Archive for June, 2006

June 27th 2006

D.C.’s Latest Gay Marriage?

“It seems to be a marriage of convenience.”

That’s former Kerry strategist Dan Payne on the strange bedfellow-ing of John (“I never found a position I couldn’t flip”) Kerry and Russ (“Hey! I’m the only guy who voted against the Patriot Act!”) Feingold.

Is it love? No, worse! It’s peace, or their half-baked approach to peace, which is sure to cause more war and suffering:

Notwithstanding their different histories, Sens. John Kerry and Russ Feingold joined forces last week to push a proposal that would have required troops to leave Iraq by July of next year.

With both Kerry and Feingold positioning themselves for 2008 presidential runs, it’s an alliance made in heaven for the GOP. Says RNC spokeswoman Ann Marie Hauser:

Whether it’s John Kerry’s indecisiveness or Russ Feingold’s extremism, Democrats across the board support an approach that results in surrendering to our enemy. But as 2008 looms, it is interesting to watch these two senators trip over each other as they rush to the far left of their party.

Don’t worry. We know one of them will flop back to the middle again. Then back to the far left. Then ….

Source: SacBee
Related Tags: , , , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 27th 2006

Sign Me Up

I was happy to see this, from the SacBee:

President Bush’s communications director is stepping down to move to New York City with her husband, the White House announced Tuesday.

Nicolle Wallace has been in a long-distance marriage ever since her husband, Mark, became United Nations ambassador for management and reform [an equally impossible job, eh?] this spring. Wallace decided to stay temporarily in Washington, but this Friday she is leaving her job overseeing White House press strategy.

I wish Wallace well; Lord knows, she had a tough job. But Bush’s media strategy has been pathetic and her departure opens the door, hopefully, for someone who will do a much, much better job.

Related Tags: , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 27th 2006

Kids! We Want To Protect And Molest You!

Just because public schools are such easy targets doesn’t mean we shouldn’t continue to attack their inefficiency, lame political correctness and downright stupidity. Two stories caught my eye recently that make it an obligation to fire another couple shots.

The first is in USAToday and says that to some schoolmarms, the children on the right are doing something that’s nothing more than high-risk behavior:

Some traditional childhood games are disappearing from school playgrounds because educators say they’re dangerous.

Elementary schools in Cheyenne, Wyo., and Spokane, Wash., banned tag at recess this year. Others, including a suburban Charleston, S.C., school, dumped contact sports such as soccer and touch football.

In other cities, including Wichita; San Jose, Calif.; Beaverton, Ore.; and Rancho Santa Fe., Calif., schools took similar actions earlier. …

… [S]everal experts, including Donna Thompson of the National Program for Playground Safety, verify the trend. Dodge ball has been out at some schools for years, but banning games such as tag and soccer is a newer development.

“It’s happening more,” Thompson says. Educators worry about “kids running into one another” and getting hurt, she says.

How hurt? Baby got a boo-boo? How often? Legions of little ones on life support?

Despite the obvious — our increasingly heavy kids should be encouraged to excercise more, not less — this attack on physical games probably has as less to do with safety than with educators’ — especially the PhD professional education administrators’ — current abhorence of competition and superiority/inferiority issues.

Teachers didn’t go into teaching because they sought a competitive lifestyle. And as the butt of the “those that do, do; those that can’t, teach” jokes, they’re not big fans of superiority/inferiority comparisons (even though Americans still admire teachers on the whole) (but when was the last time you saw a survey saying Americans respect school administrators?). So they take it out on the kids, depriving them of valuable skill-building, confidence-building, muscle-building fun.

Come to think of it, it might be that last word that’s sticking in the educators’ craw.

The second article is much more troubling. Appearing originally in Crisis Magazine and just reprinted in Focus on the Family’s Citizen (sorry, I can’t find the article on line yet),Francis X. Maier’s look at child molestation in schools is a condemnation of legislatures, school boards and trial attorneys.

The article makes a simple point: There’s more sexual abuse in public schools than in Catholic schools, but because legislatures have set low damage limits to protect public schools, shark litigators take their lawsuits elsewhere.

A 2005 Associated Press report noted that in some states, sexual abuse is now the main reason public school teachers lose their licenses. A 1999 probe by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette … found that during the 1990s, “by far the most common reason for teacher discipline” in Pennsylvania “was sex-related offences….” In January 2006, New York City’s special-schools investigator Richard Condon reportede that 250 public school teacher misconduct cases had been substantiated in his jurisdiction alone during 2005. Of these, 92 confirmed cases involved sexual misconduct …

Overall, 3 million public school students now in public schools will be the targets of sexual exploitation by a public school employee by the 11th grade, the article says. Worse, when a bad apple is found, often he or she is simply let go, often with a recommendation, to teach again elsewhere.

But when was the last time you heard a story of a class action lawsuit against a public school board for allowing this to continue? Never. That’s because most states limit damage awards to a low amount, like $150,000 — and that doesn’t make justice worth the while of the likes of John Edwards.

Maier sums up by focusing on the excuses offered for this sick system:

Our favorite is the excuse that opening public schools to litigation might “bankrupt” them — as if bankrupting Catholic schools, charities and parishes were OK. We’ve even heard the bizarre claim that churches and other nonprofits should be held to a “higher standard” because of their tax-exempt status. But this ignores the fact that governments grant tax exemption precisely for the benefit of the communities they govern and to reduce their own expenses. It implies that the abuse of a minor by a priest is somehow more loathsome simply because his parish gets a tax break, and that public school districts should be held less accountable because we pay taxes to support them.

Besides, when was the last time a public school filed a tax return? If the church should be held to a higher standard, so then should schools.

It’s too bad this article only appeared in a Catholic journal then a Christian journal. The story deserves exposure in pubs like the New York Times or Washington Post. But they’re too busy destroying our security to protect our kids, and too blind to see that readers would find an expose on molestation in public schools far more interesting and helpful than their latest salvo against the Bush administration and the War on Terror.

Related Tags: , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 26th 2006

Mr. Flip, Meet Mr. Flop

“I fear that in the run-up to the 2004 election, the administration is considering what is tantamount to a cut-and-run strategy. Their sudden embrace of accelerated Iraqification and American troop withdrawal dates, without adequate stability, is an invitation to failure. The hard work of rebuilding Iraq must not be dictated by the schedule of the next American election… [It] would be a disaster and a disgraceful betrayal of principle to speed up the process simply to lay the groundwork for a politically expedient withdrawal of American troops. That could risk the hijacking of Iraq by terrorist groups and former Ba’athists”

That’s none other than today’s foremost proponent of fixed timetables, Sen. John Kerry, speaking to the Council on Foreign Relations in December 2003.

Related Tags: , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 26th 2006

Pelicans Under The Influence

Nearby Laguna Beach is always good for a tale or two, but this is one of the best … and stick with it because there’s an interesting tidbit at the end:

Four pelicans suspected of being drunk on sea algae were being tested at a Southern California wildlife center Saturday after one of them crashed headlong into a car.

Three of the California brown pelicans were found wandering dazed in the streets of Laguna Beach after another pelican struck a vehicle’s windshield on a nearby coast road.

It suffered internal injuries and a long gash in its pouch and was undergoing toxicology tests.

Officials at the Wildlife Care Center said the seabirds may have been under the influence of algae in the ocean that can produce domoic acid poisoning when eaten. (Reuters)

The wealth of America always amazes me, particularly when it is showered on our pets and wildlife. But that’s not the promised tidbit. Here it is:

Shellfish tainted with domoic acid was thought to be the culprit behind a 1961 attack of seabirds on people and cars in the oceanside California town of Capitola that inspired Alfred Hitchcock’s horror movie “The Birds.”

They didn’t teach me that in college … and I took a class, “Auteurship and the Cinema,” on Hitchcock and Wells. Daddy’s money well spent.


Birds photo: Metroactive
Related Tags: , , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 26th 2006

Three Parts Hatred, One Part Ignorance

Here’s a question worth pondering:

Why do they hate us?

Not the Islamofascists; not the anti-globalization zealots. No; why do the New York Times and its sisters at the top of the American media heap hate us? John Barrone addresses the question today on Real Clear Politics, in light of Friday’s NYT article revealing banking surveillance against the financers of terror, and today’s letter from exec editor Bill Keller explaining (sort of) why NYT ran with the story.

Why do they hate us? Why does the Times print stories that put America more at risk of attack? They say that these surveillance programs are subject to abuse, but give no reason to believe that this concern is anything but theoretical. We have a press that is at war with an administration, while our country is at war against merciless enemies. The Times is acting like an adolescent kicking the shins of its parents, hoping to make them hurt while confident of remaining safe under their roof. But how safe will we remain when our protection depends on the Times?

Having read Keller’s letter, which first treats us as elementary school students, then as fools, I see that NYT’s leadership (1) saw the risk in running the story, (2) understood that the program was legal and (3) realized it was beneficial in protecting America. They also didn’t seem to think running the story would make much difference, since bankers were subpoenaed for the info anyway.

So they’re explaining their actions with three parts of Bush hatred and one part ignorance of the real world. Had Keller and his cohorts ever had any experience outside elite colleges and elite newsrooms — say, they had been a soldier, or even a businessman — he would never have written this:

Our default position — our job — is to publish information if we are convinced it is fair and accurate, and our biggest failures have generally been when we failed to dig deep enough or to report fully enough.

Missing are the questions that drive the soldier: Does it support the mission? Does it make me safer? Missing is the question that drives the rest of the enlightened world: Does it do good?

Neither appear to be important to the executive editor of the New York Times.

hat-tip:
memorandum
Christo “art” from Gallery Brown
Related Tags: , , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 25th 2006

Iraq’s Dead: Don’t Count On The Count

Today’s LATimes story trumpeting its hard-fought quest for a war dead total in Iraq will no doubt be echoing throughout the big media for a couple days, sensationalist tripe that it is.

Do not let yourself fall prey to the clatter without reading Hinderaker’s excellent analysis at Power Line, which includes this:

The [LA] Times makes no effort to put its 50,000 number into any sort of context. Reading its article, one might get the impression that pre-2003 Iraq was the balloon-flying paradise so notoriously depicted by Michael Moore. A bit of research, however, offers evidence that the current level of violence is, sadly, nothing new.

In January 2003, two months before the coalition’s attack on Saddam’s regime began, John Burns wrote a chilling account of Saddam Hussein’s reign of terror in the New York Times. Burns’ article, titled “How Many People Has Saddam Killed?”, recounted some once-familiar numbers that seem to have been forgotten in the current media hysteria. Burns noted that Saddam was widely considered to be responsible for “a million dead Iraqis,” a number that included 500,000 killed in the war Saddam launched against Iran. Burns tried to estimate separately the number that were simply murdered:

Casualties from Iraq’s gulag are harder to estimate. Accounts collected by Western human rights groups from Iraqi émigrés and defectors have suggested that the number of those who have “disappeared” into the hands of the secret police, never to be heard from again, could be 200,000.

Hinderaker also recounts the Oil-for-Food dead so trumpted by pro-Saddam, pro-Islamist forces, and the dead of Abu Gharaib when it really was a place of torture, unlike what its role has been in occupied Iraq.

Balancing is so easy to do. Following a day after yesterday’s quick, biased dismissal of recent WMD finds, today’s LAT article evidences once again that paper’s commitment to being on the side of the enemy in this war.
hat-tip: memeorandum
photo: Michael Fumento
Related Tags: , , , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 25th 2006

IQ And GDP

Here’s a thought-provoker:

As a rough rule of thumb, an increase of 10 points in mean IQ results in a doubling of the per capita [Gross Domestic Product].

That’s the conclusion of the authors of the article “Exponential correlation of IQ and the wealth of nations” in the journal Intelligence. Think of it! Increase a nation’s IQ from just 90 to 100, and expect a doubling of its wealth.

The full abstract (you need to subscribe to read the entire article) is too complex by half for an ilnumerate like me:

Plots of mean IQ and per capita real Gross Domestic Product for groups of 81 and 185 nations, as collected by Lynn and Vanhanen, are best fitted by an exponential function of the form: GDP = a * 10b*(IQ), where a and b are empirical constants. Exponential fitting yields markedly higher correlation coefficients than either linear or quadratic. The implication of exponential fitting is that a given increment in IQ, anywhere along the IQ scale, results in a given percentage in GDP, rather than a given dollar increase as linear fitting would predict. As a rough rule of thumb, an increase of 10 points in mean IQ results in a doubling of the per capita GDP.

But the gist of it is this: Smart nations do better.

America is smart, but as Alvin Toffler explained recently in an interview with Dennis Prager, we’re smart in an early industrial revolution sort of way, training our kids to be good factory workers in factories that no longer exist. Add Lynn and Vanhanen’s equation to the long list of reasons why we must throw the rulers of our education system out and start over.

Islamic theocracies, on the other hand, are dumb and work hard to stay dumb. They only educate half their children, leaving the girls out, and the indoctrinate the boys with numbing Koranic teaching rather than inspire them to think. It has been so for so long that their economies are fiscal cesspools, relieved only by petrodollars in those nations lucky enough to sit over petro-pools.

Many Libs say we have to help the Muslim nations address their grievances regarding their sucky economies if we are to have peace. They don’t say it that way; it’s all income disparity and imperialism and captialist greed in Lib-lingo. But it boils down to having poorly educated people living in societies that repress imagination.

How can the Libs lobby for addressing Muslim grievances while at the same time lobbying to repress our own imaginations by declaring off limits so many interesting topics, like religion, creation, morality and even the war (as evidenced by recent school bans on camo or USMC clothing)?

hat-tip: Dissecting Leftism
photo: BBC
Related Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

June 24th 2006

LAT Close To Ignoring WMD Find

Saturday morning’s LATimes finally had mention of the declassified info on 500 WMD finds in Iraq. Here it is in its entirety:

U.S. Experts Say Arms Found Were Unstable

Hundreds of chemical weapons found in Iraq were produced before the 1991 Persian Gulf War and probably are so old they couldn’t be used as designed, U.S. intelligence officials said. A summary of a declassified intelligence report reduced this week said coalition forces had recovered about 500 munitions with mustard or sarin agents.

That’s it. Given the extreme bias evidenced by this coverage, I’m surprized the LAT even bothered to mention the number 500.

Share

No Comments yet »

June 24th 2006

Terrorist Killed; Terrorism Spreads

The Saudis killed six terrorists — described as “members of the deviant minority” — and injured a seventh in raids in Riyadh earlier today.

Arab News reports:

“The group was preparing a terrorist operation and its members were being tailed on the basis of intelligence service information.”

Saudi state television showed police removing several vehicles from the scene, some of them damaged in the clash, as officers carried away what appeared to be bags of evidence. Security sources said the militants were on the verge of launching unspecified attacks.

The ministry reported that the search of the property turned up boxes of documents and computers that were being used to communicate with others through the Internet. The two-story house was recently constructed in this residential neighborhood. Policemen at the scene later said they had seized a videotape showing that the group had been plotting to carry out a suicide bombing against a security target in Riyadh within the next two days.

Tough times for terrorists, but it hardly deters them. Moscow News reports that Chechen Islamist terroists have become much more radical since their leader, Aslan Maskhadov, was killed last year.

The most eye-catching move was the appointment of the rebel movement’s exiled ideologist, Movladi Udugov, as head of the newly-created “National Information Service for the State Defense Committee”.

“Udugov’s appointment to a high position while Akhmed Zakayev retains only the post of minister means just one thing: the radicals have won a victory,” said Chechen political analyst Murad Nashkhoyev. “However, it is Moscow itself that has untied the Chechen radicals’ hands by killing Maskhadov, the elected president, and rejecting negotiations with its opponents.”

Ill-conceived liberal desire to negotiate peace with Islamists aside, the article makes it clear there’s lots of terror ahead for the Caucus region, quoting a 23-year-old Chechen Muslim:

Russia is engaged in real terror not only against Muslims in Chechnya, but also against them in the whole of the North Caucasus. The same thing’s really going on everywhere: Muslims are being killed, detained under various invented pretexts, tortured, maimed, and humiliated. Men are afraid of growing beards because they can be accused of being Wahhabis [Islamic radicals], with all the consequences that can entail. Women are afraid of wearing headscarves for the same reason.

This is why a jihad is necessary, first and foremost the jihad of the sword — not only in Chechnya, but throughout the North Caucasus.

And not only for the North Caucasus, but for anyone who is so offensive as to brush up against the Islamist world. Dark times ahead ….

Related Tags: , , ,

Share

No Comments yet »

« Prev - Next »

With Obama winning the presidency by seven percent, we can't blame the media. Their laudatory coverage and refusal to extensively probe into Obama's background and [lack of] experience was at best responsible for five percent of his vote, the pundits tell us. Here is a compilation of over 100 significant instances of pro-Obama/anti-McCain bias during the 2008 campaign.

For all 'Media Bias 2008' – Click Here