Jokers to the Right.com: March 2007

Friday, March 30, 2007

Hero/Hack: Glengary Glenn Grease Edition

My hero this week is actor Alec Baldwin. Though he is a liberal Democrat, Baldwin has done something good for soldier Resha Kane:
“He read the article, was affected by it and offered to help with her education,” said Mike Canright, a Patriot Guard Rider and family friend of the soldier. “At times it's been overwhelming and amazing that it happened.”

But despite his politics Canright said Baldwin was moved by the article and eager to help.

“I believe in his sincerity when he says we can set politics aside to support our troops,” Canright said.

My hack this week is another actor, John Travolta. He is lecturing people about global warming, when he himself owns several jets:
Travolta's five private planes – a customised £2million Boeing 707, three Gulfstream jets and a Lear jet – are kept at the bottom of his garden in the US next to a private runway.
I have no problem with him owning the planes, or flying them. I just think he should be consistent. It seems to me that if Danny Zuko was serious about this issue, he'd get rid of the jets. Carbon offsets are for rich elitists. Or is saving the environment just for the rest of us?

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Diane Feinstein Resigns from MILCON

Metroactive:

The MILCON subcommittee is not only in charge of supervising military construction, it also oversees "quality of life" issues for veterans, which includes building housing for military families and operating hospitals and clinics for wounded soldiers. Perhaps Feinstein is trying to disassociate herself from MILCON's incredible failure to provide decent medical care for wounded soldiers.

Two years ago, before the Washington Post became belatedly involved, the online magazine Salon.com exposed the horrors of deficient medical care for Iraq war veterans. While leading MILCON, Feinstein had ample warning of the medical-care meltdown. But she was not proactive on veteran's affairs.

Feinstein abandoned MILCON as her ethical problems were surfacing in the media, and as it was becoming clear that her subcommittee left grievously wounded veterans to rot while her family was profiting from the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. It turns out that Blum also holds large investments in companies that were selling medical equipment and supplies and real estate leases—often without the benefit of competitive bidding—to the Department of Veterans Affairs, even as the system of medical care for veterans collapsed on his wife's watch.


But it's Bush that doesn't care about the troops, and Republicans who are corrupt, right?

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Seven Answers from Michael Crichton

Read the whole interview here. This is just an excerpt.

On global warming:

There has been so much disinformation about my position that I feel obliged to repeat what I said in my book. Yes, the globe is warming; the greenhouse effect is real; CO2 is a greenhouse gas; it is increasing from human activities; we would expect this increased CO2 to produce warming. All true.

But nothing in this sequence of statements implies that CO2 is the primary driver of the warming we are seeing. Not at all. It is one thing to say that CO2 is a greenhouse gas and is therefore causing warming; it is quite another to say CO2 is causing ALL of the warming that we see. There is good evidence (and good physical theory) for the first statement, and weak evidence, primarily computer models, for the second.

In response to "What is the most serious threat facing our civilisation?"

Loss of classical liberal values in those western societies that embraced them.

England was the first modern state, the first superpower, the first nation to deal with moral issues around the world, and the first nation to install the benefits of what we might now loosely term a liberal society. I mean that in the 19th century sense of liberalism. That notion of liberalism was also present in America, but made it to the Continent only in a pale and limited form. It is a wonderful social conception that must be vigilantly guarded. It is not shared by other nations in the world. Nor is it shared by many citizens in English-speaking countries. Peculiarly, many of our most educated citizens are least sympathetic to classical liberal ideals. Indeed the term 'liberalism' in the modern day has come to imply a constellation of attitudes that John Stuart Mill would not recognize as liberal at all. Nor would, say, John F. Kennedy recognize them as liberal. Kennedy's conception of liberalism was simultaneously more tolerant and more tough-minded: tolerant about varieties of behavior within the society, and tough-minded toward threats to a tolerant society from without.

That's all gone, now. Today there is far too much sensitivity within societies, and too little hard-nosed recognition of threats from without. We are inclined to be intolerant of speech by our friends and neighbors, and tolerant of beheadings, rape, and homophobia in distant lands.

This makes no sense. But here we are.

Crichton is a guy who really gets it. I've been a fan of his books since I first discovered Jurassic Park, and over the past two years have come to have the utmost respect for his opinions.

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

How President Eisenhower Solved the Illegal Immigration Crisis

Older Christian Science Monitor editorial on Eisenhower and immigration that popped up on my Digg RSS:
Fifty-three years ago, when newly elected Dwight Eisenhower moved into the White House, America's southern frontier was as porous as a spaghetti sieve. As many as 3 million illegal migrants had walked and waded northward over a period of several years for jobs in California, Arizona, Texas, and points beyond.

President Eisenhower cut off this illegal traffic. He did it quickly and decisively with only 1,075 United States Border Patrol agents - less than one-tenth of today's force. The operation is still highly praised among veterans of the Border Patrol.
. . .
Then on June 17, 1954, what was called "Operation Wetback" began. Because political resistance was lower in California and Arizona, the roundup of aliens began there. Some 750 agents swept northward through agricultural areas with a goal of 1,000 apprehensions a day. By the end of July, over 50,000 aliens were caught in the two states. Another 488,000, fearing arrest, had fled the country.
. . .

Unlike today, Mexicans caught in the roundup were not simply released at the border, where they could easily reenter the US. To discourage their return, Swing arranged for buses and trains to take many aliens deep within Mexico before being set free.



The lesson here is that illegals only stay because they feel like they can. A sweep like this and an employer crackdown would seriously stem this problem.

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On Impeachment

Hube has a great post on Republican Senator Chuck Hagel calling for Bush's impeachment.

For several years now, lefties and assorted others have called for Bush's impeachment. It is usually because the war in Iraq is "illegal," or that they want to "restore the Constitution."

Here is what the Constitution says about impeachment (Article II, Section 4):
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.
Now, whether you agree or disagree with the President's policies, I have yet to hear anyone provide substantive evidence for any crime as stated in the US code.

Oh yeah, and read Hube's post. It's sarcastastic!

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Happiness is Jim Webb's Gun

Drudge:
SENATE STAFFER BUSTED FOR CARRYING WEBB'S LOADED GUN: Phillip Thompson, executive assistant to Senator James Webb (D-VA ), has been arrested by Capitol Hill Police on Monday for 'inadvertently' holding the senator's loaded gun, according to a person close to the investigation. A Senate staffer reports that Thompson was arrested for carrying the gun in a bag through security at the Russell Senate Office building while the Senator was parking his car. Thompson was booked for carrying a pistol without a license (CPWL) and for possessing unregistered ammunition. According to congressional rules, congressmen and senators, not staff, are allowed to have a gun on federal property.
Hopefully this places Webb fully against the recently overturned DC gun ban, which may have to be battled out in Congress.

UPDATE 5:00PM 3/27/2007: So apparently it wasn't Jim Webb's gun, or at least, that's what Jim Webb says. Instapundit has a good roundup. Statement by Webb:
"I believe that it's important — it's important for me, personally, and for a lot of people in the situation that I'm in, to be able to defend myself and my family," Webb said. "Since 9/11 for people who are in government I think in general there has been an agreement that it's a more dangerous time. Again, I'm not going to comment, again, with great specificity about how I defend myself, but I do feel that I have that right."
Shouldn't everyone have that right? Not just G-Men?

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Friday, March 23, 2007

Hero/Hack

My hero this week is Elizabeth Edwards, John Edwards wife. Dealing with something like cancer is never easy, and being in the public eye can't make it any easier. My prayers are with her.

Nancy Pelosi is my hack this week


Victory Caucus:

You might think that on the eve of a historic vote on emergency funding for the war effort, Speaker Pelosi would stay focused on the vote and on her caucus in the House.

Wrong! This evening, she'll be hosting Democratic fat-cats at a $28,500 - per - couple fundraiser in New York .

Don Surber says that "Dennis Hastert is looking more competent by the hour."

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Quote of the Week

"The planet has a fever" - Al Gore.

And the only prescription is more cowbell!

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Wednesday, March 21, 2007

SB5: Attack of the Clones & The Spirit of HB 76

Today I was down in Dover for the committee hearing on Senate Bill 5, a piece of state legislation that deals with the issues of stem cell research.

The biggest issue, however, was human cloning. SB5 legalizes somatic cell nuclear transfer, which is widely defined as cloning, and was the process used to clone Dolly the sheep. Among the speakers was former Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell, who spoke on behalf of Hands Off Our Ovaries talked about egg harvesting that legalizing cloning would seem to require. Cloning requires thousands of eggs per attempt.

The committee meeting ran from after one to three o’clock in the afternoon. There were many speakers on both sides, but Senator Venables, the sponsor of the bill, and Senator Sokola specifically, the only other committee member who spoke, seemed not to be swayed by the testimony of the anti-clone side.

I am not sure if SB5 will in fact make it out of committee, but if it does, Venables says he would like it to come to the floor for a full vote in the next couple weeks.

After the SB5 hearing concluded, I strode across the State House to the committee hearing on HB76. HB76 is sponsored by Representative Joe Miro, the intent of which is to ban human cloning.

In the hearing, when the Representatives spoke, it seemed that most seemed to state that they opposed human reproductive cloning. Some of the Representatives took issue with some of the specific instances of language within the bill. The bill attempts to cover all the bases, including reproductive cloning, and the creation of chimeras.

In the end, the vote for SB5 to make it out of committee is tomorrow, and HB 76 was table for another week. Officially, HB 76 was tabled to refine the language, but I have my suspicions that SB 5 sympathizers on the House committee are trying to stall HB 76.

For more information: A Rose and a Prayer

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Review: Rush Single "Far Cry"


Canadian power trio Rush has a new album, Snakes and Arrows, coming out May 1. They released the single "Far Cry" this week. I downloaded it from the iTunes Music Store for 99 cents, but you can listen to the entire song for free on Rush's website. It's climbed to number 13 on the charts right now, which is pretty impressive for a band that has not ever seen (or looked for) radio play.

I really like the song. It sounds almost like a mash up of various styles of their's, some parts of the song harkening all the way back to their 70s days, especially the bass heavy intro. Overall it seems to be a continuation of the style they've been working with from their last three studio efforts (1993, 1997, 2002).

Overall, this song really makes me want to hear the album, and it's a good mainstream rock song. Give it a listen on the website for free!

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Monday, March 19, 2007

CPAC & The State of Conservatism

This is the last CPAC post, and it has been the longest in coming 1) because it required the most amount of digestion/reflection, and 2) because I've been really busy. A good amount of this post was spurred on by Mark Henrie's ISI-sposnored talk on Saturday morning of CPAC entitled "Conservatism 101."

He used as a branching off point George Nash's three divisions of the conservative movement and the books that define them (from Nash's excellent History of the Conservative Movement in America Since 1945). Those three divisions are libertarians, spurred on by F.A. Hayek's The Road to Serfdom, anti-communists, pointing at Whittaker Chambers' Witness, and the traditionalists, who found inspiration in Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind, and Richard M. Weaver's Ideas Have Consequences.

Now obviously, there can be great conflict between all of these three groups, though they have natural points of convergence. For example, the libertarians and the traditionalists would have both prefer to have a non-interventionist foreign policy, and the anti-communists wanted to fight communism at home and abroad. However, all three parts came together, getting Barry Goldwater the nomination in 1968 and Reagan the presidency in 1980.

The reason for this uniting was that they all believed that the West was in crisis. The anti-communists feared the growing power of the USSR, and its further expansion into Europe and Asia. The libertarians feared the expansion of the state in Western Europe, which they believed would lead to totalitarianism. The motivating events for traditionalists, according to Weaver where William of Ockham, the French Revolution, and the rise of Nazism in Germany. The traditionalists found it appalling that Nazism had come rise in Germany, one of the most politically advanced countries in the West.

Conservatives genuinely believed that they were on the "losing side of history." They firmly believed, as common wisdom both inside and outside academia, that the inevitable victory of the USSR was, well inevitable. Henrie said in his talk that if someone had asked him 5 minutes before the Berlin Wall fell if the Soviet Union would collapse, he would have laughed at such a ludicrous idea. (More on this thinking in John O'Sullivan's new book The President, the Pope and the Prime Minister: Three Who Changed the World; and a great review of the book over at Albion's Seedlings)

In fact, the fundamental event that places the conservative movement at a crossroads is the fall of the USSR. This allowed the rise of Neoonservatism and the New Right (mainly the Evangelical Protestants). Henrie described Neocons as "hard Wilsonians," who rediscovered the market in the 1970s, and wished to use market-based government-led solutions to domestic problems. It also caused conservatives to re-think this tragic sense of history.

The most successful way to govern the conservative movement, a task most successfully accomplished by Reagan, was to effectively partition these groups into separate spheres of influence. The libertarians were given domestic economic policy, the traditionalists domestic social policy, and the anti-communists foreign policy. In this way, Reagan seems to be the climactic figure for the conservative movement. After all, he defeated the Soviets and is mentioned about once every half minute at CPAC.

The election of Reagan and the eventual defeat of the USSR does not mean the conservative movement was successful, nor does it mean that they even set out on these goals. In fact, the movement has been challenged by defeat after defeat, and if the actions of the 2000-2006 Republican Congress and the first Bush Administration is any indication, conservatives generally deal better with defeat than with success.

Well, what about the 1990s? According to Henrie, conservatives who were in college during the 1990s saw Pat Buchanan as the savior of the movement, and the logical successor to Reagan. Buchanan was wildly popular within the movement, but it seems that now his diehard followers are seen as black sheep to a point.

It seems that now, this having been my third CPAC, Newt Gingrich is trying to position himself as the Reagan/Buchanan for this decade, and perhaps the next as well. He wants to be the godfather for this generation of collegiate conservatives, and seems to turn out some of the largest crowds at CPAC on a regular basis. I'm not sure if this is a good thing. Gingrich has a lot of ideas (the man is almost his own think tank) but they're not always good ideas. Especially given that he seems to speak mostly in rhetoric.

This is where conservatives face one of the two big crises of today. One, there is no charismatic leader to coalesce around, and conservatives on the whole seem less educated about their intellectual roots than the used to be, buying into sets of ideas that at one point were much more systemic than they are today.

Many conservatives on campuses today can point to what they are opposed to more readily than what they are for. This presents a challenge in finding that leader. It should be someone who is well rooted in the intellectual tradition, someone who makes policy decisions based on that tradition rather than from an abstracted set of ideas. This is what has happened with President Bush. He is "conservative" in that he employs conservatives and seems to be a neocon, but is not rooted in the tradition of Robert Taft or Ronald Reagan.

The second crisis is the challenge that Islamic terror poses to the country. Many of us see this as a "clash of civilizations," but Henrie more aptly defines it has a clash of civilization and barbarism. Henrie suggests that conservatives have lost the tragic sense of the future, but some, like Mark Steyn, certainly retain it about this conflict.

Islam is not a product of the left, like communism, socialism, and fascism. They are progressive in that they appear after democratic and republican forms of government. Henrie asserts that Islam is of the right, though really not an ideology at all, because of its inherit mysticism.

The Cold War and World War II were conflicts that spanned the world, but were fundamentally still of the West. Russia is one of the great western nations, which had gone astray in 1917. Because of this, neocons have come to believe that liberal democracy is inevitable in the Middle East just as it has established itself in the West. This is flawed because Islam is not of the West.

In it's mild forms, Islam has the grounds to be a well reasoned religion like Judaism or Christianity, but has deeply cut off it's philosophical interpretations of the Qur'an. Thus the radical elements, like Wahabbism, are able to assert itself at the forefront and radicalize many Muslims. And really it isn't the Muslims in the Middle East that are poised to bring the West to its knees, but Muslims now of Europe, where radical mosques are able to attract disaffected second generation Muslims.

I don't have a solution to either of these crises, as I am looking for someone to lead us forward, especially in 2008. This is the state of conservatism as I see it: looking for direction. Hopefully we will find one traveling from the right place.

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

The Gospel of John and Yoko?

Oleg Atbashian, originally from the Ukraine, has an interesting article about the war protesters who try to live continually in the "glory days" of John Lennon's "Imagine." He writes:
My research has led me to the excerpts from Yoko Ono and John Lennon’s articles published in the 1972 editions of Sundance magazine. Although attributed to John and Yoko jointly, they were written mostly by Yoko who clearly was the one wearing the pants. It should be a required read for everyone who would like to know where their otherwise lazy and cynical leftist opponents get their passionate idealistic convictions from.

Here is a condensed list (the full text is here):

1. A collective hallucination can create objective reality.
2. “The fenceless and doorless world is soon to come.” Obviously it’s a good thing.
3. Middle America is stupid and “afraid of youth and the future.”
4. People work not because they’re glad to have a job but because they’re being bullied into working by the “tyranny and suppression of the capitalists.” (Karl Marx called and left a message).
5. Immature youth are “the aware ones”; traditional education and thought discipline is the enemy.
6. Material reality is evil.
7. “Come together rather than claim independence.”
8. “Feel rather than think.”
9. Immature and irresponsible behavior is a virtue.
10. Possessions are immoral. “Any possession that is more than what you need belongs to someone who needs it.”
11. A worldwide revolution (“progress”) is inevitable, and such a future “cannot be anything but brightness.”
12. To resist the revolution is immoral because it prolongs people’s suffering.
13. A society based on competitiveness and logic produces “hypocrisy, violence, and chaos.”
14. A society based on love rather than reasoning will produce “balance, peace, and contentment.”
15. To remove evil from this world men must be feminized (if you liked this one you will also like “The DaVinci Code” which is a 500-pages-long regurgitation of this very doctrine).


Hmm. Drugs really do mess with your head. He frames the post around the question "Who is your favorite Beatle?" Instapundit agrees with Atbashian and says Ringo, saying, "wouldn't you trust a man who'd marry Barbara Bach over one who'd marry, well, Yoko?"

Me? I tend to go back and forth between Paul and Ringo.

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Stephenson on 300

Neal Stephenson, this blogger's favorite author, has a piece in the NYT today on 300:

A WEEK ago Friday, moments before an opening-day showing of the movie “300” at Seattle’s Cinerama, a 20-something moviegoer rushed to the front of the theater, dropped his shoulders, curled his arms into a mock-Schwarzenegger pose and bellowed out a timeless remark of King Leonidas of Sparta that has in the last week become the catchphrase of the year: “Spartans! Tonight we dine in hell!”

Groans, roars, macho hooting noises and sardonic applause rained down on him. The audience had been standing in line for an hour. Only a few of them were dressed as Greek hoplites. They were much better balanced between men and women than I’d expected and, racially, looked like a fair cross section of Seattle’s populace. Over the next couple of hours, they enjoyed “300” with roughly the same level of energy and audience participation as one would expect in an N.C.A.A. Final Four game.

Read the whole thing.

I think this might lend more credence to the opinion that Stephenson is a libertarian, but I find that this is a much more well reasoned review than mos, because he does a much better job explaining the success of 300 than most.

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Friday, March 16, 2007

Hero/Hack

My heroes this week are the scientists speaking out against Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth. It is sad that they have to be lauded for trying to do their jobs (science), but that is the case.
The New York Times:
In talks, articles and blog entries that have appeared since his film and accompanying book came out last year, these scientists argue that some of Mr. Gore’s central points are exaggerated and erroneous. They are alarmed, some say, at what they call his alarmism.

“I don’t want to pick on Al Gore,” Don J. Easterbrook, an emeritus professor of geology at Western Washington University, told hundreds of experts at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America. “But there are a lot of inaccuracies in the statements we are seeing, and we have to temper that with real data.”

My hacks this week are Gov. Schwarzenegger and the State of California for moving their presidential primary to February 5.

"Moving up the primary from June to February gives California the influence it deserves in choosing the next presidential candidates," said state Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger after signing the law ordering the move.
This means that with other states considering similar moves that the presidential primaries could be more or less decided by the second week of February. I think that is bad for the process because the more choices and the more competition the better off we are in choosing the best possible president.

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CPAC Wrapup: Global Warming Skepticism

So here is the third (of four) CPAC related posts (finally!). This one, as you can tell from the title, is about global warming. The fourth, a reflection on the current state of conservatism, should be up early next week.

Though there were only two climate change related talks at CPAC, since it is an issue I am very much concerned about, and since this is my blog, I get to write a whole big post about it.

Senator James Inhofe, ranking member on the Environment and Public Works Committee, gave an excellent talk, and handed out a rather large sheet of notes to make his PowerPoint easier to follow, so we didn’t have to scribble as fast.

Inhofe started out by talking about the media swings in climate change alarmism. They are as follows: 1895-1920s cold, 1930s-1950s hot, 1950s-70s cold, 1980s-now hot. He cited articles from The New York Times, TIME magazine and others to back this claim up.

He also went through a long list of climate change scientists who have come to doubt the dogma of global warming. The list was larger than expected, and Canadian climatologist Timothy Ball declared man-made global warming “the greatest deception in the history of science.”

Inhofe also mentioned Delaware’s own embattled state climatologist, Prof. Legates, when saying that the views of Oregon and Delaware’s state climatologists are in jeopardy because of their views. On the climate.

He also has a ton of links at his committee’s website, and has produced a 68 page “Skeptic’s Guide to Debunking Global Warming Alarmism” available here.

Immediately following Senator Inhofe was a panel on the same topic entitled “Global Warming Debate Getting the Cold Shoulder.” It featured Chris Horner, author The Politically Incorrect Guide to Global Warming, Dan Gainor, Media Research Center and was moderated by Robert Bidinotto, Atlas Society and Objectivist Center.

Horner, of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, made an interesting point in global temperature readings. He said that one of the contributing factors to making the 1990s the ‘hottest decade on record’ was the closing of several Siberian weather stations after the fall of the Soviet Union. Thus these cold-climate stations ceased to report weather data and ceased to be included in the 1990s temperature records, skewing the numbers.

One thing I’d like to take this time to address is the accusation that global warming skeptics are “anti-science.” In my view, I’m more “pro-science” than the global warming advocates! What the vast majority of skeptics want is further investigation into the causes of global warming. I would like for the scientific community to debate this issue like they debate countless others.

I think “going green” is a great thing, and something we should do, humanity being the stewards of the Earth and that we should act as such. I just don’t think scare tactics are the way to go about attainting that goal.

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Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Pope Stands Ground

VATICAN CITY -- Pope Benedict XVI yesterday set out "nonnegotiable values" as he urged Catholic lawmakers to oppose laws favoring divorce, abortion, homosexual "marriage" and euthanasia.
In a long-awaited text, the pope exhorted "Catholic politicians and legislators ... to introduce and support laws inspired by values grounded in human nature."
"These values are not negotiable," he wrote, listing "respect for human life, its defense from conception to natural death [and] the family built upon marriage between a man and a woman."
Benedict's first such apostolic exhortation dashed any hope for a relaxation of the requirement of celibacy for Roman Catholic priests, and comes as draft legislation before Italy's parliament proposes to give legal status to unmarried couples, including homosexuals.
The document, which is second in importance only to an encyclical and reflects the conclusions of an October 2005 synod of bishops, also comes as efforts to break the taboo against euthanasia are spreading across Europe.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

2008 Watch: I Believe In Competition

The NYT is running a story talking about how divided the GOP is. Well, it's always been that way, at least since WWII. I for one welcome the strong, large field we Republicans enjoy for 2008. The more the merrier. I haven't made up my mind for '08 yet and I think that's a good thing.


Sorry blogging has been so light as of late, but school stuff has been relentless. I still owe you guys the two remaining CPAC posts! Hopefully after my two exams tomorrow, things should settle down.

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Saturday, March 10, 2007

300

Saw 300 last night. In a word, surreal. And of course, the Battle of Thermopylae is extremely important to Western Civ. This sums up my thoughts about the political "messages" in the movie:
To which Kid Various can only reply – maybe it’s not such a bad idea for America’s teens to understand, in the phrase of J.S. Mill, that war is an ugly thing but not the ugliest of things. Maybe it’s not such a terrible tragedy for young men and women in our country to get the message that there are things that are worth going to war for. There are things worth dying for.

It might even be a good idea for young American men and women to understand why Thermopylae was important for the survival of Western civilization and that, yes, there is indeed something distinct called Western civilization. That this civilization is characterized by pluralism, individualism, democracy, rationalism and reason.** And that more so, the rest of the world does not necessarily share these values. That most of the population of the world has, from time immemorial, suffered under the constraints of tribal/traditional culture that has led them only to despotism, penury, superstition… and defeat.

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Friday, March 09, 2007

Hero/Hack

My heroes this week are the judges on the DC circuit court, who have made a fantastic Constitutional decision:
To summarize, we conclude that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms. That right existed prior to the formation of the new government under the Constitution and was premised on the private use of arms for activities such as hunting and self-defense, the latter being understood as resistance to either private lawlessness or the depredations of a tyrannical government (or a threat from abroad). In addition, the right to keep and bear arms had the important and salutary civic purpose of helping to preserve the citizen militia. The civic purpose was also a political expedient for the Federalists in the First Congress as it served, in part, to placate their Antifederalist opponents. The individual right facilitated militia service by ensuring that citizens would not be barred from keeping the arms they would need when called forth for militia duty. Despite the importance of the Second Amendment's civic purpose, however, the activities it protects are not limited to militia service, nor is an individual's enjoyment of the right contingent upon his or her continued or intermittent enrollment in the militia.

Check out the Instapundit roundup. This is monumental, and the implications for gun rights will be far reaching.

My hacks this week are the people who decided on the "Definitive 200" list of albums for the rock and roll hall of fame. The top ten, twenty isn't so bad, but the list is too heavily weighted with things from 1997 on, which haven't stood the test of longer than a decade. It is also very rap/hip-hop/urban heavy, which I don't think is appropriate for a list from the Rock 'n' Roll hall of fame. But they haven't inducted Rush yet, so what do they know.

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Thursday, March 08, 2007

Token Muslim Guy?

MINNEAPOLIS — The State Department is turning to Rep. Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress, to help burnish the country's image in the Muslim world — despite Ellison's outspoken criticism of the Bush administration's foreign policy.

"I plan to talk to people in the State Department and anywhere I can to help try to improve America's image in the Muslim world, make friends for our country," Ellison, a freshman Minnesota Democrat, said in a telephone interview Wednesday. "I want to help win friends for our country and to isolate true enemies."

I'm not really sure what to make of it. Seems like it could be a good thing overall.

Also, those last two CPAC-related articles are still on their way. I just have a lot of school-related work I need to be doing.

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Tuesday, March 06, 2007

JttR In Print: 2008 The Early Field

I have an editorial in University of Delaware's Review today. Here's an excerpt:
Although the election is not for another 20 months, the 2008 presidential election is occupying a top spot in the media. Between Right now Rudy Giuliani, "America's Mayor," is leading polls with a sometime 2-1 lead over his nearest rival, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

Besides Giulani and McCain, there are a host of other Republicans currently seeking the nomination, making this an exciting and vibrant field. I had the opportunity to listen to many of these candidates this past week at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C.

You can read the whole thing here (if it asks to 'verify' registration, use my e-mail address, flybyyyz [at] udel [dot] edu)

For those that read this blog, a lot of this might seem familiar. Well, that's because it is. This isn't a topic I would have chosen for an editorial, but that's what they asked for. And I didn't title it.

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Monday, March 05, 2007

Science and Ethics of Stem Cell Reseach

UDaily:
Mary Ann McLane, associate professor of medical technology at UD, will speak about the science and ethics of embryonic stem cell research from 7-9 p.m., Thursday, March 8, in 104 Gore Hall. There will be a small reception after the talk.

This talk is sponsored by the Pro-Life Vanguard, the Catholic Scholars of Delaware and the Saint Thomas More Oratory. Refreshments will be provided by UD's Department of Medical Technology.

McLane is a teaching and research professor with expertise in cancer research. Her publications include the journal article “New Insights on Disintegrin-Receptor Interactions: Eristostatin and Melanoma Cells,” which investigates the role of naturally occurring proteins called disintegrins in retarding the growth of tumor cells. McLane has given presentations around the state about stem cells, cloning and the parameters of ethical stem cell research.



I helped plan this talk, and would like to invite people to attend. It is directly related to Senate Bill 5.

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2008 Watch: CPAC Wrapup Edition

As mentioned in the previous post, this is post two of four on CPAC, and as indicated in the title, this one will focus on the 2008 elections and the ramifications of CPAC.

First, the John McCain no show. He claims a calendar conflict, but I don't buy it. Everyone else made the time to be there, and this would have been an important venue for him to attempt to rebuild some political capital with the grassroots.

Duncan Hunter I thought spoke well, though he is still an unknown Congressman from San Diego. The other Delawareans I was with had generally favorable things so say.

Mike Huckabee
was the candidate that impressed me the most. I was not expecting much, if anything out of his speech, and had sort of forgotten he was even running. He gave one of the better speeches I saw at CPAC this year, and perhaps the best by a presidential candidate. He has agreed to sign the Americans for Tax Reform pledge to not raise taxes, which is good news for fiscal conservatives. Of the other Delaware people I was with, he seemed to garner the most favorable opinion post-speech, and several voted for him in the straw poll. They said he had realistic ideas, seems a solid conservative, and has an identity outside being a conservative. He is also the first governor in the nation to have a concealed carry permit, which is pretty cool.

Rudy Giuliani seemed to position himself as a leader in the Reagan model (though he might have mentioned Reagan least of all the people who spoke). Rudy said that we need leaders, not commenters, and promised fiscally conservative, optimistic leadership with a "peace through strength" foreign policy. He spoke to a packed audience, possibly the most packed of the entire weekend. I thought his speech was pretty good, but I think it probably came across better on television.

I saw Tom Tancredo at a reception Thursday evening with Ron Paul. Tancredo acted as if he were among friends, and was fairly candid for someone running for president. His feelings on Iraq aside, I really don't like Ron Paul. He's tried to combine Austrian economics with protectionism, I just don't think you can do that. As for Tanc's speech, I thought his little riff on "hyphenated" conservatism was interesting, and I liked it. So much for the paleocons who want to claim him as their own.

I don't like Mitt Romney. I really just can't think of one positive that he has. He acts too much like a politician for his own good. His speech was lame, and he only won the straw poll because he had the most paid staff in attendance. As for his association with Ann Coulter, he gets what he pays for.

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

Post-CPAC Notes

Sorry for not posting for most of last week, I was attending CPAC in Washington, and had every intention of blogging from the conference, but did not get the opportunity primarily due to the lack of time and free WiFi.

This will be the first of at least four posts on things that occurred at CPAC, with others focusing on 2008 (later tonight or tomorrow), global warming (sometime soon after that), and the state of conservatism today (that's gonna be a long one).

Here are some highlights that don't fit into any of the above:
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said "Republicans [in Congress are] serious about returning to conservative values," having "learned our [their] lesson" and pledged to keep Congressional Democrats in line, claiming that since they came into power, not one "bad bill" had made its way to Bush's desk. He also said that the bill the Dems have pushing the final recommendations of the 9-11 Commission into law (all two of them), is actually centered around giving collective bargaining rights to civilian airport security screeners.

White House Spokesman Tony Snow called for conservatives to "take off the dark colored glasses," and gave a pretty inspiring speech. I've been a fan of of Snow for a while now, and what I really love about his speech was that he has mastered the technique of making the audience feel that he is letting us in on some big secret. It's wonderful, and even though I know it's a technique, it still makes me feel that way. He also used a good amount of humor, and seemed to be really enjoying himself.

Kellyanne Conway, a notable conservative spokesperson, on a panel with Mike Barone and others, said that "Hillary is not the Clinton America misses." She also finds it ironic that a "feminist icon" like Hillary "needs her man to get anywhere in politics." Conway did express her empathy for Mrs. Clinton by saying she feels kind of bad that she probably the only one running for president that is the second-best politician in their family.

Wayne LePierre, of the NRA, is one of the most dynamic speakers I've ever heard, and never miss his CPAC speeches. He talked about what the NRA is up to right now, including fighting the UN and working hard to get the legal guns confiscated in New Orleans in the Katrina aftermath back to their rightful owners. (More on that here and here from the JttR archives)

I went to an excellent panel on China and Venezuela, even if it seemed like both panelists were making the case that their area of expertise was the bigger threat.

Thor Halversson of the Human Rights Foundation talked about Venezuela and Hugo Chavez. Though democratically elected, Chavez has been consolidating power ever since, and has gained more power by revamping the Venezuelan constitution. He is also working with other regional allies like Fidel Castro, as well as China and trying to curry favor with Russia by buying enormous stockpiles of AK-47s. Chavez has said he intends to rule until at least 2030, and the only institutional opposition he faces in his country is the Catholic Church.

Jed Babbin, author of Showdown: Why China Wants War with the U.S, said that great powers historically only rise out of war, and that China seems more and more like 1930s Germany. China's anti-satellite weaponry is a huge potential threat to the US, as are armed forces are dependent on satellites. He praised the Bush Administration for seeking strategic partners in the region such as India and Vietnam, who fear China's growing power.

Newt Gingrich spoke on his "Winning the Future" solutions...again. basically the same tune for three years now. He talked about some 2008 stuff that I'll cover in that post, but seemed to be mostly rhetoric in his speech, especially on foreign policy. Who doesn't want a strong America? Especially in the CPAC crowd. Sheesh.

And no, I did not watch Ann Coutler's speech. Nor Sean Hannity's.

A record 6,300 people registered for CPAC 2007.

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  • I'm Ryan S.
  • From University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, United States
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