Been VERY busy

I’ll try to get something later tonight.

Posted in Life | 2 Comments

Family and friends

Spent the weekend with family and friends. One of those that kind of falls into both categories (I’m Aunt Meryl, but we’re not related) is young enough to be in the OWS movement, but she has far more important things to do with her life. Like raising her gorgeous new baby boy.

Yeah, the ones with real lives are being responsible. And if I do wind up building my own house, Alexandra is the one I’m going to call on to help me design the solar roof tiles and make it as green as I can make it. (Honestly, I can’t claim selfless motives. I want to pay less in energy costs, and living in Virginia, it makes sense to have solar panels.)

It was nice reconnecting this weekend. I look forward to doing a bit more of it.

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Lazy Saturday open thread

Busy, busy, busy. You’ll have to talk amongst yourselves. I’m not home, and I forgot the cable for the camera, so the pictures are currently trapped on a memory stick.

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Friday morning briefs

Baby Assad is shaking in his booties: Sic semper tyrannis, dude. The fall of Kadaffy is energizing the Syrian opposition. (Really, do all the news services have to run that gross picture of dead/dying Kadaffy? Yes, he deserved it, but—ew.)

Lebanon’s government threatens war with Israel: Hezbollah is now part and parcel of the Libyan government. So the head of a group that runs Lebanon just threatened to bomb Tel Aviv. What will we hear from the mainstream media about this? (I’m talking to you, AP writers and editors who read my blog.) Nothing. Or a whitewash. Watch.

The AP proves me wrong: Oh, look. They put out a story about A) Gilad Shalit’s despicable treatment by the Palestinians and B) the freed Palestinian terrorists are talking about kidnapping and killing more Israelis. Of course, B) is buried waaaay down in the story. So they released another story, this one centering around the woman who tried to murder Israelis after getting a compassionate visa to treat her burns in an Israeli hospital. Of course, only about 77 sites around the nation picked that story up. So here I must give a lot of the blame to the editors who ignore the stories the prove that mainstream Palestinians aren’t interested in peace. Only in pieces of Israelis.

So then you just admit you’re a moron? The Egyptian reporter who interviewed Gilad Shalit—surrounded by armed Hamas terrorists—says she didn’t know that he was coerced. Bullshit. They deliberately mistranslated his answers; she pushed and badgered him to say that Egypt was the wonderful, wonderful country that helped negotiate his release, and she knew he was supposed to be going home. Doesn’t fly, asshat.

Posted in Hamas, Israel, Lebanon, Middle East, Syria, Terrorism | 2 Comments

Thursday, briefly

Don’t worry, no one will hold them responsible: Think the New York Times will write an editorial on how Salaam Fayyad isn’t ready for peace?

The time is not right for meaningful Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad stated on Wednesday, saying they are only likely to produce a blame game rather than a settlement.

Speaking to a nonprofit group that promotes the cause of Palestinian independence, Fayyad said there is little point in such talks without first establishing “terms of reference” – diplomatic jargon for the rough parameters of a solution.

Yeah, me neither.

Don’t hold your breath waiting for the UN condemnation: Turkey invaded Iraq in order to stop terrorists responsible for killing their citizens. Hey, that sounds just like Israel going into Gaza to stop terrorists responsible for killing their citizens! Except, of course, Israeli Double Standard Time is in effect, so there will be no condemnation—from anyone—of Turkey’s actions. This is my favorite quote of the article:

“We will never bow to any attack from inside or outside Turkey,” he said.

I’ll be bringing this one back up when Turkey condemns the next Israeli action in Gaza.

News the mainstream media leaves out: You’ll never see this in an AP article about the released terrorists, or mentioned in a New York Times editorial:

A would-be Palestinian suicide bomber freed by Israel in the prisoner swap for soldier Gilad Shalit told cheering schoolchildren in the Gaza Strip the day after her release on Wednesday she hoped they would follow her example.

“I hope you will walk the same path we took and God willing, we will see some of you as martyrs,” Wafa al-Biss told dozens of children who came to her home in the northern Gaza Strip.

Gadaffy is an ex-dictator: Do not click this link if you have a problem with graphic images of dead ex-dictators. But he’s really, most sincerely dead.

Posted in Israeli Double Standard Time, Media Bias, Middle East, palestinian politics, Terrorism, Turkey | 3 Comments

The Times’ moral equivalency on Gilad Shalit

Besides the media constantly calling the ransoming of Gilad Shalit a “prisoner swap,” there have been many irritating moral equivalencies, but none more egregious than this snippet in the New York Times.

Both Israel and the divided Palestinian leadership — Fatah runs the West Bank while Hamas controls the Gaza Strip — were making elaborate preparations for the Tuesday handover, which will end five years in captivity for one Israeli soldier, Staff Sgt. Gilad Shalit; hundreds of the Palestinians have been held much longer.

Despicable. The reason they were in prison longer than Gilad Shalit was held captive illegally is because they all committed crimes, many of them murder, attempted murder, and accessory to murder. But the media blithely repeats the Palestinian narrative of comparing “prisoners.” Once again, Gilad Shalit was a hostage. And he was ransomed. Now, of course, the media are criticizing Israel for ransoming their son. The Times, again:

The deal is likely to strengthen Hamas within Palestinian politics, adding to the difficulties for President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah and efforts to revive the peace process with Israel. Egypt, a key broker of the deal, will likely gain, as will Turkey, a supporter of Hamas. Hamas may even move its headquarters to Egypt from the Syrian capital, Damascus, where President Bashar al-Assad is facing strong popular revolt. And if the prisoner exchange emboldens Hamas to carry out more actions against Israel, that would likely empower the hawkish right in Israel.

Note the despicable refusal to put the onus of terror attacks on Hamas, let alone the polite euphemism of “actions against Israel.” No, if Hamas attacks Israel again, it will make the hawks in Israel even more powerful—so it’s on Israel not to allow the “hawkish right” to be empowered if their sons and daughters are murdered or kidnapped.

And of course, there’s this editorial. Note how the Times manages to blame Netanyahu for both downsides. Not only is the Times projecting—on zero evidence—that Bibi will be less likely to negotiate now with Mahmoud Abbas, but they point out that by making a deal with Hamas, Abbas was weakened. It’s lose-lose for Israel in the Times. Color me unsurprised.

Now that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has compromised with Hamas, we fear that to prove his toughness he will be even less willing to make the necessary compromises to restart negotiations. And we fear that the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, and his Fatah faction, who were cut out of the swap altogether, will be further weakened.

And then they cover their morally equivalent asses by adding a single qualifier to this next paragraph, so that they can claim that they didn’t mean Bibi never said he would negotiate. They only meant that he never really meant it.

One has to ask: If Mr. Netanyahu can negotiate with Hamas — which shoots rockets at Israel, refuses to recognize Israel’s existence and, on Tuesday, vowed to take even more hostages — why won’t he negotiate seriously with the Palestinian Authority, which Israel relies on to help keep the peace in the West Bank?

One has to ask: On what planet are the Times editorialists living? Abbas is the one who refuses to come to the table, time and time again. Abbas is the one who is constantly setting preconditions. Netanyahu has stated clearly on several occasions that he is willing to negotiate anywhere, anytime, without preconditions. The Palestinians refuse to negotiate until building stops in “settlements,” including the suburbs of Jerusalem that are going to remain in Israel’s hand in any deal, and both sides—and the New York Times editorial board—know this. But that doesn’t stop them from lying through their teeth about Bibi’s intent.

Mr. Netanyahu’s backers claim that his coalition is so fragile that he can’t make the compromises needed to help revive peace negotiations. But he was strong enough to go against the grief-stricken families of those Israelis killed by the Palestinian prisoners he just freed. “I know that the price is very heavy for you,” he wrote to them. Why can’t he make a similarly impassioned appeal for a settlement freeze for the sake of Israel’s security?

… As for Mr. Netanyahu, we saw on Tuesday that the problem is not that he can’t compromise and make tough choices. It’s that he won’t. That won’t make Israel safer.

They put the onus on Bibi to freeze settlements. They do not put the onus on the Palestinians to come to the table. And this ass-backwards view of Israel’s negotiations with the Palestinians is the reason why the world bashes Israel constantly. Israel apparently lives in the world through the looking glass, where up is down, war is peace, and wanting to negotiate unconditionally is being unwilling to negotiate.

Yeah, this is why I stopped reading the Times years ago.

Posted in Israel, Israeli Double Standard Time, Media Bias, palestinian politics, Terrorism | 3 Comments

Wednesday post-Shalit deal briefs

Say, mainstream media editors, writers, and idiots: It’s not a “prisoner swap.” It’s a ransoming of a hostage. Gilad Shalit was kidnapped and taken hostage five years ago. The Palestinians who were released all broke the law and were prisoners.

Leave it to the media to blame Israel for getting Shalit back: The New York Times is actually editorializing on how now that Shalit is home, Netanyahu is going to be more intractable than ever. Not a word about Mahmoud Abbas refusing to sit down and negotiate. No, it’s all Bibi, all the time.

Hypocrisy, thy name is State Department: Really? You’re objecting to the release of some terrorists because they took part in attacks on Americans? Really? When the government had evidence that Yasser Arafat was behind the murder of American diplomats and did nothing? How many governments, starting with Nixon, covered for that murderer instead of hunting him down and bringing him in for the double murder? Now State is suddenly getting a conscience?

And yet, there is still not a worldwide outcry: Syria is doubling down on the civilian-killing spree, and the world is just pretty much going “Tsk-tsk” and then talking about Israel and the Palestinians.

Turkey doing everything it can to hurt Israel: Turkey has declared that there’s no way in hell they will allow Israeli gas to go to Europe through pipelines in Turkey. What a surprise, considering they’re trying to steal the Cyprus gas fields. So, tell us, genius pundits, how is it that Israel can repair relations with a nation that is doing everything it can to harm Israel at every opportunity?

That’s okay, they’ll just kidnap another soldier and set her free: A Palestinian woman tried to stab an Israeli man. Yeah, they want peace. Really. They do. Shut UP. They do.

Posted in Israel, Syria, Turkey | 3 Comments

Gilad Shalit is home

He’s home.

After 1,941 days in Hamas captivity, Gilad Shalit has returned home: IDF soldier Gilad Shalit entered the Kerem Shalom crossing just before noon on Tuesday and was greeted by Israeli army officers. He is seen walking with the officers as they conversed with him.

There’s a ton of coverage on the Israeli media sites.

Posted in Hamas, Israel | 1 Comment

Monday, briefly

Or they’ll frown in Syria’s general direction: The Arab League is giving Syria 15 days to stop murdering its own citizens. The vote was to suspend Syria from the league, and as you can see, even murdering over 3,000 civilians isn’t enough reason to be thrown out of the Arab League. Now, if it were Israelis, and a few terrorists got taken out, there’s be uninamous consent to do something nasty. But hey, when you run on Israeli Double Standard Time, that’s to be expected. Oh, and of course, Syria is claiming that it’s really Israel that’s causing all the trouble.

Syria’s ambassador to the Arab League, Youssef Ahmad, held up a document he said was shared with the Arab foreign ministers. In it, he alleged, was proof that weapons from Israel had been found in Syria among the protesters.

“The Syrian opposition is also getting logistical support from Arab countries,” he said in his public remarks to the body. The Syrian regime frequently claims outside forces are fomenting the violence. The opposition denies that, opposing foreign intervention.

Huh. That’s funny. I thought the AP standard was to get a quote from the ones being accused, or to say, “The AP was unable to confirm the ambassadors allegations.” [slap] What am I thinking? That the AP is going to keep to the same standard for Israel as it does for everyone else?

Who coudn’t see this coming? Egypt is now expecting Israel to release all Egyptian prisoners in exchange for the poor fool who was in Egypt during the protests and picked up as an “Israeli spy.” Great precedents there, guys. And Hamas vows to kidnap more Israelis and do the same as they did with Gilad Shalit. And oh, yeah, the new slogan: Today the prisoners, tomorrow al-Aqsa. With the help of thousands of Arab Israelis, no doubt.

The next war is going to be really, really, really bad.

No, no bias whatsoever: So what’s the AP headline over the terrorist being released for Gilad Shalit? You know, the ones responsible for the Sbarro, Dolphinium, and Passover Massacres?

Prominent Palestinian prisoners to be freed

“Prominent.” Like they did something important, or worthy of note. Oh, but don’t worry. Now it’s been updated to “Poll: Israelis widely support prisoner exchange”. And of course, they still aren’t naming the attacks. “A Jerusalem cafe”. “A hotel bombing that killed 30 people celebrating the Passover holiday”. No, why mention the Sbarro and Netanya massacres? That wouldn’t fit the narrative.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas, Israeli Double Standard Time, Media Bias, Terrorism | Comments Off on Monday, briefly

Sunday, briefly

Oh, please. Israel is raaaacist: Chinese Jews feel more at home in Israel than in China, but never forget, Israel is a racist, apartheid state. What’s that? Only Palestinians count when you call Israel racist? Yeah, we knew that. (Now if I could find a Chinese Jewish guy, I’d be in heaven… I’m a goner for that epicanthic fold.)

Liar liar pants on fire: The country that sponsors Hezbollah, Hamas, PIJ, and numerous other terrorists… The country that gave us the Beirut, Khobar Towers, and Argentinian bombings… The country that is constantly talking about wiping Israel from the map says:

“Iran is a civilized nation and doesn’t need to resort to assassination” Ahmadinejad was quoted by the official IRNA news agency as saying Sunday. “Terror belongs to you,”he said, addressing the United States.

It’s a wonder his nose isn’t sixty feet long.

What a surprise: The AP is tying Herman Cain to the Koch brothers. They’re this elections neocons. Sorry, haters… they’re not Jewish. You’re going to have to blame these guys on someone else. (Not that that’s going to stop you from trying.) David Berstein wrote back in August that the fuss over the Kochs is unbelievably hypocritical.

Et tu, WSJ? The AP thinks this is an objective headline:

Thousands join NYC protest against corporate greed

This, mind you, from the organization that calls child-killers like Samir Kuntar “militants.”

Our unbiased media. (You can stop laughing now. No, really, stop. STOP!)

Posted in Iran, Israel, Media Bias, Middle East, Politics, Terrorism | 3 Comments

Your Caturday twofer

A rare twofer of Tig bugging the crap out of Gracie.

Tig annoying Gracie

Don’t be swayed by the cute, little-boy look on Tig’s face. He was lying on the other side of the screen pawing at Gracie, trying to make her play. That’s a tactic that has not succeeded in three years. See Gracie’s left paw? That’s for smacking Tig. And every time Tig sticks his paw through, he chirrups. Nope. Doesn’t work. Gracie is old and set in her ways, and will not play with him. Awwww.

Posted in Cats | 1 Comment

More anti-Semitism at Occupy Wall Street (Los Angeles)

She is the 99%.

Funny how every accusation of racism (nearly all of which proved false) was highlighted at every Tea Party rally or meeting, but the naked anti-Semitism at the OWS protests is ignored by the mainstream media.

That’s right. Blame the Jews, and chase them out of the country. It worked so well for Europe.

Posted in American Scene, Anti-Semitism, Occupy Wall Street | 2 Comments

Friday Israel briefs

Ah, the lovely sound of Palestinian terrorists hating on each other: Looks like there’s trouble in prison over the swap. It seems that most of the West Bank terrorists will be heading to other places (and other countries), while most Gaza terrorists can go home to their families. All together now: Awwwwww.

Gosh darn it! Looks like Mahmoud Abbas not only failed to convince Colombia to vote his way, but also France. That UNSC resolution creating the fictional statelet of East Palestine? Not gonna happen.

How the deal happened: Read it in full to see why there’s suddenly a prisoner swap after five years of nothing. And here’s the timeline, assuming Hamas doesn’t break the deal at the last minute. I don’t think they can. The Palestinians are too excited, too ready to welcome home their heroic child-killers, for Hamas to do anything to prevent the deal from going forward. I can only assume that Israel got proof of life for Shalit, because if he comes home dead, there will be a new government in Israel by next week. This does not, of course, prevent Ha’aretz from having the vapors over the possibility of Iran breaking the deal. (Yes, I know, Ha’aretz = lefty mag that only Americans and Westerners read, but still.)

Ah, the lovely sound of Palestinian lobbyists and politicians hating on each other: Awesome. The Palestinian UN bid has got them to cut ties with one of their American lobbies. I love it when they fight with each other; there’s that much less time to fight with Israel.

Posted in Hamas, Israel, palestinian politics, Terrorism | 2 Comments

The OWS briefs

A roundup of links on the occupiers for your reading pleasure. And boy, there are a lot of them. One surprise: In the WaPo article analyzing the movement, the fact that OWS has the same amount of coverage as the Tea Party did at the same time. The article does not comment on the overwhelmingly positive coverage v. “teabagger” coverage.

Finally! The definitive guide to OWS hands: Allahpundit found a video that explains the “twinkles”. I give it five out of five mocks.

The question answers itself: Is OWS Overblown?

A movement built on hate: A warning from Peggy Noonan.

A movement that will go nowhere but could do real damage would be “We hate the rich, let’s stick it to them.” Movements built on hatred are corrosive, and in the end corrode themselves. Ask Robespierre. In any case, the rich would leave. The rich are old, they feel like refugees in the new America anyway. A movement that would be helpful and could actually help bring change would be one that said, “Enough. Wall Street is selfish and dishonest, and Washington is selfish and dishonest. Together their selfishness and dishonesty, their operating as if they are not part of a whole, not part of a nation of relationships and responsibilities, tanked a great nation’s economy. We will reform.”

Search on “This Is No Time for Moderation” in Google News in order to get the full column.

Live long and prosper, OWS: George Will thinks OWS is just great—for turning independents into Republican voters.

By the numbers: Charles Krauthammer on the Occupier-in-Chief’s strategy of divisiveness (that is already showing divdidends).

Posted in American Scene, Occupy Wall Street | Comments Off on The OWS briefs

Anti-Semitism at Occupy Wall Street

What a surprise… the Occupy Wall Street protesters are blaming the Jews.

Via the Emergency Committee for Israel.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Occupy Wall Street | 1 Comment