March 31, 2008

Patti Patton-Bader ~ America's Favorite Mom

Not only is she an actual mom, but she is also "mom" to thousand upon thousands of deployed Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Now its time to let the world know all about how great a "mom" Patti is to all of us. Go vote by clicking here. Or by clicking on the button below...voting ends March 31, 2008 so vote every day for our "mom" Patti.


AFM Button

Ed Note: This post will stay at top until the contest ends....new posts come in below.

FITNA (UPDATED)

CENSORED!

Cowards!

Update:
On the 28th of March LiveLeak.com was left with no other choice but to remove the film "fitna" from our servers following serious threats to our staff and their families. Since that time we have worked constantly on upgrading all security measures thus offering better protection for our staff and families. With these measures in place we have decided to once more make this video live on our site. We will not be pressured into censoring material which is legal and within our rules. We apologise for the removal and the delay in getting it back, but when you run a website you don't consider that some people would be insecure enough to threaten our lives simply because they do not like the content of a video we neither produced nor endorsed but merely hosted.

Bravo to Liveleak for coming back around and standing up for free speech.

Web Reconnaissance for 03/31/2008

A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention, updated throughout the day...so check back often.


In the News: (Registration may be required to read some stories)
Bush to Meet NATO Allies Divided Over Adding Troops in Afghanistan - President Bush heads to Europe today to try to rescue the faltering mission in Afghanistan, and key NATO allies plan to meet his demands for more forces with modest troop increases, though not by as much as U.S. military officers say is needed to put down a stubborn Taliban insurgency. (READ MORE)

Obama, McCain Forged Fleeting Alliance - A year into his tenure on Capitol Hill, Barack Obama (D-Ill.) approached John McCain on the Senate floor to propose the two work together on a lobbying and ethics reform bill. The four-term Arizona Republican, 25 years Obama's senior, quickly saw a willing apprentice to help shake up the way... (READ MORE)

Sadr Tells His Militia To Cease Hostilities - BAGHDAD, March 30 -- Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr ordered his followers Sunday to lay down their arms and end six days of clashes against U.S. and Iraqi forces if the government agrees to release detainees and give amnesty to Sadr's fighters, among other demands. (READ MORE)

Blogger outreach boosts McCain - Even as talk radio was brutalizing Sen. John McCain in the Republican presidential primaries, conservative bloggers reached a respectful truce with the Arizona senator over touchy issues and gave him what the campaign called a "tremendous positive psychological" boost. (READ MORE)

U.S. used suspended security firm - Federal contracting officials signed off on millions of dollars in work last year to a Washington-area security contractor weeks after it was suspended by the General Services Administration and months before two top former executives were charged in a massive bribery and tax scam, government records show. (READ MORE)

Paulson plan aims to temper regulation - A sweeping overhaul of financial regulation that Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. will propose today started out last year as an effort to streamline and deregulate oversight of global markets, but the administration was forced to add elements addressing the mortgage crisis as it escalated this year. (READ MORE)

Mass grave uncovered in Iraq - The graves of more than 50 people thought killed by al Qaeda in Iraq during their two-year reign of terror in Diyala province's "bread basket" region have been found in a pomegranate orchard in a village near the town of Himbus. (READ MORE)

Clinton, Obama debate electoral-map strategy - Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama have very different views of what plays and what will win in the remaining primaries in both red and blue states. (READ MORE)

France will push U.S. on EU defense - French commitments to send 1,000 additional soldiers to Afghanistan may be conditional on U.S. support for the European Union's defense plan that some say will shift power away from U.S. and British interests. (READ MORE)

Cleric Suspends Battle in Basra by Shiite Militia - The Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr on Sunday called for his followers to stop fighting in Basra and in turn demanded concessions from Iraq’s government. (READ MORE)

McCain Faces Test in Wooing Elite Donors - Senator John McCain has so far managed to enlist only a fraction of the heavyweight fund-raisers who helped drive President Bush’s two runs for the White House. (READ MORE)

Maliki's Mettle - Among the worst mistakes of the Iraq war has been starting battles we weren't prepared to finish. Think Fallujah in 2004. We hope Iraq Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki absorbed that lesson before he began his campaign last week to defeat rogue militias in Basra. (READ MORE)

Hillary's Bad History - No, not sniper fire in Bosnia. We're referring to Hillary Clinton's lament last week that the U.S. is flirting with a 1990s Japan-style deflation. Perhaps it's a good time to remind everyone what really happened in Japan, so Mrs. Clinton and the rest of Washington don't make the same mistakes. (READ MORE)


On the Web:
Burt Prelutsky: Liberals and Their False Idols - There are major differences between liberals and conservatives, and that’s why I never know what people such as Barack Obama are talking about when they speak of bringing us all together. And I suspect that Jeremiah Wright’s surrogate son doesn’t know, either. For instance, if I support the surge in Iraq and you insist on bringing the troops home by next Thursday, what’s our compromise? Bringing our troops only partway home? Say as far as the Canary Islands? If you’re in favor of same-sex marriages and I happen to think the whole idea is a very silly joke, where’s our common ground? Doing away with opposite-sex marriages? (READ MORE)

Armstrong Williams: Avoiding Math and Science Like The Plague - Take a minute to think about the following: When was the last time you made a mathematical calculation in your head or by hand (yes which means not using a calculator)? Surely, some of you avoid math like the plague – especially when your teenage child comes around looking for help on their math homework – but you must admit that even in this compalculator era it comes in handy to be able to tally your bills in your head or figure out the miles per gallon you’re getting while driving along in traffic. Surely it seems reasonable to expect that people with high school diplomas and college degrees shouldn’t be afraid of a little algebra. We all took math in school, and although most of us struggled with the subject, and many of us hated every second of it, we did it and we got by. We got by, and it has helped us in some way or another while at college, work, or home. But if you thought math was hard for you, consider how hard your kids have it. (READ MORE)

Dinesh D'Souza: Ten Truths About The Election - 1. Obama's connection with the Reverend Jeremiah Wright makes him unelectable in the general election, even though neither he nor most of the pundits seem to have recognized this yet. Obama continues to campaign as if he is still viable. The mainstream media continues to cover him as if he was still viable. In reality, Obama’s candidacy is seriously imperilled, and Hillary Clinton—yes Hillary Clinton!—is the strongest Democratic candidate left in the race. 2. John McCain is the strongest candidate the Republicans could have nominated. This is not to say he is the perfect candidate. He is not conservative across the board, although he is conservative on the things that matter the most. He is a bit too old, and it shows. Still, he has the best chance of winning out of the GOP field. The irony is that if it were left up to the right-wing pundits, they would have chosen Mitt Romney. (READ MORE)

Star Parker: An open letter to John McCain - Dear John McCain, Every relationship requires effort. I want to do my part. But there needs to be common ground to start with, and you're making it harder and harder for me to find where it is. I'm an optimist and a woman of faith. I believe we are strong because our nation is meant to be, as President Reagan often reminded us, a "shining city upon a hill." You spoke in Los Angeles the other day about our country and its place in the world. You talked about political, economic and military strength, and international citizenship. (READ MORE)

A Soldier's Mind: Movie Review: Stop-Loss - Unrealistic… Inaccurate… Inconsitent… Those are the words that come to mind after seeing this movie on Sunday. The movie starts out portraying a military unit, dressed in DCU uniforms (Desert Camoflauge Uniform), conducting checkpoints in the middle of Tikrit, Iraq. That leads you to believe that the timeframe the movie is based in, is during the initial years of the conflict in Iraq. From the beginning, the movie is unrealistic, as it portrays the wrong way to set-up a checkpoint. As far as portraying what our Troops might encounter in this situation, that’s probably the most realistic part of the movie. Suddenly, they’re confronted by a white taxi-cab who refuses their orders to stop, as it approaches the checkpoint. As the Troops fire warning shots, the car turns and a passenger in the rear seat begins firing upon the Troops at the checkpoint. Realistic enough. They immediately radio in that they’re being fired up and in pursuit of the taxi. (READ MORE)

AFSister @ Argghhh!: Bringing Matt Home - It's been confirmed: SSG Keith "Matt" Maupin's remains have been positively id'd through DNA evidence. He's really gone. It's something I've always "known", but somehow, getting that confirmation tonight is just numbing. I keep finding myself saying "He's really gone", and breaking out in tears again. His parents NEVER gave up believing that he would be found, alive, and brought home. They were partially right- he was found, and will be brought home.. but not alive. He's really, truly, beyond doubt... gone. (READ MORE)

Richard Landes: When is a Christian who cites a Jew criticizing another Jew guilty of Anti-Semitism? In French Court - John Rosenthal, one of the best journalists covering the strange world of French politics and Jihad, has an article at PJMedia on the Kafka-in-Wonderland world of the infamous Chamber 17 of the French court system, dedicated to cases of defamation. In this case, to which I have only alluded, a French Christian is found guilty of “anti-Semitism” for posting an article by an Israeli Jew, Stephane Juffa, criticizing, among others, Charles Enderlin, that “veritable pyromaniac of war.” The logic of the accusation brought by Enderlin is nothing short of staggering, and the guilty verdict of the judge, Nicholas Bonnal (who has, at other times, shown sober judgment), mind-boggling. I quote some key passages below. (READ MORE)

Gabriel Malor @ Ace of Spades: More Doomsday Predictions - Rick Moran riffs off of this NY Times piece to speculate about the dangers of scientific progress. First, let's talk about the Times' article and then we'll get to Rick's comments. It's really quite simple. A couple of guys think that CERN's nearly completed Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland might cause the destruction of the Earth when it is activated. They think our options are either being sucked into a black-hole or fused into one big lump of strange matter, Ice-nine style. Their solution is to sue the Department of Energy and Fermilab (both of which are alleged to contribute to the project) for failure to file an environmental impact statement. That should be enough, they think, to derail the collider. They included CERN as a defendant, but it's doubtful the federal courts have jurisdiction over a European physics lab. (READ MORE)

Dafydd: Fascism Defined - I believe Ayn Rand was correct in her constant admonition that one should always define ones' terms. I have used the phrase "liberal fascism" several times on this blog, so it's high time I told you what I mean by it. The purpose of this post is to provoke discussion, so feel free to chime in on the comments; I am of course open to rewriting and modifying this definition based upon input from our insightful readers. In this case, "liberal" means doing something to help people "for their own good," as opposed to doing it for direct personal power and aggrandizement. I believe that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama sincerely believe that their leadership -- not their policies, as they really have none beyond collectivism and pragmatism; everything else is spur of the moment and temporary until they think of the next policy -- their leadership will bring about world peace, brotherhood, and a loving village (à la "the Prisoner") in which no one will ever hurt again. (READ MORE)

The Captain's Journal: Flushing out the British Narrative - Preliminary reading: The Battle in Basra & Continued Chaos in Basra. In the midst of the chaos in Basra at the moment with the British forces sitting at the Basra airport, it is necessary to construct a narrative for what happened and why. One problem is that not even all of the British commentators agree on that narrative. Some Brits are saying that the current battle is just what we’ve been waiting for. It’s good that it has finally come and that the Iraqis are carrying it out. “The British military always knew the test would come and it has arrived with the offensive that Iraqi forces have launched in Basra against the Shi’ite militias and criminal gangs who have run too much of the city for too long. British-trained Iraqi units have been in action, directed by Nouri al-Maliki, the prime minister, in what is clearly a crucial encounter for the future of Iraq.” (READ MORE)

Dadmanly: NYT vs NSA - The New York Times this week attempted to add historical perspective and justification for their infamous exposure of highly classified National Security Agency (NSA) terror surveillance programs. The Times, of course, considers their illegal and arguably treasonous acts in revealing classified programs and information as valued public service, of a piece with other disclosures of classified information. Significantly, the editors at the Times only consider national secrets worthy of public exposure when they do maximum damage to their political opponents. A.J. Strata provided excellent and reinforcing rebuttal to the Times self-serving rationalizations: NY Times Reporters Try To Defend Grave Mistake - Of Course Fail. (READ MORE)

Noah Shachtman: Sadr Calls for Cease-Fire? (Updated) - Great news, potentially. According to the AP, "Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said Sunday that he was pulling his fighters off the streets nationwide and called on the government to stop raids against his followers and free them from prison." “The Iraqi government quickly welcomed al-Sadr's apparent move to resolve a widening conflict with his movement, sparked Tuesday by operations against his backers in the oil-rich southern city of Basra.” (READ MORE)

Bruce Kesler: Explaining Obama, Clinton and Kerry’s False Histories - It’s a wonder to observers that Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and John Kerry so blatantly -- and relatively easily revealed as otherwise -- invented their histories as heroic, exemplary and worthy of leadership. Their formative education coincides with a post-war radical trend in historiography called leftist revisionism. Although revisions of historical understandings are a commonplace occurrence as new sources come to light, the radical left in post-war America veered into a myth that the causes of the Cold War, and of Vietnam and now Iraq, came from avaricious and racist motives and are furthered by outright mendacity and secret cabals. (READ MORE)

Phil Orenstein: Patriotism, Freedom and the American Dream - What a month. America’s college basketball fans have been riveted to their TV screens as the NCAA tournaments roar into the Final Fours during the month of March Madness. But what has recently been inundating the scene in the world of politics, religion, academia, the economy and international call-girls rings should be dubbed March Madness as well. This March, we’ve seen our share of madness from the pulpit as Barack Obama’s radical pastor Rev. Jeremiah Wright vilified America and Israel and cursed the white race in venomous sermons played relentlessly over the internet and cable TV. (READ MORE)

Diary Of A Hollywood Refugee: Open Letter to Senator Obama - Eloquently written, powerful & evocative. “Dear Senator Obama: I have now read and reread your speech, understanding you take this to be a “teaching moment,” I have applied myself to its lessons. But some questions have arisen and I need a little more clarification. You tell me Reverend Jeremiah Wright’s horrendous remarks will take on a different meaning if I will but contextualize them and understand he has seen terrible things in his time, a burden shared by all African-Americans. A fair proposition; from Kant to Auden and beyond we learn we define by comparison and only by internalizing can we grasp true meaning. So I have done precisely that: looked inside myself to understand how hatred might need to be contextualized.” (READ MORE)

Don Surber: Queer politics - They’ll meet for workshops on beating the Republicans, and for do-it-yourself sex toys. When RuPaul was popular on TV, one of my kids asked me what I thought. I replied that this is America; you can be whoever you want to be when you grow up. Still, I am amused by an LGBTQ group in Chicago’s press release on its convention this weekend. LGBTQ? At the rate they are adding letters, they’ll run out of consonants. They “oppose oppression both in and out of the ‘movement.’ Racism, Patriarchy, Heterosexism, Sexism, Transphobia and all oppressive behavior.” Well, don’t we all? (READ MORE)

Flopping Aces: Will They Admit Progress? - Great job as usual by Michael Goldfarb in describing the fighting in Basra. Basically saying that those who moan and cry about Iraq always like to point out that the militia’s are still running rampant. Well now Maliki is doing something about it and what do we get? More whining. Michael: “Faced with an intractable problem, Maliki bet big and confronted the most powerful militia in Iraq. When one looks at the rest of the Middle East, it’s not at all apparent that the region’s more problematic regimes are inclined to do the same. Take Pakistan, where broad swaths of the country are controlled by militias, the Taliban, al Qaeda. If only Musharraf had the resolve to violently confront these threats to his government’s sovereignty. It’s the same in the Palestinian territories, where Mahmoud Abbas must rely on the IDF to keep him in power. Abbas might be willing to confront Hamas, but he is unable. And in Lebanon, a weak central government lacks the resolve to strike at Hezbollah. It strikes me as a good thing that Maliki can and will go after those who directly challenge his government–even to the New York Times it looks like progress.” (READ MORE)

Fjordman: Boycott the United Nations! - The United Nation’sSecretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned Wilder’s movie Fitna as “offensively anti-Islamic,” and said that “There is no justification for hate speech or incitement to violence.” Does that mean that the UN is now going to ban the Koran, which does both? As Robert Spencer commented, “What exactly is ‘hate speech’ about quoting Qur’an verses and then showing Muslim preachers using those verses to exhort people to commit acts of violence, as well as violent acts committed by Muslims inspired by those verses and others?” Earlier in March, the U.N. Human Rights Council, which is dominated by Muslim countries, passed a resolution saying it is deeply concerned about the defamation of religions and urging governments to prohibit it. The only religion specified is Islam. (READ MORE)

Hamilton, Madison, and Jay: Correcting the myth over Basra campaign - A few on the Left have made the efforts in Basra out to be something they're not. Namely, they point to the rise of Sadr's Mahdi militias as a sign that the Surge has failed, and Iraq stands on the brink of a civil war. (How many civil wars is that? I forget.) As Captain Ed explains when the Brits left Basra, the thugs down there fought for control. Mookie al-Sadr's boys won, and decided to push their limits. The Iraqi forces weren't up to snuff in 2005/2006, at least not on par with what was needed to take on the Shi'ite militia. However this time around the security forces, working in concert with US forces, were ready. Guess who lost this fight? Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr on Sunday ordered his fighters off the streets nationwide and called on the government to stop raids against his followers and free them from prison. (READ MORE)

Ed Morrissey: Politico: Obama lied about survey - Politico has caught Barack Obama in another misstatement about his past, and this one goes right to the heart of his posing as a New Politics candidate. Working on a tip from opposition sources, Kenneth Vogel found a survey with Obama’s handwriting that he had previously denied handling. It shows that Obama himself established much more liberal positions on gun control, abortion, and other issues than he has admitted in his campaign: “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’s projected during his presidential campaign.” (READ MORE)

Jules Crittenden: “Part of the Problem” - Persians magnanimous agree to call off their Shiite militias. I guess this means we don’t have to “alleged” or “U.S. accuses Iran of involvement” or any other qualifiers anymore. Apparently the mullahs are calling the shots. Iraqi lawmakers went to Qom over the weekend to ask an Iranian general to kindly stand down his murderous stooges. “Iraqi lawmakers traveled to the Iranian holy city of Qom over the weekend to win the support of the commander of Iran’s Qods brigades in persuading Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr to order his followers to stop military operations, members of the Iraqi parliament said.” (READ MORE)

Hot Air: MyDD: Watch out for the evil GOP doing something … like this! - Apparent Hillary Clinton supporter Universal at MyDD wants the Democrats to realize the predicament they face in November if Barack Obama wins the nomination. He thinks the Republicans will create unfair and devastating advertising that will appeal to fear, using 9/11 imagery to derail Obama. Universal wants to protect the Democrats from this fate — so he cranked out an ad to kneecap Obama first (via Instapundit): “If we choose Obama as our nominee, we are locked-in to this narrative. There is no going back, no bogus NBC polls to save the day. No Anderson Cooper softball interviews or phony charges of racism that will rescue us. The opponent doesn’t care. All the thoughtfulness and restraint of a Democratic adversary will be gone.” (READ MORE)

Neo-neocon: Obama didn’t go to law school for nothing - Law requires an exceedingly precise use of language. People who are attracted to the profession often already have this tendency, and then they are schooled further in the honing of the ability. Bill Clinton was reviled for his lawyerly use of language in the service of weaseling, of parsing his words so carefully—especially when in the service of self-defense—that although they seemed to say one thing they really said another. Listeners learned not to take his words at face value, but to scrutinize them the way a lawyer would the language of a contract about to be signed. Now comes Barack Obama, another lawyer, not an unusual profession for politicians. Not all lawyer-politicians are up there with Bill in the word-parsing competition, but Obama is revealing himself—far more than Hillary—to be Bill’s true heir in that department. (READ MORE)

Melanie Phillips Blog: What the west needs to know - A propos the Wilders film Fitna, another longer film is now on line which does a much better job at informing people about Islam and exposing the absurd (early) claims by Tony Blair and George W Bush that Islamic terrorism apparently had nothing to do with Islam. Called What the West Needs to Know, it explains in a scholarly, authoritative but nevertheless accessible and balanced manner how the basic tenets of Islam have given rise to the global jihad, their implications and consequences and how they are the principal motor behind major conflicts around the world (the defining battle of Vienna in 1683 which is pictured above and where Europe repulsed the Islamic advance took place on...September 11); and it also explains, not at all comfortingly, how the many millions of Muslims who live entirely peaceful lives relate to these precepts (they are either ignorant of them, says Robert Spencer, or else they reject them on flimsy theological grounds; let's hope that's not the whole story). (READ MORE)

Mark Tapscott: Duke blasts another hole in First Amendment on campus - It shouldn't surprise or sadden me anymore to read about a once-noble university now acting as if the First Amendment was never adopted, but it still does. Remember the Duke lacrosse team outrage? Well, the players and their families are suing all of the responsible parties, including Duke. I doubt there have been many cases in which a damages suit was more justified than this one. Frankly, there would be such sweet justice if the three young men whose lives were shattered by false rape charges end up owning Duke University, so they can fire school president Richard Brodhead and the faculty members who aided and abetted the students' defamation. (READ MORE)

Cassandra: Winter Soldier II: The Inconvenient Truths Americans Won't Hear from the Media - The other night as my husband and I drove home from a party in Washington, DC we spoke of the war and wondered how historians will one day view current events. It's strange to think that historians in the time of Herodotus had only the verbal accounts of survivors to reconstruct battles. Future historians will have many and varied sources: news accounts, blogs, emails and letters, pictures and video taken with cell phones, even YouTubes. It boggles the mind. One might, at first, think such a plethora of sources would yield a more accurate picture of war: lead historians to a swifter consensus about what happened; what it all meant. I wonder, though. Will all this information clarify, or confuse? Will we, with our human tendency to sift out what confirms our own biases, simply, seize from this abundance what is useful and discard the discordant notes? (READ MORE)

Ron Winter: If Al Sadr Wants a Truce - He's Getting His Ass Kicked! - So-called militia fighters, who in reality are little more than organized criminal gangs hiding behind a religious facade, have been a wild card in the efforts to build a new and better Iraq since Saddam Hussein's army fell in 2003. The best known, but not necessarily the worst, of the bunch is the Mahdi Army run by a renegade self-anointed cleric known as Muqtada Al Sadr. To give you an idea of his street credibility, there is a slum in Baghdad named after him. Big Whoop! Last week the elected government of Iraq ordered a crackdown on Mookie's army, which has basically been running the show in Basra, and walking around Baghdad scowling and threatening anyone who even dares to hope for peace and prosperity. These are Islamo-fascists, people. They don't believe in peace and prosperity for anyone except them and only under their warped view of their religion! (READ MORE)

Jay Tea: Whose Broad Brush And Bright Ideas? - With the widespread unpleasant response to Geert Wilders' film on Islam, "Fitna," I'm finding myself thinking about the "big picture" thing again. And, as usual, I'm making myself angry. Muslims around the world are calling on all governments to get behind censoring the film. And make no mistake -- it's censorship, plain and simple. Whether it's being done as an "appeal to understanding" or naked threats of violence, the end result is the same -- they are getting their way and suppressing a film that says things they don't like. Their biggest target is the Dutch government. After all, Wilders is a Dutch legislator, so his government should be held accountable for his actions. (READ MORE)

The Midnight Sun: U.N. INDICTS WILDERS AND ‘EXTREMIST MINORITY’ - Self-professed socialist P.M. and now Mr Global, Kevin Rudd has been over licking the boots of the UN in general and Ban Ki Moon in particular. He’s coughed up $35 million of your money to sit his pudgy butt at the round-table of the reprobate. See here. So who’s he buddying up with? The latest headline reads: Ban Ki-moon condemns offensively anti-Islamic film. Those at the top of the global elite are making known exactly where they stand on Fitna…’offensively anti-Islamic film’ , ‘condemn, in the strongest terms’, being the language used by Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon: (READ MORE)

SC&A: “What We Have Here Is A Failure To Educate” And Other Kinds Of Child Abuse - One of the most accurate reflections of the state of health and fitness of a nation, culture or society is the state of health of it’s educational system. The more education a nation, culture or society affords it’s students, the more healthy that nation, culture or society. The more a nation, culture or society demands good education, the more advanced that society and culture are. Education is also a barometer of the state of freedom within a a nation, culture or society. The more freedom a citizen has to learn and explore, the freer that society is. Education is not about ideologies or specific beliefs. Education is about the freedom to explore, be it of the armchair or field variety. In a healthy society, education exists along side ideology and specific beliefs. There are Catholic, Lutheran, Methodist and Jewish universities where religious beliefs and instruction go hand in hand with the experience of learning and the exploration of new ideas. (READ MORE)

McQ: Gore launches 300 million ’climate crisis’ ad campaign - You know, for a guy who just said in an interview that skeptics are a "tiny, tiny minority now with their point of view, they’re almost like the ones who still believe that the moon landing was staged in a movie lot in Arizona and those who believe the world is flat,", he sure is behind spending a lot of money to convince the world there’s a ’climate crisis’ problem (apparently "global warming" is out - not urgent enough): This is part of a 3 year, 300 million ad campaign directed at "non-news" types who watch shows such as American Idol and what are called other "non-traditional" shows. So what does that mean, traditional folks might be skeptical? People who watch the news might be skeptical as well? (READ MORE)

Have an interesting post or know of a "must read?" Then send a trackback here and let us all know about it. Or you can send me an email with a link to the post and I'll update the Recon.

(VIDEO) FITNA



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Good lady from Pros and Cons

March 30, 2008

Web Reconnaissance for 03/30/2008

A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention updated throughout the day…so check back often.

On the Web:
A Newt One: BREAKING; Letter From Move America Forward to US Attorney's Office Regarding Crimes in Berkeley CA - We first told you of MAF's announcement that they would be sending a request letter for investigation to the US attorneys office, two days ago, when they issued their press release. Thanks to Melanie Morgan, Chairman of Move America Forward, Wake up America has a copy of the letter that has been sent from Move America Forward's attorney to the US Attorney's office regarding the criminal actions in Berkeley California, demanding an investigation. More at Melanie Morgan.com. (READ MORE)

Lawhawk: Liveleak Pulls Fitna - It's a self-fulfilling proposition. Geert Wilders produced a controversial film that showed just how barbaric the jihadis are, and the threats proceeded against not only Wilders, but against those who were hosting the film online. Liveleak had no choice but to take the safety of their employees into consideration: Liveleak, as the first poster, was on the receiving end of such threats, and they must have been of such a specific nature that they had no choice but to pull the film from their servers. This is what happens when you cede free speech to jihadis and their ilk. They don't like something, they threaten violence. They get their way. (READ MORE)

Donald Douglas: Responsible Plan? Antiwar Groups Endorse Unconditional Iraq Surrender - This post is a follow-up to my previous entry, "Iraq is Top Issue for Democratic Congressional Hopefuls." That essay discussed the pledge of 42 congressional candidates to push for an immediate Iraq pullout if elected. One of the leaders of this unelected cohort is Darcy Burner, pictured here, who this week put out a comprehensive antiwar document, "A Responsible Plan to End the War in Iraq." The plan calls for a complete pullout of all U.S. military forces from Iraq, with the exception of a minor stay-behind contingent to guard the American embassy in Baghdad. A look at Burner's campaign homepage indicates a decidedly left-wing Democratic policy agenda; and a click over at Burner's entry at Wikipedia shows that Burner identifies herself as a "practical progressive" ideologically. (READ MORE)

America's North Shore Journal: Media Mavens Mistake Military Moves - Several memes are developing in the old media about the Sadr Revolt in Iraq. They seem to be relying on anonymous sources and lack of familiarity with operation in Iraq. Let’s take a look at some of them. CBS reports: “The Iraqis didn’t ask permission, they just went, which seems to have caught President Bush by surprise.” Basra Province is under the control of the Iraqi national government, as are the Iraqi Army and other security forces. The Iraqis do not need anyone’s permission to conduct operations. The Iraqi government has been moving troops south since late summer, which did not go unnoticed by our leadership. There are American advisors at all levels of the military, from the Ministry of Defense on down. To suggest that the United States was not aware that this operation was going forward is nonsense. Dozens of Americans had to have had been aware. (READ MORE)

Ace of Spades: It's A Winning Streak - If Friday's box office numbers are any measure, the latest anti-war movie will flop just as badly as the others. Stop-loss came in 7th yesterday, and Hollywood execs keep kidding themselves about the reason: “‘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.’” (READ MORE)

Atlas: Banning FITNA Like Dhimmi Dogs - These developments give us a clear indication of who is with us and who is against the fighters for freedom. “COMCAST BANS GEERT WILDERS ‘FITNA THE MOVIE’ FROM ITS BANDWIDTH hat tip wolf . Yesterday afternoon I posted a link to the LiveLeak website which streams Geert Wilders new film ‘Fitna’ within the Comcast Community ‘News and Current Events’ Forum. My post read as follows: ‘Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders film "Fitna the Movie" was released globally on the web this afternoon. This film is a MUST SEE.’ Fitna the Movie (which was an active html link to the LiveLeak website). Within minutes of that posting, which was made under an anonymous username, so-called ‘moderate Muslims’ made posts denying that the texts quoted in the film were from the Qur’an, and had apparently notified Comcast of the offensive post existence on the forum.’” (READ MORE)

Dafydd: Newsflash: NYT Misunderstands Modern Warfare! - This may be quite a shocking story with the potential to shake the worldview of readers of this blog; if there are children reading over your shoulder, they should be sent to bed without their suppers immediately, before you read another line. (Of course, if your kids read faster than you, perhaps they should send you to bed without din-dins.) Forwarned is four-horned. I don't want to judge before all the facts are in, but it appears from available evidence that the New York Times has only a dim idea of how we conduct modern warfare. And by "modern," I mean all warfare since the introduction of the airplane. First, the factual content: “American warplanes struck targets in the southern port city of Basra late Thursday, joining for the first time an onslaught by Iraqi security forces intended to oust Shiite militias there, according to British and American military officials.” (READ MORE)

The Belmont Club: The "Heckler's Veto" - Josef Joffe at the Harvard Institute for Middle Eastern Studies argues that Europeans are dealing with the Fitna incident in a traditional, but effective way. Joffe says that in Europe, pre-emptive censorship is far more normal than in the US due to an historical fear of communal violence. “European constitutional practice does not share the American tradition of the ‘heckler’s veto.’ ... Yet in Europe, the mere expectation of communal violence against hateful speech routinely leads to bans and prohibitions. Significantly, the Dutch government has imposed no such sanctions on Geert Wilder’s Fitna. The Hague as well as the EU have merely condemned the 15-minute film. On the other hand, no television station would air it, so Wilders had to ‘premiere’ it on the Internet.” (READ MORE)

Deebow @ Blackfive: One Reason I Will Vote For McCain.... - Look, politics aside, I know John McCain is not the best Republican candidate. Hell, I could use some of my funky poli sci mojo to unfunkify and clarify why that is, but we all have our different issues and our different reasons for why we do or do not vote for candidates for public office. Phillip Butler postulates the reasons for his vote against McCain. I will give props to the doctor for his service and captivity. From his bio; “Doctor Phillip Butler is a 1961 graduate of the United States Naval Academy and a former light-attack carrier pilot. In 1965 he was shot down over North Vietnam where he spent eight years as a prisoner of war. He is a highly decorated combat veteran who was awarded two Silver Stars, two Legion of Merits, two Bronze Stars and two Purple Heart medals.” Although, according to his bio, he seems to have made a left turn sometime after that. (READ MORE)

Uncle Jimbo @ Blackfive: Washington Post embeds with the enemy - A report from the enemy press office. “As a heavy barrage erupted outside his parents' house, Abu Mustafa al-Thahabi, a political and military adviser to the Mahdi Army of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, rushed through the purple gate and took shelter behind the thick walls. He had just spoken with a fighter by cellphone. ‘I told him not to use that weapon. It's not effective,’ he said, referring to a rocket-propelled grenade. ‘I told him to use the IED, the Iranian one,’ he added, using the shorthand for an improvised explosive device. ‘This is more effective.’” Well color me shocked, but the Washington Post has a reporter embedded with the Mahdi Army. They are receiving first hand reports on how the Iranian-backed militias there are trying to kill our troops. I am just curious about how it would have gone over if they had embedded a reporter with the SS in France as we invaded Normandy, or in the caves on Okinawa to report on how well the Japanese were doing slaughtering Marines. (READ MORE)

Blonde Sagacity: American Flags are a "Visual Blight"? - "...State Road 7 in Hollywood is one patriotic corridor. From small tire shops to major car dealerships, it seems nearly every business on the busy roadway has its own sizable supply of Stars and Stripes flapping away. City commissioners are considering regulating the mass displays of American pride, calling it a visual blight. During a recent city meeting, Mayor Peter Bober called for a citywide limit on the number of flags allowed at a business, especially along State Road 7, also known as U.S. 441. Bober and others say they want to reduce the numbers of flags in proportion to the geographical size of the business, although no parameters have been set. (READ MORE)

Blue Star Chronicles: Muslim Extremists are Trying to Shut Down Dutch Film on Islamic Fascism - There’s just a big brouhaha going on because of the Geert Wilders film, Fitna. Obviously, a lot of people saw that coming and many people and groups tried to stop it from being released from the get-go. I watched the film and saw acts of terrorism committed by islamic jihadists against the West and Western interest. The film didn’t exaggerate the atrocities and in fact barely scratched the surface of the outrageous behavior of the jihadists. So what’s the problem? The problem apparently is that we are not supposed to acknowledge that jihadists are jihadists. I guess we are supposed to pretend the are a loving group of people who are just badly misunderstood. Or …. as a few commenters on my previous post have pointed out … we should all just admit that America is the big bad bully in the world and its all our fault for everything the Jihadists do around the world to anyone who does not submit to their will. (READ MORE)

Blue Crab Boulevard: The Pending Prospect Of A Positively Putrid P.C. Presidency - To my mind, there is much to dislike about the idea of an Obama presidency. On the one hand there is the purely political objection to a lightly vetted candidate whose political track record suggests a strident left-wing agenda, which most Americans would reject outright if they had any idea what Obama stood for in the first place. The objections on the other end of the spectrum concern social matters and the disturbing trend towards hypersensitivity and censorship among people who ought to know better, but who don't. Case in point: Skit featured student playing Obama in blackface (READ MORE)

Chickenhawk Express: HADITHA CHARGES DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE! - OK - I know I'm late posting this but my job interfered with my blogging... GREAT NEWS, huh? LCpl Stephen Tatum is now free and clear of charges in the Haditha incident. The incredible Nat Helms has the News over at NewsMax! Charges against the veteran Oklahoma infantryman were dismissed Friday morning “with prejudice” by Lt. Gen Samuel Helland, the convening authority and final arbiter in the notorious case. His decision means Tatum is free and clear of further prosecution in the case. Note the phrase "with prejudice" - that basically means that the damned charges should have never been brought forward! Take that and stuff it up your fat craw Murtha. (READ MORE)

Andrew Cochran: Iraqi Shiites Copying From Their Hezbollah Cousins in Lebanon? - In reviewing the action this week between Iraqi forces and Shiite militia, it's instructive to compare press accounts of this conflict to reports from the 2006 Hezbollah-Israel conflict in Lebanon, as posted or discussed on this website. Some examples: "Hizballah has proven to be a far more effective fighting machine than Israel anticipated, and the Israelis find themselves in a difficult situation: Continued military operations in Lebanon risk escalation and further destabilization, while a quick withdrawal would hand Hizballah a significant victory." Daveed Gartenstein-Ross ("DGR"), July 18, 2006. "Nasrallah admitted that it took five months of preparation to plan this operation." Olivier Guitta, July 19. 2006. "A senior Iraqi military adviser has said the crackdown is taking longer than expected, partly because militia fighters have superior weapons." Washington Post, posted March 28. 2008. (READ MORE)

Thaiphoon @ The Daily Ramble: Why Does the Looney Left Focus On Just The Total Of The National Debt?? - EuroYank challenged Nazh to respond to one of his posts concerning the national debt under Bush. Since Nazh has been busy with other posts, I happily accept the challenge. Some of what EuroYank says has merit. Others, do not. We'll go through some of them one by one. Here's one quote which I love to hear from the Left: “When Mr Bush took office he inherited a $236 billion budget surplus. Bill Clinton, his predecessor, had used budget surpluses to pay down some of the national debt in his last two years in office.” I beg to differ Yank, but you're wrong if you think that Clinton had much to do with the decline of the deficits from 1995-2000. (READ MORE)

The Dicerning Texan: It's Time to Boycott NBC - We have boycotted Hollywood actors and movies and several TV shows before, but now it's time to boycott a whole network. NBC has carried their liberal tolerance into full-blown anti-American propaganda, and...frankly...these two sisters have had enough. In 2003 they defended war correspondent Peter Arnett's traitorous remarks on Iraqi TV before finally firing him after a barrage of public criticism. Two years ago, NBC's Dateline sent some "Muslim-looking" men and a camera crew to NASCAR in order to film fans' reactions for a story they were doing about anti-Muslim sentiment in the U. S. In December of last year, NBC refused to run the ads from Freedom's Watch thanking the troops for their service. Although they finally caved in under public condemnation, their message was clear. They don't support the troops and they don't support America. (READ MORE)

Don Surber: Band of Brothers, 2008 - They really are brothers. Fighting in Iraq. Pretty sad that the burden of fighting for this nation has fallen upon so few who are willing to serve. But they are stepping up to the plate. Meet the Hill Brothers. All are in Iraq now with various units. Robert was the last to arrive. Bryan and Josh went to greet him. “I didn’t care how long I waited; I was excited to be able to see him,” said Bryan. “The reunion meant more because of the place we are in.” (READ MORE)

Flopping Aces: Fitna Goes Viral - Ah, the UN. The ever useless organization decided to stick its nose into that which doesn’t concern them when the Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, spoke out against a short film that shows fanatical Islam for what it is….disgusting, hateful, and full of bigotry. What did he call it? Hate speech. “Secretary-General today led a chorus of United Nations condemnation of the Internet broadcast of a video made by the Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders, describing it as ‘offensively anti-Islamic,’ while he also called on those upset by the film to remain calm. In a statement issued by his spokesperson after last night’s airing of the film, entitled Fitna, Mr. Ban said ‘there is no justification for hate speech or incitement to violence. The right of free expression is not at stake here.’” No opinion from the SG about the hate speech depicted in the film, guess that will come at a later date….. (READ MORE)

Fjordman: “Fitna” Review - I liked it. It is impressive how much they managed to squeeze into just 15 minutes. I notice several of the comments at Jihad Watch say Geert Wilders could have made it worse. Yes, he could. He left out quite a few things, but what he kept was authentic and bad enough. We should remember that the people reading websites such as Jihad Watch or Atlas Shrugs or Gates of Vienna are perfectly aware of how bad Islam is. This movie was not made for them. It was made for all those tens of millions or hundreds of millions of people out there who don’t trust the official propaganda about Islam, but still don’t fully understand how bad it is. Being too harsh (even if what is described is true) could put some of them off. I believe this movie struck a good balance between showing Islam for what it is and still making it possible for the average person to digest the message. It is highly effective. (READ MORE)

Baron Bodissey: A Rosetta Stone for “Fitna”: Part Three - The translations of Fitna have been coming in all day. I’ve formatted four more languages — Spanish, Italian, Slovenian, and Czech — and here they are, below the jump. I have a few more waiting in the queue for tomorrow. The following languages have been posted so far: Czech Danish English Finnish French German Italian Portuguese Serbian Slovenian Spanish Swedish The urgency of this and related projects is highlighted by the all but universal official condemnation of the movie that has emerged since Thursday. Virtually the entire MSM and all political leaders severely disapprove of Geert Wilders. The most recent example to arrive in our inbox (thanks insubria) is from the EuroMed parliament. (READ MORE)

Richard Saunders: Why - Just as my predecessor found his leave in the papers of his Almanak, so shall I. When forces take leave of their senses and allow the strong to drive the thought processes of the weak. When personal safety takes precedence to free speech and liberty then those that bend to the strong have neither. And thus we come to our turn, in this great struggle. Our turn to be the Author of freedom and society and the forces that rail against it. On Friday March 28, 2007 a seminal event took place that foreshadows the failure of my predecessors dream. A dream founded upon the basic truths that all men are created equal, and are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable right the chief among them being, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That dream is dead as of yesterday. (READ MORE)

GayPatriotWest: What Explains Left’s Obsession with Bush? - Just over two weeks ago, I observed that for the Left & MSM, McCain is the new Bush. So eager are many on the left (and their allies in the MSM) eager to elect a Democrat to the White House that they’ll savage whatever Republican wins his party’s nod in the presidential contest. Even if he has departed from conservative “orthodoxy” on any number of occasions. Even if the MSM has heralded his “maverick” stance over the years. Now that he is the Republican nominee for President of the United States, Senator McCain is learning that the kid-glove treatment he had come to expect from the MSM is no longer forthcoming. Not only that. Whenever I check left-of-center blogs, I see advertised a slew of books attacking that courageous veteran. (READ MORE)

Gribbit: Trust Team Clinton? Dick Morris Says NO! - Billy Bob Bubba Clinton in his last days as President issued a flurry of pardons and clemencies. Some of these, I’d wager most, were politically motivated. Apparently so does former Clinton aid Dick Morris. In the New York Post Wednesday of this week, Morris wrote an article addressing a pardon for Puerto Rican Terrorists in 1999 “based on the stuff I was given by the staff.”. He says: “Ron Kolb, the citizen whose questioning prompted the ex-president’s comment, rightly pointed out that the FBI and Justice Department had opposed the pardons. The clear conclusion is that it was Clinton’s political staff who pushed for clemency - with the obvious goal of helping Hillary Clinton’s bid to become a New York senator.” (READ MORE)

Ilya Somin: Property, Popular Mobilization, and Protection for Constitutional Rights - In a series of interesting posts (e.g. here) on popular mobilization and constitutional law, Jack Balkin argues that the Supreme Court often responds to changing public opinion and political mobilization in formulating its decisions. For example, he suggests that if the Court holds that the Second Amendment protects an individual right, that may in part be the result of strong public opinion supporting such an outcome. I don't doubt that the Court sometimes responds to public opinion in that way. However, property rights is a noteworthy counterexample. As I discuss in this paper on the massive political backlash to Kelo v. City of New London (now under submission to law reviews), most of the public (including even most self-described "liberals" and "Democrats") favor much stronger protection for property rights than the Court has so far been willing to provide. (READ MORE)

Eugene Volokh: More on Elton John Fundraising for Hillary Clinton - Extreme Mortman quotes my earlier post, and follows up with a response from Richard Andrews: “If the FEC is determined to sit on its hands about this, don’t see much that can be done. <…> The FEC seems rather determinedly of two minds about this -- it is bizarre for Opinion 1987-25 to have expressly stated that it was NOT over-ruling Opinion 1981-51, when they flatly contradict one another. Guess they just want to make it up as they go along.” I had thought of this distinction between high-value and low-value volunteer services, but I don't think it's right. Recall that contributions by Americans to campaigns are also limited -- they're just capped at $2300 ($1000 until not long ago), rather than entirely forbidden as to foreigners. Clearly the value of a Chuck Norris or Barbra Streisand performing at a campaign event is over $2300. Yet that's allowed; why? (READ MORE)

Jules Crittenden: How Do You Like Your Trainwreck? - With plenty of Gore, of course! UK Telegraph: “Plans for Al Gore to take the Democratic presidential nomination as the saviour of a bitterly divided party are being actively discussed by senior figures and aides to the former vice-president. The bloody civil war between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama has left many Democrats convinced that neither can deliver a knockout blow to the other and that both have been so damaged that they risk losing November’s election to the Republican nominee, John McCain.” I think my favorite part … aside from the whole thing, that is … is the idea that replacing the Hero of Tuzla and the change-hoping bigot buddy with an exaggerating doomsayer somehow gets this train back on the rails. (READ MORE)

Lorie Byrd: Why Americans aren't buying the recent Iraq War movies - First I would like to say that I am still alive and Kevin and Jay have not taken away my posting privileges. I have just found it extremely hard to blog lately between doing some work for a candidate here in NC and tending to my kids. My youngest just had her eleventh (or twelfth, I've lost count) surgery and we are still recovering from that. Anytime I decide to take ten minutes to write a blog post I typically end up spending several hours online reading other blogs, reading comments, etc., so lately I have just had to say "no" to blogging. Every now and then I have to jump in and say a few words though. My few words this week are about a post by Sarah at Trying to Grok. If you are not familiar with Sarah's blog, please stop by and read her. She is funny and interesting and very candid. The post that caught my attention this week is about the recent rash of anti-war (and some anti-troop) movies that are not doing so well at the box office. (READ MORE)

This Ain'T Hell: Hanging on like grim death - So all of the Democrats want Hillary to drop out. Everyday brings a new plea from some well-known partisan who is only thinking about the party (Fox News link); “ Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, a former candidate himself, said Clinton has virtually no chance of winning, and Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont said Friday the New York senator should just end her campaign. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants the party’s uncommitted superdelegates to support the candidate who has the most votes, which to this point is Obama. And Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean on Friday urged all those superdelegates to announce whom they will support by July 1.” (READ MORE)

Phylis Chesler: "Fitna" Is Still Live - Kudos to MyPetJawa and to Gates of Vienna. A reader just told me that LiveLeak has taken the Wilders' film down due to serious threats. There are two other sites that are still showing the film: MyPetJawa and Gates of Vienna. I suspect that many people have already downloaded the film and have converted it into a video which they can keep running, perhaps from anonymous and safe locations. These images are not private or secret. All are public images that many of us have seen before. Putting it all together and making sense of it is what Wilders has done for us. I hope that as many people as possible see this film and draw the necessary and inevitable conclusions. (READ MORE)

Wolf Pangloss: Fitna Weekend Open Trackbacks - Geert Wilders was able to get Liveleak to release Fitna today, on a Friday. But about 12 hours after it was released, due to the British media irresponsibly publishing details about the owners of and workers at Liveleak the company was scared into taking Fitna down. The video is mild stuff, by the standards of the Jihadist snuff films that are available on Liveleak every day that Liveleak will not take down no matter how many people complain about their hosting propaganda for murderers in a death cult. Yet let the complaints turn into death threats and Liveleak folds like a cheap suit. The prospect of imminent death does tend to focus the mind. (READ MORE)

Westhawk: Basra is a test of America's exit strategy - President Bush has called the current battle between Iraqi security forces and Sadr militiamen in Basra “a defining moment.” In his mind, President Bush probably likens the Basra battle to America’s Whiskey Rebellion, when President Washington had to defend the new constitution against a militia uprising. Of course, many other observers interpret the violence in Basra as Shi’ite factions, some in government uniforms, battling for economic spoils in Basra and the surrounding oil patch. For the U.S. military in Iraq, the battle for Basra is a defining moment for its exit strategy from the country. Namely, will, Indigenous soldiers + U.S. advisors + U.S. ISR, logistics, and air support = battlefield dominance? (READ MORE)

The Tygrrrr Express: I doth protest too much - The Chicago Cannonball is spending a few days in Los Angeles, and I have decided to give her a soft sell presentation on this city that is as gentle as a time share presentation. She will love this city, d@ngit. Yet no matter where one goes in life, some things are unavoidable. I used to think it was death and taxes, but a good CPA can help with the latter. Yet next to death, there is still one completely unavoidable societal threat that is storming across America, leaving destruction in its wake. That threat is protesters. I have never come as close to advocating the end of democracy as I have lately. I have come to the realization that I want freedom for me and nobody else. Actually, if I like you, which is slim but theoretically possible, I can let you be free as well. I have never come as close to advocating the end of democracy as I have lately. I have come to the realization that I want freedom for me and nobody else. Actually, if I like you, which is slim but theoretically possible, I can let you be free as well. (READ MORE)

Mark Steyn: THE POST- "POST-RACIAL" CANDIDATE - "I'm sure," said Barack Obama in that sonorous baritone that makes his drive-thru order for a Big Mac, fries and strawberry shake sound profound, "many of you have heard remarks from your pastors, priests, or rabbis with which you strongly disagreed." Well, yes. But not many of us have heard remarks from our pastors, priests or rabbis that are stark, staring, out-of-his-tree flown-the-coop nuts. Unlike Bill Clinton, whose legions of "spiritual advisors" at the height of his Monica troubles outnumbered the US diplomatic corps, Senator Obama has had just one spiritual advisor his entire adult life: the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, two-decade pastor to the president presumptive. The Reverend Wright believes that Aids was created by the government of the United States - and not as a cure for the common cold that went tragically awry and had to be covered up by Karl Rove, but for the explicit purpose of killing millions of its own citizens. The government has never come clean about this, but the Reverend Wright knows the truth. (READ MORE)

The Spirit of Man: Gutless Brits - What's happening in southern Iraq these days is the direct result of the terrible appeasement offered by the British government to the Iranian mullahs and their Islamic militants in Iraq's 2nd biggest city, Basrah, where British forced appeased and appeased and comforted the Iranian mullahs' forces there over the past few years and then withdrew like cowards leaving the spot to be filled with JAM forces. I am in no way disrespecting the brave UK military which is just following orders issued by bunch of "gutless politicians" far from the battlefields in London and who probably have no clue about what soldiering is all about. These politicians have no honor and dignity and therefore they deserve to be called for what they are: gutless and cowards. (READ MORE)

ShrinkWrapped: The Psychotic Core - Most of the commentary concerning the release of Geert Wilder's film about Islam, Fitna, has focused on the potential of the film to educate an increasingly interested and sometimes alarmed public about the dangers of radical Islam, the potential backlash from enraged Islamists, and the continuing erosion of any ability to maintain a nuanced and textured differentiation between Islam and radical Islam. Islam in Europe has an excellent summary of early reaction to Fitna and it is worth perusing. Thus far, the explosion has been limited in scope; whether the reaction builds will determine how significant this latest salvo in the war between Islamism and the modern world proves to be. (READ MORE)

McQ: More thoughts on Basra and Iraq - Let me recommend some reading for those of you interested in some good sources of opinion that provide a context and insight about what is going on in Basra. But before I do, let me make a few comments. What is happening in Basra is what all of us, from the anti-war side to the side of the war supporters, have said we want to see happen - Iraq standing up and taking charge of it’s own security and defense. So, I’m a bit amused a the sniping and the foretelling of doom and gloom I see going on among many on both sides of the issue. Let’s consider the ground reality there, ok? The shia militias in Basra are indigenous to the area and are on defense. The ISF is conducting offensive operations. Any idea which is harder to coordinate and execute? (READ MORE)

Have an interesting post or know of a "must read?" Then send a trackback here and let us all know about it. Or you can send me an email with a link to the post and I'll update the Recon.

March 28, 2008

From the Front: 03/28/2008

News and Personal dispatches from the front lines.

In their own words:
LTC Rich Phillips: Last Day in KAF - Today, Friday, 28 March should be my last full day in KAF. Of course, around here you just never know how the schedule will work out so it pays to remain flexible. Hopefully, I'll fly to BAF tomorrow to begin another stage of the redeployment process. All "my" Jordanians are gone. They flew home to Jordan last night. Now I am truly out of a job. The new liaison officer for the Jordanian Armed Forces, LtCol Tom Collins, is in place at FOB Apache and doing a great job. While I am waiting here I was thinking back over the last 18 months, from Camp Atterbury to FOB Apache. I didn't really start taking pictures until I began the trip to Afghanistan, but once I started I've managed to document the last 15 months pretty well. Here are just a few pictures of me from my time here in Afghanistan. (READ MORE)

Yellowhammering Afghanistan: Much sexes - I have a terrific terp. When he's not translating for me or other members of our team, he is constantly learning new English words and even slang in a desire to master the nuances of our language. He not only translates the words to match their appropriate meaning, but he uses the proper inflection, mimicking my emotions if I am happy, angry, appreciative. So when he makes a mistake, it is not only rare, but sometimes funny. The word that has been giving him trouble is "success." When he says it, it comes out "sexes." (READ MORE)

Kaboom: A Soldier's War Journal: A Cold Spring - The pale curtains of the desert sun loom softly every dawn. Spring has arrived, bringing with it a heat eager to oppress. It’s the same everywhere we go in this (insert writer's misleading and skewed adjective here) country. Same confused mixture of anger, sadness, and hope. Same matching black pools of the wild browbeaten, same bottled mistrust that could quench even this nation’s thirst. Caged, hellbent on survival if only to see you gone from their sight so they can focus this sensual wrath on something new. The only difference over here is that the poor aren’t afraid to openly cast it. Not jaded, like the homeless back home. Too vacant for that, and more hostile in intent. More like a junkie without the hallucinating hope for another fix. When there’s nothing to lose, it’s easy to be honest. (READ MORE)

Omar: Iraqis and US Presidential Elections - While common sense suggests that Iraq would be very interested in the U.S. presidential race — given the immense influence of U.S. decision-making on the situation in the country — we see that the local media in Iraq have largely been ignoring the developments of the Democratic and Republican primaries. Moreover, we have hardly heard any comments from the political class, and the average person on the street is not as interested about the American election as they were in 2004. What could be the reasons for this? The first, I believe, is that the clock in Baghdad ticks slower than the clock in Washington. It’s very likely that the media and politicians are not yet interested in the American election simply because there’s still plenty of time left until Americans get to make their final decision. Meanwhile, everyone in Iraq is busy living with immediate domestic challenges and issues of daily life. (READ MORE)

Doc in the Box: JUST A CORPSMAN By HM2 (DOC VADER) Benitez - (note, I didn't write this, just using it by permission, it tells a bit about what I do) I recently was engaged in a heated argument with a young sergeant during this argument the sergeant said to me “You are just a corpsman” This angered me to no end, as we continued with the patrol I thought about his statement. You are just a Corpsman. I realized that even though he may have thought he was disrespecting me he paid me one of the highest complements that could be given to a warrior. Yes I am just a Corpsman. (READ MORE)

The Angry American: Not Out of the Woods Yet - I told Kum to grab the AT-4 (medium anti-tank rocket launcher) and sling it on his back. With the recent spike in violence I wasn't about to start taking chances. My team leaders checked their men and prepped them to step out of the gate. No trucks were coming with us tonight. It had been a while since we moved dismounted through the sector and it was welcome stretch of the legs. The big iron doors squealed open and my men and I made our way out into the street. It was by my account just a familiarization walk as we had officers from the unit relieving us in our formation. We got our spacing and moved silently into the night. Checking roof tops and the sides of the roads through the green hue of the night vision for any signs of unwanted company or things that go BOOM. (READ MORE)

Toy Soldier: Dealing With Corruption - Before I post the pictures from the kids I want to touch on a subject that is at the very heart of this conflict here in the Middle East, Corruption. No, not American corruption, Iraqi. The last thing left to do to complete our mission here is to help the IA and IP establish themselves as a legitimate, capable, and competent force; but sometimes they seem so dead set against it. We arrested a known ASA Leader a while ago, and we were finishing our evidence on him and preparing to send it off to the IA Brigade. Nope, IA Brigade released him suddenly and with out explanation or word. (READ MORE)

That Krazy Korean: Odd - We get sent all kinds of crazy things here, from 5 gallon buckets of hand sanitizer, to crates of Slinkies, to bullet proof vests (seriously, somebody sent one of the captains here body armor!). Despite the absurdity of the contents of the countless care packages, they are all great gestures of kindness and thoughtfulness meant to make you smile or brighten your day (or stop a bullet). In light of the current situation here, I figure I’d share this one obscure item that was stuffed away in a box. (READ MORE)


Heading Out:
Navy Gal: The Final Countdown - The final countdown is on for our departure. All the training is done, the packout is complete. Now, we will sit through some B.S. waste-some-time crappy briefs AGAIN on what not to do in country. If I have to hear that I can't even so much as look at a guy, let alone talk to one or even worse, befriend one or else the evil troll monkeys will fly out of my butt and the mythical OZ will show himself from behind the curtain and send me to military jail, I'm going to scream! AND for gosh sakes, don't let them catch me with my collection of kitty cats in the buff on my computer, I'll go to hell for that one too! (READ MORE)

Big Tobacco: The Cigars they Carried - Ironically, I didn’t smoke while I was composing this. (By the way, Tim O’Brien, you are an elitist schmuck. If you want a real war memoir, read Jarhead by Anthony Swafford.) The things they carried were largely determined by their rank. They carried the necessities, Laptop, iPod, digital camera, cellphone with charger, PSP or Game Boy Advanced. The smarter NCOs packed power strips so their whole squad could recharge off of the lone outlet in the barracks. They carried their LBV and rucksack, wondering why they had to pack their fleece bottoms. They carried a duffle bag that they would live out of for the next three weeks. Some carried books, all carried guns. (READ MORE)


News from the Front:
Iraq:
IRAQ: Guns for money - Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's hopes of forcing Shiite militiamen to hand in their weapons has fallen flat, so he has extended a disarmament deadline and sweetened the deal by offering money in exchange for guns. A spokesman for the government's Interior Ministry, Abdul Kareem Khalaf, acknowledged today that not a single weapon had been turned in since Maliki ordered the disarmament Wednesday and gave fighters a three-day deadline. The call came as Shiite Muslim militias battled Iraqi security forces in the aftermath of Maliki's crackdown on militiamen. The offensive was launched Tuesday in the southern city of Basra and has since spread to Shiite strongholds across Iraq. (READ MORE)

Iraqi Security Forces, Coalition forces target terrorists, kill 26 - BAGHDAD, Iraq – Multi-National Division – Baghdad soldiers killed 26 terrorists during operations March 27 in Baghdad. While patrolling in Adhamiyah, soldiers from 1st Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment were attacked by small arms fire. The soldiers returned fire in self-defense, killing five terrorists and wounding an additional five terrorists. The wounded were treated and detained by Iraqi National Police. (READ MORE)

ISF, CF defend checkpoint, kill 8 militants (Baghdad) - BAGHDAD – Iraqi Security Forces and Multi-National Division – Baghdad Soldiers killed eight militants after they were attacked at an Iraqi Army checkpoint with rocket propelled grenades and small-arms fire in northern Baghdad at approximately 2:30 p.m. March 27. An MND-B aerial weapons team provided air support and engaged the terrorists, killing eight. (READ MORE)

Mass grave discovered near Muqdadiyah - TIKRIT, Iraq – Acting on a tip from a local Iraqi, Multi-National Division – North Soldiers and Iraqi Policemen discovered 37 bodies buried in a mass grave north of Muqdadiyah, Iraq, March 27. All the bodies were badly decomposed and appear to have been there anywhere from two to eight months. Some of the bodies showed signs of torture. (READ MORE)

Coalition forces kill five terrorists, capture car bomb cell leader - BAGHDAD, Iraq – Coalition forces conducted operations throughout Iraq Tuesday and Wednesday targeting suspected terrorists who are believed to be associated with al-Qaeda in Iraq senior leadership and others suspected of organizing suicide bombings for the terrorist group. In Tikrit, intelligence sources led Coalition forces to a building and called for the occupants to come out. When the occupants did not comply, the ground force approached the building and came under a heavy small-arms attack. Coalition forces called in supporting aircraft to suppress the fire. (READ MORE)

Terrorists launch eleven indirect fire attacks, other unrest (Baghdad) - BAGHDAD – Terrorists launched eleven indirect fire attacks against civilians, Iraqi Security and Coalition forces in Baghdad March 27. Five indirect fire attacks struck in the vicinity of the International Zone, killing one civilian and wounding 14. Three indirect fire attacks struck two U.S. forward operating bases and one joint security station east of the Tigris River injuring four U.S. Soldiers. And, five mortar rounds struck two joint security stations and an Abna al-Iraq, or Sons of Iraq, check point in West Rashid wounding three SOI. (READ MORE)


Afghanistan:
Afghan school gets new library and science lab for opening day - BAGRAM AIRBASE, Afghanistan – The first day of school at Jan Qadam Elementary School, Parwan Province, was alive with the throngs of excited children, dignitaries, government officials and Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force-Afghanistan soldiers who dedicated a new school library and science lab, March 24. Just after 9 a.m. on Monday, the Head of the District Development Council welcomed everyone to the event, noting the importance of the relationship between the school and all those who helped make it a great place to learn. (READ MORE)

Coalition forces disrupt weapons facilitation in Helmand - BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan – Coalition forces were attacked while conducting an operation, March 26, to capture a Taliban leader and disrupt facilitation networks in Helmand Province resulting in insurgents’ deaths and the wounding of a civilian not involved in hostilities. Coalition forces searched of compounds in the Kajaki district targeting a Taliban insurgent linked to weapons facilitation operations in the area. “Coalition forces received small-arms fire from several insurgents armed with AK-47s, machine guns, hand grenades and rocket propelled grenades during their search...” (READ MORE)

Web Reconnaissance for 03/28/2008

A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention, updated throughout the day...so check back often.


In the News: (Registration may be required to read some stories)
Fed Leaders Ponder an Expanded Mission - In the past two weeks, the Federal Reserve, long the guardian of the nation's banks, has redefined its role to also become protector and overseer of Wall Street. (READ MORE)

Obama Rewriting Rules for Raising Campaign Money Online - When Christen Braun decided it was time to learn more about the presidential candidates, the 28-year-old high school teacher from suburban Pittsburgh turned to Google -- right where Sen. Barack Obama's campaign was waiting for her. (READ MORE)

U.S. Armor Forces Join Offensive In Baghdad Against Sadr Militia - BAGHDAD, March 27 -- Thousands of supporters of hard-line cleric Moqtada al-Sadr poured into the streets of the Iraqi capital Thursday to protest an ongoing security crackdown against Sadr's militia, as clashes continued in the southern city of Basra... (READ MORE)

Fallout From Tibet Taking Glow Off Olympics - BEIJING, March 27 -- The riots in Tibet two weeks ago have turned into a major challenge to China's leaders, whose decision to use military force and restrict media access has cast a shadow over hopes for an unblemished Olympics this summer. (READ MORE)

42 Democrats Vow a Drawdown in Iraq If They Win Seats - More than three dozen Democratic congressional candidates banded together yesterday to promise that, if elected, they will push for legislation calling for an immediate drawdown of troops in Iraq that would leave only a security force in place to guard the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. (READ MORE)

U.S. Steps Up Unilateral Strikes in Pakistan - The United States has escalated its unilateral strikes against al-Qaeda members and fighters operating in Pakistan's tribal areas, partly because of anxieties that Pakistan's new leaders will insist on scaling back military operations in that country, according to U.S. officials. (READ MORE)

McCain Outlines Foreign Policy - LOS ANGELES, March 26 -- Sen. John McCain on Wednesday promised a collaborative foreign policy that would seek the input of allies abroad and would contrast sharply with the go-it-alone approach of the Bush administration. (READ MORE)

U.S. to Stop Green Card Denials for Dissidents - The U.S. immigration service said yesterday that it will temporarily stop denying green cards to refugees and other legal immigrants tied to groups that sought to topple foreign dictatorships, placing their cases on hold while it determines more "logical, common-sense" rules for judging them. (READ MORE)

Feds: Saddam Financed Lawmakers' Trip - WASHINGTON -- Saddam Hussein's intelligence agency secretly financed a trip to Iraq for three U.S. lawmakers during the run-up to the U.S.-led invasion, federal prosecutors said Wednesday. (READ MORE)

Eyewitnesses Recount Terrifying Day in Tibet - BEIJING, March 26 -- In the moment, Canadian backpacker John Kenwood recalled, he was "young and stupid, and it was all adrenaline." He was running, one in a mob of 200 or so, screaming, "Free Tibet!" and chasing riot police down a narrow street in downtown Lhasa in the early afternoon of March 14. (READ MORE)

GPO profits go to bonuses and trips - When the government's main printing agency booked $100 million in unexpected profit, it went on a spending spree: large bonuses to top managers, trips to Paris and Las Vegas, and an official photo of the boss that cost $10,000. (READ MORE)

Shiite protesters denounce PM al-Maliki - BAGHDAD — Tens of thousands of Shiites took to the streets to protest the government's crackdown on militias in Basra as heavy fighting between Iraqi security forces and gunmen erupted for a third day in the southern oil port and Baghdad. (READ MORE)

US charges Puerto Rican governor -SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — U.S. authorities have announced an indictment charging Puerto Rico's governor with 18 counts in a long-running campaign finance probe. (READ MORE)

Senate to probe bailout by Fed - The Senate Finance Committee said yesterday it is probing the Federal Reserve's bailout of Bear, Stearns & Co. last week, in which the Fed took more than $30 billion of the firm's mortgage holdings of questionable value in exchange for cash, putting taxpayers at risk of losing money in the transaction. (READ MORE)

Charity official held in Iraq trip - A former official of a Michigan-based Islamic charity has been arrested by federal agents on charges of organizing a political junket to Iraq for three members of Congress financed by Saddam Hussein, according to a federal indictment unsealed yesterday in Detroit. (READ MORE)

Bush, Putin to discuss missile defense - President Bush yesterday announced he will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Russia early next month, and said he hopes to move toward an agreement on a missile-defense system in Eastern Europe, amid signs that Russian opposition to the plan is softening. (READ MORE)

Democrats' party divide runs deep - Political tension between Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton is inflaming Democrats' emotions as it spills over into the electorate with more voters threatening to defect from the party should their candidate lose the presidential nomination. (READ MORE)



On the Web:
Ken Blackwell: A Scout is Reverent - “Of all the dispositions and habits, which lead to political prosperity, Religion and Morality are indispensable supports.” — George Washington, Farewell Address, 1796 The presidential candidates need to speak out while the spotlight is on Pennsylvania. There is an opportunity for voters in Pennsylvania and across America to know where the candidates stand on an important constitutional issue. The City Council of Philadelphia is attacking the Boy Scouts of America, seeking to drive them out of a historic location because the Scouts teach traditional moral values, consistent with the Scout Oath and Scout Law. City Council’s action violates the First Amendment, and the Scouts should fight this in federal court. (READ MORE)

Mike S. Adams: The Chancellor's Dog Ate My Homework - I’m about to hop in my car to drive to Greensboro, North Carolina, to give a speech at UNCG. Hopefully, some of my readers can make it out to UNCG by 7:30 p.m. My speech will be in the Azalea Room in the Elliott University Center. I think that’s the same place a porn star gave a speech on safe sodomy back in 2004. I plan to give my speech on safe Russian roulette. I’m only kidding. But before I leave for my trip to UNC-Gomorrah, I want to share my latest bit of correspondence with the administration here at UNC-Webmasters (hereafter, UNCW). It should provide some insight into this interesting question: Which is the biggest problem in our universities today, a) Administrative Intolerance, or b) Administrative Incompetence? (READ MORE)

Hugh Hewitt: PBIP: The Approach and Outbreak of Polar Bear-Induced Paralysis - In January of 2007, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service published a proposed rule in the Federal Register intending to notify the public and seek their comments on the idea of adding the polar bear to the list of threatened and endangered species. A raft of comments came in, and the government's biologists went off to consider them. The Service returned to the Federal Register a second time, in October of 2007, and requested more comments. The window closed again. More than 670,000 comments have been received urging that the polar bear be listed as a "threatened species." Ask yourself why there was such an outpouring of comments for such an obscure issue. (READ MORE)

Ann Coulter: Hillary: Swiftboated! - Hillary is being "swiftboated"! She claimed that she came under sniper fire when she visited in Bosnia in 1996, but was contradicted by videotape showing her sauntering off the plane and stopping on the tarmac to listen to a little girl read her a poem. Similarly, John Kerry's claim to heroism in Vietnam was contradicted by 264 Swift Boat Veterans who served with him. His claim to having been on a secret mission to Cambodia for President Nixon on Christmas 1968 was contradicted not only by all of his commanders -- who said he would have been court-martialed if he had gone anywhere near Cambodia -- but also the simple fact that Nixon wasn't president on Christmas 1968. In Hillary's defense, she probably deserves a Purple Heart about as much as Kerry did for his service in Vietnam. (READ MORE)

Victor Davis Hanson: A Speech Sen. Obama Could Have Given - Had Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., just said the following words last week in his speech on race in America, his problems with his former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, would probably now be over: “You have all heard the racist and anti-American outbursts of my pastor Rev. Wright. They are all inexcusable. His speeches have forced me to re-examine my long association with Trinity United Church of Christ. And so it is with regret that I must now leave that church. “I had heard similar extremist language of Rev. Wright in the past, and now apologize that I did not earlier end my attendance and contributions. Had I long ago expressed my strong objections to Rev. Wright’s views, such opposition might have suggested to him a more moderate path. (READ MORE)

Cal Thomas: 4,000 Patriots - BOSTON - Following Sept. 11, 2001, a day of infamy on which nearly 3,000 died at the hands of terrorists, The New York Times began publishing the names and pictures of the dead. I made a deliberate effort to look at those pictures and to read the names and hometowns of each victim. I wanted to identify with them as much as possible. Now the Times has published more pictures, names and ages, this time of American war dead. They are part of the 4,000 casualties to have fallen in Iraq and Afghanistan since those wars began. They - and their families - deserve our gratitude. Some politicians who oppose the war - mostly Democrats, but a few Republicans - offer obligatory and oblique references to "the troops" and their bravery, while undermining their sacrifice and objectives by calling for their immediate withdrawal. That is not a policy, unless one regards surrender and retreat only to fight a bloodier war another day policy. (READ MORE)

Mark Hillman: If Principles Matter, So Does McCain - First, I am a conservative; then, I'm a Republican. Rush Limbaugh, Laura Ingraham and James Dobson hold views much closer to my own and to those of most conservatives than does Sen. John McCain. I have serious, principled disagreements with the Arizona senator on several issues. In the last two contested Republican primaries, my candidate has been Anybody But John McCain. This election isn't about party or personalities, but about principles that will guide our country for the next four years or more. Will our nation trend in a direction that is generally conservative or one that reverses modest gains of the past 28 years and lurches toward cradle-to-grave paternalism? (READ MORE)

Amanda Carpenter: McCain: 'I Hate War' - Republican presidential candidate John McCain said his opposition to a premature withdrawal from Iraq is based on his hatred of war and criticized his Democratic opponents in a major foreign policy address Wednesday. “I do not argue against withdrawal, any more than I argued several years ago for the change in tactics and additional forces that are now succeeding in Iraq, because I am somehow indifferent to war and the suffering it inflicts on too many American families,” McCain told the Los Angeles World Affairs Council after returning from a weeklong trip abroad where he met with foreign leaders. “I hold my position because I hate war, and I know very well and very personally how grievous its wages are. But I know, too, that we must sometimes pay those wages to avoid paying even higher ones later.” (READ MORE)

John McCaslin: This Explains It - Astrologer Dave Bromberg of Chico, Calif., writes to Inside the Beltway to say that the time has come to let the rest of the world in on one of astrology's "juiciest" secrets: that every two years or so Mars and Jupiter are in sign opposition. "When this happens senators will find themselves in direct contradiction in what they say and what they did; governors will have to disclose hidden sexual trysts; mayors will have their intimate text messages come to light," he reveals. "This is what is happening now that Jupiter is in Capricorn and Mars is in Cancer — and it will continue until the 9th of May of this year." Streets of Philly "Want to be in a music video for Hillary?" That's the question posted on Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential campaign Web site, calling interested volunteers to "the streets of Philadelphia" on the afternoon of Saturday, April 5. (READ MORE)

Michael Steele: Bush's Africa Legacy - President Bush showed the world that it isn't words, but actions, that truly make a difference. Millions throughout Africa would agree. Mr. Bush recently completed a historic visit to the African continent; a trip he described as "the most exciting, exhilarating, uplifting trip" of his presidency. During his visit, we saw pictures of the president dancing, celebrating and attending ceremonies with heads of state. But the real story is not about just this one trip; it is about the commitment the president made to Africa and what the United States has been quietly accomplishing throughout the continent over the past eight years under Mr. Bush's leadership. (READ MORE)

Oliver North: 'Duh!' - MIAMI -- I made a major mistake in a hotel room this week. Not the Eliot Spitzer kind of mistake -- but with a television remote. While changing for a late dinner, I tried to tune in to Fox News Channel, but the electronic device took me instead to MTV and some kind of "reality show." For a few minutes as I dressed, I was treated to several attractive young American women discussing their relationships. The most oft repeated sound in this conversation was "Duh!" -- a word that does not appear in my dictionary. But now I know what it means. After conferring with several young people at our New York bureau, I was informed that "Duh!" is simply modern shorthand for "No! Really?" or "You just figured that out?" Well, if that's the case, this week should be giving the masters of the mainstream media plenty of "Duh!" moments about the campaign in Iraq. (READ MORE)

Charles Krauthammer: McCain's "Hundred Year War"? - WASHINGTON -- Asked at a New Hampshire campaign stop about possibly staying in Iraq 50 years, John McCain interrupted -- "Make it a hundred" -- then offered a precise analogy to what he envisioned: "We've been in Japan for 60 years. We've been in South Korea for 50 years or so." Lest anyone think he was talking about prolonged war-fighting rather than maintaining a presence in postwar Iraq, he explained: "That would be fine with me, as long as Americans are not being injured or harmed or wounded or killed." And lest anyone persist in thinking he was talking about war-fighting, he told his questioner: "It's fine with me and I hope it would be fine with you if we maintained a presence in a very volatile part of the world." (READ MORE)

Dick Morris and Eileen McGann: Hillary's List of Lies - The USA Today/Gallup survey clearly explains why Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) is losing. Asked whether the candidates were “honest and trustworthy,” Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) won with 67 percent, with Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) right behind him at 63. Hillary scored only 44 percent, the lowest rating for any candidate for any attribute in the poll. Hillary simply cannot tell the truth. Here's her scorecard: (READ MORE)

Lawhawk: Fitna Finally Arrives - Geert Wilders film, Fitna, which has caused quite the controversy since it was announced, has been released to LiveLeak: The opening scenes are going to be tough to watch as they recount the 9/11 terrorist attacks by the 19 Islamic hijackers, the Madrid bombings, and the words of the jihadi leaders exhorting their followers to conduct still more terrorist attacks with the intention of killing many more. (READ MORE)

A Newt One: Keep The Patriots Rising Momentum Going! - Most of you already know that at Move America Forward we've been defending the defenders for some time and that lately that has meant running up against the Berkeley City Council. The radical "peace" group CodePink has been trying to run the Marine Corps office out of town for some time now and the city council signed on to the effort in full in January. They voted to send a letter to the Marines saying that if they remain in Berkeley, that they do so as "uninvited and unwelcome intruders." We weren't about to stand by while the US military gets uninvited from a US city, so we brought about a thousand of our close fiends to the next council meeting and the council agreed not to send the letter. But don't be fooled: some very offensive provisions are still on the Berkeley books. (READ MORE)

A Soldier's Mind: Earning His Stripes - Recently, in a demonstration, dangerous “mock” terrorists infiltrated a heavily guarded Central Texas base. But one Soldier, was able to save the day and get the job done. That Soldier, SSG Gaven Cox, recently took a break from his fight with leukemia, to “Soldier up” with his 1st Cavalry Division teammates, to participate in the top-secret search and destroy mission. Through Make-A-Wish Foundation of America, Gaven was able to join Troop C, 6th Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, based at Fort Hood, to defeat the bad guys. (READ MORE)

Donald Douglas: Iraq Worse Than Vietnam, Says Albright - Via Gateway Pundit, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has declared the Bush adminstration's liberation of Iraq as possibly the worst foreign policy fiasco in American history. Here's the YouTube of Albright's "60 Minutes" interview from 1996, where, in response to the death of over 500,000 Iraqi children during the 1990s-era U.N. sanctions regime, she said "we think the price" of punishing Saddam "is worth it": Here's the report, from the Gainseville Sun, on Albright's speech at the University of Florida: (READ MORE)

Bear Creek Ledger: Weenie Forest Lake H.S. changes their story on Vets for Freedom Cancelled Visit - Now that the Forest Lake High School (in Minnesota) has received a lot of negative attention the school administrators have changed their story on why they canceled the appearance by the Vets for Freedom Heroes Tour. Now, they’re saying it’s because of a concern for security for the students! Previously, they said it was due to complains from a few parents regarding a political statement from these Heroes. Now, the school officials are making up excuses for their bad behavior, worse judgement and poor treatment of our War Heroes which I’m sure is coming from pressure not only throughout the country but from their own town. (READ MORE)

Big Dog: Democrats Did Hussein’s Bidding - There is word today that three Congressional Democrats took a trip to Iraq and it was paid for by Saddam Hussein’s intelligence agency. The trip was arranged by Muthanna Al-Hanooti who acted as an intermediary for the Hussein government. Al-Hanooti was arrested for conspiracy to act as an unregistered agent of a foreign government, illegally purchasing Iraqi oil (he received oil from Iraq for setting it up) and lying to authorities. The indictment did not name the Democrats involved but the AP reports the dates coincide with dates of a trip taken by Jim McDermott of Washington, David Bonior of Michigan (no longer in Congress) and Mike Thompson of California, all of whom opposed the war. (READ MORE)

The Belmont Club: Friend or foe? - CNN's analysis of events in Iraq are wonderful example of how to patch up a theory that is rapidly falling to pieces. The theory of course, is that Iran is a poor, misunderstood victim of US aggression in a third country. The facts however, are that Iran is supporting the Madhi Army in Iraq. How to square the circle? Easy. Just read Michael Ware. "Al-Sadr is involved in a very complicated relationship with the Iranians," said CNN Baghdad correspondent Michael Ware. "The Iranians do provide funding and support for his militia, yet at the same time they're trying to rein him in and get him to adopt a certain political agenda, which from time to time he resists." (READ MORE)

Dafydd: Brave Sir Robin vs. the Mosque of England - In recent years, Moslems in the United Kingdom have gotten bolder. Not only do they commit more violent crime against ordinary British citizens, they demand special treatment from the British government ("All animals are created equal, but some are more equal than others"). Yet I am now convinced that the core of the problem in Great Britain is not the Moslems but the Church of England itself. Great Britain has a state religion, and many British subjects look to the established church for moral guidance. The house of God should be an unwavering, unchanging, and uncompromising spiritual core of the people. Even though we humans often cannot meet God's expectations, we're at least supposed to learn through the churches and clergy what He expects of us. (READ MORE)

Uncle Jimbo @ Blackfive: McCain solid as a rock on Jihad - I think my anti-jihad credentials are pretty solid but some perspective before I launch at my own team. We conducted counter-insurgency operations against Islamic extremists, that I participated in, 20 years ago. I knew they were our main growing enemy and I have spent a goodly chunk of my adult life studying and opposing their efforts. It is a Long War in the truest sense of the word and while we may fight and kill the terrorists attacking the free world today we must win by convincing the following generations that death for Allah is not the path to Paradise. John McCain is getting all kinds of unwarranted abuse over what is likely the most common sense statement about our war on them that I have heard. (READ MORE)

Confederate Yankee: The Sadrists' Mistake - The Guardian claimed that the "surge" in Iraq was about to unravel because of strike threats from Sunni militiamen they reported last week, but if you head over to a newly-redesigned Pajamas Media today, you'll see that the threats of a strike were resolved weeks before the Guardian stories ran. The stories were an attempt to grab defeat in the media while the threat of actual defeat on the ground seems ever more fleeting. Yesterday, left-wing surrogate McClatchy Newspapers—they even has the ridiculous "Truth to Power" tagline—attempted to claim defeat from the opposite perspective, noting that some of the Sadrists in Iraq seem to be feeling a bit rambunctious after a long period of relative silence. (READ MORE)

Noah Shachtman: G.I.s Turn Filmmakers in Bad Voodoo's War - Deborah Scranton didn't have to go to war to shoot her latest documentary about Iraq. Instead, she gave hand-held, high-def cameras to soldiers in the "Bad Voodoo" platoon -- and let them handle this "virtual embed" themselves. The result, Bad Voodoo's War, airs Tuesday night on PBS' Frontline. Scranton first used the technique in 2006's The War Tapes, which followed three soldiers from Charlie Company, 3rd Battalion of the 172nd Infantry Regiment during the rise of Anbar province's Sunni insurgency. The result, troops and critics almost universally agree, was the clearest, most honest window into the Iraq conflict ever recorded. (READ MORE)

Don Surber: Parsing the parson - Barack Rodham Obama might have quit his church if Rev. Wright had stayed on. Once again, on the tough issues, Obama votes, “Present.” Democratic Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois taped an appearance that will be aired on “The View” on Friday morning, AP reported. Obama’s latest position on the hateful, race-baiting sermons of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright: “Had the reverend not retired, and had he not acknowledged that what he had said had deeply offended people and were inappropriate and mischaracterized what I believe is the greatness of this country, for all its flaws, then I wouldn’t have felt comfortable staying at the church.” (READ MORE)

Flopping Aces: Basra Violence Proves Withdrawal Strategy Doesn’t Work - Last year, two polar opposite strategies were tried in Iraq. President Bush changed commanders, changed to a counter-insurgency strategy, and sent an additional 30,000 troops to quell violence in Iraq that had been set ablaze by Al Queda. This change in course reduced violence dramatically, and while the not all of the political objectives have been met yet, most have been, and the outlook for further national reconciliation grows more positive with each passing day. On the other hand, the British forces in the south of Iraq chose to start withdrawing troops. The British people were tired of the war (as is everyone), and there was much political clout to be had by marketing a ‘leave and things will be better’ theory. Well, troop levels dropped, and violence increased. Shortly after Britain announced plans to withdraw the rest of its troops, Muqtada al Sadr ended his cease-fire and sectarian fighting erupted (though a far cry from what it was in 2006). (READ MORE)

Paul Weston: The Face of Moderate Islam in Britain - The Muslim beating handed out to Canon Michael Ainsworth, priest at the St George-in-the-East church of Shadwell, East London earlier this month and last week’s conviction of a Muslim for the rape of a 27 year old woman in nearby Whitechapel during 2005 share a surprisingly common link in the attitudes and associates of The Muslim Council of Britain. In the wake of the faith-hate attack, Inayat Bunglawalah, media secretary for The Muslim Council of Britain, wrote a quite extraordinary article in the Guardian entitled: “Jihad or Alcohol” where he claimed: “An alcohol fuelled attack on a Christian priest in East London has stirred up more Islamophobia.” (READ MORE)

Jules Crittenden: Fitna - Poligazette posts the Dutch Islamo-slam vid, at arm’s length. Gateway, “Let the seething begin ...” And, he reports, it has. Malkin, “Prepare for more March madness,” updating. Weasel Zippers’ review: “Pretty weak,” so weak that Dutch Muslims are cranking down riot worries. I’d suggest they don’t know their co-religionists if they think logic and fact will play a role in any reaction. In other Dutch Islam-related media news, Gateway reports a new animated Motoon will be anatomically correct. I dunno, I like a good Motoon as much as the next guy, but that may be more blasphemous graven imagery than I need to see. (READ MORE)

Ed Morrissey: TSA: Nipple rings a terrorist risk? - A Texas woman had to remove her nipple rings with pliers before being allowed to board a flight in Lubbock, and has now filed a lawsuit against the Transportation Security Agency for the incident. Mandi Hamlin says she was publicly humiliated, but TSA insists that it followed its procedures, even though their website notes that passengers can opt for a private pat-down as an alternative to removing piercings and other body jewelry: “Hamlin, 37, said she was trying to board a flight from Lubbock to Dallas on Feb. 24 when she was scanned by a Transportation Security Administration agent after passing through a larger metal detector without problems.” (READ MORE)

Allahpundit: Accused Saddam operative: I met with Hillary at the White House; Update: Photo added - The operative in question? Muthanna al-Hanooti, a.k.a. Baghdad Jim McDermott’s travel agent for that Saddam-comped junket to Iraq in 2002. The Sun’s pushing this story hard and it does indeed look bad bad bad … until you read down into the article and discover he didn’t start working for Iraqi intelligence until 1999. The meeting with Hillary happened in 1996. “A Michigan man facing federal criminal charges of illegally working for Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi Intelligence Service says he met with Hillary Clinton at the White House in May 1996.” (READ MORE)

Neptunus Lex: Ankle biter - A private citizen who jumps into the political scrum can leave a lot of himself out there when he does so. The things we endorse and the things we oppose can be very revealing. Envious lemon-biters with sociology pee-haitch-dees long used to carrying around an aggrieved quiver full of inflamed entitlements while stroking pet disappointments would be well advised to steer clear. People might see. But you can’t stop them, not all of them. Some of them are compelled to tell you why they will not vote for one or another political candidate. And in doing so, hugely diminish themselves. I give you Doctor Phillip Butler, PhD. Of Sociology. (READ MORE)

McQ: Obama, Big Oil and fun with charts - Since everyone has mostly been wrapped up in the Obama/Wright and Hillary/Bosnia things, we've missed a few actual issue oriented articles that have found their way into the news cycle. One that caught my attention was headlined " Obama Eyes Active Role in Oil Markets" by Jeff Mason of Reuters. And, since I'm a shill for "big oil" I figured I'd take a look and see what Mr. Obama had in mind about his role in "oil markets". Said Mason: “Democrat Barack Obama would take an active role in U.S. oil markets as president, tackling concerns about the dominance of large oil companies and eyeing the Strategic Petroleum Reserve as a potential weapon to combat high prices, his top energy adviser said.” The first obvious headshaker is the bit about the SPR and using it to "combat high prices". A) that's not its purpose at all and B) using it and depleting it for that purpose makes us strategically vulnerable to a cut-off or major disruption in supply. "B", of course, is why the SPR exists. So, given just that, you've probably figured out I'm less than impressed with Obama's idea to this point. (READ MORE)

Right Wing Nut House: An Easy Liar - I never would have thought it possible to say but I believe now it is a powerfully good thing that our presidential nominating process is such a long, drawn out affair. How else were we ever going to confirm that Barack Obama is a most accomplished and shameless liar? Obama lies with an ease that bespeaks a comfortable familiarity with the practice. At first, when his lies about his friend Tony Rezko were revealed and then confirmed by the candidate himself, I thought to myself that every politician lies at some point and that Obama telling the press that he barely knew Rezko, that he was one of a thousand contributors, and that he only raised around $50,000 for his campaigns could be written off as a candidate simply blowing smoke about a problematic associate. (It turned out that Rezko was Obama’s most important fundraiser, a patron, and that he raised closer to $275,000 for the candidate.) (READ MORE)

John Hawkins: RNC Chairman Mike Duncan On Why Conservatives Who Want To Sit Out The Election In 2008 Are Making A Big Mistake - Yesterday, I had an opportunity to talk to RNC Chairman Mike Duncan and I asked him about an argument that has been made many times in the blogosphere, especially since John McCain became our nominee. That question and Mike Duncan's answer, which I thought was very good, follows: “Here's an argument that I don't agree with, but that I hear a lot: it goes something like this, ‘The GOP is doing a poor job of representing conservatives. So, what we need to do is deliberately lose in 2008 and then, after a few years of Hillary or Barack in charge, America will be sick of the Left, the GOP will be serious about conservative principles again, and the Party will come back stronger than ever and more representative of conservative views.’ Again, I don't agree with that, but I hear it a lot. What do you say to that?” (READ MORE)

This Ain't Hell: Albright: troops are the problem - From Gateway Pundit, a view of our war against terrorism from Madelaine Albright - who has never seen the war against terror; “‘…The American forces are both the solution and the problem,’ she said. ‘They are like fly paper that attracts everybody who hates us.’” No, you cow, the problem is that you did nothing in the Clinton Administration to stem terrorism. You ignored them when they bombed the World Trade Center in 1993, the Khobar Towers, the African embassies and the USS Cole. When Haitians ran off the US Navy from the pier with machetes. When there was no retaliation for dead Rangers and Delta operators in Mogadishu. Apparently she’s right about one thing - the troops are like flypaper that attract everyone who hates the US - domestic haters like Albright, too. (READ MORE)

ShrinkWrapped: Liberal Policies, Unintended Consequences, and the Revenge of the Repressed - Recently there was a fair amount of excitement in the Blogosphere surrounding David Mamet's Village Voice article, Why I Am No Longer a 'Brain-Dead Liberal'. Mamet's conversion occurred after a period of reflection when Mamet discovered that there was an insurmountable chasm between his personal experience of the world and his perception of the larger world viewed through the lens of his liberal ideology: “... I recognized that I held those two views of America (politics, government, corporations, the military). One was of a state where everything was magically wrong and must be immediately corrected at any cost; and the other—the world in which I actually functioned day to day—was made up of people, most of whom were reasonably trying to maximize their comfort by getting along with each other (in the workplace, the marketplace, the jury room, on the freeway, even at the school-board meeting).” (READ MORE)

Phyllis Chesler: The New York (Islamic) Times. How Propaganda Works to Ensure The Subordination of Women - How do we cut down on honor murders in the West? According to some people, you do whatever it takes to keep the girls from dishonoring their families so that their families do not have to honor-murder them. According to the New York Times, "home schooling" the girls in America, re-creating a feudal, rural, parallel universe in California in which girls and women are kept hidden and apart, is the sensible, merciful alternative to honor murders in The New World. At a time when Islamists are at full jihadic throttle, The New York Times features a mild and lovely--a truly non-judgmental article about the proliferation of home schooling among Muslim communities in America. (READ MORE)

Meryl Yourish: Terrorists just miss murdering babies - The worst-case scenario—the deaths of dozens of children—just missed becoming a reality today. “Three Qassam rockets were launched from northern Gaza towards Israel on Friday by noon, with one of the rockets narrowly missing a nursery in Kibbutz Nir Am. The rockets were fired several short hours after IDF soldiers killed a Hmas gunmen in an exchange of fire in southern Gaza. The nursery in question is intended for toddlers aged one and half to two. The nurse for the children’s homes, Orna Schwartz, told Ynet of the ordeal: ‘The children were in the yard when the rocket alarm sirens sounded. We rushed to bring them into the bomb shelter and then we heard a loud explosion.’” A near-miss is almost as good as a hit, though. (READ MORE)

Ron Winter: Move America Forward Demands Federal Investigation of Berkeley Council, Police Force in Marine Recruiter Harassment - The pro-troop organization Move America Forward is seeking a federal investigation of the Berkeley, California City Council's efforts to prevent US Marine Corps recruiters from doing their job in that city, and the refusal of the Berkeley police to stop or prevent attacks on pro-troop supporters at the recruiting station. Move America Forward, the nation's largest pro-troop organization, was involved in a peaceful demonstration in Berkeley on February 12 this year, to show support for US Marine recruiters, whose office is besieged daily by anarchists, pro-terrorists and communists who are attempting to shut it down, force it out of the city, and prevent recruits from entering. (READ MORE)

Warner Todd Huston: Sun-Times Blames City Taxpayers, Not City Government, for Chicago Budget Shortfall - The Chicago Sun-Times really pulled a whopper in their March 26th piece about a tax on bottled water that the Chicago City Council passed earlier this year. Chicago levied a 5 cent a bottle tax on each unit of bottled water sold in the city expecting to raise $875,000 a month on the tax. But somehow this windfall to the city has yet to be realized with the tax booty so far only amounting to $554,000. Because of this “below expected” revenue the Sun-Times claimed that this shortfall is “exacerbating a budget crunch” for the city. I’m sorry Sun-Times but a tax shortfall isn’t “exacerbating a budget crunch.” The city itself is doing the “exacerbating” not the taxpayers. The City Council created a never before heard of tax and then spent the money it assumed it’d get. But then it didn’t get it. How can we blame the taxpayers who avoided the tax — legally avoided it, I might add — for any “budget crunch”? (READ MORE)

Kim Zigfeld: The Democrats and their Old Nemesis, Democracy - You may recall, if you are an ardent political junkie, a furor that arose in the American loopy left just as the primary election cycle was getting serious involving the apportionment of electoral votes in California. They decried as a "dirty tricks campaign" a Republican initiative to apportion the nation's most-populous state's presidential electoral votes proportional to the popular vote -- in other words, it wouldn't be winner-take-all. Each candidate would get the same share of the state's electoral votes (it has the most of any state) as he or she had won of the state's popular vote. This would guarantee Republicans a chunk of the state's electoral votes even if they lost, and could have created a major obstacle to the Democrats winning the presidency. Naturally, the Democrats wailed to high heaven that it was unfair. (READ MORE)

The Sniper: No one is more professional than they are. NO ONE. - This morning I had the pleasure of attending the Graduation Ceremony of the Basic Noncommissioned Officer’s Course Stand Alone Common Core 103-08. Wow. What a class act. BNCOC is a two-phase course that trains soldiers the leadership traits and skill sets they will need to succeed. This class had six amazing individuals who graduated, four of whom were injured soldiers recovering at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and two who were part of the cadre at WRAMC. (READ MORE)


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What do the Death Star and Nipple Rings have in common? from Neocon News