Category: Politics

  • Sheehan: Busted by the Left and the Law

    Regarding Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, the dear Mother Sheehan of the anti-war movement, I recently blogged that she was fighting tooth and nail for a sixteenth minute of fame.

    Meanwhile, my lingering question about Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan is this: Is there some sort of methadone equivalent for limelight addiction?

    I guess I did not know then the extent of her adult attention desire disorder, nor the lengths that Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan would go to in her need to feed on publicity.

    First, Angry in the Great White North catches Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan whining over the weekend at the Daily Kos. Her complaint? Hurricane Rita was getting too much coverage, leaving one to conclude just who Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan felt was robbed by this.

    i am watching cnn and it is 100 percent rita…even though it is a little wind and a little rain…it is bad, but there are other things going on in this country today…and in the world!!!!

    Even for the Kos leftists, this is childishly too far. Angry in the GWN has selected several comments that I wish you would read. Here’s a small taste:

    Give it a rest

    Sorry Cindy, but I must say that the suffering in Texas right now is quite pertinent. In fact, at a time when we have people suffering, left homeless and devastated from “a little wind and a little rain,” I think you can take a break from the camera just for a moment.

    That wasn’t enough to slow Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, though. After getting appropriately rebuffed by the left, Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan today decided to fight the law.

    A leading anti-Iraq war activist has been arrested outside the White House for what supporters say was as an act of civil disobedience.

    Anti-war protesters ended three days of demonstrations in Washington by congregating at one of the main gates to the White House.

    Police asked them several times to move on, saying they were gathering in a restricted area. When they refused, they were arrested.

    The first to be taken into custody was Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a soldier who was killed in Iraq and a leader of the anti-war campaign. She moved to the public arena last month when she staged a vigil outside the Bush family ranch in Texas, demanding a meeting with the president.

    As her supporters applauded, she was taken away by police and was expected to be released after being processed on minor charges.

    The law won.

    So, too, did Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan. Currently, a Google News search for her name and the word “arrested” returns 1,130 articles and many more related entries. Ahhhh … Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan scored another attention fix at last!

    Still, John Hinderaker at Power Line finds reason to question Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan’s judgement in this little circus of civil disobediance.

    I may be wrong about this, but I don’t think it is wise for Sheehan to go out of her way to cultivate associations between her anti-war protest and similar events in the 1960s. I really don’t think that images of her being carried away by policemen, hobnobbing with Communists, marching with Joan Baez and Jesse Jackson, etc., are helpful to her cause. I think such actions will cause light bulbs to go on in many Americans’ heads as they realize, “Oh, she’s one of those!” [emphasis in original]

    So true, but also true is the concern that the media will fail to convey to the public the radically out-of-the-mainstream nature of Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan’s statements and associates. Had the media already been willing to objectively do so, Mother Sheehan would have been but a pitied blip on the nation’s radar.

  • D.C. Protests: Associated Press Picks Side

    In straight news reporting, the lede is everything. The opening paragraph should carry the gist of the entire article and answer all of the fundamental questions of who, what, when, where and how. Why is questionable, as it can paint a bias on the story or be immediately undetermined.

    This weekend, the American capital of Washington, D.C. saw back-to-back gatherings of anti-war and pro-troop rallies. The Associated Press’ lede paragraph for today’s rally in support of the U.S. efforts in Iraq is as follows:

    Support for U.S. troops fighting abroad mixed with anger toward anti-war demonstrators at home as hundreds of people, far fewer than organizers had expected, rallied Sunday on the National Mall just a day after a massive protest against the war in Iraq.

    My attention is immediately drawn towards the mention of anger. Actually, my first reaction is that I dare you to diagram that rather poorly written sentence. Past that, I’m taken by the mention of anger in the lede. Why? Well, let’s look at the lede from the AP’s coverage of Saturday’s rally.

    Opponents of the war in Iraq rallied by the thousands Saturday to demand the return of U.S. troops, staging a day of protest, song and remembrance of the dead in marches through Washington and other American and European cities.

    What? Song and remembrance? No anger?

    Well, judging by photoblogging by Michelle Malkin and Davids Medienkritik, I would beg to differ. There seems to have been a great deal of unreported anger at Saturday’s shin dig. Meanwhile, Gateway Pundit followed Saturday’s speeches and seems to have identified a great deal of anger, as well as a great deal of failed leftist talking points.

    So why no mention of anger Saturday while it made the lede Sunday? Well, I’ll leave it to one of the best bloggers out there, Jeff Goldstein, to absolutely rip the puff piece that was Saturday’s “news” story by the A.P. Suffice it to say that the A.P. has happily allowed the slant of their writers to overwhelm their supposed straight news reporting.

    As the Indepundit allows a Marine in Iraq to point out, this weekend was critical for the home front of the war against the radical Islamist movement and our efforts in Iraq.

    Thanks for doing this. The battlefield this weekend will be on the homefront. The only thing that truly concerns me is that the seditionist groups will succeed in causing the American people to lose their will and the enemy will win politically the victory we have denied them militarily.

    Let there be no mistake: we are winning here. Morale is outstanding and we are successfully taking the fight to the enemy. You will see a successful referendum in less than 3 weeks and a successfull election in less than 3 months. I see the positive resuts of our actions everyday. The MSM ignores or denigrates almost every piece of positive news, exaggerates every negative and makes the enemy and his actions out to be more than they are.

    They absolutely cannot defeat us militarily and have no strategic vision except the destruction of all who oppose them. A strategy based on such a negative is doomed to fail, unless we cut and run. That is the enemy’s only chance to win. The biggest threat we face is a determined enemy who will not quit because, like the Vietnamese they see the possibility of victory because of a perceived willingness to quit at home.

    Folks, in the war the Marine describes, the A.P. has long since chosen sides. This weekend, they made it very freakin’ obvious.

  • Sen. Clinton Opposes Museum at WTC Site

    Shrewd. Very shrewd.

    Sen. Hillary Clinton is opposing a freedom museum planned for ground zero, citing concerns raised by the families of the World Trade Center victims who say the proposed museum would dishonor the dead.

    The International Freedom Center last week released a report saying the museum “will tangibly link Sept. 11 and the lives of its victims to humanity’s greatest idea: freedom.”

    In addition to the terrorist attacks, its exhibits would deal with events such as the fall of the Berlin Wall, efforts such as the Civil Rights Movement, and documents such as the Declaration of Independence and the South African constitution.

    But relatives of some of the Sept. 11 victims say it would over shadow a memorial museum and dishonor the 2,749 people who died there by fostering debate about the attacks.

    “I am troubled by the serious concerns that family members and first responders have expressed to me,” Clinton said Friday. “I cannot support the IFC.”

    Clinton said she does not think plans should move forward until the rebuilding agency, Lower Manhattan Development Corp., addresses the families’ concerns.

    While I agree with Sen. Clinton in this regard, I have serious doubts that we reached the same position for the same reasons.

    More on the IFC and the families’ campaign can be found at their site, Take Back the Memorial.

  • Non-Rita Quick Hits

    Defense says Lynndie England easily influenced by lover

    Army Pfc. Lynndie England’s attorneys, marshaling their defense for the first time Wednesday, laid blame for her participation in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal on her blind love for and trust of soldier Charles Graner Jr., whom the Army put in charge of part of the dangerous Iraqi facility.

    England, who attended special-education classes for much of her childhood, has learned to rely on strong authority figures, her lead attorney said, and that left her vulnerable to Graner in Abu Ghraib, where their unit took dozens of photos and videos of naked prisoners in humiliating positions in late 2003. Graner has already been convicted.

    “He’s older than I am. He’s been around. He’s experienced,” her attorney, Capt. Jonathan Crisp, said of England’s feelings. “He’s a corrections officer in the civilian world. He must know what’s going on. I love him; he loves me. Everybody looks up to him.”

    England, 22, a reservist from West Virginia, stands accused of two counts of conspiracy, four counts of mistreatment of prisoners and one count of indecent acts in connection with the photos. If convicted of all counts, she could face an 11-year prison sentence.

    I doubt strongly that this defense will stand up, as England, like every soldier, was well versed in the Universal Code of Military Justice. Peer pressure or love or stupidity ain’t an out. The poster child for the anti-war left’s (read New York Time’s) Abu Ghraib campaign has to pay her due.

    Pelosi willing to give up S.F. funds for recovery

    House Minority Leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco said Tuesday she was willing to return to the federal Treasury $70 million designated for San Francisco projects in the new highway and transportation bill and use the money to help pay for Hurricane Katrina recovery efforts.

    Well, obviously that portion of federal spending was expendable. If only we could find some other places to cut spending.

    Sheehan’s Anti-War Campaign Now in D.C.

    Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan pledged Wednesday to “force change to happen” during protest speeches outside the White House and Capitol.

    Sheehan arrived in Washington after a three-week cross-country bus tour that began near President Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas. She is expected to participate in an anti-Iraq war rally Saturday that organizers hope could draw tens of thousands of people.

    Sheehan, whose 24-year-old son, Army Spc. Casey Sheehan, was killed last year in Iraq, wants Bush to explain why he sent the United States to war and say what steps he will take to end the conflict.

    “This is where we will force change to happen because we the people of America are the checks and balances on this government,” she said. “And we will end this war.”

    […]

    Sheehan’s one-woman protest in Texas this August re-energized the anti-war movement as well as supporters of the U.S.-led invasion and of American troops serving in Iraq. Rallies in opposition to the anti-war protesters also are set for this weekend in the capital.

    I’ve already given my thoughts on Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan. I’ll leave it to Confederate Yankee to nail what is missing from WaPo’s story:

    The AP, Washington Post, and other news sources gleefully mentioned Cindy Sheehan’s march on the White House this afternoon. With the exception of Reuters, however, they were all more than willing to forego this little tidbit of information:

    “Mrs Sheehan was joined by about 30 supporters in her march down Pennsylvania Avenue to deliver a letter to Bush urging him to pull the troops out of Iraq.”

    That’s all, folks. I count 29 people. This is her entire protest party. Including Cindy.

    Hamas chief hints at compromise

    THE militant Islamic group Hamas could one day accept the existence of the state of Israel and negotiate, one of its political leaders said yesterday in an unprecedented sign of compromise.

    For years, Hamas has criticised the ruling Fatah movement of the Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud Abbas, for allegedly selling out claims to all of historic Palestine by recognising Israel and confining the Palestinian struggle to the West Bank and Gaza Strip areas occupied in the 1967 Middle East war.

    But Mohammed Ghazal, a respected figure within the movement from the West Bank city of Nablus, said yesterday: “The [Hamas] charter is not the Koran.

    “Historically, we believe all of Palestine belongs to the Palestinians, but we’re talking now about reality, about political solutions. The realities are different.”

    Hamas is about to join the Palestinian Authority’s political system by participating in January’s legislative elections.

    Analysts differed over whether Mr Ghazal’s comments suggested Hamas might take a more moderate approach.

    The movement has made it clear it will not disarm its military wing, responsible for dozens of suicide bombings against civilian and military targets, even after the election.

    Mr Ghazal’s remarks were described as “unusual” and “a new language” by Ziyad Abu Amr, a Palestinian MP who is also an expert on the movement. But they elicited cool reactions from other leading figures within Hamas and from Israel.

    The new language is a reaction to a possible line in the sand by Israel about Hamas’ role in upcoming PA elections. Israel, which has already willingly and unilaterally withdrawn from the Gaza Strip, has certainly earned a little cooperation from the Palestinian side, though I have no faith in Hamas actually making any serious steps toward a mutually beneficial future. I expect this development to be little more than a reactive twitch on the face of a terrorist organization that once claimed it was politically ready to rule Palestine but currently sees the Palestinians as ungovernable.

  • Cindy Sheehan: Fighting for a Sixteenth Minute

    My last blogging on Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan ended with a look at the time remaining for her relevance:

    Tick … tick … tick … tick …

    Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, the very publicly grieving and liberally financed mother of fallen Casey Sheehan, is on the verge of wrapping up a 25-state tour against American involvement in the Iraqi theater. Haven’t heard much about it? Well, that’s because August is over and the media has a new flavor-of-the-month by the name of Katrina, in turn now on the clock.

    Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, however, refuses to go softly into that good night of anonymity. After a failed NYC rally, Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan has decided to go whining into that good night with a claim of injury.

    Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan said Tuesday she was hurt slightly in a scuffle that erupted when police broke up a rally as she was at the microphone.

    An organizer was arrested for using amplification without a permit.

    “I was speaking and someone grabbed my backpack and pulled me back pretty roughly,” Sheehan said in a telephone interview Tuesday, referring to the rally Monday in Union Square.

    “I think their use of force was pretty excessive for someone that didn’t have a permit,” said Sheehan, who said she was not roughed up directly by police but was jostled when officers broke up the rally and arrested organizer Paul Zulkowitz.

    “I was shoved around,” said Sheehan, the grieving mother whose 26-day vigil near President Bush’s Texas ranch sparked anti-war protests around the country.

    Zulkowitz was released after being given a summons for charges of unauthorized use of a sound device and disorderly conduct.

    Paul Browne, the chief police spokesman, said Sheehan had finished speaking when officers arrested Zulkowitz, who had been repeatedly warned that he didn’t have a permit.

    Meanwhile, Bob Owens of Confederate Yankee has decided to try to slam the door on the legend of Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan with a one-two combination.

    First, the left hook, a potentially premature look at the rally in question and its ramifications:

    Do not be overly surprised if history decides that September 19, 2005, was the day that the anti-war movement died in the United States.

    In a true-blue New York Metropolitan area of 22 million people, the anti-war movement’s greatest star, a woman with “absolute” moral authority according to the NY Times own Maureen Dowd and branded the “Rosa Parks of the anti-war movement” by hopeful liberals, Cindy Sheehan managed to draw just 150 supporters, or 0.00068-percent of the tri-state metro area, to her well-advertised speech in Hyde Park.

    Then the right cross, an actual comparison of Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan to Rosa Parks:

    Rosa Parks… was the figurehead of a cause that fought to free an entire race who were being oppressed in their own country.
    Cindy Sheehan… was the figurehead of a cause that fights to defeat one man.

    Rosa Parks… fought the system to obtain constitutional rights.
    Cindy Sheehan… says our constitution isn’t worth fighting for.

    Rosa Parks… was “tired of giving in.”
    Cindy Sheehan… wants for nothing more than for the United States to give in.

    Mr. Owens has more, so go give him a gander. Meanwhile, my lingering question about Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan is this: Is there some sort of methadone equivalent for limelight addiction?

    Tick … tick … tick … tick …

    Related — Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan blogging:

  • Carnival of Liberty XII

    Let’s make it an even dozen.

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community‘s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Sunni and the Conspirators. As a twist, Sunni asked for contributors to adhere to a theme of personal liberty; some did, while others exercised their personal liberty to not do so. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • Carnival of Liberty XI

    Welcome to the Carnival of Liberty XI: Freddy vs. Predator at Red Dawn (Wolverines!!!) of the Dead.

    But first, a few preliminaries.

    This carnival is primarily, though not exclusively, the work of the Life, Liberty, Property community, and I’d like to thank its founder, Eric, for the opportunity to host this week’s round-up.

    Postings are listed in the order they were received, so don’t stop reading after the first few. That said, as host I have arbitrarily decided to designate a few personal favorites with the groovy tank from the classic Atari Combat game. Yeah, I loved my M-1, but Atari’s little beauty could guide its rounds back and forth via joystick (on some settings, that is). Do check out the other entries — personal tastes may vary.

    Be sure to visit the concession stand for popcorn and soda. Now, away we go with Carnival of Liberty XI.

    From T F Stern’s Rantings, Simple Reminder from a Wise Man. Mr. Stern looks back on the spirit felt throughout America after 9/11 and how that spirit and our liberties are under assault today.

    A destructive wedge has been applied to our Union, one that attempts to silence our uniquely American Spirit, a Spirit that says, “We can do it; with the help of God, we can do anything!” There is an under current tearing at the foundation of Liberty. It has the appearance of being for the collective good of the group while destroying the Liberty of each individual in that group; in other words, it’s a lie.

    From Fair Vote Watch, New Orleans, meet Naples ’44. Jarndyce contrasts the recent mayhem in New Orleans with 1944 Naples after the Allied invasion of Italy.

    Lewis’s masterpiece, Naples ’44 does recount the breakdown of order after the Allied invasion of Italy: petty crime, prostitution, kleptomania, freebooting, black-marketeering. Survival, yes, but Lewis’s tale isn’t one about the end of civilisation

    From The Sharpener, ID cards by stealth. Nosemonkey rants against the possibility of ID cards being forced upon the nations of the EU.

    Apparently the reason some people are wary of the EU is that it “does not appear to give sufficient priority to offering practical solutions which make a difference to some of the issues of greatest concern” – namely EEEVIL TERRORISTS, organised crime and asylum seekers. Let’s ignore the fact that people have been wary of the concept of the EU since its inception, shall we? And while we’re at it ignore that the original concept was economic, not judicial… Done? Excellent! Now that we’ve constructed a false history we can make that fiction fit our arguments. Hurrah!

    From Searchlight Crusade, Sites That Cover Specific Issues. Dan Melson provides a handy and lengthy list of sites that can be referenced by those looking for information in a variety of categories. Further, Dan hopes to enhance the list with help from readers.

    This is intended as one of those resource posts, a list of which blogs and personal websites make a habit of covering certain issues, or a list of “Go To” blogs and websites for various issues.

    From Below The Beltway, Santorum On Liberty. Doug looks at a schism between the likes of Republican Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania and the libertarian wing of Santorum’s own party. Doug turns the post into a series with follow-on pieces here and here.

    Therefore, I found this post on Catallarchy about the ideas expressed in Santorum’s book It Takes A Family: Conservatism And The Common Good very interesting, especially in the comparison of Santorum’s book with Barry Goldwater’s ground-breaking Conscience Of A Conservative.

    From Political Calculations, Is Economic Freedom the Key to Peace? Ironman adds his emphasis to the findings of a recently-released study.

    The Canadian-based Fraser Institute has released its Economic Freedom of the World 2005 Annual Report (available online as a 1.96MB PDF document). The report was primarily written by James Gwartney and Robert Lawson (of Division of Labour fame), but the most remarkable findings of the report were contributed by Columbia University political scientist Erik Gartzke, who found that economic freedom is an extremely important contributor to promoting peace between nations!

    From Critical Mastiff, Are Progressive Taxes a Good Thing? While many opposed to the system of progressive taxation from the angles of reduced incentive on the individual or unequal treatment of supposedly equal citizens, Mastiff examines the issue from the ramifications on government behavior.

    Now, at some level the government’s policies are constrained by the need to increase tax revenue—perhaps even to maximize revenue. Therefore, the government will more readily pursue policies that will generate more taxes than those generating fewer, let alone those policies decreasing tax revenues. (That this theory only works if our congressmen understand basic economics is, of course, its gaping flaw. But regardless.)

    In our present fiscal situation, wealthy people and corporations pay high Federal income taxes, and poorer people pay no income taxes at all or very few. Therefore, it makes sense for our rational actor, the Federal Government, to make laws that give preference to the rich and corporations over the poor, since tax revenues respond much more quickly when the rich get richer than when the poor get less poor.

    From Fearless Philosophy for Free Minds, Yes, I’m Angry About Gas Prices Too. Stephen Littau feels the pinch at the pump but points his anger in a less-than-common direction.

    Unlike so many Americans however, my anger is directed mostly at the environmental extremist greenie-weenies, the politicians who pander to them, an American public that is largely economically illiterate, and the politicians/interest groups who exploit this illiteracy.

    From Resistance is futile!, Our Future. Oregon’s dark-horse gubernatorial candidate sits down with a couple of bloggers.

    Why us?

    Because Atkinson is running a different kind of campaign. He is reaching out to alternative media and reaching out to the many concerned voters who feel disenfranchised by the status quo.

    […]

    So what did the three of us get out of this meeting?

    Well, in a nutshell, I gained confidence that Jason Atkinson is the right man to run Oregon.

    From Publicola, the related Homes and That Ain’t Right. Publicola examines the consequences of forced evacuations from Katrina-ravaged N’awlins.

    “As flood waters receded inch by inch Tuesday, New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin authorized law enforcement officers and the U.S. military to force the evacuation of all residents who refuse to heed orders to leave the dark, dangerous city.”

    I have serious misgivings about the idea of the government forcing someone from their home. That’s not taking into account the method they will likely use. Government has two methods to act – force or threat of force. Neither one is appealing in this situation.

    From The Pubcrawler, Iceland and Estonia. TKC looks at the success blooming in two European nations stemming from economic freedoms and ponders the lessons to be learned.

    I wonder how long it will take America to answer the clue phone on this? Our toying with socialism is dragging us down. There is a choice to be made. Do we want the failure of the European model and its corresponding bleak outlook and suffering or do we want to return to our free-market roots and thrive like Estonia and Iceland.

    FromWILLisms.com, Quotational Therapy: Part 43 — Huey P. Long, Socialist. Will Franklin looks at the roots of Louisiana’s political scene that has been pushed into the spotlight of late.

    Many of Louisiana’s problems today are rooted in its long-term one-party rule. The notoriously corrupt Louisiana political machine has waned quite a bit over the past several decades, but it still lingers, particularly within New Orleans. We can look back to infamous Louisiana Governor (and Senator) Huey Long for insight into Louisiana’s political culture

    From Satire, French President Chirac To Deliver “Vive La Louisiane Libre” Speech From Hospital Balcony. Self-named Mr. Satire uses the N’awlins situation to take a shot at Jacques.

    French President Jacques Chirac has been admitted to a military hospital. The hospital said that the president is being treated for “lack of vision, diarrhea of brain and fracture of a spine.”

    From The Unrepentant Individual, On Constitutional Interpretation. Brad examines the ramifications of drifting from the written word of the U.S. Constitution.

    The overarching power in America is the Rule of Law. It is a blueprint, the first of its kind, that declares the terms of the social contract between individual and government. It is a simple, short, and powerful document, which can be understood by any adult with an eighth-grade education. And if it needs to change with changing times, there is an amendment process by which this can be accomplished.

    So why have we messed it up so badly?

    From NYgirl, A Crisis They Cried. NYGirl, a very welcome Carnival of Liberty newcomer, takes a critical look at the downside of foreign aid in Niger.

    But, is aid the answer? The flood of foreign aid creates economic problems by driving down the price of locally produced grain & produce, forcing farmers who might otherwise be self sufficient into poverty. It also leads to the governments of the recipient countries to become less reform oriented as they lose the incentive to do so.

    Ironically, it may even cause hunger, as has happened in some villages where the men have locked up the surplus grain & forbidden its consumption by their wives & children in order to receive aid. These men have an excellent understanding of the workings of aid agencies & are happy to exploit them. The women & children of Niger are paying the price.

    From ROFASix, Rebuilding New Orleans. NOTR considers the idea of rebuilding N’awlins, not with its problematic past but with a blank slate.

    We have a chance to do something different in rebuilding New Orleans. If government falls back into the same old rut of handing out money it is doomed to return to what it was before Katrina hit, the most corrupt city in America.

    From TMH’s Bacon Bits, Remembering and Grieving …and a Warning. Bergbikr looks back on 9/11 and warns of lessons learned since.

    The past few years have seen Jihadist attacks occur around the globe. Some are targeted at centers of Western civilization from which emanate our philosophy of individual worth and personal freedom and religious tolerance, principles that are anathema to those of the Death Culture. Muslims too are not spared the sword or the suicide bomber when they cooperate with the West or themselves deviate from the extreme readings of the Quran by this medieval set of thugs.

    From Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave, Liberty Is The Right Policy. Using Katrina as a lens, Eric examines the fundamental problem of knee-jerk, freedom-restricting responses to crises.

    Why is it that the first instinct of the majority of our politicians when there is a problem of some sort is to restrict people’s freedoms and liberties? Even more importantly, why is the instinct of the majority of the citizens to go along with such an idea? Especially considering that time after time the end results don’t come out the way people think they will.

    Well, that wraps up the Carnival. Maybe. As needed, I’ll add late submissions up until I feel it’s time to hand over the reigns to next week’s host, Sunni Maravillosa. A final thanks to all contributors; I’ve enjoyed reading your work. I will attempt to send a well-deserved trackback from this post to all of you but Alas! I have yet to successfully manage the feat, try as I may.

  • Last Call: Carnival of Liberty XI

    Target Centermass will be hosting the next installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community‘s Carnival of Liberty tomorrow.

    Information of submitting entries can be found here.

  • Reminder: Carnival of Liberty XI

    Target Centermass will be hosting the next installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community‘s Carnival of Liberty on Tuesday, Sept. 13.

    Information of submitting entries can be found here.

  • Upcoming: Carnival of Liberty XI

    Target Centermass will be hosting the next installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community‘s Carnival of Liberty.

    Entries can be submitted by a variety of means:

    • Put a comment with your entry’s link on this post
    • Send an email to Carnival of Liberty at gmail dot com
    • Submit using the Conservative Cat’s form

    However, my preferred submission mechanism would be an email to me, Gunner, at targetcentermass.net. An email subject of “Hey, dolt, read this submission” is a guaranteed means of attention. Seriously. I will also pay strict attention to variations on the “dolt” portion, so feel free to have fun.