This is what sanctuary looks like

The Occupiers are selfish bastards. Really, what else can you say when you read a quote like this, from an Occupier who tried to invade a park owned by a church:

“We’re just trying to say that this country has gone in the wrong direction, and we need spaces that we can control and we can decide our future in, and that’s what this is about,” said David Suker, who was among those who scaled the fence.

And there’s this, from another Occupier, the day before:

“We need more; you have more,” one protester, Amin Husain, 36, told a Trinity official on Thursday, during an impromptu sidewalk exchange between clergy members and demonstrators. “We are coming to you for sanctuary.”

This is what sanctuary looks like:

Occupiers invading church property

And they wonder why most of the country thinks they’re a bunch of selfish, spoiled children. Hell, even Desmond Tutu thinks they’re a bunch of jerks.

“In a country where all people can vote and Trinity’s door to dialogue is open, it is not necessary to forcibly break into property,” Archbishop Desmond Tutu said in a statement Friday.

On the other hand, the media are still in the tank for OWS. Look at the headlines about this invasion of private property:

50 arrested in Occupy Wall Street demonstration
Occupy Wall St. arrests after church lot breached
NYC Occupy protesters scale fence at vacant lot
Arrests as Occupy Protest Turns to Church

And this quote goes in the final paragraph of the New York Times version, and is seen nowhere else:

“O.W.S. protestors call out for social and economic justice; Trinity has been supporting these goals for more than 300 years,” Dr. Cooper said in a statement. “We do not, however, believe that erecting a tent city at Duarte Square enhances their mission or ours.”

Eating their own, is the phrase you’re looking for. The Occupiers are alienating their supporters. As Glenn Reynolds says, #occupyfail.

Posted in Media Bias, Occupy Wall Street | 3 Comments

Hamas senior got lost in the tunnels

The news appeared in Maariv’s Hebrew weekend edition on Friday Dec 16.

Maariv, using Palestinian Pal Press as their source, tells that Tahr Atwa, a senior Hamas functionary and a part-time commander in Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades left Gaza five days ago to cross to Egypt, using the underground tunnels system. Recently his family received an anonymous phone call from Israel. The caller who presented himself as an intelligence officer, told the family that Mr Atwa is in Israel and recommended that they get a lawyer.

It was nothing, of course, for our operative to get into the location where Mr Atwa is kept. During the whole interview Mr Atwa was seething with rage, mostly directed at Fathi Hammad, Interior Minister of Gaza (and a part-time commander in Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades).”Zionist lover, imperialist infidel lackey dog, the son of a thousand” were the mildest terms used by Mr Atwa to characterize Mr Hammad.

“I kept telling this …[omitted] that the …[omitted] tunnels have become a …[omitted] maze and a man can easily get lost. We have to have a clear set of signposts put into the tunnels. The no good …[omitted] has never moved his fat unwashed …[omitted]. When I get, Allah willing, back to Gaza, my people will kill his ass, raze his house and … [omitted] his wives and children…”

When our operative tried to placate Mr Atwa, telling him that he is, in all probability, not going home anytime soon and that Mr Hammad may expire meanwhile of a natural malady such as an acute lead poisoning, Mr Atwa’s rage boiled over and his power of coherent speech was lost.

The Mr Atwa’s jail officer, speaking on condition of anonymity (of course), told our operative that Mr Atwa keeps demanding to be provided with a bus ticket to Cairo and an exit visa immediately. “However, Mr Atwa doesn’t have a passport for us to put an exit visa in and, besides, the only banknotes he offers in exchange for the bus ticket are Egyptian pounds. Counterfeited, too”, the officer added.

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

Posted in Gaza, Terrorism | 2 Comments

Remembering a love of theater

Saw South Pacific at the Richmond Landmark Theater tonight. I’d forgotten how much I love watching plays, particularly musicals. I subscribed after learning that Wicked was going to be here (went with my niece and with a friend, as I’m a bit obsessed with the play now). So now I have The Lion King in a couple of months as well. And my niece and I are thinking of a Broadway weekend as her graduation gift. It’s really a gift to me, too, because I can’t think of a better way to spend a weekend than to see three Broadway plays. Wicked, of course, is on the list. Not sure about the other two. But if we can pull it off, it’s going to be wonderful.

Posted in Life | 1 Comment

A new record for Meryl

I was checking out Reason’s blog and discovered that they were right.

A bunch of movies you probably haven’t seen get Golden Globe nominations from the preposterous “Hollywood Foreign Press Association.”

A quick trip down the list shows that I have seen exactly zero of the film nominations for any category, and of the TV series, uh, let’s see… one. Big Bang Theory.

Though I did mean to see Puss in Boots and Rango, and have The Descendants on my list of maybes.

I’m thinking that either I or the Foreign Press Association are out of touch these days. Meh, they’re a bunch of furriners. I blame them. And don’t tell me how great Game of Thrones is. I read three or four of the books and gave up utterly because I prefer to read books that have something uplifting, or at least, one where not everybody dies. Life is hard. I get it. Really. I don’t need to be told in several million words how hard it is.

Posted in Movies, Music, Pop Culture | 1 Comment

Non-violent terrorism: It’s the new pundit thing

I’m starting to think that there’s a mirror image of the Zionist conspiracy theorists. For every nutjob and Jew-hater that thinks Jews are secretly controlling the world and responsible for all of its ills, there is a corresponding person–usually on the left, but not always–that thinks that terrorists and Jew-haters who announce quite clearly that their goal is to destroy the state of Israel, and then get going on the rest of the world’s Jews, don’t really mean it. And they find proof everywhere, even in an article that clearly states the opposite and shows proof that is more recent than the one that says the terrorists are moderating.

Confused? You should be.

Peter Goodspeed, writing in the Israel-friendly National Post, says that Hamas may be publicly calling for an end to the Jewish state, but hey, Jane’s Defence says they don’t really mean it.

In the Middle East what happens in the shadows is frequently more important than what occurs in bright daylight and Wednesday’s 24th anniversary celebrations in Gaza of the founding of Hamas were no exception.

The dusty Palestinian enclave by the sea was an ocean of green flags as more than 300,000 people attended a Hamas rally in the centre of Gaza City.

Masked men, armed with AK-47s, formed a ceremonial guard for Gaza’s de facto prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, who mounted a stage shaped like a ship and decorated with a model of Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque, as a 10-man vocal group led the crowd in chanting, “We will not recognize Israel.”

Beneath the surface, however, something else may be going on.

The same day as Hamas’s Gaza celebration, IHS Jane’s, the well-respected defence and security intelligence analysis agency, published an exclusive report claiming Hamas was on the brink of renouncing armed resistance and moving to a policy of non-violent resistance to Israel.

So esssentially, don’t believe your eyes and ears. Forget that Imail Haniyeh led 300,000 Palestinians in calls for Israel utter destruction. Believe this instead:

“The move is part of a general realignment of Hamas’s strategy and allies in the wake of the Arab Spring, especially the impending electoral success of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood,” said David Hartwell, Jane’s senior Middle East and North Africa analyst.

“Sources in the movement told Jane’s in December that Hamas is downgrading its ties with Syria and Iran, forging new relationships with Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, and perhaps most significantly of all, renouncing armed resistance to Israel and moving to a policy of non-violent resistance.

It astonishes me that people actually believe this bullshit. Jane’s evidently doesn’t keep up with the Israeli intelligence community, which knows that Hamas is now setting up rocket production in the Sinai because they think Israel won’t dare risk a war with Egypt by bombing them there. No, Jane’s is totally buying the line that Khaled Mashaal has been feeding to the gullible media about reconciliation with Fatah. On what evidence does Jane’s base this assumption?

As people power revolutions swept the Arab world, Hamas found itself being forced to change by governments in Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, who want the Palestinian Islamist group to abandon armed resistance in favour of reconciliation with its rival Fatah.

Palestinian reconciliation was the focus of negotiations between Khaled Meshaal, the Hamas political chief, and Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority President, in Cairo Nov. 24.

That’s a false statement. The Islamists don’t want Hamas to give up “armed resistance” and reconcile with Fatah. They want Hamas to reconcile with Fatah, period.

The Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists in Egypt are salivating over a united Arab world’s ability to go to war with Israel again. They’re holding rallies in mosques where they chant about killing all the Jews. The Jane’s article about the reconciliation meeting on November 24th was out of date less than a week later, when Mahmoud Zahar said the deal was off.

So why this naive insistence that a terrorist group that holds regular anti-Israel rallies, that speaks the language of war, that sends rockets on a regular basis into “the Zionist entity,” that refuses to acknowledge the millennia-old ties of Jews to the land of Israel, is suddenly going to become non-violent and start chanting slogans and holding signs instead of firing rockets and setting bombs? The only explanation is the grand conspiracy theory about moderating terrorists. There’s no evidence, but they say they’re moderating, so it must be so. Just like Yasser Arafat kept saying he had no control over the suicide bombings carried out by Hamas, but every time he chose to stop them, they miraculously stopped.

“Although no public announcement has been made, senior security sources within Hamas have confirmed to IHS Jane’s that the group has accepted for the first time since its establishment in 1987 to move from armed to non-violent resistance,” the Jane’s report says.

Mr. Meshaal is said to have agreed to end armed resistance at the Cairo meeting and signed an agreement with Fatah to that effect.

Here’s a hint: Meshaal is lying, and the “well-respected defence and security intelligence analysis agency” is so gullible as to believe the lies. And Peter Goodspeed falls into the appeal to authority logical fallacy, and believes Jane’s must be right because they’re so well-respected. I don’t care how well-respected you are. If you continually deny the evidence of violence over the promise–in words, not deeds–of non-violence, then the respect is misplaced.

The fact that Ismail Haniyeh declared this during the celebration that Goodspeed writes about apparently about falls on deaf media ears. Hell, he even quoted the anti-Israel speech.

Judging from Wednesday’s celebrations, it looks as if little has changed during Hamas’s quarter-century of existence.

“We affirm that armed resistance is our strategic option and the only way to liberate our land, from the [Mediterranean] sea to the River [Jordan],” Mr. Haniyeh told the crowd.

“God willing, Hamas will lead the people … to the uprising until we liberate Palestine, all of Palestine,” the Hamas leader added.

And still, Goodspeed writes this:

In fact, Hamas may have had little choice in moving to abandon violence — at least temporarily. The Arab Spring, with its popular uprisings, has transformed the political dynamics of the Middle East and led to a breach between Hamas and former sponsors Syria and Iran.

I just don’t get it. Why are so many pundits so willing to believe so many lies when there is so much evidence to the contrary on a daily basis coming out of Gaza? It’s the same principle at work when you read the stories about the Islamist takeover of the Middle East. In spite of evidence to the contrary, willingly gullible pundits insist that the Muslim Brotherhood is not going to implement a harsh version of sharia law.

The only explanation is that there’s a mirror image of the conspiracy theorists about Jews. The pundit class is run by people who can only believe good things about Islamists and Islamist groups.

It fits. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. That explains why so many people are so willing to believe that when killers and murderers say they’re renouncing killing and murdering, they really mean it, this time. Who are you going to believe? Jane’s Defence or your lying eyes?

Posted in Hamas, Media Bias, palestinian politics | 1 Comment

Say, Karl Vick, does moderation include calling for war?

Say, Karl Vick, are you SURE Hamas is moderating? I’m thinking that Karl Vick (rhymes with “dick”) ((cf. Time Magazine’s infamous “Menachem Begin*” (rhymes with “Fagin”) issue)) is, well, wrong about Hamas becoming more moderate due to its dealings with the Palestinian Authority. Why do I think that? Hm. Let’s think. Oh, right. Because the head of Hamas, during the Hamas anniversary celebration, said this:

“The armed resistance and the armed struggle are our only choice to liberate the land, to liberate all of Palestine from the sea to the river and expel the invaders,” Ismail Haniyeh, the top Hamas leader in Gaza, told the crowd. He was referring to the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River.

I really like the way the Bloomberg News reporter put in the explanation of which sea and which river. It’s very helpful to people like Karl Vick (rhymes with “dick”), who seem unable to interpret words like “armed struggle” and “armed resistance” as, well, non-peaceful things.

Even more suspicious: The Jerusalem Post quoted Haniyeh on the “liberation” of Jerusalem and the al-Aqsa Mosque. For those of you who may not know where that is (just in case Karl Vick needs a little brushing up), that mosque is built directly on top of the Temple Mount complex–Judaism’s holiest site.

Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh on Wednesday called for the formation of an Arab army “to liberate Jerusalem and the Aksa Mosque very soon.”

Huh. An Arab army. Whoever could they mean? The new Islamist governments joining Hamas, perhaps?

I’m so glad Hamas is “edging closer to the mainstream” (the headline on Vick’s piece). Why, he all but declared Hamas to coming to an end of violence.

But in the Gaza Strip where it governs, Hamas has largely enforced a truce with Israel since January 2009. And in Cairo it signed a paper committing itself to “popular resistance” against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories. That’s “popular” in contrast to “violent” or “military” resistance. We’re talking marches here. Chanting and signs, not booby traps or suicide bombs.

And yet, Khaled Abu Toameh, writing in the Post, quotes Ismail Haniyeh as not wanting to chant and wave signs at all.

Addressing tens of thousands of supporters during a rally in Gaza City marking the 24th anniversary of the founding of Hamas, Haniyeh said his movement remained committed to armed struggle as a strategic option to liberate “all the occupied Palestinian territories,” and that Hamas, “together with all the free peoples, will lead the fight to liberate all Palestine.”

Oh, yeah–Hamas also released statistics on the number of attacks on Israel, the number of Israelis they killed, and the number of Hamas members killed by Israel. Yep. That is one peace-loving organization. Interestingly, Karl Vick is so far silent on the Hamas rally. I’m on absolute pins and needles to see what Vick says about his theory that Hamas is ready to sit down and sing Kumbayah with Israel.

Posted in Hamas, Juvenile Scorn, Media Bias | 2 Comments

A public service announcement

I’m going to have a much longer and more detailed post, but if you have any older relatives in the care of a psychiatrist that have had dramatic personality changes, they are probably overmedicated.

Right now, I’m hating nearly the entire psychiatric profession. Including the morons at the supposedly excellent geriatric psych center that gave my mother her second round of overmedication. Bravo, people. Great job. How many other elderly patients have you screwed up?

Posted in Life | 7 Comments

Tuesday afternoon briefs

Keep it up, you’ll alienate the rest of America’s Jews: The IDF asked parents to “dress modestly” for a medics graduation ceremony. I have a lot of tolerance for the religious. I have no tolerance for those that would relegate me to the back of the bus and force me to wear clothing that THEY think I should wear. Israel is starting to have a tolerance problem, and it seems to involve the haredi. Invading an IDF base and throwing stones at their own soldiers? They’d better get it under control, because we can’t afford to fight ourselves when there are enemies the world over that will be happy to see us do their work for them.

So where’s the Syrian Goldstone Commission? Funny, but the outrage against Syria’s murdering 5,000 civilians seems to be far less worldwide than, say, the outrage of the IDF stopping the Gaza Flotilla last year. What time is it? That’s right, it’s Israeli Double Standard Time. But don’t worry. It only occurs on days that end with a “y.” (By the way, bet the “outraged Israeli settlers invade IDF base” story gets far more airplay than this one.)

Saudi ERA Watch: They beheaded a woman for “practicing sorcery.” In the 21st century, the oil ticks are showing how unmodern they truly are.

Sure, the Palestinians want peace: They want it so badly that Palestinians shut down a proposed peace conference between Israelis and Palestinians. Why?

The protesters accused the Palestinian participants of “encouraging the culture of peace” between Israelis and Palestinians. They said they were opposed to the conference because it was a form of “normalization” with Israel.

They don’t want peace. They want all of Israel.

The Arab Spring: Sucks to be Israel version. Hamas has established rocket workshops in the Sinai, figuring that Israel won’t risk relations with Egypt to bomb them. I’m betting that Hamas is wrong about that, because the IDF gets really good intel from those drones.

Posted in Hamas, Israeli Double Standard Time, Middle East, palestinian politics, Syria, United Nations | 8 Comments

Late Monday briefs

So, how much you figure he paid his people to vote for him? Oh, look. A little-read magazine touts an online poll as “person of the year,” and it turns out it’s: Turkey’s prime ministerErdogan, the man responsible for bringing Turkey into the Islamist orbit, severing ties with Israel, promoting jihad throughout the world, and bringing the cause of Turkish democracy back at least a century. Awesome.

Things the media never show you: Once again, the IDF releases a video that is ignored by the world media. Because it’s the one that proves Hamas is responsible for the civilian injuries resulting in Israel’s bombing of a Gaza weapons cache.

The footage shows the explosion caused by the direct hit of the weapons cache, as well as several secondary explosions. The warehouse continued burning for several hours.

In a civilian area. Remember this when the IDF goes back into Gaza next year, and the world media scream about casualties.

Good. About damned time Netanyahu came out against the Talibanization of some religious Jews in Israel. There is no room in Israel for a society that cannot treat women as equals. None.

That’s the last you’ll see of him: A guy threw a shoe at Mad Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to protest unemployment. Say buh-bye.

Not that they’re going to care: A katyusha rocket fired from Lebanon into Israel fell short and injured a Lebanese woman. Of course Hezbollah denies any knowledge, and UNIFIL? Well. The U stands for Useless.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Lebanon, Media Bias, Middle East, Terrorism | Comments Off on Late Monday briefs

Late Sunday briefs

Just in case you want to know what those “protesters” were doing: The AFP apparently caught a picture of the Palestinian who was killed after being hit by a tear gas canister during Friday’s “protest”. Check out the large chunks of concrete on the road in this picture. The Palestinians were trying to kill Israelis with them. Of course, the news reports make it seem like the soldiers deliberately aimed for this guy’s head. From a moving vehicle. With a teargas gun. Because those are known for their accuracy. The British press is all over an IDF officer’s tweets, making it seem like he was mocking the guy. And yet, nobody seems to notice the giant chunks of concrete all over the road. What, does it rain concrete in Israel now? This guy was trying to kill soldiers. Funny how that gets ignored.

This is what we in the Royal Navy call ‘a lie’: Ras al Gul, I mean Gul Dukat, I mean, Turkish President Abdullah Gul says that Israel should negotiate with Hamas. Why? Because–seriously–Hamas is “seeking peace.” Right. I think he means “piece,” and it should be the plural, pieces–of Israel. This is, by the way, the same Gul who refused to attend a luncheon in Austria because Ehud Barak would be there. Great example to set, you goddamned hypocrite.

Cue the heavy breathing by mainstream media: Israel is working to eliminate illegal immigration by Africans into Israel. The world media is going to have the vapors, of course.

Posted in Hamas, Israel, Media Bias | Comments Off on Late Sunday briefs

Saturday night is supposed to be quiet around here

Yeah, but not the Saturday nights when I have Sarah’s four kids over. It’s my annual birthday present to Sarah and Larry, whose birthdays are the first week in December. I used to just babysit, but since I bought my condo, I’ve had the kids overnight. It’s a present to me, too. We always have fun.

The kids have been here since two, and y’know, I think I’ve been going nonstop since about then. The twins are in the downstairs bedroom. One is in bed, one is doing the pre-bedtime rituals. The older boys are on their laptops (bar mitzvah presents from their grandparents) playing some online game or other, and fully intending to stay up far past midnight. Yeah, not gonna happen.

We watched the Hulk movie tonight (the second, much better one). It was a resounding success. I thought it would be. They’ve seen all the other Avenger movies. On the other hand, tonight’s viewing reinforced to me what an awful actress Liv Tyler really is. You know, if she didn’t have looks, she’d be another semi-celebrity due to her parentage, and that’s it. That’s two awful Betty Rosses in two movies. Thankfully, no Betty in the Avengers movie next year. I really like Ed Norton as Bruce Banner, but then, the Avengers movie is going to mostly have the Hulk. It doesn’t matter who plays Banner in the film.

We haven’t had a sleepover since the summertime, I think. And no matter how much work it is, it’s relaxing for me. I like having the kids around. They’re way less stressful these days than dealing with my mother. (Long story, she’s not well, and life is hard for her right now.)

That’s why there’s been no post until now. Been busy. Fun busy, for a change.

Posted in Life | 3 Comments

Friday briefs

So, how’s that 1701 working out for you? Hizballah is still targeting UN peacekeepers, this time probably for telling the world that the rockets fired last week were in violation of UNSCR 1701, which forbids arms and weapons south of the Litani River. Don’t expect the UN to do anything about this. They’re too busy getting ready to condemn Israel.

Apparently, he was kidnapped: Why any American would want to set foot in Iran is beyond me, but Robert Levinson was apparently kidnapped, and now, of course, a ransom is required.

What to do, what to do? Hamas’ Syrian sponsors are all tied up with that “Overthrow the Dorktator” thing, so Hamas is looking for new digs. Several newspapers have reported it, and the JCPA analyizes the situation. Ah, Hamas struggling to survive as it is now. I’m loving it. (The JCPA does great work; contribute a few bucks if you can. I use the Daily Alert for many of my posts.)

Congress to Obama: No, we’re not going to ease off on Iran. So The One talks really big, but when it comes down to brass tacks, the administration wanted to back off from targeting Iran’s Central Bank. Congress is saying no. And the AP says it’s all election-year politics to make their Israel bonafides look good. Gee. It can’t possibly be to stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons, could it? One hundred senators all voted in favor of tougher sanctions. Ron Paul doesn’t give a damn about Israel. Media bias much?

Posted in Gaza, Iran, Lebanon, Media Bias, Middle East, Syria, The One | 3 Comments

Cause, effect, and media bias

If Israel does not kill terrorists, terrorists fire rockets into Israel. Israel then kills terrorists, and the media blame Israel for keeping up “the cycle of violence.” If Israel pre-emptively strikes terrorists who are about to launch attacks on Israel, then the media all blame Israel first.

The AP:

Rockets hit Israel after fighting flares in Gaza
Israel’s military says Palestinian militants have launched three more rockets into Israel, causing no casualties.

The rocket fire followed Israeli airstrikes earlier on Friday that killed a Palestinian civilian and wounded two dozen others.

[…] On Thursday, Israeli air attacks killed two Gaza militants and touched off rocket fire from Gaza on southern Israel.

Reuters:

Israeli raids kill 3 Gazans; rockets fired at Israel
Violence has flared up between Israel and Gaza, with the Israeli air force killing three Palestinians and militants firing rockets deep across the border.

[…] Palestinian militants answered Thursday’s air strike with a barrage of rockets, some of which landed near Beersheba, a city 35 km (30 miles) from Gaza.

Damned if they do, damned if they don’t.

By the way, the air strike that caused the death of one and wounding of some 24 civilians? The explosion that caused the fire was the result of a Hamas missile stockpile in a civilian area.

The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said that the air raid involved “additional blasts which were caused by the presence of arms in terrorist centers that were attacked.” The statement noted that “the IDF regrets injuries caused to innocents but stresses that Hamas is accountable.”

They learned well from their Lebanese cohorts in terror. Watch for the world condemnations–of Israel, of course.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas, Israel, Media Bias | Comments Off on Cause, effect, and media bias

Thursday lunchtime briefs

This is not the drone you were looking for: Loren Thompson writes in Forbes that the Iranians don’t have nearly as much of the stealth drone that they’re claiming to have. A telling comment: Iran is not broadcasting pictures of the UAV. Which probably means they’re sitting on a pile of scrap metal. Of course, they’re handing whatever they have to China and Russia, the two biggest aids (besides North Korea) to their nuke program. Update: There’s now a video. I will leave it to the military experts to tell me if that’s really an American drone or not.

The terrorists come home to roost: A Syrian oil pipeline has been blown up by anti-Assad forces. Hoist by his own petard–literally. File under: Delicious, divine irony.

Yes, because that’s truly the issue, politics: Eric Holder, the man who oversaw guns supplied to Mexican drug cartels, says the real issue here is that he’s being ripped by Republicans. Never mind that thousands of weapons, which have already been traced to many murders, will cause many more murders in years to come. Hell, even CNN is no longer calling Fast and Furious a “botched” operation, choosing instead to show the Justice Department’s incompetence:

Operation Fast and Furious began in 2009, and allowed illegally purchased firearms to be taken from gun stores in Arizona across the Mexican border to drug cartels. The intent of the operation was to monitor the flow of weapons to their ultimate destination.

However, hundreds of weapons were lost or unaccounted for, and a storm of outrage erupted when two of the missing weapons were found at the site where Border Patrol agent Brian Terry was killed in December 2010.

And oh yeah–it’s not his fault.

He continued to assert that top Justice officials were not told about the “inappropriate tactics” until they were made public.

Posted in Iran, Middle East, Politics, Syria | Comments Off on Thursday lunchtime briefs

Israel pinpoint strikes kill terrorists, annoy media

Israel has twice in the last two days killed terrorists preparing attacks, and of course, the world media is extremely unhappy with that. Not to mention the terror supporters. The AP is getting the vapors over this latest strike:

An Israeli airstrike on a car near a crowded park in downtown Gaza City killed two suspected militants on Thursday, the second such attack this week after a period of relative calm along the Israeli-Gaza border.

Similar flare-ups have in the past escalated into a wider confrontations between Israel and Hamas-ruled Gaza. After Thursday’s strike, Israel’s military alleged the two men in the car had planned to infiltrate Israel to attack soldiers and civilians, but provided no details.

The strike on Wednesday killed terrorists that were preparing to send rockets into Israel. That’s the “relative calm”, I suppose: The rockets hadn’t yet landed in Israel. Oh, and Ynet managed to find a host of unprovided details about the dead terrorist.

Batash, IDF officials claimed, was a senior figure in the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, and was behind an imminent terror attack in the south.

Officials said Batash was also involved in several attacks in which terrorists from Gaza were smuggled into Sinai and then infiltrated back into Israel through the border. In January 2007 he organized a suicide bombing in Eilat that killed three Israelis.

Batash was also involved in several botched attacks, in which he tried to smuggle terrorists and arms into Israel.

The AP could manage only a bland referral to “a suicide bombing in Israel five years ago that killed three Israeli civilians.”

But the best part of the article is this unbelievable quote from a Hamas spokesliar:

Ihab Ghussein, spokesman for the Gaza Interior Ministry, said the airstrike was “an unjustified crime committed in a populated area and is part of a recent escalation against the Gaza Strip.”

Hm. An “unjustified crime committed in a populated area”–you mean, like a Hamas suicide bomb attack? Really, I think Palestinian spokesliars have utterly redefined chutzpah.

And while the AP is on a roll, it must also make a moral equivalence between the killing of terrorists and–wait for it–the repair of part of the Temple Mount complex. Both, you see, are upsetting to Palestinians, and both are instigated by Israel. And watch how the AP completely takes the Palestinian point of view regarding a bridge repair.

In another source of friction, Jerusalem municipal officials announced they would shut down a walkway to a contested shrine at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a move liable to touch off a new round of violence between Muslims and Jews in the volatile holy city.

Any work in the area around the Old City compound known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary draws fierce condemnation and sometimes violence from Palestinians, many of whom suspect Israel wants to harm Muslim shrines.

Note that there is no corresponding denial from the Israeli government, which, of course, is not harming Muslim shrines. And what is this “shrine” that is going to be harmed?

The municipality says the wooden walkway leading to one of the hilltop site’s gates — built as a temporary structure after a centuries-old ramp was damaged in a 2004 snowstorm — is a fire hazard and structurally unsound and must be replaced.

Wait–what? It’s a wooden bridge that the Israelis built seven years ago, not some precious artifact of dubious Muslim heritage? No matter. Remember, it will upset the Palestinians, therefore, it may not be done. Plus, the media will ignore the lies of the Palestinian media, who will put out false stories that Jews–not Israelis, Jews–are invading the al-Aqsa mosque. There are also reams of quotes from Palestinian sources, and exactly zero from Israeli sources. Way to be unbiased, Ibrahim Barzak and the AP! Awesome that you follow your own principles so closely.

Posted in Israel, Media Bias, Terrorism | 3 Comments