Author: Gunner

  • Limited Debate Blogging Tonight

    For two reasons.

    First, my attention is torn between Bush v. Kerry, round three, and ‘Stros v. Cardinals, game one. Second, to be honest, I’m a little beat down by the debates right now, and this election should be about our security. I’m kind of disinterested in this domestic crap and am sick of hearing Kerry say things I know he doesn’t believe. Hell, I’m not too sure he really believes in anything other than we should be more like mainland Europe, both in the scope of government and the lack of testicular fortitude in our military. Tonight, as has been the case every other day in this campaign, Kerry will only say anything he thinks is politically beneficial to him at the time. There will be no signs of leadership, only promises and promises of plans.

    Oh, and the Astros are up 4-2 right now.

    EDIT: If you do need your debate-blogging fix, I recommend the VodkaPundit. And it’s still 4-2 Houston going to the top of the fifth.

  • Spaniard to Follow Magellan’s Wake

    A Spanish sailor has begun his attempt to recreate Magellan’s famed voyage using the same technology … sort of.

    Spanish sailor Jose Luis Ugarte on Sunday set sail from this southern Spanish city bound for Japan in a replica model of Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan’s 16th Century galleon Victoria.

    The replica vessel was built for the 1992 Seville Expo and, if it reaches Japan without mishap, will be a part of the Spanish pavilion in the World Expo 2005 in the Japanese city of Aichi from March to September next year.

    The original Victoria left Seville on the Guadalquivir river in 1519, while the modern-day version, measuring 25.9 by 6.7 metres (87 by 23 feet), underwent six months of work ahead of its odyssey, which began on Spain’s national day.

    Ugarte, 75, told a news conference in Bilbao last week he wants to emulate Magellan and Juan Sebastian Del Cano, the Spanish captain who won his place in history by skippering the original Victoria back to Europe after Magellan was killed in the Philippines in 1521 without making it to Japan.

    Ugarte is using only the technology and instrumentation available, though his ship is equipped with a motor, presumably for emergencies. I would assume that it is also equipped with communications gear and, hopefully, better food than was carried at sea back in the day.

    The replica will head for the Panama Canal and hopes to reach the Mexican Pacific coast resort of Acapulco by year’s end.

    I don’t know off-hand the time the original voyage took to reach Japan. For pacing, I’m sure Ugarte can compare his passage of the Panama Canal with that of Magellan.

  • Iwo Jima, Covered by Today’s Media

    From Zell Miller, voicing an argument I’ve held repeatedly of the media and the Dems:

    What if today’s reporters had covered the Marines landing on Iwo Jima, a small island in the far away Pacific Ocean, in the same way they’re covering the war in Iraq? Here’s how it might have looked:

    DAY 1

    With the aid of satellite technology, Cutie Cudley interviews Marine Pfc. John Doe, who earlier came ashore with 30,000 other Marines.

    Cutie: “John, we have been told by the administration that this island has great strategic importance because if you’re successful, it could become a fueling stop for our bombers on the way to Japan. But, as you know, we can’t be sure this is the truth. What do you think?”

    Pfc. Doe: “Well, I’ve been pinned down by enemy fire almost ever since I got here and have had a couple of buddies killed right beside me. I’m a Marine and I go where they send me. One thing’s for sure, they are putting up a fight not to give up this island.”

    Cutie: “Our military analysts tell us that the Japanese are holed up in caves and miles of connecting tunnels they’ve built over the years. How will you ever get them out?”

    Pfc. Doe: “With flame throwers, ma’am.”

    Cutie (incredulously): “Flame throwers? You’ll burn them alive?”

    Pfc. Doe: “Yes ma’am, we’ll fry their asses. Excuse me, I shouldn’t have said that on TV.”

    Cutie (audible gasp): “How horrible!”

    Pfc. Doe (obviously wanting to move on): “We’re at war ma’am.”

    Go read the rest. It’s pathetically believable.

  • Australian Troops to Stay in Iraq

    I said I had faith in the Aussies as they began going to the polls Down Under, and they redeemed that faith.

    Now, fresh off his victory, Prime Minister John Howard has firmly entrenched his country as one of our staunchest allies.

    Australian troops will stay in Iraq (news – web sites), Prime Minister John Howard declared Monday, as the stock market in Sydney hit a record high following the conservative leader’s election to a historic fourth term.

    At his first news conference since Saturday’s election increased the parliament majority of his center-right coalition, Howard said his priorities were guarding the nation’s security, working with allies to fight terrorism and maintaining the booming economy.

    The victory was a resounding vote of confidence in the government’s handling of Australia’s economy, which has low inflation, unemployment and interest rates, a budget surplus and low government debt.

    All this despite the antics of John Kerry’s sister.

    It should be noted that not all of Howard’s opposition have decided to take the results gracefully.

    Voter ignorance, greed and apathy returned the Coalition to government, a South Australian Greens MP said today.

    Kris Hanna, a former state Labor backbencher who joined the Greens last year, today said he was disappointed with the majority of Australian voters.

    “(Labor Leader Mark) Latham did his best to offer an alternative but too many Australians were not discerning or caring enough to vote (Prime Minister John) Howard out,” Mr Hanna said.

    Mr. Hanna missed his true calling as a Florida Democrat.

  • Astros Make Franchise History

    Way to go, ‘Stros!

    The Houston Astros have finally shrugged off the albatross that has been their playoff history, eliminating the Atlanta Braves 12-3 in a decisive game five.

    Next up: St. Louis for the National League pennant.

    EDIT: More details here.

    Overall, [Carlos] Beltran broke the Houston record for postseason homers.

    In a poignant note, the record was formerly held by Ken Caminiti, who hit three in an opening-round loss to the Braves in 1999. Caminiti, who spent 10 seasons with the Astros, died Sunday of an apparent heart attack at age 41.

    The news hit Caminiti’s former teammates — Biggio and Bagwell — especially hard. “I guess the best thing we can do today for him is just go out and play well,” Biggio said before the game.

    Mission accomplished.

  • Sessions Slightly Ahead for Texas Seat

    Texas’ recent redistricting has left two current congressmen, Pete Sessions and Martin Frost, slugging it out against each other in a bitterly-contested affair. A poll released today shows Sessions holding a lead only three weeks before the election.

    U.S. Rep. Pete Sessions is slightly ahead of his Democratic rival, U.S. Rep. Martin Frost, in one of the nation’s most watched congressional races, according to a newspaper poll of likely voters.

    Sessions has 50 percent to Frost’s 44 percent in the survey, which polled 800 likely voters last week for The Dallas Morning News. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent.

    Pollsters randomly selected 32nd Congressional District households with published telephone numbers. The survey was conducted by Iowa-based public opinion firm Selzer & Co.

    Frost, Texas’ most senior congressman, was forced to run in Sessions’ Republican-leaning district after Republicans decimated Frost’s district in off-year political remapping.

    Frost immediately attacked the poll, contending it undersampled hispanics, who represent over a third of the district’s population.

    Representative of the animosity shown throughout this campaign, the Frost camp called Sessions a hypocrite for streaking thirty years ago as a college freshman.

    Democrats today circulated old newspaper clippings of a 1974 college streaking stunt staged by hundreds of students at Southwest Texas State University, including an 18-year-old Pete Sessions.

    Sessions, a conservative Republican who wrote a column condemning Janet Jackson’s nude display during this year’s Super Bowl halftime performance, apparently bared his bottom with about 300 male and female students on the streets of San Marcos during the two-night rampage.

    ….

    Sessions’ campaign isn’t denying the congressman’s public nudeness.

    “Congressman Sessions’ old school days are long gone,” said Sessions’ spokesman Chris Homan. “He recognizes it as an immature action of an 18-year-old college freshman.”

    But Frost’s campaign is holding Sessions’ bare bod to the fire.

    “Pete Sessions exposed himself to children and strangers,” said Frost spokesman Justin Kitsch. “He’s exposed himself as a hypocrite as well.”

    Sessions’ spokesman dismissed the comparison of Sessions’ juvenile acts to those of Jackson, who revealed her breast in front of millions of Super Bowl watchers at the finale of a halftime performance with singer Justin Timberlake.

    This isn’t exactly the kind of exposure the four-term Republican wants in the final three weeks of a tight race with Frost, a 13-term Democrat. The two incumbents are battling for Republican-leaning Dallas area District 32 in what is expected to be the most expensive race in the country.

    There has been much silliness of this sort, as well as more serious allegations, by both sides in this contest. However, decades-old college frivolity is not going to alter Session’s poll lead. As a resident of a nearby district who actually works within the confines of the 32nd, I’m going to go out on a limb and predict that Sessions will carry the day on Nov. 2.

  • Chinese President Rules Out Reclassifying Tiananmen Events

    Continuing their Orwellian repainting of events, the Chinese stand by their view of 1989’s massacre at Tiananmen.

    Chinese President Hu Jintao says Beijing has no intention of reversing its view of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.

    Mr. Hu made the comment Saturday in Beijing at a news conference with French President Jacques Chirac.

    When asked about the Tiananmen events, President Hu said there has been no consideration of re-classifying the official view that they were a subversive riot. He said the government’s decision to put down the protests led to China’s later economic growth.

    The statements were Mr. Hu’s first public comments on the Tiananmen protests since he became head of the Chinese military last month.

    Second verse, same as the first.

    Mr. Hu, ask Lenin, Stalin, et al., about their control of history. Their versions held true only for a time. However, today’s more accurate view of history is not on their side of the story. And the world moves ever quickly onwards. Your spin of history may not outlast your days.

  • Rowling: Another Potter Character to Die

    First, the early info of the death of a major character in The Order of the Phoenix, book five of the Harry Potter series. Now, Potter history repeats itself.

    “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling said Friday that one of her characters will not survive the next book in her series about the young wizard.

    Asked on her official Web site whether she planned to kill off any more characters, Rowling replied, “Yes, sorry.” But she refused to identify that character.

    The sixth book in the series, “Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince,” is due to be published next year.

    Early prediction: not Harry, Ron or Hermione. Hagrid is safe, for now. Albus Dumbledore and Minerva McGonagall better be careful. Severus Snape is also playing a dangerous game.

  • Quote of the Week, 10 OCT 04

    The one thing I cannot forgive the Arabs for is that they forced our sons to kill their sons.

    —Golda Meir

  • Bush Campaign to Base Ad on Kerry Terror Quote

    The Bush camp is planning on using John Kerry’s own words against him, as well they should.

    President Bush’s campaign announced Sunday its plans to use as the basis of a new commercial a quote from an 8,000-word New York Times Magazine article about Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry.

    The parsing prompted the Kerry camp to retort that the soon-to-be-released Bush ad was another example of the president’s campaign taking words out of context to create a misleading impression.

    Surprise! Surprise! Surprise! The Kerryites are concerned about a quote being taken out of context. Where is their concern as Kerry and his attack-puppy sidekick repeatedly take Vice-President Cheney’s words about the danger of another attack so out of context that they intentionally, completely change his meaning? After all, the Veep never said a Kerry election would increase the danger of a terrorist attack; rather, he argued it would increase the danger of such an attack being responded to in a pre-9/11 manner, a valid consideration.

    Are the Dems right in whining about context?

    The article, a largely analytical cover story in the magazine, says the interviewer asked Kerry “what it would take for Americans to feel safe again.”

    ”We have to get back to the place we were, where terrorists are not the focus of our lives, but they’re a nuisance,” the article states as the Massachusetts senator’s reply.

    ”As a former law enforcement person, I know we’re never going to end prostitution. We’re never going to end illegal gambling. But we’re going to reduce it, organized crime, to a level where it isn’t on the rise. It isn’t threatening people’s lives every day, and fundamentally, it’s something that you continue to fight, but it’s not threatening the fabric of your life.”

    Whatever part of Kerry’s statement you parse or take in it’s entirety, it is hard not to see an actual substantiation of Cheney’s point. Without victory over Islamist terrorism, those terrorists will never be just a nuisance. With an attitude of law enforcement and diplomacy as our primary weapons, that victory cannot be attained. Nor can it be attained if we insist that the focus of the war is Osama bin Laden instead of the greater whole of the radical Islamist movement.

    A Kerry spokesman defended his candidate against the substance of the charges.

    Reuters reported that the new Bush commercial’s script asks “How can Kerry protect us when he doesn’t understand the threat?”

    Kerry campaign spokesman Phil Singer called the Republican charges “absolutely ridiculous.”

    “This is yet another example of the Bush campaign taking John Kerry’s words out of context, and then blowing it up into something that is nothing,” he said.

    “The whole article is about how John Kerry recognizes that the war on terror requires a multipronged approach. It’s not just the military aspect, but you need diplomacy to be able to enlist your allies. The Bush people have never understood that. John Kerry has always said that terrorism is the No. 1 threat to the U.S.”

    Unfortunately, Kerry has not always said that terrorism is our top threat. From the first Bush-Kerry debate:

    LEHRER: New question, two minutes, Senator Kerry.

    If you are elected president, what will you take to that office thinking is the single most serious threat to the national security to the United States?

    KERRY: Nuclear proliferation. Nuclear proliferation.

    Now, I’ll be fair. Kerry tied this into terrorism, though not exclusively. He also tied it to the North Korea’s nuclear ambitions when he made the following statement in his continuing answer:

    And part of that leadership is sending the right message to places like North Korea.

    Right now the president is spending hundreds of millions of dollars to research bunker-busting nuclear weapons. The United States is pursuing a new set of nuclear weapons. It doesn’t make sense.

    You talk about mixed messages. We’re telling other people, “You can’t have nuclear weapons,” but we’re pursuing a new nuclear weapon that we might even contemplate using.

    Not this president. I’m going to shut that program down, and we’re going to make it clear to the world we’re serious about containing nuclear proliferation.

    In Kerry’s mind, the greatest danger the U.S. faces is nuclear proliferation, not Islamist terrorism. There may be some validity to this, but two points should be considered. First, it is contrary to the statement of the Kerry spokesman. Second, it is curious that Kerry’s answer to our alleged greatest danger is the policing up of known nuclear materials while cancelling our efforts to build a potential deterrent to future nuke sources.

    This point puts Kerry perfectly into context. It supports the Bush campaign’s questioning of Kerry’s view of the threat of terrorism based on his own quotes in the Times Magazine. It jibes with his inability to take a lasting stance (outside of hindsight) in favor of any offensive U.S. action, beginning at least with Viet Nam and continuing through today. Finally, it dovetails nicely with his support of a unilateral freeze in the ’80s in the face of another threat. Simply put, John Kerry does not understand our enemies, nor is he resolute in facing them in any manner other than to rely upon others and reduce our own efforts.