I’m inclined to think that a military background wouldn’t hurt anyone.
—William Faulkner
I’m inclined to think that a military background wouldn’t hurt anyone.
—William Faulkner
I’d like to take a moment to thank those who’ve recently blogrolled or linked to Target Centermass.
First, thanks to the following for adding TCm to their blogrolls:
Second, I want the thank the Unofficial Battlestar Galactica Blog for the recent link and for pointing me to this rather simple Battlestar Galactica drinking game.
Third, I wanted once again to pimp for two sites intended for Texas bloggers:
As always, if you’ve linked or blogrolled Target Centermass and I haven’t found you, please send an email or post a comment. No good deed should go unrewarded.
EDIT: Correcting when the TexasBlogfest 2005 is happening. Hey, I lost track of dates.
I think I’m just going to enjoy an easy Saturday evening. See y’all tomorrow.
Okay, just this little tidbit: there’s a new campaign aimed at helping Americans learn the words to the national anthem. Yes, just the first verse. It’s a good cause, but it’s a shame it’s needed.
And he’s hoping for just one more flick.
The movie legend, whose piercing blue eyes have lit up screens for five decades, says he’ll give up the activities he once described as his two great passions — acting and motor racing.
“I think both are winding down,” Newman told The Associated Press during an interview Friday. “I’ll probably race for another year.”
Fans need not despair just yet. The iconic star of “The Hustler” and “Cool Hand Luke” says he plans to make one last film — “for good luck.”
He won’t say what it is, but hints that a long-rumored reunion with Robert Redford, his co-star in “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and “The Sting,” may yet happen.
The man has obviously had an incredible career. To honor him, I’d like to list my top favorite Paul Newman movies.
5. The Verdict — Very underrated, with Newman’s finest acting, in my opinion.
I changed my life today. What did you do?
4. Slap Shot — One of the funniest sports movies ever.
She underlines the fuck scenes for ya? Jesus, if she underlines the fuck scenes for ya, she must worship the ground you walk on.
3. The Sting — Intelligent story with great performances by Newman, Robert Redford and Robert Shaw.
Tough luck, Lonnehan. But that’s what you get for playing with your head up your ass!
2. Cool Hand Luke — Easily his coolest character.
I can eat fifty eggs.
1. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid — Just an absolute classic.
If he’d just pay me what he’s paying them to stop me robbing him, I’d stop robbing him.
Here’s hoping he and Redford do ride together once again on the silver screen.
From the description of tonight’s episode of SciFi Channel’s Battlestar Galactica:
When fuel supplies dwindle, the fleet must make a daring attack on a Cylon-controlled tylium mine.
No War for Tylium!!!
Adama Lied, Colonials Died!!!
If the 2004 presidential election proved anything, it’s that the controversial legacy of the Viet Nam War ain’t going away anytime soon. Well, maybe one lawsuit spawned by the conflict will finally be laid to rest.
A U.S. federal judge has ruled American chemical companies are not liable for damages caused by the spraying of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War.
Judge Jack Weinstein Thursday dismissed a lawsuit that accused the companies of committing war crimes by producing the highly toxic chemical.
The suit was filed on behalf of Vietnamese citizens who have blamed Agent Orange for health problems including cancer and birth defects.
U.S. forces sprayed some 80 million liters of the chemical during the war to kill jungle foliage that communist forces were using as cover.
Judge Weinstein said the plaintiffs’ claims have no basis under any national or international laws. He also said the plaintiffs had failed to prove a clear link between Agent Orange and their illnesses.
There was no immediate reaction from plaintiffs or the Vietnamese government.
So many aspects of that war against communist aggression, one of the key hot theaters of the Cold War, have long since become indelibly and unfairly cemented into the public mind — the tales of American atrocities, images of a summary execution or a naked child running in fear, the anguished stereotypical veteran, the phrase “We had to destroy the village in order to save it” (which I plan to blog about at a later date), and the lingering horrors of the defoliant Agent Orange.
What is the truth behind the actual health effects of exposure to Agent Orange? Well, despite today’s decision, the scientific jury is still out decades later. However, as the Mackenzie Institute noted in a paper on the controversy surrounding depleted uranium rounds, the evidence to date is not looking too good for those who continue to trumpet the evils of the defoliant.
Anyone remember Agent Orange?
Starting in 1969 and continuing through until the early 1990s, hundreds of Vietnam veterans blamed health problems, tumors and even psychological conditions on purported exposure to Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. The Agent Orange scare was strongly encouraged by the environmental lobby, the Peace Movement, and the Hanoi government. Fabricating or distorting evidence is quick and simple, while a truth that depends on scientific evidence can take a long time to show up. Naturally, as the scientists were dragging their heels, the media turned to the sensationalists and the Agent Orange Myth took on a life of its own.
Dioxin, the accused killer in Agent Orange can be dangerous and in large dosages is very lethal … to laboratory rats. Exposures humans receive are another matter. However, the thousands of Italians who were exposed to heavy doses of dioxin in a 1976 industrial accident did not develop excessive birth defects or reproductive failures. A 1984 Journal of the American Medical Association article on workers who had been exposed to a heavy dose of dioxins in a 1949 accident indicated these men did not have higher rates of cancer, heart or liver damage, nerve problems, kidney damage, reproductive problems or birth defects than was the average for men of their age group. They did have slightly higher rates of chloracne and digestive tract ulcers — both of which are quite treatable.
If any Vietnam Veterans had come down with problems related to Agent Orange, it would have been the high living “cowboys” of the Ranch Hand project — the US Airmen who actually sprayed the stuff. Flying at near-stall speeds about 50m above ground level, these servicemen took a lot of ground-fire. Indeed, one of their aircraft — known as “Patches” — is in the Air Force Museum in Dayton Ohio. Often, they ended up coated in Agent Orange when they sprayed it or had it sluicing around their ankles after being shot-up again. Moreover, at initiations for new members of their Squadron, both the newcomers and the older veterans would drink a glass of the defoliant.
Over 1,174 of the 1,206 veterans of this squadron have participated in a careful 20-year study of the results of their exposure to Agent Orange. Net result? The Ranch Hand group continues to have the same mortality rate as their control group of 1,293 similar men — and both have a lower mortality rate than the average American Male population. The only real difference in rates of those ailments associated with dioxin, despite massive exposure to Agent Orange, was that the Ranch Hand vets had a slightly higher tendency to display problems related to heavy drinking — something many of them engaged in as young servicemen on a nerve-wracking duty.
Otherwise, after $400 million in real research, the great Agent Orange scare turned out to be a bust. Real — verifiable and accurate — scientific research does not indict the material. However, it remains an article of faith among environmentalists and peace-movement members that the stuff is deadly. They believe and that is enough.
Too bad the verdict has already been rendered in the court of public opinion, but that’s true of so much about the Viet Nam War.
0-9 all time now.
Looks like the NIT now after falling in the first round 68-62, and that against a K-State team they spanked by fourteen in the regular season. Rather depressing after their amazing turn-around season to come into the game favored, having an outside shot at an invite to the NCAA tournament.
Did I really once say rank us?! Oh well, gig’em in the NIT, Ags.
A baby step in the right direction — getting our troops closer to the likely action and away from the whiners.
The commander of U.S. forces in Europe, General James Jones, says the United States is ready to begin negotiations with new NATO members Romania and Bulgaria about basing U.S. forces in those countries.
General Jones told a House of Representatives committee Wednesday that officers under his command have made repeated visits to Romania and Bulgaria, and the time has come to begin formal talks on basing U.S. forces in those countries.
“We are definitely at the launching point, as opposed to the conceptual point,” he said.
General Jones says the possibility of basing U.S. forces in Romania and Bulgaria fits into the Defense Department’s plans re-structure its force deployment around the world. The plan is to move away from large bases far from potential conflict zones, to smaller bases closer to where the forces might be used.
“We’re very excited at the possibility, in the European transformation, of basing an Eastern European brigade, a rotational brigade, in Bulgaria and Romania, along with the accompanying air assets and logistical assets necessary to sustain that presence,” he added.
A brigade would be between 3,000-5,000 troops, plus supporting units.
General Jones, who is also the NATO supreme commander, says talks with the two new NATO members should begin soon on details of the basing arrangements, which he said could include ports, airfields and facilities for ground forces.
“I believe that this year we will now turn to dialogue with both nations to work out the basing agreements, the status-of-forces agreements, and the most important one is the access that the United States wishes to have to its forces,†General Jones said. “I think the secretary of defense has been very strong in saying that we don’t want to put forces where we can’t get at them. And so we have to work out those agreements. But I think that in the case of Bulgaria and Romania we will.”
In the past, some countries that host U.S. forces have refused to allow those forces to be deployed directly to conflict areas, or the base facilities to be used in operations that the host country does not support. This was a problem with U.S. forces in Turkey when the Iraq war began two years ago.
But General Jones indicated he does not expect such issues with Bulgaria and Romania, which he described as “extraordinarily accommodating” and expressing a strong desire to have part of the U.S. European Command on their soil.
The general did not mention the incident last week in which U.S. forces apparently killed a Bulgarian soldier by mistake in Iraq.
After the last couple of years, I want us to completely get out of Germany and base our European forces where they can be closer to the expected fight, away from the spineless, and in a position to economically reward our current allies and friends. Put them in Romania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and especially Poland.
And maybe put a hell of an R&R base in England. Like Vegas with fish and chips.
I’ve added a new “My Blogroll” category to Target Centermass as a place to announce additions and to pay homage in one fashion or another to the blogs I read.
As a first post in the category, I want to list tonight’s new additions:
My usual method for trying to get out of homework consisted mainly of whining or offering pathetic excuses. This kid definitely took it several steps further.
A judge threw out a high school student’s lawsuit against mandatory summer homework, saying he and his father should have done a little more studying themselves before bringing the case.
Students in the Whitnall High School math course — honors pre-calculus — were supposed to do three assignments by certain dates over the summer. Peer Larson, 17, and his father, Bruce, had filed suit in Circuit Court, arguing that homework should not be required after the 180-day academic year is over.
The Larsons argued it was difficult for the boy to do the assignments because he had a summer job as a camp counselor. They also said students should be able to enjoy their summers free of homework.
But it’s up to school boards to decide such things, Judge Richard J. Sankovitz ruled Tuesday.
“Had the Larsons done a bit more homework,” he wrote, they would have learned that “the people of our state granted to the Legislature … the power to establish school boards.”
Bruce Larson said he had not immediately decided whether to appeal. He said the judge ignored a key issue — whether it was reasonable for a school to spring “three lengthy assignments” on students just before summer vacation began.
State Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Evers said he was glad the judge recognized homework is a local issue.
“It’s certainly something that could have and should have been resolved between the teacher and student,” Evers said.
The judge was absolutely correct in tossing this, leaving it to local authority.
That said, I’m torn between giving an “attaboy” to young Mr. Larson for his effort to shirk the work and condemning his father for letting the silliness get this far.