JewTard Jesse Malkin and his Asian Zio-Whore Michelle

Started by CrackSmokeRepublican, August 24, 2009, 09:27:39 PM

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CrackSmokeRepublican

Typical Money grubbing NeoCon JewTard ZioCrappers -- Jew Jesse and his Asian Shiksa Michelle Malkin.
--CSR

She has a new book:


-----
Michelle Malkin:
The Radical Right's Asian Pitbull

It would be easy to make cruel jokes about a Filipino American immigrants' daughter who authors a book arguing that the internment of Japanese Americans was justified by national security. Not to mention a best-seller arguing for a much tighter immigration policy. And countless weekly columns sniping at affirmative action, environmentalists, sexy pop stars, scandalous journalists, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Gary Locke, John Kerry, Teresa Heinz Kerry, and just about anything and anyone that offends radical right wing sensibilities.

     To do so would only be giving Malkin what she gives others. But most readers would find that kind of adolescent vitriole less interesting than a serious effort at understanding who Michelle Malkin is, how she became that way and what she really wants.

On the level of plain, undisputed facts, Michelle Maglalang was born to Filipino immigrants in Philadelphia on October 20, 1970. Her parents had arrived in the U.S. earlier that year. Her father was a doctor in training with a visa sponsored by an employer. Her mother was a schoolteacher. After Michelle's father completed his training, the family moved to New Jersey. Michelle spent most of her childhood in the tiny town of Absecon in southern New Jersey. Like most Filipinos her family was Roman Catholic, an affiliation Michelle retains to this day. Her parents were Reagan republicans but "not incredibly politically active," Michelle told CSPAN's Brian Lamb. "I just think that there's always been an eighth sense of gratitude toward this country and trying to give back to it." She edited the school paper at Holy Spirit High School but without evidencing a pronounced right-wing perspective. "[I was] not really politically energized yet."
Internment

Malkin's In Defense of Internment: The Case for Racial Profiling in World War II and the War on Terror argues that national security concerns, not racism, justified Japanese American roundup and incarceration.


     Her first ambition was to become a concert pianist. Michelle enrolled in Oberlin, a small Ohio college with a respected performing music department. The town of Oberlin (pop 8,560) is located about 35 miles southwest of Cleveland, near the heart of a once mighty industrial region going to rust.

     "I soon realized that I couldn't cut it with piano," she told the National Review Online. Michelle Maglalang changed her major to English and, as she had in high school, began writing for the student newspaper.

     Toward the end of her Oberlin career she signed on with an independent campus newspaper that was being started by a Jewish student named Jesse Malkin. Malkin would later become Maglalang's husband. He also had an immediate and lasting impact on Michelle's political views. Jesse Malkin had attended Berkeley High on Martin Luther King Boulevard in the town his future wife would later label "The People's Republic of Berkeley". In addition to being a top student, Malkin was a distance runner who captained Oberlin's cross-country team. That combination, as well as his strong political views, helped him win a Rhodes scholarship to study for a year at Oxford University in England.

    By the time Jesse Malkin started the newspaper, his conservative leanings had been well enough established for him to receive funding from an organization calling itself the Collegiate Network. The Network had formed in 1980 as a union of college newspapers funded by a neo-conservative group called the Institute for Educational Affairs (IEA). IEA had been founded in 1978 by Irving Kristol and William Simon, a leader of the modern neo-conservative movement. As Nixon's Treasury Secretary, Simon had shaped the administration's tax policy.

     IEA was dedicated to "seek out promising Ph.D. candidates and undergraduate leaders, help them establish themselves through grants and fellowships and then help them get jobs with activist organizations, research projects, student publications, federal agencies or leading periodicals." It was, in essence, an affirmative action program to help restore right wing influence on college campuses.

     In 1990 the IEA was merged into the Madison Center for Educational Affairs, another neo-conservative foundation started in 1988 by, among others, William Bennett, Reagan's Education Secretary. Madison continued to fund the Collegiate Network until 1995 when its headquarters was moved to Wilmington, Delaware and placed under the financial support of another neo-conservative organization called the Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI). Today ISI funds about 80 right wing college newspapers.

     In any event, when Jesse Malkin founded his newspaper in 1989 he became one of IEA's most academically impressive recruits. When Michelle Maglalang began working for that paper, she was on the road to becoming one of the IEA's most notorious.

     Oberlin was a liberal stronghold, a college that prided itself on a history of affirmative action leadership. In 1841 it had become the first U.S. college to award A.B. degrees to women. As of 1900 Oberlin had graduated half of all African Americans with college degrees. Jesse Malkin and Michelle Maglalang were among very few students who didn't hold liberal views. "For the most part, it was an incredibly politically correct culture," recalled Michelle Malkin.

     Jesse Malkin's first assignment for his new Filipino American reporter was collaborating on an article denouncing Oberlin's affirmative action program. Fellow students found the article offensive and showed their displeasure to Malkin & Company.

     "That's where I first really encountered the vicious response you can get when you stand up to a political orthodoxy," recalled Michelle Malkin. "It's an extremely liberal campus. Even if you tread very lightly on political sacred cows, there was a huge negative response, especially from somebody who was a minority, standing up and saying, 'Well, all these self-appointed minority groups on campus don't speak for me.'



     "It was seeing the violent paroxysms it caused on the Left that really put me on my way to a career in opinion journalism," she stated in her chracteristically defiant and sneering tone. "I really just came into being as a political journalist towards the end of my campus experience, and it was really after I had left and started, you know, writing on my own. It was really more social conservatism than economic conservatism that I started with for my column-writing. So I was not a huge lightning rod until the end of my tenure at Oberlin."

     Whatever her inspiration, by the time Michelle Maglalang graduated in 1992, she was committed to a career in journalism. Her first choice was of the broadcast variety. She headed to Washington D.C. to intern at NBC while Jesse Malkin went to Santa Monica to continue his conservative education by working on a PhD in economic policy analysis at the Rand Graduate School (RGS). RGS was a small, little-known adjunct to RAND Corporation, a conservative think tank founded in 1948 to promote freewheeling capitalist ideals and conduct secretive research for the federal government. It gained notoriety during the Vietnam War by its involvement with some of the more sinister aspects of the war effort.

     Maglalang's NBC stint ended without significant on-air experience. In late 1992 she moved to Los Angeles where she was reunited with Jesse Malkin and landed a job with the struggling San Fernando Valley-based Los Angeles Daily News as a reporter-cum-editorial writer. That job gave her the opportunity to learn a skill that would prove useful in her later career — producing quick-turnaround copy that provokes strong reader reactions. PAGE 2

http://www.goldsea.com/Personalities/Malkin/malkin.html

QuoteIn 1993, Malkin married Jesse Malkin, a Rhodes Scholar,[7] who later worked as associate policy analyst and economist for the Rand Corporation.[8] As of 2004, Jesse was a stay-at-home dad raising their two children.[9]

Career

Malkin began her journalism career at the Los Angeles Daily News, working as a columnist from 1992 to 1994. In 1995, she worked in Washington, DC as a journalism fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute [10], a think tank which is dedicated to the promotion of free enterprise without government regulation.[11] In 1996, she moved to Seattle, Washington, where she wrote columns for The Seattle Times. She became a nationally-syndicated columnist with Creators Syndicate in 1999.[12][13]

She comments on a wide range of topics, always from a conservative viewpoint, but she is perhaps best known for her strong views on immigration. In 2003, she attracted widespread attention for a July 4, 2003 column in Jewish World Review where she opposed the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, asserting that "the custom of granting automatic citizenship at birth to children of tourists and temporary workers such as Hamdi, tourists, and to countless 'anchor babies' delivered by illegal aliens on American soil, undermines the integrity of citizenship—not to mention national security".[14]
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

CrackSmokeRepublican

More online JewSh*t in a little propaganda pile:
==============

QuoteMichelle Loves Jesse -- But Writes Her Own Stuff

Michelle Malkin, the multi-talented columnist and blogger whose beauty puts every other conservative pundit to shame, writes today about those racist/sexist/leftist commenters who have been waging an attack upon her and her husband, Jesse.

    As I've noted in several newspaper profiles and television interviews, I met my husband in college, where he founded a right-of-center student publication that I wrote for and edited. He started off as a Berkeley-born Dukakis liberal; I was a congenital conservative who helped him see the light. We have been each other's best friend, editor, and sounding board for nearly half of our lives. He followed me to Southern California when I took my first newspaper gig in Los Angeles. He followed me up to the Pacific Northwest when I was hired by the Seattle Times. I followed him to Washington D.C. when he got a lucrative health-care consulting job. And when my career took off after I published my first book in 2002, he cut back on his own ambitions to be with our kids.

    In his spare time (such as it is with an active kindergartener and an Energizer bunny preschooler), he helps me out when he can. Al Franken needs a dozen, overpaid Harvard-trained research assistants. I have my hubby's help for a few hours a week.

In other words, the Malkins are a couple who are very much in love with one another and who have put her successful career ahead of his so that their daughter can have one full-time parent.

SO what is the problem? Well, it seems that those on the Left do not thik an Asian woman could possibly be smart enough to independently formulate conservative views -- and that since Jesse Malkin is also a writer (focus on healt care issues, as I understand it), he must have some sort of influence and control over his wife.

Michelle does concede that ther eis influence -- but an influence based upon intellectual equality, not the domination of a husband over his wife.

    As for my husband's "influence," why yes, he influences me all the time and vice versa. Spouses tend to do that to each other over the years. When I came up with my idea for Invasion after 9/11, he was skeptical. We don't agree on everything, but I've pulled him to the right on national security, the Second Amendment, and some social issues. He has put up with my insomniac writing habits, investigative obsessions, and workaholism for more than a dozen years, and I have successfully converted him to the conservative cause.

In other words, it sounds like a lovely marriage. It is the sort of relationship we should encourage and envy in this country, not one to be denigrated and destroyed.

Michelle makes a plea from the heart to her liberal critics, one which should be respected if these alleged opponents of racism, sexism, anti-Semitism and the politics of personal destruction should respect if they are sincere in their beliefs (I doubt they are, thought they talk a good game).

    The racist and sexist "yellow woman doing a white man's job" knock is a tiresome old attack from impotent liberals that I've tolerated a long time. It is pathetic that I have to sit here and tell you that my ideas, my politics, and my intellectual capital are mine and mine alone in response to cowardly attacks from misogynistic moonbats with Asian whore fixations. My IQ, free will, skin color, eye shape, productivity, sincerity, and integrity are routinely ridiculed or questioned because I happen to be a minority conservative woman. As a public figure, I am willing to take these insults, but I cannot tolerate the smearing of my loved ones. Because I have always been open and proud about his support for my career, my husband has taken endless, hate-filled abuse from my critics. His Jewish heritage, his decision to be a stay-at-home dad, and even his looks, are the subject of brutal mockery.

    Enough.

    If you have a problem with my work and what I stand for, go ahead and take me on. Keep calling me whatever four-letter-word makes you feel better when you can't win your arguments. But leave my family alone.

In other words, folks, if you want to combat her in the marketplace of ideas, have at it. If you are a lowlife scumbag who feels the need to engage in misogynistic race-baiting, do so if you must. But attacks and assualts on family are the province of intellectually deficient moral degenerates, and ae always to be condemned.

And if I may say, great picture. I think the t-shirt says it all.

1119mma.jpg

God bless you Michelle, and your beloved Jesse -- and your adorable little daughter as well.





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Comments on Michelle Loves Jesse -- But Writes Her Own Stuff

Malkin concedes that Michelle Malkin, Inc. is actually Michelle and Jesse Malkin, Inc. That's what we've been saying all along!

As for the other stuff - deplorable, all of it. "Dirty Asian Whore" isn't part of my rhetorical toolbox. Barbs like that certainly never came from me.

If you folks are incapable of seeing the irony in the fact that one of the "Unhinged" couple ends up in the newspaper for savagely beating a student photographer, then there's no hope for you.
|| Posted by The Liberal Avenger, November 20, 2005 04:06 PM ||

Actually, Malkin does not concede what you charge. She concedes that -- gasp! -- her husband serves in many behind the scenes capacities, but not that he is the Svengooli-like mastermind behind Michelle Malkin. His role seems much closer to my role when my wife returned to school some years ago -- a loving helpmate who is willing to assist with the workload.

And I notice that there is an allegation, but notihing to support it besides one unsubstantiated column. Is there a police report?
|| Posted by Rhymes With Right, November 20, 2005 04:46 PM ||

http://rhymeswithright.mu.nu/archives/134518.php
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

CrackSmokeRepublican

Quote from: "CrackSmokeRepublican"Typical Money grubbing NeoCon JewTard ZioCrappers -- Jew Jesse and his Asian Zio-Whore Shiksa Michelle Malkin.
--CSR

She has a new book:


-----
Michelle Malkin:
The Radical Right's Asian Pitbull

It would be easy to make cruel jokes about a Filipino American immigrants' daughter who authors a book arguing that the internment of Japanese Americans was justified by national security. Not to mention a best-seller arguing for a much tighter immigration policy. And countless weekly columns sniping at affirmative action, environmentalists, sexy pop stars, scandalous journalists, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Gary Locke, John Kerry, Teresa Heinz Kerry, and just about anything and anyone that offends radical right wing sensibilities.

     To do so would only be giving Malkin what she gives others. But most readers would find that kind of adolescent vitriole less interesting than a serious effort at understanding who Michelle Malkin is, how she became that way and what she really wants.

On the level of plain, undisputed facts, Michelle Maglalang was born to Filipino immigrants in Philadelphia on October 20, 1970. Her parents had arrived in the U.S. earlier that year. Her father was a doctor in training with a visa sponsored by an employer. Her mother was a schoolteacher. After Michelle's father completed his training, the family moved to New Jersey. Michelle spent most of her childhood in the tiny town of Absecon in southern New Jersey. Like most Filipinos her family was Roman Catholic, an affiliation Michelle retains to this day. Her parents were Reagan republicans but "not incredibly politically active," Michelle told CSPAN's Brian Lamb. "I just think that there's always been an eighth sense of gratitude toward this country and trying to give back to it." She edited the school paper at Holy Spirit High School but without evidencing a pronounced right-wing perspective. "[I was] not really politically energized yet."
Internment

Malkin's In Defense of Internment: The Case for Racial Profiling in World War II and the War on Terror argues that national security concerns, not racism, justified Japanese American roundup and incarceration.


     Her first ambition was to become a concert pianist. Michelle enrolled in Oberlin, a small Ohio college with a respected performing music department. The town of Oberlin (pop 8,560) is located about 35 miles southwest of Cleveland, near the heart of a once mighty industrial region going to rust.

     "I soon realized that I couldn't cut it with piano," she told the National Review Online. Michelle Maglalang changed her major to English and, as she had in high school, began writing for the student newspaper.

     Toward the end of her Oberlin career she signed on with an independent campus newspaper that was being started by a Jewish student named Jesse Malkin. Malkin would later become Maglalang's husband. He also had an immediate and lasting impact on Michelle's political views. Jesse Malkin had attended Berkeley High on Martin Luther King Boulevard in the town his future wife would later label "The People's Republic of Berkeley". In addition to being a top student, Malkin was a distance runner who captained Oberlin's cross-country team. That combination, as well as his strong political views, helped him win a Rhodes scholarship to study for a year at Oxford University in England.

    By the time Jesse Malkin started the newspaper, his conservative leanings had been well enough established for him to receive funding from an organization calling itself the Collegiate Network. The Network had formed in 1980 as a union of college newspapers funded by a neo-conservative group called the Institute for Educational Affairs (IEA). IEA had been founded in 1978 by Irving Kristol and William Simon, a leader of the modern neo-conservative movement. As Nixon's Treasury Secretary, Simon had shaped the administration's tax policy.

     IEA was dedicated to "seek out promising Ph.D. candidates and undergraduate leaders, help them establish themselves through grants and fellowships and then help them get jobs with activist organizations, research projects, student publications, federal agencies or leading periodicals." It was, in essence, an affirmative action program to help restore right wing influence on college campuses.

     In 1990 the IEA was merged into the Madison Center for Educational Affairs, another neo-conservative foundation started in 1988 by, among others, William Bennett, Reagan's Education Secretary. Madison continued to fund the Collegiate Network until 1995 when its headquarters was moved to Wilmington, Delaware and placed under the financial support of another neo-conservative organization called the Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI). Today ISI funds about 80 right wing college newspapers.

     In any event, when Jesse Malkin founded his newspaper in 1989 he became one of IEA's most academically impressive recruits. When Michelle Maglalang began working for that paper, she was on the road to becoming one of the IEA's most notorious.

     Oberlin was a liberal stronghold, a college that prided itself on a history of affirmative action leadership. In 1841 it had become the first U.S. college to award A.B. degrees to women. As of 1900 Oberlin had graduated half of all African Americans with college degrees. Jesse Malkin and Michelle Maglalang were among very few students who didn't hold liberal views. "For the most part, it was an incredibly politically correct culture," recalled Michelle Malkin.

     Jesse Malkin's first assignment for his new Filipino American reporter was collaborating on an article denouncing Oberlin's affirmative action program. Fellow students found the article offensive and showed their displeasure to Malkin & Company.

     "That's where I first really encountered the vicious response you can get when you stand up to a political orthodoxy," recalled Michelle Malkin. "It's an extremely liberal campus. Even if you tread very lightly on political sacred cows, there was a huge negative response, especially from somebody who was a minority, standing up and saying, 'Well, all these self-appointed minority groups on campus don't speak for me.'



     "It was seeing the violent paroxysms it caused on the Left that really put me on my way to a career in opinion journalism," she stated in her chracteristically defiant and sneering tone. "I really just came into being as a political journalist towards the end of my campus experience, and it was really after I had left and started, you know, writing on my own. It was really more social conservatism than economic conservatism that I started with for my column-writing. So I was not a huge lightning rod until the end of my tenure at Oberlin."

     Whatever her inspiration, by the time Michelle Maglalang graduated in 1992, she was committed to a career in journalism. Her first choice was of the broadcast variety. She headed to Washington D.C. to intern at NBC while Jesse Malkin went to Santa Monica to continue his conservative education by working on a PhD in economic policy analysis at the Rand Graduate School (RGS). RGS was a small, little-known adjunct to RAND Corporation, a conservative think tank founded in 1948 to promote freewheeling capitalist ideals and conduct secretive research for the federal government. It gained notoriety during the Vietnam War by its involvement with some of the more sinister aspects of the war effort.

     Maglalang's NBC stint ended without significant on-air experience. In late 1992 she moved to Los Angeles where she was reunited with Jesse Malkin and landed a job with the struggling San Fernando Valley-based Los Angeles Daily News as a reporter-cum-editorial writer. That job gave her the opportunity to learn a skill that would prove useful in her later career — producing quick-turnaround copy that provokes strong reader reactions. PAGE 2

http://www.goldsea.com/Personalities/Malkin/malkin.html

QuoteIn 1993, Malkin married Jesse Malkin, a Rhodes Scholar,[7] who later worked as associate policy analyst and economist for the Rand Corporation.[8] As of 2004, Jesse was a stay-at-home dad raising their two children.[9]

Career

Malkin began her journalism career at the Los Angeles Daily News, working as a columnist from 1992 to 1994. In 1995, she worked in Washington, DC as a journalism fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute [10], a think tank which is dedicated to the promotion of free enterprise without government regulation.[11] In 1996, she moved to Seattle, Washington, where she wrote columns for The Seattle Times. She became a nationally-syndicated columnist with Creators Syndicate in 1999.[12][13]

She comments on a wide range of topics, always from a conservative viewpoint, but she is perhaps best known for her strong views on immigration. In 2003, she attracted widespread attention for a July 4, 2003 column in Jewish World Review where she opposed the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, asserting that "the custom of granting automatic citizenship at birth to children of tourists and temporary workers such as Hamdi, tourists, and to countless 'anchor babies' delivered by illegal aliens on American soil, undermines the integrity of citizenship—not to mention national security".[14]
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

kolnidre

QuoteThe Christ-hating Jew who conspires against our Christian Heritage, enjoys nothing
better than the conservative who protects the Jew and will talk about everything
dangerous to our country except the Hidden Hand of the Jew conspirators, the root
of all evil which threatens Christian civilization.
-from The Hidden Hand

Doesn't that describe Malkin perfectly? She takes a lot of positions that seem righteous, but she'll rail against the release of the Libyan patsy, only reinforcing the illusion that Muslims are terrorists, not to mention distracting from Israel's involvement - if not orchestration - of Lockerbie.
Take heed to yourself lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land whither you go, lest it become a snare in the midst of you.
-Exodus 34]

CrackSmokeRepublican

Interesting quote there Kolnidre.  Note the title of this article is so that it Can get picked up by the Jew Politico Forum bots.
Quote-from The Hidden Hand

BTW, I didn't invent the word JewTard, it's been around awhile apparently:

http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=jewtard
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

scorpio

Koldnidre - Are you referring to The Hidden Hand by Count Spiridovich?
If so, that's a great book and a wealth of information.
Highly recommended IMHO
Originally published in 1926, but a reprint is available from:
http://www.thebooktree.com