Gale-force winds: Yeah, we has them

The last time I had the news on, the wind gusts were up to 56mph. They are more than that now. I don’t want to know how much, as it’s really not a whole lot of fun being in a tropical storm on your own. I’m watching the 50-foot pines behind my condo sway in the wind on a north-south axis, which is fine, because my condo is west of them, and my neighbors behind me are east of them. Feel free to fall down on a north-south axis if you must, pine trees. Wow. They just leaned halfway to the ground in that last gust.

The power is still flickering rather frequently. I don’t expect it to stay on all night, but my last round of Plants vs. Zombies seems to have calmed me down considerably. I have a flashlight upstairs and my LED lantern downstairs, so I’m fine if it does go out. Time to unplug the computers, though, I think. I don’t want them fried in a power surge.

Geez. There are a couple more hours of the peak, then there’s the same stuff towards the end that there was in the buildup. Not liking hurricanes any more than I liked the earthquake last week. Mother nature’s got some major PMS this week. I know how she feels, but geez—I don’t take mine out on everyone else!

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She’s he-eeere

Irene’s worst is just about to hit. Most of my friends in the southwestern part of the county have lost their power. One lost part of her roof to a tree (and the internet, since it hit the room with the cable, darn it). All safe, though.

Power flickered here again moments ago. I don’t anticipate making it through without losing power. But hey, my Red Cross wind-up emergency radio works fine! (And the LED lantern.)

I’m getting off lightly compared to many, though.

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Saturday Hurriblogging post

Irene is not yet here, but rain and wind gusts are. Feels like gusts are around 40mph. Steady rain. And judging from the traffic noise coming from the nearby highway, not too many people are too worried.

I will be indoors the rest of the day, with an occasional peek outside. I have my Flip video camera. If anything interesting happens, I’ll post the video.

Meantime, I have everything I need, the cats have everything they need, and we’re going to weather the storm in comfort if that blip from the APC wasn’t foreshadowing a power outage. And if the power does go out, well, I have an LED lantern, batteries, flashlight, book light, ice, coolers, propane grill, a bathtub full of water—yeah, I’m covered.

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Hurricane blogging

Between work and stocking up for the hurricane/tropical storm that’s going to hit Richmond, I have no time to do anything else today.

I have four gallon bottles of water, filled every water container I own, have been adding ice to the freezer as it gets made, and will fill the bathtub later today. I have batteries, plenty of food, a grill that runs on propane, and I bought a book light from B&N yesterday. All I need to do is get some cash and snacks and I’m covered.

I lost power for three days during Isabel. Here’s hoping that is not repeated.

Saturday morning services have been cancelled. So much for my idea of borrowing free teenaged labor from Sarah and bringing him back tomorrow morning. I’m on my own.

Good luck to everyone in the path of the hurricane. I hope it weakens a lot before it makes landfall. Really, an earthquake and a hurricane in one week is a bit much, don’t you think?

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Most awesome tweet ever

By Charles Krauthammer:

Earthquake, hurricane, Obamacare. When does it stop? Seven more and I vote we let the Israelites go.

Posted in Humor | 1 Comment

Thursday briefs

Arabs destroy, Jews rebuild: Israel has nearly finished restoring Jerusalem’s five-century-old walls. Read the article in full, then remember that when the palestinians took over Gaza, the first thing they did was destroy all of the Israeli buildings.

A look into New York’s anti-terror squad: The AP has an in-depth report about how New York’s Finest are making sure there will never be another 9/11.

Mad Mahmoud is feeling the pressure: Now you know Syria’s in trouble. Ahmadinejad is telling Assad that killing his own citizens “serves Zionist interests.” I can’t believe I’m saying this, but yes, I do think that Bashar al-Assad’s days are numbered. I don’t think his regime will survive. I don’t think he has the stones to kill as many, as quickly, as did his father—and that is what will be his downfall. It will give the Syrians and the world time to oust him. The new Middle East is going to be a dangerous place for some time, but without Syria, the Iran/Syria/Hizballah axis is badly wounded—let’s hope, fatally. (Yes, the utter hypocrisy of Mad Mahmoud, who authorized the killing of Iranians protesting his rule, is not lost on me.)

More rockets from Gaza: And here is the problem with retaliation. Egypt has notified Israel that the Egyptians, who have been so utterly brainwashed by the anti-Israel media that kept them from revolting against their dictatorship for decades, are going to be uncontrollable if Israel invades Gaza. I can’t remember where I read that, but word is that Egypt sent a warning to Netanyahu. Not a “We’re going to get you!” warning. A warning that said they wouldn’t be able to control the thousands of Egyptians swarming towards Israel. Now, there is video and audio evidence proving that Israel did all it could to prevent the deaths of Egyptian soldiers. But even if that is released on Egyptian state media, it won’t matter, because the Egyptians will insist it’s faked. That’s what sixty years of hatred does to a people. And so, Israel has to settle for airstrikes, which are obviously not enough of a deterrent.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Middle East, Syria, Terrorism | Comments Off on Thursday briefs

The AP proves me wrong

But in a good way.

Earlier today, I pointed out the AP’s annoying habit of reversing cause and effect in their reporting on Israel vs. the terrorists. Their latest article on the rockets landing in Israel has the correct order in the lead and headline. AFT, AP. AFT. Look at this: Three paragraphs of a lead that actually tells the plain, unvarnished facts of what is going on. I think a pig just flew past my window.

Gaza militants fire rockets, Israel hits back
Palestinian militants fired rocket barrages that wounded an Israeli baby Wednesday, and Israel retaliated with airstrikes that killed four Gaza fighters, Gaza officials said.

The new round of violence began last Thursday when gunmen, apparently from Gaza, crossed the border from Egypt and ambushed cars and buses in southern Israel, killing eight people. That was followed by massive Palestinian rocket attacks and retaliatory Israeli airstrikes.

Gaza Health Ministry spokesman Adham Abu Salmia said a member of the Islamic Jihad group was killed Wednesday evening in Israeli airstrikes. The Israeli military said “aircraft targeted a terrorist squad that fired rockets into Israel.”

And they aren’t even leading with the usual Palestinian spokesliars saying the wounded were children, or farmers, or scrap collectors. Color me satisfied, for now. And thanks to the editor who is making sure that the AP reports the facts correctly, and in an unbiased fashion.

Yeah, I’m pretty sure they read my blog. And that’s a good thing, because I’m keeping them honest.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Media Bias, Terrorism | 2 Comments

The pro-terrorist media bias

More rockets are raining down on Israel. And more AP media bias goes out over the wires. Look at the cause-and-effect in this lead. Note which action the AP puts first: Israel’s strike on terrorists firing mortars into Israel.

Violence along the Gaza-Israel border heated up on Wednesday, with Israeli airstrikes on militant targets and militant rocket fire at Israel.

When do you find that out? Two paragraphs later.

Israeli aircraft killed a militant from Gaza’s Islamic Jihad faction before dawn on Wednesday, Hamas security officials said. They later targeted two militants who had fired two mortars at Israel shortly before. No casualties were reported in that airstrike.

Got that? Israel struck terrorists who were firing mortars into Israel. The AP completely reverses the order of events, making it look like Israeli actions caused the rocket fire. And, of course, the real cause of the rocket fire? Well, that would be terrorists trying to destroy Israel, from Gaza—a place, where you may not remember, the media used the narrative that if only there weren’t any Israelis in Gaza, the Gazans would no longer try to kill Israelis.

Looks like they were wrong.

Finally, in the very last paragraph of the story—the one that most often gets cut by news editors who need room to run other things—we have this explanation:

A militant incursion into Israel from Sinai last week killed eight Israelis. That was followed by Palestinian rocket attacks and Israeli airstrikes that have not stopped despite a cease-fire reached on Sunday.

So the real headline should be: “Militants fire rockets into Israel in violation of truce,” but of course, they won’t bother writing that story again. They did it a few days ago. Time for the old “cycle of violence” standby.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Media Bias, Terrorism | 1 Comment

News roundup

Yeah, I felt this one: 4.2 aftershock last night around 8. Slept through anything else since then.

I’m sure the terrorists don’t care: An Egyptian woman in the Sinai was wounded by rocket fire from Gaza. If she’d died, doubtless they’d say she was a martyr to the cause. Her family? Tough on them.

Where’s the Egyptian apology to Israel? Three of the terrorists were Egyptians, one of whom escaped from jail during the Cairo spring. Thanks, Egypt! And here’s why Egyptian soldiers were shot:

Also according to the IDF investigation, the Egyptian troops noticed the presence of the terrorists even before the attack was launched, but did nothing about it. Only later that evening did an officer and a few soldiers leave their post, evidently to stop the ongoing sniper fire. The terrorists, who were wearing uniforms similar to those of the Egyptian army, resisted.

Possibly at this moment, when the troops and the operatives merged together, the Egyptian soldiers were shot. It remain unclear who fired the deadly shots, as the soldiers’ bodies have yet to be autopsied by the Egyptian authorities.

Read the whole article. Of course, the Egytians will deny the facts. Just wait for it. And don’t expect to see a credible version of this in the AP, Reuters, or AFP. More on that later.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Terrorism | Comments Off on News roundup

Lessons from the earthquake

The main lesson I took from today’s earthquake: Earthquakes suck. I do not like them. I hope to never, ever experience one again.

I am going to bed now. The earth better stay still for the next eight hours.

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Earthquake!

A 5.8 earthquake hit the area. UPDATE: 5.9!

Epicenter was between Richmond and Charlottesville. Update: Mineral, VA, about 30 miles (as the crow flies) from where I live.

Sadly, I did just the wrong thing.

I was eating lunch when the entire house started shaking: Walls, windows, stuff. I thought it sounded like a train coming. So I thought it was a tornado. I dashed into an interior closet until it ended.

The kitty condo fell over, but whether that was as a result of the quake, or because Tigger was scared to death and leaped off it so quickly, I couldn’t say. I didn’t even lose internet access.

But I am, quite frankly, scared shitless. I’ve never experienced a 5.8. I’ve slept through various minor quakes in CA and NJ, and experienced a minor one in Washington state that shook the chandelier, but nothing like this.

They’re evacuating buildings all over the region. Company in Northern VA has been evacuated. It should be all over the news any minute now.

I am going to have some chocolate, because I think I need something other than adrenaline coursing through my veins. Chocolate heals many wounds.

Update: My 3 p.m. conference at work was canceled due to earthquake. How often do you ever get to say THAT?

Update 3:42 p.m.: Gracie is still under the bed. My guess: She won’t come out unless I give her tuna. Time to make a Kroger run.

Posted in Life | 4 Comments

Tuesday, briefly

Too creepy for words: An Israeli woman escaped from a real sicko, who has since been arrested. Thank goodness she was smart enough to take advantage of the situation and get away.

Barry Rubin says: Glenn Beck is right. Oh, this will cement Barry’s reputation as someone not to have on the talk shows. What? Praising Glenn Beck? That just proves Rubin is a wingnut! (Even though he’s not.)

So who, exactly, is going to take over in Libya? Daniel Pipes worries that the “rebels” are just another Islamist group in disguise. If that’s the case, the Islamists are currently winning in the Middle East, and working on taking back Afghanistan (and Iraq). Awesome.

So how much you figure Iran is going to ransom them for? Count on some kind of deal being made that includes money, goods, or the lack of a condemnation of Iran in exchange for the two hikers who are jailed as spies. Yeah. They’re spies like I’m a Catholic.

The brave, brave mujahadin are all crouching in fear in the dark: Hamas’ leadership are all hiding out in underground tunnels for fear of a 500-lb. bomb dropping on their heads. Israel should wait until they emerge, and then pull out Lair Simon’s old Palestinian groundhog trick: If they see their shadows, six more weeks of drones. (Yeah, I’ve changed it around a bit.) The good news is that when terrorists’ actions are restricted, so are their planning abilities.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas, Israel, Terrorism | Comments Off on Tuesday, briefly

Home again

Busy, but home again. And I see the terror groups still think a cease-fire includes firing rockets at Israel. Don’t worry, the MSM will declare that a “lull” as well.

More later.

Posted in Israel, Life | Comments Off on Home again

New Russians and their old tricks

When you look at Russian behavior in the Middle East during the last few years, it is eerily reminiscent of the good old Soviet Union and its unreserved support of any Arab regime that pitched against the West and, of course, against the little Satan. While Russia has, at least formally, moderated its traditional opposition to Israel and is busily counting its petrodollars and petro-Euros instead of fomenting revolutions in its neighborhood, its involvement in the ongoing conflicts and its handling of the Arab spring shows the same course we (of the appropriate generation) became all too familiar with.

Although, when you look at the underlying reasons for the Russian, seemingly unreasonable support for regimes like the ones of Iran, Syria and Libya, the picture has a few new wrinkles, hitherto unfamiliar to the connoisseurs of the Soviet international policy of old. Where Soviet citizens were painfully used to their dear leaders sending billions of rubles of practically free assistance (including generous allowances for weaponry, the better to resist imperialism in its various guises), the new Russia became rather a capitalist entity by now, being quite interested in getting valyuta (foreign currency) for its tools of destruction.

Nothing shameful by itself in that commercial approach, I hurry to clarify. The only people who don’t take money for guns these days are the ones that pay for these guns. And, after we discount the sellers and the buyers, who remains there to cast the first stone? Nah… in fact, this post is to commend the Russians for their refreshing honesty in evaluating their friendships and the reasons for their political support of this or another scandalous polity.

And there are all the good reasons for that. For instance, as this article shows, there are $4bn of good reasons in Libya alone:

Russia’s state-owned arms export agency Rosoboronexport stands to lose around USD4 billion as a result of the Libyan conflict and the related UN arms embargo against Tripoli, the head of the organisation has said.

I don’t know whether success of the rebels in Libya means that Russian contracts are automatically finished – after all, any new Libyan government will strive to spend its petrodollars somewhere, and why not in Russia? However, the Russian concern is not without reason. Who knows, the new top dog may decide that French and/or German arms are better.

A much better example of Russian new pragmatic approach to life is their response to the Syrian unrest and the bloody way of Baby Assad with suppressing it. Since day one Russian diplomats have gone out of their usual laid-back way to defend the Syrian regime, indefensible by any standard.

Russia opposes U.S. and European leaders’ calls for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to resign, Interfax news agency reported Friday, saying that the leader should get more time to implement reforms. The move by Russia counters efforts by leaders ratcheting up international pressure against a regime criticized for its brutal crackdown against protesters calling for reforms and the ouster of al-Assad.

From the start of the revolt Russia was practically the only state (of the ones who count) that openly and unreservedly stood against any attempts to censure the bloody regime. The chief reason (aside of the traditional Moscow’s interest in the area) is freely and openly discussed in this article from Russian Izvestiya, titled “Cancellation of contracts with Syria will cost Russian MIC* $4B“. The article’s lede says “Americans urge Russians to stop supply of arms to Assad, while not offering any alternative“. Here is the gist of the article:

  • Hillary Clinton demanded that Russia stop the flow of arms to Syrian regime.
  • But Americans are not offering anything for that as a compensation.
  • Follows a long list of weaponry – from submarines to training planes for Syrian air force.
  • Military and technological cooperation [sic] between Russian and Syria has always been of interest to US and Israely intelligence [I wonder why].
  • If Russia will go with the American wishes, it will not only lose several billions but will also undermine its reputation of a reliable provider of arms to Middle East.
  • The weapons shipped to Syria are high-tech products necessary to keep Israel in check [I wonder about the harmony between Lebanese, Syrian, Iranian and Russian propaganda in this respect at least – it must be true then].
  • The Izvestiya’s sources in Foreign Ministry said that it will be too much honor to respond to every announcement and every wish of Hillary CLinton [in other words, Hillary, here is a finger – take it or leave it].
  • As far as internal situation in Syria is concerned, with all its complexity, Russian FM doesn’t see any loss of control by the government there over the situation in general. Including military cooperation and standing behind the existing contracts.

If you have expected any reference to Syrian dissidents dispatched to the next world on daily basis, my apologies – there wasn’t any such reference to offer. By the way, don’t invest too much of your time searching the official and semi-official Russian media for any reporting dedicated to the daily killing that continues in Syria. You will hardly find anything there. Now you know why.

(*) MIC – military-industrial complex.

Cross-posted on SimplyJews

Posted in Middle East, Politics | Comments Off on New Russians and their old tricks

The AP reads my blog, part the next

I’m telling you, they keep an eye on me.

Before:
Senior Israeli officials met late into the night to discuss how to proceed with retaliatory operations against Gaza militants, who they say triggered the latest round of hostilities Thursday with a roadside ambush along the Israeli-Egypt border that killed eight Israelis.

After:

The latest round of hostilities was triggered Thursday by militants who launched an attack from Egyptian territory, ambushing Israeli cars and buses along the border and killing eight people. Israel says an armed Palestinian faction from Gaza was responsible.

Better they should keep an eye on the anti-Israel editors and writers who keep on inserting weasel words and anti-Israel bias into AP articles, and not publish phrases like “who they say” in the first place when describing a terrorist attack that unquestionably occurred.

Posted in Gaza, Israel, Media Bias, Terrorism | Comments Off on The AP reads my blog, part the next