Monday, June 13, 2005

Quotes of the day

From today's Federalist Patriot email brief.

"The Children's Defense Fund and civil rights organizations frequently whine about the number of black children living in poverty. In 1999, the Bureau of the Census reported that 33.1 percent of black children lived in poverty compared with 13.5 percent of white children. It turns out that race per se has little to do with the difference. Instead, it's welfare and single parenthood. When black children are compared to white children living in identical circumstances, mainly in a two-parent household, both children will have the same probability of being poor. How much does racial discrimination explain? So far as black poverty is concerned, I'd say little or nothing, which is not to say that every vestige of racial discrimination has been eliminated. ...[B]ecause the civil rights struggle is over and won is not the same as saying that there are not major problems for a large segment of the black community. What it does say is that they're not civil rights problems, and to act as if they are leads to a serious misallocation of resources. Rotten education is a severe handicap to upward mobility, but is it a civil rights problem?" --Walter Williams

"We now have an answer to the question of whether U.S. agents should knock down doors and bat the reefer from the fingers of cancer patients. Yes! By all means, yes. The Supremes have ruled that federal anti-weed laws must trump individual states' laws on medicinal marijuana. So much for the idea that the states are the laboratories of democracy. ... I am not a lawyer, which is why the idea of the interstate commerce clause having jurisdiction over intrastate non-commerce is amusing. Everything is a matter of interstate commerce, it would seem. Pity President Bush didn't claim the right to knock over Saddam Hussein based on the interstate commerce clause; every statist and big-government advocate would have gotten writer's cramp praising this novel approach. It's only a matter of time before fast food is regulated under the clause, since hungry truckers often take sacks of fries across state lines. It's the perfect law. We could use it to annex Mars." --James Lileks

"Rather than just another $400 million line item in the federal budget, funding for PBS should be a litmus test for conservatives. After all, if you can't eliminate federal funding for a media outlet that regularly attacks your party and movement, what programs CAN you muster the political will to cut? The situation is as if taxpayers were being forced to fund advertising campaigns for John Kerry and Nancy Pelosi and conservatives who control the presidency and both houses of Congress were unwilling or unable to stop it. The real problem for taxpayers is that PBS is just one of hundreds -- maybe thousands -- of federal programs that take a small slice out of the budget pie every year but add up to big money. If Republicans tinker around the edges by changing the ideological slant of PBS, it will be just another sign that too many Republicans are OK with big government as long as it is 'our' big government. To say the least, that is poor strategy." --Paul Gessing

"The frivolous demands made on our military -- that they protect museums while fighting for their lives, that they tiptoe around mosques from which people are shooting at them -- betray an irresponsibility made worse by ingratitude toward men who have put their lives on the line to protect us. It is impossible to fight a war without heroism. Yet can you name a single American military hero acclaimed by the media for an act of courage in combat? Such courage is systematically ignored by most of the media. If American troops kill a hundred terrorists in battle and lose ten of their own men doing it, the only headline will be: 'Ten More Americans Killed in Iraq Today.' Those in the media who have carped at the military for years, and have repeatedly opposed military spending, are now claiming to be 'honoring' our military by making a big production out of publishing the names of all those killed in Iraq. Will future generations see through this hypocrisy -- and wonder why we did not?" --Thomas Sowell

"As distrust of the press grows, news articles are relentlessly scrutinized for bias, but almost no one is focusing on stories that are simply ignored. For instance, a May 18 report in the Afghan newspaper Kabul Weekly said the riots that killed 17 people were not about disrespect for the Koran in American detainment camps -- they were a show of force by the Taliban and another fundamentalist group, Hezb-e Eslami. 'These demonstrations were organized by the Taliban and their supporters, and only some naive people joined the protesters,' the newspaper said. The BBC picked up the story on May 22, but so far as I can see, it was completely ignored in American news media. If you edited, let us say, a large newspaper in Washington or New York, or a prominent newsmagazine accused of causing these famous riots, wouldn't you want to check this one out?" --John Leo

Thursday, June 09, 2005

Good advice

In an effort to lighten things up around here, allow me to pass along some words of down-home country wisdom that a good friend sent me via email:

  • Country fences need to be horse high, pig tight, and bull strong.

  • Life is not about how fast you run, or how high you climb, but how well you bounce.

  • Keep skunks and lawyers at a distance.

  • Life is simpler when you plow around the stumps.

  • A bumble bee is faster than a John Deere tractor.

  • Trouble with a milk cow is she won't stay milked.

  • Don't skinny dip with snapping turtles.

  • Words that soak into your ears are whispered, not yelled.

  • Meanness don't happen overnight.

  • To know how country folks are doing, look at their barns, not their houses.

  • Never lay an angry hand on a kid or an animal, it just ain't helpful.

  • Teachers, Moms, and hoot owls sleep with one eye open.

  • Forgive your enemies. It messes with their heads.

  • Don't sell your mule to buy a plow.

  • Two can live as cheap as one, if one don't eat.

  • Don't corner something meaner than you.

  • You can catch more flies with honey than vinegar, assuming you want to catch flies.

  • Man is the only critter who feels the need to label things as flowers or weeds.

  • It don't take a very big person to carry a grudge.

  • Don't go huntin' with a fellow named Chug-A-Lug.

  • You can't unsay a cruel thing.

  • Every path has some puddles.

  • Don't wrestle with pigs: You'll get all muddy and the pigs will love it.

  • The best sermons are lived, not preached.

  • Most of the stuff people worry about never happens.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Quotes of the day

(Courtesy of the Federalist Patriot)

"Dependence begets subservience and venality, suffocates the germ of virtue, and prepares fit tools for the designs of ambition." --Thomas Jefferson

"The more one considers the matter, the clearer it becomes that redistribution is in effect far less a redistribution of free income from the richer to the poorer, as we imagined, than a redistribution of power from the individual to the State." --Bertrand de Jouvenel

"When the federal assault-weapons ban expired last September, its fans claimed that gun crimes and police killings would surge. Sarah Brady, one of the nation's leading gun-control advocates, warned, 'Our streets are going to be filled with AK-47s and Uzis.' Well, over eight months have gone by, and the only casualty has been gun-controllers' credibility. Letting the law expire only showed its uselessness." --John Lott, Jr.

"By now it should be clear to anyone who has followed this nomination that the fight here isn't over [John] Bolton's record, his temperament or his reading of the intelligence. Rather, it is a policy dispute in which a majority of Democrats, as well as a few Republicans, have chosen to hijack the nomination process to score some points against President Bush's foreign policy. In the case of Syria, they owe both Mr. Bolton and Mr. Bush an apology. Americans need to understand the threat Syria poses to our troops in Iraq and to our allies in the region. That understanding isn't helped when Senators put their partisan animus ahead of the national interest." --The Wall Street Journal

"Headline in yesterday's New York Times: 'U.S. Challenged to Increase Aid to Africa' which topped a piece by reporter Celia Dugger. The article states that the European Union has 'agreed unanimously...to almost double assistance to poor countries over the next five years. Japan this week reaffirmed its pledge to double aid to Africa in just three years.' All this in the run-up to British Prime Minister Tony Blair's visit to Washington this week at which he 'hopes to shake loose more American aid for Africa.' Way, way, WAY down in the ninth paragraph we read that the 'United States has tripled aid to Africa to $3.2 billion since Mr. Bush took office.' [Emphasis mine]." --Rich Galen

"Let's understand what mishandling means. Under the rules the Pentagon later instituted at Guantanamo, proper handling of the Koran means using two hands and wearing gloves when touching it. Which means that if any guard held the Koran with one hand or had neglected to put on gloves, this would be considered mishandling. On the scale of human crimes, where, say, 10 is the killing of 2,973 innocent people in one day and 0 is jaywalking, this ranks as perhaps a 0.01." --Charles Krauthammer

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Hillary Dean

Hillary Clinton is running for President in 2008, or at least that's her current intention. I don't think anyone with a modicum of political sense believes otherwise. Of course, she still has to be re-elected to the Senate by the votors of New York and, in support of both elections, she has put on the appearance of moving toward the center on such issues as illegal immigration.

However, in a performance that you probably won't hear much about from the mainstream media, Ms. Clinton did a pretty good impersonation of the current head of the Democratic National Convention, former presidential candidate Howard Dean. In her speech at her first major pre-election fundraiser, she had this to say:
"There has never been an administration, I don't believe in our history, more intent upon consolidating and abusing power to further their own agenda," Mrs. Clinton told the audience at a "Women for Hillary" gathering in Midtown Manhattan this morning.

"I know it's frustrating for many of you; it's frustrating for me: Why can't the Democrats do more to stop them?" she continued to growing applause and cheers. "I can tell you this: It's very hard to stop people who have no shame about what they're doing. It is very hard to tell people that they are making decisions that will undermine our checks and balances and constitutional system of government who don't care. It is very hard to stop people who have never been acquainted with the truth."

Neal Boortz comments:
Well ... you have the power thing there .. but let's not overlook that statement about honesty either.

Let's see now .. .Hillary says that Republicans are people who have never been acquainted with the truth. Now ... work with me here ... Didn't Bill Clinton admit to lying under oath? Didn't he admit that he intentionally said things to mislead investigators and prosecutors? Just wondering. Oh, and hey! Didn't he lose his law license over his dishonesty! By golly, I think he did! And what about the White House travel office staff! It didn't take the jury long to throw out those Clinton lies, did it? And then we have the FBI files scandal .. and who hired that Livingstone chap? Hillary just doesn't seem to remember. How honest of her! And who was it who told a congressional committee for two years that she didn't have certain subpoenaed documents ... and that she didn't know who had them or, in fact, if they existed at all: only to have those very documents show up in her private living quarters in the White House with her handwriting and her fingerprints all over them? Would that be Hillary! Why, yes! I do believe it was!

Remember ... it's the Republicans who have never been acquainted with the truth.

In addition to the above, Ms. Clinton had this to say:
"The press is missing in action, with all due respect," she said. "Where are the investigative reporters today? Why aren't they asking the hard questions? It's shocking when you see how easily they fold in the media today. They don't stand their ground. If they're criticized by the White House, they just fall apart.

"I mean, c'mon, toughen up, guys, it's only our Constitution and country at stake," she said. "Let's get some spine."

Well, I'd say that the investigative reporters are a bit gunshy after what happened to Dan Rather and Newsweek. Maybe they're rethinking the whole business of trying to trash the Republicans with unfounded stories and actually taking the time to verify the facts. Of course, to the Democrats this is interpreted as the media being "missing in action."

And as for the Constitution and the country being at stake, well she's right about that although for different reasons than she thinks. The Constitution I want to preserve (or restore, to be more accurate) is the one that means what it says in the plain text. The one where the powers of the federal government are specifically enumerated and limited. The one she wants to preserve is the one that can be interpreted to mean whatever the Democrats want it to mean on any given day. Her Constitution is like a culture of stem cells, which can become any kind of cell in the organism. Her Constitution will support any power the federal government wishes to have, allow any law it wishes to pass, and uphold the desires of the collective over the rights of the individual. For that reason, she must never be allowed to become president, at least not if the Democrats also control Congress.

Firearms ownership is not about death

Professer Mike Adams makes this point concisely in his response to a critic:
And, of course, there is no inconsistency between my opposition to abortion and my opposition to gun control. Put simply, I am committed to the protection of innocent life. I want the fetus to be protected from the abortionist who seeks to take an innocent life. I also want adults to be protected from the murderer who seeks to take an innocent life.

Professor Adams often writes about the trials and tribulations of being a conservative working at an institution populated almost entirely by liberals. To be honest, I'm surprised the administration at his college hasn't canned him yet, though it's possible that his voice is loud enough that they know they wouldn't be able to get away with it. As is often the case with his articles, the real focus is the students:
Of course, critics of my response to Rita will argue that a fetus is not a person in order to rebut my assertion that "the abortionist...seeks to take an innocent life." But the real issue, the one that my critics will not touch, regards the status of the college student.

Whenever neo-libs seek to distribute condoms on campus, to show porn movies, to encourage sodomy, or to encourage "reproductive choice," they assert that college students are adults. But when it comes to gun ownership, they portray college students as children. And these children must be kept away from firearms, just as they must be shielded from any speech that might make them feel uncomfortable or wound their inner child.

The neo-libs claim a right to abortion they cannot identify in the constitution. But NRA members claim a right to bear arms, which is spelled out clearly below the 1st Amendment. It is no accident that the neo-libs seek to suppress knowledge of one amendment through the destruction of another.

Regardless of your stance on abortion, the fact remains that the Constitution specifically enumerates the right to arms whereas the right to an abortion was inferred by the Supreme Court. The latter is arguable, the former is absolute.

Monday, June 06, 2005

Gregoire wins (for now, but probably for good)

Today Judge Bridges handed down his decision in the challenge to the 2004 Washington State gubernatorial election. As many had predicted, he decided in favor of letting the election stand.

I am not a legal expert so take the following with a grain of salt. Listening to a portion of the judge's statements on the way into work (the local talk station was broadcasting it live) and reading the notes linked above, my opinion at this time is that the Republicans limited themselves in their case, and that certain issues were not presented that would have provided a more compelling reason for Judge Bridges to rule in their favor. One in particular that appears not to have been considered is that the manual recount resulted in some counties counting additional ballots that were found during the recount and which had not been counted in the previous two machine counts. Other counties did not do this. The law specifically states that a recount should count only those votes that had already been counted in the previous count. What these counties did is a recanvassing, which is when they not only count those that were previously counted but also look for, and include in the count, any additional ballots that were not previously counted. Also, since some counties did this and some did not, there was a lack of uniform standards across the state which can be considered a violation of the equal protection clause of the US Constitution. This is what formed the basis of the US Supreme Court decision in Bush v Gore after the 2000 election and, should this case rise to that level, that case may very well be used as precedent.

The next step for the Republicans is to decide whether or not to appeal the decision to the Washington State Supreme Court. Judge Bridges, in his opening remarks prior to handing down his ruling, indicated that he considered it an inevitability.

Friday, June 03, 2005

Decision coming in Washington election trial

Today is the last day of the trial where the GOP is arguing that the Washington State gubernatorial election was irredeemably marred by errors and fraud and the Democrats are arguing the opposite so that Christine Gregoire can remain in office. Judge Bridges is scheduled to render his decision on Monday.

Regardless of the decision, I expect the case will ultimately be decided by the State Supreme Court.

Friday, May 20, 2005

Maid service

In today's installment of "Stuff We Like," I would like to present professional in-home maid service. Earlier this week, as part of preparing the house to be shown to potential buyers, the Geekette and I had Merry Maids come in and to a top-to-bottom cleaning of the house. The week before, a representative had come out to evaluate the house and figure out what they would be charging based on the number of rooms, the square footage, etc. We gave her a key which they then left on the counter after they were done cleaning. When I got home from work Tuesday evening, it was like walking into a new house. Now mind, the Geekette and I do a reasonable job of keeping the place clean. But we don't clean everything in a single day so seeing the entire place sparkling was a joy. Some observations:

  • They made the bed. (I was going to do this before I left for the day but I spaced it.)

  • They have some kind of uber-vacuum that does a better job than even our Dyson, which is certainly no slouch.

  • They washed a mug that I had left on the counter.

  • They thoroughly cleaned the appliances. They even cleaned the place in the washer where you put bleach and fabric softener.

  • They cleaned the rubber strip on the bottom of the shower door.

  • They refolded and rehung the towels in the kitchen and bathrooms.

  • They cleaned the baseboards on the walls.

  • They cleaned out all the dust and cat fur from the tangle of cables under the computer desks.

  • Every surface was dusted. Dusting is the chore I dislike the most.


We'll probably have them come out and clean the place again before we move, or after we have all our stuff out. We have decided that we are going to have a professional maid service come and clean the new place at least once a month. We'll make it happen even if we have to eat ramen for dinner every night. The way they price it, you pay a certain amount for a weekly cleaning, and it's more if you go every two weeks or once a month. The tradeoff is that less frequent cleanings mean a lower monthly cost in the long term, but you don't have the house cleaned as often. I'm thinking once a month is probably good. That way we'll still need to do spot cleaning and we won't get lazy.

A study in contradiction

From today's Federalist email:
"I've resisted pronouncing a sentence before guilt is found. I still have this old-fashioned notion that even with people like Osama, who is very likely to be found guilty, we should do our best not to, in positions of executive power, not to prejudge jury trials." --Howard Dean, refusing to pre-judge Osama bin Laden in December 2003

"I think [DeLay] is guilty...of taking trips paid for by lobbyists, and of campaign-finance violations during his manipulation of the Texas election process. I think Tom DeLay ought to go back to Houston, where he can serve his jail sentence down there." --Howard Dean, rendering a guilty verdict against Tom DeLay this week

Dean's remarks were sufficiently offensive to draw the ire of even far-Left Demos like Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank: "I think Howard Dean was out of line talking about DeLay. The man has not been indicted. I don't like him. I disagree with some of what he does, but I don't think you, in a political speech, talk about a man as a criminal...."

Dean remains unrepentant, insisting, "There's corruption at the highest level of the Republican Party, and they're going to have to face up to that one of these days, because the law is closing in on Tom DeLay."

Actually, contradiction isn't the correct term. The word that most properly describes this behavior is hypocrisy. Keep it up, Howard. You're the engineer on a train that's barrelling out of control down the track toward the washed out trestle and, instead of applying the brakes, you're blowing the steam whistle and hollering out the window.

The latest on the Washington gubernatorial election debacle

According to this article in the Seattle Times:
King County's absentee-ballot supervisor has testified that she collaborated with her boss when she filled out a report that falsely showed all ballots were accounted for in the November election.

Nicole Way said in a deposition Friday that she and assistant elections superintendent Garth Fell agreed to the misleading report because officials didn't know how many absentee ballots were returned by voters.

The title of the article is "Election manager linked to false report." This isn't just a false report, this is plain and simple fraud. Regardless of whether or not it was intended to influence the result of the election, these people knowingly reported false information. They lied. I can only hope that the judge that starts hearing the case next week agrees that this election was so full of mistakes and fraud that he has no choice but to nullify the results and instruct the state to start over.

Monday, May 16, 2005

Light blogging alert

Over the next couple of months I'll be dealing with a rather large change in the lives of myself and the Geekette. No, we're not getting married, but a substantial sum of money is involved, not to mention a considerable amount of work. We're going to be moving into a new house sometime in July and we need to get stuff packed up and in storage, and get the current house ready to show to potential buyers. Therefore, I'll probably not be posting much during that time, and probably for a time after the move as we get settled in and unpacked. I'll try to put something up every so often but no guarantees (as if there ever were any in the first place).

Friday, May 06, 2005

Student who disrupted Ann Coulter's presentation speaks

Ajai Raj who, as noted previously, acted in a disruptive manner and asked Ann Coulter a lewd question after she gave a speech at UT Austin, has released a statement posted over at Daily Kos.

While reading this, I had to keep in mind that the profanity and invective that he uses is really no different from that used by Misha over at The Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiller. Therefore I can't really condemn him for that. However, I have yet to hear of Misha attending a presentation by a prominent Democrat and doing his best to disrupt it.

Should this guy have been arrested? I don't know. Certainly he should have been kicked out of the room; I don't think anyone can reasonably argue against that. But I am not an expert on the law down in Texas. Interestingly, one of the first comments to the post at Daily Kos presents an argument as to why his arrest was justified, even though the commenter is himself a lefty. I don't know if his argument is correct but I must give him credit for having the courage to post it.

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

Another example of the tolerant left

So it appears that this fellow decided to ask Ann Coulter a rather lewd question and then follow it up with equally lewd gestures when she was speaking at the University of Texas at Austin.

I wish I could say that this behavior is exclusive to the left but I can't. The recent incident where a Vietnam vet spit in the face of Jane Fonda disproves any such hypothesis. There's also the incident during the presidential campaign where a guy was trying to shout down Howard Dean. Although that one did end with Al Franken tackling him and slamming him to the floor.... I will say, though, that this kind of behavior is more often committed by those on the left than those on the right. And that's just the stuff the news actually reports.

Update: Mike provides a link to another article on the incident and asks a question.

The answer, of course, is no.

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

Idiocy on parade

Via Sound Politics comes a link to a Kool-Aid-fueled diatribe against the war in Iraq, and in support of the terrorists who are currently murdering Iraqis, from someone who is so self-contradictory, well, see for yourself. First off, he states his unequivocal support for the "insurgents:"
For myself, I can say without hesitation that I support the "insurgency", and would do so even if my only 21 year old son was serving in Iraq. There’s simply no other morally acceptable option.

Usually we get moral relativity from the left. It's refreshing to see a lefty engage in moral absolutism, no matter how whacked. Shortly after, he refers to the founding document of the United States:
As Americans, we support the idea that violence is an acceptable means of achieving (national) self-determination. This, in fact, is how our nation was formed, and it is vindicated in our founding document, The Declaration of Independence.

He follows with an extended quote to prove his point and then lays this on us:
The Declaration of Independence is revolutionary in its view that we have a “duty” to overthrow regimes that threaten basic human liberties. We must apply this same standard to the Iraqi people.

Okay, this is some kind of satire, right? If we have the duty he describes, then we had an absolute duty to remove Saddam, and have an equal duty to remove the governments of Iran, Cuba, North Korea, China, the list goes on and on. Does this guy even realize what he's saying? Moving on:
Terrorism or not, there’s no doubt that the vast majority of people in the region and in the world, believe that the war was entirely unjustifiable.

Belief does not equal correctness. I'm sure that, when asked whether or not all the people in the world who believe Jesus Christ is the son of God are correct, he'd probably answer no, or answer that they are misinformed or misguided. I would hazard a guess that most people who think the war was unjustifiable don't know all the facts but are simply parroting the views of their governments and/or major media.
The argument most commonly offered by antiwar Americans (who believe we should stay in Iraq) doesn’t defend the legitimacy of the invasion, but provides the rationale for the ongoing occupation. The belief that “We can’t just leave them without security”, creates the logic for staying in Iraq until order can be established. Unfortunately, the occupation is just another manifestation of the war itself; replete with daily bombings, arrests, torture and the destruction of personal property. Therefore, support of the occupation is a vindication of the war. The two are inseparable.

And just who are perpetrating those bombings, the torture, and the destruction of personal property? Not the US forces. What happened at Abu Ghraib was wrong, and the people responsible are being made to pay the price by their own government, but it JUST DOESN'T COMPARE TO HAVING YOUR HEAD SAWED OFF ON CAMERA. Nor does it compare with what happened in that prison when Saddam was in power. Yet this guy would have you believe that things were better for all Iraqis then.
We should remember that the war (which was entirely based on false or misleading information) was both illegal and immoral. That judgment does not change by maintaining a military presence of 140,000 soldiers on the ground for years to come. Each passing day of occupation simply perpetuates the crime.

At the same time we have to recognize that the disparate elements of Iraqi resistance, belittled in the media as the “insurgency”, are the legitimate expression of Iraqi self-determination.

Since the "insurgency" is driven largely if not mostly by foreign fighters and foreign financial support (Syria, Al Qaeda, Zarqawi), I'd say that this statement is false on its face.
Independence is not bestowed by a foreign nation; the very nature of that relationship suggests reliance on outside forces. True independence and sovereignty can only be realized when foreign armies are evacuated and indigenous elements assume the reigns of power.

So, I guess Germany and Japan aren't independent. I'm sure they're glad to know this now. Actually, our goal is exactly that of having indigenous elements assumign the reigns of power, and also responsibility for the security of their citizens. It's just that we're still in a war situation and our enemy isn't yet completely defeated.
There’s no indication that the conduct of the occupation will change anytime soon. If anything, conditions have only worsened over the past two years. The Bush administration hasn’t shown any willingness to loosen its grip on power either by internationalizing the occupation or by handing over real control to the newly elected Iraqi government. This suggests that the only hope for an acceptable solution to the suffering of the Iraqi people is a US defeat and the subsequent withdrawal of troops. Regrettably, we’re nowhere near that period yet.

If anything, the actions of the "insurgents" shows that they are becoming increasingly desperate as the indigenous government of Iraq takes shape. As for internationalizing the occupation, there are about forty other nations who would be interested to know that their contributions didn't actually happen. As for the last sentence in that excerpt, I'll address that shortly.
It’s not the insurgency that’s killing American soldiers. It’s the self-serving strategy to control 12% of the world’s remaining petroleum and to project American military power throughout the region. This is the plan that has put American servicemen into harm’s way. The insurgency is simply acting as any resistance movement would; trying to rid their country of foreign invaders when all the political channels have been foreclosed.

Americans would behave no differently if put in a similar situation and Iraqi troops were deployed in our towns and cities. Ultimately, the Bush administration bears the responsibility for the death of every American killed in Iraq just as if they had lined them up against a wall and shot them one by one. Their blood is on the administration’s hands, not those of the Iraqi insurgency.

Ah, here's the standard lefty refrain we all know and love. It's all America's fault, not the fault of those who actually detonate the bombs or cut off the heads. Note that here again he conveniently ignores the fact that much if not most of the insurgency is composed essentially of foreign invaders itself and thus doesn't qualify as a native resistance movement. Now here's the really good one:
We shouldn’t expect that, after a long period of internal struggle, the Iraqi leadership will embrace the values of democratic government. More likely, another Iraqi strongman, like Saddam, will take power. In fact, the rise of another dictator (or Ayatollah) is nearly certain given the catastrophic effects of the American-led war.

And a bit later:
Are Americans prepared to offer their support to the same brutal apparatus of state-terror that was employed by Saddam? (Rumsfeld’s unannounced visit to Baghdad last week was to make sure that the newly elected officials didn’t tamper with hiscounterinsurgency operatives, most of whom were formerly employed in Saddam’s secret police)

But, but, didn't he say that everything was better under Saddam? Isn't that view rather incompatible with the presence of a "brutal apparatus of state-terror?" Which one is it, Mike? Was it all flowers and sunshine or was it a terrible dictatorship? You can't have it both ways, even though the attempt to do so is a staple of far-left thought.
We should also ask ourselves what the long-range implications of an American victory in Iraq would be. Those who argue that we cannot leave Iraq in a state of chaos don’t realize that stabilizing the situation on the ground is tantamount to an American victory and a vindication for the policies of aggression. This would be a bigger disaster than the invasion itself.

That's right, an American victory, and thus a success of the Bush administration's policies, would be the biggest disaster imaginable. After all, it doesn't matter how many millions Saddam killed, it doesn't matter how terrible Iraq would become if we just pulled out and left it to the mercy of the fascists, it doesn't matter how many more Iraqis would die, it doesn't matter how many more terrorists would be trained at newly created training camps in terror-controlled Iraq, it doesn't matter how many more Europeans and Americans would die in attacks carried out by those terrorists, above all WE CANNOT ALLOW BUSH TO SUCCEED IN ANY WAY SHAPE OR FORM! EVEN IF IT MEANS THE DESTRUCTION OF THE UNITED STATES AND THE DEATHS OF EVERYONE IN IT! Better to be dead than admit that, yet again, a Republican president did something to make the world a better place.

This man is beneath contempt. I can't believe I just wasted this much time on him....

Thursday, April 28, 2005

Olympia unchained, Part II

So the 2005 session of the Washington State Legislature has come to a close. What did the Democrats who control both houses and (hopefully temporarily) the governor's mansion so magnanimously give us?
Washington lawmakers wrapped up their ambitious 15-week session Sunday night after passing a $26 billion state budget and rescuing a big gas-tax plan to fix crumbling, crowded roads and bridges.

The budget plan requires a half-billion-dollar revenue package, including ``sin taxes'' on cigarettes and liquor. Smokes will go up by $6 a carton and the booze tax will rise by a stiff $1.33 a liter. The estate tax, called the death tax by foes, will be imposed on about 250 large estates each year.

To clarify that a bit, the estate tax had previously been struck down by the state supreme court as unconstitutional. This legislation re-enacts it in a way that, presumably, will pass constitutional muster and also raises the minimum value necessary for an estate to be taxed. Therefore, it will affect fewer estates than the previous tax would if it were still in force.

The gas tax was also a bone of particular contention. However, what this article doesn't say is that at least some Republicans voted for it. Why? Well, Senate Minority Leader Bill Finkbeiner was on the Mike Siegel show this morning and, in response to a caller who expressed her extreme disappointment that the Republicans had rolled over on the gas tax, said that he did it because the revenue from this tax will go solely to roads and that the Alaska Way Viaduct and Highway 520 floating bridge are both in need of repair or replacement. Also, in return for their support, the Republicans got the Democrats to include language providing for independent audits of the state transportation department by the state auditor, who previously didn't have the power to perform such audits. Ideally, these audits would be performed for all departments but this is what they could get.

Here's my take on it. The Republicans knew that the gas tax was going to be passed and signed regardless of anything they did. It was simply a foregone conclusion given the reality of the situation. So they did what they could to get at least something good out of it, which is the audit language. It's realpolitik at the state level and, frankly, I applaud their recognition of the inevitability of the situation and their success in wrangling at least something positive from the Democrats.

Speaking of audits, there is currently an initiative gathering signatures, I-900, which would, if passed, instruct the state auditor to conduct performance audits on state and local government agencies and entities. In the case of the transportation department, this would be somewhat redundant now, but it would also apply to every other department, and also to the local level. It is the latest from Tim Eyman, who has worked to bring several other initiatives, most involving reducing taxes or preventing tax increases, to the ballot. If I encounter someone with one of these petitions, I'm definitely signing it.

Thanking the union for their support

The budget that was just passed by the Washington State Legislature includes an interesting item. All state employees will get a 3.2% raise across the board, but those who are members of the Washington Federation of State Employees, the union for state workers, will get their raises a full two months before those employees who are not union members.
Most rank-and-file state employees were paid based on a standard salary scale for 40 years.

But the budget just passed by the Legislature is the first to include union contracts for pay and benefits, which go into effect July 1.

Workers without a union contract have to wait two months, until Sept. 1, for the same 3.2 percent across-the-board pay increase, the first since 2001.

There are some who don't think this is right.
Paying union employees and nonunion workers differently might not be legal, according to the Evergreen Freedom Foundation, a privately funded organization that has sued unions in the past.

Foundation analyst Michael Reitz referred to an appeals court decision this week, in which the court ruled against different pay rates for state employees who do similar work at colleges and in general government.

"You've got two very similar situations. It doesn't seem like it would be in the best interest of the state to set up another legislatively distinguished class of employees," Reitz said.

As you would expect, the union supported Democrats for the legislature and for governor. This is almost certainly payback on the part of Democrats for that support. However, the recent court case that the article mentions may throw a monkey wrench into the works.

It also benefits the union in other ways:
The difference sounds like discrimination to Jen Campbell, a worker in the Division of Child Support from Tacoma.

"I am shocked that the state government would allow a union or even maybe assist the union in taking control of every state employee," Campbell said.

The first she heard of the different pay raise dates was through the news media, she said. And although she will be covered by a union contract beginning in July, she wishes she weren't.

The union would love to have every state employee as a member. If that ever happens, its power will increase significantly since there won't be any other option for employees. In closing, Ms. Campbell reiterates one of the big problems with unions today:
"I don't believe the union has my best interest at heart," Campbell said. "I don't believe it uses its dues for the purposes that I think are important and valuable and moral."

Employees who have no choice but to be in a union have no real control over what union leadership does with the money they pay in union dues. Since unions are so active politically, some employees find themselves in the situation where they are unwillingly subsidizing policies and candidates that they disagree with. At least now state employees have the option of not being in the union but expect the union, and the Democrats they support, to work to change that.

Confirming judges: A third way

Dick Morris has what he considers a better option when it comes to the current fight over confirming President Bush's judicial nominees, one that doesn't require use of the so-called "nuclear option:"
The better way to proceed is to make the filibuster radioactive politically by letting the Democrats talk themselves to death. Give them enough rope and they will hang themselves by their vocal cords.

Frist just needs to end the “virtual” filibuster and make the Democrats stage a real one, replete with quorum calls, 24/7 sessions and truly endless debate covered word for word by C-SPAN for all the nation to see — and ridicule.

In short, the idea is that the Democrats should be allowed to learn the hard way that there is a political cost associated with mounting a real filibuster. This had never occurred to me, but then I admit I'm not as knowledgeable about such things as I'd like to be.
The Republican leaders, and the Democratic majority leader before them, have allowed the filibuster to be rehabilitated in the public mind by agreeing not to stage one. The gentlemanly filibusters of the modern era, where each side concedes unless one has 60 votes, have permitted virtual filibusters that incur no public wrath.

Good point, that. For many of us, a filibuster and its consequences are sort of abstract concepts. Now that I think about this, I'm not so sure I'd support changing the rules to allow a simple majority vote to end debate. Instead, let them filibuster but remind them that a true filibuster is an option that should only be used in the extreme because there are repercussions for the party who engages in one as well as their opponents. Are the Democrats willing to pay the price such an action would exact? For how long and how many times? How about we find out.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Quote of the day

Via The Federalist:

"In liberal land, the thinking goes like this: If a majority of Americans seek a change in direction they must be denied by the courts for their own good. But when a tiny sliver of the minority seeks change it must be granted them by a handful of judges for the nation's good. This phenomenon used to be referred to as the 'tyranny of the minority', but is now simply known as the New York Times editorial policy." --Lisa Fabrizio

Olympia unchained

Liberal Larry does a pretty good job of listing all the wonderful new taxes the Democrat-controlled state Senate and House are proposing. With our (hopefully temporary) Democrat governor to rubber-stamp anything they put on her desk, we're looking at some fun times.

Actually, the situation with the gas tax is a bit more complex. What I've been hearing is that Republicans have said they'll vote for that tax, and only that tax, provided the Democrats work with them to pass legislation that will allow the state auditor to perform real independent audits of the transportation department. Since we're probably going to get a gas tax, we damn sure want to know that the money isn't being wasted.

I've been wanting to post about the goings on in our state capitol for some time, but there's been so much that I just can't wrap my head around it all. The post linked above is a good start. Now I need to find a good wrapup of all the problems with the gubernatorial election last November (i.e. fraud and incompetence were rampant). Stay tuned....

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

The fox guarding the henhouse?

From FOXNews.com:
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan was allowed to supply whatever documents he thought were appropriate to Oil-for-Food investigators rather than having his offices searched, according to a source close to the investigation.

The revelation comes less than a week after two investigators with the independent panel probing Oil-for-Food, Robert Parton and Miranda Duncan, resigned. The panel is headed by Paul Volcker, a former chairman of the Federal Reserve.

This is, to be honest, information from an unnamed source. Therefore, it should be taken with a grain of salt. The Volcker commission provides one:
A spokesman for the Volcker commission denied the panel, which Annan authorized to investigate the $64 billion program, had limited access. "Someone with an interest is pushing this nonsense out there. We had access to everything," said spokesman Michael Holtzman.

Given my poor opinion of the United Nations in general, and Kofi Annan in particular, I'm inclined to think that this likely happened as described by the source. However, without proof, this remains my opinion.

Regarding whether or not Kofi knew what his son was up to, the article has this to say:
Problems with turning over documents represents the latest in a series of criticisms of the conduct of the Volcker committee, known officially as the Independent Inquiry Committee. Recently, FOX News spoke with the business partner of Kojo Annan, the secretary-general’s son who himself has been the subject of scrutiny into Oil-for-Food. Kojo Annan was a consultant for Cotecna, a Swiss-based company that won a U.N. contract in 1998 to verify the goods coming into Iraq.

Pierre Mouselli, Kojo Annan’s former partner, said the secretary-general was well aware of Kojo and his intentions to do business in Iraq.

“The secretary-general did not say I am opening doors for you,” Mouselli said. “But the secretary-general saw us and, you know, he wasn’t against what we were doing.”

I consider it extremely unlikely that Kofi was unaware of what his son was doing. I personally think it's likely Kofi was in it up to his eyeballs but, again, that's just my opinion. The article goes on to detail Mouselli's statements about what Kofi did and did not know. It also notes:
Mouselli said he and Kojo Annan are no longer friends and he added that he would not get into business again with the younger Annan.

So could this be an attempt on the part of Mouselli to smear Kojo? If so, it's curious that Mouselli would make this statement on the record. Still, I suppose it's possible. Or perhaps he had good reason:
When Volcker released his report exploring the roles Kofi Annan and his son played in Oil-for-Food, he left out key details about the secretary-general’s awareness of his son’s business activities. The omission led Mouselli to hire a lawyer because he said he knows he provided those details.

“They were looking for a way of avoiding, drawing attention to facts that could be potentially embarrassing to the secretary-general. I had suspected that they were going to do a whitewash,” said Adrian Gonzalez, Mouselli’s lawyer.

Gonzalez said the committee, by keeping Mouselli’s claims out of the report, acted in an “unethical” way.

“I think they were aiming toward a result of exonerating the secretary-general, rightly or wrongly,” Gonzalez said.

Illegal aliens

I received this via email from a friend and decided I really should post it here.

Interesting thought from a Southern Californian.

Try driving around as a gringo in Mexico with no liability insurance..... and have an accident...

Enter Mexico illegally. Never mind immigration quotas, visas, international law, or any of that nonsense.

Once there, demand that the local government provide free medical care for you and your entire family.

Demand bilingual nurses and doctors.

Demand free bilingual local government forms, bulletins, etc.

Procreate abundantly. Deflect any criticism of this allegedly irresponsible reproductive behavior with, "It is a cultural United States thing. You would not understand, pal."

Keep your American identity strong. Fly Old Glory from your rooftop, or proudly display it in your front window or on your car bumper.

Speak only English at home and in public and insist that your children do likewise.

Demand classes on American culture in the Mexican school system.

Demand a local Mexican driver license. This will afford other legal rights and will go far to legitimize your unauthorized, illegal, presence in Mexico.

Insist that local Mexican law enforcement teach English to all its officers.

Good luck! Because it will never happen. It will not happen in Mexico or any other country in the world... except right here in the United States... Land of the naive! If you agree, pass it on. If you don't, go ahead and try the above in Mexico or Iran.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Soldiers expected to be cleared in shooting of Italian journalist

From Fox News:
A U.S. military investigation into the shooting death of an Italian intelligence officer in Baghdad is expected to conclude that American soldiers generally followed instructions as they fired on an approaching car, a senior U.S. defense official said Monday.

This is the incident where the car carrying Italian journalist Guliana Sgrena, Italian intelligence officer Nicola Calipari, and two other Italian intelligence officers was fired upon by US soldiers as it approached a checkpoint on the way to Baghdad International Airport. Officer Calipari was killed, and Sgrena and another officer were wounded. The article on Sgrena at Wikipedia appears to provide objective and balanced information about the incident and how the people and governments involved reacted.

Regardless of your views on this incident, this probably comes as no surprise, though the reasons for that will vary depending on whose side you're on. It's not possible for someone who wasn't there to know exactly what happened, but I do have my own opinions based on the knowledge that Sgrena was a journalist for a Communist newspaper in Italy, Il Manifesto, which is certainly opposed to US operations and policy in Iraq. I certainly won't go so far as to say that Sgrena deliberately tried to get herself shot and possibly killed. However, when it happened I can't help but think that she saw a perfect opportunity to smear the United States. I'm willing to bet that, at the very least, she embellished the story to a degree to cast the US in a negative light.

While I naturally tend to side with the statements of US officials in cases like this, I would guess the truth is probably somewhere in the middle, though I think it likely it's closer to the US side than Sgrena's.

Sadness

Update: I heard something last night on the radio which indicates that this was simply a tragic accident and not murder. I haven't been able to find anything new on this story so far this morning. What I heard indicated that it was simply a case of one of the children falling into the pond where they were found, and the other trying to save the first one but also drowning. I'll post an additional update as I find more information. Even if it was just an accident, what I said below still stands when it comes to the killers of the Jessica Lundsford and Sarah Lunde.

The bodies of the two toddlers who were kidnapped in Georgia two days ago have been found. The investigation now turns from searching for the pair to searching for their killer or killers.

There are certain crimes for which I think the death penalty is appropriate. This is one of them. Whoever did this has proven that he, she, or they are incapable of being trusted in our society ever again. In my opinion, we simply cannot take the chance that this person or persons will ever have the opportunity to harm anyone in the future. It's not a matter of punishment so much as societal defense.

I hope they find the killer or killers and that he, she, or they are removed from this world.

Friday, April 15, 2005

And they wonder why they keep losing....

Via Mike at Cold Fury comes this post by lefty blogger Matthew Yglesias in which he "discusses" repealing the estate tax. One statement in particular evokes memories of a post a while back by another lefty blogger regarding the four contractors who were killed and whose burned and dismembered bodies were strung up on a bridge:
Speaking of which, fuck the small businessman.

The context of this sentence is the argument that the estate tax has a tendency to cause inheritors of small business to sell the business in order to pay the estate tax. Here's more:
I might be an earnest, hardworking dude who works in the store. And somebody might die and give the store to me. The store may be worth millions and millions of dollars. If so, I ought to pay tax on it. Why? Because I've just inherited millions and millions of dollars, that's why. That I'm earnest and hardworking, and that my riches came in the form of a valuable store rather than a heaping plate of gold matters not a whit. What about those sad folks forced to sell the family business? Don't cry for them. Here you are, you inherit a store worth $X. You owe $Y in taxes, with Y being less than X. So you are "forced" to sell the store, and accept "only" $X-Y as your inheritance. Note that X is a figure in the millions, and Y a small proportion of X.

Okay, fine, but what about the people employed by that business? If the business is liquidated as a result of this, they're out of a job. What if this is a business that has been in the family for a couple of generations? Doesn't that count for something? I guess Matt thinks that the inheritor and seller of the business should just be happy he has the money. After all the government was gracious enough not to take everything so he should be grateful, sit down, and shut up. Sorry, no, there is more to life than just money. If my parents spend their lives building a business, and especially if I help them do so as I'm growing up and after I become an adult, then asking me to sell that business once their gone and be satisfied with the money left over after taxes ignores and trivializes the investment of time, effort, blood, sweat, and tears that we all made in the business in order to help it grow.

To his credit, Matthew presents a possible alternative:
The government ought, perhaps, to facilitate some kind of lending arrangement so that people who prefer to keep the store and pay the tax down over time out of operating revenues can do so.

In the end, however, he reverts to type:
Repealing the estate tax is dumb. Putting it back in place would be a good idea. But a serious program to combat inequality or reduce poverty would be better. Ressentiment, my comrades, will only get you so far.

Note that he doesn't present any ideas on what such a problem would look like. Of course, we can guess: Soak the "rich" and give the money to the poor. Welcome to socialism 101. Simply taking money from those who have it (most, though not all, who earned it through hard work and smart choices) and giving it to those who don't doesn't help. The old cliche is appropriate here: Give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day. Teach him how to fish and he'll never be hungry again. I'm all for programs that help the poor, preferably funded through private charities. However, to be effective, it must teach people how not to be poor. Simply throwing money at them is a short-term solution at best and, since it teaches them how to be dependent on others and not themselves, a catastrophe at worst.

Pope John Paul II's legacy

While flying to Rome on Air Force One to attend the funeral of Pope John Paul II, former president Bill Clinton had this to say:
"[John Paul II] centralized authority in the papacy again and enforced a very conservative theological doctrine. There will be debates about that. The number of Catholics increased by 250 million on his watch. But the numbers of priests didn't. He's like all of us -- he may have a mixed legacy."

I'm now going to do something I seldom do, which is to include an opinion piece in its entirety. This one comes from today's Federalist Patriot digest email. Since they send it out free to anyone who wants it, I'm assuming that The Federalist Patriot won't mind that I post the whole thing here with proper credit.
Amid the eulogies for the Roman Catholic Church's beloved Pope John Paul II last week, the liberal media lost no time highlighting the conservative pontiff's "mixed legacy." While much of the criticism is aimed at the Pope's defense of marriage, advocacy against population control, and reinforcement of the prohibition against the ordination of women and homosexuals (read: his defense of Catholic doctrine), a good deal of the media's displeasure also stems from his rejection of "liberation theology," the Marxist movement that swept the Latin American Catholic Church in the 1970s and '80s.

(Nota bene: Roman Catholicism is incidental to this issue. This is neither a defense nor a criticism of Roman Catholicism. What's at issue here -- whatever your faith, or lack thereof -- is the hypocrisy of the Left in blatantly misrepresenting the positions of John Paul II.)

Typical of the Leftmedia invective, NPR commentator Marcos McPeek Villatoro lovingly recalled liberation theology as "a brand of Christianity that stressed human rights and social reform ... firing up Latin American Catholics who lived under the yoke of right-wing dictatorships. ...[But John Paul II] soon silenced the Latin American theologians I so admired." Villatoro continued, "Perhaps the clearest expression of John Paul's distaste came when he visited Nicaragua in 1983. On the tarmac at Managua Airport, he wagged a reproving finger in the face of Ernesto Cardinal, who was a priest and a member of the leftist Sandinista government. Cardinal was at that moment kneeling on the tarmac to welcome this same Pope, the one who had spoken so passionately of the need for political change in Poland. Many people saw that incident on television, I saw it up close. ... I confess, this is not the moment to revisit how I felt about the Pope back then. It is not the time to air old grievances or spark new division."

But that is precisely what Villatoro did. His sarcasm was especially evident when, in his commentary's conclusion, he quoted the prayer In Paradisum from the Old Catholic funeral mass: "May the choir of angels receive you, and with Lazarus, who was once poor, may you have everlasting rest."

Elsewhere, NPR noted, "While John Paul encouraged political change in his homeland and Eastern Europe, he was much harsher with Latin American priests who had embraced leftist-inspired liberation theology to combat social injustice. ... One of his most difficult trips was to Nicaragua in 1983, where the revolutionary Sandinista leaders in power included five priests -- whom John Paul promptly suspended. Raising his voice above hecklers in the crowd, the Pope lashed out against those he believed undermined the unity of the church."

NPR's Martin Kaste refers to liberation theology as "political activism" that "stressed human rights and economic reform" -- not bald-faced Marxism. Brazilian Marxist and ex-priest Nevu Furrin, in an interview with Kaste, defended liberation theology, saying, "Jesus didn't die of a fever...of a heart attack or old age. He was assassinated, the victim of a political conspiracy, and that realization is at the foundation of liberation theology. I think Christianity has always had a revolutionary perspective, since its origin, and it can't live without revolution." Furrin continued his harangue, "[The Vatican] criticized this aspect of liberation theology, but at the same time, the Pope supported the same kind of thing in his home, Poland, with the Solidarity Movement. Why couldn't the Pope see the profound connection between the two movements?"

Why not indeed? The Polish Solidarity Movement, itself congealed by the Pope's historic visit to Communist Poland in 1979, was an anti-Marxist, pro-democratic movement aimed at dislodging Poland from the Soviet-controlled Eastern bloc. The Solidarity Movement embodied the concepts of individual liberty, free enterprise, and self improvement. Liberation theology, on the other hand, embraces collectivization, the subordination of the individual in favor of the group, and the forced redistribution of wealth and property without fair compensation. Furthermore, Marxism is profoundly anti-religion, and all these "priests" knew it.

Solidarnosc, the Polish Solidarity Movement, was formalized as a workers' union in 1980 and later as a political party, though its roots go back to the anti-Soviet Polish intelligentsia of the 1950s. Embarrassingly for the Soviets, Solidarity represented workers' opposition to the Communists' so-called "workers' paradise" and powerfully demonstrated to the world that Poland had a working class, not a proletariat. In 1980, the Soviet Politburo named Solidarity -- then ten million members strong -- as a dangerous "anti-socialist movement" and ordered a violent crackdown against the movement, driving Solidarity underground.

On 31 August 1985, the fifth anniversary of Solidarity in Poland, President Ronald Reagan said of the movement, "Solidarity has not died, nor have the principles for which it came into existence become any less urgent in the minds of the Polish people. Despite all oppressive measures, provocations, imprisonment, police brutality, and even killings, this, the only free trade union in the entire Communist world, has continued its struggle by peaceful means to persuade its government to provide all elements of the society a role in shaping Poland's destiny. Although Solidarity's voice has been muted by being forced underground, its message -- whether via underground radio, clandestine publications, public demonstrations, or by simple word of mouth -- continues to be heard clearly throughout Poland and throughout the world, wherever there are people who value freedom."

With the support of the Catholic Church, and under the leadership of Lech Walesa, Solidarity grew and continued to embody the most cogent and sustained opposition to the corruption and inefficiency of Communist Poland and proved key to the ultimate downfall of Polish Communism -- and the entire Soviet bloc. Solidarity helped usher democracy into Poland. When elected Free Poland's first president in 1990, Walesa oversaw Poland's first free parliamentary elections in 1991 and orchestrated the slumping state-run economy's transition to the free market.

Only in the eyes of the jaded Left could the Pope's support of an anti-Marxist movement and his condemnation of a pro-Marxist movement be seen as contradictory, much less hypocritical. But a media either so ignorant or so unabashedly biased as to call his consistent opposition to Marxism hypocritical deserves neither credence nor respect. No matter one's religion, or lack thereof, any clear thinker will stand in awe of this man who single-handedly did so much for the cause of liberty. The media, on the other hand, need only to look in the mirror to see hypocrisy. Forty years of fawning over Fidel Castro belies their incessant preaching on compassion for the oppressed and "disenfranchised" (to coin a term) of the world. What is extremely clear, then, is the media's hypocrisy, not the Pope's.

For the curious, what did the Pope really say when he "lashed out" at Ernesto Cardinal and those -- including Marcos Villatoro -- gathered in Nicaragua? "Dear brothers and sisters," he said, "keep in mind Christian unity can only be saved when each is capable of giving up on his own ideas, plans and commitments -- even good ones -- for the greater good of communion with the bishops, with the Pope and with the entire church." How scathing. How condescending. How hypocritical.

Or, then again -- how gentle, how appropriate, how utterly consistent.

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Does Kerry need to better verify his sources?

I don't know if this is true, but it sure would be a laugh if it is. Recently, Kerry was citing alleged examples of voter intimidation. Among them:
Kerry also cited examples Sunday of how people were duped into not voting.

"Leaflets are handed out saying Democrats vote on Wednesday, Republicans vote on Tuesday. People are told in telephone calls that if you've ever had a parking ticket, you're not allowed to vote," he said.

The "Tuesday/Wednesday" example sounds suspiciously similar to an article from the satirical publication, The Onion, as well as a post at the satirical website Scrappleface.

Of course, even if one or both of these are the source of that claim, it was probably a mistake on the part of a Kerry staffmember. Still, it's demonstrative of just how far Kerry, his supporters, and Democrats in general will go to cast doubt over the election results, though more to affect future elections than the one that he lost.

Thursday, April 07, 2005

It's all Israel's fault (and the US's too)

The UN is at it again, blaming Israel and the US for the lack of reform in the Middle East:
The creation of Israel and the US support for its policies in the West Bank are partially to blame for the lack of reform in the Arab world, according to a UN-sponsored report released Tuesday.

The Arab Human Development Report 2004 (AHDR) cited the creation of the Jewish state as one of the roots of authoritarianism in the Middle East, along with the discovery of oil and the support for dictators by the superpowers during the Cold War.

Pardon me while I go have the hernia I got from laughing so hard fixed up. Be right back....

That's better. So, this is a joke, right? Unfortunately, it's all too real. I will grant the point that the superpowers did support dictators during the Cold War, but it wasn't just the US doing it (hence the 's' on the end of the word "superpowers"). Also, our support for Saddam Hussein was to prevent Iran from becoming even more powerful than it was at the time. Although we were propping up a dictator who we would ultimately take down, I would say the alternative of an Iranian victory over Iraq would have been even worse.

The article continues:
Israel rebuffed the claims. "For too long too many people in the Arab world have used Israel as an excuse to justify behavior that cannot be justified," said Mark Regev, spokesman for the Foreign Ministry. "You can't have democratic elections because of Israel and you can't give equal rights to women in Saudi Arabia because of Israel. This is of course a cop out."

Israel, of course, isn't responsible for this at all. It has been the target of unrelenting aggression, and sometimes outright war, ever since it came into being in 1948.
In the most controversial part titled Towards Freedom in the Arab World, the report stated that the Israeli occupation of the territories and the US occupation of Iraq both created excuses for Arab governments to postpone democratization and they strengthened extremist groups which advocate violence.

Created excuses? Excuse me? So that somehow excuses Arab governments from their agressive actions against Israel? Huh?

Let me see if I can craft an analogy.

  • I hate the guy living next door, even though he's never done anything to hurt me.

  • My hatred is so complete that I can't resist the urge to beat him up whenever I can.

  • Because of this, I am unable to concentrate sufficiently on my job, and am therefore not advancing in my career.

  • All of this is my neighbor's fault. If only he would move, or let me kill him once and for all, all these problems would be solved.


This leads me to ask: Are these people on crack?

Well, maybe only somewhat. It's not all bad:
Despite its reproach for the US and Israel, the AHDR was ultimately most critical of the Arab governments, which earned it US praise.

"Overall we welcome the recognition reflected in this report of the challenges that Arab society faces and the need for reform," said Sullivan.

In its scathing analysis of the obstacles to legal and political reform, the report warned the leaders of the 22 Arab states that if they don't reform fast, violence could erupt. "If the repressive situation in Arab countries continues, intensified societal conflict is likely to follow."

Examples of repression include restrictions on opposition political parties, the press, free expression and the persistence of emergency legislation and military tribunals.

Pressure for political change is building in the Arab world, the report warned.

Here's another take on the situation, this time from Al Jazeera. I'm including it because it expands on the points in the previous excerpt as follows:

A UN agency has warned that Arab governments could face unrest and even revolution if they fail to move rapidly towards democracy, pinning partial blame on the US and Israel.



The UN Development Programme in a report - the third in a series of assessments of the Arab world - said on Tuesday that partial reform was no longer viable.

"If the repressive situation in Arab countries continues, intensified societal conflict is likely to follow," said the Arab Human Development Report 2004.

It also refers to some positive events that have already taken place while cautioning that it's still not enough:
"Some Arab governments have begun to open themselves cautiously and selectively to opposition forces," the report observed. The press release referred to this year's presidential election in the Palestinian territories and the municipal elections in Saudi Arabia.

It also acknowledged Egypt's decision in February to allow multi-candidate elections for president.

The release said that while there have been some "real and promising" moves towards greater freedom this year, "overall the pace of progress has been disappointingly limited".

Wow, I never thought I'd quote Al Jazeera but I guess there's a first time for everything.

Regardless of all this, the simple truth is that Israel is the only functioning democracy in the Middle East (although Afghanistan and Iraq are well on their way to joining it). If only its neighbors could put aside their ideology and learn to live in peace with Israel, the region would be so much better off. Israel has taken the desert and made it bloom. It is a hotbed of technological innovation. It is the only country in the region about which these things can be said. If it had true friends as its neighbors, can you imagine how much those neighbors stand to benefit from trade with Israel? I don't know if this will ever truly happen, but it sure is nice to dream.

Better pictures

Over at The Mudville Gazette, Greyhawk is compiling a list of pictures and links which are far more worthy of the Pulitzer Prize than the ones that were actually chosen.

Wednesday, April 06, 2005

Florida residents can now defend themselves in public

Update: Kim du Toit weighs in on the issue, as I expected he would.

The Florida State House of Representatives passed legislation, which had already been passed by the State Senate, addressing citizens' right to self-defense:
The bill essentially extends and codifies a right Floridians already have in their homes or cars, saying that there's no need to retreat before fighting back. People attacked in their homes generally don't have to back off. But in public spaces, deadly force can only be used after trying to retreat.

As usual, the proponents of victim disarmament and empowerment of criminals are incensed:
Opponents said the idea will legalize shootouts in the streets.

"This bill creates a wild, wild west out there," said Rep. Eleanor Sobel, D-Hollywood.

The "wild west" argument has been used every time a state or local government has made it easier for citizens to carry and use weapons for self-defense. And every time it has been proven groundless.

They're also making the obligatory flawed analogy with other recent events:
The sponsor, Baxley, also led the failed legislative effort to keep Terri Schiavo alive by blocking the removal of her feeding tube - and decried a growing "culture of death."

"For a House that talks about the culture of life, it's ironic that we would be devaluing life in this bill," said Rep. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach. "You are telling people when they are in the midst of an emotional moment ... you can stand your ground until death happens."

No, dumbass, we're telling people that they don't have to accept their own maimings or deaths at the hands of assailants just because we don't want to violate the rights of said assailants. By initiating violence against another, an attacker violates the rights of his victim and thereby forfeits his own right not to have violence done to him. This bill doesn't devalue life, it affirms the value of the lives of law-abiding citizens and their right to self-defense.

President Bush finally comes right out and tells the truth about Social Security

Yesterday, speaking at West Virginia University, President Bush finally said in plain language the truth about the so-called Social Security trust fund:
have just come from the Bureau of Public Debt. I want to thank Van Zeck, Keith Rake, and Susan Chapman. Susan was the tour guide there at the Bureau of Public Debt. I went there because I'm trying to make a point about the Social Security trust. You see, a lot of people in America think there's a trust, in this sense -- that we take your money through payroll taxes and then we hold it for you, and then when you retire, we give it back to you. But that's not the way it works.

There is no "trust fund," just IOUs that I saw firsthand, that future generations will pay -- will pay for either in higher taxes, or reduced benefits, or cuts to other critical government programs.

The office here in Parkersburg stores those IOUs. They're stacked in a filing cabinet. Imagine -- the retirement security for future generations is sitting in a filing cabinet. It's time to strengthen and modernize Social Security for future generations with growing assets that you can control, that you call your own -- assets that the government cannot take away.

I personally would much rather the Social Security tax I'm paying go into a private account. Heck, I'd rather put it in my 401k plan to be honest. The opposition to privatizing Social Security is sometimes just plain stupid. For example, Hans Reimer, the political director of the organization Rock the Vote said:
To us, it's totally black and white. This is the first generation ever that would be asked to pay for their own retirement and Social Security at the same time. This is what private accounts do. They saddle young people with an unfair burden.

Huh? What he apparently doesn't realize is that this "first generation" would not be paying any more than anyone else. The only difference is that some of what they pay would go into a private account and the rest to the regular Social Security fund (which means, of course, it would end up in the general fund, replaced by another of those IOU's).

I don't know if Social Security reform has a chance of happening during this administration. But at least the President is still talking about it and working to make it happen. Yes, Social Security isn't in immediate danger; it will be able to pay full benefits for a while. Currently more is coming in than is being paid out in benefits. The difference, as noted above, is then "borrowed" by the general fund and replaced with treasury bonds. Some think that qualifies as a "trust fund" but that's an illusion as the government is literally borrowing from itself. It's similar to my borrowing from my 401k account. I have to pay back the "loan" with interest, and that interest goes into the account so it's still mine, but that interest doesn't equate to profit. Those bonds will have to be repaid, with interest, and that payment and interest will come from taxpayers. In effect, the government is borrowing from us and then paying us back, using our own taxes to do it. Sounds like a profitable "trust fund" to me....

Tuesday, April 05, 2005

The Pulitzer Prize for terrorist sympathy?

The prize for Breaking News Photography, according to the citation for the award is:
For a distinguished example of breaking news photography in black and white or color, which may consist of a photograph or photographs, a sequence or an album, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).

Awarded to the Associated Press Staff for its stunning series of photographs of bloody yearlong combat inside Iraqi cities.

The pictures can be found here. Take a look and then come back here.

Did you look at them all? What did you notice? Rusty Shackleford at The Jawa Report breaks it down:
5 of the 20 photos were taken by journalists who were working with terrorist forces. 11 of the 20 photos would likely cause anti-American inflamation. Only two show Americans in a positive light. Three more show the victims of terrorism.

...

To their credit, at least three photos show the victims of terrorism. See, fair and balanced.

No photos show U.S. troops rebuilding Iraq. No photos show U.S. troops playing with kids in the street. No photos show the results of the first democratic election in Iraq. No photos show the thousands of freed prisoners from Saddam's tyrranical rule.

Gaijinbiker at Riding Sun expands on this:
I looked at the twenty photographs and broke them into groups on the basis of content. Here are my results:

• U.S. troops injured, dead, or mourning: 3
(2, 3, 11)
• Iraqi civillians harmed by the war: 7
(4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 13, 18)
• Insurgents looking determined or deadly: 3
(6, 15, 20)
• US troops looking overwhelmed or uncertain: 3
(7, 12, 14)
• US troops controlling Iraqi prisoners: 2
(16, 17)
• Iraqis celebrating attacks on US forces: 2
(1, 19)

Equally telling is what the photos don't show:

• US forces looking heroic: 0
• US forces helping Iraqi civillians: 0
• Iraqis expressing support for US forces: 0
• Iraqis expressing opposition to insurgents: 0

Yes, the photos are impressive and are worthy of individual recognition. But, taken as a group, it becomes difficult to believe the Pulitzer committee is not expressing their opinion of the war in Iraq and attempting to influence public opinion.

There's also the little matter of photo number 20 and how the photographer came to be on the scene at just the right time. I won't go into detail as Powerline and others have already addressed it depth.

In 2002, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Jimmy Carter. The chairman of the prize committee, Gunnar Berge, admitted openly that, at least in his view, the prize was intended as a political message: "With the position Carter has taken on this, it can and must also be seen as criticism of the line the current U.S. administration has taken on Iraq." Of course, the Nobel Peace Prize had previously been awarded to Yassir Arafat and we all know just how committed to peace he really was.

The Pulitzer Prize for photography is not as blatant as Carter's Nobel prize. I'll even admit that it's possible the Pulitzer committee wasn't trying to make a political statement with their choices as many of my fellow bloggers are convinced. But even if they weren't, I still can't help but think that they could have chosen a more balanced set of photographs. Surely there are many images of positive events in Iraq that are just as dramatic.

In addition to The Jawa Report, the following blogs have also commented on this:

Michelle Malkin
Michelle Malkin again
Powerline
Blackfive

Monday, April 04, 2005

Meet the new rig

Update

It wasn't long before I discovered that my new computer was having the same problem as the previous computer. I had originally thought it was the motherboard, which is partly why I got a new system, but now know that it was the 40GB IBM DeskStar hard drive. That drive had been in the previous computer, and the computer before that. All three computers that drive was in had problems. I did some web research and it is apparently a known issue with that line of hard drive. It's now a paperweight.

I recently replaced the 120GB IDE drive with a 250GB SATA drive. The 120 I put in an external enclosure that allows me to hook it up to a USB port. I now have 120GB of portable storage goodness.

At the same time I replaced the two off-white optical drives with a new DVD burner and a CD burner/DVD ROM combo drive. I can theoretically burn two CD's or burn one CD and one DVD simultaneously. The best part is that they have black bezels so they match the color of my case. I also replaced the white floppy drive with a black multi-format card reader. Now I can pop the compact flash card from my camera into the front of the machine and access the stored images directly.

Since I now know that the motherboard in the old computer is good, I plan on resurrecting it. I'll get new RAM for the new machine, put the old RAM back in the old machine, put the old optical drives back in, and get an inexpensive hard drive. I need to reconfigure a couple of fans as well. Once it's up I'll probably use it as a game server, or a system where I can mess around with various operating systems and software without worrying about losing any data if I have to scrape the drive.

(Original post follows)

So I broke down and upgraded the computer. I had a partial system assembled by a local shop, bought a new video card at CompUSA of all places (the local shop building my system didn't have what I wanted and CompUSA had a good enough price on it), and put it all together. All in all, here's what's new in it:


In addition, I used the existing RAM from my old system (Corsair XMS DDR400/PC3200), the existing hard drives (WD 120GB and IBM 40GB), and the existing optical drives.

For grins, I ran 3DMark2001SE sort of as a guage of raw power improvement. It's an older benchmark and doesn't take advantage of some of the new rendering capabilities of current hardware. It showed a full 50% increase. 3DMark2005 gives a score in the 4800's which is in line with what I've seen in reviews of my new video card, a little better in fact. This motherboard will let me tweak all kinds of stuff but I think I'll just leave it alone as it's plenty fast now. The main improvement in the games that I'm playing is that I'll be able to run them at 1280x1024 resolution, which is the native resolution of my LCD monitor, rather than at a lower resolution. I can also run some games at higher quality, such as Half-Life 2, Doom 3, and Unreal Tournament 2004.

It's also noticeably quieter. The power supply has a single 120mm fan instead of two smaller fans. The case has a 120mm fan in the back and an 80mm fan in the front. I've replaced the front fan with an even quieter one I was using in the old system. The CPU cooler is known for making little noise. The fan will speed up some when the system is under load, but even then it's not obnoxious.

The motherboard is capable of SLI, which is where you can put in two nVidia video cards and have them work together. Basically each one handles rendering half of each frame. I'm not using that as I have an ATi video card. I chose this motherboard instead of the Neo4 Platinum (non-SLI) because this one had much better onboard audio. It comes with a Creative SoundBlaster Live! built-in. It sounds good, and I'd say it's even better than the SoundStorm on my old motherboard.

The new case is smaller than the old, and has better airflow. However, being mostly steel and not aluminum (which I wasn't aware of when I bought it), it's heavier. Still, that means it's sturdier and is likely quieter as it doesn't flex as much with vibration of the fans and hard drives. The only lights on this computer are the LED's on the front of the optical drives, and the power and hard drive access indicator LED's on the front of the case. I thought about putting one of the lighted fans from the old system in the front of this case but they have aluminum frames and the front fan uses screws that screw directly into the fan frame so only plastic frame fans will work.

I've had a few hiccups but I've hopefully got all the kinks wired out. At the very least it should last me another year or so. I do plan on putting in a couple of serial-ATA drives, possibly later this year. For now, the hard drives from the old system appear to be doing the job.

Washington State Estate Tax

The Washington State legislature is considering reinstating a state-level estate tax. The state has had an estate tax, also known as an inheritance tax, since 1901 but the State Supreme Court abolished it in February on Constitutional grounds. In the ruling, they said any new estate tax would have to be the result of new legislation and so, naturally, that's what the Democrat-controlled legislature is going to do. As expected, Governor Gregoire (for how long, we don't know yet) will sign it into law.

What really got me was this comment from Gregoire:
"Those who are rich in Washington state are rich because we have a great state," Gregoire said when she announced her intention to partially reimpose the estate tax. "The economy has allowed them to prosper. ... Why not have them pay for education for the children of our state?"

Translation: Those who are rich are rich because the government let them become rich. Pure. Unadulterated. Socialism. People who become rich do so through hard work and smart choices. Also, the image that proponents of the estate tax want you to form in your mind is that of the so-called idle rich. These are people who simply have a lot of cash sitting in investment accounts and they're living a life of leisure without doing any work. While there are some people who fit this definition, the vast majority of rich people are hard-working. They are business-owners, and their businesses provide jobs and power the economy. Their wealth is in the value of the businesses they own, not simple cash or securities. Take, for example, this man:
"I would support a higher sales tax, even an income tax in this state, rather than having a death tax installed," said Don Root, who wants his sons to carry on his Seattle-based manufacturing and design company after he dies.

Reinstating an estate tax at the same time the federal government is poised to abolish it would cause successful Washington businesses to leave the state, taking a lot of good jobs with them, said Root, whose company employs roughly 450 people in Washington.

It's not as if his sons will be able to sit on their butts and watch the money roll in. They'll have to work for it by running the business. They'll be earning that money.

If the estate tax forces the heirs of a business-owner to liquidate the business in order to pay the tax, just how in the hell does that help the economy? The proposed legislation affects only those whose estates are worth two million dollars or more, but this is not a hard limit to exceed when you own your own business.

Gregoire is not the only one supporting reinstating the estate tax. The father of the country's wealthiest individual, and a wealthy man in his own right, is also onboard:
"The question is, why are people wealthy?" [William] Gates [Sr.] said at a news conference last week. "They worked hard, they're smart, and they are American ... (with) a police force that works, a court system that works, a market system that makes it possible to dispose of what you own. Economists tell us that having a stable market adds 30 percent to the value of everything you own."

Gates is a leading voice in the campaign to preserve the estate tax through Responsible Wealth, a national network contending that concentrated wealth tends to turn into concentrated political power and is therefore bad for democracy.

At a forum last week in Olympia, Gates said Washington's tax system puts a disproportionate burden on poor people.

One of the best ways to shift the tax burden from low-income and middle-class residents to those who can best afford it is to restore Washington's estate tax, he said.

Of course Mr. Gates does not have to worry about whether or not his son will inherit anything when he dies. And in the case of Bill Gates Jr., when he dies it's not as if Microsoft will have to be liquidated to pay the estate tax. But a smaller business, where one person essentially owns it all, does not have that luxury.

I do agree that wealthy people have a greater social obligation to help those less fortunate, for indeed I do recognize that fortune plays a role though not the only one, and usually not the major one. Yet I'd rather see that obligation fulfilled through charitable giving rather than government-mandated wealth redistribution. That, after all, is what an estate tax really is and, as such, is socialism pure and simple.

Friday, April 01, 2005

Alaska Governor Murkowski on drilling in the ANWR

Frank H. Murkowski, the Governor of the State of Alaska, has penned an opinion piece for the Seattle Times. In it, he attempts to explain why drilling for oil in the Alaska National Wildlife Reserve, which has recently been approved by Congress, is a good idea and won't adversely affect the environment. I've included some excerpts with commentary below. First, he provides us with an interesting number:
Washington's five oil refineries process billions of dollars of Alaska crude, supplying consumers throughout the Northwest with energy. Washington alone consumes 18 million gallons of petroleum daily. Apparently, not everyone is traveling to their destinations on bicycles. If Alaska's crude oil were not available, Washington state would be getting its oil supply from Middle Eastern nations in foreign ships with foreign crews, built in foreign shipyards.

Most of Washington State's power comes from hydroelectric dams but electricity doesn't power cars (yet), nor the trucks, trains, and ships which move goods from one place to another and form part of the backbone of the nation's economy.
Alaska's environmental standards are the highest in the world, and yet Washington Sens. Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray — opponents of ANWR drilling — have repeatedly declined my invitations to visit ANWR and see firsthand this area of national importance.

All I can say about this is that I am totally not surprised.
Advances in directional drilling make the footprint in ANWR extremely small. Use of only 2,000 acres for ANWR development is authorized in the House energy bill, yet ANWR is 19 million acres, about the size of Colorado.

Hmmm... Let's do some math here. Two thousand out of 19 million is 1.0526315789473684210526315789474e-4 according to my calculator. This equates to roughly 0.01 percent. That's right, a hundredth of a hundredth. We're talking a virtually neglible amount of area here. Now, admittedly, this is not the entire portion of the ANWR that Congress in 1980 said could be developed for oil exploration if Congress authorizes it. That area is the coastal plain which is about 1.5 million acres. Yet even that is only about 8 percent of the total area of the ANWR.

Governor Murkowski goes on to provide another interesting number:
Federal biologists began surveying the Central Arctic caribou herd in 1978, after the Alaska pipeline began operation. Since then, the herd has grown from 5,000 to over 32,000 animals. Alaska has proven it can be responsible; wildlife in ANWR will continue to coexist with cautious oil and gas exploration.

Life is adaptable. Yes, it has limits but as long as we're cognizant of those limits and work to stay well within them, there's no reason why development of this area will cause any sort of ecological disaster.

Yet more interesting numbers:
Critics falsely claim ANWR will only produce six months of oil. This incorrectly assumes ANWR would be the only oil field in operation in the world. In fact, ANWR oil will make significant contributions to the nation's energy supply for decades, replacing what we import from Saudi Arabia for the next 20 years. To bring this statistic home, ANWR alone would supply the state of Washington with all of its oil needs for 15 years.

Some estimates use the most pessimistic production figures by counting only 3.5 billion barrels of oil. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates between 12 billion and 32 billion barrels exist in the ANWR "1002 area," of which between 6 billion and 16 billion barrels are recoverable using current technology.

Just to be clear, the "1002 area" he's talking about is the entire 1.5 million acre coastal plain. The small 2000 acre area currently being opened won't produce all that oil.
Some say ANWR will take at least seven years to begin production. That delay is because of the comprehensive environmental-impact study necessary to ensure that the environment is protected.

Yep, we're just going to rush in and rape the environment. And if you believe that one, well you know the punchline.
Like all Americans, I support research and technological development in alternative energies so that in the future we can reduce our energy dependence. But we must be realistic — right now the world moves on oil and that will be the case for years to come. Until the arrival of new energy technology, oil from ANWR can significantly help in easing our dependence on foreign imports.

Producing oil in Alaska means high-paying careers for American workers, not foreigners. Companies friendly to our country will profit, rather than governments that would prefer our demise.

While hybrid vehicles, alternative technologies such as fuel cells, and alternative fuels like biodiesel, ethanol, and hydrogen will help, they're not going to displace oil as the king of energy any time soon. They will take years, probably decades, to become pervasive. In the short term at least we need to reduce our dependency on foreign oil while these new technologies are being developed. The plan to extract oil from a portion of the ANWR balances conservation with responsible use.