WhatFinger

Jerry A. Kane

Jerry A. Kane is a retired English professor who has also worked as a journalist and technical writer. His writings have been featured at Canada Free Press and some have appeared at WorldNetDaily, American Thinker, and in daily and weekly newspapers across the country. His commentaries, news stories, and musings appear regularly on his blog, The Millstone Diaries.

Most Recent Articles by Jerry A. Kane:

Tea-Publicanism is the Answer for America’s Woes

Knowledgeable tea partiers know that the Democrat Party plays so far out in left field it's no longer in the stadium, and all they see is a Hobson's choice between supporting spineless, sell-out, milquetoast, business-as-usual, Democrat-light Republicans or a third party. But now tea party conservatives are saying they have found an answer to the dilemma and are urging their brethren to become Tea-Publicans and rejoin the Republican fold.
- Saturday, February 20, 2010





Principal’s Swift Action Negates Harmful Threat

imageA Staten Island fourth grader was snatched up from lunch period, hauled to the principal's office, and almost suspended by the South Beach school principal for playing with a plastic Lego police figure holding a toy machine gun, barely two inches long. The boy's mother said her son loves the toy figure because his dad is a retired police officer.
- Saturday, February 6, 2010


Surgical Implants Filled with Explosives Are Undetectable in Suicide Bombers

Britain's MI5 intelligence service reports that al-Qaida is recruiting female suicide bombers who have had explosives surgically implanted in their breasts. Male suicide bombers are undergoing similar surgeries; but instead of the breast area, the explosives are implanted in the buttocks or appendix areas.
- Friday, February 5, 2010

Defeating America’s True Nemesis

- Jerry A. Kane and Peter W. Cooper The first three words of the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution, WE THE PEOPLE, are capitalized and written larger than the others for they contain the idea of self-government. The Constitution's beginning phrase presupposes the belief set forth in the Declaration of Independence that liberty is an unalienable right and gift from man's Creator that cannot be bestowed by other men or governments.
- Wednesday, January 27, 2010

The Punch Heard ‘round the World

In the Massachusetts race to replace Ted Kennedy in the US Senate, Republican candidate Scott Brown landed several damaging blows against Democrat lightweight Martha Coakley in their final televised debate, but the wild haymaker he unleashed upside the head of RINO moderator David Gergen could prove to be "the punch heard 'round the world."
- Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Chicago Cops Propose to Discard Entrance Exam to Increase Minority Hires

City Hall sources say that the Chicago Police Department wants to dump its entrance exam because it would boost the hiring of minorities and save money on test preparation and lawsuits filed against the exam process. If the application-only process is implemented, Chicago would become the only major US city that would not have police entrance exams.
- Thursday, January 7, 2010




A Kodak Moment for the UK

A criminal case involving a former soldier who found a shotgun in his yard and dutifully turned it over to the police proves that prosecutors and judges in the United Kingdom cannot administer justice or thoughtful discretion in the courts because they have succumbed to political correctness and the gun-control ideology embedded in UK law.
- Saturday, November 21, 2009


America’s Fascist Obamanation

Once again, a police officer disregards the First Amendment and shows contempt and distain for the constitutional rights of an American citizen.
- Monday, November 9, 2009



Reagan Conservatives Win a Skirmish in the Battle for the GOP

New York's 23rd district has become symbolic of the struggle within the Republican Party between Reagan conservatives and the left-leaning RINO establishment. The special election to fill Congressman John McHugh's seat is the only open congressional seat in this off-year election.
- Sunday, November 1, 2009

Sponsored