M2RB: Mötley Crüe
Nothin' left to do
Too many things were said
To ever make it feel
Like yesterday did
Seasons must change
Separate paths, separate ways
If we blame it on anything
Let's blame it on the rain
GOP, don't go away mad...
GOP, just go away
GOP, just go away
By Andrew C McCarthy
I’m done grumbling about how President Obama
is empowering America’s enemies. After all, it is not just Obama. When
it comes to abetting the Muslim Brotherhood, Republicans are right there
with him.
Not all of them, of course. This week, for example, Senator Rand Paul
proposed an amendment that would have prohibited our government from
transferring F-16 aircraft and Abrams tanks to Egypt’s Muslim
Brotherhood–dominated government. This lunatic plan is not just an Obama
initiative. It is also a GOP brainstorm — of a piece with 2011’s Libya debacle,
in which Republican leaders cheered as Obama, upon consulting with the
Arab League, ignored Congress and levied war on behalf of the very
jihadists who, quite predictably, have since raided Qaddafi’s arsenal,
besieged northern Africa, and massacred Americans in Benghazi.
A few weeks back, the John McCain & Lindsey Graham roadshow made its way to Brotherhood Central in Cairo,
with newcomer Kelly Ayotte in tow. Senator Ayotte appears to have
filled the void created by Joe Lieberman’s retirement — after all, when
you have Republicans, who needs another Democrat? The former trio is
best remembered for its Tripoli triumph
of late 2009, when the three kicked back in the Qaddafi compound and
toasted our newly cozy relations with the dictator. The bipartisan
solons then winged their way home in time to second the Obama State
Department’s increase in funding for the Libyan dictator’s regime. After
all, they reasoned, Qaddafi was our hedge against Libya’s jihadists. As
is their wont, though, the solons soon dazzled us with a 180, suddenly
deciding that what we really needed to do was back Libya’s jihadists in
their war against Qaddafi. The rest, as they say in Mali, is history.
So the GOP brain trust now brings this Midas touch to Egypt,
rallying behind Obama’s cozy relations with the new “Islamic democracy.”
That would be the Brotherhood’s rapidly unraveling sharia basket case,
into which our own bankrupt government has so far sunk nearly 3 billion
U.S.-taxpayer dollars, with more billions soon to come through
U.S.-backed IMF loans and, yes, sophisticated U.S. weaponry. Any moment
now, as it was in turbulent Libya, the ground in Egypt is certain to
shift, or crater. When it does, who knows whose side the senators will
have us on . . . and who knows what American enemies may be wielding
that U.S. weaponry?
Senator Paul, by contrast, has three ideas that seem positively batty
to the McCain gang. First, he thinks that American foreign policy ought
to be premised on American national interests, not on the
shifting notions of “global stability” popular at the Wilson School and
the Council on Foreign Relations. Second, he suggests that when we give
aid and arms to anti-American Islamists, bad things tend to happen to
America. Finally, Paul believes the foundation of American foreign
policy is, of all quaint things, the United States Constitution. The
Framers gave Congress not merely the authority but the duty to thwart
executive excess. On the international stage, that primarily means the
power of the purse, which enables the people’s representatives to defund
such madness as the arming of Islamic supremacists.
So Senator Paul tried to stop weapons transfer. His amendment, however, was defeated
79–19, because 23 Republican senators opted to follow the lead of
McCain, Graham, and Ayotte. They joined all Senate Democrats (and a
couple of nominal “independents” who are, in effect, Democrats) in
voting to “table” the Paul Amendment. “Tabling” is a bit of procedural
chicanery, allowing senators to defeat Paul’s amendment yet pretend to
the folks back home that they didn’t actually vote “against” it.
Don’t be fooled. The choice here was simple: Stand with the Muslim
Brotherhood or stand with the American people. Nearly two-thirds of
Senate Republicans went with the Brothers.
Let’s be clear about whom Republicans have voted to arm. In late 2010, as I detail in Spring Fever: The Illusion of Islamic Democracy,
Mohammed Badi, head of the Muslim Brotherhood, called for violent jihad
against the United States and Israel. The “Supreme Guide” gleefully
added, “The United States is now experiencing the beginning of its end,
and is heading towards its demise.” The Brotherhood took pains to post
this speech on its Arabic-language website, reflecting its official
position.
Badi’s sentiments would have been no surprise to anyone who had
been paying attention. It had not been long, after all, since the Holy
Land Foundation trial, in which the Justice Department proved that the
Brotherhood regards the core mission of its U.S.-based affiliates (such
organizations as CAIR, the Muslim Students Association, and the Islamic
Society of North America) to be, as the Brothers themselves put it, “a grand jihad
in eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within” by
“sabotage.” Prosecutors further demonstrated that the Brotherhood’s
principal activity in the U.S. since the late 1980s has been the
financing and promotion of Hamas, a formally designated terrorist
organization to which it is a serious federal felony to provide material
support. Lo and behold, since the moment the Brotherhood took power in
Egypt, promoting and legitimizing the leadership of Hamas has been at
the top of its agenda.
Mohamed Morsi, a leading Brotherhood official, became Egypt’s
president last summer — just as his close associate, the aforementioned
Supreme Guide, was railing
that all Muslims, including rulers, must “wage jihad in Allah’s way” in
order to reverse the “usurpation” of Palestine by the “murdering
Zionist criminals.” In his very first public pronouncement after winning
the presidency, Morsi called for the United States to release Omar
Abdel Rahman. That would be the “Blind Sheikh,” who is serving a life
sentence for terrorism convictions, and who has been credited by Osama
bin Laden with issuing the fatwa that approved the 9/11 attacks.
Al-Qaeda quite sensibly gleaned that fatwa from this statement about
Americans that Abdel Rahman made following his conviction:
Muslims everywhere . . . dismember their nation, tear them apart, ruin their economy, provoke their corporations, destroy their embassies, attack their interests, sink their ships, . . . shoot down their planes, [and] kill them on land, at sea, and in the air. Kill them wherever you find them.
In addition to calling for the Blind Sheikh’s return to Egypt, where
such sentiments are common, Morsi has directed the release of many
terrorists who had been incarcerated during President Hosni Mubarak’s
tenure — Mubarak having had a close counterterrorism partnership with
the United States. Morsi further failed to protect the American embassy
from being overrun by Islamist rioters. When, after several calls from
an embarrassed White House, Morsi finally dispersed the rabble-rousers,
he left intact the longstanding encampment where Egyptians continue to
agitate for the Blind Sheikh’s release.
Prior to his election, Morsi promised
that his top imperative would be the imposition of sharia, Islam’s
totalitarian legal code and societal framework. He has been true to his
word, recently orchestrating the imposition of a new sharia constitution
— the heavy-handed gambit that has horrified minorities and sent Egypt
reeling into its latest chaos. Sharia constitutions are apparently fine
with Senator McCain these days, but as we saw in his vertiginous
positions on Qaddafi, the GOP’s guru of choice is not exactly a model of
consistency on this point.
In a 2011 interview with Der Spiegel,
the senator declared, quite correctly, that “sharia law . . . in itself
is anti-democratic — at least as far as women are concerned.” Thus
McCain then insisted that the sharia-driven Brotherhood — which he
accurately described as “a radical group” that “has been involved with
other terrorist organizations” — “should be specifically excluded from
any transition government” in Egypt. Yet, now that the Brothers are the government, McCain would have us to arm them.
Meanwhile, under Morsi’s leadership, Egypt is seeing the widespread
persecution of Christians and other religious minorities. In many areas,
police and Islamist vigilantes now enforce sharia standards on the
streets, just as they do in Saudi Arabia and Iran. And recordings recently surfaced
of Morsi calling Jews the “descendants of apes and pigs” —
“blood-suckers” for whom Muslims “must not forget to nurse our children
and grandchildren on hatred,” including “hatred . . . for all those who
support them.” [Memo to Republicans: “Those who support them” refers to . . . the American people.]
I could go on, but as Beltway supporters of America-hating Islamists
like to say, “What difference does it make?” Still, just in case it
makes any difference to you, here are the Republican senators who
shamefully voted to provide Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood government with
F-16s and Abrams tanks: Alexander, Ayotte, Barasso, Blunt, Burr,
Chambliss, Coburn, Cochran, Collins, Corker, Enzi, Flake, Graham, Hatch,
Hoeven, Inhofe, Isakson, Johanns, Johnson, Kirk, McCain, McConnell,
Murkowski, Portman, Toomey, and Wicker.
Kudos to the 18 Republicans who joined Senator Paul in trying to stop
the arming of America’s enemies: Boozman, Coats, Cornyn, Crapo, Cruz,
Fischer, Grassley, Heller, Lee, Moran, Risch, Roberts, Rubio, Scott,
Sessions, Shelby, Thune, and Vitter.
Common sense is on their side.
Sadly, history is sure to follow, and probably soon.
Don't Go Away Mad (Just Go Away) - Mötley Crüe
We could sail away
Or catch a freight train
Or a rocketship into outer space
Nothin' left to do
Too many things were said
To ever make it feel
Like yesterday did
Seasons must change
Separate paths, separate ways
If we blame it on anything
Let's blame it on the rain
I knew it all along
I'd have to write this song
Too young to fall in love
Guess we knew it all along
That's alright, that's okay
We were walkin' through some youth
Smilin' through some pain
That's alright, that's okay
Let's turn the page My friends called today
Down from L.A.
They were shooting pool all night
Sleeping half the day
They said I could crash
If I could find my own way
I told them you were leaving
On a bus to go away
That's alright, that's okay
We were two kids in love
Trying to find our way
Thats's alright, that's okay
Held our dreams in our hands
Let our minds run away
That's alright, that's okay
We were walkin' through some youth
Smilin' through some pain
That's alright, let's turn the page
And remember what I say girl
And it goes this way
Girl, don't go away mad...
Girl, just go away
Or catch a freight train
Or a rocketship into outer space
Nothin' left to do
Too many things were said
To ever make it feel
Like yesterday did
Seasons must change
Separate paths, separate ways
If we blame it on anything
Let's blame it on the rain
I knew it all along
I'd have to write this song
Too young to fall in love
Guess we knew it all along
That's alright, that's okay
We were walkin' through some youth
Smilin' through some pain
That's alright, that's okay
Let's turn the page My friends called today
Down from L.A.
They were shooting pool all night
Sleeping half the day
They said I could crash
If I could find my own way
I told them you were leaving
On a bus to go away
That's alright, that's okay
We were two kids in love
Trying to find our way
Thats's alright, that's okay
Held our dreams in our hands
Let our minds run away
That's alright, that's okay
We were walkin' through some youth
Smilin' through some pain
That's alright, let's turn the page
And remember what I say girl
And it goes this way
Girl, don't go away mad...
Girl, just go away
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