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The best defense of the Iraq battle

I still stay away from the 'war' word because I think this is just a battle in a larger war. Mgraves covers it in a few volumes. 4, 3, 2 and 1. 1 through four is the best way to read it ;)
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Left wing idiots dream about war crimes trials

In this day and age, I guess that is the price of leadership. I wish PM Blair the best, though I would be conflicted if I lived in Britain myself.
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UFO?

Kathy asks the question, hunts down the stories and asks what you think? I personally think they are high on Union punch :)

I report. You decide.

Was it a UFO, a UO, or no O at all? Uh-Oh.


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What did Mr Jefferson learn from the Koran?

Not likely what Rep Ellison thinks he did. First Muslim member of Congress and all...

During the Jefferson administration, the Muslim Barbary States, crumbling as a result of intense American naval bombardment and on shore raids by Marines, finally officially agreed to abandon slavery and piracy.

Jefferson's victory over the Muslims lives on today in the Marine Hymn, with the line, "From the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli, we will fight our country's battles on the land as on the sea."

It wasn't until 1815 that the problem was fully settled by the total defeat of all the Muslim slave trading pirates.

Jefferson had been right. The "medium of war" was the only way to put and end to the Muslim problem. Mr. Ellison was right about Jefferson. He was a "visionary" wise enough to read and learn about the enemy from their own Muslim book of jihad.




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Space

One of the few things I support the Government almost totally in is manned spaceflight. Follow the Apollo program  into space here.
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Hydrogen fuel of the future?

Metacafe explains in a video, how Hydrogen will rescue the world. Long live Hydrogen! ...Umm I think.
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Attack our embassy and we will remember

Early reports indicate that the Air Force has taken it to the fools that dared to attack our two embassies in Africa. I hope we got them.

The Ethiopians did us a big favor by dislodging the Islamists from Mogadishu. Once on the run, the US could bring all of its technological assets on line to track them, and the Air Force waited long enough for all of them to run into the trap. The Navy positioned the USS Eisenhower in the waters nearby Somalia just in case it finds even more targets to strike.

That hasn't stopped the Ethiopians, either. Their forces have surrounded an al-Qaeda base and may have overrun it by the time you read this post. Between the three forces, including those loyal to the Somalian transitional government, AQ in Africa is about to take a huge blow, perhaps even a fatal defeat.

Amen my friends, praise God and pass the ammunition.

Addendum: Jason has a few links to add.




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Arab culture

Yes this is terribly simplified but many of its basic points can not be easily disputed. Arabs do have a strong belief that things happen because Allah wants them to and that maintenance is a boring and unimportant thing for them to do. It really does hinder them in the long run.

Arabs really have a problem with personal responsibility, which is a bedrock characteristic in any strong economy. The cause of this Arab problem is the concept of "inshallah" ("If God wills it.") This is a basic tenet of Islam, although some scholars believe the attitude preceded that religion. In any event, "inshallah" is deadly when combined with modern technology. For this reason, Arab countries either have poorly maintained infrastructure and equipment (including military stuff), or import a lot of foreigners, possessing the right attitudes, to maintain everything. That minority of Arabs who do have the right attitude towards maintenance and personal responsibility are considered odd, but useful. The "inshallah" thing is made worse by a stronger belief in the supernatural, and magic in general. This often extends to technology. Thus many Iraqis believe that American troops wear sunglasses that see through clothing, and armor vests that are actually air conditioned. When they first encounter these beliefs, U.S. troops thought the Arabs are putting them on. Then it sinks in that Arabs really believe this stuff. It's a scary moment.
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Romney looks to be a formitable fundraiser

6.5 million is a lot of money and he raised it in one day. It looks like he can hang in the money department. Now comes the important question. Can he hang in the values and policy department? Still hanging out on the fence. Waiting and watching for more.
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Lady Be Good

It is the story of an aircrew lost during WW2 and the surprising find made about in many years later. Experts were able to piece their story together in the 1960's. A sad but interesting read.

In early November, 1958, a British oil exploration team was flying over North Africa's harsh Libyan Desert when they stumbled across something unexpected… the wreckage of a United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) plane from World War 2. A ground crew eventually located the site, where a quick inspection of the remains identified it as a B-24D Liberator called the Lady Be Good, an Allied bomber that had disappeared following a bombing run in Italy in 1943. When she failed to return to base, the USAAF conducted a search, ultimately presuming that the Lady and her crew perished in the Mediterranean Sea after becoming disoriented.

The British oil surveyors found that the desert environment had preserved the aircraft's hardware astonishingly well; the plane's 50 caliber machine guns still operated at the pull of the trigger, the radio was in working condition, one of the engines was still functional, and there were still containers filled with water on board. But the remains of the crew were nowhere to be seen.

It took the US military over a year before they took the sighting seriously, but eventually they dispatched a search operation which scoured the desert for the remains of the crew. The search teams found several improvised arrow markers at varying distances to the northwest– one made of boots, others made from parachutes weighed down with rocks– but the markers stopped at the edge of the vast, shifting sea of sand known as Calanscio. The group was unsuccessful in finding any further trace of the crew.


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Chavez moves quickly to destroy his country.

With the election just weeks behind him, Hugo Chavez is moving quickly to silence his critics and nationalize large parts of his nation's economy. Obviously the horrible wreck socialism/communism made of the former Warsaw Pact countries under that exact system is no credible warning to this idiot. I hope God has pity on the people of Venezuela, because economic forces will not.

Chavez is another in a long line of bully boys from South America but in his case, one who seems to think he has found the key to making socialism actually work on a national level, something which has escaped every other country that has ever made a serious attempt at implementing it. Apparently his visits to the socialist paradise of his hero Fidel Castro never managed to deter him from a desire to duplicate Cuba in Venezuela.

Addendum: Publius Pundit offers more info.

Think of the implications of Chavez’s move, there, as well as the nutty governor’s statement now. Chavez intends to control all the media and information all through the country. CANTV’s stock has now plunged 16% on the NASDAQ until it was yanked from floor trading, due to its precipitous fall. Nobody thinks Chavez is going to compensate anyone fairly for his forced expropriation and the market is responding accordingly.

But more significantly, with the prospect of Chavez owning the entire phone line system — oh and what a shame this will be because Venezuela’s phone lines are the clearest in all South America, and they’ll go to hell under state ownership — Chavez will be able to listen in on any phone call he wants, especially with all the great electronic help he’s getting from Cuba’s communist electronic warfare experts who are now in Caracas. Worse yet, he’ll be able to cut off electricity to any dissident or group, effectively ending any possible power to dissemimate news via electronic media. The only way to get any serious news out of Venezuela now will be to fly into Venezuela. If you can get a visa.


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Iraq War Medicine

National Geographic has a fairly good piece up on the science of medicine in Iraq. If you like a well put together multimedia show, this is it. Thanks Jason.
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Military families and the media

Andi was kind enough to point to a dispatch written by an Air Force wife about the media. She attempts to explain why the media is disliked and mistrusted in the military family community.

During my husband's first deployment to Iraq in 2003, there came a time when I hadn't heard from him in nearly a week.  That day I happened to see Aaron Brown's news program on CNN.  Mr. Brown chose to exhibit a photograph of an American soldier, dead in a Baghdad gutter.  The story was about casualties that had been suffered that day.

My anger was white hot.   I could not see straight.  How DARE he?  How dare he show this picture for ratings?  How dare he flash this picture around so that the next morning someone would wake up to the chaplain on their doorstep and wail, "Oh my GOD!  That was my beloved I saw dead on TV last night!"  What if that person the chaplain visited was me?  I didn't sleep at all that night, and was downstairs at 5:30 am, sick to my stomach that there would be a knock on the door at 6.

I even wrote Mr. Brown about the situation.  His response to me?  "With all due respect, I didn't think it was that bad."

Of course you didn't, sir.  Because it is our family, our loved ones, and not yours.  To you it is just a story.  To us, it is our life.

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Sean went easy on her.

My thanks to MsU for this video. I feel for Cindy because she is so confused, her son is an American hero and deserves to be acknowledged as such. This is just a shame. My congrats to Sean for handling her with kid gloves. I hope she gets the mental treatment she so richly needs.
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Want to help our injured warriors?

Andi has a post on ways to help. Please consider it.

That's the most common question I'm asked by people who want to help our wounded troops and their families. Many feel that while they can send money to organizations which make a difference, sometimes it seems impersonal and they would rather do something more tangible, something that offers a direct connection to the service member/family member. But as many soon discover, unless you live near a military installation or a military hospital, there aren't many opportunities for direct access to those you want to reach.
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