Posted on 04/19/2014 4:48:06 PM PDT by Chickensoup
So Why is Mark Steyn No Longer at National Review? I didn't even find him in the contributing editors section. I do go to www.steynonline.com but reading Steyn was a good 40% of why I subscribe to NR.
Really, it is very true—a Bob Hope joke. Some unknown young NR editor objected to the joke in an incredibly snotty and insufferable way. The NR publisher weighed in to Steyn’s defense in the Corner, but all the rest of NR were silent on it. As best I understand it, Steyn pulled out from contributing then. But yes, it was also around the time that the NR apparently wanted to settle and Steyn didn’t.
This blogger has a decent timeline with links:
http://occamsrazormag.wordpress.com/2014/01/13/has-mark-steyn-thrown-national-review-under-the-bus/
I’d say post #42 pretty much nails it.
Put another way, NR is staffed by timid, salaried gopee eunuchs while Steyn is a human Tasmanian Devil, a conservative dynamo with balls like church bells.
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You have a way with words.
Never seen so many `comments removed by moderator on any thread Ive ever read on FR.
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Partially my fault. I lost my temper with the infamous HG.
I dont know. This thread is like production on a FOIA request.
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There were words. Naughty words and bad ideas. They needed to go so we could continue this conversation.
I love that one too. These are all of his books that I’ve read, and some that I own:
By the Rivers of Babylon -————hardcover — own it
Cathedral
Mayday
Night Fall
Plum Island
Spencerville———————— hardcover — own it
The Book Case
The Charm School
The Gate House-—————hardcover — own it
The General’s Daughter
The Lion———————— hardcover — own it
The Lion’s Game
The Talbot Odyssey
Up Country
Wildfire
Word of Honor-————— hardcover — own it
:)
NR is no McCLeans is it?
Nor a Western Standard.
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There are places with courage and we need to support them completely.
Someone Steyn quotes said the Penn State researcher who fudge a bunch of data doesn’t belong at Penn State, he belongs in the State Pen. That’s it. That’s the joke. Caused a lawsuit in Canada (where speech isn’t free), which isn’t going well for the Plaintiff (the Penn State guy) because he refuses to cooperate with discovery. He’s stonewalling release of his raw data.
That was a battle with HG? Well known Blog Pimp policeman? Has he expanded his beat to “Vanity Police?”
This is the last column on the links provided. It is not at the link but I found it elsewhere.
Heading South
Mark Steyn, National Review’s Happy Warrior, January 3, 2014
article source: http://www.steynonline.com/5995/heading-south
Whether or not Nelson Mandela was emblematic of the new South Africa, his memorial service certainly was. Thamsanqa Jantjie, the lovable laugh-a-minute sign-language fraud who stood alongside President Obama gesticulating meaninglessly to the delight of all, was exposed in the days that followed as a far darker character. A violent schizophrenic charged over the years with burglary, rape, kidnapping, and murder, he was also a member of a “necklacing” gang necklacing being the practice of placing a gasoline-filled tire over the head of the victim and setting it alight.
Nevertheless, Mr. Jantjie was merely the ne plus ultra of the South African state’s shambolic security operation for the service. My fellow congregants at National Review have been arguing in recent weeks over whether Mandela was a great man (Deroy Murdock) or a Commie terrorist (Andrew McCarthy) or on balance a mild disappointment (Conrad Black). But beyond such assessments is the daily reality that a lot of things in South Africa simply don’t function anymore. As revealing as Mr. Jantjie’s extensive and violent criminal background is the fact that the National Prosecuting Authority cannot reliably state which offenses he has been convicted of, and, for the one crime for which he seems definitively to have been sentenced, whether in fact he served the sentence.
Before Mandela’s, the last South African funeral to have commanded international attention was that of Field Marshal Smuts, the greatest South African of the pre-apartheid era and the only man to sign the treaties ending both the First and Second World Wars. He is a forgotten figure now, but he was the only South African with a statue in Parliament Square at Westminster until Mandela’s was put up, and his funeral in 1950 attracted numbers comparable to and perhaps even surpassing those in Soweto. Smuts would have been astonished by the chaos and ill discipline of Mandela’s farewell six decades later. He took it for granted that South Africa was a First World nation, on a par with her sister dominions in Canada and Australia. The line between these two funerals is one of racial progress, and precipitous decline by every other measure.
Since the 1990s, life expectancy has fallen back to where it was in Smuts’s day. South Africa is the murder capital of the world, with around 50 homicides every day. In a 2011 survey, one in three women claimed they had been raped in the past year. South Africa’s current leader, Jacob Zuma, was accused of raping an HIV-positive woman, but replied that he took a shower afterwards to “minimize the risk of contracting the disease.” This is one of the more rational self-administered treatments. It is widely believed among Mr. Zuma’s compatriots that sex with a virgin will cure you of AIDS, which, virgins being somewhat thin on the ground, has led to an epidemic of child rape, including victims as young as eight months old.
Not all of this, or even very much of it, can be laid at Mandela’s door. In that sense, his leadership is more of a lesson in the limitations of the great-man theory of history. His predecessor, F. W. de Klerk, South Africa’s last white leader, was also a great and generous man, who understood that the regime he had served all his life could not be preserved. Yet, as the years go by, it seems to me that the comradely de Klerk and Mandela are less symbolic of the new South Africa than were their wives. Marike de Klerk wound up getting murdered; Winnie Mandela was a murderer or, at any rate, found by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to have been personally responsible for multiple murders. Either role would be unusual for an American first lady, as it would have been for a prime-ministerial consort in Smuts’s day. Mrs. de Klerk was stabbed and strangled in 2001 by a domestic servant just another of those 50 murders a day; no motive, nothing was taken; she was killed because that’s just the way it is.
Upon her death, Winnie Mandela said, “As a woman I can identify with the exhaustion of her emotional resources in shaping her former husband’s career.” That’s one way of putting it. Mrs. Mandela coped with her own emotional exhaustion by having her security detail kidnap 14-year-old Stompie Moeketsi on suspicion of being an informer, slit his throat, and dump his body in a field. Her most famous contribution to the dictionary of quotations was a celebration of the aforementioned practice of black-on-black “necklacing”: “With our boxes of matches and our necklaces we shall liberate this country.”
In the end, she never got the chance. The Cold War ended, which meant that Moscow was too internally distracted to subvert South Africa the way it had the rest of the continent. So Mandela was gracious and dignified, and content to cut himself and the ANC in on the crony capitalism of the old National Party. Even so, South Africa has been living off the capital of its racist past these last two decades, even as all its social indicators head remorselessly south and a fifth of the white population has fled.
Jan Smuts and Nelson Mandela met just the once, when the general came to Mandela’s college to talk up Britain’s cause in the war against Germany. It would amaze Smuts, who had fought in the Boer War against Britain and whose comrades had clung fiercely to their identity during the enforced Britishization that followed, to see how swiftly even the most tenacious culture can be swept away. Yet Mandela’s benign rule in the 1990s was likewise only an interlude. South Africa is disintegrating, and what’s left is headed nowhere good.
I am a bad bad girl. But I am mending my ways.
Don’t know but he sounds boorish and irritated on the radio. You’d think they were find a more dynamic host for Rush.
I’ve heard that about your badness....Oh, it’s that “News Forum” thingee? Strange the AM would nuke dozens of posts, yet not move the thread off the News Forum.
Fair enough. Surprised there wasn’t a zot.
That “Occam’s Razor” site seems to be a pro-evolution, pro-abortion, pro-pagan white racialist web site which thinks the reason chrstianity was founded was to keep the white race pure.
Ah, jeez—I didn’t actually check the links, just took it that they were relevant. Since the Mandela service was a few weeks earlier and this was a holiday week column when NR is generally closed between Christmas and New Year’s, I’m going to guess that he already had that one submitted in the pipeline before the dust up, though really I’m of course just guessing. I think if the Mandela column were leading them to can Steyn, they just wouldn’t have posted it at all.
I'm certainly impressed as I review this Thread of History.
Even Bob Hope knew how to do that....
You are apparently not enough of cynic to gain proper enjoyment.
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