Right Wing Nut House

6/6/2005

IKE’S D-DAY MESSAGE AND A PRAYER FROM FDR

Filed under: History — Rick Moran @ 7:07 am

Here’s the message sent by General Dwight Eisenhower to the troops and read to them prior to the battle.:

Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force!

You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward which we have
striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The
hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march with you.
In company with our brave Allies and brothers-in-arms on
other Fronts, you will bring about the destruction of the German war
machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of
Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.

Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well
equipped and battle hardened. He will fight savagely.

But this is the year 1944! Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of
1940-41. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats,
in open battle, man-to-man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their
strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground. Our Home
Fronts have given us an overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions
of war, and placed at our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men.
The tide has turned! The free men of the world are marching together to
Victory!

I have full confidence in your courage and devotion to duty and skill in
battle. We will accept nothing less than full Victory!

Good luck! And let us beseech the blessing of Almighty God upon this great
and noble undertaking.

SIGNED: Dwight D. Eisenhower

This prayer was part of FDR’s announcement of the beginning of the invasion. Both Tom Browkaw in The Greatest Generation and Stephen Ambrose in D-Day: June 6, 1944 have pointed out the profound effect this prayer had on the people of the United States. Churches and synogogues were full as people gathered to pray for the success of the invasion and for God to watch over their loved ones. It truly was a day when the nation collectively held its breath.

Last night, when I spoke with you about the fall of Rome, I knew at that moment that troops of the United States and our Allies were crossing the Channel in another and greater operation. It has come to pass with success thus far.

And so, in this poignant hour, I ask you to join with me in prayer:

Almighty God: our sons, pride of our Nation, this day have set upon a mighty endeavor, a struggle to preserve our Republic, our religion, and our civilization, and to set free a suffering humanity.

Lead them straight and true; give strength to their arms, stoutness to their hearts, steadfastness in their faith.

They will need Thy blessings. Their road will be long and hard. For the enemy is strong. He may hurl back our forces. Success may not come with rushing speed, but we shall return again and again; and we know that by Thy grace, and by the righteousness of our cause, our sons will triumph.

They will be sore tried, by night and by day without rest - until the victory is won. The darkness will be rent by noise and flame. Men’s souls will be shaken with the violences of war.

For these men are lately drawn from the ways of peace. They fight not for the lust of conquest. They fight to end conquest. They fight to liberate. They fight to let justice arise, and tolerance and good will among all Thy people. They yearn but for the end of battle, for their return to the haven of home.

Some will never return. Embrace these, Father, and receive them, thy heroic servants, into Thy kingdom.

And for us at home — fathers, mothers, children, wives, sisters and brothers of brave men overseas — whose thoughts and prayers are ever with them — help us, Almighty God, to rededicate ourselves in renewed faith in Thee in this hour of great sacrifice.

Many people have urged that I call the Nation into a single day of special prayer. But because the road is long and the desire is great, I ask that our people devote themselves in a countenance of prayer. As we rise to each new day, and again when each day is spent, let words of prayer be on our lips, invoking Thy help to our efforts.

Give us strength, too — strength in our daily tasks, to redouble the contributions we make in the physical and the material support of our armed forces.

And let our hearts be stout, to wait out the long travail, to bear sorrows that may come, to impart our courage unto our sons wheresoever they may be.

And, O Lord, give us faith. Give us faith in Thee; faith in our sons; faith in each other; faith in our united crusade. Let not the keenness of our spirit ever be dulled. Let not the impacts of temporary events, of temporal matters of but fleeting moment — let not these deter us in our unconquerable purpose.

With Thy blessing, we shall prevail over the unholy forces of our enemy. Help us to conquer the apostles of greed and racial arrogancies. Lead us to the saving of our country, and with our sister nations into a world unity that will spell a sure peace — a peace invulnerable to the schemings of unworthy men. And a peace that will let all men live in freedom, reaping the just rewards of their honest toil. Thy will be done, Almighty God. Amen.

Pres. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, June 6, 1944

REMEMBERING WHY I LOVE HISTORY

Filed under: History — Rick Moran @ 6:37 am

One of the reasons I love history is that it forces you to travel backward in time and actually live the events that the historian is writing about. You’re compelled to experience the event from the perspective of someone from that time, that era. What do you believe? What are your prejudices? How would you interact with the characters? What would you see? Whose side would you be on?

A million questions answered differently by each and every one of us. This is especially true when I read about transcendent historical occurrences, those “hinges of history” where events transpire that shape the present and whose effects will be felt far into the future.

“Real” historians don’t give as much weight to individual events, They point to underlying forces and historical trends that one single event rarely impacts. That’s why for the longest time, counterfactual or alternative history was debunked by historians as an intellectual parlor game, a pointless exercise in sophistry.

This attitude on the part of professional historians may be softening a bit thanks in large part to Niall Ferguson’s compilation of scholarly alternative history scenarios in Virtual History. The book is worth reading if only to peruse the first 90 pages where Ferguson gives a history of historiography, or the study of how history has been viewed and written since the time of Homer. It explains a lot about why contemporary historians pooh-pooh the idea of counterfactualism and how a quasi-Marxist or deterministic view has dominated the writing of history for most of the last century.

That being said, I believe there is enormous value to looking at individual historic events and how the decisions made by so few affected the destiny of so many.

Today is the 61st anniversary of the most important single event of the 20th century: D-Day. I’ll get a lot of flack for saying that from some of my readers who have been kind enough to share their love of history with me. Some would point to the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima or the Apollo Moon Landing. Perhaps a hundred years from now some historian will point to another event, a decision made in obscurity which will have consequences that at the moment are hidden from us.

But there are aspects to D-Day that make it one of the true “make or break” moments in the history of man. First and foremost is the fact that if the invasion had failed, if Eisenhower would have been forced to abandon the beachhead, the consequences would have been catastrophic. Stalin, who had been clamoring for two years for the Allies to open a second front against the Germans, could have decided to make a separate peace with Hitler. We know now that he contemplated such a move several times. Whether Hitler would have been smart enough to let him off the hook is another matter. But freeing up 3 million German troops from fighting Russians to manning the defenses of the Western Wall would have made any additional attempt to land in France problematic.

If Stalin didn’t make a separate peace, then surely he would have been in trouble himself. With the prospect of an Allied invasion in France dead for a year, Hitler would have been able to transfer the bulk of his western armies to the east in an attempt to defeat the Red Army. At the very least, the breakout battles fought by the Red Army later that summer may have had a different outcome indeed. The Wehrmacht could have blocked any Russian advances that would have prolonged the war by at least a year, possibly two. Just think of the headaches for Roosevelt and the Americans who were also fighting the Japanese in the Pacific.

Ain’t history fun?

How about the Presidential election of 1944? Would the American people look at the failure of D-Day as Roosevelt’s fault? Or the British parliamentary elections in 1945? Would the British have been willing to turn Churchill out with the war still going on? What would the delay have meant to the post-war British turn to the left? What about the independence of India? Would the British have been so willing to partition India with the Nazi threat still present? What about the mass of supplies that we were sending to Stalin and Chiang Kai Shek in China? If we were going to make another attempt at breaching the Atlantic Wall, wouldn’t our troops need those supplies? Would Chiang have been forced to surrender to the Japanese? Would Stalin have been able to hold on? Would we have used the atom bomb on Germany?

The list of “what if” questions about D-Day are limited only by one’s imagination. And as Stephen Ambrose points out in his must-read history D-Day: June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II, the success or failure of the invasion depended entirely on a pitifully small number of men, the first waves that hit the beach at dawn on that fateful day. This was especially true at Omaha Beach.

The carnage, the confusion, the terror present on that ridiculously small strip of insignificant French territory became the crucible by which our present was forged. The entire war effort had telescoped down to the actions of less than 8,000 American soldiers who were pinned down by some of the most intense fire ever experienced by American fighting men. The original plan, which called for the American forces to break out from the beach and up several draws to a causeway where ideally, they would link up with Allied forces from other landing sites had fallen by the wayside. The troops hadn’t landed at their designated points on the beach, German obstacles hadn’t been cleared, the tanks that were supposed to land with the troops had sunk into the English Channel, and many, many of the troops officers were dead or wounded.

It was at this point that the ultimate test of civilizations played itself out. Would the sons of democracy be able to defeat the sons of dictatorship? As Ambrose dramatically points out, the answer was a resounding yes. Trained as they were to think on the battlefield and encouraged to improvise if necessary, one by one - first in small groups and then by company - the America’s made their way up the murderous bluffs, through the minefields, and began to silence the German guns. There was no plan to it, no coordination. Just individual American soldiers taking it upon themselves to do the job. In short, for all of Eisenhower’s careful planning, it was the improvisation and sheer courage of the American soldier that won the day and made June 6 a date to remember victory rather than tragic defeat.

I wonder, would I have had that kind of courage? What would I have done if it were me trapped behind the seawall with mortars and machine guns firing incessantly, casualties all around me, many of my friends killed or wounded, and suffering from the shock and terror associated with battle? Would I have been a leader or a follower? What would I have been thinking?

That’s why I love history. Doesn’t asking questions like that tell you something about yourself? It isn’t important if there are answers, it’s the questions that make you think.

Those beaches at Normandy have been quiet for 61 years now. The men who gave the “last full measure of devotion,” whose young lives were snuffed out in a cause greater than themselves are still being mourned by the ever shrinking number of comrades who survived them. And as we look back and marvel at their sacrifice and courage, we do them honor by asking ourselves if placed in their boots, would we have done as well?

The answer, if there is one, reveals as much about ourselves as it does about them.

Cross Posted at Blogger News Network

6/5/2005

MORE KORAN ABUSE

Filed under: General — Rick Moran @ 5:27 pm

A United States Marine was sentenced today to 20 years hard labor for looking sideways at the Koran.

The offense occurred at the Guantanamo Detention Center where Muslim prisoners have filed numerous complaints against guards who they say routinely desecrate the Islamic holy book. Some of the desecrations include:

1. Wearing dirty white gloves while handling the Koran

2. Not being deferential enough towards the holy book. One inmate, Muhammed Ahkbar complained that Marine guards routinely failed to “bow low and scrape their heads against the floor” while in the presence of the Koran. “It is only right that the infidel dogs show homage to Allah in this manner.” Ahkbar said.

3. Guards not being ready for pop quizzes on the Koran by inmates.

4. Guards not washing their hands after urinating and then handling the Koran. This led to a rumor in the facility that a guard had actually peed on the holy book. But after a 6 month investigation costing taxpayers more than $1 million, no proof of the allegation could be found.

In addition to Koran desecration, inmates complain of torture and mistreatment. “My bed is lumpy.” said Saad Rafjani. “I prefer the Serta Extra Firm queen size but these defilers before Allah gave me the twin size.”

One inmate complained about the food. “The lamb is overcooked, the Khoubz tastes like the inside of my AK-47, and you can see right through the water!”

Pentagon spokesman Lawrence DiRita claims that the inmates are comfortable and well fed.

LIVE 8: SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW

Filed under: WORLD POLITICS — Rick Moran @ 8:05 am

We live in an age when the confluence of the political culture and the culture of celebrity have merged to form a seamless, media driven whole, a world where rock stars and movie legends are asked to comment on a wide variety scientific and technical issues whose complexity and in some cases obscurity, would tax the combined faculties of many institutions of higher learning.

There are some, including author Theodore H. White who traces this marriage of cultures to John F. Kennedy’s fascination with Hollywood and in particular, his study of the question of why the notoriety of people like Clark Gable and Marlyn Monroe transcended the small artists community of Hollywood and made them larger than life characters to the American people. Kennedy was the first Presidential candidate to use Hollywood stars in a huge way. All of a sudden, reporters were asking Sammy Davis Junior his views on race relations (questions that Davis generally refused to answer). Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Kennedy’s brother in law Peter Lawford not only campaigned for the President, they were included in the Presidential circle of friends and thus identified closely with Kennedy’s personality and policies.

It was the Viet Nam War that galvanized Hollywood and made movie stars into activists. With the breakdown of the studio system where stars were virtual prisoners of movie moguls and thus subject to strict limitations on their public persona, movie stars were suddenly free to comment on and participate in anything they wished. While certainly a liberating experience, the war spawned a generation of Hollywood stars whose extreme liberal politics led them to ever more outrageous public commentary on things they knew very little about. Do the thoughts of these celebrities have real world consequences? Ask the apple growers of America.

In 1989. a little known preservative used by about 5% of apple growers called Alar became a focus of concern because of it’s possible cancer causing ingredients. CBS 60 Minutes produced a scary story about what it termed “the most potent carcinogen used in our food supply.” Less than a week later, Congress held hearings on Alar that featured several experts from the National Resources Defense Council, the EPA, and the National Academy of Science. The hearing also featured actress Meryl Streep, whose dramatic testimony was seen on all three network newscasts that evening.

It was a perfect storm of high profile celebrity marrying up with the politics of the environmental movement. And it caused a panic that cost the apple growers of America $375 million in losses.

The only problem with this story is that it was a fairy tale:

Mass hysteria ensued. At a parent’s request, state troopers chased a school bus to confiscate a student’s apple. School administrators had apples and apple products summarily destroyed. Apple markets rotted overnight.

The NRDC, however, prospered. Fenton, its media consultant, stated in an interview for Propaganda Review: “The [PR] campaign was designed so that revenue would flow back to NRDC from the public. The group sold a book about pesticides through a 900 number on the ‘Donahue’ show and to date 90,000 copies have been sold.” Fenton’s strategy succeeded to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

At the same conference, environmental-health expert A. Alan Moghissi, Ph.D., then of the University of Maryland, stated: “The Alar controversy is a classic case of poor science applied to a societal decision, resulting in a poor final decision.”

Also at the conference, Dr. Richard Adamson, then director of the NCI’s Division of Cancer Etiology, stated: “The risk of eating an apple treated with Alar is less than the risk of eating a peanut butter sandwich or a well-done hamburger.” More recently, Adamson described the cancer risk from eating Alar-treated apples as “nonexistent.”

Even though both the EPA and the NAS testified at the hearing that the risk of eating Alar treated apples was extraordinarily low, it was Meryl Streep’s ignorant rant against apple growers deliberately trying to give children cancer that people heard.

And now Bob Geldof - rock star, concert promoter, organizer of famine relief for Africa, and all around celebrity saint - has decided to enter the world of international finance. The incongruity of someone who became famous through his participation in a punk rock band called “Boomtown Rats” who now wants to lecture the developed world on such arcane subjects as aid packages and third world debt relief seems to be lost on the media who are trumpeting Geldof’s latest brainstorm to the skies. Called “Live8″ because a series of concerts and protest march will coincide with a meeting of the G-8 in Britain this July, Geldof is following in the footsteps of that other globetrotting celebrity, U-2’s Bono whose expertise includes lecturing the developed world about famine, the AIDS pandemic, and other African issues that some have called little more than ignorant posturing.

According to its website, the goal of Live8 is as follows:

This is without doubt a moment in history where ordinary people can grasp the chance to achieve something truly monumental and demand from the 8 world leaders at G8 an end to poverty.

The G8 leaders have it within their power to alter history. They will only have the will to do so if tens of thousands of people show them that enough is enough.

By doubling aid, fully canceling debt, and delivering trade justice for Africa, the G8 could change the future for millions of men, women and children.”

Canceling some or all of Africa’s huge debt has been on the table of the G-8 for several years. It’s estimated that sub-Saharan Africa alone has $55 billion in debt that it can never repay. It would make sense to cancel at least some of Africa’s crushing debt burden and free up government funds for other development projects.

The problem with Africa, however, isn’t money. And doubling aid to the continent would be something akin to giving a convicted drunk driver his license back with a gift-wrapped bottle of Chivas Regal. Why does Geldof think that Africa has debt problems in the first place? Loans made by western banks and governments to the kleptocratic autocracies that pass for governments on that benighted continent have been swallowed up by both bad people and bad government:

Bitter experience suggests that even if these huge sums were multiplied tenfold, they would do little good. For Africa received £220 billion of aid between 1960 and 1997, the equivalent of six Marshall Plans, and finished up even poorer than before.

With the possible exception of President Robert Mugabe, everyone now accepts that Africa’s central problem is not a shortage of aid but “bad governance”. Put simply, the continent is filled with repressive and incompetent regimes whose chief pastime is grand larceny.

Decades of bitter experience have shown that authoritarianism is the enemy of development. But a British-sponsored commission has dodged an unambiguous demand for every African regime to embrace democracy. It is little short of incredible that this vital issue can still be skirted.

Still more depressing is the report’s coverage of corruption. This, we are told, is a “systemic challenge facing African leaders”. In a continent where Gen Sani Abacha, the late Nigerian dictator, was able to steal between £1 billion and £3 billion in less five years, this is no exaggeration.

Despite facts to the contrary, Geldof has decided that the western world must not only reform it’s aid programs but also “eliminate extreme poverty” whatever that means. And he’s holding western government responsible for this state of affairs due to “trade injustices.”

Breaking down trade barriers is always desirable. But what happens if the trade “injustices” are occurring on both sides of the trade divide? When African nations severely restrict food and electronics imports in favor of bolstering their domestic industries, why should western nations cut off their own noses to spite their faces and give Africans a break on their exports? According to Geldof, there apparently is no reason except “justice” whatever that is.

Geldof’s ignorance is not confined to issues. He also has the political instincts of a marmoset:

Anarchists from around the world are planning to cause chaos at next month’s G8 summit in Gleneagles as a row broke out last night between Bob Geldof and DJ Andy Kershaw over the absence of black musicians at events staged to benefit Africans.

With police fears mounting over Geldof’s call for one million people to protest at the summit, Kershaw last night condemned the almost exclusively white line-up for the pop concerts to coincide with the summit. “If we are going to change the West’s perception of Africa, events like this are the perfect opportunity to do something for Africa’s self-esteem,” he said. “But the choice of artists for the Live8 concerts will simply reinforce the global perception of Africa’s inferiority.”

But The Independent on Sunday can reveal that anarchist groups that have rioted at previous G8 gatherings are planning similar disruptions in Scotland and plan to hijack Geldof’s “long march to freedom” on 6 July and the Make Poverty History rally on 2 July. Anarchist groups will encourage protesters to “Make Capitalism History” instead.

So, for a concert to help call attention to African problems Geldof fails to book African acts? And to top it off, the moonbats are ready to hijack his “Long Walk for Justice” and turn it into a free-for-all. It appears that what Mr. Geldof is good at besides his many accomplishments as a musician is shallow thinking.

Chrenkoff, as usual, gets it exactly right:

It’s so much easier though to have a concert or an appeal for aid or debt forgiveness rather than for political and economic liberty. It’s difficult to imagine Robbie Williams and U2 playing for regime change in country X, or Madonna and Sting performing on stage for economic reform in country Y and international trade liberalization. But these are the things that actually matter. And so our boys from the 42nd Infantry Division are now doing more for the cause of solving world’s problems, than our boys from REM strutting the stage.

To believe that we can wipe out poverty simply by dumping a couple of hundred billion dollars into the hands of ruthless tyrants is worse than absurd; it’s morally dishonest. Proposing bad solutions is worse than not proposing any solutions at all. What Mr. Geldof is doing is using his celebrity to promote policies that not only are wrong, they’d be unattainable even if they were right.

In short, Geldof is fooling himself. And in the process, he’s fostering the notion among the uncritical young that world problems can be solved by singing and dancing and marching.

Would that t’were true. But like the Pied Piper, Geldof is leading the children astray. And what makes it unconscionable is that he’s achieving more notoriety in the process.

Cross Posted at Blogger News Network

6/4/2005

IT’S NICE TO BE WELL THOUGHT OF

Filed under: Blogging — Rick Moran @ 1:57 pm

From Mike Krempasky, we have the definitive statement by those in favor of regulating blogs on what they really think of us:

Finally, we do not believe anyone described as a “blogger” is by definition entitled to the benefit of the press exemption. An individual writing material for distribution on the Internet may or may not be a press entity. While some bloggers may provide a function very similar to more classic media activities, and thus could reasonably be said to fall within the exemption, others surely do not . The test here should be the same test that the Commission has applied in other contexts - is the entity a “press entity” and is it acting in its “legitimate press function”?

Frankly, I could care less whether they want to define me as a “press entity,” which reminds me of something that Jean Luc Picard would be battling on Star Trek…

ATTACK OF THE PRESS ENTITY! Watch as this evil force consumes entire colonies. Will Data be able to figure out the creature’s weakness in time? Or will Picard succeed in communicating with it and discover it’s just a misunderstood evil force, not really dangerous?

Repeat after me; I will not obey any FEC regulations that restrict my freedom of speech.

6/3/2005

TEN MOST HARMFUL BOOKS OF THE 19TH AND 20TH CENTURIES

Filed under: Books — Rick Moran @ 3:19 pm

Human Events Magazine has gone and done it. They assembled a distinguished and surprisingly diverse group of authors, critics, and intellectuals and listed the 10 Most Harmful Books of the 19th and 20th Centuries. (HT: Citzcom)

…So many books to choose from…so few chosen…

The fact is they could have made it “The Hundred Most Harmful, etc.” and still come up short. And even though they included both Darwin’s Origin of Species and Descent of Man in the “Honorable Mention” category - perhaps as a gratuitous slap to contemporary humanists - they actually did a pretty good job. Here are their choices:

1. The Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels

Or, How to Screw up the World In Five Easy Lessons

2. Mein Kampf by You-Know-Who

The first blogger, Hitler’s incoherent rants became a best seller in Germany only after he came to power and people started to give the book as a wedding gift. Also spawned numerous imitators and a cottage industry in accusatory epithets. (See here for the latest)

3. Quotations from Chairman Mao by Mao Zedong

Little known fact: Even though it’s been referred to by moonbats as The Little Red Book when the Chicoms ran out of red paper, they remade the cover, coloring it with the blood of the Gang of Four (which rapidly ballooned into the Gang of Twenty Million). Unfortunately, they soon ran out of people to execute (figuring that 20 million was just about right) and ended up publishing it in China with an aqua-marine cover with a very nice gold leaf binding.

4. The Kinsey Report by Alfred Kinsey

All your sex belong to us.

5. Democracy and Education by John Dewey

Take every crazy idea that’s come up in education over the last 50 years and it will have Dewey’s fingerprints all over it.

6. Das Kapital by Karl Marx

More looniness quoted today by loons who think a “dialectic” is some new kind of phone.

7. The Feminine Mystique by Betty Freidan

The reason why drop-dead gorgeous women are rarely feminists. One look at Freidan and most of her husky, pimple faced, hairy legged followers who think that sex is rape and good looking babes run for cover. The only mystique involved here is what man could have been so castrated as to marry this bitch?

8. The Course of Positive Philosophy by Auguste Comte

More God is dead stuff from a Frenchman. Two strikes right there.

9. Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Nietzsche

God and Superman wasn’t enough for this moonbat, he had to saddle the western world with this incoherent screed against just about everything. Nietzsche was a pest. He was a pill. He was a burr under the saddle of rational thought. And he was Hitler’s fave to boot.

10. General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money by John Maynard Keynes

We can thank this moonbat for the welfare state.

I’m surprised they didn’t find room in there for Jacques Derrida’s Of Grammatology which pretty much began the most destructive social movement of the 20th century, Deconstructionism. Although technically a book about literary criticism, Derrida’s followers pounced on his ideas of textual nonsense and turned literary criticism into damaging critiques of western civilization. We’re still trying to recover from that movement’s destruction of the rational left in Europe and to some extent the United States.

Finally, another really harmful book that didn’t make the list and was perhaps the book that had the most influence on Hitler and other Nazi leaders was Houston Stewart Chamberlain’s The Foundations of the 19th Century in which this befuddled Englishman’s theories on race so captivated the perverts who surrounded Hitler they just couldn’t wait to put them to good use. Hitler himself nearly swooned when Chamberlain told him at their first meeting in 1927 that he would rule Germany one day.

Good thing that one is out of print.

IRAQ WANTS MORE JACKBOOTED US IMPERIALISM

Filed under: War on Terror — Rick Moran @ 11:16 am

Boy, those Iraq’s must be gluttons for punishment.

It isn’t enough that we’ve brutally occupied their country, tortured and flayed their innocent citizens, robbed them of their oil, and tried to ram a puppet government down their throats. Now they want us to become even more involved in their affairs (Thank you sir, may I have another…):

To prevent the breakdown of Iraq’s troubled transition and a potential civil war, Iraq’s new government appealed to the Bush administration yesterday to take a much more assertive role, particularly on four key political and military issues, according to Iraqi and U.S. officials.

In talks with Vice President Cheney yesterday and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Wednesday, Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari requested greater U.S. and coalition help in crafting a new constitution. The deadline is now less than three months away, but deliberations have been slowed as Iraq still works on the composition of a constitutional committee.

With time running out for writing the constitution and then holding elections in December for a permanent government, Zebari warned that the United States has withdrawn too much, leaving the new government struggling to cope and endangering the long-term prospects for success.

International help in drafting their constitution would not be without precedent. Following the end of World War I, some of the most idealistic and gifted legal minds of Europe sat down with the new German government that overthrew the Kaiser and drafted what at the time was considered the “perfect” constitution. William L. Shirer describes it in The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich:

“The constitution which emerged from the Assembly after six months of debate…was on paper the most liberal and democratic document of its kind the 20th century had seen, mechanically well-nigh perfect, full of ingenious and admirable devices which seemed to guarantee the working of an almost flawless democracy. The idea of cabinet government was borrowed from England and France, of a strong, popular President from the United States, of the referendum from Switzerland…”

As Shirer points out, the Weimer constitution also had its flaws not the least of which was voting by lists (as they do currently in Lebanon) which leads to a multiplicity of small, splinter parties and in Germany’s case, made a stable majority in the Reichstag impossible.

While I’m sure the Iraqi’s would be grateful for our help, it’s best that we tread cautiously in helping draft a document that will act as a basic law of the land lest our own preconceptions of “democracy” and “freedom” override what is possible in an Iraqi society racked by sectional and sectarian differences. In short, we may end up making matters worse instead of better.

As for security issues, I don’t see how much more we could be doing. Any major anti-insurgent sweeps need to be carried out by Iraqi forces for the simple reason that we’re not going to be there forever and they may as well gain the experience and self-confidence that comes with succeeding in operations of this nature. If they get into trouble, we’re there to back them up. But we can’t make the same mistake we made in Viet Nam by continuously bearing the brunt of combat operations. Back then, we failed the Vietnamese military by not giving them a chance to prove themselves until it was too late. When they did go out into the field, they were ill-prepared and not well led. Nixon’s “Vietnamization” policy was a disaster. It came after 4 years of American led combat ops and failed to adequately train a South Vietnamese army racked with corruption and ambivalence. The result was predictable.

One big help we could give to the Iraqi’s would come from our new Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad. Unfortunately, although named to replace John Negreponte three months ago, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has failed to hold confirmation hearings. Here’s the Captain’s take:

By the way, expect to see some mild fireworks at Khalilzad’s hearing. The Village Voice already alerted the Left that Khalilzad has — gasp! — worked for an oil company before. The nominee represented Unocal during the Clinton-era negotiations with the Taliban that hoped to establish a pipeline across Afghanistan to gain greater access to oil production in Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Ted Rall/Michael Moore contingent have long claimed that this effort was the true motivation behind the Afghanistan phase of the war on terror. This will give the Democrats an opportunity to show how far they’ve slid to the radical Left. If this thoroughly debunked conspiracy theory plays any role at Khalilzad’s hearing, we’ll know the lunatics have seized control of the asylum.

Sometimes, I think Bush does things like this just to goose the moonbats. Seriously, the clock is ticking on the constitution as the deadline is a little more than 3 months away. The Iraqi’s have made every single deadline we’ve set so far. Let’s hope they keep it that way.

IRAQ WMD THAT DOESN’T EXIST IS MISSING

Filed under: War on Terror — Rick Moran @ 6:54 am

You remember the Iraq WMD? You know, the WMD that doesn’t exist, that’s just a figment of Bushitler and eeeeevil Karl Rove’s imagination who went into Iraq to steal the oil and kill Arabs? Well…according to the UN, it’s gone missing:

U.N. satellite imagery experts have determined that material that could be used to make biological or chemical weapons and banned long-range missiles has been removed from 109 sites in Iraq, U.N. weapons inspectors said in a report obtained Thursday.

U.N. inspectors have been blocked from returning to Iraq since the U.S.-led war in 2003 so they have been using satellite photos to see what happened to the sites that were subject to U.N. monitoring because their equipment had both civilian and military uses.

In the report to the U.N. Security Council, acting chief weapons inspector Demetrius Perricos said he’s reached no conclusions about who removed the items or where they went. He said it could have been moved elsewhere in Iraq, sold as scrap, melted down or purchased.

Previously, we’ve had the non-existent WMD going to Syria in Russian trucks and the phantom weapons being removed and taken to the Bekka Valley in Lebanon.

For imaginary items, they sure get around, don’t they?

To be fair, the UN is talking about so called “dual-use” equipment, especially in the biologic weapons sphere. Fermenters and miles of pipes that could be used to make both pharmaceuticals and bio-weapons are valuable commodities and could have been sold or simply moved out to the desert and buried.

But the fact remains that something was removed from sites that the UN previously determined contained weapons of mass destruction. If they were used for innocent purposes, why move them?

This kind of logic will escape the moonbats who continue to ignore evidence of Saddam’s ties with al Qaida as well as evidence that while not present in the kind of stockpiles thought by western intelligence and the United Nations , Saddam’s WMD programs could have been reconstituted if his oil for food bribery schemes had been allowed to bear fruit and sanctions against him lifted.

UPDATE

Jonathon at GOP Bloggers:

So the stuff that Saddam didn’t have is now missing. At this point, the UN should be kept around for its wonderful sense of humor, if nothing else.

Hee.

And Matt at Blogs for Bush is scratching his head.

Alpha Patriot has an accounting of the missingWMD that doesn’t exist.

By the way, Good Luck to the Patriot as he’s leaving the Watcher’s Council after a long and illustrious stay. If you haven’t already, blogroll his site and visit often for some really good stuff!

THE COUNCIL HAS SPOKEN

Filed under: WATCHER'S COUNCIL — Rick Moran @ 5:40 am

The votes are in from this week’s Watcher’s Council and once again, it was a tough choice. I was lucky enough to walk away with top honors for my post on the possible Bird Flu pandemic entitled “A Killer in the Shadows” but there were several other worthy posts in the Council category I’d like to highlight.

Dr. Sanity has become the poet laureate of the Council lately with this gem about the beheader Zarqawi and the hope that he’s close to death as a result of wounds he recently received in “A Prayer for Zarqawi:”

Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord your soul to keep;
And if He keeps it very well,
It’s sure to find its way to hell.

I pray you get what you deserve,
I pray you get what I desire;
And with God’s grace you’ll keep your nerve
As you approach eternal fire.

But if you don’t, it’s no surprise–
A coward never lives his lies.
You’ve sent so many to the Lord,
It’s only fair you face His sword.

E-Claire has some advice for the President regarding the schmucks at Amnesty International in “Hey Dubya: Don’t Feed the Moonbats:”

I heard a rep. of “Human Rights Watch” on the raadio yesterday. He out and out said that they hold the US to a “higher standard” than they do “people with less developed armies.” Talk about Racist…. He might as well have come out with it: “Those little brown people just aren’t as capable as you taller, whiter, more technologically advanced people. We expect so little of them and so much of you.”

The same “Human Rights Watch” whose basis for condemning the main opposition faction to the Mad Mullahs was twelve [12] phone calls.

The blind credulity of these infantile dopes is beyond comprehension. Whyinhell would the White House even deign to respond to them?!?

Good question, although Gregory Djerejian believes the Prez should have taken the opportunity to come clean about prisoner mistreatment worldwide.

I agree with Greg up to a point. He wants a blue ribbon independent panel to look into the allegations of torture. I think a panel like that could easily morph into a 9/11 Committee - a partisan tug of war that wouldn’t do anyone much good in the long run. For the moment, all the critics of the Pentagon’s handling of torture allegations have on its investigations is that they’re moving too slowly. Given the nature of the charges and the conflicting testimony of the participants, I don’t see how they could go much faster. That being said, I think the President should get out front of the various torture investigations. Right now it’s like Chinese water torture. The information is coming out in dribs and drabs which only allows his enemies to take each allegation out of context and dwell on it lovingly, massaging it and milking it for all that it’s worth.

The problem is exactly the opposite of what his critics charge; the incidents are isolated and disconnected. If torture was administration policy - like the Nazis “Final Solution” or even Stalin’s “gulag” - it would be easier to trace. Holocaust historians have Heydrich’s train schedules and accountings from the death camps themselves to go by. In the administration’s case, critics like to point to the Justice Department memos that explored a myriad of interrogation options, all of which were eventually rejected. The fact that they were even discussed causes these critic’s imaginations to take flight and not set down until they end up in the same place as Amnesty International - La-La Land.

Finally, in the Council category The Smarter Cop blogs the recent arrest of terror suspects here in America in “Terrorists in your Backyard:”

Next time you’re in a mall’s food court with your daughter and you see a kindly old man smiling at her, try not to overreact, but at least consider this:

Shah saw a girl nearby looking at him and he smiled back.
The Bronx man, the son of a Malcolm X lieutenant, then turned to the agent and said, “I could be joking and smiling and then cutting their throats in the next second,” the complaint said.

This is Exhibit A for the point many have been trying to put across both to the general population and to our ignorant bureaucrats who seem to be caving to CAIR and other organizations sympathetic to Islamicists - it’s their intended goal to blend into our society and appear as we do, even as every moment they wish to shed our blood. They’re just waiting for the right time.

Chilling, that.

In the non-Council category, the winner was Bloggledygook’s “Taking Islam Seriously” in which Daniel Berczik fisks this column by Frank Rich right smartly:

In today’s Dubai, home to cutting-edge resort design and prestigious golf and tennis tournaments (in which, we presume, women sometimes wear shorts or tennis skirts) it is still unlawful to be allowed entry into the country if one’s passport is stamped by Israeli Customs. Will keeping the pages of an odd Koran or two dry really change the rancid philosophy that holds 1.5 billion people in a death grip of shame, perversion and hatred?

Yet Mr. Rich can’t let himself go that far, because that would actually serve to put him to the right of this administration even as it would install him directly in the center of American public opinion. Those complaining about Koran abuse see the latest yawning episode as either a shameful display of America’s arrogance and disrespect for the world’s second largest religion or one more foul-up by a government and its military that only serves to make the fight harder.

Great writing. Great thinking.

If you’d like to participate in the weekly Watcher’s Vote, go here and follow instructions.

TODAY’S MURDER WILL BE BLOGGED…

Filed under: Blogging — Rick Moran @ 4:19 am

I missed this when it came out a couple of weeks ago:

A doomed Queens man’s chilling computer entry led cops to a suspect who allegedly robbed and killed the victim and his sister to finance a return to China, police said yesterday.

Jin Lin, 23, was charged with first-degree murder yesterday in the bloody slayings of Sharon and Simon Ng in their Kew Gardens Hills apartment Thursday, officials said.

Cops zeroed in on Lin, who once dated the woman, because Ng typed a journal entry into his computer fingering his sister’s ex-boyfriend as the suspect, police said.

Here’s the poor guy’s blog entry made minutes before he was murdered:

Anyway today has been weird, at 3 some guy ringed the bell. I went down and recognized it was my sister’s former boyfriend. He told me he wants to get his fishing poles back. I told him to wait downstair while I get them for him. While I was searching them, he is already in the house. He is still here right now, smoking, walking all around the house with his shoes on which btw I just washed the floor 2 days ago! Hopefully he will leave soon, oh yeah working on the jap report as we speak!

I guess it had to happen sooner or later. I’ve seen blog entries when all sorts of things are in progress; tsunamis, riots, ballgames, beauty contests, even sexual trysts (sorry, no link!). But this has to be the eeriest example of the power of the new media. It allowed the young man to reach from beyond the grave and finger his murderer.

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