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Posted in Site news | 2 Comments

Compare and contrast: Protests there and here

This is courage:

In Zawiya, 30 miles (50 kilometers) west of Tripoli, an army unit attacked the city’ Souq Mosque, where regime opponents had been camped for days in a protest calling for Gadhafi’s ouster, a witness said. The soldiers opened fire with automatic weapons and hit the mosque’s minaret with fire from an anti-aircraft gun, he said. Some of the young men among the protesters, who were inside the mosque and in a nearby lot, had hunting rifles for protection.

The witness said there were casualties, but couldn’t provide exact figures. He said a day earlier an envoy from Gadhafi had come to the city and warned the mosque protesters, “Either leave or you will see a massacre.” Zawiya is a key city near an oil port and refineries.

“What is happening is horrible. Those who attacked us are not the mercenaries, they are sons of our country,” he said, sobbing. After the assault, thousands massed in the city’s main Martyrs Square, shouting “leave, leave,” in reference to Gadhafi, he said.

“People came to send a clear message: We are not afraid of death or your bullets,” he said. “This regime will regret it. History will not forgive them.”

This is petulance:

The bill sparked massive protests. Last week local teachers called in sick and jammed the capitol building in Madison; by the weekend, the crowd had swelled to 70,000. As unions across the country bused in protesters, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka showed up to rally the masses, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson arrived to lead them in “We Shall Overcome.”

But — overcome what? Democracy in action? Overcome who? The voters and taxpayers of Wisconsin?

The (baby boomer) presidents of the teachers and public employees unions told Wisconsin State Journal reporters that workers would do “their fair share” to narrow the budget gap. If that were true, though, they’d actually have to contribute far more than the governor has requested:

In the past 10 years, says the Wisconsin Department of Employee Trust Funds, taxpayers paid more than $8 billion for state workers’ health care coverage, while the workers put in only $398 million. And from 2000 to 2009, according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau, taxpayers spent about $12.6 billion on public employee pensions while the employees contributed only $8 million.

Just wanted to point out the difference.

Posted in Middle East, Politics | Tagged , | Comments Off on Compare and contrast: Protests there and here

Evil Israelis letting Palestinians flee Libya to the PA

Those evil, evil Israelis. They’re just rotten scum who are trying to destroy all the Palestinians, one way or another. The proof?

Israel will allow 300 Palestinians living in Libya whose lives are endangered into the Palestinian Authority, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said Wednesday.

Netanyahu made the announcement at a reception for visiting Polish Prime Minster Donald Tusk, who arrived Wednesday along with eight of his cabinet ministers for the first annual Israeli-Polish joint government meeting.

Those bastards!

The decision to permit entry of the Palestinians living in Libya was made out of humanitarian considerations, Netanyahu said. The request to allow them into the PA, he said, came from PA President Mahmoud Abbas.

Just awful! I can’t wait for the UN condemnation for this.

Posted in Israel, palestinian politics | 1 Comment

Oil Shale Economics

Thomas Friedman wrote today about the need for the United States to reduce our need for foreign oil, proposing a phased $1 tax on gasoline to help wean us from it. This would certainly reduce consumption, but it would not really reduce our dependence upon foreign oil (only reducing the amount we consume) and would result in significant job losses. There is potentially a better solution.
A few years ago, I saw a study that said that with oil at $100 there is vastly more oil available than there is at $50. The lower price point makes it impossible for companies to consider investing billions of dollars to reach shale oil. However at $100, it could make economic sense. Once the investment is made, the available oil supply would be much larger than it currently is. Of further note is the fact that North America has by far the largest reserve of this type of oil in the world. As a general rule, as the price increases, so does the amount of oil available.
I don’t know if the price point is $100 or not at this point, but I do know that the US would be able to be self sufficient should the price go much above that, having reserves so vast as to support not only our own economy for generations, but others as well.

This is evidently one reason why OPEC has worked to keep the price of oil below the critical level. If oil is at $40 or $50, it is only cost effective to drill where there are large pools of oil. As I understand it, we’re nearing the tipping point when it will become worthwhile to go after the shale oil. At that point, we could end our dependence upon foreign oil entirely without  providing incentives for change (taxation) in our own economy.
The real fear on the left, and this is why taxation is proposed, is that there will be no new incentive, other than increased cost, to use alterative sources of energy and that fossil fuel usage might even increase. Taxation would alter the value of the commodity, potentially keeping its value below the critical tipping point by reducing demand. In other words, taxation will force us to continue to depend upon foreign oil while also forcing us to reduce our consumption.

The markets left alone will result in higher oil prices that will make exploration and usage of the vast reserves of oil in North America more worthwhile, resulting in a dramatically reduced, if not eliminated, reliance upon foreign oil, while also reducing consumption simply because of the increased price. Basically, the markets will alter behavior as much as taxation could do while benefiting the United States far more.
There are clear environmental impacts of shale oil exploration and legislation will no doubt need to be implemented to address it, likely raising the costs somewhat. In the long run, finding effective and inexpensive alternative forms of energy is by far the best alternative.

For a simple explanation of oil shale economics, see this basic explanation from Wikipedia.
Posted in Middle East | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Wednesday brief briefs

The Mahdi is coming! The Mahdi is coming! Ahmadinejad is soooo excited about all the turmoil in the Middle East (except, of course, for his own backyard). He’s predicting that it will reach America. Not hardly, moron. What I find fascinating is the AP’s nod to A-jad’s cultish thinking.

It begins: Christian priest murdered in Egypt. The religious cleansing of Egypt after the revolution has begun. Expect to see more Copts murdered in the coming months, regardless of what Sandmonkey insists. The Muslim Brotherhood is not, contrary to popular media punditocracy, moderate.

The bombardment of southern Israel continues apace: See title.

Posted in Iran, Middle East | Comments Off on Wednesday brief briefs

This week’s SNN

This week’s SNN is up. We’re putting out the podcast about twice a month, and I do have a segment this time around. Give it a listen.

Posted in Podcasts | Comments Off on This week’s SNN

Yes, it’s all Israel’s fault

Libyan troops are massacring protesters. Bodies are lying in the streets. The arms that Ghaddafy is using to murder his countrymen? Supplied by Britain and Italy. Hezbollah is now deeply intertwined with the Mexican drug cartels, teaching them advanced bomb-making skills (and sending sleeper agents here to threaten Americans).

The Iranians are crushing their citizens’ skulls again. Word is that Hezbollah imports are doing much of the beatdowns.

The UN Security Council resolution on Israeli settlements was sponsored by Lebanon, now nearly fully Iran’s client state. And Iranian ships are passing through the Suez Canal for the first time since 1979. (And sure, they’re not carrying weapons. They’re just going to stop in Lebanon for the tourist attractions.)

But the major problem needing fixing in the Middle East today? Why, of course, it’s the Israeli-Palestinian issue. No peace in Israel, no peace in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Yemen, Bahrain, Syria, etc., etc., etc. The UN condemns Israel at every opportunity.

Seriously?

The European Union is telling Israel that growing instability in the Middle East makes it imperative to immediately resume the stalled peace process with the Palestinians.

Hungary’s foreign minister Janos Martonyi, whose country currently chairs the EU, told his Israeli counterpart Avigdor Lieberman on Tuesday that time is pressing and that the Israeli-Palestinian talks remain the core issue.

A Palestinian state would have stopped Ghaddafy from firing on his people? It would have stopped the Iranians from bashing in the heads of democracy protesters? It would have stopped the rest of the Middle East from rising up against their autocratic rulers and demanding freedom? That’s what the establishment of a Palestinian state would have done?

I think I’m going to call bullshit on that. Yes, I most definitely am. (Insert several eye rolls here.)

Morons.

Posted in Juvenile Scorn, Middle East | Tagged , , | 5 Comments

Holiday weekend things

Thing 1: There was a fair amount of G. family crossover with Y. family (that would be me) this weekend. Let’s see, Sarah came over for Little Big Planet 2 time, um, twice last week. Then we went shopping on Saturday. The family less one came over for dinner on Sunday, and then we saw Harry Potter & the Deathly Hallows at the Byrd, thus reigniting my obsession with the last film. I thought I was past that after I rented out a theater and invited my former students to watch it with me in November. Guess not.

Funniest moment of the night: Jake asking me if I’d seen the movie before. “Jake… remember a big, empty movie theater? The one that I rented out for my birthday?” “Oh yeah!”

Kids.

Thing 2: My taxes are done. I am now going to be extremely obnoxious around mid-April. I also decided to pay the extra twenty bucks and e-file my state taxes, because I didn’t adjust my withholding well enough to get the money in my pocket instead of Uncle Sam’s and Old Virginny’s. Big refunds. Hence, the early sending in of the tax forms. I think I’m going to have to make yet another adjustment, though. I like getting as close to zero as possible. And oh yeah—how much does it suck that I’m paying less in taxes (percentage) now that I’m a homeowner? That’s right, people who don’t own property get screwed by the government. It’s a mystery to me why mortgage interest takes precedent over rent. It shouldn’t.

Thing 3: It’s time for soup. We had chicken for dinner last night, I’m making chicken soup tonight. I need to refill my freezer. This time, I’m going to add more carrots than I could possibly want. I simply can’t have enough carrots in my chicken soup. I always wish I’d added more. Well, this time, I think it’s going to be carrot soup, with chicken chunks and matzoh balls.

Posted in Life | 4 Comments

Muslim ERA Watch: Muslim Brotherhood edition

Long-time reader DG wrote the following:

There’s a really cute story in the Washington Post: Egypt women stand for equality in the square

Though the reporter was reporting from the demonstration on Friday, there was no mention of Sheikh Qaradawi’s views on gender equality. There was some really good stuff in this article, but towards the end it was priceless.

Abdel Ibrahim Hassan, a man who came to Tahrir Square on Friday to celebrate the revolution with untold thousands of his fellow citizens, argued that women have an enviable standing already and that Western prejudices should not assume they need change.

“Islam respected the role of women before any other culture,” said Hassan, a math teacher. “Before Islam women were bought and sold. But men and women are not equal, a woman is a weak creature. She cannot bear arms.”

His wife, Samah, bearing an Egyptian flag and wearing a black niqab covering her face with only small slits for her eyes, spoke up – strongly. “I’m hoping our young people will be able to develop a democracy,” she said, as she photographed the square with a sleek cellphone. “Men and women will play an important part in the elections.”

Their 15-year-old daughter, Sarah, her face and hands the only parts of her body visible from her enveloping black garments, interrupted.

“We demand seats in parliament for young people,” she said, “men and women. Women will play an important role in society after participating in the revolution of January 25th.”

Does the reporter, Kathy Lally, realize how absurd this sounds? First to have a husband claim women are respected then to describe how completely his wife and daughter are covered?

Though Qaradawi’s views on gender equality are not discussed there, I did find a fatwa that is very revealing. (No pun intended.)

Concerning the point on hijab, a woman can put on a hat or anything else to cover her hair. Even when necessary, she may take off her hijab in order to carry out the operation, for she is going to die in the cause of Allah and not to show off her beauty or uncover her hair. I don’t see any problem in her taking off hijab in this case.

Women are allowed to reveal their hair when they are about to murder infidels. How enlightened!

No doubt Sarah will be able to serve in Parliament, as long as she remembers her place.

Posted in Feminism, Middle East, Religion | Tagged , | Comments Off on Muslim ERA Watch: Muslim Brotherhood edition

The WaPo chastises Abbas

I missed this on Friday:

Abbas proves he prefers posturing to a peace process
PALESTINIAN PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas claims to be interested in negotiating a two-state peace settlement with Israel. For two years he has enjoyed the support of a U.S. president more sympathetic to the Palestinian cause than most, if not all, of his predecessors. Yet Mr. Abbas has mostly refused to participate in the direct peace talks that Barack Obama made one of his top foreign policy priorities – and now he has shown himself to be bent on embarrassing and antagonizing the U.S. administration.

It’s an editorial in the WaPo, not on a Saturday (the day the fewest amount of people read), chastising Abbas and calling him what he truly is: A man uninterested in peace with Israel. Update:It’s dated Friday, and was posted Friday night, but it is for all intents and purposes Saturday’s editorial. The vote happened Friday.

Mr. Abbas’s stubbornness might seem spectacularly self-defeating – but only if one assumes that he is genuinely interested in a peace deal. In fact, the U.N. gambit allows him to posture as a champion of the Palestinian cause without having to consider any of the hard choices that would be needed to found a Palestinian state. It enables him to deflect criticism from the rival Hamas movement about his friendly relations with the United States. It might even allow him to head off a popular Palestinian rebellion against his own autocratic behavior – Mr. Abbas has failed to schedule overdue elections, including for his own post as president.

The Obama administration has all along insisted that Mr. Abbas is willing and able to make peace with Israel – despite considerable evidence to the contrary. If the U.N. resolution veto has one good effect, perhaps it will be to prompt a reevaluation of a leader who has repeatedly proved both weak and intransigent.

Well, it won’t prompt the Obama administration to do any such thing, but at least the mask is slipping. In the WaPo, too. Holy cow. Is reality creeping into the MSM editorial pages?

Posted in Israel, palestinian politics, The One | 2 Comments

Comment spammers, again

I logged in to find several dozen spam comments today. I’ve noticed a trend of more and more spam comments (and if yours have gone into the memory hole, I apologize—I’m just deleting spam without looking these days).

As a result, I’m putting comments registration on yet again. If you’ve already registered, all you have to do is log in to comment. If you want to register, I need to see a legitimate email address or your registration will be deleted. I have no desire to use your email address for anything at all except to acknowledge that you exist.

Sorry for the inconvenience, but let’s face it—you’re not a very talkative bunch here. There are a few dozen commenters out of thousands of readers. Which makes my job easier, so I’m not really complaining.

Posted in Site news | 2 Comments

Sunday news briefs

Smart power! The PA is saying that the U.S. should be “ashamed” of vetoing the settlement resolution. Imagine, if you will, the outrage that would spew if an Israeli official—even anonymously—said the U.S. should be ashamed for anything regarding Israel. Say kids, what times is it? That’s right, Israeli Double Standard Time. But not to worry: It only occurs on days that end with a “y.”

Libya massacres Muslims, Muslim world not much up in arms: The death toll is over 200, and where did the latest shootings occur? A big protest march? At a government building? Nope. At a funeral procession for the ones killed the day before. The dictators of the Middle East have seen what happened to Mubarak, and especially the ones who hate the U.S. are doubling down on the oppression to keep power.

Egypt’s Khomeini is ba—aaack: And he’s preaching against Jews and homosexuals. Awesome. The moderating Muslim Brotherhood is going to be just find and dandy. Ask Tom Friedman, who couldn’t find an anti-Semitic Egyptian to save his life while he was there (not that an anti-Semitic Egyptian would save his life; we all know how much they want to kill Jews).

That is why this revolt is primarily about a people fed up with being left behind in a world where they can so clearly see how far others have vaulted ahead. The good news is that many Egyptians know where they are, and they don’t want to waste another day.

Yep. Totally. Because two million people chanted “To Jerusalem we are heading, Martyrs in the millions.” The revolt isn’t about Islam. It’s all about catching up to modernity.

Posted in Israeli Double Standard Time, palestinian politics | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Tig3.0 is 3.0

(I should have posted this yesterday, but I was busy.)

Tig 3.0 at three:

Tig3.0 is 3.0

Tig 3.0 at (barely) three months:
Baby Tig3.0 on an APC

Yes, that is the same APC. It’s the only one of that color in my house. What a difference a few years make, eh? He grew a bit.

Yesterday, for his birthday, Tig got a can of wet food without all the additives for his digestive health, catnip, turkey scraps for lunch, and turkey scraps for dinner. Gracie shared everything but the turkey, because she will only eat tunafish or cat food, nothing else.

It was a happy day for all three of us. I miss my previous Tig, but Tig 3.0 has filled his predecessors paws quite nicely. As I like to say, I won the kitty lottery. Tig 2 gave hugs. This Tig gives hugs and kisses. And Gracie is happier than she’s ever been. Yep. Life is good.

Posted in Cats | 7 Comments

U.S. vetoes settlement resolution

Sanity prevails.

The U.S. today vetoed a draft resolution in the United Nations Security Council that would have declared Israel’s settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem to be illegal and demanded a halt to such activity.

U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice sought until the final hours before the vote to reach agreement with Palestinian and Arab diplomats on a compromise statement that would have increased pressure on Israel to cease settlement construction, while stopping short of calling it illegal or demanding a moratorium.

Rice was alone in opposing the measure on the 15-member council, the UN’s principal policy making panel. It was the Obama administration’s first veto of a UN resolution and marked the 10th time in the past 11 years that the U.S. has voted against a text considered to be critical of Israel.

In the meantime, the Middle East is burning.

As protesters attempted to converge on Pearl Roundabout, a landmark in the capital Manama that has become the principal rallying point of the uprising, soldiers stationed in a nearby skyscraper opened fire.

Since they took to the streets, Bahrain’s protesters have come to expect violence and even death at the hands of the kingdom’s security forces. At least five people were killed before yesterday’s protests.

But this was on a different scale of magnitude.

As they drew near, they were met first with tear gas and then with bursts of live ammunition.

Clearly, if only the UN had passed the anti-Israel resolution, all would be well with Bahrain.

Why is Abbas so set on this resolution? So he can keep on doing what he’s been doing—not conduct peace negotiations with Israel. If the Obama administration truly cared about peace, they’d treat Abbas as badly as they treated Netanyahu. They’d scold him and publicly humiliate him and force him to come to the table. But that’s not the narrative. No. The narrative is that it is Israel that is intransigent.

Posted in Israel Derangement Syndrome, palestinian politics, The One, United Nations | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on U.S. vetoes settlement resolution

Purim Katan – The Threat of The Mob

Everywhere in the world today, minorities are under threat. Some of you, no–many of you, would note, “They always are.” Yet, the truth is that such threats are relative and today, I am concerned.

Americans believe that power is derived from the will of the people. We decry despotism. Yet our sense of fairness often drives us to allow the mob to rule even when we know that its rule is unfair. That contradiction results in another, namely a contradiction between the belief that the rights of every person are sacred and the belief that the will of the majority, even to trample upon the rights of the minority, must be followed.

Today we are witnessing upheaval in the Middle East. Mob rule threatens to overturn despotism. Ethically, we must support the mob because power should derive from the will of the people. Yet also ethically, we must oppose the mob’s efforts should they gain power, to create a tyranny of their own. Our conflicted minds think, “Down with the dictator! Beware the victors!

I wish that I could say that this conflict was limited to foreign lands. It is not. This week, both on the left and the right of the political spectrum, mobs gather to press their voice, to press their power, in states across our Union. They speak and act in righteous indignation at affronts, at unfairness, or in religious fury. I will not for a moment declare all of these groups wrong to do so and, in this place, will not even criticize a one. What I offer here is one man’s sense that times are changing. The majority is feeling empowered to act as a mob. Minorities, both ethnic minorities and those who hold minority views, are under increasing threat.

Thus, when I hear the words of those advocating for the United States to support condemnation of Israel precisely because the majority of nations do and when I can note that this reasoning seems to be starting to resonate, I find myself, as I do today, becoming increasingly concerned. I am concerned not only for Israel. Israel has friends. Israel has strength. Israel may take care of itself. I am concerned that the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s will be reborn and that Israel’s purpose as a safe haven for the persecuted Jew will be made manifest again. I am concerned that the rights of minorities in America and throughout the world will be under threat because the masses so wish. I am concerned that the rule of law will be increasingly unable to be sustained against the will of the masses.

There is little or no difference between the resolution proposed in the UN Security Council today in condemnation of Israel and many others that have been proposed before. The real difference is in the sense that standing up for the persecuted minority, or even standing apart with a minority, increasingly appears to be seen as unreasonable and even as unrighteous.

Should the United States today vote to support the majority for that sole reason, it will be a shameful day in our nation’s history and a frightening omen for the future.

Today is Purim Katan, “Little Purim”. Today is the 14th of the First Month of Adar. Today, though we are not required to read the Megillah, the Book of Esther, as we will be required next month on Purim, we are reminded of the persecution of minorities everywhere in the world. We are reminded that the tide may swiftly change against us and others. We cannot forget.

If we are vigilant, we may live the blessing from the Book of Esther, “And the Jews had light and Gladness and Joy and Honor.” Kein yehi ratson!

Posted in American Scene, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Israeli Double Standard Time, Jews, Politics, Religion, United Nations, World | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments