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    April 28

    Torture American Style

    Here's an Associated Press story I just came across.

     

    It appears that an Al-Queda explosives trainer who had his hand mangled in a land-mine in Afghanistan finds the facilities at Guantanamo ill-suited for his unique needs:

    Sufyian Barhoumi, who lost four fingers and damaged his thumb in a land mine explosion in Afghanistan, said he struggles to use the sink and toilet in the prison's Camp Five. He also said air conditioning and the loss of outdoor recreation time has worsened the pain in his hand.

     

    To emphasize his point, the detainee removed a gauze wrap from his damaged left hand, keeping it uncovered for most of the 50 minutes he spent testifying from the witness stand.

     

    “My bones, they hurt every time I use the button (to operate the toilet),” he said. “It causes me a lot of pain.”

    What's this?  We don't have handicaped facilities at Guantanamo?  Where's Ted Kennedy when you need him to correct this great social injustice?  It's the least we can do for someone who likes to play with explosives targeted for civilians.  

    This reminds me of other allegations of torture, like this one from Guantanamo who says he was exposed to loud music, suggestive looks from females, and a guard who ate his peanut butter sandwhich "right in front of him".

    That's outrageous!  If I want to be tortured I have to go all the way across the Hudson and hang out with George Clooney at Scores and pay an exhorbitant cover charge.  Granted the food is much better, but one girl drank my Tequila shot right in front of me! 

    April 27

    Democrats For Leaks

    Powerline observes that 56 Democrats voted against an admendment criticizing illegal disclosures of classified information:
    ...56 Democrats voted against the amendment, even though it was directed specifically against "unauthorized disclosures of classified information contrary to law and voluntary secrecy agreements." So a leak had to be unauthorized and illegal to fall within the amendment's condemnation.
    That's just amazing.  In the wake of a CIA official (with deep Democrat and Joe Wilson ties) being fired for illegally disclosing classified information, they can't bring themselves to comdemn illegal activity.  Here is the text of what they voted against:
    1. The Supreme Court has unequivocally recognized that the Constitution vests the President with the authority to protect national security information as head of the Executive Branch and as Commander-in-Chief;

    2. The Supreme Court has recognized a compelling government interest in withholding national security information from unauthorized persons;

    3. The Supreme Court has recognized that secrecy agreements for government employees are a reasonable means for protecting this vital interest;

    4. The Supreme Court has noted that "It should be obvious that no one has a 'right' to a security clearance";

    5. Unauthorized disclosures are most damaging when they have the potential to compromise intelligence sources and methods and ongoing intelligence operations;

    6. Potential unauthorized disclosures of classified information have impeded relationships with foreign intelligence services and the effectiveness of the Global War on Terrorism;

    7. Media Corporations and Journalists have improperly profited financially from publishing purported unauthorized disclosures of classified information;

    Therefore, it is the Sense of Congress that the President should utilize his constitutional authority to the fullest practicable extent, where appropriate, to classify and protect national security information, and to take effective action against persons who commit unauthorized disclosures of classified information contrary to law and voluntary secrecy agreements.

    What is also more revealing is how the media is treating Mary McCarthy more like a whistleblower than someone disclosing American secrets.  John Kerry can always be relied upon to demonstrate his ignorant duplicity by explaining that while he is against illegal leaks, he is glad she "told the truth" -- even though the New York Times admits no one can find evidence of these secret prisions, which raises an interesting question:  is it possible that MAry McCarthy fell victim to a sting -- falling for planted information in the wake of previous leaks?  That would make Dana Priest's Pulitzer Prize for writing about leaked information even more of a joke that it already is. 

    Back in December, before we knew about Mary McCarthy, John Hinderaker wrote about the CIA's secret war last December in Leaking at All Costs.

    April 25

    Hot Air

    Nice weather + good blogs = less reasons for me to blog.
     
    Michelle Malkin has just launched a new site called Hot Air.  Each day she has a new video segment where she quickly runs through the hot topics on the blogosphere.  There are some good posts about CIA leaker Mary Mcarthy's connection to high-profile Democrats (National Review's Corner has been all over this as well).
     
    Also for humor, check out the Hot Air post on Cynthia McKinney, where she explains to a local TV crew that they are not allowed to use anything she says unless she is seated.  I knew Congress gives a lot of perks to its members, but I did not realize that they could copyright all of their utterances.
     
     
    April 17

    A War Worth Winning

    A friend of mine brought to my attention this essay and solicited comments.  My response is below:
     

    I would take issue with several finer points, but I think the main premise -- that we are in a war and that it is a war we must win -- is correct.

     

    I found it odd that the title was "a different spin on the Iraq war".  It did not seem like a different spin to me, but then again I don't rely on CNN or the New York Times for my information.  That would be kind of like limiting my knowledge of theology to Marilyn Manson's Bible studies (as entertaining as they might be).

     

    Too be honest I've read many articles over the years that I think have made these points much more effectively and accurately than below.  So many articles -- not sure where to start, but this one from Commentary Magazine and this one from Victor Davis Hanson.  This article by Gary Rosen goes deep into foreign policy but ends with this:

    Mere cooperation among states is no promise of peace and security when what goes on within states, large and small, has assumed such potentially lethal proportions. In this respect, as President Bush correctly observed in his June 2004 speech at the Air Force Academy, realism has proved a most unrealistic guide to foreign policy.

     

    None of this makes it easier—or, in every instance, practical—to put freedom “on the march,” in Bush’s phrase. But our predicament leaves few other options, and we will never discover the right combination of “carrots and sticks” for the job if, for fear of offending our friends, we resign ourselves to a status quo that nurtures our enemies.

    Some feel instinctively uneasy about "American arrogance" (or in some cases self-loathing), but the context of history is a wonderful remedy.  Once upon a time there was a very unpopular war -- there were hundreds of thousands of casualties and draft riots in New York.  The President was not expected to be re-elected under these circumstances, but he was and perhaps the Union was saved as a result by President Lincoln's convictions and perseverance.  Wars are always messy and never go as planned.  But so far over 50 million people have been liberated from tyrannical regimes which tortured and killed dissidents (or infidels) and gave shelter to and perhaps even collaborated with terrorists.  We can debate if the war is moral, but there have certainly been significant accomplishments. 

     

    Speaking of casualties -- and certainly not to make light of them -- so far there have been 2,358 US casualties in Iraq over three years of combat..  Between 1983 and 1996 an average of 1,286 American servicemen were killed by accidents each year -- more than double the rate of casualties in Iraq.  The purpose here is not to make light of the casualties but to provide context to the never ending drumbeat of the body count in the news.

     

    And on top of all this the information coming out of Project Harmony as of late has been rather revealing.  Only a small number of documents have been translated thus far, but the body of evidence is growing daily that Iraqi leaders were not only transporting WMD (apparently chemical munitions) right up to the invasion, but also intended to strike at unspecified Western targets outside of Iraq.  We also just learned that over 8,000 terrorists were trained at Saddams's training camps between 1999 and 2002 and US intelligence believes that many of these are the "foreign fighters" that have come back into Iraq with RPGs and IEDs.  Not to mention that the camp at Salman Pak which featured a large commercial airliner where hijacking was allegedly practiced. Too soon to draw definitive conclusions, but the information that is first now slowly starting to trickle out .  Bob Kerry a leading Democrat on the 9-11 commission said just 2 weeks ago that the commission's findings should be reconsidered as a result of this new evidence.  Israeli intelligence still adamantly believes that the WMD was moved to Syria days before the invasion.

     

    Also worth noting that this essay was written before the riots in France last year (not this month's protests on the CPE).  As Mark Steyn points out it may already be too late for Europe. 

     

    Wow.  Sorry this is so verbose.  Every time I finish a paragraph a new thought enters my mind.  Anyways that's my $0.02.

    Conservative Books Can Lead to Sexual Harassment

    ...charges.
     
    An Ohio State University librarian is being charged with sexual harassment after recommending conservative books to students.  David French of the Allied Defense Fund argues:
    “The OSU Mansfield faculty is attempting to label a librarian as a ‘sexual harasser’ because they disagree with his book suggestions,” said French.  “It is astonishing that an entire faculty would vote to launch a sexual harassment investigation because a librarian offered book suggestions in a committee whose purpose was to solicit such suggestions.”
    The school's web site includes the following statement on diversity:
    “…we celebrate and learn from our diversity and we value individual differences. Academic freedom is defended within an environment of civility, tolerance, and mutual respect.”
    Mr. Horowitz, please call your office.

    "Republicans Hate Latinos"

    That was the headline on the front page of the Arizona Star this past Friday in bright red letters:
    'Republicans Hate Latinos'' read the headline on Friday's front-page in red, all-capital letters. No attribution. Just stated as fact.
     
    That quote has been in the news since labor activist Dolores Huerta used the phrase in an April 3 speech at Tucson High School. The statement appeared as a quotation above four photos, including one of Huerta.
     
    Yet in the Star's presentation, the quote was not attributed, instead presented as fact and in eye-catching red.
     

    New York Times: Ignorant or Manipulative?

    The debate continues.  Is the New York Times really that clueless or do they just aim to decieve.
     
    The latest example is in this New York Times Editorial which opines:
    "Even a president cannot wave a wand and announce that an intelligence report is declassified."
    When you're done laughing, Powerline has more.

    Bush Derangement Syndrome: Online and Wired

    The Washington Post has a rather enlightening article on liberal bloggers who confess to being "insane with rage and grief".
     
    I had many thoughts as I was reading it yesterday, but am too tired to remember any of them at the moment.  But it really is amazing.
     
    I truly beleive that there is a real psychological issue at play here.  Everyone is entitled to their own unique preferences and perspectives and this kind of diversity of thinking is a wonderful thing.  But how much intelletual honesty is left when people reach the point that they can't discuss Goerge W. Bush without involving an expletive or crude remark?
     
    Listen to this blogger explain how she was once a well-balanced bleeding-heart liberal when George W. Bush came along and drove her into an insane rage:
    She signed petitions. She boycotted veal. She canvassed for Greenpeace. She donated to Planned Parenthood. She read the Nation, the New Yorker, the Utne Reader and Mother Jones. She agonized over low wages for overseas workers every time she bought a $40 leather purse.

    Then George W. Bush was elected. Then came 9/11, Afghanistan, Iraq, Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib, the Patriot Act, secret prisons, domestic eavesdropping, the revamping of the Supreme Court, and the thought "It has come to the point where the worst people on Earth are running the Earth." And now, "I have become one of those people with all the bumper stickers on their car," she says. "I am this close to being one of those muttering people pushing a cart.

    "I'm insane with rage and grief.

    "But I also feel more connected than I ever have."

     

    Maryscott O'Connor says her liberal Web log, My Left Wing, is

    It's worth noting that 9-11, Afghanistan and "domestic eavesdropping" are among the events that pushed her over the edge.  Now I can understand that many are divided over Iraq, but 9-11 and Afghanistan?  Are they suggesting that her response to 9-11 was to blame America because we brought it on ourselves, and toppling the Taliban and stopping the regular executions on the soccer field were watershed events that pushed her over the edge of sanity?  Also notice that the post mentions "domestic eavesdropping" when FISA judges determined that it was clearly international and almost certainly legal.  But I digress....
     
    It seems that the Internet is helping these people to feed their psychosis by creating an alternate-reality with other inmates.  It's almost like they are suffering from Tourette syndrome and Bush Derangement Syndrome at the same time.  Again I'm all for a diversity of opinion but read the whole article and tell me that this liberal blogger -- who posts on the most popular liberal blog --  is in any position to be intellectually honest about anything to do with the Bush Administration.
     
    The author tries to suggest that it was conservatives like Newt Gingrich who drove her to this rage by their "inflamatory rehtoric".  Paul from Powerline handliy debunks the Post's conclusions here.  Some conservatives might have made crude jokes regarding Clinton's sexual escapades, but nothing close to the crudeness, profanity and fantasising about killing the President which has become common place behavior among liberals.  But of course this is all the fault of "inflamatory rhetoric" by conservatives. 
     
    This almost reminds me in a way of how Christians are labeled as hatemongers by many liberals.  The truth of the matter is that Christ spoke of and demonstrated compassion to all sinners -- including a prostitute.  In other words, while Christianity might consider homosexuality a sin, Christianity demands it's followers to express compassion to all sinners (in Islam, homosexuality would merely require a beheading).
     
    So liberals keep painting Chrsitians as intolerant hatemongers and hateful people because they need to fuel their agenda and justify their rage, much like the blogger in the article.  They don't want to understand Christianity or Constitutional Law -- they want to be angry and to be able to justify it.  Some of then will even try to embrace Islamic terrorists as "freedom fighters" while denouncing Christians as Nazi hatemongers. 
     
    There are liberals who can articulate their positions without profanity or crudeness (I think most of them are professors or news journalists).  Their voices however seem to be increasingly drowned out by the deranged left -- don't even bother trying to have a substantive discussion or debate with members from this group.
     
    UPDATE:  A bit of a tangent but there is a relatively new book out called American Theocracy which attempts to make the case that Christianity among our leaders is ruining everything.  The New York Times says it
    "presents a nightmarish vision of ideological extremism, catastrophic fiscal irresponsibility, rampant greed and dangerous shortsightedness.".
     
    Many liberals will flock to this book, looking to find more reasons to justify their hated of Bush, Christianity or both.  However, I find it amusing that Democrats (James Carville and Paul Begala) say that they need to invoke Christianity and the Bible more often (perhaps to relate to all those unrefined and uneducated red staters).  Some people, specifically John Kerry -- would be advised not to attempt this approach.
     
    I haven't read American Theocracy so it wouldn't be fair of me to try to debunk it at the moment (some sugggestions made by the book are simply absurd), but I think that I might add it to my reading list. 
    April 16

    Missouri Skies

    If I had unlimited time and resources, photography and astronomy would be among my 4,832 hobbies (the same goes for blogging -- too many thoughts and interests and not enough time).
     
    In any case, the pictures on this site are breathtaking.  Enjoy!
    April 10

    What Would Mexico Do?

    If you only get to read one article on immigration, let it be this one.
     
    And one more thing.  I'm sick and tired of hearing the media refer to these demonstrations as "immigration rights" rallies.  Most Americans including myself support immigration rights -- what we oppose is illegal immigrants who sneak across our borders, some with criminal backgrounds, and use our public schools, hospitals and don't pay taxes.
     
    What is a country without borders?
     
    If we open the borders to a population that has no intention of assimilating into American culture -- and don't check them for diseases or criminal backgrounds along the way -- why even bother having borders at all?
     
    Of course the Democrats think this is a great idea.  Never mind that only they can provide "Real Security".  Schute, they even want to make sure aliens convicted of felonies can still vote.
     
    Michelle Malkin has quite a collection of pictures from demonstrations -- pictures you won't see in MSM coverage.
     
    Powerline has a poll on the immigration issue.  I would support efforts to widen the "immigration highway" and facilitate the process towards legal immingration, but not amnesty.  Apparently many still haven't learned from the 80's. 
    April 09

    Week in Review

    Shhh!  Don't tell anyone but the economy is on fire.  Unemployment is down to 4.7% -- which is the lowest in 4.5 years and is statstical full employment.  Compare that to the double digit unemployment plaguing France and Germany.  Senator John Kerry's "worst economy since Herbert Hoover" line during the 2004 Presidential campaign was ridiculous then, but even more so today  (for a more current Kerry-chuckler click here).
     
    Of course you probably did not hear any of this good economic news because the media is careful to filter only information that paints the Bush Administration in an unfavorable light.  The media focused their attention on what they played as Bush leaking classified information, with many articles in major newspapers referring to him  as "leaker in chief".  Below is today's headline at MSNBC:
     
     
    Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post has a rundown on several major articles on the matter, including this one from the New York Times: 

    "The testimony, cited in a court filing by the government late Wednesday, provides the first indication that Mr. Bush, who has long assailed leaks of classified information as a national security threat, played a direct role in the disclosure of the intelligence report on Iraq at a moment that the White House was trying to defend itself against charges that it had inflated the case against Saddam Hussein," says the New York Times .

    "If Mr. Libby's account is accurate, it also involves Mr. Bush directly in the swirl of events surrounding the disclosure of the identity of an undercover C.I.A. officer."

     
    The media in all things related to the Bush Administration is either ignorant or biased -- either way they can't be trusted. 
     
    First of all, which branch of government does the Constitution grant the authority to classify and declassify information?  Why the Executive of course.  The President can legally declassify information at will -- which is a far cry from "leaking classified intelligence". 
     
    As Andrew McCarty points out in a must-read article, the Clinton Administration did the same thing after its bombing of the Shifa phramacetical factory in Sudan.  Faced with criticism, the Clinton Administration revealed classified information in an effort to justify their actions. 
     
    President Bush was facing a challenege from Joe Wilson on the Iraq-Niger-uranium claim.  The President authorized Libby to disclose what would have been a preview of the NIE to counter these claims by Joe Wilson -- who was found by even a bi-partisan Senate committee to be untrustworthy -- which is perhaps the most polite way to describe Wilson's integrity.
     
    Today's Washington Post has a story on the matter which leads as follows:

    As he drew back the curtain this week on the evidence against Vice President Cheney's former top aide, Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald for the first time described a "concerted action" by "multiple people in the White House" -- using classified information -- to "discredit, punish or seek revenge against" a critic of President Bush's war in Iraq.

    Bluntly and repeatedly, Fitzgerald placed Cheney at the center of that campaign. Citing grand jury testimony from the vice president's former chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Fitzgerald fingered Cheney as the first to voice a line of attack that at least three White House officials would soon deploy against former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV.

    And where's the crime?  It is worth noting that Fitzgerald has not charged anyone with leaking classified intelligence.  Indeed it could not even be demonstrated that Valerie Plame was "outed" as had been suggested (read my lengthy post from last year, The Idiot's Guide to PlameGate for more on this).  The media wants us to think that for the White House to reveal classified information in order to defend itself from significant criticism from a charlatan is somehow a crime. 
     
    As Andrew McCarthy says, this is much ado about nothing.  Thus we can expect several weeks of front page articles on matter so that the media can continue to misinform and drag Bush through the mud.
     
    In other news of the week, Investors Business Daily has a must-read summary of what we know so far about Saddam's documents.  I came across this link from Powerline, where John amusingly wondered out loud if the Saddam documents and tapes were "leaked".
     
    UPDATE:  Earlier in the week Scott Johnson at Powerline commented extensively on the media's hysteria over the "leaks".
     
    April 05

    Democrats Run Congress Like a Plantation

    I've wanted to make some more observations on the Cynthia McKinney episode -- specifically in reference to statements made by those defending her claims of racism.  But due to time constraints just one quick observation for now.  The following is from an article in the Congessional paper, The Hill:

    She and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) no longer speak, not even to exchange greetings when encountering each other in the Capitol hallways, said two House Democratic sources. Pelosi twice turned down McKinney’s request to regain her seniority after she was defeated and then reelected in 2002 and 2004. McKinney first came to Congress in 1992.

    I seem to recall a certain Senator from New York claiming that it was Republicans who run congress "like a plantation" to a black audience on MLK day.  Again, where are the minorities that have been elevated to leadership positions in the Democratic party? 

    April 03

    Reconcile This!

    In today's episode of Reconcile This!, we bring you two news articles that appear on the same day and see if you can figure out which one is more accurate:
     
    Exhibit A:  Sex-filled media linked to promiscuity
     
    This article appeared today on MSNBC, and claims: 
    Sexually charged music, magazines, TV and movies push youngsters into intercourse at an earlier age, perhaps by acting as kind of virtual peer that tells them everyone else is doing it, a study said on Monday.

    “This is the first time we’ve shown that the more kids are exposed to sex in media the earlier they have sex,” said Jane Brown of the University of North Carolina, chief author of the report.

    The subtitle of this article specfically mentions movies:  "Sexual content in music, movies, TV can lead to intercourse at younger age"

    Exhibit B:  "Anything that is erotic has been banned in the United States"

    That was director Paul Verhoeven, who directed "Basic Instinct" and "Showgirls", which appeared in an article discussing Basic Instinct 2's box-office failure:

    "Anything that is erotic has been banned in the United States," said the Dutch native. "Look at the people at the top (of the government). We are living under a government that is constantly hammering out Christian values. And Christianity and sex have never been good friends."

    The same article also quotes a script writer Nicholas Meyer -- who was a writer for "Fatal Attraction:

    "We're in a big puritanical mode," he said. "Now, it's like the McCarthy era, except it's not 'Are you a communist?' but 'Have you ever put sex in a movie?'"

    Yes, these articles did appear on the same day.  In the same country.  In the same universe.

    If you're having difficulty determing which article is more accurate, here's a hint:

    Those who suffer from Bush Derangement Syndrome are not known for their intellectual honesty...

    Cynthia McKinney in particular comes to mind.

    UPDATE: 

    Just fired up my RSS reader and I see that Powerline found Verhoeven's and Meyer's comments profoundly amusing as well.