Thursday, August 23, 2018

Remember Mollie Tibbetts


By 
https://amgreatness.com/2018/08/22/remember-mollie-tibbetts/
August 22, 2018

Image result for mollie tibbets

Democrats say “love trumps hate,” and they’re not wrong—at least, not for the reasons they think. Donald Trump won in 2016 precisely because love trumps hate—the love of a parent for her children; the love of people for their community; and the proper love citizens have for their country. Those people—62 million Americans, give or take, and counting—are tired of seeing their love undermined and negated by years of hateful Democratic Party policies. That’s the truth of the matter.

In politics, the human element is often overlooked. People focus on data points about unemployment and GDP growth or statistics about the cost of the military, which is not to be ignored. But what they forget is why policies come to be in the first place: to help people.
Trump’s entire election was centered around bringing a degree of humanity back to our technocratic politics. That’s it. It’s really no more complicated than that. One issue that Trump understood intuitively better than his opponents was immigration—the human costs and the burden for American communities to handle the influx of illegal immigration over the years.
In 2015, the Kate Steinle case drove that point home. Steinle was murdered by an illegal immigrant carrying a gun while walking on the famous San Francisco Embarcadero with her father. Her killer was acquitted. And the illegal immigration problem has persisted. Now America has been given another terrible reminder of the dangers of the country’s current immigration policy.
Over the past few weeks, a missing persons case involving a 20-year-old University of Iowa student, Mollie Tibbetts, has been in the news daily. While taking a run in the evening in July, the Iowa student did not come back home.
She just disappeared.
A month-long search involving scores of volunteers ensued. A wide-ranging investigation scoured the Iowa countryside for evidence of her fate. Mollie’s parents—the people who had nursed her, who had sacrificed to provide a better life than they had for her, who raised her to be a good and decent person—now have to plan for their daughter’s funeral.
And why did this happen? Because  Mollie was murdered by an illegal immigrant—24-year-old Christian Bahena Rivera. Not only is Rivera an illegal immigrant but he had been in the country illegally for seven years.
Authorities knew about Rivera for almost the entire time he was in the country illegally, according to the New York Post. Mollie’s fate is that of Kate Steinle’s. Sadder still is the fact that both Steinle and Tibbetts’ fates were no different than the countless other young people—of all races and religions—who’ve been taken by the reckless and murderous actions of people who should not have been in the country in the first place.
The Democrats believe that the Blue Wave is coming in November. They believe that by making 2018 a referendum on the low character of Donald Trump,  they will return to power (and systematically vote to remove Trump from office based on the fabricated narrative that he’s a Russian agent). Let the memory of young Mollie Tibbetts, of her family, and of all the people who’ve been victims of illegal immigration remember just what’s at stake in November.
President Trump is correct when he warns that there will be no wall or any meaningful reform of our dysfunctional immigration system if the Democrats win. If, however, Americans vote for the right Republicans, real change will happen. It already has with the passage of the president’s travel moratorium.
The Democratic Party’s motto has become “Resist Hate.” Let the Republican motto be, “Remember Mollie Tibbetts.”

THE PANTSUIT THAT CRIED WOLF


By Ann Coulter
http://www.anncoulter.com/columns/2018-08-22.html#read_more
August 22, 2018


Former US President Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary Clinton arrive on the platform of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, before the swearing-in ceremony of US President Donald Trump, January 20, 2017. (Photo by AFP )Former US President Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary Clinton arrive on the platform of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, before the swearing-in ceremony of US President Donald Trump, January 20, 2017. (Photo by AFP )

If you've ever wondered how Russia became America's most fearsome enemy, long after that country gave up Communism, gulags, forced starvations and mass murder (all of which liberals were cool with), the answer is: This crackpot idea came from the same woman who blamed a "vast right-wing conspiracy" for Monica Lewinsky. 

The Russia conspiracy is classic Hillary, as detailed in my new book, Resistance Is Futile!: How the Trump-Hating Left Lost Its Collective Mind. Throughout her long and blemished public career, Hillary has always blamed her troubles on bad people conspiring against her. 

When her husband's mistress, Gennifer Flowers, stepped forward as Bill Clinton was running for president in 1992, Hillary blamed a former gubernatorial opponent of her husband, who "has now spent the last two years doing everything he can to try to get even, and it's a sort of sad spectacle." 

Bill later admitted to the affair. 


When Hillary callously fired long-serving White House travel office employees to make room for her friends' travel business, she responded to the public outcry by accusing the head of the travel office, Billy Dale, of embezzlement. To continue the charade, her husband's government criminally prosecuted Dale. The jury acquitted him after about three minutes of deliberation, but Dale was left jobless and nearly bankrupt. 

When Hillary's health care bill went down in flames, hurting the Democrats and leading to the first Republican Congress in 40 years, she blamed the media for having "bought into the right-wing attack." (You know how the media slavishly repeat conservative talking points.)


As mentioned above, when her husband was caught for the millionth time molesting the help, Hillary blamed a "vast right-wing conspiracy."

When DNA proved the story was true, Hillary blamed the fuss in the media on "prejudice against our state" -- meaning Arkansas. "They wouldn't be doing this if we were from some other state," she said. Even The San Francisco Chronicle hooted at that one. 

When she lost to Obama in 2008, she blamed the media's rampant sexism. In fact, a ham-handed liar like Hillary could only have survived in politics as long as she did thanks to the media's devotion to her. 

Quiz: When the Democratic National Committee's emails popped up on Wikileaks in July 2016, embarrassing her campaign and enraging Democrats, would Hillary: 

A) Apologize to Bernie Sanders for the DNC's horrible mistreatment of him; 

B) Demand an accounting of the inept computer security measures at the DNC; 

Or 

C) Invent a story about Russia conspiring against her? 

Answer: C. Russia had to become the next Linda Tripp, a mysterious enemy undermining our heroine. 

Hillary's campaign manager Robby Mook launched the Russia conspiracy theory on the eve of the Democratic National Convention on ABC's "This Week With George Stephanopoulos" -- because who better to ask the tough questions than a former top aide to Hillary's husband? 

Mook explained: 

"Well, what's disturbing about this entire situation is that experts are telling us that Russian state actors broke into the DNC, took all these emails and now are leaking them out through these websites. ... And it's troubling that some experts are now telling us that this was done by -- by the Russians for the purpose of helping Donald Trump." 

Stephanopoulos may not have burst out laughing, but, at the time, every serious journalist in America did. Right up until Trump drove liberals mad by winning the election, Hillary's Russia conspiracy theory was scoffed at throughout the media. 

A New York Times story described Mook's claim as an "eerie suggestion of a Kremlin conspiracy to aid Donald Trump." It was, the Times reporters said, a "remarkable moment." Even at the height of the Cold War, such an accusation had never been leveled by one presidential candidate against another. And yet, the Times dryly observed, Mook had cited nothing more than unnamed "experts." 

Los Angeles Times reporter Mark Z. Barabak also pointed out the unnamed "experts" and noted that Mook's "allegation" served two political purposes. It tainted Trump's boast that he'd get along with Russia and "also served the added benefit, from Clinton's perspective, of distracting from internal party divisions over the emails." 

Russian scholars and cyber-security experts dismissed the harebrained claim: 

"Experts: Hard to prove Russians behind DNC hack" -- USA Today 

"Why the Kremlin might not be the fan of Trump that it's said to be" -- The Christian Science Monitor 

A month later, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi held a conference 
call with nervous Democrats, urging them to push the Russian conspiracy theory and also to put out the word that "the Russians" might have altered the content of the emails. 

President Obama took the alleged Russian hacking so seriously that he told Putin to "cut it out." 

It was only after disaster struck and Trump won the election that the media decided maybe there was something to that Russia business, after all. 

As described in the book "Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton's Doomed Campaign," two days after the election, Hillary's communications team met for hours "to engineer the case that the election wasn't entirely on the up-and-up. ... Already, Russian hacking was the centerpiece of the argument." 

The entire Russian collusion gag was invented to assuage the potty pantsuit's embarrassment at having lost a second election that was fixed for her to win. 

In the two years since the media guffawed at Mook's claim, the public has been presented with no new evidence. All that's changed is that the media suddenly decided to demand that we all believe it. 

THEN: “ISLAMIC EUROPE? RIDICULOUS!” NOW: “ISLAMIC EUROPE? INEVITABLE – AND TERRIFIC!”


European elite changes its tune - to enable surrender.

August 23, 2018
Related imageFrench police watch Muslims praying in the street during a protest in March 2017. (AFP)
One week back in 2007, I was paid a not inconsiderable sum of money to fly first class from Oslo to Washington, D.C., on the Tuesday and to fly back on the Thursday, so that I could give a hour-long lunchtime talk on the Wednesday to an audience of American and international diplomats. Given that I had been compensated so well and given, as it was explained to me, that I had been accorded the star spot, the sole solo turn, in the middle of a day-long conference consisting otherwise of panel discussions about Western Europe, I foolishly expected a friendly reception.
My first doubts in this respect began to arise only moments after the event kicked off. Sitting through the morning's panels, I heard one highly credentialed individual after another – professors, politicians, and retired and active diplomats from various countries – join in predicting a glowing future for Western Europe. Socially and economically, they all agreed, prospects looked a lot brighter for Western Europe than for America. Not a single one of the dozen or so panelists diverged from this consensus.
After three or four hours of sunny prophesizing, everybody lined up for the buffet. When they were all back in their seats, I was introduced and, from a lectern up front, proceeded to serve up a condensed version of the argument of my 2006 book While Europe Slept. I described the rise of Islam in Western Europe, the failure of Muslims to integrate, and the consequent increase in gang crime, welfare dependency, forced marriage, sharia-run enclaves, and numerous other ills – the usual litany. Western Europe, I maintained, was undergoing a radical metamorphosis that, unless drastic action were taken, would ultimately bring its liberal democracies crashing down.
It's easy to read an audience. As I spoke, I could feel the snappily dressed, self-impressed-looking crowd growing restive. When I was done and they were invited to ask questions, I didn't get questions but incredibly condescending razzes, remonstrations, and reproaches. A German envoy reacted angrily to my account of some recent incident – I don't remember what – that had taken place in her country. Her colleagues from a couple of other countries had similar bones to pick. “These are just anecdotes!” one diplomat thundered dismissively. I tried to engage them in a reasonable give-and-take, but they weren't having it. 
What made the experience especially striking was that over the course of the previous year or so I'd given a number of talks about the same subject in Europe and North America. The audiences had been composed not of credentialed foreign-policy experts but of ordinary citizens. All of them had recognized that what I was saying was true. During the Q&A sessions, they'd been eager to express their gratitude that someone was talking about these matters, eager to recount their own horrific experiences with the consequences of mass Muslim immigration, and eager to vent their frustration at political leaders who refused to listen to them, to care about their sufferings, or even to acknowledge the plain objective facts.
On that day in Washington, after my lunchtime talk was over, I thought that despite the reception I had received, it would only be polite to stay for the rest of the day's proceedings. I sat there in the audience, then, as the first of the afternoon panel discussions got underway. It began with all of the panelists voicing outrage over my remarks and basically calling me an idiot. One of them, while professing to be astonished at my incomprehensibly buffoonish and offensive views, noted that, remarkably enough, Walter Laqueur – the distinguished elder historian, world-class Europe expert, and sometime professor at places like Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and the University of Chicago – had just published a book (The Last Days of Europe) in which he made arguments that were essentially identical to my own. It didn't occur to that panelist to wonder why, if I was so wrongheaded, Walter Laqueur actually agreed with me.
In any case, once I heard myself being bad-mouthed from the stage, I got up and bolted. I've never been sorry that I went, however. For one thing, it was a nice payday. For another, it opened my eyes big time. This was supposed to be a gathering of some of the world's most knowledgeable people on the subject of contemporary Europe. Yet they were either ignorant of, or in deep denial about, things that ordinary people all over Europe – people whom they would surely dismiss as lowbrows – knew all about. That event sent my opinion of diplomats plummeting to rock bottom. It made me even more cynical than I already was about persons who were considered experts simply because of institutional credentials. Years later, when people started talking about the Deep State, I knew what they were talking about, because I'd been in the room with it that day.
I mention that event in Washington not because it was an outlier in my experience of public discussions about Islam but because it was thoroughly consistent with what was, at the time, the reigning attitude of the Western cultural establishment toward any expression of concern about the topic. I recall, for instance, an omnibus review in the Financial Times of While Europe Slept, Bat Ye’or’s Eurabia, Melanie Phillips’s Londonistan, and Walter Laqueur’sThe Last Days of Europe – four books by authors with very different backgrounds but making very similar argumentsHow to explain this? Were we all part of some cabal? The reviewer wasn't troubled by that question. Indeed, he wasn't troubled by any of the hundreds of exceedingly troubling anecdotes in any of our books. No, as far as he was concerned, our books were just dystopic jeremiads written by hysterical bigots. Western Europe was in great shape. Islam wasn't about to take over anything.
One more example. In March 2007, Newsweek ran a “special report” on “Europe at 50.” That piece, too, cited a handful of recent books about the rise of Islam in Europe, my own included. Like the Financial Times reviewer, the Newsweek writer was thoroughly dismissive. Citing our worries about Western Europe's Islamization, he wrote: “To most who live in Europe – or have visited lately – all this seems wrong, even absurd.” Far from being in peril of Muslim domination, he asserted, Europe was moving from strength to strength: “50 years after the EU’s march to unity began, it is now Europe, not the United States, that’s held up as a new lamp unto the nations.”
Cut to 2018. As it turns out, it's not Europe but Islam in Europe that's been moving from strength to strength. As the number of terrorist atrocities, mass car burnings, and gang riots and rapes across Western Europe climbs relentlessly, it's harder and harder to hold up Europe as “a new lamp unto the nations.” Consequently, the elite's message about Islam in Europe has begun to shift. Only the day before yesterday, it seemed, they were telling us – and many of them, to be sure, are still telling us – that it's preposterous to suggest that Western Europe's present order is on the verge of being undone. But now at least some of them are starting to sing a different tune. Yes, they admit, Islam is taking over Western Europe – but hey, there's no reason to worry about it!
Case in point: on March 28 of last year, the Dutch newspaper Trouw ran an interview with Maurice Crul, a professor at the Free University of Amsterdam who “has been conducting research on migration and integration for twenty-five years.” Since only every third Amsterdammer under age fifteen is of Dutch descent, noted Crul, ethnic Dutch people will soon be a minority in that city. The same holds for other major Western European burgs. For Crul, the lesson here is obvious: integration “now works in two directions.” Meaning what? Meaning that Western European natives who have been complaining for years about the failure of immigrants to integrate will themselves henceforth be obliged to integrate into the new, multicultural urban landscapes.
“White Dutch people have to get used to this idea,” Crul insisted. Trouw's interviewer neglected to ask him exactly how much of Muslim culture the ethnic Dutch, as part of their integration process, should be expected to accept as majoritarian norms. Forced marriage? Imam-approved school curricula? Honor killing? Should Dutch women who don't want to be raped start wearing hijab? Does Crul, who's been studying this stuff for a quarter century, have any clue that what he's talking about is gradually accepting and accommodating Islamic strictures until all of Western Europe is under sharia law?
Crul isn't alone. This past August 6, the German newspaper Tagesspiegel published a column by Barbara John, a retired 80-year-old politician who belongs to Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union Party. John noted that in some major German cities, people with foreign backgrounds already outnumber native Germans. In Frankfurt, for example, 51.2 percent of the population is non-German. This trend, John pronounced, “is irreversible.” It “awakens fears,” she added. “But they are unfounded.” She held up Rotterdam and Amsterdam as examples of immigrant-heavy cities that are doing just dandy. “After all,” she stated, the new majorities in those cities consist of “many immigrant groups, which differ enormously in education, ethnicity, religion, culture and finances,” and are thus divided from one another, and from ethnic Dutch people, in many ways.
Yes, there are people from all kinds of backgrounds in Western Europe's largest cities. But only one of those backgrounds is problematic. At this point, no one needs to be told why. At present, Muslims make up about 17% of the population of Antwerp and Brussels, 22% of Birmingham, 25% of Marseille, 11% of Amsterdam, 13% of Rotterdam, and 13% of Frankfurt. Immigration patterns and demographic trends indicate that those numbers will increase steadily in the years to come, and eventually, I repeat, all of Western Europe will be under sharia law. Or, as John puts it so prettily, “many things will be different and some things will be better.”
Well, she'll be dead and it won't matter to her. But to the children and grandchildren of today's Western European adults –  people who never voted to have their countries turned over to foreigners and, ultimately, governed by Islamic law – it will matter. To read these blithe reassurances from the likes of Maurice Crul and Barbara John is to recognize them as precisely the kind of people who, at that 2007 conference in Washington, mocked those of us who warned that Western Europe was in for an impending transformation of colossal proportions. Now our warnings are beginning to be treated as received truths, even as those of us who issued the warnings continue to be treated as pariahs. For the nature of our perceived offense is starting to shift, too. These days, more and more, the crime isn't predicting a Muslim takeover of Western Europe. The crime is complaining about it instead of humbly and obediently adapting to it.
Bruce Bawer is the author of “While Europe Slept,” “Surrender,” and "The Victims' Revolution." His novel "The Alhambra" has just been published.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Today's Tune: Joe Ely - Because of the Wind

'The Lubbock Tapes: Full Circle' review: Where it all began for Joe Ely


August 17, 2018
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When the Clash started kicking around with Joe Ely in the late ’70s, they were drawn to this West Texas wild card who didn’t like rules. Ely was a singer-songwriter from West Texas, which meant he fit in quite naturally with the outlaw country movement that had emerged with his Austin neighbor Willie Nelson at the forefront. But Ely was also drawn to rock, Tex-Mex, Cajun and Beat literature, and didn’t much think of or care about music as a business.
“Full Circle: The Lubbock Tapes” (Rack ’Em Records) documents the artist’s formative years as a solo act. After his one-of-a-kind band, the Flatlanders, imploded, Ely ran off and joined the circus. He took care of llamas, stallions and “the world’s smallest horse” for Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey. After one of his charges kicked him and broke three ribs, he returned to Texas to recover and began working on songs, some of them written by his old Flatlanders pal Butch Hancock.
“The Lubbock Tapes” come from two demo sessions. The first, in 1974, shows Ely in thrall to honky tonk, putting his own twist on the type of two-steps that would keep a crowd dancing on the sawdust floor of a big Texas roadhouse. Curley Lawler from country-swing giants Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys adds violin to “Winds and Waterfalls,” and it’s just fine for what it is, but not truly distinctive. Where Ely really made his mark is with songs such as Hancock’s “Standin’ at a Big Hotel,” in which a drifter much like Ely meets his match “in the wilds of Hollywood.” With its surreal twist on Western outlaw mythology, the song caught the ear of established hitmakers such as Jerry Jeff Walker, among others, and earned Ely a long look with the major record labels seeking to make their mark in the expanding country market.
Ely found himself signed to MCA, and most of the songs on “Full Circle” are scattered throughout his first handful of excellent studio albums for the label. When the second batch of demos on this collection were recorded in 1978, Ely had established his sound, a merger of rock and country that took the experiments of the Flatlanders a step further into a realm of its own — somewhere between the mainstream rock of Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty and the rebel country of Nelson and Waylon Jennings, but not really beholden to either genre.
By this time, Ely’s band had added Jesse Taylor on guitar and Ponty Bone on accordion, and the innocence of the earlier recordings gives way to the darker hues injected into Hancock’s “Fools Fall in Love” and the darn near flamboyant rage that burns through “Down on the Drag.” For Ely a wider recognition of his talents was on the horizon, but the foundation for his “discovery” had already been built. These demos give us a glimpse of the young Ely as he was figuring it all out.
Greg Kot is a Tribune critic.
greg@gregkot.com
Twitter @gregkot
‘Full Circle: The Lubbock Tapes’
Joe Ely
3 stars (out of 4)

JOE ELY REVEALS INITIAL RECORDINGS ON ‘FULL CIRCLE: LUBBOCK TAPES’ (ALBUM REVIEW)

By Jim Hynes
August 16, 2018
8/10 Stars
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Joe Ely sounds like a Texas version of honky-tonkin’ Hank Williams in these first set of countrified outings captured on Full Circle: The Lubbock Tapes, but as it unfolds his rock n’ roll persona comes to the fore as well. It’s a look back to the genesis of Ely’s solo career. Keep in mind that the iconic trio Flatlanders, with his buddies Butch Hancock and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, had failed to catch on in the early seventies. Ely tried his hand in folk clubs and coffee houses before joining the circus; only to have a horse kick him in the ribs. So, dispensing with Nashville and New York, Ely returned to his hometown of Lubbock, TX and looked to its greatest musical hero, Buddy Holly, as a role model.
Ely wrote some new songs, polished off some old ones, borrowed a few from his pals Gilmore and Hancock, and tiring of solo gigs, set out to form a band. In the early ‘70s bands were only welcome in dance halls and large honky-tonks in West Texas. Ely’s first ban member was Rick Hulett on guitar and fiddle but Lloyd Mainer, who even then was the consummate producer for country sessions, joined on lap and pedal steel and Don Caldwell, who owned his own Caldwell Studios in Lubbock (where these were recorded), added his sax.  Greg Wright (bass) and Steve Keeton (drums) formed the rhythm section. After playing relentlessly, the band began to draw crowds and pack some good-sized venues.
This is an album in two parts. The first half are sessions from 1974 that paved the way for Ely’s debut on MCA Records, three years later. Liberation from standard acceptable dancehall fare came a bit slowly but kicked in once Maines made his pedal steel a lead instrument, capable of melody and not just weeping support. Curly Lawler from Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys sat in for the opener “Windmills and Water Tanks.” Ely nods to the dancehall fans with “Joe’s Cryin’ Schottische,” a schottische being a dancehall requisite. The lovely ballad “Because the Wind” appears in later recordings of Jimmie Dale Gilmore and the Flatlanders. But, the big break came with Butch Hancock’s “Standin’ at the Big Hotel,” which drew interest from Jerry Jeff Walker’s Lost Gonzo Band” and became the impetus for Ely signing with MCA.
The second part of the album are sessions from 1978 in preparation for the Joe Ely Band’s third album for MCA, Down on the Drag. This is the Joe Ely Band of Clash fame, comprised of sizzling guitarist Jesse Taylor and accordionist Ponty Bone. Ely says, “You can hear it going from a real honky-tonk sound to a harder edge. The song was still telling a story, but Jesse was cutting loose, and he Lloyd were playing these screaming solos together. I don’t think that was captured on the studio version of Down on the Drag. You can hear it on The Lubbock Tapes.” This blue-infected rock n’ roll melded with twang became Ely’s signature style leading to his popularity as a live act not only in Texas, but across the pond. Ely fans will certainly recognize many of these tunes like “BBQ and Foam,” “I Had My Hopes Up High,” and “If You Were a Bluebird.”  Despite the radio dilemma of “too rock for country versus too country for rock,” Ely forged his signature style, and has become an iconic figure among singer-songwriters.
Ely recounts, “I was surprised the tapes existed. Lloyd had a box in his barn that he had moved about five times. Lloyd’s always calling me about tapes that he’s found. One day he called and said he’s found these.” Ely, an artist with a five decade career, found it “well-worth the the forty-year wait hear these tracks, even though hardly anyone realized that until right about now.” Perspective is good; not ony for Ely but for the rest of us too.

Monday, August 20, 2018

Dorrance wins 1,000th career game as Tar Heels down OSU


By Dave Lohse

https://goheels.com/news/2018/8/19/womens-soccer-dorrance-wins-1-000th-career-game-as-tar-heels-down-osu.aspx

August 19, 2018

What They're Saying About Anson Dorrance's 1000th Win

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – The University of North Carolina women's soccer team scored a workmanlike 2-0 victory over the 23rd-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes Sunday afternoon before a crowd of 732 fans at Finley Fields South.
 
With the win, which improved the 2018 Tar Heels to 2-0, Carolina rewarded head coach Anson Dorrance with his 1,000th overall collegiate coaching win.  Dorrance coached the Tar Heel men's team to 172 wins over 12 seasons from 1977 through 1988.  Sunday's win over Ohio State, which fell to 0-2, gives him 828 collegiate women's wins.  Dorrance founded the Tar Heel program in 1979 and is now in his 40thseason as its head coach.
 
North Carolina (ranked #3 by Top Drawer Soccer, #4 by Soccer America, #6 by United Soccer Coaches) has opened its season with a pair of wins over teams coached by Tar Heel alumnae.  On Thursday, UNC defeated Illinois 3-1, coached by 1983 UNC alumna Janet Rayfield, the first-ever scholarship women's soccer player at Carolina.  On Sunday, UNC beat Ohio State which is coached by 1992 alumna Lori-Walker-Hock, now in her 22nd season in Columbus.  Walker-Hock won three national championships at Carolina and Rayfield won two.
 
On Sunday, UNC scored late in the first half on the first career goal by freshman midfielder Brianna Pinto and then added a second-half tally by junior forward Bridgette Andrzejewski while posting a clean sheet and turning in a suffocating effort on the defensive end.
 
UNC ended with a 23-4 edge in shots, including a 4-3 margin in shots on goal.  The shot margin in the second half was a startling 16-0.  UNC took all seven corner kicks in the game.  Carolina split goalkeeping duties with Samantha Leshnakgoing the first 45 minutes and making three saves.  Claudia Dickey played the second half and did not face a shot.  Devon Kerr went the whole way in goal for Ohio State, making eight saves.  Ohio State defenders also made a pair of saves on shots that would otherwise have been UNC goals.
 
In the 37th minute, UNC freshman Rachel Jones got behind the Ohio State defense and was dribbling in on goal before being tripped up and fouled just outside the penalty area.  Freshman midfielder Brianna Pinto stepped up and bent a shot from 20 yards out into the upper left corner of the goal for her first career goal.  Pinto, whose father Hassan was recruited to play at Carolina while Dorrance was the men's coach and whose mother played softball at UNC, had rejoined the Tar Heels last Wednesday after playing with the U.S. U20 National Team at the FIFA World Cup in France.
 
Carolina added an insurance goal in the 58th minute on a brilliant header inside the right post by Bridgette AndrzejewskiEmily Fox, who also played with Pinto in France at the U20 World Cup for the U.S., helped set up the goal.  Fox started at left back for Carolina Sunday and early in the second half she controlled the ball on the end line before centering it to redshirt sophomore forward Taylor Otto in the middle of the box.  The center forward redirected the ball to the far post and Andrzejewski was there for the nifty put away.  She became the fifth different Tar Heel to score in two games for UNC.
 
The two goals would be all UNC needed on the afternoon as Dorrance played a deep bench with 21 players seeing action and 20 playing at least 22 minutes.
 
UNC will return to action this coming Wednesday at Finley Field South as it takes on the Texas Longhorns at 5 p.m.  Texas is ranked 17th in the United Soccer Coaches poll in the preseason and is 1-0 after opening with a 1-0 win at Rice on Friday.  The Longhorns are coached by Angela Kelly, UNC Class of 1995.


Related:

What They're Saying About Anson Dorrance's 1,000th Win

https://goheels.com/news/2018/8/19/womens-soccer-what-they-re-saying-about-anson-dorrances-1000th-win.aspx

One win from 1000: 10 ridiculous stats behind the coaching resume of Anson Dorrance


August 19, 2018

Image result for anson dorrance 2018

On Sunday at 4 p.m., Anson Dorrance has a chance to make history — again.
Dorrance, the 67-year-old head coach of the North Carolina women’s soccer team, is one win away from 1,000 in his career. With a win against No. 23 Ohio State, at Finley Fields South, the No. 6 Tar Heels (1-0) would get him there.
In an effort to contextualize Dorrance’s unprecedented success in the world of college women’s soccer, The Daily Tar Heel has gathered 10 statistics that tell the story. Special thanks to Dave Lohse, associate director of athletic communications and team SID, for making such statistics available in a thorough media guide.

999

Career wins for Dorrance. Dorrance has won 827 matches as head coach of the women’s soccer team, and won 172 matches as head coach of the men’s soccer team. In 51 total seasons of college coaching — including a nine-year period from 1979 to 1988 when he coached both soccer teams — Dorrance’s career record is 999-135-59.
Len Tsantiris is second on the list, with 570 career victories as the head coach of UConn women’s soccer from 1981 to 2017.

42

Total years of service by Dorrance to the UNC soccer programs. He coached the men’s soccer team from 1977 to 1988, before being succeeded by Elmar Bolovich. He founded the women’s soccer program in 1979 and enters his 40th season as head coach in 2018.
Dorrance also coached the U.S. Women’s National Team from 1986 to 1994. He led the team to a gold medal in the first ever FIFA Women’s World Cup, held in China in 1991.

90.5

Percentage of matches the UNC women’s soccer team has won under Dorrance, before a 3-1 win against Illinois on Thursday. Heading into the 2018 season, the Tar Heels have also won 91.3 percent of their home games; 89.9 percent of their road and neutral-site games; and 89.9 percent of their NCAA Tournament games.

22

National championships won by UNC under Dorrance. The first came in 1981, in a 12-team tournament sanctioned by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. The remaining 21 are NCAA championships.
UNC’s 21 NCAA titles are the most by any women’s sports team; Stanford women’s tennis is second with 19. Among all college programs — men’s and women’s — no program has more total national championships than UNC’s 22.

59.5

Percentage of national championships won by UNC (22), among all 37 in the history of college women’s soccer. Notre Dame is next on the list, with three national championships. Only 10 teams besides North Carolina have won a women’s soccer national championship.
Nine of those UNC championships were won consecutively, starting in 1986 and ending in 1997.

2012

The last year Dorrance won a national championship. UNC won 15 of 17 national championships between 1981 and 1997. From 1998 to 2017, the team has won seven of 20 national championships — more a reflection of increasing parity in the sport than anything else.
When Dorrance won his 20th NCAA title in 2009, he became the first coach in NCAA history to do so, while coaching a single sport.

103

Matches without a loss for UNC, from 1986 to 1990. The Tar Heels won 97 matches and tied in six others during that stretch. The Tar Heels would challenge that streak a few years later, with a 101-match unbeaten streak that ended in 1994.

607

Games between losses by more than one goal for North Carolina. On Nov. 24, 1985, George Mason beat UNC, 2-0, in the national championship match. For the next 25 years, the Tar Heels never lost by more than one goal. The streak was snapped on Nov. 20, 2010, with a 4-1 loss to Notre Dame. The loss to George Mason was the last time the team lost in the 1980's. 

57

Former UNC players to appear on the United States National Team, since its 1985 creation. The 2015 team, which won a FIFA Women’s World Cup gold medal, featured six Tar Heel alumnae — defender Lori Chalupny; defender Whitney Engen; goalie Ashlyn Harris; defender Meghan Klingenberg; forward Tobin Heath; and midfielder Heather O’Reilly.
In total, North Carolina had nine current or former players compete in the last World Cup, for four different countries. It ranked first among U.S. colleges in terms of player representation.

2

Senior classes to leave UNC without a national championship, in the program’s history. Only the classes of 2016 and 2017 have left North Carolinawithout a title — again, a nod to the increased parity in the sport, something Dorrance has praised many times.
The 2016 squad went 17-4-3 and lost, 1-0, to West Virginia in the NCAA semifinals. The 2017 squad went 17-3-2 and lost, 2-1, to Princeton in the round of 16.

Sunday, August 19, 2018

The Weekly Standard’s Ties to Fusion GPS


August 16, 2018
Image result for william kristol fusion gps
In his online appeal for money after being fired this week, disgraced former FBI agent Peter Strzok credited an unlikely source to vouch for his victim status: The Weekly Standard.
At one time a leading conservative magazine, the Standard declared last month that Strzok’s plight was merely an “overwrought tale of bias” and the case against him is “just sound and fury.” The article brushed off Strzok’s actions as “several bad judgment calls” and blasted Congressional Republicans for continuing a criminal investigation into the now-unemployed G-man.
Strzok is following only 32 people on his newly-verified Twitter account. Bill Kristol, the editor-at-large of the Standard, is one of them.
So, what’s with the fanboying between the Standard—an allegedly serious publication dedicated to advancing conservative principles—and a corrupt government bureaucrat who embodies everything the conservative movement fought against for decades?
I found an article in the Standard archives this week that might explain why. On July 24, 2016, just days before Strzok helped launch a counterintelligence probe into the Trump campaign, Kristol gave Strzok and the Obama Justice Department a big assist from the anti-Trump Right by posting a flawed and questionably-sourced article. “Putin’s Party” is compelling evidence that Kristol and the Standard were far from mere sideline observers as the Trump-Russia collusion scam took shape in the summer of 2016.
At the very least, the timing of the article suggests there was careful coordination between the central players—including the Hillary Clinton campaign—and Bill Kristol to derail Trump’s candidacy just weeks before the election. But the article’s content also serves to raise alarming questions about the claims by many Republicans that “conservatives” had no knowledge of or involvement with the Christopher Steele dossier.
Let’s back up a bit. On the morning that Kristol’s piece posted, the Trump-Russian election collusion story was in its embryonic stage—nearly all American voters that summer remained blissfully unaware of the details in this preposterous story—but secretly it was being peddled to the media by Fusion GPS, a political opposition research firm hired by the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee to dig up Russian-related dirt on Donald Trump. Talking points produced by Glenn Simpson, the head of Fusion, and contained in the Steele dossier, were making the rounds in the D.C.-NYC media claque during July 2016. (At the same time, Steele was working with the FBI and alerting the agency to his dubious findings about the Trump campaign.)
Kristol’s article hits on every single one of the Simpson-Steele talking points: Trump forced the GOP to water-down language on the Ukraine in the party’s platform (it didn’t happen); the Russians were behind Wikileaks’ release of the DNC’s hacked emails (unproven); Trump encouraged foreign powers to interfere in the election (he didn’t); and Trump would not honor U.S. commitments to NATO (an overblown assessment of Trump’s NATO criticism nearly all the Republican candidates made). He listed a handful of unknown Trump campaign associates who would soon become household names, including campaign manager Paul Manafort; national security advisor, Lt. General Michael Flynn; and foreign policy aide Carter Page. (Strzok and the FBI formally opened their investigation into the three men—and campaign aide George Papadopoulos—on July 31, 2016.)
The content of Kristol’s piece closely mirrored reporting by other news outlets at the same time. (Lee Smith wrote about how the Fusion-planted media echo chamber evolved before the election.) But despite the flimsiness of the accusations, Kristol took his advocacy a step further.
These indications provide sufficient grounds for Trump’s links to Putin to be further investigated. Politicians who are currently supporting Trump should withdraw their unconditional support. We don’t know how direct and close a financial relationship Trump and Manafort have with the Putin regime. If Trump and Manafort don’t act to allay these concerns by releasing their tax returns (or in other ways), wouldn’t it be advisable for a Republican member of Congress to lead an urgent investigation into whether Putin is interfering in the current American election? Trump and Manafort may be Putin’s chumps. Will other Republicans sit by as the whole Republican party becomes Putin’s party?
A few hours after the Standard piece went online, Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook reinforced Kristol’s message in an interview on CNN. Desperate to change the subject from DNC chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz’s pending resignation, Mook also claimed the Russians were behind the DNC’s computer hack because Putin wanted Trump to win. There were other similarities to Kristol’s article. “Trump and his allies made changes to the Republican platform to make it more pro-Russian,” Mook told Jake Tapper. “And we saw him talking about how NATO shouldn’t intervene to defend our Eastern European allies if they are attacked by Russia. So, I think, when you put all this together, it’s a disturbing picture.”
The next day, Carter Page received his first text from a reporter and former Wall Street Journal colleague of Simpson’s, asking him about his ties to Russia and mentioning dossier-sourced specifics. White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest fielded his first (planted) question during the daily press briefing by an AP reporter, who oddly asked whether the DNC hack was an attempt to influence the election in favor of Donald Trump.
Coincidence? Not a chance.
Kristol would take to Twitter dozens of times before the election to promote the Trump-Russia collusion fantasy, even referring to the GOP as “the Putin Party.” Kristol’s handpicked candidate to challenge Trump, Evan McMullin, also pushed the Trump-Russia narrative. (On the other hand, despite Fusion and Glenn Simpson being covered in the conservative media for more than a year, Kristol has zero tweets about the firm.)
It might be easy to dismiss all of this as mere happenstance, the rantings of a fierce Trump foe determined to do whatever he could to stop Trump from winning. But there is an important sidebar to consider: The Washington Free Beacon admitted last year that they retained Fusion from late 2015 until April 2016 to gather opposition research on Republican primary candidates. The website is run by Kristol’s son-in-law, Matthew Continetti. The Beacon posted numerous negative stories about the Trump campaign in 2016, including hit pieces on Carter Page in March and July.
The Beacon’s story keeps changing, however. At first, Continetti admitted that the Beacon “retained Fusion GPS to provide research on multiple candidates in the Republican presidential primary.” Days later, Continetti explained why his website failed to mention its relationship with Fusion in several related articles prior to October 2017. After some blather about aggregated articles, Continetti vowed that future articles “will mention its history” with Fusion.
And they did. A few days after that, the Beacon posted an article with this disclaimer: “The Washington Free Beacon was once a client of Fusion GPS. That relationship ended in January 2017.”
Say what? Something is not adding up here; in fact, it stinks.
We are expected to believe that Bill Kristol’s son-in-law paid Fusion throughout the 2016 presidential campaign cycle but Simpson doesn’t pitch one dossier-related story to either one? Kristol just comes up with the very same flimsy talking points that Simpson and Steele are peddling—at the exact same time—and it’s pure coincidence? Kristol just happens to call for an investigation one week before the FBI takes the outrageous and unprecedented step of probing private citizens working on an opposing presidential campaign? Kristol and Robby Mook just strangely regurgitate the identical Trump-Russia plotline—on the same morning?
Since the election, Kristol and the Standard have ignored major developments in Spygate while shamefully working with Democratic operatives to smear lawmakers such as Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif), chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, who are trying to get to the bottom of the scandal. Kristol has been in the forefront of keeping Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation working in perpetuity.
And the Standard has yet to report on Strzok getting fired. (Nor has Kristol tweeted about Strzok.)
Unfortunately, there are still some conservatives who trust Kristol and the Standard fairly to report on the Trump presidency and Republican Congress. It’s important that the public fully understands what role Kristol and his publication played—and continue to play—in fueling the biggest political corruption scandal in American history.
Kristol asks a lot of questions on Twitter. It’s time for him to answer some now.