The new maps for Call of Duty 4 released today. Naturally, Xbox Live has collapsed under the strain, as it does every single time anything happens.
Distance learning
April 4, 2008An e-mail received today:
Hi. I am not a student at your school but the professor of my class is out of town and I am stuck on a homework problem. If you could help me then I would appreciate it. I need to work the following problem, using only rules of inference and not conditional or indirect proofs.
. . . logic problem follows . . .
It used to be that when you tried to get strangers to do your homework for you, you would pretend it wasn’t homework.
More missile defense coolness
April 4, 2008The YAL-1 Airborne Laser, explained in a Boeing promotional video. (Warning: fairly cheesy.) Apparently they’ve licked the problem of atmospheric distortion by analyzing the return from a tracking laser before firing the high-energy laser.
NY legislature takes a stand against libel tourism
April 4, 2008The New York legislature has unanimously passed the Libel Tourism Projection Act. I’m not sure how much this will actually do to address the problem, but it definitely sends the right message.
(Via LGF.)
UN Human Rights Council sinks even lower
April 4, 2008No longer content with using the UN Human Rights Council to protect themselves from criticism, Arab and Muslim countries now seek to use it to curtail free speech elsewhere:
Arab and Muslim countries defended Tuesday a resolution they pushed through at the United Nations to have the body’s expert on free speech police individuals and news media for negative comments on Islam. . .
Pakistan’s ambassador, Masood Khan, speaking on behalf of the 57-nation Organization of the Islamic Conference, denied the resolution would limit free speech. It only tries to make freedom of expression responsible, he said.
“Responsible” speech, of course, is speech that we don’t disapprove of. Well, surely this was controversial, right? They only won narrowly, right?
The statement proposed by Egypt and Pakistan . . . passed 32-0 last week at the council.
Oh.
(Via LGF.)
Mugabe cracks down
April 4, 2008Mugabe makes clear he has no intention of leaving power:
Zimbabwe’s government staged separate police raids on Thursday against the main opposition party, foreign journalists and at least one democracy advocate, raising the specter of a broad crackdown aimed at keeping the country’s imperiled leaders in power.
With the government facing election results that threaten its 28-year reign, security officers raided the Miekles Hotel in central Harare on Thursday afternoon, searching rooms that the main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, had rented for election operations. . .
About the same time, a second group of riot officers sealed off the York Lodge, a small hotel in suburban Harare that is frequented by foreign journalists. A lodge worker . . . said six people were detained, including Barry Bearak, a correspondent for The New York Times who was later located in a Harare jail.
Raids on the opposition party, arrests of foreign journalists, and no official election results yet. Yep, I’m sure this runoff is going to be fair.
Best error message, ever
April 4, 2008From Call of Duty 4 on the Xbox 360:
Error during initialization: Microsoft error SESSION_FULL when calling XSessionJoinRemote() for session gameSession for clientNum 12 — xuid 9000001965691
What, no stack trace?
Obama owes lead to Chicago
April 3, 2008Tom Elia makes a striking observation:
Of Sen. Obama’s 711,000 popular-vote lead, 650,000 — or more than 90% of the total margin— comes from Sen. Obama’s home state of Illinois, with 429,000 of that lead coming from his home base of Cook County.
That margin in Cook County represents almost 60%of Obama’s total lead nationwide.
Interestingly, Sen. Obama’s 429,000-vote margin in Cook County alone is larger than the winning margin of either candidate in any state.
(Via Instapundit.)
I’ll come out and say what neither Elia or Reynolds wants to say, but everyone is thinking. This is Chicago; is there any good reason to believe those votes are real? Does Obama even have a significant lead at all?
This underscores another aspect of the wisdom of our Founding Fathers in establishing the Electoral College. With the College in place, a single corrupt city can steal only one state. Without it, one or two cities like Chicago or Seattle could steal the entire election.
Canada will stay in Afghanistan
April 3, 2008Prime Minister Harper made the announcement today:
Canada accomplished what it set out to achieve at the NATO summit, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday, including having the conditions met for extending the country’s mission in Afghanistan.
(Via Instapundit.)
Between that, and the French pledge of more troops, it’s a good day for the Afghan people, and for the global war on terror.
US News rankings for programming languages
April 3, 2008The US News and World Report rankings of graduate programs are out. In addition to ranking schools by strength in fields overall, they also rank specialty areas such as programming languages. (No permalink.) Let’s take a look:
1 Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 2 University of California–Berkeley Berkeley, CA 3 Stanford University Stanford, CA 4 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, MA 5 Cornell University Ithaca, NY 6 Princeton University Princeton, NJ University of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign Urbana, IL 8 University of Texas–Austin Austin, TX 9 Rice University Houston, TX 10 University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison, WI
This list seems pretty much random. I’m glad to see my school on top, but the rest of the list is so strange that I can’t honestly take much satisfaction from it. The University of Pennsylvania, which has one of the strongest groups in PL, doesn’t make the list at all!
Are all the US News rankings this bad? Probably, yes. One of the principles I’ve learned is when the media is wrong about anything of which I have direct knowledge, it’s probably wrong about everything else as well.
BONUS: Glenn Reynolds has some related thoughts about law school rankings.
NATO endorses missile shield
April 3, 2008NATO leaders agreed to extend our missile defense system to cover Europe by installing a radar in the Czech Republic and interceptors in Poland.
Missile defense is now official policy not only of the United States, but of NATO as well. Hopefully this will make it hard for the Democrats to shut down a system that is already installed and working. Honestly, I don’t understand why they continue to oppose it. The system is built and has passed 28 of 29 tests since it was deployed. Reagan, their nemesis, has passed away. It simply goes beyond reason now.
BONUS: An interesting video on the state-of-the-art in missile defense. (Via Instapundit.) It’s half an hour long, but well worth it if you’re interested in missile defense. (Bear with it, they do eventually point the camera at the screen.)
UPDATE (6/17): Sigh, the testing record link is stale now. I assemble my own chronology here. With my conservative methodology, I calculated a 23-2 record.
Zimbabwe runoff is back on
April 3, 2008It’s hard to keep up with the pace of events in Zimbabwe, but it seems to fluctuate between three states:
-
Mugabe will steal the election outright.
-
Mugabe will rig the results enough for a runoff, which he will try to steal.
-
Mugabe will leave office voluntarily.
State three always seemed far-fetched, but there was enough talk of it from supposedly informed sources that I began to hope. Now things appear to have settled into state two. This isn’t good news; Mugabe now knows how many votes he’s going to have to steal to win. Expect to see him “win” the runoff by a narrow margin.
What’s three little years among friends?
April 3, 2008The Independent runs a 2005 photo as evidence of a depression in 2008. (Via Gateway Pundit, via Instapundit.)
BONUS: Roger de Hauteville spots an MP3 player on the impoverished man in the foreground.
Columbia Journalism Review rebukes Obama and media over 100-years distortion
April 3, 2008The Columbia Journalism Review actually gets the story right:
Ever since John McCain said at a town hall meeting in January that he could see U.S. troops staying in Iraq for a hundred years, the Democrats have been trying to use the quote to paint the Arizona senator as a dangerous warmonger. And lately, Barack Obama in particular has stepped up his attacks on McCain’s “100 years” notion.
But in doing so, Obama is seriously misleading voters—if not outright lying to them—about exactly what McCain said. And some in the press are failing to call him on it.
Next, CJR goes on to rebuke the media for not calling Obama on this:
Still, some outlets continue to portray the issue as a he-said, she-said spat. A long takeout on the controversy by ABC News, opining that McCain’s comment “handed his Democratic opponents and war critics a weapon with which to bludgeon him,” is headlined: “McCain’s 100 Year Remark Hands Ammo to War Critics: McCain Haunted by January Remarks Suggesting 100 More Years in Iraq.” And today’s L.A. Times story, headlined “Obama, McCain Bicker Over Iraq,” is similarly neutral.
To be fair, the ABC News piece does provide the quote in its full context, giving enough information to allow conscientious readers to figure out the truth. That’s better than the L.A. Times piece, which says only that “McCain has stressed since then that he meant that U.S. troops might need to remain to support Iraqi forces, not to wage full-scale warfare”—instead of simply telling readers that it’s clear from the context that McCain did indeed mean that. Still, neither piece stated high up and unequivocally that Obama is distorting McCain’s words.
(Via Hot Air.)
I think the media rebuke is the more important one. Unlike politicians, newspapers actually care a little bit about their reputation for honesty.
Sign of the times
April 2, 2008Another use for the iPhone: Sometimes it’s just too much trouble to get up from your armchair and walk two steps to your computer.
Firefly as evil misogynist fantasy
April 2, 2008Wow. It’s hard to know what to say about this. (Warning: vulgarity.) Jonah Goldberg thinks it’s hilarious, but I actually find it a bit disturbing. How does one get to the point of seeing the world through that kind of lens?
(For the record: All four of my regular readers know about Firefly already, but in case you haven’t, it is simply the best show ever to grace the small screen.)
China provides intelligence on Iranian nuclear program to UN
April 2, 2008This AP story seems potentially important. It’s frustratingly short of information on the substance of the Chinese briefing, though.
Whither NATO
April 2, 2008Stephen Green asks whether NATO serves any purpose any more:
So now we’re inviting Ukraine and Georgia into NATO.
Great. Uh… then what?
NATO used to mean something. It used to do something. Namely: defend Western Europe from a Soviet attack. If Russian tanks ever came streaming across the North German Plain, we had a plan in place to deal with it. . .
If Russia were to attack Ukraine, what would we do? Lithuania? How about even Poland, or eastern Germany? Do we have a plan? . . .
Well, no. NATO isn’t a defensive alliance anymore. It’s a club. . . It’s an alliance without a plan, and without even a real enemy.
Actually, I think NATO’s primary purpose is the same as it ever was, to defend Europe against Russian attack. Whatever else NATO does is a sideshow. For now, of course, the Russian threat has receded, and that’s reflected in NATO’s clubliness. In the future, who can say? Particularly in light of Putin’s recent belligerence, I’m not going to go out on a limb and say that the Russian threat is gone forever.
The reason to expand NATO is simple: to consolidate our gains. We’re pushing the tripwire all the way back to Russia’s doorstep. Conquerors typically start with a few small countries that no one cares much about before they start the real campaign. We’re telling the Kremlin that at their first sign of aggression, they will have to deal with us.
Make no mistake: the Kremlin sees this. That’s why they scream bloody murder every time NATO expands. I’m not saying that Putin has any plans to expand, but I’m sure he hasn’t ruled it out. This makes it look a little less attractive.
So, sure, we should have a plan for a war with Russia. What’s more, I’m sure we do. If, God forbid, we ever need to fight that war, I’m sure the plan will fare no better than any other plan ever does. Still, at least we’ll be starting a little farther east.
More on Basra
April 2, 2008Allahpundit is puzzled by all the differing accounts. He guesses:
My hunch, as I’ve said before, is that this will end up like Israel’s war with Hezbollah insofar as (a) the media pronounced it an unmitigated disaster, (b) the damage to the bad guys was much greater than reported, and (c) even so, the mission ultimately failed to cripple a lethal Iranian proxy, leaving it to regroup and fight another day after it’s been extravagantly resupplied.
I worry that he might be right about (c), which is why I find Roggio’s report somewhat reassuring.
UPDATE and BUMP: Instapundit has more.
Clinton fired for unethical conduct during Watergate inquiry
April 2, 2008Dan Calabrese has a blockbuster column on Hillary Clinton’s unethical behavior while serving on the legal staff of the House Judiciary Committee during the Watergate hearings. (Via Hot Air.) There’s a lot of material here, but here’s the juiciest thread:
Jerry Zeifman, a lifelong Democrat, supervised the work of 27-year-old Hillary Rodham on the committee. . . When the investigation was over, Zeifman fired Hillary from the committee staff and refused to give her a letter of recommendation – one of only three people who earned that dubious distinction in Zeifman’s 17-year career. . .
She was one of several individuals – including [Burke] Marshall, special counsel John Doar and senior associate special counsel (and future Clinton White House Counsel) Bernard Nussbaum – who engaged in a seemingly implausible scheme to deny Richard Nixon the right to counsel during the investigation.
The actions of Hillary and her cohorts went directly against the judgment of top Democrats . . . that Nixon clearly had the right to counsel. Zeifman says that Hillary, along with Marshall, Nussbaum and Doar, was determined to gain enough votes on the Judiciary Committee to change House rules and deny counsel to Nixon. And in order to pull this off, Zeifman says Hillary wrote a fraudulent legal brief, and confiscated public documents to hide her deception.
The brief involved precedent for representation by counsel during an impeachment proceeding. When Hillary endeavored to write a legal brief arguing there is no right to representation by counsel during an impeachment proceeding, Zeifman says, he told Hillary about the case of Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, who faced an impeachment attempt in 1970. . .
The Judiciary Committee allowed Douglas to keep counsel, thus establishing the precedent. Zeifman says he told Hillary that all the documents establishing this fact were in the Judiciary Committee’s public files. So what did Hillary do?
“Hillary then removed all the Douglas files to the offices where she was located, which at that time was secured and inaccessible to the public,” Zeifman said. Hillary then proceeded to write a legal brief arguing there was no precedent for the right to representation by counsel during an impeachment proceeding – as if the Douglas case had never occurred.
The brief was so fraudulent and ridiculous, Zeifman believes Hillary would have been disbarred if she had submitted it to a judge.
(Emphasis mine.) The credibility of Zeifman’s charges are bolstered (if Clinton’s subsequent behavior weren’t enough) by his contemporaneous notes of the affair:
Zeifman says he was urged by top committee members to keep a diary of everything that was happening. He did so, and still has the diary if anyone wants to check the veracity of his story. Certainly, he could not have known in 1974 that diary entries about a young lawyer named Hillary Rodham would be of interest to anyone 34 years later. But they show that the pattern of lies, deceit, fabrications and unethical behavior was established long ago.
This revelation won’t change the coveted Internet Scofflaw endorsement. Here at Internet Scofflaw we aren’t under any illusions regarding Hillary Clinton’s character, but we still see her as the lesser of two evils.
More on Pizza Hut’s defenseless-driver policy
April 2, 2008The Pizza Hut driver who last week shot an armed robber is still not back at work, according to the Des Moines Register:
Spiers, who has a valid handgun permit, said he’s been “pretty much in the dark” about his job since the incident. . . “I just know that, given what happened, it’s not likely I’ll have a job anyway,” Spiers said. “Right now, I’m just taking some time off, trying to cool things down.”
(Via Instapundit.)
People aren’t happy about this:
A state senator said he would stop buying Pizza Hut products if the pizza chain fires a Des Moines delivery man who shot a teen who tried to rob him at gunpoint. . . “What I want everybody to know … is that there is people out there supporting this man and his right to defend himself,” Zaun said.
As I see it, Pizza Hut’s defenseless-driver policy is part a consensual business arrangement between them and their drivers, so they would be within their rights if they fire him (as reprehensible as it would be to do so). On the other hand, any purchases that we might make at Pizza Hut, Kentucky Fried Chicken, or Taco Bell in the future are consensual business arrangements as well.
Obama takes money from oil interests, ad notwithstanding
April 2, 2008Factcheck.org takes Obama to task on his latest ad:
Technically, that’s true, since a law that has been on the books for more than a century prohibits corporations from giving money directly to any federal candidate. But that doesn’t distinguish Obama from his rivals in the race. . .
- Obama has accepted more than $213,000 from individuals who work for companies in the oil and gas industry and their spouses.
- Two of Obama’s bundlers are top executives at oil companies and are listed on his Web site as raising between $50,000 and $100,000 for the presidential hopeful.
(Via Instapundit.)
A secret change to tenure rules?
April 2, 2008At Baylor University, Inside Higher Ed reports:
Senior administrators have come to believe that departmental standards were not rigorous enough and so applied new standards, which have never been shared with faculty leaders, let alone with those who submitted tenure portfolios under the old standards. Largely as a result, tenure denials at Baylor this year — which have been about 10 percent annually in recent years — shot up to 40 percent.
(Via Instapundit.)
Setting aside the unfairness of this, Baylor is shooting themselves in the foot here. It really can hurt recruiting if prospective hires worry that they won’t be treated fairly. I can think of one major institution in particular (not mine, in case you’re wondering) that developed such a bad reputation that it was unable to hire anyone that would meet their standards for tenure.
Automating attractiveness judgements
April 1, 2008Determining whether or not a face is attractive no longer requires human computation. Researchers at Tel Aviv University have implemented an automated system to judge whether a face is attractive or not. (Via Instapundit.) The system is based on the idea that the most beautiful face is one whose features are close to the average.
The psychological research doesn’t sound new; I first heard the observation that beautiful equals average about 20 years ago. On the other hand, the vision problems implicit in the project sound hard. (For example, the article doesn’t say this, but surely they must locate the cheekbones in order to judge whether a face is attractive.)
In a way, though, this work is a pity. Now that a computer can tell whether a face is attractive, we’ll have to give up any hope that people will start using CAPTCHAs based on pretty faces. Oh well.
Operations in Basra continuing
April 1, 2008Bill Roggio reports at the Long War Journal that the Iraqi Army’s operations are continuing against those Mahdi Army elements that refuse to lay down their arms. To the extent that peace has fallen, it’s because most of the Mahdi Army has obeyed al-Sadr’s call to lay down their arms.
The mainstream media seems convinced that this is a defeat for al-Maliki, but I don’t get it, at least not yet. If the Iraqi government ends as the sole military power in southern Iraq (other than the coalition), Maliki wins. The possible problem is that Sadr has been able to preserve his base of power after defeats in the past, but it looks as though Maliki may finally be wise to him.
Mugabe may leave office
April 1, 2008Earlier today the talk was of a runoff election between Mugabe and Tsvangirai. This would give Mugabe another shot at rigging the election, which apparently he didn’t do well enough the first time.
Now that talk seems to have fallen by the wayside. Official sources are now saying that Mugabe is prepared to step down, and the sticking point is getting agreement from the army chief of staff. Gateway Pundit has a roundup. (Via Instapundit.)
I’m still skeptical about this. I find it hard to believe that Mugabe would ever leave office voluntarily, but I hope I’m wrong.
Belichick: no other cheating, we swear
April 1, 2008Bill Belichick, coach of the New England Patriots, insists that the time they got caught was the only time they ever cheated. The Patriots are under investigation again after allegations that a former employee has illegal tapes of a St. Louis Rams practice.
Best quote:
“I’ve never seen a tape of another team’s practice. Ever!” [Belichick] said Tuesday. “Certainly not that one.”
He also argues that their successful season proves they aren’t cheating any more. I’m not sure I follow his logic.
For the record: I don’t see anything really wrong with gathering intelligence at any open event, but the rules are the rules.
Also: Why the hell is the US Senate involving itself in this?
China under pressure
April 1, 2008Stop blocking the internet, Olympics committee tells China. The IOC wants journalists to have uncensored access to the Internet during the games. “More backbone than I’d expected,” remarks Glenn Reynolds. I guess I agree, but only because I expected none at all. China’s likely response is “or what?”, to which the IOC can have no response. They lost whatever leverage they had long ago.
On the other hand, Bhaichung Bhutia has some backbone. A national sports hero of India, he has refused to carry the Olympic torch because of the China’s crackdown in Tibet. Plus there’s this gem:
China was infuriated last month when Tibetan protesters broke into the Chinese Embassy compound in Delhi.
Yep, it’s bad when your embassy is violated.
Finally, no April Fool: I agree with Nancy Pelosi about something.
NYT hits a new low
April 1, 2008The New York Times goes where it must to find the desired narrative; in this case a news story written in the first-person by a former captain from Saddam’s army. (Via Instapundit.) Wow.
UPDATE: Instapundit prints a letter from another NYT reporter defending the article.
Nicolae Ceausescu, call your office
March 31, 2008Brzezinski repeats 100-years calumny
March 31, 2008In the Washington Post, Brzezinski repeats the lie:
Both Democratic presidential candidates agree that the United States should end its combat mission in Iraq within 12 to 16 months of their possible inauguration. The Republican candidate has spoken of continuing the war, even for a hundred years, until “victory.”
(Via the Corner.)
Of course, that is exactly not what McCain said. Now Brzezinski is a politician, so we shouldn’t be shocked when he lies. The Washington Post, on the other hand, looks bad here. Aren’t there supposed to be standards of accuracy even for op-ed pieces?
UPDATE: Better link for McCain’s actual remark.
Busted
March 31, 2008Politico has the story:
During his first run for elected office, Barack Obama played a greater role than his aides now acknowledge in crafting liberal stands on gun control, the death penalty and abortion — positions that appear at odds with the more moderate image he has projected during his presidential campaign.
The evidence comes from an amended version of an Illinois voter group’s detailed questionnaire, filed under his name during his 1996 bid for a state Senate seat.
Obama gave his usual “it wasn’t me—I never saw it—I wasn’t there” response:
Late last year, in response to a Politico story about Obama’s answers to the original questionnaire, his aides said he “never saw or approved” the questionnaire.
They asserted the responses were filled out by a campaign aide who “unintentionally mischaracterize[d] his position.”
Politico, however, did the legwork, discovering:
But a Politico examination determined that Obama was actually interviewed about the issues on the questionnaire by the liberal Chicago nonprofit group that issued it. And it found that Obama — the day after sitting for the interview — filed an amended version of the questionnaire, which appears to contain Obama’s own handwritten notes added to one answer. . .
Through an aide, Obama . . . did not dispute that the handwriting was his. But he contended it doesn’t prove he completed, approved — or even read — the latter questionnaire.
An interview and his own handwriting. I’m not sure even Obama can get away with disavowing his own words and handwriting.
Oh, and what are those opinions that he says never held? Ed Morrissey summarizes:
Opposed to parental notification on abortions. He amended this to say that he might possibly support it for 12- or 13-year-olds, but no older. Flatly opposed the death penalty, a position he denied ever having. Supported bans on the sale, possession, and manufacture of guns, again a position he denied ever taking.
(Via Hot Air.)
Obama is looking more and more unprepared for national politics, where people sometimes follow up on what you say.
Rube Goldberg, call your office
March 31, 2008A diary at Daily Kos reports on the race for the Democratic credentials committee. (Via TalkLeft, via Instapundit.) He concludes that it is possible for Clinton to gain a majority of the credentials committee, and thereby seat the Michigan and Florida delegations. I don’t know if any of this is accurate or not (he does list Texas for Obama — does the caucus trump the primary?), but it’s hugely entertaining.
Israel and Palestinians agree on steps for peace
March 31, 2008The plan, announced by Secretary of State Rice, includes several Israeli concessions:
- removing 50 travel barriers in and around Jenin, Tulkarem, Qalqiliya and Ramallah,
- dismantling of one permanent roadblock,
- deploying 700 Jordanian-trained Palestinian police in Jenin and allowing them to take delivery of armored vehicles,
- raising the the number of Palestinian businessmen allowed into Israel to 1,500 from 1,000,
- increasing the number of work permits for Palestinian laborers by 5,000 from its current number of 18,500,
- building new housing for Palestinians in 25 villages,
- connecting Palestinian villages to the Israeli power grid, and
- Israeli support for large-scale economic development programs and encouragement of foreign investment.
In return, the Palestinians promised an immediate cessation of rocket attacks and suicide bombings.
Okay, I made that last one up.
Lieberman on the Democrats
March 31, 2008He’s not going to mend any fences with the far left with this interview.
Pizza deliveryman shoots would-be robber
March 31, 2008A Des Moines pizza deliveryman did his part to make the world a better place:
A pizza deliveryman told Des Moines police that he shot a man who robbed him at gunpoint when he delivered a pie late Thursday to a south-side address.
The alleged assailant, Kenneth Jimmerson, 19, was taken to Mercy Medical Center in serious condition. He was charged this morning with first-degree robbery and will be taken to Polk County Jail when released from the hospital, police said.
Melanie Stout, 18, the woman who placed the order for the pizzas, was charged with conspiracy to commit robbery.
(Via Instapundit.)
The story is not entirely cheery though. In keeping with the “no good deed goes unpunished” principle:
Restaurant officials have suspended the Pizza Hut driver, James William Spiers, while the case is under investigation. . . Vonnie Walbert, vice president of human resources at Pizza Hut, said:
“We have policy against carrying weapons. We prohibit employees from carrying guns because we believe that that is the safest for everybody.”
It’s exactly that sort of thinking that made this deliveryman look like an attractive target.
Zimbabwe opposition claims victory
March 30, 2008I have to blog this right away, since it won’t last long. Sky News reports that the opposition is claiming victory based on unofficial results. Then the rub:
The electoral body said it would start announcing early partial returns at some point today.
The official returns will probably be a bit different. (Is Jimmy Carter there to give Mugabe cover?)
UPDATE: The NYT reminds us of the last Zimbabwean vote:
In 2002, reported results had challenger Morgan Tsvangirai piling up a big lead. Then, suddenly, the announcements stopped. When they resumed, hours later, Mr. Mugabe was well ahead.
(Via Instapundit.)
UPDATE and BUMP: The Telegraph reports: Robert Mugabe’s defeat cannot be covered up. Here’s hoping.
The Guardian’s report is less promising:
Robert Mugabe was desperately trying to cling to power last night, despite his clear defeat in Zimbabwe’s presidential election, by blocking the electoral commission from releasing official results and threatening to treat an opposition claim of victory as a coup. . .
Tsvangirai [the apparent winner] made no public appearances, apparently out of concern for his safety. Mugabe’s spokesman, George Charamba, warned Tsvangirai not to declare himself president because that “is called a coup d’etat and we all know how coups are handled”.
Yes, I suppose we do.
(Via Instapundit.)
UPDATE: The election rigging proceeds in slow motion. (Yet again via Instapundit.)
Something is wrong in Detroit
March 30, 2008I’m not referring to Kwame Kilpatrick. The entire U.S. Attorney’s office is entangled somehow with Saddam’s intelligence agency:
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Detroit confirmed Thursday the entire Detroit office has been recused from the Al-Hanooti case, but officials would not say why. The case is instead being handled by government lawyers from Washington, D.C.
(Via Instapundit.)
All you need to know about Windows Vista
March 30, 2008The system requirements for Crysis:
OS – Windows XP or Windows Vista Processor – 2.8 GHz or faster (XP); 3.2 GHz or faster (Vista) Memory – 1.0 GB RAM or 1.5 GB RAM (Vista)
John Edwards takes a courageous stand
March 30, 2008Edwards Praises Both Clinton, Obama.
You have to click through, just for the photo.
The media on Basra
March 30, 2008Instapundit has a round-up on media coverage of the operation in Basra. Ed Morrissey indicts the media:
Did our media give anyone this context? No. They reported it as some kind of spontaneous eruption of rebellion without noting at all that a nation can hardly be considered sovereign while its own security forces cannot enter a large swath of its own territory. And in the usual defeatist tone, they reported that our mission in Iraq had failed without waiting to see what the outcome of the battle would be.
But Ed Cone disagrees, pointing to two stories that did give context. Cone is partly right; the article I read at the Washington Post did give some context (can’t find it now, sorry), and didn’t present it as spontaneous rebellion. However, I think that Morrissey is more right than wrong.
The media has utterly failed to educate the public on the state of the war, preferring to focus on its “grim milestones.” (I suppose it’s more efficient their way: they’ve been able to represent the entire war in 12 bits.) To anyone who is informed on the war, it has been perfectly obvious that this had to happen eventually. Morrissey saves me the trouble of explaining why:
The British left a power vacuum behind in the south that the Baghdad government could not fill at the time, and Sadr and the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council’s Badr Brigades filled it instead. They have fought each other and some smaller Shi’ite groups for control of the streets ever since 2005. . . The Iraqi government had no choice but to challenge the militias for control of Basra and the surrounding areas, but they waited until the Iraqi Army had enough strength to succeed.
This explanation rates in complexity somewhere between the domino theory and “Berlin is that way” so the media ought to have been able to handle it.
UPDATE: Day by day weighs in.
Last man with a dictionary
March 30, 2008We’ve become sadly used to the passing of the word “terrorist” to describe actual terrorists (remember, those people who intentionally kill civilians as a means of political coercion), and also to its occasional misuse to describe anyone the speaker doesn’t like (typically Bush, Cheney, Blair, etc.). Still, one might have hoped for better from our own government.
Michael Totten posts about the dismaying story of an actual freedom fighter who was denied a green card by the INS because of his history as a “terrorist”:
Saman Kareem Ahmad is an Iraqi Kurd who worked as a translator with the Marines in Iraq’s Anbar Province. He was one of the few selected translators who was granted asylum in the U.S. because he and his family were singled out for destruction by insurgents for “collaboration.” He wants to return to Iraq as an American citizen and a Marine, and has already been awarded the Navy-Marine Corps Achievement Medal and the War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal. Secretary of the Navy Donald C. Winter and General David Petraeus wrote notes for his file and recommended he be given a Green Card, but the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) declined his application and called him a “terrorist.” . . .
The Kurds in Iraq–unlike the Kurds in Turkey and the ever-popular Palestinians– did not use terrorism as a tactic in their struggle for liberation. They fought honorably against Saddam’s soldiers, not against Arab civilians in south and central Iraq.
(Via Instapundit.)
For the record, a terrorist is someone who intentionally attacks civilians in order to create terror as a means of coercion. A soldier who attacks legitimate military targets is not a terrorist, even when the speaker disapproves of his cause. Conversely, someone whose vocation is setting off car bombs in crowded marketplaces is a terrorist, and he doesn’t stop being so simply because he is currently fighting for his life against the US Marines or the IDF.
Wiki-wars
March 30, 2008The New Republic has an article on edit wars at Wikipedia on the pages for Clinton and Obama. (Via The New Editor, via Instapundit.) No surprise: both sides have some juveniles. But the key point is here, I think:
The battles over Hillary’s and Obama’s pages have been so heated because the stakes are so high. The candidates’ Wikipedia pages are their second Google hits, right after their official campaign portals.
Wikipedia almost always comes near the top on Google. Why? A friend at Google once confirmed for me what I suspected, that it’s not simply the result of their page ranking algorithm — they put it there deliberately. “People like Wikipedia,” he said.
True enough, people like Wikipedia, but it tends to be of limited use for controversial subjects. Moreover, you can be surprised by what turns out to be controversial; I once read their article about the “alleged moon landings.” (This has long since been fixed.) I’d rather they simply applied their algorithm and let the chips fall where they may.
UN Secretary-General advocates censorship
March 30, 2008Ban Ki-moon cannot limit himself to a negative review:
I condemn, in the strongest terms, the airing of Geert Wilders’ offensively anti-Islamic film. There is no justification for hate speech or incitement to violence. The right of free expression is not at stake here. I acknowledge the efforts of the Government of the Netherlands to stop the broadcast of this film, and appeal for calm to those understandably offended by it. Freedom must always be accompanied by social responsibility.
(Via LGF.)
Oh, the right of free expression is not at stake here? Never mind then.
Al-Sadr capitulates, maybe
March 30, 2008Al-Sadr has ordered his followers to “end all presence on the streets” and not to carry arms against Iraqi forces. I guess we know who’s winning.
Still, Al-Sadr has been very slippery in the past, managing to escape destruction each time he’s been defeated. I hope the Iraqi army finishes the job this time.
UPDATE: Bill Roggio reports promising news from Baghdad and Basra. (Via Instapundit.)
Stop-Loss flops
March 30, 2008Friday I blogged on the (lack of) reality behind the movie Stop-Loss, based on the trailer. Well, Libertas actually saw the movie, and didn’t care for it much. (Via Instapundit.) Viewers seem to agree; the movie opened at #7, earning just $1.6 million. Apparently, Paramount is not surprised:
Paramount wasn’t expecting much because no Iraq war-themed movie has yet to perform at the box office. “It’s not looking good,” a studio source told me before the weekend. “No one wants to see Iraq war movies. No matter what we put out there in terms of great cast or trailers, people were completely turned off. It’s a function of the marketplace not being ready to address this conflict in a dramatic way because the war itself is something that’s unresolved yet. It’s a shame because it’s a good movie that’s just ahead of its time.”
They didn’t expect the movie to do well, but they made it anyway? I guess they feel some principles are worth wasting money on. (Paramount’s shareholders have some grounds to be upset, I think.)
Also, an Instapundit reader suggests “an X-Prize for an Iraq war movie that doesn’t suck.”
Rice disappoints on Iran
March 29, 2008The Washington Times publishes excerpts of an interview with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. (Via Power Line.) The article is headlined by her comments on race, and on that topic what she says sounds about right. (ASIDE: One is struck by the fact that Rice, who (unlike Obama) actually grew up in the segregated South, managed to avoid forming ties with any racist nutcase ministers.)
However, I was troubled by this bit at the end:
Miss Rice cited resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, ending North Korea’s nuclear programs, and securing Iraq and Afghanistan as the Bush administration’s main foreign-policy priorities for the rest of its term.
What about Iran? Continuing the quixotic Israeli-Palestinian “peace process” is a higher priority than keeping Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons?
Blue on Blue
March 29, 2008The Clinton campaign turns up the heat on Obama:
Sen. Hillary Clinton’s most prominent African-American supporter in Pennsylvania [Philadelphia mayor Michael Nutter] says that had he been a member of Sen. Barack Obama’s church, he would have left because of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s fiery and controversial sermons. . .
Nutter said, “I think there is a big difference between expressing the pain and anger that many African Americans and other people of color may feel versus language that I think now crosses the line and goes into hate.” . . .
“Somehow, someway, for some people there’s an automatic assumption that a mayor who is African-American or some other elected official has to support another African-American,” Nutter said.
“I thought that when Dr. King said that he wanted people to be judged not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character, I thought that’s what he was talking about,” Nutter added.
(Via Instapundit.)
Obama: 1980’s Democrats supported Reagan and Bush
March 29, 2008Speaking in Greensburg, Pennsylvania (45 minutes from Pittsburgh), Obama said he would return America to the “traditional” foreign policy of Reagan and Bush 41.
The truth is that my foreign policy is actually a return to the traditional bipartisan realistic policy of George Bush’s father, of John F. Kennedy, of, in some ways, Ronald Reagan.
(Emphasis mine.) Got that? The foreign policy of Reagan and Bush Sr. was “bipartisan.” Obama must be working from a different dictionary than I, because I distinctly recall the Democrats vehemently opposing Bush and especially Reagan. (I remember it very clearly because, sad to say, I was part of that Democratic consensus opposing Reagan. But give me a break; when Reagan left office, I was 17 and still in the clutches of the Seattle Public Schools.)
I remember the Democratic opposition to Reagan’s military buildup, to SDI, to the liberation of Grenada. I remember apoplectic reaction to Reagan’s evil empire speech, and the Boland Amendment cutting off the Nicaraguan Contras. I remember the 1991 Gulf War resolution that Senate Democrats voted against 10-45 (and two of the ten are no longer Democrats) and House Democrats voted against 86-179. Bipartisan indeed.
No matter how often the Democrats are wrong — against Lincoln, Eisenhower, Reagan, Bush 41 — they’ve always joined the consensus in retrospect, and they’re always right today.
Massive oil deposit in North Dakota?
March 29, 2008I first saw this piece on a huge oil discovery in North Dakota a little while ago, but didn’t pay much attention, since I’d never heard of Next Energy News before. Now that piece is making the rounds of the blogosphere (Rand Simberg, Instapundit) and one of Simberg’s commenters points to this post, which strikes me as credible. (As the very least, it has lots of supporting links.)
If this pans out, the upshot is 100–300 billion barrels of oil in the Williston Basin, which spans the U.S.-Canada border (with the largest portions being in North Dakota and Saskatchewan). By comparison, Saudi Arabia has 260 billion barrels in proven oil reserves.
UPDATE (5/20): For some reason, a lot of people are finding this post through search engines. Here’s my latest post on the topic.
624787
March 29, 2008John McCain releases his first campaign ad since clinching the Republican nomination:
This looks like a front-runner’s ad: entirely positive and mostly non-specific. (There’s perhaps a very subtle dig at Obama by asking “what must a President believe about us?”) I hope he’s not buying the polls that show him as the front-runner; once the Democrats settle on a nominee, the media will do everything in their power to close that gap.
Progress in FBI’s anthrax investigation
March 29, 2008Fox News reports that the FBI has narrowed its focus to “about four” suspects in its investigation of the 2001 anthrax attacks. Three are scientists connected with Fort Detrick. It’s been a long time since I had any hope this case would be solved. Here’s hoping.
ASIDE: My brother-in-law used to live about a mile from Fort Detrick. It was somewhat creepy driving past it.
Misinformation kills
March 28, 2008Zimbabwe (“get behind the fist”) and Zambia have thrown away thousands of tons of much needed corn, leaving people to starve rather than allow them to eat genetically modified foodstuffs. (Via Instapundit.)
Robert Paarlberg explains:
The overregulation of this technology in Europe and the anxieties felt about it in the United States are not so much a reflection of risks, because there aren’t any documented risks from any GM crops on the market. I explain that reaction through the absence of direct benefit. The technology is directly beneficial to only a tiny number of citizens in rich countries—soybean farmers, corn farmers, a few seed companies, patent holders. Consumers don’t get a direct benefit at all, so it doesn’t cost them anything to drive it off the market with regulations. The problem comes when the regulatory systems created in rich countries are then exported to regions like Africa, where two thirds of the people are farmers, and where they would be the direct beneficiaries.
Duke keeps digging
March 28, 2008Duke University has asked a court to shut down a website critical of its handling of the lacrosse rape hoax case.
“Get behind the fist”
March 28, 2008Robert Mugabe’s re-election slogan. (No joke!) (Via the Corner.)
Polls show that Zimbabwe is poised overwhelmingly to reject Mugabe, if given the chance, which seems unlikely to me. Personally, I suspect he’ll be leaving office the way Nicolae Ceausescu did, and no sooner.
UPDATE: No surprise here; things look bad.
Blue on blue
March 28, 2008The battle over superdelegates continues. Oddly enough, everyone argues — on high moral grounds — for the position that favors his preferred candidate. I’m reminded of Michael Barone’s first rule of life: “All process arguments are insincere, including this one.”
Rev. Wright’s top-secret apology
March 28, 2008Tom Maguire spots an interesting statement: Under continued fire for his membership in Rev. Wright’s congregation, Obama now says that he would have left the church, but didn’t need he needed to because Wright apologized. (Via Instapundit.) Maguire observes that Wright’s purported apology was not exactly well publicized, and has some thoughts on the value of a second-hand apology.
But why rely on our own recollection; let’s ask Google. (I’m telling you, this Internet is going to catch on!) As of 9:47am Eastern, there are no hits regarding a Jeremiah Wright apology on the first three pages. However, there are plenty of hits regarding how Wright is owedan apology. Geez.
Reagan: A Time for Choosing
March 28, 2008This was making the rounds a few months ago. I was reminded of it today by the state of rhetoric in the current campaign (great oratory really can have content!), but upon listening to it again, I was struck by how germane it is to today’s war. Shall we defeat our enemies, or shall we try to accommodate them, and in so doing sentence countless human beings to slavery?
Stop-Loss
March 28, 2008The New York Times reviews Stop-Loss, the latest anti-war film to come out of Hollywood. Unshockingly, they recommend it. Just as unshockingly, they leave unasked the question of whether the movie has anything to do with the stop-loss policy employed by the Pentagon.
Judging by the trailer (which I saw a few months ago in the previews for Charlie Wilson’s War — a terrific pro-American, anti-Soviet film about running guns to the Afghan Northern Alliance), the protagonist returns from a tour of duty in Iraq, looking forward to his discharge and a life with his fiancée. On the way out, he is informed that he is being “stop-lossed” and sent back to Iraq. Tragedy ensues.
In reality, the stop-loss policy is intended to maintain cohesion in units deployed to war. According to the Christian Science Monitor, soldiers can have their commitment extended for the duration of a deployment and up to 90 days before and after that deployment. So, it would not happen that a soldier who had just returned and was due to be discharged would get transferred to another unit and re-deployed. Indeed, from the perspective of unit cohesion, that would entirely defeat the purpose.
There’s certainly a legitimate debate about whether stop-loss is a good policy (I have no strong opinion), but judging by the trailer, this movie just spreads misinformation and doesn’t advance that debate at all.
More Obama on NAFTA
March 27, 2008Stephen Spruiell notes an Obama ad blaming NAFTA for the downfall of a then-non-existent company bankrupted by domestic competition:
Obama’s presidential campaign aired a TV ad that featured a man named Steven Schuyler standing in front of a Delphi Packard Electric plant in Warren, Ohio. In the ad, Schuyler says he worked for Delphi, an automotive supplier, for 13 years until NAFTA enabled the company to ship his job to Mexico. “Barack Obama was against NAFTA,” Schuyler says, adding, “We need a president that will bring work into this country.”
The Delphi ad might qualify as the most deceptive of the 2008 race. First, Delphi did not exist as an independent company when Congress passed NAFTA in 1993. It was part of General Motors until it was spun off as an independent supplier in 1999. Second, foreign competition did not drive the company to eliminate American jobs. It declared bankruptcy in 2005 because the legacy labor costs it inherited from GM made it impossible to compete against other U.S.-based suppliers. Third, workers at the Warren, Ohio plant were offered generous buyouts and early-retirement packages. Its employees were not just kicked to the street.
There’s more.
UPDATE: Rephrased.
Guarding John
March 27, 2008Apparently, McCain has declined Secret Service protection. (Via Instapundit.) I don’t approve. I doubt that many people are impressed, and there’s more than his own life riding on his survival.
L.A. Times shows IPS how it’s done
March 27, 2008The L.A. Times admits fabricating documents in Tupac Shakur case. (IPS should take note!)
Funny
March 27, 2008Via Instapundit, the most entertaining trial ever. I don’t know if this is legitimate, but even if not it doesn’t detract from the humor much.
Popular Mechanics on Rainbow Six Vegas 2
March 27, 2008Popular Mechanics has an article on the balance between realism and gameplay in military shooters like Rainbow Six Vegas 2 (R6V2). (Via Instapundit.) It’s a good article, but I get the feeling the author is not a serious gamer. The article gives the impression that R6V2 makes great strides toward realistic gunfire, except for a few compromises. My impression, having played the game, is that R6V2 is actually less realistic than its predecessor.
It may well be that they calculate accurately the amount of damage done by a bullet after penetrating cover and/or armor, but there’s another side of the equation, which is how much damage a soldier can take before going down. In reality, a soldier would go down quite quickly, but in R6V2, a player can endure quite a lot of punishment. Its predecessor was less forgiving.
Now, I don’t care all that much about realism for its own sake, but I did enjoy the unique gameplay that arose from the Rainbow Six Vegas’s realism. In R6V, a player firing first from cover would nearly always win, making it possible for sneaky old guys like me (I’m 36) to beat the kids, despite their vastly superior videogaming skills. That style of gameplay has not been duplicated in any other game, including its sequel. In R6V2, players are tough enough that run-and-gun becomes a viable strategy, which puts the kids back on top.
A majority of Americans can read
March 27, 2008Gallup (via Instapundit):
A solid majority of the U.S. public, 73%, believes the Second Amendment to the Constitution guarantees the rights of Americans to own guns.
Biting the hand that feeds me
March 27, 2008This morning my post on Blackwater Fever was Instalanched. My first response was to use it to try to draw attention to my ad for John McCain. My second response was to wonder how on earth Glenn Reynolds found it. Before today, my blog was known to fewer than 10 people, and I’m not actively promoting it. According to the stats, I’ve received no traffic from search engines. So he must have found out via a linkback.
The thing is, Reynolds must get thousands of linkbacks every day. He can’t possibly look at them all, and also scour the Internet for interesting articles, and also hold down a job as a law professor, can he? I’m curious, so I’m going to try an experiment: I have another link to Instapundit in this post. If I get another Instalanche, we will have empirically confirmed that Glenn Reynolds has no life.
UPDATE: Reynolds refuses to be manipulated into a sending a second Instalanche, but he (or someone at UT claiming to be him) weighs in in the comments. Hypothesis confirmed!
A moral case for Iraq
March 27, 2008I’m tired of the defeat-in-Iraq crowd pretending that they have the moral high ground. Of course we can and should make pragmatic arguments for finishing the job based on our own security, but there’s a moral argument we should make as well. The pro-defeat crowd wants to abandon an entire people to the worst kind of tyranny in existence today, and all the while they’re patting themselves on the back.
I would like to see John McCain run an ad like this:
(Video shows a teenaged Iraqi girl.) This is Amira. She lives in Iraq. She has had a difficult childhood: she saw her father and uncle carried away for speaking critically of Saddam Hussein. [Adjust details as appropriate.] But now Amira is free, and she has dreams for her life. She wants to travel, to study and become an artist, or a doctor.
(Video shifts to Al Qaeda thugs.) But there are some who don’t want Amira to realize her aspirations. Men who subscribe to a perverted form of Islam and wish to impose it on her country, and indeed the world. (Brief collage of Taliban and Iranian atrocities.) These men come into her country and set off bombs, hoping to terrorize her people into obedience. (Aftermath of a car bomb.)
(Screen splits, with Amira on one side and the U.S. Capitol on the other.) Will America continue to stand with Amira, or will we abandon her to her enemies? This November, you will help make that decision.
I’m John McCain, and I approved this message.
Blackwater fever
March 27, 2008The Inter Press Service news agency (IPS) is reporting on a new disease that is so bad, it’s named after a security contractor:
What Iraqis now call Blackwater fever is really a well-known medical condition, and while it has nothing to do with Blackwater Worldwide, Iraqis in al-Anbar province have decided to make the connection between the disease and the lethal U.S.-based company which has been responsible for the death of countless Iraqis.
(Via Jules Crittenden, via Instapundit.)
In fact, blackwater fever is named after the dark red or black urine it causes, and has been called that for ages. This is just lame. Next time make up some fake documents or something.
ASIDE: I had never heard of IPS before, so I looked them up. From their website:
IPS is a communication institution with a global news agency at its core. IPS raises the voices of the South and civil society. IPS brings a fresh perspective on development and globalisation.
So, basically, this is an obscure advocacy organization that puts out dubious news stories. Probably we shouldn’t make too much of this in the media failure department. On the other hand, the leftists that bought into this are probably owed a bit of friendly teasing.
UPDATE: This blog is five days old. I went to the pageview stats this morning, expecting to see a typical number (like 4), and found I’d been Instalanched. (To a close approximation, every person reading this knows this already.) So here’s my advice to other new bloggers: forget insightful commentary; it’s snarky one-liners that get you noticed!
Anyway, during my fleeting moment of fame, I’d like to draw attention to my ad that John McCain should run on Iraq, in the hopes that someone will see it who can make it happen.
A trip down memory lane
March 26, 2008Baghdad Jim McDermott and his colleagues’ trip to Iraq in 2002 was paid for by Saddam. (Via Instapundit.)
To be fair, it is not alleged that they knew it. I’m reminded of the Humbert Wolfe quote:
You cannot hope to bribe or twist (thank God!) the British journalist. But, seeing what the man will do unbribed, there’s no occasion to.
Did Obama violate ethics rules?
March 26, 2008Jim Lindgren, going through the Obamas’ tax returns, finds that Obama seems to have violated the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act by accepting honoraria.
Oh brother
March 26, 2008Obama’s effort to sidestep his church’s bizarre teachings becomes more threadbare by the day. It is now revealed that his church’s worship bulletin contained a racist rant (pdf) alleging, among other things, that Israel worked on “an ethnic bomb that kills Blacks and Arabs.”
In the worship bulletin. And Obama can no more disown this guy than his own grandmother.
I can see why he thinks his best chance is convince people that it’s out-of-bounds even to mention this stuff.
Blue on blue
March 26, 2008Gallup reports that many Democratic voters will switch to McCain if their candidate doesn’t win:
Among people who identified themselves as Hillary Clinton supporters, 28 percent said they would vote for McCain if Obama is his opponent, the March 7-22 Gallup Poll Daily election tracking survey found. The same poll found that 19 percent of Obama supporters would switch sides and cast ballots for McCain if Clinton is the Democratic candidate.
I’m not sure I buy it, but here’s hoping. Also:
A recent Gallup survey found that 11 percent of Republican voters said they would vote for a different party or not at all if McCain doesn’t pick a running mate who is more conservative than he is.
That, er, shouldn’t be hard, should it?
Organ donation tarnished by scandals
March 26, 2008This is bad. (Via the Corner, where David Freddoso makes a connection to Terri Schiavo.)
Get me some popcorn
March 26, 2008Pittsburgh’s mayor and city council are fighting over the budget:
Cost-cutting ideas are coming quickly in Pittsburgh City Council, but some members are claiming that they’re being targeted for political revenge by Mayor Luke Ravenstahl in the latest proposal.
Over objections from the Ravenstahl administration, Council voted to cut half the number of taxpayer-funded take-home cars for city officials.
On the heels of that vote comes a call from an ally of the mayor to put the knife to City Council’s payroll for its staff. . . [Councilman Ricky] Burgess led in making the charge that revenge by Ravenstahl is behind Councilman Jim Motznik’s bill to slash money for council’s staff. Burgess said it’s payback for City Council voting on Tuesday to cut the number of take-home cars for city employees from 59 to 29.
As long as they’re squabbling by cutting the budget, let’s sit back and enjoy the show.
Yet another jaw-dropper from the Obama camp
March 26, 2008Obama military advisor and campaign co-chair Tony McPeak blames U.S. Jews for the lack of peace in the Middle East. (Via Instapundit.) Enough to get him fired? It’s hard to say. Stephanie Power (formerly Obama’s chief foreign policy advisor) lost her job not for advocating invading Israel, but for calling Hillary Clinton a monster. On the other hand, people are paying more attention to this stuff now.
Dennis Prager makes a good point
March 25, 2008Blue on blue
March 25, 2008Clinton attacks on Wright, Obama fires back on Bosnia:
Breaking her silence on the controversy surrounding Barack Obama’s long-time pastor, Hillary Clinton said Tuesday that she would have left the congregation if her pastor behaved like Obama’s. . . “You know, we don’t have a choice when it comes to our relatives. We have a choice when it comes to our pastors and the churches we attend,” she said. . .
The Obama campaign blasted back that Clinton only made the statement to distract from scrutiny about her own recollection of a March 1996 trip to Bosnia. “After originally refusing to play politics with this issue, it’s disappointing to see Hillary Clinton’s campaign sink to this low in a transparent effort to distract attention away from the story she made up about dodging sniper fire in Bosnia,” Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton said.
They’re both right.
I wish I’d said that
March 25, 2008On Obama’s race speech, Christopher Hitchens has a way with words:
You often hear it said, of some political or other opportunist, that he would sell his own grandmother if it would suit his interests. But you seldom, if ever, see this notorious transaction actually being performed, which is why I am slightly surprised that Obama got away with it so easily. (Yet why do I say I am surprised? He still gets away with absolutely everything.)
(Via Instapundit.)
Medellin v. Texas
March 25, 2008The Supreme Court issued an important opinion today. The case involved a convicted murderer who is a Mexican national. The police failed to notify him of his right to consult with the Mexican consulate, and his lawyer failed to raise the issue at trial. The issue was raised on appeal, and after a convoluted path through state and federal courts, the conviction was upheld.
In the meantime, however, the UN’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a ruling that required the United States:
to provide, by means of its own choosing, review and reconsideration of the convictions and sentences of the [affected] Mexican nationals.
In response, President Bush issued a memorandum ordering the Texas courts to review the case in line with the ICJ’s ruling. The Texas courts declined to do so, and the Supreme Court took up the case.
At issue were two questions: (1) does the ICJ’s decision constitute enforceable domestic law, and (2) does the President have the power to issue orders to state courts in accordance with that decision? The Supreme Court answered no to both.
For anyone concerned about our nation’s sovereignty, this was the preferred decision. (Last October, Ramesh Ponnuru made a strong case for today’s outcome.) However, legally it seems to have been a close call, hinging on whether the precise wording of the ICJ treaty made it “self-executing.” There’s a limit, then, to how much solace we can take from this decision. We need to stay vigilant.
UPDATE: The key bit seems to be on pages 8 and 9 of the decision. There is a distinction dating back to the Marshall court between treaties that are self-executing, and ones that are merely commitments to act:
In sum, while treaties “may comprise international commitments . . . they are not domestic law unless Congress has either enacted implementing statutes or the treaty itself conveys an intention that it be ‘self-executing’ and is ratified on these terms.”
Lawyers probably knew all this already, but it was new to me. (ASIDE: The decision cites The Federalist #33, which is very interesting in light of our government’s consideration of treaties that infringe our individual liberties.)
The decision then goes on to consider whether or not the relevant treaties are self-executing. It begins thus: “The interpretation of a treaty, like the interpretation of a statute, begins with its text.” (I think I’m going to like the Roberts court.) It continues:
The [Optional Protocol to the Vienna Convention] provides: “Disputes arising out of the interpretation or application of the [Vienna] Convention shall lie within the compulsory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice.” . . . Of course, submitting to jurisdiction and agreeing to be bound are two different things.
They go on to find that the text of the Protocol is more naturally read as “a bare grant of jurisdiction.”
Globalization, good and bad
March 25, 2008With NAFTA and the International Court of Justice in the news, I’ve been reflecting on so-called globalization. (ASIDE: Regarding the latter story, there are so many different issues muddling the case that I’ll need to read the decision to decide what I think.) It strikes me that there’s really two different forms of globalization going on under one name.
One form seeks to make people more free, and is exemplified by free-trade agreements such as NAFTA, the WTO, and the failed Doha Round. When two people who happen to reside in separate countries wish to make a consensual exchange of goods, very often their governments interfere, either by demanding a cut (as with tariffs), or by prohibiting the exchange altogether (as with quotas). Free trade agreements make people more free by lessening governmental interference in their individual choices.
As implemented, these agreements sometimes work in peculiar and unfortunate ways. For example, when the WTO tries to convince a recalcitrant government to lift a tariff, its tool of coercion is to license another government to impose new tariffs. Thus, the WTO withdraws freedom from one set of people to try to gain it for another set. But, when the mechanism works, both sets end up free. On balance, the WTO seems to extend freedom much more than it curtails freedom.
In sharp contrast is the other form of globalization, which seeks to limit individual freedom by placing people under the authority of international organizations such as the UN or the EU. In the United States, we can already recognize that our governments usually are not especially concerned with individual freedoms, but at least there are mechanisms by which we can hold them to account. International organizations are much less accountable (or — as with the UN — not at all). Moreover, such organizations have already established a reputation for bizarre and capricious behavior (or worse).
This is something to keep in mind when we read about people who support and oppose “globalization.”
Detainee treatment
March 24, 2008James Robbins (at the Corner) observes that many detainees in US custody prefer not to be released, at least not until they finish their classes (!).
D.C. cracks down on guns
March 24, 2008D.C. police are cracking down on guns:
Police are asking residents to submit to voluntary searches in exchange for amnesty under the District’s gun ban. The program is starting in the Washington Highlands neighborhood of southeast Washington on Monday and will later expand to other neighborhoods. Officers will go door to door asking residents for permission to search their homes.
Obviously D.C. is responding to an expected loss in the Heller case, but what I want to know is, are people really giving the police permission to search their homes?!
UPDATE: Well, that’s a relief: The program has yet to start, and residents are upset about it. (Via Instapundit.)
But there’s something odd in this article:
A police spokeswoman said that if evidence of other crimes is found during voluntary searches, amnesty will be granted for that crime as well.
“Chief Lanier has been clear,” Traci Hughes said. “Amnesty means amnesty.”
This can’t possibly be true. If they find a dead body in your house, they’re going to give you amnesty? In any case, I doubt the police chief’s proclamation is binding on the district attorney.
Media pays extra to ignore the troops
March 24, 2008I’ve long lamented the poor state of reporting on the war in Iraq. While our military systematically roots out terrorists, our mainstream media reports only on the latest atrocities committed by the enemy. As Iraq has quieted, and terrorist atrocities have become less frequent, Iraq has begun to fade out of the media. Without the Internet, it would be awfully hard to learn what’s actually happening.
Given the leanings of the media, this is not surprising, but I learned today something that did surprise me: While reporting in Baghdad is expensive, embedding is free! Paul McLeary writes in the Columbia Journalism Review:
Five years into the war, news organizations have understandably cut back a bit, given the immense cost of maintaining a Baghdad bureau. From life insurance for reporters to guards, armored cars (which not all bureaus have), and fortified houses outside of the Green Zone, reporting from Iraq is an incredibly expensive proposition.
But embedding with infantry units is free. Flights to Kuwait, where the Army public affairs team picks you up and puts you on a military aircraft to Iraq, and insurance still cost, but once you’re embedded, your expenses end. And that’s why I can’t understand why every major news organization doesn’t have one reporter embedded with a combat unit at all times.
(Via the Corner.)
So, hardly any major news organizations have embedded reporters any more, despite the fact that embedding is nearly free. (At least, if they do have them, we never hear from them.) This is surprising at first blush, but unlike McLeary, I can imagine a reason why not: perhaps the media simply doesn’t want to report on the troops.
Orbital mechanics to be revised again?
March 24, 2008The March 8 issue of the Economist has an interesting article about how spacecraft apparently are not following their expected trajectories:
In 1990 mission controllers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California . . . noticed something odd happen to a Jupiter-bound craft, called Galileo. As it was flung around the Earth in what is known as a slingshot manoeuvre . . . , Galileo picked up more velocity than expected. Not much. Four millimetres a second, to be precise. But well within the range that can reliably be detected. . .
Once might be happenstance. But this strange extra acceleration was seen subsequently with two other craft. . . So a team from JPL has got together to analyse all of the slingshot manoeuvres that have been carried out over the years, to see if they really do involve a small but systematic extra boost. The answer is that they do.
Altogether, John Anderson and his colleagues analysed six slingshots involving five different spacecraft. Their paper on the matter is about to be published in Physical Review Letters. Crucially for the idea that there really is a systematic flaw in the laws of physics as they are understood today, their data can be described by a simple formula. It is therefore possible to predict what should happen on future occasions.
Anderson and his colleagues plan to test their theory when they receive data from Rosetta, which executed a slingshot maneuver in November. I hope I hear about the results.
If I had any readers, I’d ask the physicists if they knew anything about this.
Spitzer directed effort to smear Bruno
March 24, 2008I can’t say I’m surprised by the revelation that Eliot Spitzer, his denials to the contrary, personally directed his administration’s wrongdoing in “troopergate.” What does surprise me is his degree of emotional involvement in it:
Around June 25 or June 26, Mr. Dopp [Spitzer’s former communications director] told prosecutors, he first met with Richard Baum, the governor’s chief of staff, who told Mr. Dopp that the governor wanted the records on Mr. Bruno released to the media. “Eliot wants you to release the records,” Mr. Baum told him.
But Mr. Dopp, mindful of the political war that would erupt between the governor’s office and Mr. Bruno, hesitated and decided to check with the governor.
He told the governor that Mr. Bruno would be furious, according to people familiar with his account. Mr. Spitzer responded with expletives about Mr. Bruno and belligerently dismissed the warning.
The governor was so angry, Mr. Dopp recalled, that he turned red and spit out coffee he was sipping as he directed him to release the records immediately. “As he was saying it, he was spitting a little bit,” Mr. Dopp said. “He was spitting mad.”
Not only was this man willing to use the power of his office to spy on his political opponents, but he became furious when Dopp had the temerity to counsel against it. Then, when he was found out, he pinned the blame on Dopp:
A report by the attorney general, Andrew M. Cuomo, on July 23 said that the Spitzer administration had improperly used the State Police to assemble records on Mr. Bruno’s flights. Mr. Spitzer apologized, placed Mr. Dopp on indefinite unpaid leave, and said he would not tolerate such behavior.
One usually imagines this sort of conduct being of a cold, calculating, ruthless sort. But for Eliot Spitzer, it was more like “How dare you oppose my rule!” He truly was a scoundrel of the first order.
ASIDE: With Spitzer out of office now, the political damage of this revelation to the Democrats is largely contained. (Although the New York Times article does not let on, Spitzer was, in fact, a Democrat.) So I’m curious: Did the New York Times really come into this information during the past week, since Spitzer resigned?
Media failure
March 24, 2008A particular fascination of mine is with the media’s inability or unwillingness to report events accurately. I admit I was slow on the uptake here. The myth of competent and fair journalism is a powerful one: I wanted to believe, all the evidence to the contrary.
Like most people (according to my informal survey of people I’ve felt like asking), I had noticed that whenever the media covered something of which I had personal or professional knowledge, they invariably reported something wrong — often the central facts of the story. But, I always figured, it’s the junior reporters who cover local news, or science and technology. They must get the major stories right. On the occasions when they got caught making stuff up (like 60 Minutes and Dateline NBC rigging cars to make them appear unsafe) I saw it as just an aberration.
It wasn’t until December 2000 that I really grasped the scope of the media’s incompetence and/or dishonesty. In my own defense, there didn’t use to be as many alternative information sources you could use to double-check the mainstream media. Still, my realization came, not by the Internet, as you might expect, but by an older technology: C-Span. It was during the month of legal wrangling in Florida that followed the Presidential election.
One of the many lawsuits was in (iirc) Seminole County. Democrats were suing to have all the county’s absentee ballots thrown out because many absentee ballot request formswere handled improperly. (This would have given the election to Gore.) The day that case went to trial, I was home with the flu, and I watched the proceedings on C-Span. For the first time, I had direct knowledge of the facts of the day’s top story. Later that evening, I watched the media report on what had happened: not a single story got the central facts right, and every one erred in the direction of making the lawsuit sound more reasonable than it was. Sitting alone in my living room, I apparently had better news-gathering resources than the entire mainstream media.
That was the day I realized that the media cannot be trusted, but it still took me a while to realize that (at least when it comes to politics) they don’t necessarily even try to get the story right. Now, I’m not someone who gets exercised about media bias. Journalists have always had their biases; the myth of the impartial journalist is a modern vanity. However, I don’t think it’s too much to ask for them to tell the truth.
In a typical example, the BBC has just admitted (“clarified,” that is) that a recent report critical of Israel was fabricated:
The BBC showed a bulldozer demolishing a house, while correspondent Nick Miles told viewers: “Hours after the attack, Israeli bulldozers destroyed his family home.” . . .
The house, however, was not demolished; the BBC was embarrassed when news reports from other broadcasters showed the east Jerusalem home intact and the family commemorating their son’s actions.
Last week, the BBC apologized live on its news program, admitting it had used footage of another house being demolished.
(Via Power Line.)
While we’re discussing the BBC, last week they reported on a speech in which President Bush claimed victory in Iraq. Except, he didn’t. (Via LGF.) Unfortunately, I didn’t start this blog quickly enough, and the article referenced has already gone down the memory hole. Will they apologize for this? I doubt they are sufficiently embarrassed. (UPDATE: Screen grabs are at the Monkey Tennis Centre. (Via Instapundit.))
Obama and Clinton’s “embellishments”
March 24, 2008A well-known handicap of senators running for president is a lack of concrete accomplishments, and the problem is exacerbated for Obama and Clinton, who are both among the least-experienced members of the Senate. The obvious response, to take credit for things you didn’t do, is starting to gall their Democratic colleagues. (Via the Corner.)
There’s nothing here on McCain, and one feels safe in assuming that they would have included something on him if they could. Of course, McCain’s problem is more the stuff he’s done, than the stuff he hasn’t.
Lone blogger takes on the UN
March 24, 2008Amazingly, she gets results. (Via Instapundit.) Positive spin: power to the people! Negative spin: if one person can fix this in a matter of hours, what is the State Department doing with its time?
Prior restraint
March 24, 2008Under pressure from Islamists, Network Solutions shuts down a website being used to promote an upcoming anti-Islamic movie. (Via Instapundit.) Apparently Network Solutions has a policy against “objectionable material of any kind or nature.”
Hmm, perhaps I can get them to shut down websites promoting aspect-oriented programming. Get your censorship while the getting’s good.
Beer, Wine, and Democrats
March 24, 2008For my readers (ha!) looking for any difference in substance between Clinton and Obama to explain all the heat on the left, I recommend an insightful article by Ramesh Ponnuru from the March 10 issue of National Review. (NR subscribers can find it online here.) Ponnuru cites journalist Ron Brownstein’s observation of two factions within the Democratic party:
Brownstein wrote an article for the Los Angeles Times last spring on the tensions within the Democratic party: “Since the 1960s,” he said, “Democratic nominating contests regularly have come down to a struggle between a candidate who draws support primarily from upscale, economically comfortable voters liberal on social and foreign policy issues, and a rival who relies mostly on downscale, financially strained voters drawn to populist economics and somewhat more conservative views on cultural and national security issues.”
Democratic strategists, Brownstein noted, alluded to this division by referring to “wine track” and “beer track” candidates. One class of Democratic voters looks for a candidate who will be a “warrior” for their interests. Another class looks for a candidate who will serve as a kind of secular “priest” affirming their values.
Clinton, he says, is the “beer track” warrior, and Obama the “wine track” priest. In the past, the priests (Gary Hart, Bill Bradley) have tended to lose the Democratic primary, but things look different in 2008, in part due to Obama’s unique abilities and in part due to improved economic circumstances:
We now have a mass upper class. Its material concerns largely met, it can vote for reasons that previous generations would have dismissed as hopelessly ethereal, such as the need to create a new style of politics that brings the country together. Its members have the luxury, that is, of voting for “hope.”
Interesting. The analogy of Obama as priest is also somewhat more poignant given the strange videos being circulated by Obama supporters (for example).
The coveted Internet Scofflaw endorsement
March 24, 2008My new voter registration card arrived in the mail yesterday. I’m now a registered Democrat. Pennsylvania is abuzz about the Presidential primary, which, against all expectation, has turned out to matter. I’m part of the surge of Republicans that are changing their party registration to Democrat. (Aside: the Pennsylvania Department of State says that Republican-to-Democrat switchers outnumber the other direction by a 3-to-1 margin. Only 3-to-1? Who’s going the other way?)
I will be voting for Clinton. This is not because I think she’ll be the easier opponent to McCain to beat. I think it’s a fools errand to try to predict now who will be the stronger opponent in November. (Remember, the Democrats ended up with Kerry in 2004 because they thought he was the strongest candidate. Oops.) Neither is it because I want to see three more months of Democratic internecine warfare, although I certainly don’t mind.
I will be voting for Clinton simply because she scares me less than Obama. There’s no question her foreign policy would be a disaster, but she and her people don’t have the same predilection for jaw-droppingly bizarre foreign policy pronouncements.
Of course, this is all a matter of degree. Both have pledged to abandon Iraq, and neither has any plan to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. (It’s not clear that President Bush has a plan either, but at least he recognizes the danger.) Nevertheless, on balance, Clinton seems to be less dangerous.
Odd…
March 23, 2008The spell checker built-in to WordPress (the blogging software I’m using here) doesn’t recognize the word “blog.”
Hello world!
March 23, 2008This is the first post on my new blog, Internet Scofflaw. For a long time I’ve thought of assembling my essays and other musings into one place, but I never got around to doing so until now.
One driving force behind actually starting now is that I finally came up with a good blog name. I’ll write about what the name means, and other philosophical matters, in future posts, whenever I feel like it. The other driving force is that there’s so much going on right now, it seems like a good time to start.
“Hello world!” is the default name that WordPress gives to your first post, but it seemed appropriate, so I kept it.
Posted by K. Crary 