Saturday, December 30, 2006
I certainly hope that this movie is not the flop that the three Star Wars "prequels" were. The Indiana Jones sagas are terrific movies. I will definitely watch any of them should I happen to catch them on TV at virtually any time.
Friday, December 29, 2006
Reactions of all sorts are coming in. Many Iraqis, including Iraqi-Americans, are rejoicing. Extra security and higher alert status are in place to guard against Sunni/Baathist violence from any "Saddam dead-enders", or those who would use his death as a pretext for violence.
There has been an apparent car bombing at an airport parking garage in Madrid, Spain. As I type this at 1:02 AM Pacific time, CNN International reported the bombing, but did not report any claim of responsibility. It could have been done by Basque separatists, or another terrorist group.
The hope, slim though it may be, is that Saddam's death will remove some of the initiative for Sunnis to oppose peaceful progress in Iraq. The coming days will tell whether those hopes were pipe dreams or whether they may come to fruition someday.
Happy New Year, everyone!
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
The full research paper is available here.
Sunday, December 03, 2006
This excerpt should encourage you to read the whole thing:
[..] Secular order in
India is in effect another canary in the coal mine, illuminating the true character of Islamofascism for all who will see to understand the threat to civilization that unchecked Islamofascism poses to the world.
Update: don't miss this post, entitled "The Hajj story you won’t hear; Islam as a religion that lost sight of its inner meaning."
Saturday, December 02, 2006
What American accent do you have? Your Result: Philadelphia Your accent is as Philadelphian as a cheesesteak! If you're not from Philadelphia, then you're from someplace near there like south Jersey, Baltimore, or Wilmington. if you've ever journeyed to some far off place where people don't know that Philly has an accent, someone may have thought you talked a little weird even though they didn't have a clue what accent it was they heard. | |
The Midland | |
The Northeast | |
The South | |
The Inland North | |
Boston | |
The West | |
North Central | |
What American accent do you have? Take More Quizzes |
I wonder if Space Ghost is from Philly? Gary Owens is from South Dakota.
Thursday, November 30, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006
The first sentence should hook you into reading the whole thing: "The flip side of the climate change conundrum is energy."
Where is the energy going to come from to feed the growth of not only the west, but the developing world? Can we trust government to make the right choices, or should government take a less activist role in terms of the technologies selected to produce the energy to meet our needs?
Saturday, November 25, 2006
Betsy Newmark links to and expertly fisks a column in the Washington Post by Senator Chuck Hagel of
Mr. Hagel, Mr. Hagel. I can't understand how members of Congress who supposedly understand American interests and geopolitics can spout this drivel over and over again.
1) "They will decide their fate and form of government." Mr. Hagel, the Iraqis have voted in election after election, with overwhelming support and in numbers greater per capita than our republic.
2) "
3) Apparently Mr. Hagel depends on the NYT headline writer for in-depth analysis of the news. Here are Dr. Kissinger's most recent and celebrated comments on Iraq in full,
"If you mean by 'military victory' an Iraqi government that can be established and whose writ runs across the whole country, that gets the civil war under control and sectarian violence under control in a time period that the political processes of the democracies will support, I don't believe that is possible....A dramatic collapse of Iraq - whatever we think about how the situation was created - would have disastrous consequences for which we would pay for many years and which would bring us back, one way or another, into the region." It appears that Mr. Hagel and his allies would have argued against the occupation of
3) "We are destroying our force structure, which took 30 years to build." This is high comedy. During the 90's, the "
4) While the cost of the war is high, and the loss of any member of the armed forces is one too many, the cost and losses compared to WWII is insignificant on a per capita basis. The bulk of our population carries on virtually untouched by the war. There are no war bond drives, no rubber drives, no gas rationing, no draft. The strongest argument against our policy in
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
Monday, November 20, 2006
Here's an excerpt from a TCS daily article that Glenn includes in his post:
In the full sweep of U.S history, from the commencement of the Revolution on Lexington Green in April 1775, until the sunny morning of September 11, 2001, our average daily sacrifice has been between 14 and 15 military fatalities (1,217,000 fatalities/83,461 days = 14.6/day). Since 9/11, the average daily sacrifice has been 1.7 per day (3200/1900=1.68).
From the Revolutionary War until the American entry into World War I, the average daily rate was about 11 per day (578,000/52,231=11.07). From World War I through the break up of the Soviet Union, the rate was over 16 per day (636,000/38,811=16.39). Or in our long running confrontation with Soviet communism following World War II until the collapse of the Soviet empire, the rate was over between 6 and 7 per day (112,400/16,892=6.65).
As things stand, the conflict with Islamic radicalism involves the lowest average daily military fatality rate of any long run national security era. It may worsen, it may improve. If Congress had been asked on September 12, 2001, to endorse a national defense posture against Islamic radicalism that traded up to 2 military fatalities per day over the subsequent five years in return for no additional homeland attacks, the deposing of terror friendly regimes in Afghanistan and Iraq, the ending of Libya's nuclear program, what would they have done? Would Congress accept that bargain today?
As the man says, read the whole thingSaturday, November 18, 2006
Excerpt:
On Nov. 3, a string of Blackhawk helicopters had been roaring across the desert on a nighttime counterinsurgency raid, carrying Special Forces soldiers to hunt high-value targets who had been making improvised explosive devices.
Flying over the desert at night is disorienting. Toz apparently believed the helicopter had touched down. He stepped out. It was more than 100 feet off the ground and thundering ahead at 100 mph.
His mother was impressed with the professionalism of the Army's presentation and took comfort in learning that the mission had been a success. Her son's e-mail precluded any resentment.
"Don't ever think that you are defending me by slamming the Global War on Terrorism or the U.S. goals in that war," Jeffrey Toczylowski wrote. "As far as I am concerned, we can send guys like me to go after them or we can wait for them to come back to us again. I died doing something I believed in and have no regrets except that I couldn't do more."
Toczylowski had gone through the Reserve Officers' Training Corps at Pennsylvania's Valley Forge Military College and then turned his Texas A&M criminal-justice degree into an assignment as platoon leader with the military police. He had completed the Special Forces training course in 2003.
After a sergeant in his company died of a heart attack, Toczylowski got serious about his mortality, fellow soldiers said. He earmarked money from his savings and insurance policies to assist friends and help cousins with college tuition and to fund a scholarship at Valley Forge, his mother said.
Honoring his wishes
The party was the challenge for the family. But Peggy and Pam say Toczylowski was wise, and they're convinced he knew that assigning them planning duties would keep their minds off losing a son and brother.
It's unfair to excerpt from the second article since it is already an abridgment of longer works by Friedman. Still, this excerpt is among my favorites:
"The company town has been revived in one major area: medical care. It is taken for granted that workers should receive their pay partly in kind, in the form of medical care provided by the employer. How come? Why single out medical care? Surely food is no less essential to life than medical care. Why is it not at least as logical for workers to be required to buy their food at the company store as to be required to buy their medical care at the company store?"
--from "Pricing Health Care: The Folly of Buying Health Care at the Company Store," Feb. 13, 1993
The reaction of the environmentalists:
Amid various presentations on the nature of the fuel resource, problems unique to processing this fuel, emerging technologies, economic issues, etc. was a presentation by an attorney representing the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance that could be summed up in one sentence: "It is really bad - don't do it."
And of the wildlife advocates:
the observation of a Mexican Spotted Owl in a canyon nearby one of the reserves, which therefore qualified the area as a habitat for an endangered species.
The Israelis appear to be a couple of years ahead of the US in this field. Hopefully we will learn enough from their experience to alleviate these concerns by those who want alternatives to foreign oil as long as they're alternatives that are ineffective and don't address the actual need.
OK, I've tried at least 4 times to input my blogger beta settings in order to post to my blog --no joy.
OK, I've tried another 3-4 times with the same result. At least I learned about advances in bulking up mice--and perhaps mankind to follow soon .
Finally, success. I signed out on my primary machine and signed into Google Docs on my test machine using IE 7. The blogger beta settings are saved, and I'm in business.
Apparently, all I need to do is copy my set of labels for my posts into Google Docs, and I won't need to use the old blogger editor any longer.
Which South Park kid are you most like? Kyle You are clever, and often come up with intelligent and funny comebacks to other people's stupid remarks. |
Click Here to Take This Quiz Brought to you by YouThink.com quizzes and personality tests. |
Friday, November 17, 2006
Hopefully the long term outcome will be as positive for both Iraq and America as it has been for the Philippines and America.
Nature just won't cooperate with the naturalists' agenda.
H/T: The Corner on National Review Online
This military blog post is well worth reading. It concludes as follows, "Here's one soldier whose morale is not being ground down by the enemy he faces. If it's being eroded, it's by the people who putatively support him."
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Godspeed, Milton.
Update: Instapundit posts a link to more praise here.
Next we have Speaker-in-waiting Nancy Pelosi failing in her first effort to place her loyalists in key positions that will be controlled by the Democrat party. "The Democratic caucus voted 149-86 for Hoyer."
Perhaps the other members of her party believed Rep. Pelosi when she promised the "most ethical Congress in history." They knew, apparently better than she, that placing an unindicted co-conspirator from the ABSCAM scandal in the 1980's in the Majority Leader's chair was not consistent with that promise.
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Multiculturalism, meet the rock and the hard place.
Tom Evslin's excellent Fractals of Change blog suggests that France (France?!) may have a workable policy idea to use trade and taxation to ensure that countries that adopt carbon sequestration and similar measures to reduce emissions are not at a disadvantage to countries that do not.
An excerpt from Iain's article: "Soon after the widespread blackouts of 2003, the Electric Reliability Organization was etablished, and it recently issued its first report. That report makes for grim reading because the nation’s electric power infrastructure is on the brink of collapse."
And: "The ERO projects that U.S. demand will increase by 141,000 megawatts (MW) over the next 10 years. Supply, however, will increase by only 57,000 MW, and that assumes that all currently proposed new facilities are approved and built."
If the Democrats are serious about responsible environmental policy, they should encourage investment in practical solutions that reduce emissions while increasing our electrical supply in order to enable the continued growth and prosperity of the economy. More use of safe, modern nuclear power plants and innovative sequestration approaches like the Great Plains Synfuels Plant in North Dakota are available, economically viable solutions today.
Here's more on the Great Plains Synfuels Plant:
"At the Great Plains Synfuels Plant, North Dakota, some 13,000 tonnes per day of carbon dioxide gas is captured and 5000 t of this is piped 320 km into Canada for enhanced oil recovery. This Weyburn oilfield sequesters about 85 cubic metres of carbon dioxide per barrel of oil produced, a total of 19 million tonnes over the project's 20 year life. The first phase of its operation has been judged a success."
If you believe that democracy isn't compatible with Iraqi society, then how can it make sense for democracies to import incredibly large numbers of Islamic immigrants whose numbers grow to 20-40% of the population of major cities, if not the countries as a whole? What happens to democracies when non-democrats swell to near majority levels? What will happen to countries that were dictatorships not so long ago themselves?
Is anyone in Europe paying attention?
Monday, November 13, 2006
My results:
You are Obi-Wan Kenobi
| You are civilized, calm, and have a good sense of humor, even when those around you don't. You can hold your own in a fight, but prefer it when things don't get too exciting. |
(This list displays the top 10 results out of a possible 21 characters)
Click here to take the Star Wars Personality Quiz
Sunday, November 12, 2006
You scored as Republican. <'Imunimaginative's Deviantart Page'>
What Political Party Do Your Beliefs Put You In? created with QuizFarm.com |
Saturday, November 11, 2006
Today the day is for the veterans who served in all wars, especially those who gave their lives in the defense of freedom for us all. My thoughts go to my own Father, gone now for a little over 14 years. He was one of the many thousands of infantrymen to land on the beaches of Normandy on June 6, 1944. He fought through the Battle of the Bulge. He lost some hearing, and was injured when a building he was clearing collapsed after being hit by shellfire. He returned home to Georgia, somehow found his way to Mobile, Alabama, and met my Mother in 1953. I came along in October of 1954 after they had returned to Georgia and started their lives together in Macon.
There are still thousands of such men alive today. They endured incredible danger and hardship to fight an implacable enemy who had swept all before him from the late thirties until mid-1942. They battled an enemy dug in on tiny nameless islands across the Pacific. Those that survived returned home and started us on a great adventure that exhibited the might of America. While scrimping to buy their own homes, to start families, to attend night school, to work one or more jobs, their taxes paid for the restoration of Europe, the occupation and restoration of Germany and Japan, and to hold back the tide of Communism. They were heroes on the battlefield, and loyal Americans on the home front. The enemies of America underestimated them time and again.
Today we honor these men, and veterans of other wars who have made sacrifices in other places and other times just as great. I honor them, but most of all, I honor my Father. I thank him for more things than I can possibly say; mostly for his love, his faith and encouragement, his example. I love you and miss you, Dad, and I hope to be able to say that and more to you one day when we're all together again.
Friday, November 10, 2006
The whole notion of attempting to accuse the other (winning) party of nationwide election fraud is ridiculous, and is dangerous to the republic. We still need to find out what ACORN has done, but this election appears to have been generally fair overall.
I hope that any efforts to circumvent the Electoral College have been put aside forever. Otherwise, we would have large groups of disenfranchised states and wholesale opportunities for voter fraud nationwide.
I am more concerned about the impact of Secretary Rumsfeld's departure on force morale and enlistment/reenlistment rates than on the possible political benefits during the just completed election cycle. Still, it appears that his departure was handled so badly that there is a distinct possibility of negative impact on both aspects of the issue.
Now on ESPN: "Athletics have deal with Cisco for Fremont site." What would Billy Martin say?
This will put Fremont on the map, and contribute to the continuing demise of the city of Oakland.
Read the whole thing. I especially like this part:
"What I'm concerned about is national security and, consequently, the way the election was fought and is being interpreted. I'm upset because I think we have sent a terrible message to our enemies: Just hang on long enough and continue to inflict some damage, and the Americans will lose heart and give up. You barely need anything at all. You might not be able to hijack a plane with a box cutter anymore, but you can take back a country -- a country we conquered with overwhelming military power -- merely by mercilessly and endlessly setting off small bombs in your own town day after day.
How much harder it becomes ever to fight and win a war again. Only pacifists and isolationists should feel good about the way this election was won."
Now they tell us!
Here's an excerpt:
"Astute readers know that news organizations like the Times never have trouble finding experts who will attach the worst possible interpretation to security issues. This is part of the inescapable nature of the war on terror. Sometimes there is unvarnished truth from them. But quite often they are just an appropriate-sounding bleat of concerned noise out of the religious belief and slogan, '9/11 changed everything.'
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
There are many postmortems on the election out now, and there will be many more to come. I like the take of the Best of the Web Today so far.
We now return to the era of divided government. An era where there will be much heat, but less light. Perhaps that is best; as Thomas Paine said, "That government is best which governs least." We will certainly see fewer earthshaking changes at the Federal level.
Over the next two years, it will be interesting to watch the 50 states to see which of them produce the best results. Like 50 distinct laboratories, one of them may produce a leader--or may have already done so--who is worthy to lead the nation.
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Click here to see the results for the WA races.
My old associate going back to the late 80s (when I was Apple's Networking and Communications Evangelist), Toby Nixon, appears to be going down to defeat in his race to return to the state senate. Toby is a terrific person, with a wonderful family. He is a legendary figure in the evolution of PC communications--he worked at Hayes Communications back when "Hayes modem" was the standard. I believe that he still works at Microsoft, and does important work there. I'm sure that he'll continue in public service in some capacity. He was a very good senator, and his defeat is a loss for the people of the state of Washington.
Nevermind, Michael Fox, nothing to see here...
My main machine has Firefox up with 8 tabs. I am in love with Google Reader; I have all of the best bloggers in a category called "opinion" open in a tab that I refresh frequently. I have tabs dedicated to The Truth Laid Bear's wonderful election tracker, Fox News election page, and to CNN's Blog Party--at least for now.
Many pundits predicted a loss of both houses to the Democrat party. A smaller number predicted that the Republicans would retain both houses. I agree with Captain Ed that the Democrat party is likely to take the House--the only question is by how much--but the Republicans are going to hold the Senate--narrowly.
Monday, November 06, 2006
Here's an excerpt that includes Hugh's response to Jonathan Chait of the LA Times:
"Everybody in professional politics, conservative or liberal," Chait wrote, understands that Kerry was trying to make a joke about Bush. And yet the GOP has succeeded in convincing the country that he was denigrating American soldiers." Which means that those who disagree with Chait must be stupid or lying. That group includes a vast number of men and women in the military, as has been pointed out repeatedly across the web. MSMers like Chait refuse to acknowledge their opinions and judgments. They don't want those opinions and judgments to be counted, just like the military's votes in Florida in 2000.
"As for your comments on NAC, you're sounding like a crackpot conspiracy theorist lunatic. NAC has absolutely nothing to do with charging for every PC in your house, it is an optional technology for corporate LANs. There is no secret plan to put an 802.1x NAC capable switch on to your home network. If anything, moving away from NAT and on to IPv6 would allow ISPs to see how many devices you have in the home and potentially charge you for every device on your home. As it stands now, the ISP can only see the single IPv4 address on your personal router."
While George is scathingly correct in his fisking of Robert, after reading Robert's original article and George's response, I'm reminded of this.
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Saturday, November 04, 2006
H/T: Instapundit.
Interesting to hear his reactions during all three phases. It has a much happier ending than other videos that have been published from Iraq.
Friday, November 03, 2006
Sadly, I expect to see stories about issues with military voting. I didn't have to wait long.
The Democrat party--they support the troops, you know. That is, until it comes time for those who preserve and defend the Constitution are about to take the opportunity to exercise their rights under it.
Thursday, November 02, 2006
Essentially, the New York Times story validates the pre-war worries about WMD. The Times and IAEA attempt to blame the Bush Administration for somehow leaking the information to help Iran.
As though A. Q. Khan, North Korea and China hadn't already gotten there first.
Here's Captain Ed with an especially large helping.
Update: Jim Geraghty's take is even better.
Arnold Kling posits "Operation Sunscreen" at TCS Daily as an alternative to Kyoto-like approaches to global warming. Photo accompanies the article.
Excerpt:
"But the many disappointments and crimes and blunders (the saddest of which is the utter failure to influence Iran, and the corresponding advantage taken by Tehran-backed militias) do not relieve us of a responsibility that is either insufficiently stressed or else passed over entirely: What is to become, in the event of a withdrawal, of the many Arab and Kurdish Iraqis who do want to live in a secular and democratic and federal country? We have acquired this responsibility not since 2003, or in the sideshow debate over prewar propaganda, but over decades of intervention in Iraq's affairs, starting with the 1968 Baathist coup endorsed by the CIA, stretching through Jimmy Carter's unforgivable permission for Saddam Hussein to invade Iran, continuing through the decades of genocide in Kurdistan and the uneasy compromise that ended the Kuwait war, and extending through 12 years of sanctions and half-measures, including the "no-fly" zones and the Iraq Liberation Act, which passed the Senate without a dissenting vote. It is not a responsibility from which we can walk away when, or if, it seems to suit us."
The anti-war left that glories in what they call America's defeat in Vietnam ignores the consequences of our withdrawal of US troops and of support for anti-Communist governments in the region--the Vietnamese boat people, the Cambodian killing fields, to name two. I don't want our nation to go through years of guilt and self-doubt over a mission and a people that believed in America, only to see both abandoned to a terrible fate. This expansionist enemy wants to force America back as it expands, just as the Communists did. We cannot fail to show resolve now in a self deceiving hope to return to the "What me worry? 1990s.
Omar Fadhil (AKA Iraq the Model) has written a plea to America to remain by the side of Iraq; it's a far better case than I can make.
Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Here's an excerpt from the first article:
"Unlike the Stern report and its patrons, those of us who take a skeptical approach to these doomsday climate scenarios aren't trying to end the discussion. The Earth is warmer now than it was in the recent past, and this may be partly attributable to human behavior. But everything else--from how much warmer, to the extent of mankind's contribution, to the cost of doing something about it--remains very much in dispute.
Some of the Stern review's recommendations, such as carbon trading rights, are also worth debating. But most of its proposals are merely openings for government to expand its role in allocating investment, raising taxes and otherwise controlling economic decisions. Socialism was supposed to have died with the Soviet Union, but it is making a comeback under the guise of coping with global warming.
Meanwhile, there are far more urgent, and far less speculative, problems that we know how to solve with the right policies. That message may not get scary headlines, but it would improve the lives of more human beings around the world."
Here's an excerpt from the second article:
"The report on climate change by Nicholas Stern and the U.K. government has sparked publicity and scary headlines around the world. Much attention has been devoted to Mr. Stern's core argument that the price of inaction would be extraordinary and the cost of action modest.
Unfortunately, this claim falls apart when one actually reads the 700-page tome. Despite using many good references, the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change is selective and its conclusion flawed. Its fear-mongering arguments have been sensationalized, which is ultimately only likely to make the world worse off."
Please read them both, especially the second article by Mr. Bjorn Lomborg.
"These investigations are critical because the Republicans in Congress have ignored this serious problem," Lautenberg said.
Hmmm. It would appear that moonbats everywhere are beginning to see that words and actions have consequences...
Excerpt:
"I'm still pretty torn on this controversy. Had Kerry simply come out yesterday and said, Whoops, my bad -- I left out a couple of key words from the punchline and left the wrong impression -- my apologies!, I think the entire story would have died immediately. However, in his typically tone-deaf manner, he decided to brand the entire incident a Republican smear, despite the fact that he had been quoted accurately.
Now he's left with the argument that he misquoted himself while trying to show off his supposed intellectual superiority over George Bush, and that it's all Bush's fault despite being Kerry's intellectual inferior. Really, no one could have scripted a more hilarious scenario, and the longer Kerry continues this line of defense/offense, the more ridiculous a figure he becomes. It demonstrates clearly that the 'I was for the $87 billion before I was against it' gaffe was no fluke."
That's it in a nutshell: John Kerry misquotes himself and manages to make himself look even more ridiculous than ever.
Update: Drudge points out that the troops understand what Kerry meant.This article is worth reading, and it inspired me to search anew for good books on the Marshall Plan and on MacArthur's plan for Japan.
Excerpt:
"Moreover, MacArthur's occupation plan was developed between 1942 and 1945 and then used during the occupation. It was produced by a large team working on the expectation of a hostile invasion and a process of pacification that would cost a million US casualties and millions of Japanese lives. MacArthur knew that he would not be welcomed as a liberator. His team knew there would be much hard work needed to keep the Japanese islands from descending into chaos and violence."
Update: it occurs to me that the Allies began planning for the post-war world long before 1945. Churchill discusses this in his fantastic six volume history of World War II. It would be interesting to know whether President Clinton or his cabinet directed planners in the government to plan for a post-war Iraq after passing the Iraq Liberation Act in October of 1998. If there were plans, why weren't they used? If there weren't, then why pass the bill other than as political theatre?
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
His press conference today in Seattle managed to make things worse for him and his party. It seems patently ridiculous to assert that his insult to everyone in the military--past and present--was any sort of failed joke aimed at the President. Kerry is a relic who was created by the old media; his presidential aspirations have been canceled by the new media. He just doesn't know it yet.
As today is Halloween, we're reminded of this "separated at birth" image.
Update: I like the Belmont Club's take.
Excerpt:
" South Portland police were notified around 9 a.m. that a man wearing a rubber Osama bin Laden mask was standing on top of a berm along the highway carrying a sign that said 'I Love Tabor,' and waving what appeared to be an assault rifle.
Four South Portland officers and two state troopers converged on the man. They drew their guns when he did not respond to their demand that he drop his weapon.
Police said instead he walked toward them dropping plastic hand grenades. His costume included fake dynamite and bandoliers, police said.
He eventually did drop the rifle, which turned out to be a toy and was arrested,..."
Monday, October 30, 2006
Excerpt:
"Why does this matter? The Stern Report uses the cherry-picked information as the basis for one of its important conclusions about the projected costs of climate change(on p. 138),
The costs of climate change for developed countries could reach several percent of GDP as higher temperatures lead to a sharp increase in extreme weather events and large-scale changes.To support its argument the Stern Report further relies on a significantly flawed report from the Association of British Insurers, which we critiqued here. It’s (sic) presentation of the future costs of disasters and climate change is highly selective to put it mildly."
Update: A Second Hand Conjecture piles on with another thorough fisking. Stern must feel fairly meek by now.
Sunday, October 29, 2006
H/T: Sound Politics
Not to be outdone, Al Gore makes an appearance in another story from the UK.
H/T: Free Republic and the ever vigilant Matt Drudge.
Quoting from Christopher Chantrill's excellent article: "Contrary to the received notion, it appears that the urban poor are not too poor, or too ignorant, or too feckless to send their children to school—or to pay for it.
And we are idly tossing into the air another very small idea, as inadvertently suggested by the documentary Up Series. What if children suckled at the teat of government schools generally grow up to be adult adolescents, don’t bother to marry, and don’t bother to have children?
They would be well on the way to the status of H.G. Wells’ Eloi in The Time Machine, 'humanity upon the wane,' shortly to fall into the clutches of the Muslim Morlocks. For when society sets itself 'steadfastly towards comfort and ease, a balanced society with security and permanency as its watchword,' it has no need to develop 'intellectual versatility… the compensation for change, danger, and trouble,' until it is too late."
Read the whole thing.
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Ronald Bailey's article in Reason, "Climate Change Lemmings Jump Off The Cliff: California signs onto Kyoto Protocol just as it falls apart", contains this prediction by the author: "In any case, based on Europe's current difficulties, I predict that there will be no follow-on Kyoto Protocol-style global treaty and that California will never establish a market in greenhouse gas emissions."
I agree.
Friday, October 27, 2006
Apparently remaining in the Netherlands over the winter isn't unusual for the swans. As for myself, I'd much prefer Florida.
Like uncountable thousands of Windows users, I have been testing Windows Vista on a backup machine and using that platform to test IE 7. Sparked by a nasty virus/trojan/bho infection that I acquired by recovering files for a friend from his seemingly lost hard drive, I decided to test Firefox 2 on my production machine.
The scales have been lifted; I see clearly now. Download Firefox 2, make it your default browser, and put your browser troubles behind you. Click on the Firefox download button conveniently located in the left column of this blog to protect yourself from all too many nasty exploits and vulnerabilities in IE 6.
BTW, it took the better part of three full days to regain full confidence that my machine was clean again, despite the measures that I had taken prior to the infection. In a later post, I will explain the tools that I used to clean my machine and the new measures that I have taken to protect my production environment in addition to switching to Firefox 2.
An excellent example of truth, succinctly expressed, by Steven Milloy, FoxNews.com's Junk Science columnist.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
I hope that the President and his associates, and the RNC at large, take note of the simple power of this format, and repeat it often.
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
I recommend Steven F. Hayward's article, "The Fate of the Earth in the Balance: The Metaphysics of Climate Change" in AEI Online without reservation.
Monday, October 23, 2006
What? They're letting us know that they intend to reverse all of those popular policies, plus give us the Iraqi version of the Vietnamese boat people and Pol Pot's killing fields as a bonus?
H/T: Dr. Sanity
Sunday, October 22, 2006
Quote: "One of the things I keep trying to hammer home to the media is the extent to which legislative promises to meet environmental goal X sometime in the future have almost always been, and likely always will be, meaningless blather.
The reason is simple. Voters love promises to accomplish wonderful things, but they don’t love burdensome policies to secure those wonderful things. Because the public’s attention span is quite limited to say the least, loud and vigorous promises to slay environmental dragons will harvest political capital while subsequent failure to actually slay those dragons will go relatively unnoticed and cost politicians little."
That sums up the entire environmental/global warming movement: make promises impossible to keep, but let everyone feel good about having made them, regardless of the consequences.
H/T: Instapundit.
Saturday, October 21, 2006
Keegan sums up by saying that "The Vietnam war was not lost on the battlefield, but in the American media's treatment of news from the front line." That is exactly right. Our present day enemy is attempting to follow the same template, as is the MSM.
Friday, October 20, 2006
Eric Cheney is a University of Washington economic geologist. He's not related to the other Cheney, although I imagine that they agree on the answer to the question that Eric Cheney answered.
I'm sure that both are correct. Science and technology will provide answers if we are willing to apply them to any problem.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
The A-10 is one of my favorite aircraft of all time, along with the "Buff". The B-52 is getting an upgrade as well; even worse news for the bad guys.
Sunday, October 15, 2006
However, lack of debate and continuing research isn't scientific. Scientists haven't given in to demands that they stop research--even under penalty of death. Otherwise, the example made of Giordano Bruno would have "settled" the question of whether the earth was the center of the universe.
More on the chilling effects of scientific censorship here.
H/T: Instapundit.
Saturday, October 14, 2006
I'm no expert. I agree that the Republicans have done less than their majorities in both houses could have enabled them to do. However, it's hard for the Democrats to establish that they offered anything other than "no" to any new thinking on entitlements and other real problems, and certainly no serious alternative on Iraq other than "redeployment."
It's a dangerous world. We need serious people in government. If all the Democrats were like Senator Liberman, I'd say that the outcome wouldn't matter too much in the sense that national security would be assured in any case. However, the Democrats gloat over kicking Liberman out of their party. That and their other pronouncements on Iraq and the the war on terror gives me no reason to be comfortable with them influencing national policy at any level.
Friday, October 13, 2006
This post, on the NYT belated awakening to the crisis in North Korea, is no exception.
But acting now will avoid some of the massive damage and cost relatively little, said the study commissioned by Friends of the Earth from the Global Development and Environment Institute of Tufts University in the United States."
Gee, the Friends of the Earth paid for a study, and it spells disaster unless we do what they say.
Meanwhile, the guys over at Climate Audit continue to poke holes in the "settled science" around global warming.
Thursday, October 05, 2006
I think that the perfect follow up question would have been, "All right, Mr. Soros, what's your policy on tax evasion?"
Again, if Drudge is right, one wonders how the electorate will react, and whether the Democrats will suffer in November.
I mean, how dare the U.S. enforce its border!
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Update: Hugh Hewitt links to a Drudge Report post that reports a leak from ABC that included the identity and age of the young recipient of the IMs in question.
The Left's schadenfreude over the Foley scandal is, in part, based on the impression that the Republicans claim the mantle of the party of values, and that scandals like the Foley scandal expose at least one elected Republican as a hypocrite. However, as Betsy points out, Republicans have been punished more and have done the honorable thing and resigned, while Democrats who have engaged in worse conduct--actual sex in a sex scandal, for example--have survived and been reelected.
Of course, this brings to mind that old saw that the public gets the government that it deserves. We deserve better--campaigns that deal with issues and a press that reports them honestly. If we allow the politics of personal destruction to succeed in moving the electorate from the issues and the lack of real plans from the Democrat party to do anything other that undo the progress made by the Republicans and to reinstitute the same failed policies that lead to economic and foreign policy malaise, then we will have failed the country as an electorate.
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
According to OpinionJourmal.com, First Lt. Hegseth served as an infantry platoon leader and civil-military operations officer in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division.
Monday, October 02, 2006
Saturday, September 30, 2006
Update: while considering the questions raised above, also consider the demographics of carbon emissions by the US population over the coming decades.
More: Greenland may be green, again.
And, Gore-d on his own petard.
Even more here on the scientific consensus on global warming.
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Alternatively, the article could have been entitled, "How Michael Moore somehow managed to miss a free meal and a chance to take a swipe at America and the President."