Thursday, May 31, 2007
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Rosie in a Mouth Trap
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Revolution
(that was supposed to have solved all of our problems by now) can't manage
to do anything else and has pretty much made a complete and utter ballsup of
their victory and all that was supposed to do, to rescue the constitution
and the country and end the war just by quitting. And let's be clear on
that. They aren't talking winning. They're talking losing... already lost in
fact, and uh.... we're just gonna quit. And that's supposed to be a good
thing. Don't get me wrong. I hate the fact that we're there. I hate the fact
that our soldiers are being slaughtered over there and their parliament can
take a vacation! Hello! Our blood is buying you time to fix your country.
You don't have time for a vacation! So yeah, I hate that we're losing a
generation of brave people. It really breaks my heart. But we made the damn
mess. We have to fix it. Quitting may get you reelected (and that's all
you're trying to do, isn't it?), but just as with all liberal policies,
somebody else pays for it later. You can't take the easy way out and expect
it to really work. You don't have a plan for the war or the country. You
have a plan to get some power and keep it. That's it. Nothing more. And so
yes, how about immigration reform. Well that's a case where you can appeal
to your voters/slaves, take the easy way, PC way out... and actually take
the best course. And that's because this country has, for so long, ignored
the flood of illegal immigrants, primarily from Mexico, and now we've got a
problem that won't be solved by doing what we should do. Twelve million
illegal immigrants (each one insisting that they aren't criminals. Please
explain that to me. How do you break a law but not be a criminal?) are now a
part of our economy. We need them. And even if they weren't a large part of
our economy, the sheer logistics of forcibly removing twelve million illegal
(non-criminal!?) immigrants makes the idea impractical. Probably impossible.
We'd need all the troops back from both wars to go through every state in
the union to go house to house checking for paperwork that is probably
forged anyway, and marching the illegals back where they came from. It is
impossible. So the best we can do is offer them a good enough deal so that
they'll present themselves for documentation. Then they go on a program that
puts them on a path to legality. Citizenship? Hell no. My wife is from New
Zealand, and she is jumping through hoops just to get a work permit. No way
in hell some criminal gets any easy way to citizenship. Amnesty? Hell no.
You broke the law. Admit it. Why is it you can't say the word ILLEGAL?
Really, what we need to do is look at why millions of mexicans are streaming
across the border... with the aid of the Mexican government. As a country,
Mexico is ridiculously rich, but the government is so corrupt that the
people do not benefit from that until they're trying to leave. It's an
absolute crime, and they've demonstrated through successive administrations
that it doesn't matter who is in charge. Nothing will change. How in hell
they can complain about US immigration policy is beyond me. That's like
Hitler complaining about how easy it was invade France. The fact is that
what needs to happen is a complete militarization of the southern border,
and then a change in Mexico. Not another election that changes nothing, but
in fact a bloody bloody revolution that really changes the country. The
Mexican government does nothing whatsoever to discourage its people from
running away... and they won't, because they're getting rich from that mass
evacuation. Shame on you, Mexican government. And Viva La Raza!
Friday, May 11, 2007
Visitors....
Kapact
Wednesday, May 09, 2007
What? He can't be a bigot!!!
Here's something for anyone who thinks that any liberal is a saint, or that a black person... (oh! Excuse me! An "African American"!) Can't, by definition, be a bigot.... It all comes from CNN... I didn't write it. But you should read it.
NEW YORK (CNN) -- Civil rights activist Al Sharpton, who led the charge to have radio host Don Imus fired for making racially insensitive remarks, is now under fire for a comment about Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney's Mormon faith.
During a debate on religion and politics at the New York Public Library with atheist author Christopher Hitchens, Sharpton said, "As for the one Mormon running for office, those that really believe in God will defeat him anyway, so don't worry about that. That's a temporary situation."
On the campaign trail in Iowa Wednesday, Romney fired back, calling Sharpton's comment "terribly misguided." (Watch Romney call Sharpton's words 'bigoted' )
"It shows that bigotry still exists in some corners," Romney said. "I thought it was a most unfortunate comment to make."
Asked if he thought Sharpton is a bigot, the former Massachusetts governor said, "I don't know Rev. Sharpton. I doubt he is personally such a thing. But the comment was a comment which could be described as a bigoted comment.
"Perhaps he didn't mean it that way, but the way it came out was inappropriate and wrong."
Sharpton said his remarks were being taken out of context and that he was responding to an attack by Hitchens, who, he said, had charged that the Mormon Church supported segregation until the 1960s.
"In no way did I attack Mormons or the Mormon Church when I responded that other believers, not atheists, would vote against Mr. Romney for purely political reasons," Sharpton said in a written statement.
He also accused Romney's campaign of engaging in "a blatant effort to fabricate a controversy to help their lagging campaign."
Sharpton told The Associated Press that "[Mormons] don't believe in God the way I do, but, by definition, they believe in God."
Sharpton was licensed as a minister in the Church of God in Christ, a predominantly black Pentecostal denomination, at the age of 9, according to a biography on the Web site of his National Action Network. He became a Baptist in the 1980s.
His debate Monday with Hitchens -- who is on a tour promoting a new book that rejects God -- revolved around religion and politics. Minutes before Sharpton's controversial comment was made, the discussion turned toward the idea of a Mormon running for president, then moved to a conversation about the role of faith in politics.
Romney is a member of the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known informally as the Mormon Church. If elected, he would be the first Mormon to serve in the White House.
His religion has come up as an issue in the 2008 campaign because many conservative and evangelical Protestants, who make up an important constituency in the GOP base, do not consider Mormons to be Christians, because of their unique beliefs.
The LDS Church was founded in the 1830s by Joseph Smith -- revered by members as a prophet of God -- who taught that a new book of scripture, the Book of Mormon, had been revealed to him by an angel. Adherents eventually relocated to Utah in 1847, after Smith was killed by a mob in Illinois.
Some church leaders practiced plural marriage in the 19th century, but the church officially ended the practice in 1890 and has since excommunicated polygamists from its ranks.
The church has about 5 million adherents in the United States.
A CNN/Opinion Research Corporation poll last year found that 34 percent of Americans considered the LDS Church to be Christian, 35 percent did not and 31 percent were unsure. In a Gallup/USA Today poll in February, 72 percent of Americans said they would be comfortable voting for a Mormon for president, but 24 percent said they would not.
"I think it's sad, honestly," Republican strategist Ralph Reed said of the Sharpton controversy on CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360." "I don't think there's any place in politics for religious intolerance in any of its ugly forms.
"And I think if Gov. Romney took it that way, then whatever Al Sharpton meant, then I think the best thing to do and the most healing thing to do, so that we can have an uplifting dialogue about faith in the political and civic process, is for Rev. Sharpton to apologize."
Democratic strategist James Carville told Cooper he believes Sharpton when he says he didn't mean to disparage the Mormon faith.
"The main point here is that Mormons have served this country honorably and with integrity for a long, long time, and ... it would be a very big mistake not to vote for someone based on their faith -- Mormon faith or any other faith," Carville said.
Romney said Wednesday that he hears little concern about his religion from voters on the campaign trail.
"Overwhelmingly, the people I talk to believe that we elect a person to lead the nation not based on what church they go to, but based on their values and their vision," he said. "I received very little comment of the nature coming from Rev. Sharpton."
Tuesday, May 08, 2007
Hello New Zealand?
My relationship with that country has been at times a bit edgy, but I really
love that country and it's people. For those of you silent multitudes out
there who don't know, I'm an American married to a Kiwi lady. I was down
there for almost three years, Sadly for me, it was when America invaded
Iraq. And at the time, a girl I worked with asked me if I hated all Iraqis.
I said I didn't know them, so how could I hate them? I said it was a
decision by my government, really for the purpose of taking out a murderous
dictator and freeing the Iraqi people. She seemed to understand that. But
then there were idiots who threw food at me and swore at me... because of my
accent. My accent. Others backed me up in public and demanded to know how I
voted. There was even a Pastor who accepted an invitation into my home
before launching into a tirade against America and Americans. This was a
religious man. Do you see what I'm saying? I invited the man into my
home.... gave him a cup of coffee and a biscuit just so he could insult me
and my country. I even tried to agree with him, just to settle him down. All
it did was spur him on. And this enlightened, laid back bastion of liberal
love and tolerance treated me like a criminal based upon nothing but my
accent. And even so, I met lots of really nice people, and I'd love to go
back there. But I don't hear from my friends there. C'mon New Zealand! Don't
you have a comment? See, I worry that my rants have alienated my friends in
New Zealand. And I really believe that Islam is going to hit New Zealand,
and in a big way. Its already there, in Palmerston North. You could say that
a Mosque is harmless, but Islam has more than a Mosque in the south pacific.
The Bali bombings weren't accidents, and there were Kiwi's killed there. So
you know, they're close and getting closer. It's come out recently that some
bombings had been averted in Australia. So how can New Zealand just sit
there and ignore the threat that Islam openly presents? Really, what will it
take? Is it going to take a car bomb in Auckland to wake you up? Al Zawahiri
has been in your country. Some of the 9/11 hijackers trained in Palmerston
North. They've already killed some of you. So what will it take? An Air New
Zealand flight taking out the skytower? Al Qaeda bought an election in Spain
with a few explosives in a train station. Is that in the plan for New
Zealand? I'll tell you something that bothers me about what I see there, and
what I see here. At the same time we are really bending over backwards to
appease (and that is the word you should remember.... Google 'Neville
Chamberlain' and 'appeasement'. Toss in 'Adolf Hitler' while you're at it)
Islam, we are pre-judging (Google 'prejudice' too) Christians who are doing
nothing worse than alerting people to a grave threat. David W, you should
know that the Dannevirke News totally discounted your feedback to my column,
based on nothing but the fact that you're a Christian. I guess if you were a
Muslim they'd care about what you have to say. I guess if you preached an
intolerant religion that tells its followers to kill anyone with different
beliefs, you'd be worth acknowledgement. Take heart, Dave. New Zealand
hasn't been overrun. Yet. But the more silence the rest of the world gets
from New Zealand, the less time you have before a bomb goes off on one of
the islands. I will make a prediction, though. When the first bomb goes off,
Islam will not be blamed, even if they claim responsibility. Blame will be
pointed at the average Joe Blog, for not being more sensitive to the needs
of this 'peaceful religion'.
So. New Zealand... what do you have to say to that?
Friday, May 04, 2007
Why We Can't Believe Hillary...
first lady escaped already-remote Katmandu and traveled two hours by
prop plane, land rover and rowboat to the Tiger Tops Jungle Lodge.
Mount Everest's summit in 1953.
his historic trek, had a brief Hillary-to-Hillary handshake at the
Katmandu airport before Clinton departed Sunday for Bangladesh.
knew his name had two L's.
'It's because of Sir Edmund Hillary,'" Hillary Clinton reported.1
[The New York Times, 1995]
Rodham, had read an article about the intrepid Edmund Hillary, a
one-time beekeeper who had taken to mountain climbing, when she was
pregnant with her daughter in 1947 and liked the name.
Hillary," Mrs. Clinton told reporters after the brief meeting on the
tarmac, minutes before her Air Force jet flew past the peak of
Everest itself. "So when I was born, she called me Hillary, and she
always told me it's because of Sir Edmund Hillary."2
April
1995, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton engaged in a brief (and reportedly
coincidental) meeting with Sir Edmund Hillary (who, along with Tenzing
Norgay, became the first person to reach the summit of the world's highest
mountain, Mt. Everest, in 1953) and told reporters she had been named
after the famed mountain climber. The notion that Ms. Clinton's given name
was inspired by the man who conquered Everest was almost certainly a bit
of fiction invented for political expediency (as many critics have noted,
Edmund Hillary didn't become world-famous until six years after Hillary
Rodham was born), but there are some subtleties to this claim which should
be considered:
Hillary Clinton said her mother, Dorothy Rodham, "had read an article
about the intrepid Edmund Hillary, a one-time beekeeper who had taken to
mountain climbing, when she was pregnant in 1947 and liked the name."
Although it is true that Edmund Hillary did not perform the feat that
made him a household name throughout the English-speaking world until
1953 (by which time Hillary Rodham was already six years old), it is
not true, as many skeptics have asserted, that Edmund Hillary was
nothing more than an obscure Auckland beekeeper until then. Even before
World War II he was already a serious mountain climber who boasted to a
friend that "some day I'm going to climb Everest," and by 1947 he was
honing the necessary skills on the peaks of the Southern Alps. It's
certainly possible young Edmund was profiled in some periodical as far
back in 1947.
seen an article about a New Zealand mountain climber? We performed a
comprehensive search of several major American newspapers (including the
Chicago Tribune) and found that none of them made any mention of Edmund
Hillary whatsoever prior to June 1953, so it's fair to say that the
American media paid him little note prior to his successful assault on
Mt. Everest that year.
Whether or not Dorothy Rodham might have come across mention of Edmund
Hillary in 1947, the story about her daughter's name doesn't quite jibe
with the circumstances. Depending upon how one interprets Hillary
Clinton's claim, either seeing Edmund Hillary's name in print inspired
her mother to name her 'Hillary' (even though she came across it being
used a surname rather than a first name), or it inspired her to use the
less-common spelling of 'Hillary' rather than 'Hilary' when naming her
daughter. However, 'Hilary' (spelled with one 'l') was a common woman's
name which Dorothy Rodham would undoubtedly already have seen and heard
hundreds of times before reading about Edmund Hillary, and the two-l
spelling, while less common, was one she was far more likely to have
encountered reading about persons (both male and female) much more
prominent than Edmund Hillary in 1947, such as film actress Hillary
Brooke and Cornell football and basketball star Hillary Chollet.
The tidbit of information that Hillary Clinton was named for Edmund
Hillary does not appear in any news stories about the First Lady written
prior to her 1995 south Asian tour, and every appearance of it in news
articles since then refers to that single 1995 account. If Hillary
Clinton thought an anecdote about the origins of her name was
entertaining enough to repeat to the press when she met Sir Edmund
Hillary in 1995, how come she never mentioned it at any other time,
before or since?
much as mentioned the story, not even Living History, her 2003
autobiography. A staggering amount of information has been published
about Hillary Rodham Clinton in her lifetime (going all the way back to
her days as a Wellesley College graduate in 1969, when she was featured
in Life magazine); that she disclosed a basic fact such as how she got
her name only once in all that time is rather incredible. (The only
other mention of Hillary Clinton's connection to Edmund Hillary was made
by her husband, former president Bill Clinton, in his 2004
autobiography.)
We opined back in 2003 that Hillary Clinton's claim about being Edmund
Hillary's namesake might not have been completely false since she didn't
say she was actually named for the mountain climber, but rather that her
mother told her she was named for him a minor but important distinction
given how often parents make up harmless little fibs to amuse their
children or misremember past events. Indeed, in October 2006 this was the
excuse a spokesperson for her campaign provided in officially discounting
the story:
For more than a decade, one piece of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton's
informal biography has been that she was named for Sir Edmund Hillary, the
conqueror of Mount Everest. The story was even recounted in Bill Clinton's
autobiography.
Edmund after all.
daughter, to great results I might add," said Jennifer Hanley, a
spokeswoman for the campaign. 3
We still find this explanation rather incredible. In order to accept it,
one has to believe that only after Hillary Clinton was nearly 60 years
old, and only after she had been pilloried in the press for more than ten
years for claiming she had been named after someone who was virtually
unknown in the U.S. at the time of her birth, and only after her husband
had unknowingly presented the fictitious story as true in his own
autobiography, did her mother finally confess that the "sweet family
story" she told her daughter wasn't the truth. (Hillary Clinton doesn't
have the excuse that other people were spreading a falsehood about her, as
she herself was the one who initiated the claim back in 1995.)
Reagan Wannabes
holding a.debate at the Reagan library. This is wonderful symbolism... and
worthy of their liberal apponents. They are all claiming the Reagan legacy,
but none of them really seem to understand what it was about Reagan so
great. The Republican party that Reagan took to greatness is not the
Republican party of today. Reagan had courage and vision. He loved this
country, and he loved democracy. He was brave and bold and unapologetic. He
knew that the only way to succeed is to shout your beliefs from the
rooftops, and to have no time for your opponent's attempts to cut you down.
He also understood that even though we may disagree, we are all Americans.
We are all a family, and we all deserve respect from each other. Reagan may
have done battle with his liberal opponents, but he left the fight at the
office. He understood and appreciated the dignity that went with the office
of the president. He looked and acted like a president. He was worthy of the
presidents before him. And I'll tell you something else. He understood how
the world worked. He understood the concept of attacking our enemies
ruthlessly... but effectively. He understood Sun Tzu. Ultimate excellence
lies not in winning every battle, but in defeating the enemy without ever
fighting.