hanson becomes his replacement.) This algorithm provides a
'clear and present danger' to all N. American drivers. SEE rogercallow.com for details; particularly as it relates to Identity
Theft paralleling the 'Final Solution' of Nazi Germany.
V.D.HANSON: Our descent into collective
madness (U.S. Professor & my 'point man' for the Franco Alulio algorithm (Ontario, Canada) which poses a 'clear & present'
danger to all N. American drivers) Feb.18-2021
Icicles
hang off the State Highway 195 sign on Feb. 18, 2021 in Killeen, Texas. Winter
storm Uri has brought historic cold weather and power outages to Texas as
storms have swept across 26 states with a mix of freezing temperatures and
precipitation. PHOTO BY JOE RAEDLE /Getty
Images
Article content
These are crazy times. A pandemic led
to national quarantine; to self-induced recession; to riot, arson, and looting;
to a contested election; and to a riot at the U.S. Capitol.
In response, are we focusing solely on
upping the daily vaccination rate? Getting the country back to work? Opening
the schools as the virus attenuates? Ensuring safety in the streets? Or are we
descending into a sort of madness? It might have been understandable that
trillions of dollars had to be borrowed to keep a suffocating economy
breathing. But it makes little sense to keep borrowing $2 trillion a year to
prime an economy now set to roar back with herd-like immunity on the horizon.
Trillions of dollars in stimulus are already priming the economy.
Cabin-feverish Americans are poised to get out of their homes to travel, eat
out and socialize as never before. Meanwhile, the United States will have to
start paying down nearly $30 trillion in debt. But we seem more fixated on
raising rather than reducing that astronomical obligation. We are told
man-made, worldwide climate change — as in the now discarded term “global
warming” — can best be addressed by massive dislocations in the U.S. economy.
The Biden administration plans to shut down coal plants. It will halt even nearly
completed new gas and oil pipelines. It will cut back on fracking
to embrace the multitrillion-dollar “Green New Deal.”
Americans should pause and examine the
utter disaster that unfolded recently in Texas and its environs. Parts of the
American Southwest were covered in ice and snow for days. Nighttime
temperatures crashed to near zero in some places. The state, under pressure,
had been transitioning from its near-limitless and cheap reservoirs of natural
gas and other fossil fuels to generating power through wind and solar.
But what happens to millions of Texans
when wind turbines freeze up while storm clouds extinguish solar power?
We are witnessing the answer in oil-
and gas-rich but energy-poor Texas that is all but shut down.
Millions are shivering without
electricity and affordable heating. Some may die or become ill by this
self-induced disaster — one fueled by man-made ideological rigidity.
Texas’ use of natural gas in power
generation has helped the United States curb carbon emissions. Ignoring it for
unreliable wind and solar alternatives was bound to have catastrophic
consequences whenever a politically incorrect nature did not follow the global
warming script.
In 2019, a special counsel wrapped up
a 22-month, $35 million investigation into then-President Donald Trump’s
alleged “collusion” with Russia in the 2016 election. Robert Mueller and his
team searched long and hard for a crime and came up empty.
Then, Trump was impeached in December
2019 and acquitted in the Senate in early 2020. His purported crime was warning
the Ukrainians about the Biden family’s quid pro quo racketeering.
After the revelations concerning
Hunter Biden’s shenanigans not only in Ukraine but also in Kazakhstan and
China, Trump’s admonitions now seem prescient rather than impeachable.
Trump had been threatened with removal
from office under the 25th Amendment. He was accused of violating the Logan Act
and the Constitution’s emoluments clause. His executive orders were often
declared unconstitutional if not seditious.
All these oppositional measures
predictably failed to receive either public or congressional support.
Finally, an exasperated left decided
to flog the presidential corpse of now private citizen Trump. It did so without
a Supreme Court chief justice to oversee an impeachment trial in the Senate.
The targeted president was no longer president.
There was no special prosecutor,
little debate and even less cross-examination. In the end, the second impeachment
was sillier than the first. But, like the first, the show trial wasted precious
time and resources in the midst of a pandemic.
But the height of our collective
madness is the current cancel culture. Its subtexts are “unearned white
privilege” and “white supremacy.”
In the name of those abominations,
mobs tear down statues, destroy careers, censor speech, require veritable oaths
and conduct reeducation training.
Stranger still, those alleging “white
privilege” are usually themselves quite wealthy, liberal — and white. These
elites count on their incestuous networking, silver-spoon upbringings and tony
degrees to leverage status, influence and money in a way undreamed of by the
white working class.
Affluent and privileged minorities
likewise join the chorus to call for everything from reparations to
“reprogramming” Trump voters.
The most elite in America are the most
likely to damn the privilege of those who lack it. Perhaps this illogic squares
the psychological circle of feeling guilty about things they never have any
intention of giving up.
If blaming those without advantages
does not satisfy the unhappy liberal elite, then there is always warring
against the mute dead: changing their eponymous names, destroying their
statues, slandering their memories and denying their achievements.
The common denominator with all these
absurdities? An ungracious and neurotic elite whose judgment is bankrupt and
whose privilege is paid for by those who don’t have it.