Archive for October, 2004

31
Oct

Good for the goose

Democrats love to make fun of how President Bush mispronounces “nuclear” as “nucular”. Well, I’m starting to get annoyed at how John Kerry pronounces “idea”. There is no “r” at the end of the word.

31
Oct

Disgusting Democrats

I can’t wait for this election season to be over. The rhetoric has reached a fever pitch and is disgusting and offensive. On “Fox News Sunday” this morning, Pennsylvania’s Democrat Gov. Ed Rendell (who has done all he can to make sure that military voters don’t get their ballots counted in that state) told host Chris Matthews that President George W. Bush is Al Qaeda’s best recruiting tool and that Osama bin Laden favors the president’s re-election. [Personally, I thought the 72 virgins was the best recruiting tool, but to each his own.]

Then you get the Democrats’ first stepson stepping in it with some anti-Semitism and slander.

Chris Heinz, 31, displayed his mother Teresa’s famous lack of rhetorical restraint at a recent campaign event with a group of Wharton students. Philadelphia magazine reports: “Heinz accused Kerry’s opponents – ‘our enemies’ – of making the race dirty. ‘We didn’t start out with negative ads calling George Bush a cokehead,’ he said, before adding, ‘I’ll do it now.’ Asked later about it, Heinz said, ‘I have no evidence. He never sold me anything.’” Heinz also reminded writer Sasha Issenberg of Pat Buchanan by saying, “One of the things I’ve noticed is the Israel lobby – the treatment of Israel as the 51st state, sort of a swing state.” Buchanan was blasted as an anti-Semite years ago when he cited Israel’s “amen corner” in Congress.

On the intellectual elite beat, we’ve got a college professor kicking a Republican student for being a Republican.

Fort Lewis College student Mark O’Donnell said he was showing people his College Republicans sweat shirt, which said “Work for us now … or work for us later,” when Maria Spero kicked him in the leg at an off-campus restaurant.

Spero then said “she should have kicked me harder and higher,” said O’Donnell. “To physically take that out on someone because you disagree with them, that is completely wrong.”

Spero, a visiting instructor of modern languages, apologized to O’Donnell in a letter dated Oct. 29.

One wonders how Spero treats students in her classes who disagree with her politically.

Yes, there are Republicans who behave badly too, but it appears as though the most vitriol is produced by the left. You don’t hear Barbara or Jenna Bush calling John Kerry a traitor to his country for meeting with the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong in Paris — while he was still a member of the military.

31
Oct

Scary Halloween pics

Instapundit has one that he thinks will scare some people. I have a photo that will scare others.

Go out and vote Tuesday.

[Yes, the cut-and-paste job is pretty poor. I'm just not going to spend a lot of time on something like this.]

30
Oct

Hit refresh

I mean it. Right now. Hit the “refresh” button on your browser. You did it? Good. You are now two separate people. I’m not talking schizophrenia or multiple personality disorder here. I mean, you’re really two separate people. Like the feeling? Hit refresh again. Now you’re three separate people — at least the way The New York Times decides to count people. N.Z. Bear wrote to the Times to try to get a correction and was rebuffed.

I publish the website The Truth Laid Bear, which was cited as a source in Jim Rutenberg’s piece on bloggers, “Web Offers Hefty Voice to Critics of Mainstream Journalists” dated 10/28 as follows:

“A recent posting on DailyKos, a liberal Web site visited by more than 500,000 people daily, according to blog rankings posted on a site called The Truth Laid Bear…”

The statement that Daily Kos is visited by more than 500,000 people daily based on my site’s rankings is inaccurate. The rankings on my site represent Average Daily Visits as tracked by SiteMeter (www.sitemeter.com). They represent the number of visits each blog receives during a day, with a visit being defined by SiteMeter as “a series of page views by one person with no more than 30 minutes in between page views” (http://www.sitemeter.com/default.asp?action=help#2).

What the data does NOT show is that it is 500,000 individual people visiting Kos’ site each day, as is stated in the Times article. It is far more likely (approaching certainty) that the number of individuals checking Kos’ site during a day is much smaller, and that each of them check back a few times during the day. If, for example, we assume each reader checks an average of twice a day, then it would be 250,000 people visiting daily. Given that Kos’ site is a major portal for political bloggers, it is quite possible that the number of visits-per-day-per-person is even higher, as loyal readers check back many times during the day to get the latest news; however, it is impossible to know this exactly based on the summary SiteMeter data provided on my site.

You can go to Bear’s site and see the back-and-forth responses, but suffice it to say that Bear is right an the Times is wrong. Saying that each “visit” a site receives is a different person is like saying that each time you set the paper down on the breakfast table and then pick it up again is another “subscriber” to the newspaper.

30
Oct

When the GOP does it, there's a brouhaha

Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, who has slowly been losing his mind, has started channeling Pat Roberston.

Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin says John Kerry has been gaining in the polls every day since Oct. 21, and George Bush has been going down every day.

“That’s how God wants it to be,” Harkin told a group of about 25 people at the Benton County Headquarters in Vinton on Thursday afternoon.

And Democrats snigger when some pastor somewhere says President Bush was “chosen by God” or some similar formulation.

I’m just waiting for Harkin to ask for a couple million for his re-election campaign or God will call him home.

30
Oct

Osama's not a splatter

After suffering nearly three years of stage fright, the world’s most wanted piece of excrement made a video appearance just days before Americans go to the polls to vote.

Both the Kerry campaign and the Bush administration will use Osama’s appearance to their advantage. Kerry will once again decry the “outsourcing” of Tora Bora. Bush will simply ask: “Who do you trust to go after this guy?”

If the polls are any indication, Americans overwhelmingly feel that President Bush would do better in the war on terror. As national security becomes a more and more important issue, Kerry’s numbers correspondingly decline.

This was bad news for Kerry and unless he can turn the media focus back to the economy, he’s in trouble.

28
Oct

Ahhnold calling

Just got a pre-recorded phone call from the Governator inviting me to a Saturday rally against various propositions at the Del Mar Fairgrounds. Schwarzenegger claimed to be traveling up and down the state campaigning — a typical Republican lie — while he’s stumping for President Bush in Ohio.

The real news is that this phone call makes you, the reader of this blog, less than six degrees of separation away from California’s governor. Just another of the benefits of being a Hoystory reader.

28
Oct

Hoystory endorses

With absentee ballots arriving in mailboxes and many people taking advantage of early voting opportunities across the country, I wanted to get the long-awaited Hoystory.com endorsement out on the Internet. I want to emphasize that the following endorsement is not approved by, nor is it representative of the views of, my employer, The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Having said that, I want you to know that I will be working election night designing the Union-Tribune’s metro section. The presidential candidate I want you, the reader, to vote for is the one who will ensure that I spend the night surrounded by a horde of miserable, distraught and depressed people.

Let me say this again. I’ll be in the newsroom. Working. You. Vote. Person who will make other people in the newsroom sad.

That is all.

28
Oct

An interesting correction

The Wall Street Journal earlier this week ran a correction to a front-page article by reporters Shailagh Murray and Greg Hitt. The sentence being corrected was this one:

Mr. Bush believes the key to victory lies in his party’s conservative core. He gave a rare interview over the weekend to Fox News, a network sympathetic to Mr. Bush and popular with Republicans.

Even I will admit that Fox News tilts to the right. I will also admit that CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN and MSNBC tilt to the left to varying degrees. But you would never see reporters characterize CBS as “sympathetic” to Sen. John Kerry.

This illustrates the difference between a paper’s editorial pages and its news pages. The Journal has the country’s most prestigious conservative editorial page — but that obviously doesn’t extend to its newsroom. That article, with that sentence, got through at least one line editor and a couple of copy editors — at the very minimum — before it appeared on the front page.

The correction:

News Corp.’s Fox News was incorrectly described in a page-one article Monday as being sympathetic to the Bush cause.

Remember that just because a newspaper has endorsed President Bush, it doesn’t mean that he’s getting a pass on its news coverage. It’s very likely to be just the opposite.

27
Oct

California is loony-toon land

California’s saner, senior senator, Dianne Feinstein, demonstrates that you can be to the right of Barbara Boxer and still be a nut. In a letter to The Wall Street Journal, Feinstein takes the paper’s editors to task for supporting research into a bunker-busting nuke. [Link requires a subscription, but I'll be quoting the entire letter.]

Your Oct. 20 editorial “Bunker Busting Myths” is badly mistaken. As the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service reports, the administration’s own long-term budget plans, which include $485 million for the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator (bunker buster) between 2005 and 2009, “cast doubt” on the contention that the study of new nuclear weapons is, in fact, only a study.

And Amb. Linton Brooks, head of the National Nuclear Security Administration, stated earlier this year that the goal is to be “able to design, develop, and begin production of a new warhead within three to four years of a decision to enter engineering development.”

Let me first say that I support research into any weapon that will help deter rogue nations from thinking they’re safe to launch attacks on the U.S. simply because they have nuclear weapons.

Feinstein believes that we’re not just “studying” a bunker buster bomb because an administration official says that the goal is being able to “design, develop and begin production” of such a weapon within three to four years after Congress votes for it and the President approves it. At this stage, it is just a study. Yes, it’s a study that sets the groundwork for the future, but just because we study something doesn’t mean we’re going to do anything about it (see global warming).

At a time when one of the most profound threats facing our nation is that terrorists will get hold of nuclear weapons, the United States must do everything it can to make nuclear weapons less available and their use less legitimate. The administration, however, is leading the U.S. down a dangerous path with its pursuit of new nuclear weapons such as the bunker buster.

Ah, yes. If we get rid of our nuclear weapons — or at least stop making new ones — then terrorists won’t seek them out to use against us. Nuclear weapons then being “illegitmate.” We should get rid of all jumbo jets too, because then terrorists won’t use them to ram buildings and kill thousands of Americans. If we have a weapon or technology, then it is therefore “legitimate” for terrorists to use it against us.

This is the epitome of Sept. 10 thinking. Does Feinstein really believe that if we destroyed all of our nuclear weapons that Kim Jong Il would give up his. What kind of fantasyland is Feinstein living in?

If we add new nuclear weapons to our stockpiles we would be legitimizing the pursuit of new nuclear weapons by other nations. This would not only undermine our nonproliferation policy, but would also send a message to the other countries — some of which may wish to do us harm — that it is okay to develop these treacherous weapons.

No, it sends exactly the opposite message. The message is, if you think you’re safe developing nukes deep beneath some mountain to transfer to terrorists or to use against the United States, you’re wrong, because we’ll bore down and blow it up. As P.J. O’Rourke has aptly said: “It’s a mess with a message — don’t mess with us.”

We’ve had a nonproliferation policy for decades — and that stopped Pakistan and India how exactly? We haven’t tested a nuke in decades (we run supercomputer simulations), and that did what exactly to stop France from detonating a nuke?

Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi understands the world a whole lot better than the senior senator from California. He gave up his nuclear weapons program because he saw what Saddam Hussein got and he didn’t want any of it.

Does Feinstein seriously believe that other countries will give up their nuclear programs if we destroy ours? Or that they will start developing nuclear weapons just because America has them?

Does Feinstein believe that that juvenile excuse is going to work when a country is confronted by the United States and the rest of the international community? It’s like a 5-year-old whining: “The U.S. has nukes, so I want them too.” It’s not going to fly.

The bottom line is that we will make our nation, and our allies less secure, not more, if the U.S. opens the door to the development, testing, and deployment of new tactical nuclear weapons.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D., Calif.)
Washington

How exactly are we less secure if we have the capability to destroy heavily fortified targets around the world?

Safety through weakness has never worked. You’d think that the Democrat Party would have learned that after Ronald Reagan’s strength — not weakness — brought about the end of the Cold War. Or that it was President George W. Bush’s strength — not weakness — that persuaded the Libyan dictator to give up his WMDs.

This is another example of why the Democrat Party cannot be trusted with this nation’s security. They think that if we somehow appear less threatening, then no one will want to attack us — when the opposite is true. September 11, 2001, taught some of us that weakness emboldens terrorists, it doesn’t pacify them.

Unfortunately, Sen. Feinstein has learned nothing during the past three years and America is worse off because of it.





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