Author: Jonn Lilyea

  • Brownback just lost my support

    Its bad enough when intellectually vacant Democrats make intellectually vacant statements but when Republicans start doing it. I was reading the Washington Times story about Democrats opposing the now-famous SURGE. Things like;

    “Escalation of this war is not the change the American people called for in the last election,” Democratic Whip Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois said last night in his party’s response to Mr. Bush’s prime-time presentation of his Iraq strategy changes.
        “Instead of a new direction, the president’s plan moves the American commitment in Iraq in the wrong direction.”

    And;

    Sen. Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, said Americans want to know whether Mr. Bush’s strategy is a “change of course.”
        “Or is this simply more of the same with slightly different rhetoric?” Mr. Schumer said.

    And then I ran into this paragraph;

    Sen. Sam Brownback, Kansas Republican and a favorite of conservatives, last night said Mr. Bush’s troop surge is not the answer.
        “Iraq requires a political rather than a military solution,” he said.

    Well, I thought maybe Mr. Brownback had more to say on the subject, because I wasn’t going to impugn him on a one-line quote in a newspaper article, so I went to his website to see what could be missing from the story. I found more, well, word-wise but still intellectually vacant;

    “I do not believe that sending more troops to Iraq is the answer,” said Brownback. “Iraq requires a political rather than a military solution. In the last two days, I have met with Prime Minister Maliki, with two deputy presidents and the president of the Kurdish region. I came away from these meetings convinced that the United States should not increase its involvement until Sunnis and Shi’a are more willing to cooperate with each other instead of shooting at each other.”

    Brownback continued, “The Kurdish leadership does not wish to get in the middle of a sectarian fight between the Sunni and Shi’a, and the United States should not either. Instead of surging troops, we must press the Iraqi government to reach a political solution. We cannot achieve a political solution while a military solution is imposed. The best way to reach a democratic Iraq is to empower the Iraqis to take responsibility for their own nation building.”

    He sounds like a Democrat. Where have these people been for the last forty years. People in that part of the world don’t understand words. They don’t tell the truth and as soon as your back is turned they’ll run a dagger through your backside.

    The only thing people in that part of the world understand is force. No amount of surrender talk, no amount of concession will yield even a moment’s respite from the violence there. The people who are killing each other will only stop when they’re dead, or when they’re backed into a corner, weaponless with a bayonet to their throat.

    Brownback is apparently over in the area now and has cutsey blog going about all of the people he’s met and how wonderful they are to him, but I honestly don’t think he’s had his eyes open the entire he’s been there if he can’t get these notions of negotiation and political solutions out of his head.

    Lessons of the past are lost on Presidential candidates I guess. When Saddam Hussein was beaten soundly in 1991, Yassir Arafat couldn’t get to the negotiation table fast enough. When Hussein’s defenses were destroyed again in 2003, Qaddafi couldn’t surrender his weapons of mass destruction fast enough. When Sadr and Iran meet the same types of defeat, the rest will come along willingly – maybe fast enough to shut Chavez up for a day or two, as well.

    But until Brownback yanks his head from his fourth point-of-contact, he’ll get no support here from me.

    Meanwhile REAL Republicans like Mitch McConnell are supporting the President’s plan;

    President Bush’s decision to deploy more than 20,000 additional troops to Iraq drew fierce opposition Thursday from congressional Democrats, but the Senate’s top Republican threatened a filibuster to block any legislation expressing disapproval of the plan.

    “Obviously, it will … require 60 votes,” said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., as senior administration officials made the case for Bush’s new policy in Congress, at news briefings and the morning television programs.

    Powerline did an interview with McConnell here.

  • Pesky job

    This pesky job is getting in my way this morning, but Sister Toldya said everything I want to say (only better) here and here.

  • Clutching at straws

    Trying to get out before the President has a chance to talk, Democrats are scurrying towards any venue that will have them. Dick Durbin begs the KosKids to give him an agenda since the Democrats don’t appear to have one past the first 100 hours. He gives them a series of drop down boxes so they don’t have to type all that much (we already know that the KosKids are allergic to the Shift key).

    Ted Kennedy gives a perverted lesson in what he thinks the Constitution says to those same KosKids. He claims that “people elected Democrats to show some backbone”. Apparently backbone means to cut-and-run in Massachusetts.

    And the Kos Kids respond in kind;

    This country has faced no graver threat than the one posed by the rogue sociopath currently occupying the Oval Office.  Thousands of lives stand to be lost if no one curbs this president from his intended path, and we thank you — as patriots to patriots — for taking this stand.

    There’s no doubt in my mind that Bush and his henchmen are trying to provoke a Constitutional crisis — I hope you and your fellow Democrats in the Senate –and any Republican  who may choose to ally with you — are prepared to do whatever it takes to win if that is what it comes down to.

    Way to show some backbone, ya smelly hippie freak.

    In the meantime, the rest of the Democrats are backpedaling away from Kennedy’s rant at the National Press Club yesterday according to the Washington Times.

    House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland also cast doubt on the proposal. The Constitution’s Article II, he said, “probably does” give the president authority to prosecute a war.

    Showing his own version of “backbone”;

    Mr. Kennedy’s proposal, Mr. Reid said, “is an idea, and we’ll certainly look at it in an intelligent way.”

    But then there the axis of cowards;

    Sen. Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, and Mr. Reed will hold a press conference today with retired Gen. Wesley Clark, to call on the president “to end our open-ended commitment in Iraq.”
        But not even Mr. Kennedy’s proposal, however, goes far enough to please hard-line war opponents.
        Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich of Ohio on Monday called for Mr. Bush to withdraw all troops from Iraq and close all military bases there.
        “A U.S. declaration of an intention to withdraw troops and close bases will help dampen the insurgency which has been inspired to resist colonization and fight invaders,” he said in his announcement.

    Now the New York Times reports that Democrats will hold votes on the President’s proposal as early as next week. Hours before the President even makes his proposal. The Times claims that Democrats want to isolate the President and make this “his” war. Right out of Teddy Kennedy’s speech yesterday. That’s fine, they can do that. But what about those supposed Blue Dog Democrats that ran as conservatives and claimed that their first priority would be national defense. Can Pelosi and Reid hold them together? And will the people who voted for them stand for it?

    Makes you wonder how Americans elected these clowns doesn’t it?

    Hat tip to Sister Toldya.

  • The case for domestic oil drilling

    If anybody learned anything yesterday, it should have been that we need to expand our domestic oil production. Russia and the Belarus battling each other over gas lines,Hugo Chavez nationalizing the US-corporation-owned telecommunications and electricity industry in Venezuela (while Chavez stays insulated from serious backlash with massive petrodollars after nationalizing the oil industry last year) to cries of “Always towards victory, Comandante!” from his cabinet.

    Iran appears to be running short of oil according to Roger Stern in the International Tribune which doesn’t do anything for stability in the oil-rich Persian Gulf. Without the US in the Gulf, Iran would be free to run rough shod over the emirates and then hold the world hostage to it’s lunatic President’s whims.

    A UPI story reports that the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta holds Nigerian oil production hostage to it’s demands that the industry be nationalized to “let profits benefit the people”. A chonology of the attacks on Nigerian oil by the rebels courtesy of Reuters.

    With vast reserves of oil in Alaska, the Gulf of Mexico and off the West Coast, it seems to make common sense to get ahead of the impending worldwide energy disaster. But no one has accused Democrats of having too much common sense.

    Since we haven’t built an oil refinery since 1978, it’d probably be a good idea to build or expand a few of those as well. In his 1979 “malaise speech“, Democrat President Jimmy Carter promised us that

    We will protect our environment. But when this nation critically needs a refinery or a pipeline, we will build it. 

    So where are the Democrats when there is a Republican administration facing an energy crisis? Are they on the side of working Americans or are they on their own selfish, political side?

    But President Bush’s administration is lifting a ban on drilling in Alaska’s Bristol Bay and boosting royalty rates to offset OPEC’s impending production cuts. While in the interim, Democrats are planning to cut back tax breaks for oil company exploration and development. So who’s really doing the people’s business here?

    Captain Ed comments on Chavez at Captain’s Quarters

  • Payback time [Updated]

    I’m reading reports of our actions in Somalia and bouncing in my chair with joy;

    A U.S. air strike hit targets in southern Somalia where Islamic militants were believed to be sheltering suspects in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies, Somali officials and witnesses said Tuesday. Many people were reported killed.

    Monday’s attack was the first overt military action by the U.S. in Somalia since the 1990s and the legacy of a botched intervention — known as “Black Hawk Down” — that left 18 U.S. servicemen dead.

    Helicopter gunships launched new attacks Tuesday near the scene of the U.S. air strike, although it was not clear if they were American or Ethiopian aircraft, and it was not known if there were any casualties.

    But I suspect that Democrats (otherwise known as the usual suspects) will soon be comparing our actions in Somalia with Nixon’s “illegal war” in Cambodia and the attempt of that administration to widen the war in Southeast Asia in order to more effectively kill more of the enemy.

    Flopping Aces is considering the attack a tribute to those 18 warriors killed in October 1993. I just think it’s tactical brilliance; get the little creatures all crammed up in a small space and drop a coupla thousands rounds of 20mm lead on their asses. They’ve terrorized and held hostage their own people long enough.

    Some of the estimates I’ve seen this morning are 400 dead and I figure that’s a good start. Although I have a personal stake in massive payback, moreso, I’d love for the Somalian people to get some respite from their bloody past.

    I’ve also noticed that the AP wire story that everyone seems to be using on the internet, although it mentions the “Blackhawk Down” incident, but none of the backstory like they normally would of a similar incident with a Republican administration. They don’t even pin the the year down, let alone under which President and the make-up of Congress at the time.

    They don’t mention that the generals asked for US Bradleys in Somalia and got nothing but excuses from Clinton and Les Aspen, the Secretary of Defense. You’d think they’d want to point out the failures of politicians to support the troops they sent into combat, wouldn’t you?

    Update 1-10-07: Captain’s Quarters  and Powerline are reporting that the air attack was successful. AP reports we’re into our third day of bombing the Islamist rebels.

    The Washington Time’s Rowan Scarborough reports this is not the first use of the US military against Islamist targets in Somalia;

    Senior defense sources say the AC-130 was not the first action in and around Somalia since the September 11, 2001, attacks and the subsequent placement of a U.S. military task force in Djibouti a few miles from the Somalia border. The sources said the task force has periodically launched special operations missions against militants, but they declined to give specifics of where and when.

    Little Green Footballs reports the outrage from the Arab League in Egypt.

    Jacob Laskin writes in FrontPage Magazine;

    Encouragingly, the U.S. military is more than equal to the task. As documented by the journalist Robert Kaplan, lost amid the constant barrage of bad news from Iraq is that the U.S. military remains on unwearied offensive against al-Qaeda and its fellow travelers. In Africa especially the military has hunted down the terrorist group and trained local forces to carry on the fight. It has done all this, moreover, with little fanfare and even less recognition.

  • Cut-and-Run Democrats politicize the war for our security

    From the Washington Times we get threats Congress is making towards our National Security;

    “If the president chooses to escalate the war, in his budget request we want to see a distinction between what is there to support the troops who are there now. The American people and the Congress support those troops. We will not abandon them,” the California Democrat said during an appearance on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”
        “But if the president wants to add to this mission, he is going to have to justify it. And this is new for him because up until now the Republican Congress has given him a blank check with no oversight, no standards, no conditions.”
        Rep. David R. Obey, Wisconsin Democrat and House Appropriations Committee chairman, echoed his party leader’s warnings and some of her wording, saying, “There are certainly going to be no blank checks” from his panel.
        “I think we’re going to scrub his request and, at the same time, use it as a chance to really discuss whether or not the policy behind that request makes any sense,” he said.

    So, based on purely fiscal policy, disregarding our security, the Democrats have declared themselves more knowledgeable about what we need to win than the generals they appointed to their positions. Obey seems to have already made up his mind with none of the testimony he claims he requires. So why should the Administration and the Pentagon appear in front of his farce of a committee, except for Obey’s own political benefit?

    Yeah, the previous Congress gave the President a blank check, because the President and his advisors are more intimate with the facts than a bunch of mouthy impudent, self-important clowns who care more about themselves and their personal wealth than they are about the welfare of the nation. The President is the Commander-in-chief while Congress holds the purse strings.

    Imagine the sigh of relief from the enemy this morning after reading this article.

  • Commie spies not popular in Poland

    I was reading this article about the resignation of Stanislaw Wielgus, the newly appointed archbishop of Warsaw. He was forced to resign after admitting a few days ago that he’d cooperated with Poland’s communist-era secret police. I’m sure we can find some Leftists around somewhere that will sympathize with him and explain away his traitorous behavior using the awesome power of hindsight the Left seems to treasure.

    Afterall, look how the Left still defends Alger Hiss. Despite the fact that Hiss has been proven guilty of treason using the VENONA Project files (made famous by the scholarly work Venona; Decoding Soviet Spies in America ) and the KGB’s own archives (The Haunted Wood; Soviet Espionage in America – the Stalin Era by Allen Weinstein), they still defend him and fend off charges that he was a traitor by sniffing that he was only found guilty of perjury – not espionage.

    Yeah, the good archbishop should see if he can get a job as Archbishop of Berkely or Cambridge. I’m sure they can find room for an old commie.

  • Tax cuts and Democrats

    According to an article in the San Diego Union tribune, the Democrats are looking for a way to “pay” for middle class tax cuts. That’s the same kind of wordsmithing that allowed Bill Clinton to raise our taxes after campaigning on a middleclass tax cut in 1992. I remember the “targeted tax cuts” of the Clinton years – the targets were few and far between.

    They aren’t “paying” for tax cuts – the only people paying here are the taxpayers. It’s the taxpayers’ money, not government’s money – hence the name “taxpayers”. The fact that Democrats demand that taxpayers “pay” for their taxcuts implies that we are buying something we don’t necessarily deserve. And who, exactly, are we paying? The government? For what? For bloated Federal programs that cost more than their private equivalent would cost? The Democrats are being disingenuous by using the phraseology of the fiscally responsible to cover up the fact that they don’t want to cut any of their spending programs and it’s all in preparation for tax increases.

    Remember the famous Clinton line about he had worked harder than he ever had in his life to find us a middleclass tax cut, but couldn’t find any – so he raised our taxes instead?

    Remember how Bill Clinton balanced his spending (he never balanced the budget, contrary to popular urban legends – there was still a deficit when he left office)? By downsizing the military and cutting defense spending – one of the only functions of government clearly mentioned in the Constitution that we don’t need a judge to “interpret” for us. Well, the Party of Cut-and-Run are contemplating the same;

    Bush’s spending decisions also came under fire from the new chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. David Obey, D-Wis.

    “How can you ever expect to get to a balanced budget if you’re spending $100 billion a year on Iraq borrowing the money to do it, if you’re giving $50 billion a year in tax cuts to people who make over a million bucks a year and paying for that with borrowed money?” Obey said.

    At least some Republicans still have a backbone;

    The Senate’s top Republican said most GOP senators oppose this budget rule because “it almost guarantees that the majority, if it enacts it, will try to raise taxes.”

    “The last thing we need to do is to be raising taxes in this country, and ‘pay-go’ is the first step toward raising taxes,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. “I think there will be very few, if any, Republicans who will support raising taxes.

    But according to Robert Novak, not all of the Republicans are quite so stiff-spined – including the President.

    Curt at Flopping Aces compares the Democrats on the Sunday shows to the RNC-rejected Zucker ads.