Thursday, June 04, 2009

Obama's Judgment?


Didn't he really prove how poor his judgment was when he had to make his first serious decision? Joe Biden for Vice President? Come on. Seriously.

Case closed, forever.

I'll Take GWB's (First Term) Worldview over BHO's in a Heartbeat


Michael Rubin gets it right when writing (http://blog.american.com/?p=1596)about President Obama's speech in Egypt today:

Michael Rubin
Obama’s Troubling Moral Equivalency

By Michael Rubin
June 4, 2009, 9:06 am

President Obama received a standing ovation in Cairo. The Arab street should be happy. In Barack Obama, they have found a president for whom accountability matters little, and for whom moral equivalence dominates. As Obama points out, the Islamic world thrived when Europe was in the Dark Ages. But this is true only to a point. By this time, the Arab world (perhaps with the exception of Baghdad) was already a backwater. The center of gravity had shifted eastward into Persia. And then, by blaming the legacy of colonialism, a 19th century phenomenon (and one which led to considerable development and opportunity), Obama relieves Muslims in the region of the need to consider just how and why they fell so far behind several centuries before. Why did Muslim centers of science stop innovating? It is an uncomfortable question for Arabs, Persians, and more broadly speaking, Muslims to ask, but there will not be real reform or a solution to their plight until they do.

Accountability matters in other ways. On June 24, 2002, after a devastating campaign of terrorist bombings, President George W. Bush declared:

It is untenable for Israeli citizens to live in terror. It is untenable for Palestinians to live in squalor and occupation . . . I call on the Palestinian people to elect new leaders, leaders not compromised by terror. I call upon them to build a practicing democracy, based on tolerance and liberty. If the Palestinian people actively pursue these goals, America and the world will actively support their efforts.

For Obama, however, moral equivalency trumps accountability:

It is also undeniable that the Palestinian people—Muslims and Christians—have suffered in pursuit of a homeland. For more than 60 years they have endured the pain of dislocation. Many wait in refugee camps in the West Bank, Gaza, and neighboring lands for a life of peace and security that they have never been able to lead. They endure the daily humiliations—large and small—that come with occupation. So let there be no doubt: the situation for the Palestinian people is intolerable. America will not turn our backs on the legitimate Palestinian aspiration for dignity, opportunity, and a state of their own.

Why the Palestinian cause remains stagnant after billions in aid and Bush’s commitment to see a Palestinian state is for two reasons: rejectionism and terrorism. And yet, rather than hold the Palestinian leadership accountable for failing its people, Obama embraces moral equivalency. The problem with moral equivalency is that it does not build bridges or ameliorate understanding; it encourages conflicting sides to stake out ever more extreme positions knowing that outside mediators will always place blame in the middle.

Obama will get a standing ovation, and Bush will get scorn. Bush however can look in the mirror and know that he liberated 50 million people and inspired others chafing under dictatorship in Syria, Libya, Tunisia, Egypt, and elsewhere. Obama will look in the mirror and admire how handsome he is.

Friday, May 29, 2009

I Love Dick Cheney! Are There Any Other Grownups Left in Washington?


Former Vice President Dick Cheney gave a speech last week at the American Enterprise Institute. It was serious, direct, and it was a reminder of the threat we face from a determined and dangerous enemy.

For those who will never forget September 11th, and the reality-check it delivered, read and/or watch the speech.

http://www.aei.org/event/100068

Liberty and Tyranny by Mark Levin


Finished this a few weeks ago. A very timely and valuable book for 2009.

Really a great resource and framework to evaluate the direction the President is taking our country. The ideas and principals that made this country what it is are being thrown aside for those have have always failed before.

Do people understand what's happening to the country? Do people realize what we are becoming and what we are losing? Mark Levin does.

Twikini is a nice new Twitter App for WM


A lot has happened on the last few years in the smartphone and social networking world.

The "dream" of converged devices seems like it's actually become a reality. My latest devices are a Treo 800w and a Touch Pro. Both are very powerful PDAs and mobile phones.

Similarly, sites and networks like Facebook and Twitter have really taken hold and become common means of communicating and staying in touch for lots of people. Not just the young, but us middle-aged folks us them too.

I'm new to Twitter. But, since joining, I've searched for my favorite Windows Mobile client. I've used a few, but have recently begun to use Twikini most often.

Twikini is a new product by Trinket Software . http://www.trinketsoftware.com/Twikini

It is clean, fast, and effective. And, most helpfully to me, it works well on various sized screens.

We'll see how it goes as the product develops, and as competitors respond, but I think the undisputed result is that we users will be the beneficiary in any case.
OK. Well, it's been a couple/few years since posting here. Seems like a good time to get back into posting more regularly. Stay tuned...

Friday, November 18, 2005

Here's Another Interesting Wal-Mart Story

Here's the link to an interesting Business Week Article: http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/nov2005/nf2005117_0199_db016.htm?campaign_id=topStories_ssi_5

Do you like Wal-Mart? I do. To the critics: Give Me a Break.

Here's John Stossel's new column on Wal-Mart and it's economic critics from Townhall.com:

Is Wal-Mart a problem?

By John Stossel

Nov 16, 2005

Is Wal-Mart a problem?

The Food and Commercial Workers Union hired Paul Blank, who was political director for Howard Dean's presidential campaign, to lead a campaign to convince people not to shop at Wal-Mart until Wal-Mart pays workers more. "The average associate at Wal-Mart makes $8.23 an hour," Blank told me. "That's not a job that can support a family."
Wal-Mart said its average pay is higher than that, but Wal-Mart workers do make a lot less money than Wal-Mart's owners.
"They have taken the values, the morals, the ethics, fairness that are the fabric of our society and put them aside and . . . put their profits before their people," said Blank.
That's foolish economics, and not very good morality. He is as wrong as the tycoon Michael Douglas played in the movie "Wall Street," who said: "It's a zero-sum game. Somebody wins. Somebody loses. Money itself isn't lost or made, it's simply transferred."
That's a myth. Businesses create wealth.
Take the simplest example. I buy a quart of milk. I hand the storekeeper money; she gives me the milk. We both benefit, because she wanted the money more than the milk, and I wanted the milk more than the money. This is why often both of us say "thank you." Because it's voluntary, business is win/win. A transaction won't happen unless both parties benefit. Each party ends up better off than he was before. And when you have millions of successful transactions, you end up very well off -- like the owners of Wal-Mart.
Their becoming rich doesn't mean there's less for the rest of us. Sam Walton's innovations created thousands of new jobs and allowed millions of Americans to save money.
In earlier eras, John D. Rockefeller and Cornelius Vanderbilt were depicted as evil. But the condemnation rarely came from consumers. It was competing businessmen who complained. And newspapers lapped it up, calling them "robber barons."
Vanderbilt got rich by making travel and shipping cheaper. Lots of people liked that.
No one was forced to buy the oil on which Rockefeller got rich. He had to persuade people by offering it to them for less. He offered it so cheaply that poorer people, who used to go to bed when it got dark, could now afford fuel for their lanterns.
These are "robber barons"?
"You could not find a more inaccurate term for these men than 'robber barons,'" said philosopher David Kelley. "They weren't barons. All of them started penniless. And they weren't robbers, because they didn't take it from anyone else."
Wal-Mart's critics act as if economic competition were a "zero-sum game" -- if one person gets richer, someone else must be getting poorer. If Wal-Mart's owners profit, we lose. But the reality is exactly what our ordinary language tells us: We make money. We produce wealth.
Wal-Mart created wealth. It started with just one discount store. Then, its owner, Sam Walton, invented new ways to streamline the supply chain, so he was able to sell things for less and still make a profit. By keeping prices low, Wal-Mart effectively gives everyone who shops there a raise, its own employees included.
Not all Wal-Mart workers support families. Some are retired. Others are part-timers, students or people looking for a second income.
"None of them was drafted. None of them was forced to work at Wal-Mart," said Brink Lindsey, a senior scholar at the Cato Institute. "That means that if they're working there, presumably, that was the best job they could get."
Before Sha-ron Reese was hired at Wal-Mart she was on welfare. She'd lost custody of her kids and was homeless, living in her car. California store manager W.C. Morrison took a risk and hired her. "She had no references," he told us. "She had no work experience."
In her own words, she was "raw." But Morrison took a chance on her. That changed her life.
Today, Reese has two people working for her. She's got her own apartment. She's regained custody of two of her kids.
And she's a Wal-Mart customer. "Everything, just about, that's in my house," she said, "Wal-Mart sells."

Find this story at: http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/JohnStossel/2005/11/16/175731.html

Saturday, October 29, 2005


Lewis "Scooter" Libby Indicted. Mr. Libby is facing five very serious charges. If true, he should be punished for the violations. That said, a couple of points: I have always believed that the Bush Whitehouse (and Campaign) have had among the worst communications operations in modern political history. This "scandal" never should have happened. If the Administration had simply destroyed Ambassador Wilson's claims in the open--as they should have--there would have been no reason to resort to this type of b.s. innuendo, etc. (If you still believe that Wilson has any credibility, you obviously are unaware of the bi-partisan Senate Intelligence Committee Report on the subject. Check it out.) And, my second point is that I am disgusted by much of the whining and complaining by my Conservative brethren. Of course the Bush Administration is not covered the same way as the Clinton Administration was by the mainstream media. They have always been and will always be hostile to Republicans who profess to any sort of Conservative Philosophy. So what? Get over it. That's the reality and we should begin to act accordingly. Of course Hillary and Bill were allowed to "walk" for similar charges, but that's really irrelevant. Our disgust with their actions was justified. It should also be directed at Libby's actions (again, if they're true.) And, while Ken Starr was an honorable Independent Counsel, Patrick Fitzgerald seems to be no less professional. Once again, if the Administration had just "kicked Wilson in the nuts" as he deserved, in the open, because his dishonest efforts to harm his Nation REQUIRED a fast, factual, and ruthless response, we wouldn't be having this discussion today. This problem exists thoughout the Administration and MUST BE CORRECTED if we have any hope for a successful second term. Posted by Picasa

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

David Frum Echoing My Thought on Miers

David Frum, former Bush speechwriter (remember: the Axis of Evil--it was his line), writes something similar to what I was trying to articulate yesterday on Harriet Miers. Of course, he writes it much better than me.

From his Blog on the National Review Online site:

OCT. 5, 2005: MORE ON MIERS
The president was visibly angry at his press conference yesterday. Nobody likes criticism, especially when it's justified. But was he convincing? He sure did not convince me. The closest thing he offered to a defense - praise for his nominee for hailing from outside the "judicial monastery" - entirely misses the point. Senator John Cornyn elaborates on this defense in the Wall Street Journal this morning, and makes it clearer than ever what is wrong with it:

"[S]ome have criticized the president because he did not select an Ivy-League-credentialed federal appeals court judge for the open seat."

The problem with Harriet Miers is not that she lacks formal credentials, although she does lack them. Had the president chosen former Solicitor General Theodore Olson, or Securities and Exchange Commission chair Christpher Cox, or former Interior Department secretary Gail Norton, nobody would complain that they were not federal appeals court judges.

Had the president named Senator Jon Kyl (LLB, University of Arizona) or Senator Mitch McConnell (LLB, University of Kentucky) or Edith Jones Clement (LLB, Tulane), nobody would be carping at the absence of an Ivy League law degree.

Those who object to the Miers nomination do not object to her lack of credentials. THey object to her lack of what the credentials represent: some indication of outstanding ability.

The objection to Miers is not that she is not experienced enough or not expensively enough educated for the job. It is that she is not good enough for the job.

And she will remain not good enough even if she votes the right way on the court, or anyway starts out voting the right way. A Supreme Court justice is more than just a vote. A justice is also a voice.

The president's defense of Miers in many ways amplified the problem. His case for her boils down to: "Because I say so" and "She really is a nice person."

But "because I say so" is not an argument. It is an assertion of pure authority. And have not the great conservative legal minds of the past three decades warned again and again that the courts have gone wrong precisely because they have relied too much on authority and too little on argument?

"She really is a nice person" likewise is a statement grounded on feeling rather than thought. And don't conservatives object to legal liberalism precisely because it is based on sloppy emotion rather than disciplined thought?

Believe it or not, legal conservatism is a powerful and compelling school of thought. The Scalias and the Thomases and the Rehnquists have had their effect not by forcing their positions on the country by brute vote-counting, but by persuasion. That's why, to pick out just one example, that Bush v Gore was decided by a 7-2 majority and not lost 3 to 6.

This president has never believed much in persuasion. He believes that the president should declare and that the country should then follow. But judges cannot and should not do that. He should have chosen a justice who could lead by power of intellect, and not because she possesses 1/9 of the votes on the supreme judicial body

It has been conservatives who have been most up in arms about the Miers nomination. But really this is a nomination that disserves not just conservatism, but the whole country.

All Americans are entitled to know that those judges who exercise the power of judicial review have thought hard and deeply about the immense power entrusted to them. If the courts were just about getting the votes, then the preisdent should have chosen Dennis Hastert for the Supreme Court. But to change American law, it's not enough to win the vote count. You have to win the argument. And does anybody believe Harriet Miers can win an argument against Stephen Breyer?

Yesterday's White House talking point was that Miers "reflects the president's judicial philosophy." OK. But can she articulate it? Defend it? And persuade others of it - not just her colleagues, but the generations to come who will read her decisions and accept them ... or scorn them. That's the way this president should have thought about this choice. And that's the way the Senators called on to consent to the choice should be thinking about it now.

Tuesday, October 04, 2005


Supreme Court Nominee Harriet Miers. I'm not impressed. Why didn't Bush nominate a brilliant, Conservative intellectual? Would it be a tough fight in the Senate? Probably. But isn't it a fight worth having? Isn't it something that much of America thinks is important--perhaps the most important issue facing the nation today? I do. Posted by Picasa

Why I'm Very Disappointed in Bush's Choice of Harriet Miers.

Count me among those Conservatives who are very disappointed in President Bush's choice of Harriet Miers to replace Justice O'Connor on the United States Supreme Court.

What is the evidence of her excellence as a legal mind? Really, that's what I wanted to see in the next Justice. John Roberts seems clearly brilliant, and very well qualified for his position. He also happens to be quite young (50-ish), and has the potential to leave a significant mark on the Court for years to come.

Do we know how he'll rule? Of course not. While I hope he'll be a Conservative in the mold of a Scalia, I'd be quite pleased with another Rehnquist if that's how he turns out.

But why is Scalia my model? He's a thinker. A scholar. A true intellect. He has the utmost faith in the system created under our Constitution, including it's built-in mechanisms for "fixing" results that the people don't like. If political hot-button issues are decided in the legislative arena, the people can voice their opinion by contacting their representatives and by their vote on election day. No such relief is possible with unelected lawmakers sitting as Justices.

Will Miers vote the "way I want?" Perhaps. But, Bush has an opportunity to renew/begin a national conversation about the role of the judiciary in our society. I believe most Americans want a limited role for the courts. Of course they are a co-equal branch of government, but where their branch works should not interfare with the other equal branches: legislative and executive.

I haven't seen anything that tells me that Miers is exceptional enough to make the Conservative judicial case. The case is there, it is waiting, and it can be won--as I think it's the one most of us would choose, if told the options. I don't have any reason to see her demonstrating the correctness of this view. Scalia can persuade if he is given the chance. He certainly can hold his own (at least) in any debate of legal scholarship. Can Miers? I hope but I doubt.

I have enjoyed the posts at the National Review site, their Corner and Bench Memos blogs as well. Check out the link on the right side of my blog if you're interested.

The 2006 CR-V LX AWD Mini-Sport Ute. I'm shopping for one right now for my wife and I. (I already drive a 1999 CR-V EX, and I LOVE it, but we need to replace her old Civic. I'm posting this because I hate to car shop. You just know they're gonna screw-ya, it's just a question of how much. I think I have a good price on the new vehicle, and I have a good rate on my loan, but the trade-in is the kicker. That negotiation comes tomorrow. I'll post the result later. Posted by Picasa

Thursday, September 29, 2005

Ed Koch, a REAL Liberal, Spanks Cindy Sheehan.

Courtesy of the former Mayor of New York City, a true Liberal:


Speak up America! Sheehan has spent her sympathy, By Ed Koch

Cindy Sheehan, whose son Casey was killed in action in Iraq on April 4, 2004, has become the face of the anti-war movement in the United States. While her grief is understandable, her rhetoric is outrageous.

As the mother of a son killed in battle in Iraq, she originally struck a sympathetic chord, whether you supported the war in Iraq or opposed it. One cannot help but empathize with the agony of a bereaved mother. But that has changed over the months, and I believe that many Americans who viewed her with sympathy no longer do so.

Many Americans, myself included, now see her as a person who has come to enjoy the celebratory status accorded to her by the radicals on the extreme left who see America as the outlaw of the world. These radicals are not content to be constructive critics. They are bent on destroying this country.

Some of them want to turn America into a radical socialist state. Others hope to create a utopia. But regardless of their agendas, how can Cindy Sheehan's supporters defend her shameful statement, "This country is not worth dying for."

While we recognize the U.S. is far from perfect, we are still head and shoulders above most other countries in the world in every respect. We remain the place where almost all others, given the chance, want to come to live. We continue to be the land of opportunity. We are the world's leading economy.

Yes, there is far too great a difference between the incomes of the rich and the poor. Yes, we haven't provided universal medical care as a matter of right for all of our citizens. Yes, minorities still suffer from discrimination socially, in housing, jobs and education. But we have a political system that for more than 200 years has allowed the electorate to work its will through regularly held elections. The government follows the will of the people, or it will no longer stay in power..

Those who rail against the United States have simply failed to sell their message to the public at large. They keep losing elections, local as well as national. Rather than broadening their appeal, they have narrowed it.

I supported and still support the war in Iraq, because our Congress and President had every right to rely on the advice of the CIA that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. On Sunday, September 25, 2005, Tim Russert of Meet The Press, summed up the situation prevailing before the war, saying, "…post September 11th, there was a fear of terrorism, an inability to know whether there were weapons of mass destruction by the public or by the media. George W. Bush said there were. Bill and Hillary Clinton said there were. The Russians, French and Germans, who opposed the war, said there were. Hans Blix of the UN said there were."

Iraq had fought an eight-year war against Iran resulting in a million casualties, using poison gas against the Kurds, who were citizens of Iraq, and against the Iranian army. Yes, since the 2003 invasion, we have not found any present supplies of WMD. Nevertheless, based on advice from CIA counterparts advising every member nation of the United Nations Security Council, the Security Council, including Syria, adopted Resolution 1441 unanimously, finding Iraq had weapons of mass destruction for which it had not accounted and advising Iraq that failure to account was cause for war. Iraq refused to account for them to the U.N. We and our allies were right to invade, notwithstanding that other countries, terrified by the prospect of terrorism against them and tempted by corruption at the UN masterminded by Saddam Hussein through the Oil-For-Food program and lucrative vendor contracts with Hussein's regime, did not join us.

As I have often stated, we have accomplished our original goal to prevent Iraq from threatening us or its regional neighbors. We should declare victory and get out. Yes, there probably will be a civil war among the Kurds, Sunni and Shia. If the UN — which is still under a cloud because of the "Oil for Food" scandal — decides to take a military role in Iraq to stop the civil war, we can join them at that time. Having accomplished our original mission, we should no longer be fulfilling the obligations of other countries, such as Germany and France which have had a free ride to date. Even in Afghanistan, the latter NATO allies, do not participate in combat duty, leaving that and the ensuing casualties for the U.S. to bear.

President George W. Bush summed up his views on Iraq when he stated, "When the Iraqi army stands up, the American Army will stand down." I have low expectations of that happening in the immediate future. The estimates provided by the Bush administration on our getting out range from two to ten years. I do not believe we should wait that long, because of the casualties that would be involved. We should get out now, leaving the UN in charge. Although I believe that we should leave Iraq, I do not accept Sheehan's outrageous statements.

Sheehan has joined those who rail against Israel, labeling Israel as the culprit with her comment, "You get America out of Iraq, you get Israel out of Palestine and the terrorism will stop." Is that why Sunni and other terrorists have intentionally killed thousands of Shia civilians, labeling them, according to al-Zarkawi, infidels? Is that why Arab fundamentalists have declared war against all Christians and Jews?

According to Wikipedia, on August 15, 2005, on the Chris Matthews Show, Sheehan said, "she would not have responded differently to her son's death had he died in Afghanistan rather than in Iraq. Sheehan argued that the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan was 'almost the same thing as the Iraq war.'" Remember, the UN Security Council authorized the invasion of Afghanistan and the war against the Taliban government.

Sheehan's personal attacks on President Bush include comments in a speech on April 27, 2005, when she said, "We are not waging a war on terror in this country. We're waging a war of terror. The biggest terrorist in the world is George W. Bush." Shameful.

According to Wikipedia, Sheehan wrote, "Casey was killed in the Global War of Terrorism waged on the world and its own citizens by the biggest terrorist outfit in the world: George and his destructive neo-con cabal."

In an interview on CBS, Sheehan referred to the foreign insurgents coming into Iraq, who are condemned as terrorists even by other Arab countries, as well as the U.S. and Great Britain, as "freedom fighters." On September 16, 2005, she said, "Pull our troops out of occupied New Orleans and Iraq." On the one hand, she and her supporters urge that the National Guard be brought back from Iraq to be used in New Orleans, and on the other hand, she condemns their use there now.

In addressing a veterans' group on August 5, 2005, she demeaned herself with the use of truly outrageous remarks hurled at the President, describing him as "a lying bastard," "that jerk," "that filth spewer and war monger," and "that evil maniac."

Sheehan appeared this past weekend in Washington, D.C., leading the parade in a picture captured by the media that included Jesse Jackson, Julian Bond and Al Sharpton.

On Monday of this week, while Sheehan and her supporters were in Washington protesting at the White House against the presence of U.S. military forces in Iraq — those forces there at the request of the democratically elected Iraqi government — according to The New York Times, "Armed men dressed as police officers burst into a primary school in a town south of Baghdad on Monday, rounded up five Shiite teachers and their driver, marched them to an empty classroom and killed them, a police official said." Sheehan believes them to be "freedom fighters."

Of course, Sheehan has the right to state her opinion in a country she believes shouldn't be defended. We who disagree with her statements, we who believe this country deserves our thanks, love and willingness to defend it, also have the right to express our views. Speak up, America.

(posted at: http://www.JewishWorldReview.com)

Tuesday, September 27, 2005


Former FEMA Director Mike Brown testifying before Congress today. Now, I don't claim to be an expert on FEMA--as I doubt many Americans are--and, I'm not going to say he did a great job during the Katrina Storm--even though it's possible that when the historic record is reviewed he did. No, I'm writing to say GOOD WORK standing up to the blow-hards in Congress and in not letting them stick him like a muzzled pig. They really are a pathetic bunch. Both Democrats and Republicans. They sit back and judge others for what they feel was done wrong, but do you ever hear them criticize themselves? I don't. And, don't you think Congress was in a position to oversee FEMA, the safety of the levees of New Orleans, the inept preparedness of the local authorities on N.O. who are some of the most corrupt in the nation? I do. Since they didn't, they really don't have much right to criticize others in my book.  Posted by Picasa

Monday, September 26, 2005


Oy Vey! Please Cindy, your 15 minutes are up. Go see if Pravda needs a columnist. Posted by Picasa

Why won't this man just go away? No wait, I kind of like to be reminded of another a-s from Massachusetts who ran for President and embarassed the state. Teddy Kenndey, Mike Dukakis, John Kerry...not quite a "slugger's row" if you ask me. I'm so pround to be from the Commonwealth. Posted by Picasa

Sunday, September 25, 2005


Emory. Four + years old. The greatest dog in the world! We just learned that he has epilepsy. I've witnessed three seizures over the past 6 weeks or so. He seems ok, and on doctor's orders we just began to treat him with medicine: Potassium Bromide. If it helps, it shouldn't harm him, shouldn't shorten his life, should help to lessen the seizures (in both number and duration), and should just add a few more minutes to his daily dining routine--as I squeeze his medicine into his mouth via a syringe. Fingers crossed!! Posted by Picasa

Charles Krauthammer is one of my favorite columnists and political analysts. I've mentioned Krauthammer in the blog before, but I thought I'd just take a moment to add a bit more. He is obviously a very bright man, and his medical degree from Harvard is some evidence of that. He worked in the Carter Administration, and was presumably, a strong Democrat. However, like many of us, he came to rethink his politics as time passed, programs failed, thinking on the left atrophied, etc. He has now become a very prominent NeoConservative voice, most often seen on FoxNews and read in the Post and it's syndicated peers. I can't urge anyone enough to read some of his work. It's just plain good! (Here's a link to some columns of his for the Washington Post, that are available on the web: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/linkset/2005/03/24/LI2005032401690.htmlPosted by Picasa

Blogger Spam is Annoying!

Just a quick thought: immediate and robotic spam posted to MY blog after I add a post is really annoying!

Streaming Radio on your Pocket PC. This screenshot is an image of Resco Radio. (www.resco.net). This is a great product! There are all kinds of radio stations on the internet that "stream" their broadcasts for free. This sweet app lets you access and play those streams really easily and it also lets you record them at a time of your choosing. The only problem I have so far, is that the app doesn't yet support Windows Media streams. (It is coming, but it's not here yet.) So for now, I use Resco whenever I can, but sometimes I need to rely on Windows Media 10 to hear some of my other favorite "talk and news" stations. Posted by Picasa

Friday, September 23, 2005


I Hope President Bush appoints another Conservative like Judge Bork to the Supreme Court. He's certainly a bit odd-looking, but the man sure is bright and thoughtful. And, he has the courage to disregard Political Correctness in favor of honest jurisprudence. Sort of what we want in a Justice, don't you think? Now, if you listened to Senator Kennedy, you'd think Bork wanted to return the Nation to the Pre-Civil War Confederacy. But, are you really listening to Kennedy? If so, you are in trouble and are detached from reality. My Senior Sentator's chronograph is stuck in 1969 and he doesn't seem to recognize that most of us are in 2005. Posted by Picasa

Mr. President, You Don't Have to Micro-Manage Hurricaine Relief.

Why must President Bush spend so much time working on overseeing the storms raining down upon the Gulf Coast States?

Katrina. Rita. Whatever the next one's name is. These are monster storms that bring mother nature's power down on our communities. The devastation can be, has been, and will likely still be emmense in the future from such natural phenomena. (Is that a word?)

Of course I feel great emphathy with the folks suffering the immediate impact of the storms, but I don't want the President spending too much time HIMSELF working on the government's response.

Local governments, State governments, Federal Agencies (FEMA, et al), and relief organizations like the Red Cross, should be in control and should be able to handle the storms. Immediate action must come from the people closest to the event: i.e., the locals. The Feds can backup, followup and assist. But, the Federal Government is not there to be a first responder for big storms. And, I don't want my President to be First Responder in Chief.

I'd rather he work on issues of governing the Nation.

Sunday, September 11, 2005

The Best Hurricane Katrina Summary Yet, IMHO.

From one of my favorite columnists, Charles Krauthammer, via Townhall.com:

Assigning blame
Charles Krauthammer (back to web version) | email to a friend Recommend to a friend

September 9, 2005

WASHINGTON -- In less enlightened times, there was no catastrophe independent of human agency. When the plague or some other natural disaster struck, witches were burned, Jews were massacred and all felt better (except the witches and Jews).

A few centuries later, our progressive thinkers have progressed not an inch. No fall of a sparrow on this planet is not attributed to sin and human perfidy. The three current favorites are: (1) global warming, (2) the war in Iraq and (3) tax cuts. Katrina hits and the unholy trinity is immediately invoked to damn sinner-in-chief George W. Bush.

This kind of stupidity merits no attention whatsoever, but I'll give it a paragraph. There is no relationship between global warming and the frequency and intensity of Atlantic hurricanes. Period. The problem with the evacuation of New Orleans is not that National Guardsmen in Iraq could not get to New Orleans, but that National Guardsmen in Louisiana did not get to New Orleans. As for the Bush tax cuts, administration budget requests for New Orleans flood control during the five Bush years exceed that of the five preceding Clinton years. The notion that the allegedly missing revenues would have been spent wisely by Congress, targeted precisely to the levees of New Orleans, and reconstruction would have been completed in time, is a threefold fallacy. The argument ends when you realize that, as The Washington Post notes, ``the levees that failed were already completed projects."

Let's be clear. The author of this calamity was, first and foremost, Nature (or if you prefer, Nature's God). The suffering was augmented, aided and abetted in descending order of culpability by the following:

1. The mayor of New Orleans. He knows the city. He knows the danger. He knows that during Hurricane Georges in 1998, the use of the Superdome was a disaster and fully two-thirds of the residents never got out of the city. Nothing was done. He declared a mandatory evacuation only 24 hours before Hurricane Katrina hit. He did not even declare a voluntary evacuation until the day before that, at 5 p.m. At that time, he explained that he needed to study his legal authority to call a mandatory evacuation and was hesitating to do so lest the city be sued by hotels and other businesses.

2. The Louisiana governor. It's her job to call up the National Guard and get it to where it has to go. Where the Guard was in the first few days is a mystery. Indeed, she issued an authorization for the National Guard to commandeer school buses to evacuate people on Wednesday afternoon -- more than two days after the hurricane hit and after much of the fleet had already drowned in its parking lots.

3. The head of FEMA. Late, slow and in way over his head. On Thursday he says on national television that he didn't even know there were people in the Convention Center, when anybody watching television could see them there destitute and desperate. Maybe in his vast bureaucracy he can assign three 20-year-olds to watch cable news and give him updates every hour on what in hell is going on.

4. The president. Late, slow and simply out of tune with the urgency and magnitude of the disaster. The second he heard that the levees had been breached in New Orleans, he should have canceled his schedule and addressed the country on national television to mobilize it both emotionally and physically to assist in the disaster. His flyover on the way to Washington was the worst possible symbolism. And his Friday visit was so tone-deaf and politically disastrous that he had to fly back three days later.

5. Congress. Now as always playing holier-than-thou. Perhaps it might ask itself who created the Department of Homeland Security in the first place. The congressional response to all crises is the same -- rearrange the bureaucratic boxes, but be sure to add one extra layer. The last four years of DHS have been spent principally on bureaucratic reorganization (and real estate) instead of, say, a workable plan for as predictable a disaster as a Gulf Coast hurricane.

6. The American people. They have made it impossible for any politician to make any responsible energy policy over the last 30 years -- but that is a column for another day. Now is not the time for constructive suggestions. Now is the time for blame, recriminations and sheer astonishment. Mayor Nagin has announced that, as bodies are still being found and as a public health catastrophe descends upon the city, he is sending 60 percent of his cops on city funds for a little R&R, mostly to Vegas hotels. Asked if it was appropriate to party in these circumstances, he responded: ``New Orleans is a party town. Get over it.''

©2005 Washington Post Writers Group

Sunday, August 28, 2005


Just a picture of your humble correspondent (the one on the left) and his pal on our recent summer vacation in Maine. Posted by Picasa

Friday, August 19, 2005

Cindy Sheehan. Feel Free to Speak, but You Don't Know Squat About Geopolitics or Fighting Islamo-Fascists

I'm sorry for her loss, and she should certainly has the right to express her thoughts, but how can anyone take her seriously as an Iraq War (or War on Terrorism) critic?

All of the "Peace" protesters certainly express a grand wish. Peace on earth would be a wonderful thing for all. But, Peace does not necessarily involve other grand notions, such as freedom, democracy, equality, etc. Saddam Hussein's Iraq could be considered "peaceful," but was that fact comforting for the hundreds of thousands (at least) who were executed and brutalized by his regime during his reign? Was the "peace" that existed comforting for the slaves held by Americans before our nation's Civil War? Pre-war Nazi Germany? Do you think the Jews and Gypsys were pleased that their country was not yet at war?

And, isn't it odd that many of these "Peace" protesters today (who incidentally, include and are often led by the "Peace" protesters of the post-Vietnam Cold-War era), often celebrate horrible tyrants who's only virtue seems to be that they are enemies of the American Government? (Leaders such as Castro in Cuba and Stalin in the U.S.S.R.?)

When these people are asked how it's possible to compare the most free and humane nation on earth (us), with our "rivals" abroad, we are told that such comparisons are meaningless, since we hold ourselves to a higher standard. While it's true that we do, isn't that proof our our decency and moral leadership?

Don't call this a fascist country or call Bush a murderer, unless you are arrested by the secret police and tortured for doing so. Since this will never happen, your hyperbole can't be considered serious and even though you deserve prayers and compassion for your loss, your politics are pathetic and foolish.

Leave the Global War on Terrorism to serious people who understand that we are the good guys and that we're fighting the bad guys. This fight will determine whether our nation will continue to exist and permit future "Cindy Sheehans" to spew their ignorance and absurdities.

Friday, July 22, 2005

Sorry I've Been Gone. Are You?

Well, I've been a very bad boy-blogger. I've left you all high and dry for a while now. First I will apologize, as I hate when bloggers do that.

Second, let me explain. Nothing to revelatory (is that a word?), it's just that I had a terrible summer cold a couple of weeks ago, and then I was away with the family for a week, and then I had to to try and catch up with work and life over this past week.

Did I do it? Am I back? Almost.

I'm hoping to add a few post this weekend on the vacation, my hunt for a new car, and a few Supreme Court stories floating around the last couple of weeks. And, maybe even a mention of the Rove silliness.

So, until then, ciao!

Friday, July 01, 2005


Tonight's Screen Shot. Isn't this a beautiful and calming theme? Posted by Picasa