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Monday, July 16, 2007

 
Media Misreporting (And Double Standards) Aloft In Latest Ann Coulter Flap

Story here.

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Those Darn Illegal Alien Guest Worker Programs

Saudi Arabia is supplying half of the insurgent forces in Iraq.

Let's hope we patrol that border better than the US-Mexico border.

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Blogging the Quran: Sura 2, "The Cow," verses 222-286

Robert Spencer has the installment here. The longest book of the Koran is wrapped up here. Of particular interest if the "no compulsion in Islam" verse (Sura 2:256). Spencer elaborates:

Islamic spokesmen in the West frequently quote it to disprove the contention that Islam spread by the sword, or even to claim that Islam is a religion of peace. According to an early Muslim, Mujahid ibn Jabr, this verse was abrogated by Qur'an 9:29, in which the Muslims are commanded to fight against the People of the Book. Others, however, according to the Islamic historian Tabari, say that 2:256 was never abrogated, but was revealed precisely in reference to the People of the Book. They are not to be forced to accept Islam, but may practice their religions as long as they pay the jizya (poll-tax) and "feel themselves subdued" (9:29).

So, according to these "others," us infidels are not bound to religious compulsion, but we are bound to political compulsion. Allah orders Muslims to make war against the infidels, and while some dispute whether the surviving infidels be forced to convert to Islam, there is no doubt that non-Muslims must submit to Islamic political rule. And that's the nicer translation.

Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Saturday, July 14, 2007

 
The Amazing iPhone

It blends.

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CAIR's Links With Hamas

The Counterterrorism Blog has a fascinating article, complete with a graphical illustration of the various ties. (link via LGF.

Update: Paul Sperry at FrontPage Magazine has more.

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Friday, July 13, 2007

 
My Hometown Is Taking A Bit Out Of Crime

Clayton Cramer has the story.

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Thursday, July 12, 2007

 
Just Because I Feel Like It

One of the most joyful piano sequences in all of rock and roll, courtesy of YouTube. (It starts at the 03:17 mark.)

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Freedom vs. Freakdom

FrontPage Magazine interviews John Lott on his book Freedomnomics, which was written in response to the popular Freakonomics.

The section that catches my eye most is the comparison between public and private efficiency, relying on the example of Arctic expeditions. Read the whole thing.

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Lady Bird Johnson (1912-2007)

Rest in peace.

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

 
I Have A Question

Hey, I don't mind tweaking the Islamofascists, but please answer me this: why does Salman Rushdie deserve a knighthood?

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Monday, July 09, 2007

 
Blogging the Quran: Sura 2, "The Cow," verses 211-221

Robert Spencer has the installment here. Today's topics: fighting during the holy month of Rajab, drinking and gambling, marriage with unbelievers.

Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Saturday, July 07, 2007

 
One Hundred Candles

Today would have been Robert A. Heinlein's 100th birthday.

His name popped up on this blog once before:

Here's a word for both the pop educators and the "hooked on classics" crowd: balance. In between the old kid-unfriendly classics such as Great Expectations and The Great Gatsby, uber-depressing nihilo-crap like A Separate Peace and Catcher In The Rye, and ancient works such as Beowulf and Canterbury Tales that require an advanced degree in linguistics to read, there's gotta be some fun stuff. Kids need to be able to develop the discipline to read challenging works, but for the sake of morale and future reading habits they've got to be exposed to literature they might actually enjoy.

I was one of those kids who hated reading during childhood. I took a stab or two at reading for pleasure but could never get into it - mainly because I didn't know where to look for suitable authors. In my early twenties I finally stumbled across paperback science fiction. The combination of fascinating subject matter and excellent writing style (particularly that of Heinlein and Niven) did it for me. I now have a book collection that could completely fill the bed of my pickup truck - old college textbooks, lots of sci-fi, some classical literature, books on history, current events, and philosophy. I discovered the joy of reading despite school.

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The Definitive Review Of Michael Moore's SiCKO

Kurt Loder hjas it right here. Moore wants us to believe that socialized medicine is the cure, but doesn't tell about its side effects, about which Loder gives an introduction.

We Americans need to learn more about how universal health care actually operates where it is implemented.

(Link via Ace of Spades)

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Thursday, July 05, 2007

 
Blogging the Qur'an: Sura 2, "The Cow," verses 141-210

(DSL problems earlier this week delayed this post.)

Robert Spencer has the installment here.

Two sections stand out. First, Sura 106:

None of Our revelations do We abrogate or cause to be forgotten, but We substitute something better or similar: Knowest thou not that Allah Hath power over all things?

Through abrogation, Allah reserves the authority to overturn old scripture in favor of something "better or similar." Question: why doesn't Allah lead with the best possible dictates in the first place? Why go through the trouble of writing Sura A if a new and improved Sura B will be coming down the pike?

But doesn't the God of the Bible do that? Don't the Old and New Testaments represent a Christian parallel to abrogation? No. The biblical God sends different people on different missions, each of which carries unique sets of orders. People who wish to understand this book must discern between mission-specific dictates and general statements of ethics. One example is my old post on capital crimes in ancient Israel.

Verses 190-193 address jihad. Spencer notes the sura that classifies jihad as defensive in nature. So it really is a religion of peace, right? Not so fast.

What constitutes a defensive conflict? A clue to that comes in v. 193: "And fight them until persecution is no more, and religion is for Allah." Ibn Ishaq explains that this means that Muslims must fight against unbelievers "until God alone is worshipped." Says Bulandshahri: "The worst of sins are Infidelity (Kufr) and Polytheism (shirk) which constitute rebellion against Allah, The Creator. To eradicate these, Muslims are required to wage war until there exists none of it in the world, and the only religion is that of Allah." This conflict would be essentially defensive, against the aggressions of unbelief: if Muslims must fight until unbelief does not exist, the mere presence of unbelief constitutes sufficient aggression to allow for the beginning of hostilities.

The sura says oppression AND religion for some entity other than Allah are conditions for war.

Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Wednesday, July 04, 2007

 
Odes To Liberty

Original posted July 4, 2002. Every year a change is made:

2003 Original image of WTC replaced with mini-collage of WTC, Liberty Bell, and the flag raising on Mount Suribachi.
2004 Image of young girl celebrating the liberation Iraq; LOTR quote.
2005 Iraqi girl image replaced by Iraqi voter; Cathy Seipp quote via Samizdata.
2006 Viktor Frankl quote
2007 Oriana Fallaci quote

--

Through these fields of destruction
Baptisms of fire
I've watched all your suffering
As the battle raged higher
And though they did hurt me so bad
In the fear and alarm
You did not desert me
My brothers in arms

Dire Straits, "Brothers in Arms"


"Then I will live in Montana, and I will marry a round American woman and raise rabbits and she will cook them for me. And I will have a pickup truck, or possibly even a recreational vehicle, and drive from state to state. Do they let you do that?"

Vasili Borodin (played by Sam Neill), The Hunt for Red October


"'We hold these truths to be self-evident... That all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights... That among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness... That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men ...'. And this paper that from the French Revolution on the whole West has copied, from which each of us has drawn inspiration, still constitutes the backbone of America. Her vital lymph. Know why? Because it transforms the subjects into citizens. Because it turns the plebes into people. Because it invites, no, it orders the plebes turned into citizens to rebel against tyranny and to govern themselves. To express their individualities, to search for their own happiness. (Something that for the poor, for the plebes, means to get rich). The exact contrary, in short, of what the communists used to do with their practice of forbidding people to govern themselves, to express themselves, to get rich. With their practice of installing His Majesty the State on the throne."

Oriana Fallaci, The Rage and the Pride


"With this faith we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood."

Martin Luther King


"The State exists simply to promote and to protect the ordinary happiness of human beings in this life. A husband and wife chatting over a fire, a couple of friends having a game of darts in a pub, a man reading a book in his own room or digging in his own garden - that is what the State is there for. And unless they are helping to increase and prolong and protect such moments, all the laws, parliaments, armies, courts, police, economics, etc., are simply a waste of time."

C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity


"Funny that the same people to whom diversity is a holy word so often bemoan diversity of opinion as divisive. But in a democracy, politics are naturally divisive: you vote for this candidate and someone else votes for that one; you vote yes (or no) on a proposition and other citizens disagree. What's not divisive? Saddam and his 99.96% of the vote. That's how it went during the previous Iraqi election -- an illustration of the Latin roots of the word fascism, which actually means a bunch of sticks all tied together in one big unhappy unified bunch, and not (despite what many assume) any variation from p.c. received-wisdom regarding gay rights, affirmative action, bilingual education, etc. This election was different because it was divisive, which means it was better."

Cathy Seipp (Samizdata quote of the day, February 01, 2005)


"It's all wrong. By rights we shouldn't even be here. But we are. It's like in the great stories, Mr. Frodo. The ones that really mattered. Full of darkness and danger they were. And sometimes you didn't want to know the end. Because how could the end be happy? How could the world go back to the way it was when so much bad had happened. But in the end, it's only a passing thing, this shadow. Even darkness must pass. A new day will come. And when the sun shines it will shine out the clearer. Those were the stories that stayed with you. That meant something. Even if you were too small to understand why. But I think, Mr. Frodo, I do understand. I know now. Folk in those stories had lots of chances of turning back only they didn't. Because they were holding on to something...That there's some good in this world, Mr. Frodo. And it's worth fighting for."

Sam Gamgee (played by Sean Astin), Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers


"[W]e recognize that we are living in the middle of the most overwhelmingly successful experiment in human history. Not perfect. Just the best place in the world to live in, that's all."

Jay Manifold


"I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered! My life is my own."

Number Six (played by Patrick McGoohan, "The Prisoner" TV series)


"Patriotism means to stand by the country. It does not mean to stand by the President or any other public official save exactly to the degree in which he himself stands by the country. It is patriotic to support him insofar as he efficiently serves the country. It is unpatriotic not to oppose him to the exact extent that by inefficiency or otherwise he fails in his duty to stand by the country."

Theodore Roosevelt


"So this Jefferson dude was like, 'Look, the reason we left this England place is 'cause it was so bogus. So if we don't get some primo rules ourselves - pronto - then we're just gonna be bogus, too."

Jeff Spiccoli (played by Sean Penn), Fast Times at Ridgemont High


"Democracy extends the sphere of individual freedom, socialism restricts it. Democracy attaches all possible value to each man; socialism makes each man a mere agent, a mere number. Democracy and socialism have nothing in common but one word: equality. But notice the difference: while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks equality in restraint and servitude."

Alexis deTocqueville, Democracy in America Vol. 2


"We who lived in concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms -- to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way"

Viktor Frankl, Man's Search for Ultimate Meaning

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Sunday, July 01, 2007

 
Can You Pass 8th Grade Science?

Mingle2 Free Online Dating - Science Quiz

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Thursday, June 28, 2007

 
Kelly's Heroes, Updated

There's a question that the 1970 film never answered: how (or if) those intrepid soldiers could have spirited that cache of gold out of Germany once they got their hands on it. I can't imagine how a handful of guys could successfully smuggle 14,000 gold bars (minus the German tank commander's cut) out of the country. The only alternative is exchanging the gold for currency. Kelly has two problems: finding a buyer for the gold in a war zone, and smuggling much lighter yet still bulky wads of cash.

Modern technology has solved the second problem, as illustrated by the following spam email I received today:

I am in need of your assistance. My name is SGT Justin Harris . I am in the Engineering military unit here in Ba'qubah in Iraq, we have about US$25 Million US dollars that we want to move out of the country. My partners and I need a good partner someone we can trust. It is oil money and legal.We are moving it through diplomatic means, to send it to your house directly or a bank of your choice using diplomatic courier service they can ship it directly to you in your place, door to door delivery. The most important thing is that can we trust you? Once the funds get to you, you take your 50% out and keep our own 50%. Your own part of this deal is to find a safe place where the funds can be sent to. Our own part is sending it to you. If you are interested i will furnish you with more details. But the whole process is simple and we must keep a low profile at all times.Can i trust you and will you help?

Send me an email with your positive reply and i will send you more details and the plan. Dont worry it is risk free.
Waiting for your urgent response.

Your Army in Iraq.
SGT Justin Harris

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A NightMare On Elm Street Pennsylvania Avenue II

Freddy Krueger is dead once again.

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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

 
Rod Serling, Call Your Office

Tip to travelers: when visiting a nation that endured a bloody Maoist insurgency for many years, do not go around sporting Maoist fashion accessories.

Cameron Diaz is sorry for being unaware of the "potentially hurtful nature of the slogan" on the handbag she purchased. I doubt that Peruvians would even recognize a slogan written in Chinese pictographs. But everyone should recognize an olive drab handbag with a big red star and Chinese script as something that just screams Communist China.

As for that slogan...I wonder how many people have connected "Serving the People" with this.

Which brings to mind an old post regarding one of Mao's other favorite sayings:

Nothing summarizes Marxist utilitarianism better than Mao's famous statement, "To make an omelet, you must break a few eggs." The analogy is perhaps more illustrative than Mao would have recognized; as one consumes one's breakfast for personal nourishment, Communist elites (literally and figuratively) consume a nation's population for their own enrichment.

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Play With Your Food

The Vienna Vegetable Orchestra

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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

 
Not The Red State Answer

In last Sunday's crossword syndicated by United Media, the clue for 113 Across is "Hunter's need." What seven-letter word or phrase comes to mind? Shotgun? Good aim? Not even close - the puzzle's answer is license.

Update: I checked - United Media's offices are in New York City.

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Monday, June 25, 2007

 
Crime News Du Jour

The founder of an anti-gun organization is facing federal weapons charges.

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Blogging the Qur'an: Sura 2, "The Cow," verses 75-140

Robert Spencer has the installment here.

No personal commentary this week. Click the link and read the whole thing, as always.

Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Thursday, June 21, 2007

 
So How Far Behind Is The Fake Italian Accent?

Hillary spoofs The Sopranos.

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Will Celine Dion Become The Fourth Dixie Chick?

No, she hasn't been ranting about Bush (to the best of my knowledge). I saw the YouTube video for song "You and I." How'd a Canadian learn to sing in a Southern accent?

This song will be the theme song for Hillary Clinton, someone else known for fake Southern accents.

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Monday, June 18, 2007

 
Blogging the Qur'an: Sura 2, "The Cow," verses 40-75

Robert Spencer has the installment here.

The immediately preceding suras (34-39) began the theme of rebelliousness, in this case, that of the fallen angels. The following suras are taken from this translation:

002.034 And behold, We said to the angels: "Bow down to Adam" and they bowed down. Not so Iblis: he refused and was haughty: He was of those who reject Faith.

002.035 We said: "O Adam! dwell thou and thy wife in the Garden; and eat of the bountiful things therein as (where and when) ye will; but approach not this tree, or ye run into harm and transgression."

002.036 Then did Satan make them slip from the (garden), and get them out of the state (of felicity) in which they had been. We said: "Get ye down, all (ye people), with enmity between yourselves. On earth will be your dwelling-place and your means of livelihood - for a time."

002.037 Then learnt Adam from his Lord words of inspiration, and his Lord Turned towards him; for He is Oft-Returning, Most Merciful.

002.038 We said: "Get ye down all from here; and if, as is sure, there comes to you Guidance from Me, whosoever follows My guidance, on them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve.

002.039 "But those who reject Faith and belie Our Signs, they shall be companions of the Fire; they shall abide therein."

Today's suras continue that theme with regard to ancient Israel. This section touches on familiar Biblical stories of Israel's rebelliousness at the time of the Exodus. But not all is familiar. The Bible does not record an argument detailed in suras 67-71, in which Moses commands the sacrifice of a heifer and the people keep asking for detail after detail about what kind of heifer is to be sacrificed. In the Bible, animal sacrifice is already recorded in considerable detail in the stone tablets; it is unlikely to imagine such an argument erupting as the Law of Moses is being read. It also seems odd to find the complaint against Jews "profan[ing] the Sabbath" from this time period - how does one violate the Sabbath while one is wandering in a desert?

The Old Testament speaks of Israel waxing and waning in its overall level of obedience to God. (The same is true of Christendom.) But in the Koran everything is downhill. One also gets the impression that Jewish history after the Exodus is inconsequential; the only post-Exodus event recorded in "The Cow" is some mysterious incident involving Solomon (Sura 102).

Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Sunday, June 17, 2007

 
Family Ties

Most Christians have no problem getting along with non-Christians. This may seem confusing to some; after all, Christianity teaches that those who are not reconciled with God will not receive salvation. Why care about people who aren't going to Heaven?

One could say that while a particular non-Christian is alive we really don't know that that person's eternal destination won't make a course change at a later date. That's a valid observation, but not the real reason.

Christianity makes a radical claim about the relationship between believers, nonbelievers and God: we're all family. God created the souls of all, thus he is the father of all, believers and nonbelievers alike. All of the children have gone astray - but some have reconciled with him while others have not.

When one is faced with the earthly parallel - being in good standing with Dad while some of the other siblings aren't - one is charged with three tasks: to build and maintain the relationship with Dad, to build and maintain the relationships with the wayward siblings without doing anything that interferes with the paternal relationship, and to act as a bridge between the wayward siblings and Dad. That third task is tricky; there will be occasions to discuss the rift outright, but most of the time it involves nothing more than being a positive influence to that sibling.

Christianity works the same way. Loving God doesn't mean giving up on non-Christian friends. We may have to reassess what kinds of "fun" we pursue with them, though. (Heck, sometimes we have to reassess the "fun" we pursue with fellow Christians.) Witnessing to nonbelievers isn't all Amway sales presentations. Most of the time it's just bringing good to someone's life.

The hardest part of doing good to others is when it requres criticism. We see them doing something destructive, and we want to help. We need to effectively communicate what the problem is, how it hurts that person, and how the future can be better when that problem is dealth with.

Most Christians grasp all this, even if they haven't thought it out as thoroughly as outlined here. They care about both believers and nonbelievers out of the same human motivations that drive us all, and because they believe in a God who values everyone.

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Saturday, June 16, 2007

 
Sign Of The Apocalypse

Both the Communist Cuban state press and the American capitalist Opinion Journal have the same concerns about ethanol's impact on world hunger.

Update: Reuters has more on the story cited by Granma.

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Thursday, June 14, 2007

 
Hitchens Fisked

Blogger and pastor Mark Roberts has a lot to say about Hitchens and his latest book god is Not Great. Roberts debated Hitch on the Hugh Hewitt show; much of his bloggage on the subject stems from that debate. Read the whole thing.

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Judging The Troop Surge...

...before the troop surge is at full strength.

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Ruth Graham (1920-2007)

The wife of evangelist Billy Graham passed away. Rest in peace.

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Rudy's Contract with America

Giuliani has a 12-item platform. Most of the planks are good, but some raise questions.

Number 8 throws a bone to right-to-lifers, and goes beyond abortion:

I will increase adoptions, decrease abortions, and protect the quality of life for our children.

We need to take advantage of the common ground in America to reduce abortions by increasing adoptions and assuring that individual choice is well informed. We need to measure our progress toward these goals. We need to reduce the high costs of adoption. And we need to protect our children against sexual predators and online pornography.

If "assuring that individual choice is well informed" means what I think it means, the abortion lobby will want his head on a platter. Planned Parenthood and its fellow travelers despise informed consent laws.

Compromise is impossible on the central issue of abortion - either the fetus is a human life or it isn't. Rudy's only chance to settle nerves is to convince right-to-lifers that except for promoting informed consent laws, he's not gonna touch the issue as President. Robin Toner of National Right to Life says history is against his shot at the nomination.

Number 9:

I will reform the legal system and appoint strict constructionist judges.

America must reform its legal system. We need to eliminate nuisance lawsuits through "loser-pays" provisions. Tort reform can help us reduce costs passed on to the consumer, such as higher insurance premiums. Activist judges threaten to expand the power of the courts beyond the bounds established by the Constitution; we must reassert the proper balance.

The NRLC article cites a Rudy quote that calls into question his ability to recognize judicial activism:

"It would be O.K. to repeal," Mr. Giuliani said. "Or it would be O.K. also if a strict constructionist judge viewed it as a precedent, and I think a judge has to make that decision."

One can support abortion and still recognize that the Constitution doesn't guarantee it as a right. The Constitution is silent on the issue, and SCOTUS is not authorized to rule on science, in this case the science of when life begins. Blackmun denied that the Court ruled on science; in the ruling he states, "We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins." But that is dishonest; the Court based its rulings on assumptions regarding the beginnings of human life.

If Rudy gets Roe wrong, what else will he get wrong?

Number 11 (emphasis added):

I will provide access to a quality education to every child in America by giving real school choice to parents.

Education reform is a civil-rights struggle and the key to improving America’s competitiveness in the global economy. We need to empower parents and children by expanding school choice. We need to promote math and science, while ending the digital divide.

I'd like more details on that last item. That kind of language sounds a bit statist. Sure, those are good things to pursue, but when a politician says "we" need to do something, "we" is usually the government. At the very least, citizens need to know what Rudy has planned.

Number 12 (emphasis added):

I will expand America's involvement in the global economy and strengthen our reputation around the world.

We need to strengthen our country by engaging aggressively the global economy. The mission of the State Department needs to be focused on acting first and foremost as an advocate for America. Fostering trade and educational and cultural exchange will promote the expansion of freedom.

Expanding freedom takes a bit more than that. We've got to find some diplomatic means to get Mexico to expand its economic freedom, so that it will be a prosperous nation and we won't be flooded with economic refugees. That involves talking a government into giving up some of its power. That ain't easy. I don't know what it takes, but I know that educational and cultural exchange aren't nearly enough. Same applies to bargaining with the developing world and with semi-developed nations other than Mexico.

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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

 
"Icon Of Hatred"

That is the title of a documentary video released by Richard Landes via his website Second Draft. LGF has the video.

Second Draft has a series on the Muhammad al-Dura incident, the centerpiece of the video. Alyssa A. Lappen has an informative article at FrontPage Magazine.

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How To Send The Republicans A Message

A Michelle Malkin reader demonstrates.

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"Try These On For Size, Connie Chung!"

Is Katie Couric tarting up the news? I'll believe it when she pulls something like this.

Update: Connie Chung is unavailable for comment.

Update: Fun aside. The Moderate Voice says Dan Rather was right. And he was. Note his exact words:

"That, you know, the trend line continues, as I say, dumbing it down, tarting it up, going to celebrity coverage rather than war coverage.

As Moderate Voice states, this is a reference to the news media prioritizing entertainment news over political news, prompted by the specific example of networks interrupting coverage of the dismissal of General Peter Pace to report the latest in Paris Hilton's legal obyssey.

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Tuesday, June 12, 2007

 
Victims Of Communism Memorial

The Washington Times reports this new memorial in the nation's capital, its inauguration timed with this important anniversary.

More at the Volokh Conspiracy.

Update: PowerLine has video of that famous speech.

PowerLine also has images of a White House memo regarding the Brandenburg speech. "Tear Down This Wall" was highly controversial - even within Reagan's own administration.

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Art Quiz

An artist or an ape? (I got 5 out of 6 right.)

(Link vis No Pasaran)

Update: Pollock, or birds?

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Sopranos Double Feature

Dan Drezner has the video of the opening credits and theme song.

Mary Katherine Ham parodies the video.

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The Blair Fridge Project Continues

Tim Blair shows off more fridges.

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Monday, June 11, 2007

 
Disney Has Completely Lost Its Mind

I discovered this atrocity (warning: heroic music) via James Lileks.

"Let's take a TV comedy canine and make him into something completely unrecognizeable." Right. Where's my broker? I've got a short sale to make...

Accept no substitutes.

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Sunday, June 10, 2007

 
Blogging the Qur'an: Sura 2, "The Cow," verses 1-39

Robert Spencer has this installment here.

Spencer comments on a central Koranic claim:

The Qur'an is not to be questioned or judged by any standard outside itself; rather, it is the standard by which all other things are to be judged. That, of course, is not significantly different from the way many other religions regard their Holy Writ. But there has been no development in Islam of the historical and textual criticism that have transformed the ways Jews and Christians understand their scriptures today.

There are two types of textual criticism: one that seeks to better understand the historic context of the Bible, and one spins new context into or original context out of the Bible.

Compare this to the originalist vs. activist methods of interpreting the Constitution. Both types of spin are common to Second Amendment interpretation ("A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed"). Many leftists perceive that the amendment authorizes states to have national guards, and pretend that the latter half of the amendment does not exist. Originalists point out that the Militia is the collective term for all men of consctiption age, that it exists independent of the states, that "well-regulated" in that time was often synonymous with "competent," that Article 1, Section 8 already stipulates State powers regarding the Militia (appointing officers, organizing military training), that "a free State" uses State synonymously with Nation, that the whole reason the Bill of Rights exists is because of concerns about individual rights and not "states' rights," and that the second half of the amendment does indeed exist.

Such treatment of the Bible has always existed. Ancient and modern spin doctors have sought to expunge all claims of Christ's deity from the Bible. Constantine nationalized the church, thus inserting into church authority an entity that was never authorized by the Apostles. Medieval leaders assumed that powers vested to theocratic Israel were vested to all nominally Christian governments, when such is not written in the Bible. The Book of Revelation is a candy store for undocumentable soothsaying.

Back to the Koran.

The Qur'an, we're told, is guidance to those who believe in what was revealed to Muhammad as well as in "that which was revealed before" him (v. 4). This involves the Qur'an's oft-stated assumption that it is the confirmation of the Torah and the Gospel, which teach the same message Muhammad is receiving in the Qur'anic revelations (see 5:44-48). When the Torah and Gospel were found not to agree with the Qur'an, the charge arose that Jews and Christians had corrupted their Scriptures — which is mainstream Islamic belief today.

Interestingly, this closely parallels Watchtower (Jehovah's Witnesses) and Mormon treatment of the Bible. However, the Watchtower does not challenge the veracity of original Biblical scriptures as Islam does - only the modern non-Watchtower translations. (I don't know the Mormon stance on this topic, but I do know that Mormons - and the Watchtower - each claim that it is the only genuinely Christian sect.)

I am also unaware of any historical evidence Islamic scholars have to offer regarding their claim that the original Christian and Jewish scriptures were replaced by spin.

There's more. Read the whole thing.

Update: Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Saturday, June 09, 2007

 
Soup's On

Look closely at the upper portion of this picture.

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There's A Million Watergate Jokes In This Headline

Stone: Al Gore Following Nixon Path

That's GOP analyst Roger Stone, not Oliver Stone (my first guess) or Sharon Stone or Sly and the Family Stone.

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More Good News From Iraq

The Anbar region is turning around.

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Friday, June 08, 2007

 
It's Dead, Jim

Safe for now. But like Freddy Krueger, it will eventually return...

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Thursday, June 07, 2007

 
The Troop Surge Is Working

Evidence (via Glenn).

Particularly note the second and third graphs. They report a figure neglected by most of the MSM - enemy casualties.

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Blogging the Qur'an: Sura 1, "The Opening"

A little late, but here is the first in Robert Spencer's series on the Koran.

Update: Sura 1 is essentially a prayer, and one of the most common in Islam. Spencer focuses on the last two verses: "Show us the straight path, the path of those whom Thou hast favoured; not the (path) of those who earn Thine anger nor of those who go astray." All religions claim that there are true paths and false ones, and all monotheistic religions claim that God isn't pleased when people take the wrong one. (Christianity in particular claims that everybody goes off track.)

All fine and dandy, unless you think that this prayer is appropriate for some ecumenical gathering. The prayer calls for Allah to show the way of Islam, the true path as alleged in the Koran.

Is it possible to draft an appropriate prayer for an ecumenical setting? Is there even a single principle that all religions share? I can't think of one.

Update: Click the "Koran" label to see all my posts on this series.

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Michellee Malkin vs. the Wall Street Journal Editorial Board

Michelle scores.

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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

 
D-Day Anniversary

It happened 63 years ago today.

Here is one of the heroes of that day: Benjamin H. Vandervoort, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne. He was portrayed by John Wayne in the 1962 film The Longest Day. He carried out his assignment despite a broken ankle.

A salute to all the Allied soldiers who fought that day.

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I'm All For Putting Sharks On Antidepressants

Human prescription medicines are appearing in their habitat.

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Quote Of The Day

"Margaret Sanger was the Al Gore of the eugenics movement."

a female caller to the Rush Limbaugh Show

For a smidgeon of historical data on Sanger, see here.

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Tuesday, June 05, 2007

 
Blogiversary

The blog is five years old today.

I remember Jay Manifold's one and only piece of advice on blogging: have fun. That hold true whether one is going for a few laughs or delving into serious topics. Some people have made stabs at coming up with rules for blogging. I won't attempt a comprehensive list, but I believe that these principles are very important:

  • Do not take disagreement personally. Everybody disagrees with you on something.
  • In any debate, whether by email or comments section, actually changing opinions is extra credit (and quite rare, by my experience). The goals are to make your position understood and to understand others' positions. You should seek to identify what I call the "hinge issue" - the point at where divergence of opinion begins. I hold up my exchange with Sean LaFreniere (see here and here) as an illustration; the hinge issue in this case is disagreement over the legitimacy of the legal concept of substantive due process.
  • If you send a link to one of your posts to another blogger, don't request that you be linked - that's already implied by the email. Your goal is to entertain the addressee.
  • Most bloggers should never blog about work. If in doubt, assume you're among the most.
  • Don't blog about friends and family without permission.

I'll recount a few blog milestones:

  • Date uncertain Making use of my ISP-provided webspace to host images displayed on the blog. I wanted that capability most for putting flag icons next to my blogroll entries. It also supports what has become a blog tradition, my annual costume party posts on October 31.
  • November 5, 2002 Birth of the other blog, the Henderson Prize for the Advancement of Liberty. Inspired by my dissatisfaction with the Nobel Peace Prize. I first announced the "prize" here, and explained why I chose not to parallel the Nobel Peace Prize: "The prize specifies liberty instead of peace because the latter cannot last for any significant length of time without the former." Putting together one of these prizes is one of the highlights of the year. It's educational, and often I don't know the complete roster of awardees until the HPAL entry is complete. For instance, while working on the award to honor the end of slavery in Britain, I didn't realize that it would dovetail with one of that nation's early legislative reforms, the Reform Act of 1832. I also didn't realize how many Communists would win the award for contributing to the downfall of Communism. Because the award seeks to highlight specific events, its roster will invariably include persons who have on other occasions been very unkind to freedom; Janos Kadar is a classic example.
  • January 12, 2003 One of the early Instalanches, if not the first.
  • September 08, 2003 My first guest post at Sasha Castel's now-defunct blog; I announced it on this blog here. Being invited to post on someone else's blog is one of the highest compliments a blogger can receive. Don't know if she'll make a comeback, but I've kept a hyperlink in the window.
  • March 2005 Texas Blogfest 2005. First blogger gathering I went to. Met Emperor Misha for the first time.
  • July 4, 2005 Linked by Jim Lindgren of the Volokh Conspiracy. One of the harder links for a non-lawyer to get. Fittingly, the topic was something very non-lawyery - Doonesbury.
  • November 5, 2006 A guest post at Samizdata, on certain political implications of the graphic novel V for Vendetta. I submitted the post on my own initiative, and Samizdata kindly accepted it.

Many thanks to my readers.

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Monday, June 04, 2007

 
Tin Soldiers And Chicoms Coming

Eighteen years ago today.

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Progress In Iraq

Sig94 has a list of accomplishments (via the Rott).

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Prediction

If the illegal alien amnesty bill passes, look for a sharp increase in UFO sightings.

I wonder what George Noory has to say about this...

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Thursday, May 31, 2007

 
Government Waste Du Jour

John Murtha used earmarks to start up a do-nothing agency. Instapundit has video of the CNN broadcast.

Citizens Against Government Waste rewarded his efforts by naming him its Porker of the Month for May.

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Democracy In Action

Bashar al-Assad is reelected President of Syria, receiving 97.3% of the vote.

He was the only candidate.

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You Know Bush Has Problems With The Republican Base...

...when Day by Day does this to Tony Snow.

(Yeah, I'm a little behind in my cartoon reading. But I'm just about caught up.)

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Why Jimmy Carter Was A Failed President

Because he believes that thugs can be reasoned with:

The Carter Center called for dialogue Thursday between President Hugo Chavez and opponents protesting his decision to force an opposition TV channel off the air, while calm returned to the streets after three days of demonstrations.

The Atlanta-based organization founded by former President Jimmy Carter expressed concern about the potential for escalating violence after the government halted broadcasts by Radio Caracas Television on Sunday. Police have repeatedly clashed with angry crowds hurling rocks and bottles since Chavez refused to renew the station's broadcast license.

"Healthy democracies require spaces for political dialogue and debate to allow divisions about the future direction of the country to be addressed in peaceful ways," the Carter Center said.

Dude, Venezuela is not a healthy democracy. Hugo Chavez is not at peace with his people. He is the sort who will respond only to some form of coercion.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

 
Blogging The Koran

Hot Air contributor Robert Spencer is starting up a new project:

So over the course of the next few months, I’m going to read it, and discuss it in a series of columns. All of it. Not “cherry-picked” or “out of context.” The whole thing, beginning to end. Some of you may be familiar with David Plotz’s series on Slate, “Blogging the Bible.” This series will be similar to that one, but rather than just write about what I think or feel about a certain passage, I will, unlike Plotz, refer to commentaries – all Muslim ones – on the Qur’an. I’ll try to explain how mainstream Muslims who study the Qur’an will understand any given passage, and what its import might be for non-Muslims.

You’ll need a Qur’an. Here is a good Arabic/English text. In traditional Islamic theology, the Qur’an is essentially and inherently an “Arabic Qur’an” (as the Qur’an describes itself repeatedly: see 12:2; 20:113; 39:28; 41:3; 41:44; 42:7; and 43:3). Its meaning can be rendered in other languages, but those translations are not the Qur’an, which when no longer in Arabic is no longer itself. Some Muslim scholars even claim that the Qur’an cannot be fully understood except in Arabic, but the blizzard of translations made by Muslims for Muslims who don’t speak Arabic (who are the great majority around the world today) as well as to proselytize among non-Muslims belies that claim. Here are two popular Muslim translations, those of Abdullah Yusuf Ali and Mohammed Marmaduke Pickthall, along with a third by M. H. Shakir. Here is another popular translation, that of Muhammad Asad. And here is an omnibus of ten Qur’an translations.

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