Friday, June 29, 2007

Chief Justice ZACKlyRight

On December 10, 2006, I wrote, "We will never be a color-blind society until we are a color-blind society." Please go read the entire post. I'm not going to force it on you by reproducing it here but it is brilliant, though.

In yesterday's U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down racism, the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, John Roberts, wrote, "The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race."

ZACKlyRight, again! No, it never gets old!
Comic Relief

Taking a break from the intense and meaty topics we’ve discussed over the last few weeks (abortion, race, race & abortion, the colossal stupidity of Sens. Hillary Clinton, John F. Kerry and John Edwards to name a few, the liberal media’s obsession with words the President never spoke and the liberal media ignoring words the leading Democratic candidate for President actually did speak, and the hate-mongering of Sen. John Edwards’ paid campaign staff), I give you my commentary on something that had the sports world all abuzz this week: Frank Thomas and his pursuit of joining an “exclusive” club.

On the left is a list of all the members of Major League Baseball’s 499 career home run club. On the right, is the club Mr. Thomas joined yesterday by hitting his 500th career home run. I put the lists next to each other so you can better see how the “exclusivity” of the clubs changed.

(Please forgive the formatting issues I'm having with the column on the right; it a blogger.com limitation.)

Old Club - 499 ---------- New Club - 500
Hank Aaron ----------- Hank Aaron
Barry Bonds ----------- Barry Bonds
Babe Ruth ------------- Babe Ruth
Willie Mays ------------ Willie Mays
Sammy Sosa ----------- Sammy Sosa
Frank Robinson ------ Frank Robinson
Ken Griffey, Jr. ------ Ken Griffey, Jr.
Mark McGwire -------- Mark McGwire
Harmon Killebrew ---- Harmon Killebrew
Rafael Palmiero -------- Rafael Palmiero
Reggie Jackson -------- Reggie Jackson
Mike Schmidt ---------- Mike Schmidt
Mickey Mantle ---------- Mickey Mantle
Jimmie Foxx ---------- Jimmie Foxx
Willie McCovey ------- Willie McCovey
Ted Williams ---------- Ted Williams
Ernie Banks ---------- Ernie Banks
Eddie Mathews ------- Eddie Mathews
Mel Ott ---------------- Mel Ott
Eddie Murray ---------- Eddie Murray

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Clueless in Boston

At the Boston Globe, the extreme Left-hand is clueless to the more extreme Left-hand.

The following is an excerpt from the Boston Globe's lead editorial from June 14, Senseless in Gaza, an editorial bemoaning the Palestinian-on-Palestinian violence: "The Hamas campaign to eradicate Fatah from Gaza is certainly not the sole cause of Gazans' misery. They long suffered from Israel's suffocating occupation, and then from Ariel Sharon's foolishly unilateral withdrawal in 2005, a move that allowed Hamas to bid for power with the misleading claim that its rockets and suicide bombings had driven Israeli soldiers and settlers out of Gaza."

Why would the anti-Israeli Boston Globe not solely blame Palestinian terrorists for the misery of Gazans when the Boston Globe can take a gratuitous shot at Israel?

"Occupation (the anti-Israeli revisionists winning the propaganda war)" is a crime; "unilateral withdrawal" is a crime. Hmmm, what's a Jew to do?

Sharon unilaterally gave people their freedom and independence and territory and he's being attacked by the Boston Globe. Only committed anti-Israeli idiots could believe such jive.

Substitute Bush for Sharon, al Qaeda for Hamas and Iraq for Gaza and let me know if you think the Boston Globe would be so harsh on President Bush if he suddenly withdrew from Iraq.

Monday, June 25, 2007

The Ignored Quote

A play on my post of June 4, 2007 (please go read it).

On or about June 21, 2007, Sen. Hillary Clinton said the following at the Take Back America conference sponsored by the extreme leftist group Campaign for America's Future: "We're going to end the war in Iraq and finally bring home the troops . . . The American military has done its job. The American military has succeeded."

Recall, President Bush never said "mission accomplished" yet the liberal extremists and liberal media continue to represent to the American people that he did. The entire theme of the President's May 1, 2003 speech aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln was that though major ground operations had ended in Iraq, the war against terrorists was going to be a long one.

Also, I'm sure it irritates the hate-Bush crowd that the President can actually fly the military fighters he commands; he flew, but did not land, the Navy S-3B Viking interceptor to the Lincoln on May 1, 2003.

Anyway, I have not seen one newspaper article or heard one television news report of Sen. Clinton's comment (I've emailed all my liberal friends at the Boston Globe and invited them to do one honest story in their life; I'll keep you posted).

In the last three weeks Sen. Clinton has said "we are safer than we were" and "the American military has succeeded" and she's not openly praising the President of the United States? I now have to question if the Senator knows that the President of the United States is the Commander-in-Chief.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Graphically Making My Point II

Stretching back to last Friday night, I had as rough a week of no sleep or poor sleep as I’ve had in a long time. During this time I had written about 1500 words in two different posts, with multiple edits, regarding the topic at hand. Re-reading both updated drafts this morning, I can’t make sense of any of it. Unrelated, and at the risk of irritating the pro-terrorist lobby, I am now an even stronger proponent than I’ve ever been of sleep deprivation interrogation techniques for captured enemy combatants. Last night, I would have told anybody anything to be allowed to sleep . . . of course, we want to make sure the terrorists aren’t just telling us anything but, instead, are giving us actionable information (thus, water-boarding!). Anyway, I don’t think anyone from the pro-terrorist lobby is planning to prosecute me for torturing myself.

Now, to the stealth racism of white, liberal elites who are rewarded with almost monolithic support from the African-American community:

I am pro-life. I’m not in the “in the case of rape” camp and I’d really need to hear compelling arguments from sincere medical experts to get in the “to save the life of the mother” camp; the latter just sounds like so much jive when the presidents of NOW, NARAL and Planned Childlessness say it.

Next, I am thrilled with the steadily increasing percentage of African-American voters who are voting for Republicans. As I’ve written before in Madison’s Factions-themed posts, the middle-class African-American community is rapidly growing and many in that community share traditional Republican concerns about homeownership and spiraling property tax bills, income tax increases, saving for their children’s college educations, saving for their own retirement, and as the African-American community is a huge Church-going community, it’s possible many in the community actually have more conservative views than some Republicans on same-sex marriage, to name just a few social issues of common ground. Anyway, I’m not pleased with the rate of increase African-Americans are voting for Republicans so I’m looking to accelerate that rate with this post.

During the 2000 and 2004 Presidential campaigns, President Bush promised to save Social Security (SSI), one of his few significant promises that looks to go unfulfilled. Though he considered a combination of many fixes to save SSI, the President was pilloried for suggesting to raise the retirement age. The militant black community and their enablers in the liberal media claimed this was racism as blacks have a lesser life expectancy than whites. You’ve got to be kidding me! With all that potential SSI recipients have to worry about, some are thinking to raise the retirement age just to stick it to the black man? I cannot overstate how colossally stupid you have to be to believe this argument from the militant black leadership (which is bent on preserving its power and NOT improving the lives of anyone in the black community). Of course, I need to point out that President Franklin D. Roosevelt fathered the SSI program with no recognition of the life expectancy differences between the races and Presidents Truman, Kennedy, Johnson, Carter or, our first “black” President, President Clinton, did nothing to inject recognition of life expectancy differences into SSI rules. The militant black community and the liberal extremists successfully painted President Bush as having racist intentions, in the eyes of many, nonetheless.

Naturally, I don’t think women have a constitutional right to kill their unborn baby. The best I can hope for is that Roe v. Wade is struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court and then 50 states, independently, decide to outlaw the practice. But, what about allowing just black woman the “right”? The only Commenter on this topic, Anonymous (gee, what were the chances?) picked-up on my graphic implication but by using the phrase “by-product” suggests the white racist has a superior reason for supporting abortion “rights”. I’m comfortable, in the absence of any evidence, writing that no such white racist (pro-abortion rights belief being superior to racist belief) exists. The superior reason for a white racist to support abortion “rights” is because blacks kill their unborn, across all age groups, at about three times the rate that whites kill theirs. The “by-product” to these racists is they appear to be “pro-choice” to their liberal, pro-abortion, friends.

Philosophically, supporters of abortion “rights” are barely different than someone that thinks abortion should only be made available to blacks. Citing just the 20 – 24 age groups of White, Non-Hispanic and Black, Non-Hispanic for the years 1990 – 1999, Blacks induced abortion in a range of 118.9 – 137.7 times per 1,000 pregnancies while Whites induced abortion in a range of 26.3 – 41.9 times per 1,000 (source: the CDC report I mentioned in my last post). I wonder if the white racists consider the white abortions "collateral damage" if they cannot limit abortions to the black community.

And, provocatively, what would NOW, NARAL and Planned Childlessness think of allowing only blacks to kill their unborn babies? Wouldn’t they be in the awkward position of having to argue that blacks aren’t special and they could not have a “right” that whites did not have? Think about this for a minute. (Pause.) Thanks, you just saved me (and yourselves) about 200 words.

In my third question (which really isn’t a race issue; it’s a “culture of life” issue), I’m definitely suggesting that embryonic stem cell research proponents do not believe the destruction of a human embryo is the destruction of a human life; I'm being generous. If there is no destruction of human life, then what difference would it make to the proponents which embryos were destroyed? So, let’s legislate they will only be the embryos of blacks and find out. Or, let’s legislate it will only be the embryo of whites. Or Catholics. Or heterosexuals(?). I don’t care how you word the legislation to be offended by it. If you can come up with any group where such destruction would be offensive to you then you have to support President Bush and his allegiance to a “culture of life”. In arguing against my provocative legislation, don’t the proponents have to argue that all races, religions, sexual orientations, etc. must be proportionately DESTROYED?

This week, President Bush, fulfilled, yet again!, promises he made during the 2000 and 2004 Presidential campaigns; he vetoed legislation that would have expanded Federal funding of human embryonic stem cell research. Let me state very clearly and very emphatically, I do not know the difference this makes to researches who are now challenged to use adult stem cells, umbilical cord blood and amniotic fluid instead of embryonic stem cells; I’d love to hear from a researcher instead of the “culture of death” talking heads that took to the microphones this week. I do know embryonic stem cell research requires the destruction of a human embryo. The President’s actions this week were perfectly consistent with his “culture of life” beliefs.

In closing, very much like the anecdotes I laid out in “Crime and Punishment” just two or three posts below, Republicans and conservatives are hammered by militant black and guilt-ridden liberal whites that a change in SSI retirement ages has roots in racism. Yet, on an actual public policy position where support means supporting an activity where innocent black children are killed at three times the rate as white children, the militant blacks and liberal whites do not see nor do they have to explain their much more pronounced “racism” (please note my quotes).

The next time you’re at a dinner party, a family gathering, a guest on a radio talk show, being interviewed by a newspaper or any other venue where you might have exposure to non-militant African-Americans (to shock their sensibilities), militant blacks (to shock their insensibilities), or white, liberal extremists (to mock their idiocy) and the subject of abortion comes up, matter-of-factly say, “I think only African-American women should have the right to abortion.” Produce a blank, empty smile as you stand or sit there as though you just said, “I think it’s supposed to rain tomorrow,” you know, as you would say it if you were just attempting to fill a lull in the conversation. Though you’re graphically making a profound point, you might also want to be prepared to run.

I’m not sure the 12 hours of sleep I got last night helped, but these are some of my thoughts; please correct me where I’m wrong (as if!) or challenge me if you’re not clear on my points.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Graphically Making My Point

My folder of post ideas is busting at the seams but I just can’t find the time to write a coherent post; my goodness, tonight we celebrated Father’s Day in my house and I wasn't even traveling the last three days!

So, while I work through some busy days, let’s try something different with tonight’s post; how about if the readers do most of the writing until the weekend? I ask the loaded questions and the readers supply the answers.

So, what do you guys think of only allowing African-American women to kill their unborn babies (try to answer this question without considering what Sen. Robert C. Byrd and his friends in the KKK think)?

Is there a difference, philosophically, between only:none and 3:1? As in, is supporting only blacks killing their unborn babies while denying whites that "right" any different than supporting a murderous activity knowing that black women, across all age groups, kill their unborn babies about three times the rate that white women, across the same age groups, kill their unborn babies (Centers for Disease Control, National Vital Statistics System, Revised Pregnancy Rates, 1990 – 97, and New Rates for 1998 – 1999: United States, Vol. 52, Number 7, October 31, 2003)?

Fueled by black racial-arsonists and their liberal enablers who cry racism at the mere mention of trying to help save Social Security by raising the retirement age, I’ve thought an awful lot about the questions I ask above.

Somewhat related, and especially directed to those who support human embryonic stem cell research, would it bother you if embryonic stem cell research was conducted only on the destroyed embryos of blacks (assuming there is absolutely no bias on the test results)?

I have to work a super-long day tomorrow so I’ll let your Comments collect; I’ll probably not be able to comment until Friday night but I look forward to having this conversation. If there are no comments for me to respond to, I'll answer my own questions in a weekend post.

Elsewhere, the first sentence of the Boston Globe’s lead editorial today was, “If voters last fall hoped that putting Democrats in charge of Congress would guarantee a progressive energy policy, they had better keep the pressure on over the next few days (An energy bill with no justice, A10)”.

Wow, the Boston Globe gives the impression that voters had other things on their mind last November besides the war. Hmmmm, where have we heard that before? Oh, I know, my first three or four posts after the November elections and my posts of December 16, 2006; March 23, 2007; April 19, 2007; May 3, 2007 and May 26, 2007. Being ZACKlyRight never gets old.

Of course, voters did have an awful lot of things on their minds beside the war and the Boston Globe and other liberal extremists certainly know this despite their rhetoric about “mandate to end the war” but I can assure you that not one American pulled a lever in a national election based on the primacy of his/her energy policy beliefs. The suggestion to the contrary is ridiculous . . . but, then again, as we all know, the Boston Globe is ridiculous.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

The View from Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I, CT)

This appeared in the Wall Street Journal late last week; italics and super-bold are mine for emphasis; no other commentary was necessary other than adding the super-bolded italics:

I recently returned from Iraq and four other countries in the Middle East, my first trip to the region since December. In the intervening five months, almost everything about the American war effort in Baghdad has changed, with a new coalition military commander, Gen. David Petraeus; a new U.S. ambassador, Ryan Crocker; the introduction, at last, of new troops; and most important of all, a bold, new counterinsurgency strategy.

The question of course is -- is it working? Here in Washington, advocates of retreat insist with absolute certainty that it is not, seizing upon every suicide bombing and American casualty as proof positive that the U.S. has failed in Iraq, and that it is time to get out.

In Baghdad, however, discussions with the talented Americans responsible for leading this fight are more balanced, more hopeful and, above all, more strategic in their focus -- fixated not just on the headline or loss of the day, but on the larger stakes in this struggle, beginning with who our enemies are in Iraq. The officials I met in Baghdad said that 90% of suicide bombings in Iraq today are the work of non-Iraqi, al Qaeda terrorists. In fact, al Qaeda's leaders have repeatedly said that Iraq is the central front of their global war against us. That is why it is nonsensical for anyone to claim that the war in Iraq can be separated from the war against al Qaeda -- and why a U.S. pullout, under fire, would represent an epic victory for al Qaeda, as significant as their attacks on 9/11.

Some of my colleagues in Washington claim we can fight al Qaeda in Iraq while disengaging from the sectarian violence there. Not so, say our commanders in Baghdad, who point out that the crux of al Qaeda's strategy is to spark Iraqi civil war.

Al Qaeda is launching spectacular terrorist bombings in Iraq, such as the despicable attack on the Golden Mosque in Samarra this week, to try to provoke sectarian violence. Its obvious aim is to use Sunni-Shia bloodshed to collapse the Iraqi government and create a failed state in the heart of the Middle East, radicalizing the region and providing a base from which to launch terrorist attacks against the West.

Facts on the ground also compel us to recognize that Iran is doing everything in its power to drive us out of Iraq, including providing substantive support, training and sophisticated explosive devices to insurgents who are murdering American soldiers. Iran has initiated a deadly military confrontation with us, from bases in Iran, which we ignore at our peril, and at the peril of our allies throughout the Middle East.

The precipitous withdrawal of U.S. forces would not only throw open large parts of Iraq to domination by the radical regime in Tehran, it would also send an unmistakable message to the entire Middle East -- from Lebanon to Gaza to the Persian Gulf where Iranian agents are threatening our allies -- that Iran is ascendant there, and America is in retreat. One Arab leader told me during my trip that he is extremely concerned about Tehran's nuclear ambitions, but that he doubted America's staying power in the region and our political will to protect his country from Iranian retaliation over the long term. Abandoning Iraq now would substantiate precisely these gathering fears across the Middle East that the U.S. is becoming an unreliable ally.

That is why -- as terrible as the continuing human cost of fighting this war in Iraq is -- the human cost of losing it would be even greater.

Gen. Petraeus and other U.S. officials in Iraq emphasize that it is still too soon to draw hard judgments about the success of our new security strategy -- but during my visit I saw hopeful signs of progress. Consider Anbar province, Iraq's heart of darkness for most of the past four years. When I last visited Anbar in December, the U.S. military would not allow me to visit the provincial capital, Ramadi, because it was too dangerous. Anbar was one of al Qaeda's major strongholds in Iraq and the region where the majority of American casualties were occurring. A few months earlier, the Marine Corps chief of intelligence in Iraq had written off the entire province as "lost," while the Iraq Study Group described the situation there as "deteriorating."

When I returned to Anbar on this trip, however, the security environment had undergone a dramatic reversal. Attacks on U.S. troops there have dropped from an average of 30 to 35 a day a few months ago to less than one a day now, according to Col. John Charlton, commander of the 1st Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division, headquartered in Ramadi. Whereas six months ago only half of Ramadi's 23 tribes were cooperating with the coalition, all have now been persuaded to join an anti-al Qaeda alliance. One of Ramadi's leading sheikhs told me: "A rifle pointed at an American soldier is a rifle pointed at an Iraqi."

The recent U.S. experience in Anbar also rebuts the bromide that the new security plan is doomed to fail because there is no "military" solution for Iraq. In fact, no one believes there is a purely "military" solution for Iraq. But the presence of U.S. forces is critical not just to ensuring basic security, but to a much broader spectrum of diplomatic, political and economic missions -- which are being carried out today in Iraq under Gen. Petraeus's counterinsurgency strategy.

In Anbar, for example, the U.S. military has been essential to the formation and survival of the tribal alliance against al Qaeda, simultaneously holding together an otherwise fractious group of Sunni Arab leaders through deft diplomacy, while establishing a political bridge between them and the Shia-dominated government in Baghdad. "This is a continuous effort," Col. Charlton said. "We meet with the sheikhs every single day and at every single level."

In Baghdad, U.S. forces have cut in half the number of Iraqi deaths from sectarian violence since the surge began in February. They have also been making critical improvements in governance, basic services and commercial activity at the grassroots level.

On Haifa Street, for instance, where there was bloody fighting not so long ago, the 2nd "Black Jack" Brigade of our First Cavalry Division, under the command of a typically impressive American colonel, Bryan Roberts, has not only retaken the neighborhood from insurgents, but is working with the local population to revamp the electrical grid and sewer system, renovate schools and clinics, and create an "economic safe zone" where businesses can reopen. Indeed, of the brigade's five "lines of operations," only one is strictly military. That Iraq reality makes pure fiction of the argument heard in Washington that the surge will fail because it is only "military."

Some argue that the new strategy is failing because, despite gains in Baghdad and Anbar, violence has increased elsewhere in the country, such as Diyala province. This gets things backwards: Our troops have succeeded in improving security conditions in precisely those parts of Iraq where the "surge" has focused. Al Qaeda has shifted its operations to places like Diyala in large measure because we have made progress in pushing them out of Anbar and Baghdad. The question now is, do we consolidate and build on the successes that the new strategy has achieved, keeping al Qaeda on the run, or do we abandon them?

To be sure, there are still daunting challenges ahead. Iraqi political leaders, in particular, need to step forward and urgently work through difficult political questions, whose resolution is necessary for national reconciliation and, as I told them, continuing American support.

These necessary legislative compromises would be difficult to accomplish in any political system, including peaceful, long-established democracies -- as the recent performance of our own Congress reminds us. Nonetheless, Iraqi leaders are struggling against enormous odds to make progress, and told me they expect to pass at least some of the key benchmark bills this summer. It is critical that they do so.

Here, too, however, a little perspective is useful. While benchmarks are critically important, American soldiers are not fighting in Iraq today only so that Iraqis can pass a law to share oil revenues. They are fighting because a failed state in the heart of the Middle East, overrun by al Qaeda and Iran, would be a catastrophe for American national security and our safety here at home. They are fighting al Qaeda and agents of Iran in order to create the stability in Iraq that will allow its government to take over, to achieve the national reconciliation that will enable them to pass the oil law and other benchmark legislation.

I returned from Iraq grateful for the progress I saw and painfully aware of the difficult problems that remain ahead. But I also returned with a renewed understanding of how important it is that we not abandon Iraq to al Qaeda and Iran, so long as victory there is still possible.

And I conclude from my visit that victory is still possible in Iraq -- thanks to the Iraqi majority that desperately wants a better life, and because of the courage, compassion and competence of the extraordinary soldiers and statesmen who are carrying the fight there, starting with Gen. Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker. The question now is, will we politicians in Washington rise to match their leadership, sacrifices and understanding of what is on the line for us in Iraq -- or will we betray them, and along with them, America's future security? (End of column.)

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Crime and Punishment

So, I was asked today, “what are your thoughts on I. Lewis ‘Scooter’ Libby being ordered to prison while his appeal is being heard?”

What are my thoughts?

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when Sen. Robert Packwood (R, OR) was hounded out of office by the liberal media for sticking his tongue in an aide’s mouth while in that same time period President Clinton was sticking, well, you know, and the President was being praised by the liberal extremists and being protected by the liberal media.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when the liberal extremists and liberal media were all-a-twitter because Rep. Mark Foley (R, FL) sent grotesque text messages to a House Page all the while the meda knew that Rep. Gerry Studds (D, MA) actually had sex with a House Page; Rep. Studds was given a standing ovation by his caucus on his first appearance in the House chamber after he was censured by the House. Rep. Foley RESIGNED from the House as he should have lest he be expelled. Rep. Studds continued to serve.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when Rep. Robert Livingston (R) was hounded out of office because he had an affair while in that same time period President Clinton was sticking, well, you know. Rep. Livingston RESIGNED. President Clinton continued to serve.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when Rep. Newt Gingrinch was hounded out of office because he had an affair in that same time period President Clinton was sticking, well, you know. Rep. Gingrich RESIGNED. President Clinton continued to serve.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when Senate Democrats and the liberal media claimed outrage when President Bush fired 8 U.S. Attorneys knowing full well that President Clinton was stic . . . oops wrong reference . . . fired all 93 U.S. Attorneys! My goodness, General Reno torched approximately 20 children in Waco and Senate Democrats want to have a no-confidence vote on General Gonzales?

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when black, racial-arsonists, the liberal media and Senate Democrats attacked Sen. Trent Lott for saying something nice about a man on his 100th birthday but completely ignored that Senate Democrats elected former KKK member, Sen. Robert C. Byrd (D, WV), President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate. Sen. Lott RESIGNED as Majority Leader. Sen. Byrd is hailed as the “Conscience of the Senate” and stands third in the line of succession to the Presidency.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when the liberal media sensationalized Sen. George Allen’s unscripted “macaca” joke and almost completely ignored Sen. John F. Kerry’s unscripted “our troops are stupid” joke. Sen. Allen lost his re-election bid by 7,000 votes and so went the U.S. Senate to the Democrats.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when liberal extremists and the liberal media successfully tarred President Bush with supporting and directing the Swift Boat Veterans and POWs for Truth (think about that; he was tarred!) even though there is absolutely no evidence of any contacts between the White House and the Swiftees. Meanwhile, there is substantial evidence linking the Kerry campaign to CBS News’ disgusting hit job on President Bush’s National Guard service, yet the public knows nothing of the Kerry campaign’s involvement.

My thoughts are exactly the same thoughts I had when Sen. Edward Kennedy (D, MA) . . . you know what, the Republicans don’t even have anything close . . . but Sen. Kennedy is the hero! of the extreme Left. The Boston Globe argues Sen. Kennedy is the most influential Senator of his generation. Hooray! for the coward and manslaughterer!

What are my thoughts? My thoughts are, lesser crimes (as if you can compare sticking your tongue and your penis in the same place comparable crimes; as if you can compare text messages to anal and oral sex) by Republicans are routinely portrayed as greater crimes than the actual greater crimes commited by Democrats. The punishment for inferior Republican crimes is greater than the punishment for superior Democrat crimes.

“Scooter” Libby was convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice in a case where there was no underlying crime to obstruct! The liberal extremists think he should rot in hell . . . starting today! President Clinton committed the same crimes and there was an underlying crime to obstruct! He’s the darling of the liberal extremists and the liberal media. His net worth, all coming subsequent to sticking his, well, you know, is estimated at $10 - $50 million.

Well, I was asked today what were my thoughts; these are just a few of my thoughts. They are not meant to be comprehensive, just illustrative.

If someone could produce a single comparison where the actual “crime” of the Republican (or Conservative) was actually greater than the “crime” of the Democrat (or Liberal) but the Democrat was treated more harshly by the Courts, the Public, or the Media, I’d love to read about it.

Pardon Mr. Libby today, Mr. President.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Whew! Moveon.org must be relieved!

These are the comments of Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D - he is, CT) from a Sunday talk show:

"I think we've got to be prepared to take aggressive military action against the Iranians to stop them from killing Americans in Iraq. And to me, that would include a strike over the border into Iran, where we have good evidence that they have a base at which they are training these people coming back into Iraq to kill our soldiers . . . We've said so publicly that the Iranians have a base in Iran at which they are training Iraqis who are coming in and killing Americans. By some estimates, they have killed as many as 200 American soldiers. Well, we can tell them we want them to stop that. But if there's any hope of the Iranians living according to the international rule of law and stopping, for instance, their nuclear weapons development, we can't just talk to them . . . If they don't play by the rules, we've got to use our force, and to me, that would include taking military action to stop them from doing what they're doing."

Sen. Lieberman said much of the action could probably be done by air but that he would defer to military leadership. "I want to make clear I'm not talking about a massive ground invasion of Iran," Sen. Lieberman said.

"They can't believe that they have immunity for training and equipping people to come in and kill Americans. We cannot let them get away with it. If we do, they'll take that as a sign of weakness on our part and we will pay for it in Iraq and throughout the region and ultimately right here at home," he said.

From the Moveon.org perspective, if not for people keeping Vice President Al Gore from stealing the 2000 Presidential election, Sen. Lieberman could be the incumbant Vice President today with an inside track on the Democratic Party's nomination in 2008. Whew!, say they!

Or, from my perspective, there are at least two Democrats serious about protecting American lives: Sen. Biden (D, DE) and Sen. Lieberman. Truly, I didn't think their numbers would be that high but I'm thrilled that if there are only two that they are United States Senators.

I've written it before: Rep. Dennis Kucinich could be elected President and his national security team would tell him that he could not quit in Iraq. Hopefully I don't have to remind anyone after January 20, 2009 that I wrote this today (for those not following along: I'd only have to remind you if a Dem-agogue is elected President in November 2008).

Sunday, June 10, 2007

A Time for Grown-Ups

I would probably never vote for Sen. Joseph Biden (D, DE) for President. His pro-abortion belief pretty much disqualifies him for my vote . . . even though he has attractive ideas on the most important issues facing voters in November 2008 - America's national security. But all Republican candidates will be at least as serious about protecting born Americans as Sen. Biden is so there is no need to surrender the lives of the unborn. Sen. Biden will have a litmus test to appoint pro-abortion judges; he cannot win his Party's nomination without declaring such a test; the most liberal of the Republican candidates may be pro-abortion, but he certainly won't have a litmus test.

And, who could forget Sen. Biden's outrageous treatment of Ms. Anita Hill during the Senate confirmation hearings on the nomination of Clarence Thomas for the U.S. Supreme Court?

That being written, I reproduce an article by Sen. Biden (D, DE), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, that appeared in the Wall Street Journal on June 4. The article is about a serious topic; a topic worthy of a grown-up conversation. This contrasts greatly with the childish, nonsensical garbage coming out of the Sens. Clinton, Edwards and Obama campaigns.

CSI:Nukes; Sen. Joe Biden; June 4, 2007; from the Wall Street Journal

The most dangerous threat America faces is the possibility that one of the world's most extreme groups -- like al Qaeda -- gets its hands on a nuclear bomb. Luckily, a would-be nuclear terrorist cannot make the ingredients for a modern-day Hiroshima by himself. Either a state will have to give or sell him a bomb or the nuclear material to make one, or the terrorist will have to steal the material.

To bring deterrence into the 21st century and prevent an attack from ever occurring, the United States and other potential targets of nuclear terrorism must take advantage of nuclear terrorists' reliance on states.

The U.S. has long deterred a nuclear attack by states, by clearly and credibly threatening devastating retaliation. Now is the time for a new type of deterrence: We must make clear in advance that we will hold accountable any country that contributes to a terrorist nuclear attack, whether by directly aiding would-be nuclear terrorists or willfully neglecting its responsibility to secure the nuclear weapons or weapons-usable nuclear material within its borders. Deterrence cannot rest on words alone. It must be backed up by capabilities.

Before, we relied on being able to track incoming bombers or missiles to know who had attacked us. Today, because a nuclear bomb might be delivered in a rental van or a boat, the credibility of the new deterrence will rest on our scientific ability to examine the air and ground debris created by an attack to determine the source of the nuclear material.

Building on work from the Cold War, the U.S. is a leader in this new science of nuclear forensics. Any country today that aids a would-be nuclear terrorist, through action or neglect, has to be concerned about getting caught. But we can and must do more to improve our ability in this area, and to make our ability to trace the source of a nuclear explosion widely known. We need more nuclear forensics research, more scientists to analyze nuclear samples, and an assured ability -- using our own aircraft or those of cooperating states -- to quickly collect nuclear debris from the site of any attack, in this country or around the world.

While there is a lot the U.S. can do on its own to deter countries from helping nuclear terrorists, there is much more we can do through cooperation with other governments. In the aftermath of an attack -- or much better, if terrorists are caught smuggling nuclear material before an attack -- scientists would want to compare the samples they collect against what is known about other countries' nuclear material, to figure out the samples' country of origin. To enable such work, the U.S. should take the lead in creating an international nuclear forensics library.

The library could house actual samples of nuclear material contributed by participating countries, validated data about their material, or binding agreements to provide predetermined data in the immediate aftermath of an attack or smuggling incident. A library cannot guarantee that in the wake of an attack the world could assign blame to a country, but it could be a critical tool in narrowing an investigation and debunking wild rumors or allegations. Countries might hesitate to share their nuclear material, but the library could safeguard samples and identify their origin only if they matched smuggled material or nuclear debris. Any country that refused to contribute to a nuclear forensics library would risk condemnation or suspicion in the event of a terrorist nuclear attack.

Working out arrangements -- to ensure that samples and data stay in trusted hands and that countries cannot fake the samples or data they submit -- won't be easy. That is all the more reason to build on existing data collections in Russia and Germany and work with other countries to craft such a world-wide nuclear forensics library.

Four years ago, I proposed improving our nuclear forensics capabilities, but today funding for critical nuclear analysis by our National Laboratories remains dangerously low. Congress must give the labs the resources that they need -- and that America's security demands.

This new form of deterrence must add to, not replace, other efforts to prevent nuclear terrorism. We must devote far more dollars and people to working with Russia and other countries to secure and reduce stockpiles of nuclear weapons and materials and to remove nuclear weapons-usable materials from as many sites as possible. The president must make this effort his or her personal priority.

Deterrence based on strong nuclear forensics is a critical tool to help prevent nuclear terrorism. To prevent a nuclear 9/11, we must use every tool we have. (End of article.)

Isn't this the kind of threat and idea Presdential candidates should be talking about?

Hopefully, as we get closer to the election, the children will be sent home and the adults will remain to compete for the Presidency.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Big Tent - Many Minds / Small Tent - One Mind

So, on Wednesday, June 6, the Boston Globe did a lead editorial titled, "The Republican big tent". They were pleased with the diversty of opinions expressed by the Republican Presdential candidates in the debate the night before.

The letter I wrote:

Editor,

On September 20, 2006, I submitted a letter to the editor titled, "GOP Big Tent (Blogger's note: you can read the full text of that letter in my September 23, 2006 post)"; the Boston Globe chose not to publish it. Your editorial yesterday, The Republican big tent (June 6, A14), was sweet, sweet, satisfaction; I am influencing somebody's thinking!

Ironically, on the same day, Mr. Derrick Z. Jackson (Boston Globe columnist) wrote, "Guiliani said, 'It's unthinkable that you would leave Saddam Hussein in charge of Iraq and be able to fight the war on terror,' even though Saddam was not linked to 9/11 or Al Qaeda and did not have weapons of mass destruction (A debate goes nuclear, June 6, A15).

Mr. Scot Lehigh (Boston Globe columnist) wrote, "'It's unthinkable that you would leave Saddam Hussein in charge of Iraq and be able to fight the war on terror', (Guiliani) said. No matter that Iraq wasn't part of the 9/11 attacks and didn't have operative ties with Al Qaeda (Essential qualities, June 6, A15)."

Mr. Jackson and Mr. Lehigh both responded to the same quote, chosen from hundreds, with the same exact words. Evidenced, liberal, group-think, no?

Surely Mr. Guiliani's quote was not more significant than Sen. Hillary Clinton's "I believe we are safer than we were" quote from Sunday night yet that quote didn't even make the Globe's "news" story. (End of letter.)

I always blind-copy the Globe columnists if I use something in her/his column in one of my letters. I hear directly from the columnists often. Well, I heard from Mr. Lehigh. He was gracious to respond to my letter and I'm not going to embarrass him by reproducing his entire email but I do need to reproduce one sentence because it proves my point exactly:

Mr. Lehigh responded in part with, "We don't discuss these mini-columns at all, but just race to get them done after the debate, each in his own office." (End of excerpted email.)

Thank you for making my point for me, Mr. Lehigh.

The liberals are loyal to a strict mind-set, there was no reason for Mr. Lehigh and Mr. Jackson to "discuss" anything. They raced to say the same thing; gee, what were the chances? What were the chances two liberals were going to parrot the same exact thing?

Separately, in my reply to Mr. Lehigh, I challenged him on his use of the word "operative" in his quote; his commentary being more honest than Mr. Jackson's. He was exactly correct in his use of the word, though, only about 73 Americans out of 300,000,000 understand the meaning of this extremely important word. As in, there were, in fact, contacts between members of the Hussein government and al Qaeda before 9/11. There is no evidence, however, that Hussein's government funded, trained, provided security or performed any other activity that provided any operational assistance to al Qaeda for the 9/11 attack. Anyway, I challenged Mr. Lehigh to explain to his readers why he used the very important word. I'll keep you posted.

Also in my reply, I reminded him that just a week earlier, another Globe columnist, Ms. Joan Vennochi wrote something very close to "President Bush trashed Sen. Kerry's war record." As we all know, this is hogwash. Again, you can google till your heart's content and you will never find a quote from the President or anyone associated with his Administration that EVER challenged the Senator's war record. Liberal extremists take it as an article of faith that Bush directed the Swift Boat Veterans and POWs for Truth.

There is absolutely no evidence of any "operational" contact between the Bush White House and 295 Vietnam veterans who carried a rifle in a swamp halfway around the world who earned enough medals to armor-plate a Humvee who also dared to share their opinion with America in 2004.

Of course, I think it is outrageous that being associated with 295 Vietnam veterans who carried a rifle in a swamp halfway around the world who earned enough medals to armor-plate a Humvee and who dared to express an opinion on electing a Commander-in-Chief is something the President has to be distanced from and liberal extremists paint as an atrocity. Think about that for a second.

Well, Mr. Sam Fox is the Ambassador to Belgium.

Finally, in other news, I absolutely kid you not, this is the entry on page A4 of the Boston Globe from June 8: Headline: Edwards says US less safe First Sentence: Presidential contender John Edwards yesterday disputed Democratic rival Hillary Clinton's contetion that the United States is safer since Sptember 11 . . . "

Now please go read my post of June 4, The Clipped Quote, and the third comment to that post.

No, I never tire of being ZACKlyRight.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

A: Of Course He Will

Q: Will President Bush pardon I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby.

First, to remind everyone where I stand on this, I reproduce a comment I made to my post of March 14, 2007:

Your neighbor's babysitter takes the kid into town for an ice cream cone. Your neighbor comes home and finds the house empty. In a panic, he calls the police because he suspects kidnapping. The FBI is called. Twenty minutes later the babysitter returns home with the kid. The kidnapping investigation is closed.

The FBI comes over to your house anyway and asks if you've eaten out lately. You say, "Yes, last Friday." You are called before a Grand Jury and asked the same question under oath. You again answer, "Yes, last Friday." Your credit card receipt strongly suggests you were there Saturday . . . as does the waiter, who was shown your picture . . . as does the valet, who was shown your picture. The Grand Jury indicts you for obstruction of justice and perjury in the "babysitter kidnapping case".

You are subsequently found guilty of obstruction of justice and perjury in the babysitter kidnapping case because your answer under oath was deemed a lie by the jury.

What's not to understand about the Scooter Libby case? Shameless exploitation of a non-event by liberal extremists and their co-conspirators in the liberal media. (End of my comment from the March 14, 2007 post.)

So, now that we've established (in a much more clever way than the Wall Street Journal; they thought sharing the actual facts of the case was the way to go; silly them) that there was no crime, let's get beyond that and assess the politics.

Will President Bush pardon Scooter Libby?

Let's consider a few other things the President has done just over the last few years that might give us some insight:

Dem-agogues in Congress: DON'T APPOINT JOHN BOLTON to the UNITED NATIONS!

Figurative Presidential Response: Bite me.

Dem-agogues in Congress: DON'T APPOINT SAM FOX AS AMBASSADOR TO BELGIUM!

Figurative Presidential Response: Bite me.

Corrupt World Bank Executive Committee: DON'T APPOINT PAUL WOLFOWITZ WORLD BANK PRESIDENT!

Figurative Presidential Response: Bite me.

Though, I'm sure the Corrupt Executives at the World Bank think they had the last laugh. Their case against Mr. Wolfowitz was more ridiculous than Mr. Fitzgerald's case against Mr. Libby.

It is interesting that Mr. Wolfowitz had almost unanimous support from all the African nations . . . Mr. Wolfowitz was actually getting World Bank money to the nations that needed it . . . and none of the European nations . . . again, Mr. Wolfowtz was actually slowing the flow of money to nations that didn't need it as much. Anyway, I wonder if those are the same African nations that are going to also benefit from President Bush's $30 billion commitment to fund AIDS relief.

Africa? Hey, isn't there a country in Africa committing genocide? No? Oh, you mean only one completely clueless goverment, in the entire world, is dumb enough to call the situation in Darfur a genocide? Of course! Naturally it's "dumb" President Bush! I digressed.

Dem-agogues in Congress: DON'T VETO THIS WAR FUNDING BILL WITH A SURRENDER DATE!

Figurative Presdential Response: Bite me.

I could go on, but you get the point. And, the items I listed above were not even the most pressing things the President's conservative base was demanding.

So, now President Bush can say "bite me" and get a pronounced bump from his base?

Gee, will President Bush pardon Scooter Libby?

Yes. Emphatically, yes.

And he'll do it like a man, not like a coward. Recall, literally 5 minutes before the fumigators arrived at the White House, President Clinton pardon Marc Rich, who was indicted in federal court of evading more than $48 million in taxes and with 51 other counts of tax fraud all while running illegal oil deals with Iran during the hostage crisis.

Monday, June 04, 2007

The Clipped Quote

The entire Sen. Hillary Clinton quote from last night's Democratic Presidential debate from New Hampshire, "I am a Senator from New York. I have lived with the aftermath of 9/11, and I have seen firsthand the terrible damage that can be inflicted on our country by a small band of terrorists. I believe we are safer than we were."

The Boston Globe did not include the last sentence in the quote it published today.

The letter:

Editor,

Did the Boston Globe not think it was newsworthy to report Sen. Hillary Clinton believes the Country is "safer" than it was on 9/11 (War, Clinton targets in N.H. debate, June 4, A1)?

Prior to the quote you chose not to report, Sen. Clinton reminded those watching the Democratic Presidential debate that as a Senator from New York she has "lived with the aftermath of 9/11" and has seen "the terrible damage that can be inflicted on our Country . . . ." Precisely! Because she is the Senator from New York she definitely would know if we we are more safe or not.

Your hatred for President Bush is so clouding your "news" coverage that an immensely significant opinion expressed at last night's debate was left on the cutting room floor.

"My goodness, if we print facts someone might be inclined to give President Bush credit! We can't have that!" (End of letter.)