I used to read Derek Hunter’s columns quite regularly. Lately, for whatever reason, being busy, I suppose, I haven’t been doing so. This was a good reminder for me to read them once again. I enjoy his perspective and wit. Unfortunately, as is usually the case, those who need to read this sort of book won’t. Most of us are a bit guilty of reading things that reconfirm what we already believe. I know that I am!
The conclusion is an important one. He says: “It’s not my desire that you stop consuming news, it’s my hope that you will consume more of it, from as many sources as you can from all sides.”
Here are some of my favorite quotes. My apologies for including too many. Feel free to ignore or scroll down. Good Reads usually allows me to add quotes, but I haven't been able to with this one, so I'm including them all here in the body of my review.
“They’re well versed on who was the first of each configuration of human being to accomplish something without ever realizing that the accomplishment itself doesn’t need the qualifier. There are 7 billion people on the planet; only a handful have ever flown on a space shuttle. Therefore, flying on the space shuttle is an amazing accomplishment in and of itself. Yet leftist professors and students look not at the accomplishment itself as something worthy of celebration but at the race of the person.
Guion Bluford was the first African American to go into space and to fly on a space shuttle. He did so in 1983, in the early years of the program. Bluford is not remarkable because he’s a black guy who went to space or flew on the space shuttle; he’s remarkable because he went into space. You haven’t flown on a space shuttle, have you? See?
To focus on a person’s race for an accomplishment is to cheapen the accomplishment. ‘See, even a (whatever type of person) can do this’ is the mentality. Well, why wouldn’t every type of person be able to do that? Why is it extra special that one person did it? SJWs don’t realize it, but the patronizing attitude of ‘You can do it, too’ toward various configurations of people implies that they believe it is special that the others did it, as if they or the world didn’t think they could. This mentality stems from college grievance majors. Many programs started decades ago, when there were real problems to be addressed. Ironically, as the problems were solved, instead of terminating the courses or refocusing them as historical studies, the departments grew even larger and more powerful. So they needed to create new problems.”
“’TMZ’ and ‘People’ magazine are expected to be fluff, ‘Time’ is expected to be news. You’d be hard pressed to spot the difference between them now.”
“… for the love of God, have some fun. Politics is important, certainly, but living beats it in a walk.”
“Hollywood excels at presenting the rare as the norm in the name of a liberal agenda. The percentage of transgender characters on TV, for example, exceeds any reasonable estimate of the percentage in the population at large by a factor of at least ten.”
“Outrage fuels page views, and page views equal money.”
“Agenda-driven movies are churned out regularly, picturing an evil corporation planning to poison a small town or a corrupt billionaire willing to risk it all on some illegal scam to win a little more.”
“… no group has been more eager to embrace any liberal cause or agenda item than Hollywood. Actors, producers, and movie executives proudly paint themselves as champions of the average American—from their walled-off mansions in their double-gated communities.”
“Liberals like to have it both ways on matters of race. Every commercial on TV looks like a Benneton ad, but they tell us that everyone is being oppressed. Which is it? Because it can’t be both.
How many times have you seen an ad like this: five people of different races driving in a convertible, all smiling and laughing (but weirdly, no one talking), stopping to grab some fast food that not one of those professional models would eat on a dare, then sharing their food while sitting around a campfire and still laughing. They’re laughing so hard you’d think there was a gas leak.”
“There’s an amazing phenomenon that occurs in some human beings when things are going well—they actively seek something to be upset about. This is a distinctly first-world problem.
In the third world, where starvation reigns, peanut allergies are virtually nonexistent.
While the peanut is revolutionizing famine relief and saving lives, it’s being banned in schools across the United States as if it were a weapon of mass destruction.”
“Former vice president Al Gore didn’t amass a net worth of more than $200 million while hosting teleconferences from his solar-powered bunker in the woods and encouraging people to ride their bikes to work. He made it while flying in private jets to exotic locations around the world to chastise the average person driving a pickup truck to a job site about how he needs to lower his ‘carbon footprint.’”
“President Trump might have popularized the term “fake news,” but he didn’t invent the phenomenon any more than poets invented the sunrise simply because they wrote about it. Had journalists and journalistic outfits stuck to conveying facts, their credibility would still exist.”
“The most widely held liberal narrative is that most conservatives are dumb, and Republican presidents are just plain stupid. It’s been around since at least President Ronald Reagan, who was portrayed as a doddering old man, senile, playing the role of president, and has only picked up steam: Republican presidents (Reagan, W. Bush, Trump) are dumb, Democratic presidents (Carter, Clinton, Obama) are smart. The only exception was George H. W. Bush, whose résumé made it impossible to call him dumb, so he was portrayed as a ‘wimp.’”
“Making fun of presidential gaffes is fun, and it should be done. No president is perfect, and none should ever be above mockery. Media outlets had a field day with President George W. Bush’s gaffes—“Is our children learning?” But no mainstream media outlet bothered to have any fun at the expense of President Obama when, in February 2010, referred multiple times to “Navy Corpse-men,” instead of “Corpsmen.” One is a member of the US Navy; the other is, presumably, a patriotic zombie of some sort. Yet nothing about it—delivered in a speech at the National Prayer Breakfast, so it wasn’t some obscure event—was mocked the way Bush’s mispronunciation of “nuclear” was. It’s almost as though the media couldn’t think of anyone who might find that funny. Weird, right? It’s not that conservatives mind being held to standards, it’s that liberals not only aren’t held to the same standards, they aren’t held to any standards at all.
Verbal gaffes happen to everyone and can be indicative of anything, but they’re portrayed very differently depending on the party affiliation of the person making them.”
“Before Barack Obama even took office, the presidential historian Michael Beschloss called him the ‘smartest guy ever to become president’ on The Don Imus Show in November 2008. When asked how he knew it to be true, Beschloss had no answer. It was just a matter of faith presented and treated as a matter of fact, and it stuck.”
“Bill Nye is not a scientist; he’s an engineer turned actor who spent a good part of his early adulthood attempting to be a comedian. In 1993, he developed his ‘science’ show for a PBS station in Seattle and from that pulled the biggest joke of his career on all of us.”
“To Democrats you are your skin color, you are your genitalia. Your vote should be determined by which bathroom you use.”
“And don’t kid yourself, there’s a lot of money in division. It’s empowered Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson to avoid getting real jobs their entire adult lives while living like kings.”
“Are there still racists in this country? Of course there are. There are 330 million people; in a pool that big there will always be idiots of all flavors. But when the liberal Southern Poverty Law Center estimates that there are only between 5,000 and 8,000 members of the Ku Klux Klan left in a nation of 330 million and its peak membership was 4 million in 1920,20 with a population of only 106 million . . . well, if that’s not progress, there is no such thing as progress.”
“Justice is being treated equally, not having an equal outcome; it’s being judged for who you are and what you’ve done, not what anyone throughout history with your same skin pigment level did years or even centuries before you were born. Victories do not transfer from generation to generation—children of Super Bowl champions are not Super Bowl champions, too—neither does complicity in crimes.”