Thursday, June 23, 2005

 

L Foley - uh, people...

OK, I finally broke down and read a transcript of the "US targets journalists" remarjs by Ms. Foley.

http://thedustyattic.blogspot.com/2005/05/more-of-linda-foleys-talk.html

Journalists, by the way, are just being targeted, ah, verbally or, ah, or, ah, politically. [But - jsa] They're also being targeted for real. Um…in places like Iraq. Ahn and, ah, what outrages me as a representative of journalists is that there's not more outrage about the number, and the brutality, and the cavalier nature of the U.S. military toward the killing of journalists in Iraq. I think it's just a scandal.

And it's not just US journalists, either, by the way. They target and kill, ah, journalists from other countries, particularly Arab countries like Al -, like Arab news services like Al-Jazeera, for example. They actually target them and blow up their studios, ah, with impunity … and, ah, this is all part of a culture that it's okay to blame the individual journalists and it just takes the heat off these media, ah, conglomerates who are actually at the heart of the problem.


Is this what all the hullaballo is about? Now, with Eason Jordan, the statement ws clear that the military was "targetting" American (and other) journalists with weaponry. But with Ms. Foley, it is that the military does not do as much about it as she would like when journos are killed by others or explain to her satisfaction when other nation's `journalists` are hit by US weapons. I think she is expecting too much and/or, as with the bombing of the Baghdad office of al Jazeera, not paying attention.

And note her criticism is actually directed at the corporate news organizations for not doing more to protect their employees or find out more about what happens to them.

But yes, she does say the US actually uses weapons against other nation's news people. I disagree, but it is a matter of interpretation and bias. And thought a number of the incidents she worries about happened when we were effectively the government - we did not need to use weapons on journos, just declare them the equivalent of persona non grata: weapons may be used if such refuse to leave, much as when a group of people in Peoria confront police and do not follow legitimate instructions. Where others used weapons, our military either was not there or was kinda busy: but they were investigated - perhaps not as well as she would like, and maybe the employers of her union members should have pushed more to make her happier (not happy), but not ignored.

My query here is whether she has an open-enough mind to listen (again) to the explanations and if still wants more to specify just what she is looking for, and from whom. I have sone doubt, but attacking her rather than asking for nore is not going to do much good.

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

 

Gunmen Kill Iraqi Ex-Judge

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Gunmen on Wednesday killed a former judge whose name once was on a list of Sunni Arabs joining a parliamentary committee to draft Iraq's new constitution, officials said...

Former judge Jassim al-Issawi, whose candidacy to join the 55-member committee was later dropped, was a law professor at Baghdad University and the former editor-in-chief of Al-Siyadah newspaper, said Salih al-Mutlak, secretary general of the Sunni National Dialogue Council

Al-Issawi, 51, and his son were killed in Baghdad's northwestern Shula neighborhood, said Abdul Sattar Jawad, current editor of Al-Siyadah.


At first glance, this is Sunni killing Sunni for being even almost working with other Iraqis - and of course foreigners. The roof is leaking, let's burn it down - from inside!
 

Korea Experts: U.S. Spurned '02 Kim Effort

WASHINGTON - North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, in a previously undisclosed message to President Bush in November 2002, said the United States and North Korea "should be able to resolve the nuclear issue in compliance with the demands of the new century," according to two private U.S. Korea experts who delivered Kim's message to the White House


This is news? No, it is "Let's attack whatever Administration is in office - especially this one" again. The whole thing was reported at the time: after years of knowing about it the US finally tells NK to quit fooling around with nuclear recovery/enrichment and come to the six-nation talks, NK responds with an offer to talk to only the US and only if the US makes such broad non-agression promises as to preclude retaliation for NK attacking SK or Japan, POTUS laughs them out of the room.
 

EU wants 20 pct cut in energy use by 2020

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Europe should reduce its energy consumption by 20 percent by 2020 through more efficient technology, the EU executive Commission said Wednesday, helping cut dependency on oil and meet climate change targets.
...
A household could save up to 1,000 euros a year in electricity and heating bills by using energy saving lightbulbs, getting rid of old fridges and replacing boilers, he added.


Lightbulbs, sure, even though the initial investment is (relatively) big. And they often enough need replacing anyway.

But boilers? Wouldn't that take about thirty years to recoup costs for replacing something that still works?

Refrigerator: maybe, if the old one is over ten years old.

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

 

Mussoilini as "liberal"

Mr. Cramer uses Mussolini's words and draws parallels to today's liberal/left.
Here's Mussolini's most clearly leftist statement:
"If the nineteenth was the century of the individual (Liberalism means individualism) it may be expected that this one may be the century of "collectivism" and therefore the century of the State."
Is there anything that more clearly identifies where American conservatism and libertarianism differs from Fascism--and where Fascism is most clearly a form of progressivism?

Monday, June 20, 2005

 

Costly meds

Of no real interest to anyone else, but...

I take seven prescription pills (not counting aspirin, the docs want me taking a low-dose [St. Joseph's] every day).

I jsut ordered four of them from a discount (NOT re-import) store: for a 3-month supply, over $490!!!

How long I'll keep taking these things on an income of under $1600/month (hint, my one-bedroom apartment is $840/month, auto insurance is over $240/month...) is problematic. And no, insurance won't cut cost much if at all.

Time to move to a much cheaper state, I guess.
 

Marriage or Union

The word "marriage", whatever the English-language dictionaries may say, is by implication bound up in religion - and only a few, at that. The State used that word because "partnership" or others were not quite the same, and why invent a new one?

But what the State actually does is, for a fee, record a limited partnership and agree to define certain legal consequences (eg inheritance) without the need for a more formal arrangement, while allowing for actual more formal arrangements (wills, pre-nups...) to override the default.

Alas, since first implemented (Republic of Rome, pre-Empire?), the State certificate has been used to engulf more and more areas - my (un-)favorite horror is the ICU at most hospitals and how they define "family" for visitation access.

Replace current legal references to "marriage" with some other term ("civil union" is clumsy, but what else has been proposed?) and there is no effective change to those laws - not even in who may sign the certificate (not necessarily a religious figure even now). Then [attempt to] argue about the definition and qualifications without the religious connotations. Gays (and others) who want "marriage" can argue about it with their (putative) co-religionists, those who want the protections - and yes, privileges - of the State certificate can argue about who qualifies.

Oh, there would still be people against altering the qualificatiion, and many would cloak themselves in "religion", but I do believe a bit more rationality (as opposed to rationalizing) would come to bear.
 

case against Europe's biotech policy strengthened

EU members again uphold the "precautionary principle", whch if applied early enough would have had the Earth populated by a few carbonaceous chemicals afraid of "going live".

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The United States may see its case against Europe's biotech policy strengthened this week as three EU governments look set to maintain bans on a type of genetically modified (GMO) maize, a EU official said on Monday.

The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, wants Austria, Luxembourg and Germany to scrap their bans on Bt-176, a GMO maize strain made by Swiss biotech giant Syngenta .

The Commission says there is no scientific justification for the bans on health and environmental grounds.


Ah, but there is money involved, right? Well, sort of, except that GMO crops are generally more bearing, giving a larger crop. OTOH, they can keep lying to Africa and assure that their non-GMO crops will have a market.

Saturday, June 18, 2005

 

Canada OKs cannabis drug for MS pain

Sativex is a metred spray, administered under the tongue or inside the cheek. It's derived from extracts of the marijuana plant and is said to taste like peppermint.


OK, not exactly what I thought, which is that the plant itself had been approved. Pity.

See Google cache http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:YCYZdli_LyQJ:www.cbc.ca/story/science/national/2005/04/19/MS-cannabis050419.html+%22Canada+OKs+cannabis+drug+for+MS+sufferers%22&hl=en>cached

Bloody blogger and its crappy knowledge of HTML...
 

Assimilation nation

Once again, Mr. Krauthammer steps aside from the pack for a different view and makes sense.
America's genius has always been assimilation, taking immigrants and turning them into Americans. Yet our current debates on immigration focus on only one side of the issue — the massive waves of illegal immigrants that we seem unable to stop.
...
By all means we should try to control immigration. Nonetheless, given our geography, our tolerant culture and the magnetic attraction of our economy, illegals will always be with us. Our first task, therefore, should be abolishing bilingual education everywhere and requiring that our citizenship tests have strict standards for English language and American civics.

The cure for excessive immigration is successful assimilation.


Despite such as the fringe that wants to "reclaim" the Southwest for "Latinos" (not mestizos or indios of course! Only those who can claim to have Euro-immigrant blood!) people come to this country any way they can because they want to enjoy what we have - and are largely smart enough to know they can do so without forcing us to become them but rather just being able to keep some of the old while adopting/adapting what is here that was not there.

And while it may seem repellent to some, [US-]English is the language here. If I were to emigrate to Brazil, I would expect to have to learn at least a basic seven thousand words of their brand of Portuguese. So, yes, education in English is a first step. Other steps, some less daunting (if you have a refrigerator, you do not have to shop every day - but yes, you can keep doing so if you want) and others more (no, you can't kill your sister because she flirted with a boy) so.
 

Onward, Moderate Christian Soldiers

Moderate Christians are less certain about when and how our beliefs can be translated into statutory form, not because of a lack of faith in God but because of a healthy acknowledgement of the limitations of human beings. Like conservative Christians, we attend church, read the Bible and say our prayers.
But for us, the only absolute standard of behavior is the commandment to love our neighbors as ourselves. Repeatedly in the Gospels, we find that the Love Commandment takes precedence when it conflicts with laws. We struggle to follow that commandment as we face the realities of everyday living, and we do not agree that our responsibility to live as Christians can be codified by legislators.


I think JOHN C. DANFORTH makes a point I have felt for some time: Jerry Falwell and his "conservative Christian" ilk do not speak for me.

If anything, I do not think the point is made stridently enough. Nor at all completely: for instance, "In recent years, conservative Christians have presented themselves as representing the one authentic Christian perspective on politics" misses that this group of subsets (ie, sects) of religion has always claimed to be the only holders of true beliefs, and that what has recently changed is that the MainStreamMedia has gone from showing Oral Roberts and Jim Bakker as fringe nuts to portraying similar types as the mainstream of Christianity.

That latter is, to me at least, an indication of political indoctrination practiced by the MSM whether with forethought or just unexamined prejudice. Why is it that war-on-terror-takes-decades POTUS Bush is vilified as "a born-again Christian" while killer-rabbit dictator-adulator former POTUS Carter never has this label applied to him?

Friday, June 17, 2005

 

FDA admits one size does not fit all

The drug's trial, on just over 1,000 individuals, was launched after the FDA turned away the medication following a study involving all races that showed little improvement - but also gave hints that blacks might have had some benefit.
The maker, NitroMed of Lexington, Mass., then decided on a trial using blacks only, a population that has more than twice the rate of heart failure as whites.


And now, BiDil is approved by a review committee and moves toward full approval. But still with at least two problems. Some question that it can work on one subset of humanity but not others (apparently never heard of sickle-cell anemia or Tay-Sachs) so doubt both original and new tests, others debate whether it should carry a "blacks only" label.
 

Argentina Amnesty Ruling

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - A Supreme Court ruling that struck down amnesty laws protecting human rights violators during Argentina's "Dirty War" won widespread support ...
The Supreme Court Tuesday voted 7-1, with one abstention, to throw out two laws forbidding charges in scores of cases of disappearances, torture and other crimes during the 1976-83 military dictatorship.
 

two weeks from retirement

By WAYNE PARRY

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) - A 64-year-old police officer just two weeks away from retirement will be promoted to detective after throwing himself in front of a woman and her two young children when a gunman opened fire inside a precinct house.
Michael Gullace, who has spent 38 years on the job, was working a desk shift Wednesday night when he heard gunfire.
Gullace grabbed the gunman's girlfriend and their two young children and threw his body over them. When a detective returning fire at the suspect ran out of bullets, Gullace tossed him his own weapon, enabling the officer to keep firing.
 

PETA cruelty

PETA Employees Arrested


Two employees of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals have been charged with animal cruelty after dumping dead dogs and cats in a shopping center garbage bin, police said.

Nice.


Saturday, May 22, 2004

 

Kim duToit wins one - Blogs Do Work!

- KdT wins one Posted by: The Director of the National Park Service on May 17, 04 | 5:16 pm in response to this

Both Kim and "The Mrs." posted about a ridiculous situation they found at a National Park Service site. While they may not have quite the following of Instapundit, their posts led to a number of EMails to the Service: when the Director checked the situation, he agreed with their point and promised changes - all within less than a day!


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?