Category: Blogosphere

  • Moving Day

    … for a couple of the troops at the Officers’ Club, one of my daily reads.

    Charlie Munn and John Noonan have settled into their new digs at OpFor, military jargon for opposing force. Go check ’em out … often.

  • Continuing My Recent Trend

    There once was a time in the not-too-distant past when I really blogged. I think.

    No real writing tonight — instead, I’m offering up some tasties from the fine sites on my blogroll and their internet cousins.

    Chad Evans at In the Bullpen takes a look at how the radical Islamist movement is increasingly utilizing the internet.

    Nearly five years after 9/11, there can be considerable debate whether or not radical Islam as an ideology has grown. I believe it has, but the measure of whether or not the ideology has spawned future terrorists is not known. What is known is that jihadis using the Internet to disseminate their ideology has grown and grown at a rather alarming rate.

    In the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s report, a twenty percent increase of jihadi sites is cited over the previous year.

    […]

    The question on everyone’s mind is what are we doing to stop this? Sadly, I don’t think we are doing much to prevent these sites from operating and growing.

    Military Matters‘ Uncle Jimbo, a frequent contributor over at Blackfive, questions the media’s assualt on what is essentially a military psy-ops effort. Preach it, Uncle.

    I have difficulty with the press pushing back every time it finds out the military doesn’t trust it to inform the American public, or the world, about our operations. Every time they sniff out any foray into information warfare, they begin with the propaganda meme, and attempt to discredit it. Yet the same folks will bemoan the inability of the administration to stir public sentiment in our favor at home or anywhere else. It would be nice for the media to admit they have waged an aggressive propaganda campaign of disinformation and disinterest in anything positive that has actually harmed our war effort and made our work in Iraq more difficult.

    I am not blaming the press for the current situation in Iraq, except as an agent spreading doom and gloom.

    Protein Wisdom‘s Jeff Goldstein looks at the same effort with similar conclusions. As an aside, I ain’t shy about thinking that Jeff’s mix of off-the-wall zanyand dead-on-target analysis makes him one of the best in the blogging arena.

    Whenever I mention that the tenor of mainstream media coverage of this war is troublesome—and that it may indeed have a material impact on how successful the campaign ultimately is—I am met with scoffs from anti-war types who insist that their dissent has no effect on the situation on the ground in Iraq, and that in fact, their willingness to speak Truth to Power is part of the great tradition of this country, and one of the few things left that the Bushies haven’t beaten into the dirt with their fascist boot heels.

    Of course, this is a strawman argument: my gripe is not against dissent, but rather against intentional and purposeful misrepresentations growing out of ideology.

    And it is ironic, I think, that the anti-war crowd spends so much time noting how their “dissent” has no measurable impact on the waging of the war—even though it should be obvious that public opinion is driven largely by the media representation of the war and its prosecution—and then turns around and finds troubling a “propaganda” campaign they claim is being waged by the military.

    Evidently, some words do have an impact, though I guess to many in the anti-war crowd, some propagandists are more equal than others.

    Finally, Unqualified Offerings brings us a blog post. It has comments. Generic hat-tip-type acknowledgement to JohnL at TexasBestGrok, who calls it the world’s greatest blog posting ever.

  • Carnival of Liberty XL

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Homeland Stupidity. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • Nothing from Me Tonight

    Perhaps you will be so kind as to visit two recent additions to the Target Centermass blogroll. Hey, I can always use more quality Lone Star blogs.

    Do drop by and pay them a visit if you don’t enjoy their work already.

  • Tartan Day ’06 Tartan Dump

    I’m just wrapping up Tartan Day ’06 with some actual tartans. I’ll throw the images below the fold.
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  • Tartan Day ’06 Link Dump

    Scots Wha Hae
    (c) FreeFoto.com

    It’s Tartan Day. You want links? I got ’em.

    Well, let’s start with the obvious — the Scottish Tartans Society, the “principal authority in the world on tartans and Highland dress.”

    On the internet, I recommend ElectricScotland.com as a starting point for all things Scottish, be it history, geneology, clans or travel.

    Ith at Absinthe & Cookies shows all of the blogs marking Tartan Day by participating in the Gathering of the Blogs, 2006 edition.

    Want to weave your own tartan? Try the tartan weaver, where you can design your own and even purchase products made with your design.

    This chronology may or may not help you brush up on your Scottish history, but it just might bring a chuckle (hat tip to Blackfive).

    Alexis Malcolm Kilts has kilts moderately priced, with a wide selection that includes the tartans of all the branches of the U.S. military.

    Here in the DFW area, the fine folks at Scotland Forever have been helpful with my wedding planning.

    For a kilt on a budget, there’s Sport Kilt, even if you’re looking for digital camo or a Hawaiian print.

    I’ve already blogged about the tragic passing of the famed Scottish regiments, as units centuries old are being amalgamated into one regiment. Here’s the site of the Black Watch, one of the legendary regiments now only a battalion

    The American sport of lacrosse has begun taking root in Scotland. The Scottish national lacrosse team is currently preparing for this July’s 2006 World Championship in London, Ontario. The Scots went 4-3 and finished seventh in the 2002 championships in Perth, Australia. Check out their history page — the Scottish national team can essentially trace it’s roots to the aftermath of the Lockerbie bombing of Pan Am Flight 103.

    The 2006 Texas Scottish Festival and Highland Games is approaching, with a full slate of activities and entertainment scheduled for June 2-4 in Arlington. I went to last year’s festival and had a grand time. Hey, nowhere else but Texas would someone opt for this outfit — kilt, hose and flashes, sgian dubh, cowboy boots and hat (click for larger). Oh yeah, that ain’t me in the picture.

    Texas Scottish Cowboy
  • Tartan Day ’06

    It’s now the sixth day of April, 2006, where I live, so let me welcome you to Tartan Day, a day to be celebrated by Scots and those of Scot descent. Since it is Tartan Day after all, let’s start this with the tartan of my family, which is expected to play a prominent role in my pending nuptials. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the Wylie family tartan.

    Next, here’s a quick look at the historical reason why April 6 has been chosen as the day of celebration.

    Me? I’ll be marking the day by donning a shirt in the famed Black Watch tartan. Too bad such noble garb will be wasted in the cube farm. Hopefully, I should have some good wedding pics for the 2007 edition of Tartan Day.

    Now, I’ll put up more Scot-related material later, but I wanted to point y’all toward the third annual Gathering of the Blogs, as Ith at Absinthe & Cookies presents a collection of bloggers planning on honoring the day. Those blogs, currently, are as follows:

    Aye, check ’em out throughout the day for what promises to be some good ol’ Scot-related blogging.

  • Carnival Of Liberty XXXIX

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Below the Beltway. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • Nothing Tonight

    Sorry, folks, but I’ve been busy with wedding details.

    Perhaps this would be a good time to visit the many fine sites on my blogroll, including the following three new and long-overdue blogs added today:

  • From the Ol’ Blogroll

    First, from the Jawa Report, the latest news of brutal abuse from Iraq — check that, I mean the latest brutal abuse of news from Iraq.

    The Latest Blood Libel Lie in Iraq

    What would you do if every day you saw images of dead civilians, women, and children? Now, imagine that you are told these deaths were the result of Americans intentionally killing civilians. If this was your perception of reality, then you too would probably feel an obligation to fight America. At the very least, you would support those that took up arms.

    Now imagine that it was mainstream media sources that were reporting Americans had massacred Iraqi civilians. The media, instead of challenging the version of the story as delivered by radical Islamists that routinely lie, equivocate and act as if the story told by U.S. soldiers is only one version of the truth. That the word of a U.S. soldier is just as suspect as that of Muqtada al Sadr.

    Propagating the lie that U.S. soldiers massacre mosque worshippers constitutes a form of blood libel. By portraying American troops as blood thirsty murderers, jihadi propagandists create an atmosphere of obligatory vendettas. What moral person could stand by and let the Americans get away with this type of murder? By treating that lie as if it was a legitimate viewpont, the media help prolong the war on terror. Worse, they give jihadis recruiting power, which leads to the death of more U.S. soldiers and eventually civilians.

    Take for instance this …

    Go read the rest. It dovetails quite nicely with my piece yesterday on “our” media.

    Second, Chad at In the Bullpen covers a big story from the DFW area: the walk-out protests by local high school students/truants in favor of illegal immigration.

    Second Day of Immigration Protests in Dallas

    Another day, another protest held by students in the Dallas area over the immigration bill. Local media reported many students were from the city of Irving, a suburb of Dallas, and that the Dallas Police Department called in trains and buses to help transport students to Dallas City Hall. School administrators claim all students absent will be marked truant therefore any test, quiz or homework assignment missed will result in a failed grade. Truancy also used to be against the law, but so too is entering this country illegally and aiding those who break U.S. law. Seemingly not in this day and age though.

    Check it out for the silliness that has been the locales’ allowing teenagers to blow off school for two straight days and some of the fallout of such coddling.

    Third, JohnL at TexasBestGrok posts a special farewell installment as part of his aircraft cheesecake series.

    Sunday Aircraft Cheesecake (F-14 Tomcat)

    After more than 30 years of distinguished service to the US Navy, the last two squadrons of F-14 Tomcats ended their final combat deployments about two weeks ago. A couple of nice articles about this milestone event can be found …

    Definitely watch the video. And tell JohnL to keep up the cheesecake.