The history of SPAM
Brad Templeton has compliled a history of the word spam. Joe-Bob says, "Check it out."
Brad Templeton has compliled a history of the word spam. Joe-Bob says, "Check it out."
Every news source in the world is reporting this, so I will randomly choose... ooooh, MSNBC:
"The likely death of Saddam Husseins two powerful and notorious sons, if confirmed, would represent a withering blow to Iraqi Baath Party loyalists who hope to wait out the American occupation and restore the regime to power.
That's great! It's taken Bush months to beat this level, and it's worse for him that he sometimes forgets to save his game.
All that remains is the Big Boss Level. I hope Bush remembered to defeat the Tikriti Dragon and get the Spirit Key-- he's gonna need it!
While I'm on an Instapundit kick, he excerpts a report from the Telegraph saying that Newsweek says that a joint congressional inquiry found that Saudi Arabia was deeply involved in the 9/11 attacks. (How's that for a chain of references?) The administration has apparently not released an entire section of the congressional report that has all the juicy details of how individuals working in Saudi consulates were intimately involved in the plot.
This, not to put to fine a point on it, is wrong. The administration should not be coddling the Saudis for at least ten reasons right off the top of my head, but certainly not if they were involved in the worst assault on America since the Second World War.
Though I have consistently defended the the decision to invade Iraq, and in general support the administration (I am a conservative, after all) I most certainly do not approve of this. This information needs to be disseminated, the American people (and everyone else, for that matter) need to know. There are good reasons for what we are doing in the war on terror. But it should not be me (God forbid) or the USS Clueless or other warbloggers pointing this out. The Bush administration should be out in public, letting us know and making the case for taking the fight to these terrorist sickos.
And while I'm on a roll, I hear that Adm. Buster Poindexter's TIA got its funding zeroed by the Senate. Good. The Patriot Act: I, II and N is a bad idea. Not increasing military funding or the size of the military when you're in a war is a bad idea. Not taking a really close look at how our intelligence system is working (and in terms of human intelligence, not working at all) is a very bad idea. There are questions, and I think the administration should be a lot more vocal about either answering them (if only to shut certain people up) or saying flat out that we don't know the answers yet. And with the Saudis, its time to call a spade a spade.
Instapundit is reporting that Reuters is reporting that American forces may have put the finger on Uday and Qusay Hussein. If true, this is very good news.
"There was a shootout in Mosul, and there is a number of dead people and a couple of them could be Uday and Qusay," the official said, but added it had not been definitively confirmed.
I think those two would qualify for just about anyone's pre-decease list.
[Update] MSNBC has a bigger story, and mentions that sources believe there is a 90-95% chance that the two brothers have gone to their eternal reward.
In the news: Gephardt Attacks Bush 'Unilateralism'....
"Democratic presidential candidate Dick Gephardt on Tuesday issued a blistering criticism of the Bush administration's "chest-beating unilateralism" in its handling of the Iraq war, which he said weakened diplomatic alliances and squandered global goodwill following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
"Foreign policy isn't a John Wayne movie, where we catch the bad guys, hoist a few cold ones and then everything fades to black," Gephardt said in remarks prepared for a speech to the Bar Association of San Francisco. "No matter the surge of momentary machismo - as gratifying as it may be for some - it is shortsighted and wrong to simply go it alone."
Want to know how little I think of Dick Gephardt? I love what he said here-- I've said the same thing myself before-- and I still think he comes off like a jerk.
Also, the Democrats really need to find a way to move beyond the Uranium thingy (thingy!!) and join it up with other trenchant criticisms, because Uranium is like sooo last week.
Oh wait, sorry-- I forgot. Clinton took the party's brains and moral compass with him when he left office. They are currently in a U-Stor-It in Passaic, NJ and are in need of a good cleaning, having sat untouched for eleven years.
Because the constant focus on tests cripples education. Teachers teach to the test, not to the students, the material, or the community, and useless pursuits like art and music get cut from the curriculum in the scramble to raise test scores and win funding.
The No Child Left Behind Act was a mistake. The public education system is broken, and it is only making matters worse.
Because .org has that authenticity that .biz completely lacks. We want respect, damnit.
When, at the end of the week, the perfidy.org domain name comes out of the .org registry's bizarre purgatory - none of you better take it. We lost perfidy.com to a wacko in Md who is now using it for "monetization". If you steal what is rightfully ours, we will hunt you down and glare at you. Then, we will accept our loss like the powerless, whiny bitches we are.
Buckethead,
Having finished Steven den Beste's twenty-page post (man needs an editor), I need to take some time to ruminate and compose a brief response.
You are correct-- SdB does articulate almost exactly what you've been saying since we started our weblog and before. My difficulty comes not with the overarching structure of his arguments, but in the half-truths, omissions, and arrogantly stated howlers he sometimes tosses off as asides, and with his choice to address his post to America-hating liberals (though such a tone may be an appropriate response to Hesiod, sure). I am not one of the Children of Chomsky. I'm an America-loving centrist who does not question the existence or worth of the Anti-Terror Bus we are all riding, but instead wonders if we shouldn't take the bypass rather than the business loop, and whether the driver really knows if this is the road to St. Louis.
One thing SdB did do exceedingly well was to remind me that we are in the early stages of a long, hard campaign, and that many things are still fluid. It is easy on the internet to become shrill and blinkered (easy?? I thought it was required!!), and in the interest of maintaining my sense of perspective, I'm going to take a break from the big-picture and warblogging and return to the anklebiting that comes so naturally to me.
Well, we know that millions of dollars were going from Saddam's government to Palestinian terror groups, and to the families of suicide bombers. I think we can safely assume that Bremer has not continued those payments. How deep an effect this will have remains to be seen, considering that the EU sends millions to the PA, at least a goodly chunk of which probably ends up in the hands of Al Aqsa or other terror groups; and Iran and Syria are still sending home the bacon to Hamas and Islamic Jihad. On the flip side, America and other nations have seized or frozen millions from the accounts of suspected terrorists. That's gotta hurt.
But, as I might have mentioned, we are still in the early stages of the war. Lots more work to do.