Category: General

  • Reciprocity VIII

    Just want to thank the latest to add Target Centermass to his blogroll:

    TexasBestGrok

    I’m just guessing, but I suspect John at TexasBestGrok might be a fan of Robert A. Heinlein, one of the greats of science fiction. TBG is worth the regular look, if only for the Heinlein Quote of the Month, the weekly aircraft cheesecake post (check out the Blohm und Voss BV 141; I’d never seen it), and especially the regularly-featured Sci-Fi Babe Poll.

    TBG has his links classified by Heinlein-related titles and Target Centermass is now listed under the “The Green Hills of Earth.” As a tribute to that, I send back this:

    The arching sky is calling
    Spacemen back to their trade.
    All hands! Stand by! Free falling!
    And the lights below us fade.
    Out ride the sons of Terra,
    Far drives the thundering jet,
    Up leaps the race of Earthmen,
    Out, far, and onward yet —

    We pray for one last landing
    On the globe that gave us birth;
    Let us rest our eyes on fleecy skies
    And the cool, green hills of Earth.

    Thanks for the link, sir.

    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.

  • Quote of the Week, 10 JAN 05

    War, like most things, is a science to be acquired and perfected by diligence, by perserverence, by time, and by practice.

    —Alexander Hamilton

  • Posting Delayed

    Sorry, folks. Picked up some software tonight and have been working with it. Updated my system utilities and, damn! my PC is a mess. Just a quick note and then I’m out of here. Oh, and a barely-late quote of the week.

    CBS News the story of the day — big breaking today with report and belated firings. I recommend you get your updates at RatherGate.com.

  • Mich. School Board to Vote on Bible Class

    The school board in a small town in Michigan, facing popular demand, is wrestling with the idea of adding a course to its curriculum focusing on the Bible.

    A yearlong dispute over whether to add a religious group’s Bible class at small-town Frankenmuth High School in rural Michigan comes to a head at Monday’s school board meeting.

    At issue is whether the proposed curriculum conforms to a 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decision barring public schools from indoctrinating children in religion but upholding the right to teach about religion.

    The dispute in Frankenmuth, about 75 miles north of Detroit, is the latest skirmish in a nationwide battle between religious conservatives and church-state separationists that has stretched from Fort Myers and Miami, Fla. to Camden, N.J.; North Kansas City, Mo.; Kewaksum, Wis.; and Westcliffe, Colo.

    The school board will get a report Monday from a curriculum committee, made up of teachers and administrators, and will decide whether to adopt the proposed class, Pendleton said. He said he doubts the board will do so.

    One year ago, hundreds of Frankenmuth parents and students asked their Board of Education to offer a Bible course based on materials from the National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools.

    What if the town was full of flat-earthers or Holocaust-deniers? Should the numbers sway the content of public education?

    The Greensboro, N.C.-based council says its curriculum conforms to the law. But People for the American Way and the American Civil Liberties union say its materials illegally promote religion.

    “It’s religious right people who want to impose a theocracy in this country,” said Judith Schaeffer, deputy legal director of Washington-based People for the American Way. Her group has urged Frankenmuth to reject the class.

    National council lawyer Mike Johnson vigorously defended his group’s course outline.

    “It’s completely defensible. The approach is objective, certainly nondenominational,” Johnson said from Shreveport, La. “It presents the Bible as history and literature, but it does not proselytize.”

    Nondenominational within a particular grouping of religions perhaps, but I suspect little would be included outside of the biblical viewpoint from a non-Christian perspective.

    The curriculum, based on the King James Bible, includes topics ranging from “Periods of Hebrew History in the Old Testament” to “The Parables of Jesus — Literary Genre.”

    In a letter to Frankenmuth school officials, Schaeffer said the course material teaches the Bible from a Protestant Christian perspective, rather than objectively, and teaches the creation story, Noah’s flood, Tower of Babel and resurrection of Jesus as history.

    National Council does not release the names of districts that use its materials. But Johnson said 288 schools in 35 states have adopted its course outline.

    At the eye of the storm is David Pendleton, president of the seven-member board on which he has served for 20 years. The district in Michigan’s rural Thumb has about 1,200 students, 500 of them at the high school.

    “It’s stirred up about as much controversy as the abortion issue,” he said.

    Founded in the mid-19th century by Lutheran missionaries to the Indians, and followed by German pioneer farmers, the Bavarian-themed tourist town of 4,600 remains a conservative community, Pendleton said.

    As far as most board members are concerned, teaching the Bible at Frankenmuth High School would be a good thing, he said.

    “I would love to see it. Other board members would love to do it. But can we do it legally? I don’t think so. But, we’ll see,” he said.

    I cannot believe a school board member is actually stating that legality is the only thing driving the question. Strike that — I have no problem believing it. Who cares about the integrity of the education they’re elected to protect?

    The dispute came to a boil at a Jan. 13 school board hearing, when parents Marcia and Robert Stoddard submitted petitions signed by about 1,200 parents and students asking for the course, The Saginaw News reported.

    There was a time in high school when I might have signed this. Who knows where I would be now with the possibility of this added indoctrination?

    This is why high school is not the place for such an issue in exclusion. By that, I mean the impact or beleifs of religions can rightfully be touched upon in history or philosophy classes, but there is no need to focus on just one at this stage and in such a public forum, be it supposedly for literary, historical or philosophical reasons. This is especially true when alternative religions are not granted the same exposure.

    About 100 people filled the Rittmueller Middle School cafeteria, with shouts breaking out at one point between an avowed atheist and a course supporter.

    “It’s our history, and we must accept it,” the paper quoted high school student Dan Redford as telling the board. “It would be a crime to stop students from learning about our world.”

    Classmate Brandon Bierlein disagreed, saying, “It’s best to leave the Bible to the pastors.”

    While opposing the National Council on Bible Curriculum’s course, People for the American Way says that public school instruction about religion and the Bible is legal and desirable.

    “Schools of course can teach students about the Bible, about the Quran, about people’s beliefs,” said Schaeffer of People for the American Way. “The issue is how do you approach this material.”

    Religion lies at the center of American society, and an educational system that ignores religion renders the nation’s history incomprehensible, said Charles Kriker, founder of the journal Religion and Education and a retired professor at Iowa State University.

    “You really can’t understand things if you exclude that factor,” he said from Ames, Iowa. “Just because something is controversial doesn’t mean you have to ignore it.”

    I only occasionally agree with the ACLU and, when I do, I usually feel a need to cleanse myself afterwards.

    They are right in this case, though. What if the course, popularly demanded, is implemented and peer pressure is placed upon its enrollment? What if I move my future family there and my children are pressured to take such a course with no courses available for contradictory views?

    At the age of high school students and those younger, the public responsibility towards religion should be towards protecting the reasonable rights of the family and the church within their own domain. It should not be one of such blatant advocacy towards a particular indoctrination.

  • Internal U.N. Audits Ignite Debate

    Internal United Nations audits released today show “extensive mismanagement” of the Iraq Oil-for-Food program.

    Internal U.N. audits sent to the director of the Iraq oil-for-food program uncovered extensive mismanagement of multimillion-dollar deals with contractors and fraudulent paperwork by its employees, according to copies of the some of the reports obtained by The Associated Press.

    An independent panel investigating corruption in the humanitarian program released the 55 internal audits on its Web site Sunday, a day earlier than originally planned after some of the reports were leaked to the media.

    The panel led by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, who was appointed in April by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan to investigate the growing scandal, was given access to the audits that were conducted throughout the duration of the program, along with other relevant documents.

    The oil-for-food program was created as a humanitarian exemption to sanctions imposed on Iraq after the 1990 invasion of Kuwait, which led to the 1991 Gulf War. Beginning in 1996, it allowed Saddam Hussein’s government to sell oil and use the proceeds to buy food, medicine and other items.

    The contention over access to the audits led some congressional investigators to accuse the United Nations of stonewalling outside investigations of alleged corruption at the program. At least five congressional probes are running separately from Volcker’s.

    In November, Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., accused U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan of trying to cover up the extent of fraud at the program and called for his resignation.

    Now that the internal audits are being released, the two sides disagree about what they show.

    Today’s released briefing paper can be found in a PDF file here, and copies of the internal audit reports have been published here.

  • Palestinian Abbas Claims Presidential Victory

    The Palestinians have voted and the presidential replacement for terrorist Yasser Arafat has declared victory.

    Former Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas declared victory in the Palestinian presidential election late Sunday after exit polls gave him a commanding lead over his rivals.

    Abbas dedicated his win to “my brother,” a reference to the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, and to Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

    “There is a difficult mission ahead — to build our state, to achieve security for our people, to provide a good life for our people, to give our prisoners freedom, our fugitives a life in dignity, to reach our goal of an independent state,” Abbas said.

    Israel is prepared to immediately make “all the necessary adjustments” to work with Abbas, Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told CNN.

    “The main challenge is still ahead for him,” Olmert said. “Will he fight against the terrorists? Will he try to stop this bloody, violent war against the state of Israel? This is the main question. This is what interests us.”

    President Bush said: “This is a historic day for the Palestinian people and for the people of the Middle East.”

    A poll from the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research found Mahmoud Abbas had 66 percent of the vote and his closest challenger, Mustafa Barghouti, had about 20 percent.

    ….

    Abbas, a moderate now serving as interim chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization, would take the reins held by Arafat, the popular leader who died in November. Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, was the candidate of Arafat’s Fatah party.

    The 69-year-old once served as prime minister but quit the post, accusing Arafat of undermining his authority by refusing to give him control of the Palestinian Authority’s security organizations.

    Official results are expected Monday, but the challenge of the job is already presenting itself as Israel is set to demand the new Palestinian president act against missile attacks into Israel from Gaza.

    A new Israeli coalition due to be sworn in today will demand swift action by Yassir Arafat’s successor to stamp out rocket fire by militants against Israeli targets around the Gaza Strip.

    ….

    The prime minister is expected to invite the new Palestinian president for face-to-face talks, although Palestinian officials are concerned Mr Sharon would want them to focus primarily on Israeli security.

    “Of course, we expect a new, different Palestinian leadership that will be prepared to move in the direction of peace,” said Silvan Shalom, the Israeli foreign minister.

    An Israeli official said the government wanted Mr Abbas, assuming he won, to match his rhetoric against the armed intifada with a serious effort to end incitement against Israel and to stop militants from launching Qassam rockets against Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip. Only then would moves such as a release of Palestinian prisoners and the resumption of talks be considered.

    “No one expects terrorism to stop tomorrow, it’s not realistic,” the official said. “But he needs to send a signal to his own people that the war is over and then we can sit down and talk.”

    Palestinian militants yesterday fired two rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip.

    I expect nothing new anytime soon. Abbas is assuming the reins of an untamed beast, one that has been fed on brutality and hatred for decades.

  • Nuclear Submarine Accident Kills 1 Sailor

    The military, even during peacetime exercises and operations, is a dangerous business. This fact has tragically demonstrated again.

    A nuclear submarine that ran aground about 350 miles south of Guam, killing one crewman and injuring 23 others, was due back at its home port in Guam on Monday, according to a Navy spokesman.

    There were no reports of damage to the USS San Francisco’s reactor plant, but the extent of damage to the 360-foot submarine would be determined when it gets to port, said Jon Yoshishige, spokesman for the U.S. Pacific Fleet. The vessel was moving under its own power.

    Officials said they still don’t know what the Los Angeles-class submarine hit Saturday, but Lt. j.g. Adam Clampitt of the Pacific Fleet said it had been conducting operations underwater at the time.

    The incident is under investigation, said Yoshishige.

    Navy medical personnel from Guam have been brought aboard the submarine to treat the injuries, which included broken bones, lacerations, bruises and a back injury, the Navy said. The submarine has a crew of 137.

    The name of the sailor who died was being withheld pending a mandatory 24-hour waiting period, the Navy said. The sailor’s next of kin had been notified.

    Located west of the international date line, Guam is a U.S. territory about 3,700 miles southwest of Hawaii.

    During the Cold War, this could very well have been a game of cat and mouse between an attack sub and a missile boat that went awry. Who knows? That may still be the a case.

  • Pentagon Orders Iraq Troop Review

    Old soldiers never die, they just get called back to review operations in Iraq.

    The Pentagon has confirmed that retired Gen Gary Luck has been asked to review overall operations in Iraq.

    The news comes as a senior official revealed that the US army is likely to ask for a permanent increase of 30,000 in its strength [blogged here yesterday].

    US defence officials have sought to play this down as just part of an ongoing review process.

    But Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has asked the general to look at the training of the Iraqi security forces.

    That is critical, because handing over security to the Iraqis is key to the Pentagon’s exit strategy – and this new review does seem to reflect the concern about how the security strategy is unfolding.

    US military commanders acknowledge that the performance of the Iraqis is mixed, and far from being able to cut US troop numbers as it had hoped, the Pentagon now has more personnel in Iraq than ever – more than 150,000.

    To argue that operations in Iraq and the training of Iraqi security forces should not be reviewed for possible improvements would be silly. I wish Gen. Luck … well … good luck on his mission.

  • Insurgent Admits Iran, Syria Links on Tape

    A captured Iraqi insurgent has confessed to contacts with neighboring Iran and Syria, two countries that have denied undermining the Iraqi government but have much to fear from success in the fledgling democracy.

    An Iraqi militant suspected of involvement in beheadings and other bloody attacks told Iraqi authorities that his group has links with Iran and Syria, according to a tape aired Friday by an Arabic TV station funded by the U.S. government.

    Moayad Ahmed Yasseen, leader of Jaish Muhammad, which is Arabic for Muhammad’s Army, was captured nearly two months ago in Fallujah, the former guerrilla stronghold west of Baghdad.

    Alhurra television, which has its headquarters in Washington, said the tape of his purported confession was made Dec. 24 and provided to the station by Iraq’s Ministry of Defense.

    Iraqi and U.S. officials, including President Bush, have accused Syria and Iran of meddling in Iraq’s affairs and aiding insurgents, a charge both nations vehmently deny. Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said last week that Iraq’s patience was running out with countries that support the insurgency.

    Iran?

    On the tape, Yasseen, a colonel in Saddam Hussein’s army, said two other former Iraqi military officers belonging to his group were sent “to Iran in April or May, where they met a number of Iranian intelligence officials.” He said they also met with Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    He said Iranian officials provided money, weapons “and, as far as I know, even car bombs” for Jaish Muhammad.

    Check on contact and collusion.

    Syria?

    Yasseen also said he got permission from Saddam — while the former dictator was in hiding after his ouster by the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 — to cross into Syria and meet with a Syrian intelligence officer to ask for money and weapons. He didn’t say if the request was met.

    Check on contact, unknown on collusion.

    And what of Yasseen’s portion of the “patriots” lauded by some on the Left?

    The U.S. military has said Jaish Muhammad appears to be an umbrella group for former Iraqi intelligence agents, army officers, security officials and members of Saddam’s Baath Party.

    The group is known to have cooperated with Jordanian terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi as well as other Saddam loyalists and al-Qaida supporters. Allawi has accused Jaish Muhammad of killing and beheading a number of Iraqis, Arabs and foreigners in Iraq.

    Well, let’s just say they ain’t minutemen fighting for the good of Iraq.

  • Book Meme: Tell Me Your Authors

    From the Llama Butchers (though not originally), here’s the idea:

    You copy the list from the last person in the chain, delete the names of the authors you don’t have on your home library shelves and replace them with names of authors you do have. Bold the replacements.

    Here is their list, followed by mine with replacements.

    1. Evelyn Waugh
    2. Thomas Hardy
    3. Tom Clancy
    4. Jane Austen
    5. CS Lewis
    6. JRR Tolkien
    7. Robert Graves
    8. P.G. Wodehouse
    9. Patrick O’Brian
    10. William Shakespeare

    Gunner’s Contribution
    1. Ken Follett
    2. Mario Puzo
    3. Tom Clancy
    4. Robert Heinlein
    5. CS Lewis
    6. JRR Tolkien
    7. Ernest Hemingway
    8. George Orwell
    9. Joseph Heller
    10. William Shakespeare

    Now it’s your turn.