:blink: Sorry, what?

Thankfully, this was slightly less of a WTF moment in context: UN bans WMD sales to terrorists The United Nations Security Council has unanimously passed a resolution aimed at keeping weapons of mass destruction out of the hands of terrorists. It means all UN member states will have to pass laws to stop terrorists and … Read more

I’m uncertain…

…about just what would be the proper reaction to this particular group: Operation Take One For The Country. Amused? Appalled? Apprehensive? Approving? And that’s just the As. Not that what consenting adults do is any of my business, mind you, but this is definitely one of the… shoot, the censor circuits just kicked it up … Read more

Back and forth

Jack O’Toole and Ogged are both trying to wrest control of the current election narrative so that it actually works in the Democrats’ favor. O’Toole’s argument seems to be that there isn’t a general theme and strategy in the drive to unseat Bush; Ogged concurs and offers his own suggestion (‘not playing by the rules’). … Read more

Something’s going on…

… we just won’t know what yet for a while: Blasts Rock Syrian Capital. AMMAN, Jordan, April 27 — Explosions and gunfire broke out in the diplomatic quarter of Damascus, the Syrian capital, Tuesday night in what officials described as a confrontation between security forces and a group of unidentified attackers. Witnesses said more than … Read more

The dream has died.

Oliver Willis reports that Law and Order: SVU has referenced blogging in tonight’s show. (Sigh) I’ll get the lights if somebody else turns off the water and gets the mail forwarded, OK? It’s all going to go downhill from here anyway…

Fourth Estate?

Such a simple statement… And the president at his barbecue with the press this August and a reporter said to him: Mr. President, is it really true you don’t read the press or watch us on television? And he said no. And the reporter then said: Well, how do you then know, Mr. President, what … Read more

Self-referencing…

I really should con…vince the folks over at Socialism in an Age of Waiting to take a look at this debitage post (which draws off of my post about the Commissar’s post), so that I can find out if this really is a proper Marxist analysis of blogging. And if it is, I’m also curious … Read more

Um, is this going to be a problem?

This is highly unlikely to impinge on regular blogospheric radar sets across the spectrum, but that doesn’t mean that it’s not of interest: Cyprus vote leaves island split. More than three-quarters of Greek Cypriots have voted against a UN plan to reunite the island in a referendum. Turkish Cypriots, in contrast, endorsed the plan with … Read more

Baseball Thread.

Not that I’m following the sport this year, but people seem to like a thread dedicated to it now and again, so here you go. (pause) So, who’s winning?

Stephenson Interview

I’m going to join the chorus flitting around the blogosphere and say that Salon’s interview of Neal Stephenson was well worth sitting through the ad. Not that I actually watched it, of course, but even if I had it would have been worth it. Stephenson’s the sort of guy you want around when you’re channel-surfing … Read more

Kevin Drum grasps the nettle.

Actually, it was the third rail of Left-wing online political discussion – religion – but I’m trying to keep the titles shorter. Besides, Kevin didn’t grab it so much as he brushed against it lightly:

This doesn’t mean you can’t fight religious groups on substantive grounds, of course, any more than strictures against mocking blacks mean you can’t oppose affirmative action. I’ll never give an inch to the creationism/Intelligent Design crowd, for example, but you can do it without ridiculing anybody’s actual religious beliefs — something that will win neither arguments nor friends in any case. My advice: the next time you’re tempted to mock somebody or something on religious grounds, just substitute “Hispanic,” or perhaps “Hindu,” and see how it sounds. If it sounds like something you probably shouldn’t say, then you probably shouldn’t say it.

And if that still doesn’t convince you, remember Amy Sullivan’s advice: just think of ’em as an interest group and pander to them. We libs know how to do that, don’t we?

It was probably that last paragraph that set certain elements of his comments section off so. ‘Pandering’, after all, is what the Other Side (however you want to define it) does. It’s interesting to consider, though, how little of an issue all of this is in the offline world. Contrary to popular online belief, there are quite a few evangelicals and fundamentalists in the Democratic Party, and luckily for said party the more… vehement… rants of certain secularists tend not to impinge on the Evangelicals’ / Fundamentalists’ radar. This is unlikely to change dramatically in the next decade, although I make no promises after that. Still, Kevin’s advocating a good habit to get into*.

(Via Kikuchiyo)

Moe

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Tragedy in North Korea.

As all of you no doubt have seen by now, there was a horrific accident in North Korea today that caused the deaths of at least 3,000 people. The Command Post has provided a link to the North Korean chapter(?) of the International Red Cross; if I encounter a better link I will certainly post … Read more

Hugh Hewitt Anticipates the Parson.

Now, if you just feel like rolling your eyes at Mr. Hewitt and his latest column about Senator Kerry (International Man of Apology), that’s your own lookout. I’m mostly interested in the last paragraph, as it’s the most likely to actually be able to spark a real discussion:

… He “leads” the party that invented the Torricelli Option, and folks like Daschle have to be worried about a November wipe-out. A “presumptive nominee” isn’t the nominee. Who was that lady on Larry King this week?

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The Jesurgislac Memorial Silly Thread

…because he’s indicated that he’d like to see some silly news, and frankly so would I. I start this off with a blind leap into Google with the word silly: Molecules with Silly or Unusual Names. Highly lame; enough, in fact, to get laughs out of me. Post your own below. Moe

Whimsy’s end.

Car Bombs Leave 60 Dead in Southern Iraq BASRA, Iraq – A series of car bombs ripped through police stations and an academy during rush hour Wednesday morning, killing at least 60 people, including schoolchildren, and wounding scores in the bloodiest attacks to hit this mainly Shiite city since the U.S.-led occupation began a year … Read more

Whimsey continues…

… or is it whimsy? That’s right, I was reading Dorothy Sayers again. Good writer, if you can get past the racial/religious insensitivity; it’s fascinating to contemplate just how much of a transformation point World War II was to our society. All sorts of perfectly-natural-seeming attitudes and prejudices abruptly… stopped being so, or at the … Read more

If Zevonblogging makes me depressed…

…and Cashblogging makes me belligerent, then I’m sure you’re all asking the question “What’s the emotion best associated with blogging to Tori Amos?” Whimsical, of course. Glenn Reynolds noted something that occured to me, too; to wit, that being targeted by a delinking campaign by Rittenhouse Review apparently does wonders to your hitcount. Now, I’d … Read more

Interesting.

Blogging to Warren Zevon may depress me, but blogging to Johnny Cash makes me extremely belligerent: I just deleted a truly obnoxious post about Senator Chuck Hagel’s guarded endorsement of the draft. Alas, I’m supposed to be the nice Right Wing Death Beast, so let’s just say that I consider conscription to be neither wise … Read more

There’s something you don’t see every day…

… an article calling for the election of Bush over Kerry because the latter would be more of a warmonger. It’s quite real – the author has also written for Antiwar.com (not gonna link to it, though) – but unfortunately for the Kerry campaign, it’s from an Australian paper. I say ‘unfortunately’ because as Andrew … Read more

New Blog – Friends of Saddam

The Commissar of Politburo Diktat has branched out to start a blog (Friends of Saddam) to track developments in the ongoing UN Oil for Food corruption scandal. He’s looking for co-authors, especially foreign ones (really especially Iraqi ones). Hopefully, it’ll become a good resource for one of our less reported scandals: check it out.

Well, that was silly of him.

I rarely agree with dKos about anything anymore – which I, at least, regret; his technical blogging skills are worthy of respect – but I have to agree with him that this Kerry kerfuffle seemed counterintuitive. The very short version: a Boston Globe reporter took up the Senator’s offer on MTP to make his medical … Read more

This is as far back as I could go.

This probably wasn’t where the meme started, but what the heck. Does LiveJournal have server logs? 1. Grab the nearest book. 2. Open the book to page 23. 3. Find the fifth sentence. 4. Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions. “Upon opening the fridge, a ridiculous monster pops … Read more

Everybody gets sick sometimes.

If Larry Niven ever wrote a colder sentence, I haven’t read it – and it was in the back of my head as I was plowing through Senator Clinton’s recent New Yorker article about health care issues. It was less dry than I expected; unrepentant VRWCer I may be, but I give her full points for starting off with “I know what you’re thinking. Hillary Clinton and health care? Been there. Didn’t do that!” Not Eddie Izzard-level humor, mind you, but for a career politician it wasn’t bad.

As to substantive comments, Jane Galt doesn’t agree with Senator Clinton that the difficulty of people with pre-existing problems to get insurance represents a market failure (although her comments section is debating the issue quite politely, in the main), but is more concerned that (in her opinion) this article violates the spirit of the campaign-finance rules; Robert Tagorda liked the idea of better use of information technology, but has issues with her number of uninsured Americans. (Links via Pejmanesque)

As for me… well, it’s not a technical piece, to be sure, and it’s certainly not designed to serve as an argument against getting a national health care system. That being said, a good number of the problems listed are not partisan ones. We do need to revamp our disease protocols to handle the modern era, our existing healthcare system is notably inefficient and we really should start assessing just what modern diagnostic techniques are going to do to our health coverage, just to pick three examples at random*. Discussing them can’t hurt. Truth be told, I also find that I am happier about contemplating the national health care proposals of the duly elected junior Senator from New York than I am in those of the unelected First Lady, which is no doubt some sort of horrible flaw in me, but what the heck. I’m allowed to be quirky, seeing as I’m just this guy on the Internet.

No, really. There’s, like, a blanket permission for it somewhere around here…

Moe

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It’s fragging hot out.

The thermometer creeps up on me, patient, sly, freezing itself when I give it my evil look (Kills flies on sight! Perfect for all home, garden use! Copyright applied for) It knows, oh yes, it does; it knows that I am not As patient as it is. It can wait for my guard to drop, … Read more

I don’t think that a secret identity will help the situation.

Via Tacitus we see this NYT article about the aftermath of the Rantisi assassination. Most of the article is unsurprising – Hamas vows revenge and promises to retaliate even more harshly, Arafat’s regime flew flags at half mast in mourning, Israel promises to keep targeting known terrorist leaders whenever possible (with the unstated suggestion that … Read more

Society is apparently not doomed, after all.

At least, according to this article, which is essentially about how wonderful it is that kids are getting more conservative these days. Of course, to support its thesis it uses anecdotal evidence, umpteen billion polls that aren’t even linked to, surveys ditto and shows some signs of having the graph drawn first, then picked out … Read more

Waitangi Day!

I’m – OK, I actually did type “giving a big shout-out to my Marxist peeps over at Socialism in an Age of Waiting“, but let’s face it, I don’t even think I said that correctly, let alone in a way that wasn’t sad, lame or both – at any rate, they’ve got up a nicely-long … Read more

“Still Blogging?” Open thread.

Sort of the equivalent of banging on somebody’s door, just to make sure that they’re still alive and kicking and stuff. Frex, it’s been a month since Constant Reader Catsy’s blog Slouching Donkey, Lying Elephant got updated; it never hurts to doublecheck, eh? Add your own “Um… hello? Anybody home?” below.

Middle East Open Thread.

Today, Israel assassinated Hamas leader Abdel Aziz Rantisi, Muqtada Sadr is reportedly proclaiming his willingness to be martyred (if it’ll kick off a Shia civil war, one assumes) and they’re having what sounds like serious problems with two of the highways into Baghdad. In other words, it looks like it’s going to be a busy … Read more

Better restock that liquor cabinet.

Ricky of North Georgia Dogma and Oliver Willis have staked out early claims to provide the essential Democratic and Republican Convention Drinking Games, respectively. Mine was going to be much simpler for both: Drink. …yeah, well, it’s not like either of these are going to be particularly gripping events, desperate media stories (past, present and … Read more

More rules of thumb.

Not quite as funny as the classic When I am an Evil Overlord series, but still worthy of note: The Pulp Movie Survival Tip List. Some words of wisdom: 19. If a local person who has spectacularly saved your life before indicates that you have some kind of supernatural power, role, or place in custom, … Read more