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Shinzo Abe Assassinated, June Jobs Jump, NY’s New Gun Hurdles

July 8, 2022 by GregC

Listen to “Shinzo Abe Assassinated, June Jobs Jump, NY’s New Gun Hurdles” on Spreaker.

Join Jim and Greg as they recoil at the horrific assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and discuss why he was such a valuable U.S. ally. They also welcome better than expected job growth in June. And they wonder if New York Democrats learned anything from the Supreme Court decision as they pass new hurdles for residents to get concealed carry permits – including submitting their social media accounts for an evaluation of their character and conduct.

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Filed Under: China, Constitution, Economy, Elections, Guns, History, Humor, Inflation, Japan, Journalism, Labor, News & Politics Tagged With: 3MartiniLunch, assassination, CCW, Economy, guns, Japan, jobs, New York, Shinzo Abe

Reagan Attorney General Ed Meese: Bush Was Ideal Vice President

December 4, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “Ed Meese: Bush Was Ideal Vice President for Reagan” on Spreaker.

Ronald Reagan and George Bush waged a fierce battle for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination, but that summer they forged a personal and political alliance that greatly assisted Reagan and eventually led to Bush winning the White House eight years later.

“No president ever had a better vice president, a more loyal vice president, a more hand-working vice president than George Bush,” said former U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese III, who served as counselor to Reagan in California and Washington before being confirmed to lead the Justice Department in the second Reagan term.

Reagan and Bush battled for the nomination for months before Reagan eventually clinched the delegates needed to win the nomination.  Some in the GOP pushed for former President Gerald Ford to be Reagan’s running mate but the negotiations fell through.  Reagan then turned to Bush, with one condition.

“Before [Reagan] asked him to serve and announced him as his requested vice presidential candidate, it was made clear by George Bush that he was willing and able to support Ronald Reagan in all his policies and positions that he had taken during the campaign,” said Meese.

That was an adjustment on some issues, including economic policy.  During the campaign, Bush had derided Reagan’s supply-side agenda as “voodoo economics.” But Bush came around on that too.

“I had later explained to people that in Detroit at the convention that Mr. Bush had an exorcism,” laughed Meese.

After Reagan and Bush defeated President Jimmy Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale in the general election, Reagan and Bush put their team together.  Meese became a counselor to the president as part of the famed “troika” that also included longtime Reagan aide Michael Deaver and Bush confidante James Baker III, who served as Reagan’s chief of staff in the first term.

Meese says Baker and the other former Bush personnel became loyal foot soldiers in the Reagan Revolution.

Crisis struck the Reagan administration in March 1981, when the president was shot and nearly killed by John Hinckley, Jr.  As Reagan underwent surgery, Secretary of State Alexander Haig declared himself to be in charge until Bush returned from a trip to Texas.

Meese says Bush’s handling of that moment spoke volumes about his character, including his refusal to fly to the White House in Marine One.

“He said, ‘No, have them land at my official residence up at the Naval Observatory and I’ll come in by car.’  He wanted to be sure that nobody thought he was usurping or trying to take over the position of the president,” said Meese.

He says Bush also showed deference by not engaging in verbal disputes with cabinet officials during meetings but would share his concerns privately with the president.

Bush also assisted Reagan in developing relationships abroad, as the vice president represented the U.S. at many different funerals for leaders around the world.  It happened so frequently, that Meese says Bush staffer had a motto of “You die, we fly.”

He also took the lead in more concrete policy areas like combating the influx of drugs into Miami and across our southern border.  He also led the administration’s regulatory reform efforts.

Listen to the full podcast for more on those issues and to hear Meese explain why Reagan was confident Bush would be a good running mate and political partner even after a tough primary fight, how they collaborated in fighting the Cold War and more.  He also shares his thoughts on Bush’s emotional tribute at Reagan’s funeral.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 1980, assassination, bush, news, Reagan, USSR, vicepresident

Hillary & Civility, Rand Paul Predicts Deadly Violence, Bloomberg & 2020

October 10, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “Hillary & Civility, Rand Paul Predicts Deadly Violence, Bloomberg & 2020” on Spreaker.

Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America actually find amusement in Hillary Clinton’s craven pronouncement that Democrats will return to civility if they take back one or both chambers of Congress.  They also shudder as Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who survived the congressional baseball shooting and a violent attack from his neighbor, predicts the intense confrontations will ultimately lead to a political assassination.  And they get a kick out of former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg becoming a Democrat again in anticipation of a 2020 presidential bid.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 2020 campaign, assassination, civility, Clinton, Hillary, Michael Bloomberg, National Review, Rand Paul, Three Martini Lunch

GOP Leads Ohio House Race, Republican Rep. Indicted, John Hinckley Requests Release

August 8, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “GOP Leads Ohio House Race, Republican Rep. Indicted, John Hinckley Requests Release” on Spreaker.
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America cheer the narrow lead of Republican Troy Balderson over Democrat Danny O’Connor in the special election for Ohio’s 12th Congressional District, but they fear the low GOP-voter turnout in a strong red district bodes badly for Republicans in the 2018 midterm elections. They also suspect Democrats will use the insider trading indictment against New York Rep. Chris Collins to paint Republicans as a  party of corruption and greed. And they’re perplexed by the public support for the release of John Hinckley, Jr., who shot four people during the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan in 1981.

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Filed Under: congress, Economy, News and Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 12th Congressional District, 3MartiniLunch, assassination, Chris Collins, Danny O'Connor, indictment, insider trading, John Hinckley, midterm elections, National Review, Ohio, President Ronald Reagan, special election, Troy Balderson

Broward County Accountability, Libs Target Internet, Maduro Assassination Attempt

August 7, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “Broward County Accountability, Libs Target Internet, Maduro Assassination Attempt” on Spreaker.
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America are pleased to see a key figure from the Florida high school shooting replaced in the Broward County Sheriff’s Office but are irritated the media has stopped covering Sheriff Scott Israel, who still has his job despite failing to perform his duties before and during the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. They also reject Democrats’ call to regulate the internet as a public utility in the wake of Facebook, Apple, and YouTube’s ban of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. And they mourn for Venezuelans as dictator Nicolas Maduro survived a botched drone assassination attempt, and they discuss regulations on drones and the potential to use them for terrorism.

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Filed Under: congress, Economy, News and Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 3MartiniLunch, Alex Jones, apple, assassination, Broward County, drones, Facebook, internet, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, National Review, Nicolas Maduro, regulations, Scott Israel, Venezuela, YouTube

Rogan Recalls Upheaval, Stacked Field 50 Years After RFK’s Death

June 5, 2018 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/6-5-rogan-blog.mp3

Fifty years ago Tuesday, New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy eked out a narrow win in the California presidential primary.  Moments after declaring victory, Kennedy was fatally shot, throwing the 1968 presidential race into further turmoil and sending political shockwaves still being felt today.

Former Rep. James Rogan, R-Calif., who also served as one of the impeachment managers against President Clinton in 1999, is now a judge on the Superior Court of California in Orange County.  He is also the author of “On to Chicago: Rediscovering Robert F. Kennedy and the Lost Campaign of 1968.”

Rogan was 10 years old and finishing the fifth grade when Kennedy was killed.  His class was enthralled with the very competitive Democratic primary.  While most of the kids backed Kennedy, Rogan strategically supported Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-Minn., to impress a cute girl in his class who was also on the McCarthy bandwagon.

Rogan remembers staying up past midnight, seeing McCarthy concede and Kennedy declare victory.  It was only in the morning that a classmate called to tell him Kennedy had been murdered.  He then flipped on his family’s new color television and saw the footage of Kennedy on the hotel floor.

“The first thing I saw was color footage from six hours earlier of Kennedy flat on his back on this concrete floor of a pantry of a hotel in Los Angeles, with this big pool of maroon blood seeping from the back of his head.  I had never seen anything like that before,” said Rogan.

Another Kennedy assassination would have been traumatic enough for the country, but his murder also followed the Tet Offensive in Vietnam that greatly galvanized the anti-war movement, the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. two months earlier and the race riots that followed in over a hundred cities around the nation.

“People in 1968 really believed that a possible revolution was afoot,” said Rogan, who noted that the GOP candidates vigorously committed to victory in Vietnam and backing the police amongst the rioters in our urban centers.

America’s political and cultural environment was a powder keg in 1968, and Judge Rogan says he’s stunned by how many younger, well-educated Americans know almost nothing about it.

“We have generations of young professionals today who have never heard of Robert F. Kennedy or Nelson Rockefeller, or Eugene McCarthy, or Hubert Humphrey, people who were titans on the political stage in 1968,” said Rogan.

While people too young to remember Kennedy’s assassination or the upheaval of 1968 may think of it as ancient history, Rogan is quick to point out the same ideas seen on the campaign trail in 2016 found their roots in 1968.

“It really struck me how 1968 and 2016 had so many different parallels: a nation divided, the polarization of politics, the abject hatred that people had for the other side, the incendiary campaign strategies of some candidates,” said Rogan, who was working on his book during the 2016 campaign.

He says Bernie Sanders was not pushing anything new in the last campaign, because Kennedy and McCarthy were espousing the same ideas five decades earlier.

“If you go back and study their speeches, and their campaigns, and what their issues were, you can see it is a direct predecessor to what the progressives of today are talking about,” said Rogan.

“Anybody who wants to understand 2016 and 2018 needs to understand 1968 if you want to know where it all started and how the connection reaches back in time,” said Rogan.

Another parallel between 1968 and 2016 is the prodigious field of candidates.  But while 2016 featured 17 Republican candidates at one point, Rogan says 1968 was remarkable for the many prominent names all battling each other.

“Running against each other in one single race, you had President Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, three-term Governor of New York Nelson Rockefeller, Bobby Kennedy, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Eugene McCarthy, George Wallace – who made Donald Trump look like a shrinking violet on the campaign trail – and Gov. George Romney from Michigan, who was Mitt’s dad,” said Rogan.

“It was the ultimate throwdown in American politics,” he added.  Nixon ultimately won the election over Humphrey, with Wallace winning a handful of states as an independent candidate.

In addition to recalling the horror of Kennedy’s assassination and the fallout on our nation, Rogan’s book also examines what would have happened if Kennedy had not been killed.  The idea has intrigued Rogan since learning Kennedy probably would have made a full recovery if Sirhan Sirhan’s bullet had been off course by just a centimeter.

“I wanted to explore, not based on sentimentality or that Camelot sentimental nonsense.  I wanted to explore the issue, based on the facts and the evidence, what really would have happened if Bobby Kennedy had survived and continued his campaign: what would have happened to the Democratic Party, what would have happened to the Republican ticket and what would have really happened in November 1968,” said Rogan.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 1968, 2016, assassination, news, President Trump, Robert Kennedy

‘Chasing King’s Killer’

January 15, 2018 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/1-15-SWANSON-BLOG.mp3

As Americans pause to commemorate what would have been Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s eighty-ninth birthday, a new book chronicles the civil rights leader’s horrific assassination 50 years ago, the harrowing pursuit of his killer, and the legacy he leaves with us today.

James L. Swanson is the author of “Chasing King’s Killer:  The Hunt for Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Assassin.”  Swanson, who writes of these searing moments in history in the style of a novel, has also written on the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy and the pursuit of their assassins.

When it come to King, Swanson says one quality stands out strongest.

“I think Martin Luther King is one of the bravest men in American history, in a way more so than Abraham Lincoln or John Kennedy.  Unlike them, Dr. King was under constant threat of death and harassment for over ten years,” said Swanson.

Swanson begins the book by recounting the 1958 attack on King’s life, when a deranged black woman named Izola Ware Curry stabbed King in the heart at a book signing event in Harlem.  Later, the FBI kept very close tabs on King, and one official even sent a letter urging King to take his own life before receiving the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize.

The threats didn’t stop there.

“He was threatened countless times with death.  His home was bombed.  A gun was shot at his house.  He was hit with bottles and rocks and stones.  He was arrested over 30 times by white sheriffs and policemen,” said Swanson.

Yet, King endured the threats of violence to pursue his dream of Americans being judged on the content of their character rather than the color of their skin.

“He could have gone back to private life and lived quietly as a husband, father, and minister at his local church.  But he said for this great cause we must all be prepared to die.  In fact, when John Kennedy was assassinated, Martin Luther King turned to his wife and said, ‘Well, you know that’s what’s going to happen to me,'” said Swanson.

In 1967, just as King was straining relations with President Johnson over the Vietnam War, a lifelong criminal named James Earl Ray escaped from the Missouri State Penitentiary in the back of a bread truck.

He seemed like the last person to have his name etched permanently in history.

“Ray was a longtime, lifelong loser.  He grew up poor in Missouri, almost Civil War-type poverty, didn’t even have shoes at school, dropped out of school.  He was a lifelong petty criminal, who came from a generation and forebears of criminals and grifters and chiselers,” said Swanson.

After escaping, Ray went out to California and successfully went unnoticed.  He spent the next several months on mundane pursuits such as ballroom dance classes, bartending school.

“He went to find a new life in California like so many lost people in the 1960’s did,” said Swanson.  “He went to see gurus and psychologists who would teach him self-awareness and self-improvement.  It was an odd life,” said Swanson.

Then, suddenly, after King visited Los Angeles in March 1968, Ray left Los Angeles and headed to the Deep South, apparently determined to kill Dr. King.  So what changed?

Ray was certainly a racist, but he wasn’t in the Klan.  He had never participated in racial violence.  This hidden alarm clock, this hidden signal went off in Ray, almost like he was a hibernating animal.  Something triggered him, and he decided to hunt down Martin Luther King,” said Swanson.

“I think he did it to achieve significance.  Certainly, he wanted to send the civil rights movement into disarray.  But I think his innermost motive was to be somebody, because he had been nobody all of his life,” said Swanson.

Around that time, King was spending a lot of time in Memphis, Tennessee, in support of the city’s striking sanitation workers.  Newspaper accounts included a picture of King outside the Lorraine Motel, with his room number – 306 – clearly visible in the picture.

According to the evidence, Ray then rented a room at a boarding house near the Lorraine Motel.  From his room, Ray could see King’s room and the balcony outside of it.  But he did not have a clear shot from there.  He soon discovered that the community bathroom in the boarding house offered the angle he was looking for.

Around 6 p.m. on April 4, 1968, Ray noticed that King was standing alone on the balcony, speaking to associates in the parking lot below.  Ray quickly made his way to the bathroom, locked the door, and fired one shot that fatally struck King in the cheek.

A couple of police officers had been quietly observing King, trying to assure his visit to Memphis proceeded smoothly.

“Two of them were in the (nearby) fire station, observing Dr. King from a distance at the Lorraine Motel.  They saw him shot.  They yelled to each other, ‘Dr. King has just been shot.’  So they ran out of the fire station and ran to the Lorraine Motel to see what was going on,” said Swanson.

While the police rushed to the motel, Ray was making his getaway.  But as he approached his car, Ray noticed the patrol cars parked at the fire station.  Fearing an officer would see him, Ray quickly ditched his rifle and a suitcase, a decision that eventually provided critical evidence in his capture.

Swanson says Ray may have been captured within minutes if Memphis police had set up roadblocks more swiftly, but a prank call at the worst time delayed those efforts.

“The Memphis police were distracted because a teenager got on a ham radio and pretended to be someone pursuing James Earl Ray in his Mustang.  It was all a crank call and it sent police on a wild goose chase for almost an hour,” said Swanson.

Ray slipped out of Tennessee via back roads and eventually wound up in King’s hometown of Atlanta.  From there, he abandoned his car and caught a bus, first to Chicago and then to Detroit, where he then slipped in to Canada.

From there, Ray forged a passport and flew to England with hopes of eventually disappearing in Africa.  However, the fingerprints from the boarding house and his rifle, along with other evidence, allowed the FBI to track down Ray, with the held of Scotland Yard, just as he was preparing to board a flight.

After initially pleading his innocence, Ray agreed to plead guilty, a move with launched a number of conspiracy theories.  Ray alleged that he was doing the bidding of a figure known only as Raoul.  Others thought there may have been a government conspiracy or that Ray was targeting King on behalf of white supremacists.

“There were rumors at the time that a rich, racist white man had offered a $50,000 or even a $100,000 reward for the man who killed Martin Luther King.  but how could Ray have found out who that man was?  How could he have collected the reward?” asked Swanson.

He says the facts of the case lead to an obvious conclusion.

“There is overwhelming evidence that it was certainly James Earl Ray in the window of the boarding house from which the shot was fired.  There’s so much evidence that it was certainly James Earl Ray and James Earl Ray did it alone.

“I do believe there’s some evidence that one or two of his brothers might have helped him plot it or, more likely, helped him during the initial phases of his escape.” said Swanson.

However, in the 1990’s, Ray successfully convinced one group of his innocence.

“One of King’s sons (Dexter) went to visit James Earl Ray in prison and said, ‘I believe you.  My family believes you.  You didn’t kill my father.’  It was one of the greatest con jobs by a lifelong con man,”said Swanson.

“There’s a very disturbing photo of King’s son extending his hand to shake the hand of James Earl Ray.  Ray keeps his hands in his pockets and stares at the son.  The look on Ray’s face is, ‘Oh, you expect me to shake that black man’s hand?’  You can read it on his face,” said Swanson.

In a speech the night before his assassination in 1968, King told his followers that the movement would reach the “promised land” but admitted he might not be alive to see it.

“He said, ‘I would like a long life but tonight I’m not fearing any man.’  He didn’t know that just a couple of miles away on that stormy night that a man with a rifle was lying in wait in a hotel room and was going to come out the next day and hunt him down and kill him,” said Swanson.

In his voluminous research for the book, Swanson says he came to admire King all the more for his courage and commitment to the cause of equality and justice.  He believes that it what Americans should consider on this day.

“He loved America.  He didn’t hate America.  He thought America had failed to live up to the promise in the Declaration of Independence.  He wanted to carry on Abraham Lincoln’s unfinished work and make America a better place,” said Swanson.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 1968, assassination, James Earl Ray, Martin Luther King, Memphis, news

‘Turkey Is Basically on the Cliff’

December 20, 2016 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/12-19-GABRIEL-BLOG.mp3

Terrorism reared its deadly head again in Turkey on Monday and an attack in Germany is also strongly suspected of links to radical Islamic terrorism, events that Act for America President Brigitte Gabriel says appear to be the latest indications of a bloody ideology fighting for power.

On Monday, Russian Ambassador to Turkey Andrey Karlov was gunned down while speaking at an art gallery in the Turkish capital of Ankara.  According to reports, the killer then shouted a familiar Islamic refrain.

“God is great! Those who pledged allegiance to Muhammad for jihad. God is great!” he said, while also condemning the crushing of the Syrian rebels in Aleppo.

“Don’t forget Aleppo, don’t forget Syria! Step back! Step back! Only death can take me from here,” he reportedly said.

Turkey has been inundated with terrorist attacks this year in addition to the failed attempt to topple increasingly radical President Tayyip Erdogan.

“Turkey is basically on the cliff of a complete collapse, between the forces of moderation within Turkey who feel they are losing the fight and the forces of the radicals who feel empowered and that they are winning,” said Gabriel.

She says the best chance for Turkey to reverse course has come and gone.

“I think it’s already too late for the moderates to turn the ship around.  Unfortunately, the coup was the last straw, the last attempt at being able to take over the government .  Moderates realize that Erdogan has literally driven the country, over the decades since he has been leading the country, into the abyss of radicalism,” said Gabriel.

“That basically killed any chance or any hope for the moderates to really take back their government,” said Gabriel.

She says it is a tragic departure from Kemal Ataturk, who less than a century ago turned Turkey into a secular Muslim nation.

“It is sad to see how far Turkey has come from being a beacon of moderation in the Islamic world in the last century under President Ataturk.  He basically ended the Islamic caliphate back in 1924, less than a hundred years ago,” said Gabriel, noting Ataturk banned women from wearing hijabs or men from sporting long beards.

“Turkey went from being the example of what secularism under Islam looks like to being more radicalized now  with the world heading back into the Dark Ages,” she added.

Hours after Karlov was assassinated, reports emerged of a shooting at an Islamic Center in Switzerland and a deadly truck attack at a Christmas market in Berlin, leaving at least nine dead and 50 injured.

Gabriel says while the tactics vary, the motivations are often the same.

“What is driving everything is the ideology that is bringing all the radicals together: the warning not only of the caliphate which was established, but the growth and power of the caliphate .  And the radical Islamists now feel that the caliphate is under attack,” said Gabriel.

“They are using the attacks against ISIS as a rallying cry to basically recruit and mobilize anybody who believes the way they do,” said Gabriel.

She says inspiring jihadists is far easier now than it was on 9/11 thanks to the internet and the power of videos and social media.

“Any jihadi, regardless of what tongue he or she speaks, they can listen to these jihadi messages and they can feel inspired to carry on their own jihadi attacks and their own martyrdom operation,” said Gabriel, who says the inspiration is working because we can see many of the deadly suggestions being carried out.

“They are instructing people to go out and plow into people using a truck or a fast-driving machine, go out and slash people with a knife and cutting them, go out and carry out your own personal jihad.  You can make bombs under your mom’s kitchen or in your own kitchen,” she said, noting many of the ingredients for explosives can be found in a grocery store or pharmacy.

Gabriel urges intelligence officials to be more aggressive in pursuing terrorism leads in order to avoid cases where advanced warning went unheeded, such as the 2009 Christmas Day underwear bomber or the 2013 Boston Marathon bombers.

She also says individual citizens can make a difference.

“On our website, ActforAmerica.org, we have a program called ‘Open Eyes Save Lives.’  We are carrying this campaign on social media, on Twitter.  If you go to our website, we give tips as to what people can look out for, what you can do in the case of a terrorist attack, how to protect yourself, how to protect your community,” said Gabriel.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: assassination, attack, Berlin, caliphate, Gabriel, jihad, news, truck, Turkey

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