A community of 30,000 US Transcriptionist serving Medical Transcription Industry

Last week was a fairly typical one in 21st Century headlines:


Posted: Apr 13, 2017

in an Islamic terrorist attack on the St Petersburg Metro; ~On Friday, four victims were killed in an Islamic terrorist attack by a homicidal truck driver on Queen Street in Stockholm; ~On Palm Sunday, at least 45 victims were killed in an Islamic terrorist attack on two Coptic churches in Egypt. In other news, the United States bombed Syria after a chemical-weapons attack, and UK, Canadian and other newspapers reported on the treatment a Berlin schoolboy received after revealing to his Muslim classmates that he's Jewish. Meanwhile, Giulio Meotti wrote for the Gatestone Institute on the closure of 500 churches in London, and the opening of 423 mosques. The US bombing raid got the most headlines - because, after eight years of Obama, it was unusual. It's also the simplest, cleanest act: Identify a military target and fire missiles at it. What do you do about the others? In column inches (or whatever unit of measure now applies), the attention they commanded followed the cynical formula of old-time editors: One dead American equals ten dead Europeans equals one hundred dead Russians equals one thousand dead Africans. And so it proved. Nevertheless, the Palm Sunday bombings were the most significant event of the week. They demonstrate that hardcore Islam is serious about expunging the remnants of Christianity from the region in which it was born. This is not a small thing. It was a clever attack. The first suicide bomber hit St George's Church in Tanta. The second struck northwest, at St Mark's Cathedral in Alexandria, seat of the Coptic papacy. Pope Tawadros II had just left the cathedral after hearing about the Tanta attack. Nevertheless, ISIS and its affiliates came within minutes of killing the Coptic patriarch - at worship on Palm Sunday. As I said, not a small thing. But it doesn't seem to make a lot of news. Other Christian leaders, friom Pope Francis and the Archbishop of Canterbury on down, seem to have more to say about potential, hypothetical upticks in "Islamophobia" than about the sustained attempt to eradicate the oldest adherents of their own faith. Western politicians don't seem to have much to say about it, either, perhaps out of shame: On America's watch, public expression of Christianity was obliterated in Iraq, and the last Christian church in Afghanistan razed to the ground. Almost exactly two years ago, when 148 students were slaughtered at a school in Kenya, President Obama could not bring himself to identify them as Christian, even though their killers had gone to great pains to separate their captives according to their faith, releasing the Muslims and killing the Christians. As I remarked somewhat mordantly, apparently black lives don't matter when they're Christian. The Islamic supremacists' assault on Christianity is not confined to the Holy Land and the more benighted parts of the developing world. Monday's subway bloodbath in St Petersburg was also celebrated by Isis as making "a metro to Hell for worshipers of the Cross". It's doubtful that most of the victims, who included many students, would have seen themselves as such. But that's the point: you might not think of yourself as a "worshiper of the Cross", but that's how the guys who want to kill you see you. And so it went in Stockholm also. As in Egypt, it was a symbolic target: the flagship Åhléns department store. I bought some socks there last summer. Good times. The owners announced after the bloodbath that they'd be selling off at bargain-basement prices all the merchandise damaged when the truck came crashing through the window. For prices you can't beat, look for the tire tracks on our cashmere sweaters! For one incredible sale only, our prices have fallen lower than our run-over customers! Eventually, someone explained to the store that this was not in the best of taste, and the sale was canceled before this savvy marketing opportunity could spread elsewhere on the Continent. (Galeries Lafayette in Rouen: We've cut our prices like the neck of a Catholic priest!) But the secular, consumerist utopia attracts the ire of the Islamic imperialists, too. The killer in Stockholm was, like his comrade in St Petersburg, an ethnic Uzbek. But what he was principally was a Muslim, and one who divided the world into two groups, believers and non-believers. Among the dead was Chris Bevington, an Englishman who worked in Sweden for the music-streaming service Spotify. The people who create such billion-dollar boutique diversions assure us that they are the future, and that the likes of the Stockholm jihadist are momentary aberrations, freakish eruptions in the otherwise smooth progress to a world in which the seductive siren of the unending song can be piped directly into your cerebral cortex 24 hours a day. The killers of Stockholm, Petersburg and Alexandria are betting otherwise. In a too pat symbolism, the Westminster Bridge attack claimed among its victims the window cleaner of Churchill's country home, Chartwell. More tellingly freighted, the toll of the dead in Stockholm numbered Maïlys Dereymaeker, the young mother of an 18-month-old baby: She'd worked as a psychologist at several Belgian migrant centers helping "refugees" whose asylum bids had been turned down. Her killer could have used her assistance: Rakhmat Akilov had had his application for Swedish asylum rejected last year, but the authorities couldn't be bothered to rouse themselves to deport him. She was, in a certain sense, on his side. But he killed her anyway, because that's not how he saw it. The Jewish schoolboy in Berlin isn't really news, is he? That's just daily life in many European cities in the 21st century: The 14-year-old, who cannot be named under child protection laws, was beaten, kicked and threatened with a replica gun after he revealed to fellow pupils that he was Jewish. He endured a campaign of intimidation by Muslim pupils who told him "Muslims hate Jews. All Jews are murderers." Why put the boy in such a school? Ah, well. The mother believed the Official Propaganda: Emma said she and her husband had originally been attracted to the school, Friedenauer Gemeinschaftsschule, which has a large proportion of Arab and Turkish children, by the fact it was so multicultural. Yes, it's so multicultural, they all hate the Jews. When there are no Jews left, who will they hate? In London, the churches close. But that's not really news, either, not this deep into Matthew Arnold's long, withdrawing roar: The Sea of FaithWas once, too, at the full, and round earth's shoreLay like the folds of a bright girdle furl'd.But now I only hearIts melancholy, long, withdrawing roar... Almost right. The churches close and the mosques open, and it happens so gradually you don't notice that the melancholy, long, withdrawing, roar is now in fact the triumphant incoming roar of what comes after. CNBC paraphrased London Mayor Sadiq Khan's reaction to the Westminster attacks this way: Terrorists Can't Stand London's Thriving Multiculturalism On the contrary, they understand very well that it's not "thriving", that "multiculturalism" is merely an interim phase, and that what comes after will be more unicultural. The Coptic cathedral attacked in Egypt stands in Alexandria, a city I've visited from time to time. Woody Allen said years ago that he spent much of his time in his own preferred metropolis looking for "Cole Porter's New York". Because I'd read his quartet of novels as an impressionable lad, I wander around Egypt's great port city looking for Lawrence Durrell's Alexandria. But it no longer exists. As I write in The [Un]documented Mark Steyn: [Durrell's] cast of characters would be entirely bewildering to contemporary Alexandrians: an English writer (of course), a Greek good-time girl, a homosexual Jew, a wealthy Copt. In the old days, Alexandria bustled with Britons, Italians, and lots and lots of Greeks. All gone. So are the Jews, homo- and hetero-, from a community 50,000 strong down to some four dozen greybeards keeping their heads down. I got an e-mail a year or so back from the great-grandson of Joseph Cattaui, a Jew and Egypt's finance minister back in the Twenties: These days, the family lives in France — because it's not just that in Egypt a Jew can no longer be finance minister, but that in Egypt a Jew can no longer be. Now, in the absence of any other demographic groups to cleanse, it's the Copts' turn to head for the exits — as in Tripoli and Benghazi it's the blacks'. In the once-cosmopolitan cities of the Arab world, the minority communities are confined to the old graveyards, like the rubbish-strewn Jewish cemetery of broken headstones, squawking chickens, and hanging laundry I wandered through in Tangiers a while back. Islam is king on a field of corpses. In western cities, the field of corpses is already quite high - with Belgian psychologists who devoted their lives to helping "refugees", and French priests who gave Catholic property to their Muslim neighbors to worship on, and daughters of EU bigwigs who ask that in their murdered child's memory donations be given to migrant-assistance charities. Until they abandon their illusions, they are on the same "metro to Hell" as Alexandria and the other post-diversity cities of the Muslim world. ;

Fascinating element of human nature. What makes a lot of news? - Some guy getting dragged off an airplane.

[ In Reply To ..]
As that weirdo Jim Morrison once sang, people are strange.

I didn't see anything on the news about the - Ohio child being taken by the CPS

[ In Reply To ..]
simply because his family did not want to put him on ADHD medication. That was shocking to me.

Another thing I didn't see much about was the Chechnya Muslim - Republic rounding up homosexuals

[ In Reply To ..]
and putting them in concentration camps.

Tell me again how "oppressed" gays are in America. Where are the social justice warriors marching in the streets in protest?

And the MSM spends more time on how many times - Trump plays golf than they did on

[ In Reply To ..]
radial Islam killing Christians.

Similar Messages:


Who Are You Picks For Best And Worst 3 Presidents In The 20-21st CenturyNov 17, 2014
I had a hard time choosing between 1 and 2, but here are my top 3 picks and why: 1. Teddy Roosevelt (Republican, Progressive Party): One of the best thought out, organized, and well-implemented presidential goals of all time, the "Square Deal" between companies, consumers and workers with the "3 C's" as the motivating force behind everything he did domestically: Conservation of natural resources (federal protection acts to preserve natural resources) , Control of corporations (anti- ...

Turn Of The Century QuestionFeb 08, 2010
Last night I was watching the movie Emma on Masterpiece Theatre.  I love that movie and think I actually like this one better than the Emma starring Gwyneth Paltrow.  Anyway....Laura Linney gave the introduction.  She talked about what it was like for a woman to live in that era.  My husband told me he could never ever live back then (clothing, the way they talked and acted).  All I could think of (of course never telling him) how I feel I have been misplaced in time and ...

Reached A Verdict In The Trial Of The Century Jul 05, 2011
Waiting for parties to return to court house to read the verdict.  Tune in.    I think guilty but no death penalty.   She will be awful lonely for the rest of her life as she will not make it in general population.  What do you think?  ...

Drudge Headlines 03/01/2017 At 0942 ETMar 01, 2017
FIVE MINUTE OVATION AS HE ENTERED TO CHEERS... VIEWERS OVER THE MOON: 'UNIFYING'... Media left and right give thumbs up... STOCKS RISE... ...

Good Off-year Election For Dems, In Spite Of Fairly LowNov 06, 2013
Deep Red/Tea Party candidates, some wins for moderate conservatives.  Some of the results: RED WINSChris Christy, GOP, was reelected by large margin -- carrying a slight but definite majority of Hispanic voters.Alabama state senator red against red race, with fairly moderate establishment incumbent defeating Tea Party religious extremist. (IMO a win for both red and blue Americans so put it on both lists. :) BLUE WINSVirginia governor turns blue.Virgnia lieutenant governor turns blue.Det ...

"Romney's Tax Plan: Very Progressive, By 15th-century Standards."Oct 28, 2012
From The Economist: "The Tax Policy Center has completed an analysis of the distributional effects of Mitt Romney's tax plan, and as might be expected it's quite good for you if you're raking in the big bucks, and not particularly helpful if you're not." "So, again, while it's true that Mr Romney's tax plans represent a large net transfer from the poor to the rich if you start from the baseline of current tax law, they're actually pretty progressive if yo ...

Typical TrumpJan 14, 2017
This is typical Trump. ...

Ellen Barkin - So Very Typical Aug 28, 2012
...

Typical Democrat Deceit.Oct 10, 2014
Anything to get ahead. ...

Typical Fraudulent Behaviors By The Democrats.Nov 06, 2013
This is how the Dems operate.  I just hope the Republicans see this coming in 2014 - they will have to or we won't win the Senate.  By then, Obamacare will be a total disaster and we have every chance of winning the Senate, but for this type of behavior by those less honest than us. Link   ...

If I Don't Go Insane This Next Week I Just Don't KnowFeb 12, 2012
Last week we got one of the female kittens fixed.  All went well and by the next day all her siblings were back to normal with her.  She is more affectionate and loveable now.  Three sisters left to go.  Today one of the sisters went into heat.  Actually I think yesterday she went into heat.  Then today another one of her sisters went into heat.  HOWEVER...We found her mounting the other in heat.  Was looking up if female cats in heat mount other female ca ...

Do You Go To Church Every WeekJan 11, 2010
Well, do you? ...

It's Been My Observation This WeekMar 26, 2010
that we, as a group of people that come to this site, are as varied as they come. We are all passionate about our beliefs, values. I have not seen yet one person that has changed their mindset on anything due to something that another poster said.This weeks hot topic of course is the health care system. Some here are so dead set against it that it scares me, as well as those that are so set in favor of it. Why does it scare me? Both sides are so set in their thinking that I honestly believe that ...

Anyone See Rev. Wright This Week? Sep 07, 2012
...sing "Godd-- America" to open the convention. ...

Interview Next WeekSep 21, 2012
Part-time, no benefits, but pay is better PLUS it's a foot in the door with this particular employer.  We'll see what happens.  Job is 10,000 times easier than medical transcription - hourly.  Hourly!  ...

Job Interview Next WeekMay 26, 2016
trying to work hard with no distractions this week to determine a solid average per hour rate.  otherwise im going ahead with job interview next week, in-office transcribing position, FT with benefits.  do not know any other information at this point.  My first hour this morning made 14.40.  Here goes my 2nd hour.... ...

Its Been A Good Week Or 2Nov 22, 2014
Benghazi: Similar to five other government reports, the one released by the House Intelligence Committee on Friday left Republicans in the same position they have been in for two years: with little evidence to support their most damning critiques of how the Obama administration, and then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, responded to the attacks. Climate Change: During a recent visit to China, President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping announced a potentially landmark ...

Fool Of The WeekFeb 07, 2015
Fool of the Week: Brian Williams http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2015/02/06/fool-week-brian-williams/ He is apparently taking some time off work. I hope he finds himself, whomever that may be. http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2015/02/06/fool-week-brian-williams/ ...

Netanyahu This WeekFeb 28, 2015
So, they say Biden and some "top" Democrats will not be attending. I understand the sentiment, and they can always watch on CSPAN and get the info, I suppose, but I do think they should listen, even if they don't believe he should be here, which I agree, he shouldn't. Boehner has made a large error and Republicans supporting him are being very destructive to our country's image in the world, not to mention further fracturing Congress. "For starters, it’s completely unc ...

I'd Like To Get A Job Working 1 Day A Week ......Mar 14, 2015
outside the home so I can get some people contact and not feel so isolated.  I live in a large city, but it's been difficult finding a job like this.  Because of some health problems, I can't do anything physically taxing like retail or Mcjobs. I'd like to work in a medical office doing some kind of clerical work.  However, these jobs are usually got by word of mouth, and I don't know have any personal contacts who could let me know about available openings.&n ...

Typical Game By Beck - Only Tell Part Of The StoryOct 16, 2009
And then the part you DO tell, make it as inflammatory as you can.   Link to the full story in which he goes ballistic over Anita Dunn quoting Mao.  He conveniently neglects to mention the context in which she quoted Mao, OR the fact that many Republicans read Mao, too.   http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/10/16/beck.dunn/index.html ...

Theme Song For The Typical American Voter.Oct 28, 2014
Tell me what I want to hear.  And even if you don't, that's what I'll hear anyway.  (Link) ...

Elijah Cummings - Typical Political Hack.Oct 22, 2015
We knew exactly what to expect from the Democrat ranking member on the Benghazi Committee in his opening statement today - namely, a rant about how the committee is being used merely for political purposes to derail Clinton's presidential campaign.  "Nothing to see here - move along." Cummings has 2 problems, of course: 1.  Ms. Clinton is before the committee regarding her actions as Secretary of State and would be sitting exactly where she is this morning whether she were runni ...

Newsweek Cover This WeekJan 16, 2012
Noted conservative Andrew Sullivan (former editor of New Republic no less) essays on the purposeful distortion of President Obama's many accomplishments in his first term. Good read for those honestly interested in a thoughtful, unbiased review.   ...

So, Whoever Posted The Panda Cam Last Week ....Oct 27, 2009
n/m ...

Fix It Week On Dylan RatiganJun 28, 2010
He will be spending so much time every day this week talking about the economy, the deficit, what's wrong and how to fix it (hopefully). I can't remember what else he'll be talking about, but it sounds interesting. Right now, he's talking about the bribes in Afghan...$13.5B are spent bribing people, loaded on pallets in Pakistan and shipped to Dubai.  They have it on tape now. If you can't watch it, it will probably be on line tomorrow. ...

Tackling The Deficit-Fix-It WeekJun 29, 2010
The first of the series this week. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31510813/#37983994 ...

I'm Swearing Off Meat For This WeekJun 27, 2011
I'm going to see if it will help me lose some weight. The only thing about it is I don't want to load up on carbs to compensate. ...

My First Ever 2-week Vacation Is Over <sigh>Aug 05, 2012
We took our Goldwing motorcycle, rode 5,167 miles in 15 days. We live in Ohio and went to Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North & South Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Kansas, and Missouri.  We rode the train to the top of Pike's Peak, we saw Mount Rushmore, the Badlands, Devil's Tower, Monument Valley, Arches National Park and did a lot of scenic riding.  We saw a moose, curled horn sheep, a coyote, a deer-like animal that we still ...

Have To Ask To Work 4 Days A Week, Not 5Feb 02, 2013
If I had a therapist, I could go talk to my therapist...but I don't... I got offered to come back a few hours a week at my old tutoring job - $15/hour.  A 3-dollar an hour raise.  At daycare I make...$9.50/hour.  A no-brainer, right?  But tutoring job is maybe 3-10 hours a week, tops.  Not enough hours.  But with the daycare job, it's too many hours - especially since I've gotten shingles and want to address some health issues (basically STRESS REDUC ...