Uncategorized Archives

I did a little “vani…

I did a little “vani…
I did a little “vanity Googling” today to see if anyone else had picked up the UPI article on blogging, and I found two places:

Apparently Karen, of “DemocratSpeak” visited here as she made a small change to the article.

Doug Payton, a software engineer in Atlanta, has written a [right wing] “blog” called Considerettes since last April, using Blogger.com’s system.

Heh heh…apparently she had to make sure potential visitors were aware of what my leanings were, in case it wasn’t obvious or they wanted to avoid it altogether.

A great line from la…

A great line from la…
A great line from last night’s State of the Union address: After doing a rather lengthy yet only partial enumeration of weapons that Saddam has not accounted for (which would be “material breaches” all), W took aim directly at the anti-war-at-all-costs crowd and said

Some have said we must not act until the threat is imminent. Since when have terrorists and tyrants announced their intentions, politely putting us on notice before they strike? If this threat is permitted to fully and suddenly emerge, all actions, all words and all recriminations would come too late. Trusting in the sanity and restraint of Saddam Hussein is not a strategy, and it is not an option. The dictator who is assembling the world’s most dangerous weapons has already used them on whole villages, leaving thousands of his own citizens dead, blind or disfigured.

Those words could have come from Churchill speaking of Hitler and his campaign against Jews. The parallel will no doubt be lost on those to whom those words were directed.

Saddam continues to …

Saddam continues to …
Saddam continues to sabotage the inspection process. Today, the NY Post is reporting that death certificates with the names of (currently living) Iraqi scientists are being sent to their families as a reminder of what happens to those who cooperate with the UN.

The proof continues to mount….

Daniel Pipes has a t…

Daniel Pipes has a t…
Daniel Pipes has a thoughtful article that, while ultimately being a piece that describes why Europe is balking at the prospect of war, gives us a very good history of appeasement in the 20th century, and why sometimes it works and sometimes it’s disastrous. And why this time it would be the latter.

Once again, a good lesson in history trumps Bush-as-Hitler protest signs.

And now, from the sa…

And now, from the sa…
And now, from the same world body that brought us a Libyan presiding over a human rights commission, we now have Iraq about to get its turn presiding over the UN’s Conference on Disarmament. Apparently, the UN understands what a PR fiasco this is. According to WorldNetDaily, Kofi Annan has previously has been bolstering this conference as the place he hopes will ultimately deal with all major disarmament issues, but now UN spokesman Farhan Haq is downplaying the committee. “Since it’s not exactly a body that has been meeting to deal with issues substantively for several years, the main worry is not about a procedural issue such as who is the chair; it’s about what it can do,” he said. That’s PR, plain and simple; on one side investing great hope in a conference’s work, while defending an oxymoron by suggesting it’s a bureaucracy looking for a direction (after 25 years of existence).

This is a classic example of blind, liberal, value-free “fairness”. Fairness for the sake of fairness, and without regard for suitability, and afraid of making judgements because it’s afraid of setting standards. It appeals to (and appeases) the lowest common denominator, and thus that’s exactly what it gets. And all this mushy policy is attached to a conference that doesn’t know what to do. Thanks so much, “United” Nations.

James Taranto, on to…

James Taranto, on to…
James Taranto, on today’s “Best of the Web Today” column, reminds us of recent history:

It’s a misconception that the decision now facing America and the U.N. is whether to go to war with Iraq. The U.S. and the U.N. are already at war with Iraq, and they have been for 12 years. There was no surrender or peace treaty that ended the Gulf War; instead, the allies accepted a ceasefire predicated upon Iraq’s compliance with a series of demands, embodied in various U.N. resolutions, concerning disarmament, human rights, sanctions, reparations to Kuwait, repatriation of war criminals, etc. These restrictions are supposed to be temporary: Baghdad’s compliance was to restore both peace and Iraq’s sovereignty.

This speaks directly to the smear by some anti-war pundits that Bush Jr. is trying to exact revenge on Hussein for thumbing his nose at Bush Sr.’s conditions. This is further pointed out each time there’s an attack on coalition forces patrolling the no-fly zones. We’re still at war, folks. And the only reason we are is that Hussein won’t comply with the conditions of the ceasefire.

So, if you’re anti-war, you’re 12 years too late. Get out of the way and let the good guys enforce the peace the way it was agreed it would be done by the international community, even if the international community has forgotten what they decided last year (or last decade), and even if it has to be done by force. (And no, that’s not an oxymoron. A peace or ceasefire treaty has to have teeth or it’s not worth the paper it’s written on.)

UN Weapons Inspectio…

UN Weapons Inspectio…
UN Weapons Inspections: Day 62: I heard a great observation on the Fox News Channel over the weekend. In typical Fox “fair and balanced” fashion, Rita Cosby had two guests on at the same time, one who believed that war should be an option and one that didn’t. The fellow who supported the Bush administration said that weapons inspections, given the anti-war crowd’s reasoning, were a catch-22. If weapons are not found, they’d say we shouldn’t go in. If weapons were found, they’d say we should continue inspections. His point was similar to Condoleezza Rice’s point last week; the method by which a country should disarm is very well established by many countries, notable those of the former Soviet Union, and Saddam Hussein is not following that pattern.

In fact, today we find out more details from Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz that Hussein is sabotaging the whole effort by buying off inspectors, and otherwise getting spies into the mix that tip off the Iraqis as to what the next site to be inspected will be. Additionally, Iraq is still playing a shell game with weapons, moving them constantly so that intelligence as to where they’ve been hidden has to be incredibly current to be of any use. (The link above goes to today’s World Tribune story, but the full text of Wolfowitz’s speech, given last Thursday to the Council on Foreign Relations is here.)

Hans Blix has also been knocking the Iraqis. “Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance, not even today, of the disarmament that was demanded of it, ” he said today. Inspectors have not been told about the fate of biological weapons (like VX nerve gas and anthras), or been allowed to use a reconnaissance plane to better hut for weapons, or talked privately with scientists.

This, then, is the way out of the catch-22. In order for the results of weapons inspections to be of any use, the process must be trustworthy. If it isn’t, due to manipulation by Hussein, that is a material breach of the UN resolution saying that inspections must be unhindered. Sabotage, shell-game strategies and stonewalling are hindrances.

The evidence continues to mount, but the anti-war crowd insists that we can’t go in because Saddam has hidden his weapons so well.

Global Warming Updat…

Global Warming Updat…
Global Warming Update: Here in Georgia the temps were in the low single-digits last night, and as late as 9am it still hadn’t broken 10 degrees where I am. Across the South, the story was the same; record lows being broken going as far back as 1940.

Required reading: “…

Required reading: “…
Required reading: “Why We Know Iraq is Lying”, by Condoleezza Rice. The “Reader’s Digest” version of the smoking gun. Anti-war protestors and UN member states can no longer say that the Bush administration hasn’t made the case. Key paragraph:

There is no mystery to voluntary disarmament. Countries that decide to disarm lead inspectors to weapons and production sites, answer questions before they are asked, state publicly and often the intention to disarm and urge their citizens to cooperate. The world knows from examples set by South Africa, Ukraine and Kazakhstan what it looks like when a government decides that it will cooperatively give up its weapons of mass destruction. The critical common elements of these efforts include a high-level political commitment to disarm, national initiatives to dismantle weapons programs, and full cooperation and transparency.

The article goes into specifics. Enjoy.

(The NY Times requires free registration in order to read their articles on-line.)

Here’s another Ann C…

Here’s another Ann C…
Here’s another Ann Coulter piece that is very instructive. It’s one of those “turnabout” arguments, where an attempt is made to show that the prevailing conventional wisdom on a particular topic is in fact completely upside-down. I recall a local Atlanta radio talk show host of the liberal persuasion try to make the case that political correctness came from the conservatives (ignoring, conveniently, that it began in liberal academia). That case couldn’t be made, but in Coulter’s piece, she has history and statistics on her side as she shows that it’s more the Democrats that have been reluctant about removing racism. Further, all the liberal pundits that equate alumni or sports preferences in university admission with race preferences conveniently ignore how we fought a Civil War partially over race issues, or that the Supreme Court has said that the “equal protection” clause in the constitution does apply to race (not athletic ability or musical talent), or that a (Republican) president had to force a (Democrat) governor to allow integration in schools.

It’s a great history review for those who’ve forgotten it.

 Page 174 of 183  « First  ... « 172  173  174  175  176 » ...  Last »