Jimmy Carter’s War

Victor Davis Hanson;

Imagine a different Nov. 4, 1979, in Tehran. Shortly after Iranian terrorists storm the American Embassy and take some 90 American hostages, President Carter announces that Islamic fundamentalism is not a legitimate response to the excess of the shah but a new and dangerous fascism that threatens all that liberal society holds dear. And then he issues an ultimatum to Tehran’s leaders: Release the captives or face a devastating military response.
When that demand is not met, instead of freezing Iran’s assets, stopping the importation of its oil, or seeking support at the U.N., Mr. Carter orders an immediate blockade of the country, followed by promises to bomb, first, all of its major military assets, and then its main government buildings and residences of its ruling mullocracy. The Ayatollah Khomeini might well have called his bluff; we may well have tragically lost the hostages (151 fewer American lives than the Iranian-backed Hezbollah would take four years later in a single day in Lebanon). And there might well have been the sort of chaos in Tehran that we now witness in Baghdad. But we would have seen it all in 1979- -and not in 2001, after almost a quarter-century of continuous Middle East terrorism, culminating in the mass murder of 3,000 Americans and the leveling of the World Trade Center.

Required reading.

ADSCAM – The Planets Align

Mark Cameron neatly ties together the developments in Adscam today.

Chuck Guit� and Jean Brault, President of Groupaction, have been arrested on fraud charges related to $2 million worth of communications contracts for the firearms registry. Two grassy knoll-ish thoughts cross my mind. First, it’s interesting how the Liberal scandals seem to be coming together. You half expect it to come out in discovery that Guit� and Brault planned their fraud over a round of golf on Jean Chr�tien’s Shawinigan golf course followed by drinks at the Auberge Grand-M�re. Second, and more seriously, it’s interesting how the RCMP investigation seemed to proceed at exactly the speed necessary for Liberal election timing. This allows the government to quietly bury the Public Accounts Committee inquiry, say that arrests have been made and action is being taken, and refuse to answer further questions for fear of interfering in a police investigation.
If one had confidence that the RCMP were an entirely impartial, non-political police force, these kinds of unworthy thoughts would not cross our mind. But given the fact that Giuliano Zaccardelli has shown himself to be a political initimate of the current government, and that the RCMP itself has been implicated in Adscam, you can’t help but wonder whether the RCMP and the government colluded on timing (or if the RCMP just decided to speed things up as a pre-election gift for Martin). Remember that Liberal Quebec lieutenant asked for arrests to be made in advance of the election only a few weeks ago

Not an unworthy thought at all. News story here.

John Gormley Liveblogging

John Gormley of 650 CKOM’s “John Gormley Live” just mentioned he’s having a local blogger as a guest coming up after the news break. (John, you need a blog. Hell, you need a website).
I’ll be live blogging, without his knowledge, to give listeners (who he had better send here if he knows what’s good for him) a demonstration as to how fast this medium can cover an event. [ after the show started I emailed him the link.]
(I hereby pledge to be fair and balanced, despite the fact that the SOB esteemed radio host didn’t ask ME to be his guest.)
First off, he’s announcing the RCMP have charged Chuck Guite and Jean Brault as a result of investigation into ADSCAM. Among the details, they allege bogus contracts involving Group Action regarding the Gun Registry, of all things.
He’s spelling “blog” for the listeners… and describing what they are. He’s mentioning that …. ME!!!!! “Very interesting, very political”
John’s guest is Theresa Zolmer of Heart Of Canada from Saskatoon. (Theresa is much nicer than I am. Probably a safe choice.) He’s covering her posts – describing her varied format, and asks her if this is typical…. discussing the fact that readers can leave comments.
Some recommendations: Small Dead Animals… heh. Grrrrrl Meets World” (I’ll update the links later)… Blogs Canada and their current spat with the Treasury Board over the parody of the Gov’t of Canada logo. and how others are coming to his defense… not a good idea to tick off the blogosphere…. [ask the New York Times about that…] PaulMartinTimes and their parody of Paul Martin’s site gets an honourable mention.
They’re taking calls. (I’m going to resist…. ) Theyr’e talking about Belinda Stronich’s blog – “boring”. The importance of good writing, and being concise…. the phenomenon of linkage and blog communities of like-minded people. Personal safety? Oh dear. “You don’t know other bloggers”… I suppose if you’re hitting the personal sites. Most of the prominant bloggers have been pretty straightforward about who they are.
Good stuff about the role of the “wild card” in democracy and how they can make “politicans cringe”. Missed an opportunity to get in the role the blogosphere played in keeping the Trent Lott story alive. Oh well, that’s forgivable… time is tight. Going on to celebrity blogs…. academic blogs, other special interests.
Calls are up next. (OK, John, you’re forgiven. I think that’s 4 free plugs… )
… No calls at the moment. Mention of the right – left nature of the blogosphere, Colby Cosh comes up – good choice … photoblogs, political satire … Andrew Sullivan. Maybe bloggers are “people with too much time on their hands.” (Yup.)
ok. I can’t take it anymore….
JOHN… INSTAPUNDIT!!!
No mention of the blogosphere is complete without a mention of Glenn Reynolds.
….
OK. So I broke down and phoned in. Filled in the gaps, admitted that we’re all about the traffic, and that we’re just attention seekers… and how half the fun is drawing the tin foil crowd into the comments section.
Got the plugs in for Instapundit, Outside The Beltway, Scrappleface and Best Of The Web. That should pretty much get anyone hooked and onto to the rest of the good ones. (Shoot – forgot Lileks). Mentioned the fact checking aspect of the blogosphere… Gave a lame answer about the blog title, which really doesn’t have much of a story behind it.. admitted that the gopher is one of my personal kills.
And I forgave John. On air. The whole segment ended up being a Small Dead Animals infomercial.

Special Delivery

Brandon Buchan bought an Mp3 player on Ebay, tendered by a Louisiana pawn shop.
When the courier delivered the package to his home in Saskatoon, he opened the box to find a .22 calibre semi-automatic Smith and Wesson, complete with a gun license.
Just so we’re completely aware of how effective the 2$ billion gun control registry is in controlling the flow of illegal firearms.

AIDS Contrast

Jay Currie spotted this contrasting AIDS story in Asia.

AIDS victims in 1987: Philippines 135 / Thailand 112
In 1991 the WHO predicted the Philippines would have 80,000 to 90,000 cases and Thailand 60,000 to 80,000 AIDS victims.
Thailand promoted the use of condoms in massive campaigns where Catholic Philippines promoted “Abstinence” and “Be faithful”.
The prognosis of the WHO was wrong for both countries:
1999: Philippines 1,005 / Thailand 755,000 AIDS victims.

No End To War. Not Yet.

Sandi Rinaldo on a CTV National News promo just now, in reference to the bombing in Grozny;

“Political assassination in a war with no end in sight.”

Stop.
Stop. Stop. Stop.
Stop talking about this war as though the primary objective is to “end” it. We can end it today – through surrender, withdrawel, appeasement.
The ultimate goal is the defeat of Islamic fascism and the terrorism it spawns around the world. The only objective must be to defeat ideologies and regimes that oppress and suppress freedom and plurality and equality of peoples.
It’s a mistake to hope for an end just yet. There is too much to do, there are too many tentacles to cut. This is a cancer that has grown over decades and it will not be cured in a year or two. As difficult as it is to face the truth, as much as we wish it were otherwise, we must stop hoping for it to “end”, or we will fail.
First, victory – however long it takes.
Then, the end will come on its own.

Journalistic Blinders

This didn’t take long. I read the article earlier today about LA Times Editor John Carroll’s comments on journalistic ethics. Paul, at Wizbang;

Oh Goody… Who was he going to rip?
– The New York Times for their Jayson Blair fiasco?
– NYT owner Pinch Sulzberger who blamed the fiasco on his readers?
– Eason Jordan and CNN who admitted to spewing Saddma’s propaganda for dollars?
– The NY Times’s Rick Bragg who never went to the places he claimed to be reporting from?
– The USA Today who let Jack Kelley make stories up for years?
– Steven Glass whose pseudo-journalism was so legendary they made a movie about it?
– Dateline NBC for planting explosives on a GMC truck to make it look like any impact would make it blow up?

Nope. The BBC and Andrew Gilligan’s “sexing up” scandal against the British government didn’t make his list, either. Oddly enough!
Go read the whole jaw-dropping thing. Instead, the LA Times editor’s directed “a scathing critique of Fox News and some talk show hosts, such as Bill O’Reilly…”
Well, there’s one of his problems – he doesn’t know the difference between a journalist and an op-ed guy! Finally, an explanation for the editorial content that masquerades as hard news in his own paper.

Just Another Blast In Place That Doesn’t Matter

While the media has moved into full-bore news recycling [note to editors – new pictures of the same scandal does not a “broadening” story make];
Chechen president assassinated

The Kremlin-backed president of Chechnya was killed Sunday when an explosion ripped through a packed stadium during Victory Day observances in Grozny.
The head of Chechnya’s state council, the region’s finance minister and a journalist working for the Reuters news agency were also among the dead.
Several dignitaries were in the crowd for ceremonies to mark the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in 1945.
The top Russian commander in the region, Col.-Gen. Valery Baranov, was badly wounded. It’s reported he lost one of his legs in the explosion.


Kadyrov had been part of the separatist war against Russia in the 1990’s before recognizing his cause was being taken over by Islamists. He was being credited for helping erode public support for the movement.
While the abuses at Abu Ghraib are a public relations win for Islamism, this is a strategic and military one.
I predict it will be treated like any of the other news “blips” out there this morning. A day or two will pass, and we’ll hear nothing more until another blast goes off in another remote part of somewhere we know nothing about. A body count, some background history and then, back to analysis of naked detainee photos.

Moment Of Silence



Now, more than ever – Never Forget

He was loading detonators into hand grenades on a moonlight night somewhere in Belgium about half a kilometre from the front line, when the bullet sheared through the “meat” of both his legs, just above the ankle. “I thought somebody had lashed me,” he recalls. He spent three weeks in a field hospital and re-turned to the trenches.
Before he was injured a second time – his jaw shredded by flying shrapnel – he had survived the onslaught at the Battle of Vimy Ridge and seen the carnage of Hill 60, when his battalion went in with 1,100 men and came out with 127.
He was just a teenager, like so many, talked into a signing up by a soldier his sister was dating, inspired by his buddies who were doing the same. He had barely turned 16 when he first donned the uniform in 1914, but the recruiters had fudged his enlistments by making him a bugle boy. “I never blew a bugle,” he says. He landed instead in the thick of the war, following the fiercest fighting from Belgium to France.

Clifford Holliday died yesterday, at the age of 105. Of the 650,000 Canadians who served, he was one of only 8 surviving WWI veterans, and the last who had seen combat.
hat tip – Pol:Spy
More in the extended entry.

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Forget The PR

Jaeger, on the already-wearing-thin Iraqi Prison Scandal Outrage[tm];

Bush could haul Rumsfeld out in public and do a Daniel Pearl on him, offering up his head on a silver platter to be used in the next soccer game in Fallujah and the opponents would say it’s not enough. He could it follow that up and commit hari-kari on Al-Jazeera and they’d say he took the easy way out, and anyway Wolfowitz is still pulling the strings so nothings changes. So forget about the public relations and just do what’s necessary to restore discipline, punish the guilty and get on with it.

Global Warming, Mea Culpa

I would like to apologize too. For Global Warning.
Today, I watched and gave useless advice to a friend as he lay underneath my 1986 Dodge pickup (which averages 12 miles per gallon) as he used a jackknife to cut a hanging bracket to release a goodly portion of my exhaust system.
So, I guess I’m sorry about that.
But it’s not like it’s really loud or anything, so it will do for now. And it’s not nearly as bad as the bike.

Torture, And Taking Responsibility

Predictably, the calls for Donald Rumsfeld’s resignation over the prison abuses in Iraq are beginning. Not everyone agrees.
It reminds me of an earlier incident in which prisoners were humiliated, abused, tortured and murdered. It occured in Somalia, and was committed by Belgians and Canadians, under the auspices of a UN Peacekeeping mission.
Kofi Annan was the Head of Peacekeeping for the UN. (1993 – 1997).
Can anyone recall if he was forced to resign? Oh, wait, no. He still had the Rwandan genocide to unattend to.
Well, we know how that quashed his career and all.

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