TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
.
Jon Kyl to finish out rino-John McCain's term
{ washingtonexaminer.com } ~ Former Sen. Jon Kyl is heading back to the Senate to replace the late Sen. rino-John McCain, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey said on Tuesday... "I am deeply grateful to Senator Kyl for agreeing to succeed his friend and colleague of so many years. Every single day that Jon Kyl represents #Arizona in the U.S. Senate is a day our state is well-served," Ducey tweeted. Kyl, a former three-term senator from Arizona who retired in 2012, had been name-checked as a possibility to fill out the next two years until a special election is held in 2020, according to a GOP official familiar with the move. Kyl's appointment also earned the stamp of approval from Cindy rino-McCain, the late senator's wife. "Jon Kyl is a dear friend of mine and rino-John’s. It’s a great tribute to rino-John that he is prepared to go back into public service to help the state of Arizona," rino-McCain said in a tweet Tuesday afternoon. Kyl is serving as the sherpa for Judge Brett Kavanaugh's appointment to the Supreme Court. The confirmation hearings for Kavanaugh began Tuesday morning...
.Iran has Moved Missiles into Iraq and Syria
{ founderscode.com } ~ Two planes have moved weapons from Iran to Beirut via Damascus. The airline is known as Qeshm Fars Air and is used by both the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps as well as al Quds, but led by Qassem Soleimani... The weapons are bound for Hezbollah. Meanwhile, Iran has also been moving missiles to Iraq and Syria. These are short range missiles which Iran says are for defensive activities. There are two types of missiles. They are the Zelzal Fateh-110 and the Zolfaqar. Both have ranges estimated up to 700 km. That means based on the locations, they can strike both Riyadh and Tel Aviv. This too is being managed by Qassem Soleimani. This is not fully a new condition for Iran as they have been transferring missiles to the Houthis in Yemen where some have been launched at Saudi Arabia. The number of transferred missiles is unknown at this time but it appears the most recent transfer to Iraq is designed to supply Iraq as a forward operating base for Iran. Officials of the West have said that the missiles are being manufactured in al Zafaraniya, which is East of Baghdad. Another location that has been noted is Jurf al Sakhar, north of Kerbala. The al Zafaraniya location is producing warheads using the same operations owned by Saddam Hussein. Shiite engineers have been recruited and hired to make all locations fully operational. So, what does European intelligence have as a response to all of this considering they are still working to stay in the Iran nuclear deal. Not so much it seems... https://founderscode.com/iran-has-moved-missiles-into-iraq-and-syria/ .
There Were no FISA Hearings on Warrant to Surveil Page
{ judicialwatch.org } ~ Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton appeared on “Justice with Judge Jeanine” on the Fox News Channel to discuss news that no hearings were conducted regarding the FISA surveillance of Trump campaign adviser Carter Page.
.dinky-Warren Exposed After Paper Publishes
the One Thing She's Been Hiding for Years
{ redrightvideos.com } ~ The Boston Globe ran the defense for far-left dummycrats-Democrat Elizabeth dinky-Warren this weekend... The far left rag insisted that Harvard University never considered dinky-Warren as Native American in their hiring process. The Boston Globe reported they came to this conclusion after analysis from several interviews and university documents. “Although critics have charged that Sen. Elizabeth dinky-Warren, D-Mass., has advanced her career with a narrative that she is a distant descendant of Cherokee and Delaware tribes, Harvard University never considered her ethnicity when it hired her as a law professor, according to a report Saturday.” However, the Boston Globe found overwhelming evidence that proves otherwise! The Globe examined hundreds of documents, many of them never before available, and reached out to all 52 of the law professors who are still living and were eligible to be in that Pound Hall room at Harvard Law School. Some are dinky-Warren’s allies. Others are not. Thirty-one agreed to talk to the Globe — including the law professor who was, at the time, in charge of recruiting minority faculty. Most said they were unaware of her claims to Native American heritage and all but one of the 31 said those claims were not discussed as part of her hire. One professor told the Globe he is unsure whether her heritage came up, but is certain that, if it did, it had no bearing on his vote on dinky-Warren’s appointment. dinky-Warren’s political enemies have long pushed a narrative that her unsubstantiated claims of Native American heritage turbocharged her legal career, enabling an unlikely rise from being a commuter college graduate to holding an endowed professorship at the top of the Ivy League....
Electronic health records blamed for doctor burnout
by wnd.com
{ wnd.com } ~ The Citizens’ Council for Health Freedom charges the scumbag/liar-nObamacare requirement that doctors use electronic health records... has caused a surge of burnout in the medical profession, explains Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin. “The EHR is causing doctors to leave their patients,” said Twila Brase, the president of CCHF and the author of “Big Brother in the Exam Room: The Dangerous Truth About Electronic Health Records.” “Congress forced doctors to buy and use computerized record systems to collect and report patient data to the government. And it’s wreaking havoc on their practices and their patients.” A new report in the American Journal of Medicine found that over just three years as scumbag/liar-nObamacare was being implemented, “physician burnout increased significantly, from 45.5 percent to 54.4 percent.” “Parallel studies of all U.S. workers during the same period showed no changes,” the report found. It also said studies “show the doctors spend more face time on their EHRs than with their patients.”... https://www.wnd.com/2018/09/obama-requirement-blamed-for-doctor-burnout/A historical novel ... that's also hilarious?
by DAVID LIMBAUGH
{ wnd.com } ~ I want to tell you about one of the funniest books I’ve read in a while. It’s a novel called “Armstrong,” and it imagines that Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer survived the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
Written as a letter to Custer’s wife, Libbie, it is a page-turning adventure that’s genuinely clever and engrossing. There is also a real history to the story, and conservatives will recognize a certain cultural and patriotic conservatism, including a strong affirmation of marriage and America’s military heritage. The book is set at the tail end of Reconstruction and offers, in its own comic way, an ideal of reconciliation that some might find instructive for our times.
The book’s wholesome and redeeming message does not detract from its hilarity. It is anything but preachy and is entertaining throughout as the nonstop action drives the story forward – rapidly. The only thing that slowed me down was my involuntarily pausing every other paragraph while silently laughing at the witty dialogue. There are politically incorrect utterances, but they add an authenticity to the historical setting.
It’s rare to find a book a dad can enjoy and pass on to his teenage children. Sure, there will be some jokes and historical and political references they won’t get, but the story will keep them entertained. They’ll laugh at Custer’s outrageous exploits, and they’ll probably learn something, too. It may even spark in them an interest in the history of this period.
The book has been praised not only by novelists Winston Groom (“Forrest Gump”) and Stephen Coonts (“Flight of the Intruder”) and screenwriter Rob Long (“Cheers”) but by historian Bradley Birzer at Hillsdale College. Birzer wrote in The American Conservative that he “thoroughly enjoyed” this “satirical alternative history,” and he praised the author, H.W. Crocker III, saying that “Crocker knows his history, so his anti-history is knock-down, pain in the stomach, hilarious.” If you like learning history while laughing, you’ll like this book.
Full disclosure: H.W. Harry Crocker is a friend of mine. But I also know him from his history books and novels. I reviewed his first novel, “The Old Limey,” many years ago and noted that it’s “a great book, an absolute gut-buster.” This book is just as good, if not better, because as wild as the story seems and as quixotically fearless as Custer is here depicted, many of the experiences and characteristics Crocker attributes to him are founded in fact.
Custer really was a daring and highly successful cavalry officer. He was indeed the “Boy General” of the Union Army at the age of 23. He attended the wedding of a Confederate officer a friend from West Point during the Civil War. He liked the Southerners he fought against, and he was fond of his Indian scouts. Though a handsome man and a flirt, he was famously devoted to his wife, Libbie which Crocker demonstrates throughout the letter. And I understand that Custer truly did have a remarkable affection for and rapport with dogs, horses and other animals – even if not quite to the exaggerated degree shown in the book.
The Custer character in “Armstrong” is bigger than life – brave, bold and buoyant no matter the circumstances – and the other main characters are equally colorful, including a multilingual Native American scout and Christian convert, an eccentric Southern cardsharp who wears an eye patch decorated with the Confederate battle flag, and a large cast of beautiful women.
Custer’s life is saved by one – Rachel, a white woman held captive by the Sioux, who spirits him off the battlefield. Custer is inducted into their tribe in a hysterical scene – one that explains the eye-catching art of the book’s cover, which has Custer, muscular arms folded, highlighting a tattooed image of his wife, an image put there by the Indians.
Rachel and Custer escape from the Sioux, and through a series of rollicking escapades, he ends up posing as a marshal, Marshal Armstrong, who forms a ragamuffin army of his own to liberate a town from a villain who has enslaved it. But Rachel has designs of her own.
I won’t reveal any more about the plot, but if you grew up watching Westerns on television – or if you missed out on that experience – you will love “Armstrong,” which is pitched as the first in a series of “Custer of the West” novels. I am looking forward to the next one. Humor is hard to pull off for an entire novel, especially one grounded in history, but my friend Harry really delivers in this marvelous satire. One of my favorite books in college was “Don Quixote,” and at least in terms of its endlessly droll dialogue, “Armstrong” is reminiscent of it. I am happy to recommend it to you.
Comments
we use the EHR and boy it is a privacy nightmare. what o did was a tsunami in America pray
we end all of it