Category: Politics

  • Father of Slain Marine Wins $11MILLION from Westboro Loons

    Albert Snyder, father of slain Marine LCPL Matthew Snyder won every count of his lawsuit against the Westboro Baptist Church loons who protest at his son’s funeral in 2006. The jury awarded Mr Snyder $2.9 million for compensatory damages and a staggering $8 million in punitive damages.
    The Westboro Church is headed by Fred Phelps, who also runs the WWW.godhatesfags.com website. Some thirty thousand protests are claimed by the, largely Phelps family group.

    U.S. District Judge Richard D. Bennett, who had sealed the church’s financial documents, said from the bench that the compensatory damage award would already eclipse Westboro’s assets.

    Good! Hopefully these jackals will be forced into poverty, then they won’t be able to disrupt any more funerals of servicemen.

    The Baltimore Sun has the story

  • Is Killing The Enemy An Illegal Assassination?

    Picked this up from ACE (via Instapundit).  Justice Stevens was being interviewed and the issue of the killing of Japanese Admiral Yamamoto in 1943 came up. 

    Operation Vengeance began on 18th April 1943, when 18 aircraft led by Major John W. Mitchell, went out to find the plane carrying Yamamoto. At 9.30 am the US pilot, Thomas G. Lamphier, identified Yamamoto’s aircraft approaching Kahili Field on Bougainville. Two bursts from his guns hit the target and the aircraft crashed into the jungle.  

    Justice Stevens was a young cryptographer who helped break the Japanese code that led to the information about the enemy commander’s travel plans. 

    “[Justice Stevens] won a bronze star for his [World War II] service as a cryptographer, after he helped break the code that informed American officials that Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto, the commander of the Japanese Navy and architect of the Pearl Harbor attack, was about to travel to the front. Based on the code-breaking of Stevens and others, U.S. pilots, on Roosevelt’s orders, shot down Yamamoto’s plane in April 1943.  

    Stevens told me he was troubled by the fact that Yamamoto, a highly intelligent officer who had lived in the United States and become friends with American officers, was shot down with so little apparent deliberation or humanitarian consideration. The experience, he said, raised questions in his mind about the fairness of the death penalty. “I was on the desk, on watch, when I got word that they had shot down Yamamoto in the Solomon Islands, and I remember thinking: This is a particular individual they went out to intercept,” he said. “There is a very different notion when you’re thinking about killing an individual, as opposed to killing a soldier in the line of fire.” Stevens said that, partly as a result of his World War II experience, he has tried on the court to narrow the category of offenders who are eligible for the death penalty and to ensure that it is imposed fairly and accurately. He has been the most outspoken critic of the death penalty on the current court.” 

    Eugene Volokh does a thorough job of demonstrating the insanity of this view.  Read it all, but here’s how it starts: 

    “First, killing an enemy military leader — and apparently a highly competent one — in the middle of a war almost always is the humanitarian decision. It takes little consideration, it seems to me, for our military to properly come to this conclusion. That Yamamoto was “highly intelligent” and that he had lived among us might have emotionally humanized him to people who are considering his fate. But it surely didn’t entitle him to any exemption from military attack. If anything, it made him only more dangerous to us and our soldiers (living among us made it more likely that he would understand us better).  

    There’s nothing humanitarian about preserving an enemy military leader — and instead focusing only on killing enemy line soldiers — when that means more likely deaths for our soldiers (and possibly more likely deaths for his soldiers as well, though that’s harder to tell). There’s everything humanitarian about killing him to protect our soldiers, and to win an indubitably just war. The man’s military job was trying to kill our soldiers, using others’ weapons even if not his own personal ones. We got to him first, likely saving our soldiers’ lives. That’s pretty much the end of the story.” 

    So, what’s the big deal?  Stevens is just an 87 year old doddering fool, right? 

    Actually, this is a view held by a significant number “enlightened lawyers”.  During World War II, commanders made the decisions and the lawyers, like Stevens, were left to their nuanced reflections of the matter. 

    Today however many in the emasculated military leadership have deferred the decision making to the lawyers.  A classic example was General Tommy Franks during the first few days of the Afghanistan war.  From The New Yorker: 

    “On the first night of the Afghan war, an unmanned Predator drone identifies a convoy of vehicles fleeing Kabul. Mullah Omar, head of the Taliban, is determined to be inside this convoy. The CIA is in control of the Predator attack drone and wants to use it to kill Omar, but they have to ask for permission from military commanders who are based in Florida. General Tommy Franks decides not to fire any missiles or launch an air strike against the building in which Omar takes shelter. Eventually fighters attack and destroy the building, but by then Omar and his associates have moved on. One anonymous senior official later says of this failure to kill Omar, “It’s not a f_ckup, it’s an outrage.” 

    This is the same kind of leadership weakness that resulted in the largest Taliban force in Afghanistan being allowed to escape from the trap at Tora Bora.  We are still fighting those who could have been killed six years ago! 

    It’s not just academically under-achieving Field Artillerymen but also senior officers in the Special Ops Command; see LTG Francis Kearney’s relentless legal pursuit of Capt. Dave Staffel and Master Sgt. Troy Anderson. 

  • House Committee Ignores Common Sense Blames Fires On Global Warming

    Here is a press release from The House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming (A creation of Nancy Pelosi)

    Select Committee to Examine Link Between Changing Climate, Frequency and Intensity of Wildfires on Thursday

    MEDIA ADVISORY FOR 10 AM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2007

    Contact: Select Committee, 202-225-4012

    A Spark Neglected: Wildfires and Global Warming
    Select Committee to Examine Link Between Changing Climate, Frequency and Intensity of Wildfires

    “A spark neglected makes a mighty fire.”
    –Robert Herrick

    Following the devastating fires in Southern California, the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming will hold a hearing examining the scientific link between a changing climate and the frequency and intensity of wildfires.

    Witnesses will discuss the present effects of climate change on wildfires and contributing factors such as increased drought, changes in snowmelt patterns, changes in precipitation, and higher temperatures. In addition, mitigation and adaptation strategies will be discussed.

    The frequency and intensity of wildfires have increased in recent decades throughout the Western United States. Last year, the Forest Service spent a record $2.5 billion fighting wildfires that burned a record 9.9 million acres (4 million hectares), compared to the ten-year average of 6 million acres. This year 8.7 million acres have burned thus far. The current fires burning in California are expected to cause over $1 billion in property damage alone and have already burned an area the size of Rhode Island. Mounting scientific evidence indicates that the growth in wildfires is linked to global warming and that this trend is likely to intensify in the coming decades.

    This ignores a number of factors that actually contributed to the fires. Global Warming didn’t put a stop to the responsible practice removing of deadwood and brush from forests, activists and their willing accomplices in the legislatures did.

  • Liberty City Seven “On Path to Jihad”

    The Liberty City Seven, who are they you ask? The seven black converts to Islam from Florida who the media assured us were no threat, just “Foolish kids with pipe dreams” who couldn’t possibly blow up the buildings they wanted to.
    A government witness and noted terrorism expert testified that all seven are in the jihad phase of Islamic radicalization: (pre-radicalization, self-identification, indoctrination, and jihadization) have organized themselves as if they are a military organization, with a definite hierarchy and leadership. Is it that the Bush admin is paranoid? No, there actually are terrorists out there, the media just chooses not to tell us about them, thinking the daily foibles of Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan so much more important to report.

    Miami Herald Story

  • Democrats to Gain Voters In New Jersey

    TRENTON, N.J. – In about two weeks, New Jersey voters will decide whether to eliminate insensitive phrasing in the state Constitution that characterizes people with disabilities as “idiots” and “insane.”

    The offensive language, adopted in the Constitution in 1844, is aimed at barring people with limited mental capacity from voting: “No idiot or insane person shall enjoy the right of suffrage.”

    At least seven other states _ Arkansas, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Mexico and Ohio _ have the words “idiot” or “insane” in their constitutions to define who can vote.
    Newsday/AP Story

  • The discussion over waterboarding is tortuous

    Evan Perez in the Wall Street Journal reports that Attorney General nominee Michael Mukasey won’t go on the record as condemning waterboarding until he has the facts – like a judge should say in public;

    Though the support of several important senators is on the line, Attorney General nominee Michael Mukasey declined to say if he considers an interrogation technique that simulates drowning to be torture and therefore illegal, though he called the procedure “repugnant.”

    In a letter responding to questions from Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Mr. Mukasey promised to review the interrogation methods used by the government to ensure they comply with the law, adding that if he finds anything illegal he would “rescind or correct any legal opinion of the Department of Justice that supports use of the technique.”

    A White House official defended the response provided by Mr. Mukasey because “he has not been briefed on classified programs. He’s a judge — and as any good judge knows, you need to have facts to make determinations.”

    Of course, this has sent the Left into hyperspace. The Washington Post reports Congressional reaction in Mukasey Losing Democrats’ Backing;

    The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee has so far refused to schedule a vote on Mukasey’s nomination. All four Democratic senators running for president said before the release of Mukasey’s letter yesterday evening that they will vote against him because of his handling of the waterboarding issue.

    Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.), the Democratic front-runner, said yesterday that “we cannot send a signal that the next attorney general in any way condones torture or believes that the president is unconstrained by law.” Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (Del.), a member of the Judiciary panel, issued similar statements.

    Technorati will lead you to one-line posts like “If it’s repugnant, it’s torture,…” and “Looks like torture to me.” Deep thoughts all. I think that sucking the brains out of a child who is 3/4 birthed is repugnant, too, but I’m pretty sure the Left wouldn’t let me call it torture. Watching The View or Keith Olberman “looks” like torture to me.

    Trolling the “my brother waterboarded me” post at the Democratic Underground yesterday, I stumbled over this nugget;

    PearliePoo2 Donating Member (258 posts) Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Oct-29-07 06:58 AM
    Response to Original message
    9. The line coming from the admin
    is that it’s a little “head dunking”
    Bullshit
    Apparently heart attacks DO happen and the victim is revived (sometimes) only to be subjected to it again and again.
    I think read that the head is inclined down and arms and legs are strapped tight.

    I’d be interested to learn where this particular member got the information that torturees have actually had heart attacks while being waterboarded – I’m pretty certain there’s no information available to the public that would support that contention. Reviving a person from a heart attack should be so easy that a potentially valuable asset can go through the process repeatedly – completely immature. It’s probably more of a fantasy he/she had during a bout of the Bush Derangement Syndrome – or saw in a movie once. 

    I’m not sure what, exactly the Left is trying to accomplish by even having this discussion. I’d like to think they’re just blinded by their own guilt-ridden consciences, but unfortunately, that’s probably not the answer.

    The answer is probably closer to the fact that waterboarding is a painless way to extract information from recalcitrant thugs who want to kill, or facilitate the killing, of innocent people – it works, and it’s leading us to victory over the blood-drenched thugs. That’s as good a reason as any for the Left to call for ending it. They haven’t had many victories against the people who are fighting and winning this war, so I guess they’re happy when they can score little victories that hamstring that thin red line that stands between us and the thugs.

    I’d like to know what the Left considers acceptable by the Bush Administration to extract information that saves American lives from hardcases. A stern expression? Witholding their daily ration of lowfat mocca latte? Making them read the Washington Times instead of the Washington Post?

    Just as in every other discussion we have with the Left, we can be sure their answer to the question would begin with “I don’t know, but….” They’ve got plenty of ideas about what the Bush administration CAN’T do, but none that are helpful.

    I predicted two months ago that President Bush will finish his term without an actual fulltime Attorney General because the Left will make it too hard for him to get one through the advice and consent process. That prediction is coming true.

  • Warren Should Quit Whining

    In a Guardian Unlimited article, billionaire Warren Buffett complains that he doesn’t pay enough in federal taxes. Well, golly, Warren, I do. I need the money I work for, I don’t have billions in assets I could sell. The money taken from every paycheck is money I need. Sure, I tend to get a refund each year, you know, the government gives back the money it shouldn’t have taken from me. But, the interest they add for holding it for up to a year is nice.

    Oh, wait, that’s right, they don’t pay interest on that…

    By the way, every year when I do my taxes, at the bottom of the form is a line item for money I would like to VOLUNTARILY donate to the government. If Buffett feels he isn’t paying what he should, by all means, he should check that box and cut a check. What he shouldn’t do is encourage a government who cannot even spell efficiency to raise taxes.

  • The KKK Protests The KKK, No, Really…

    Two factions of the Ku Klux Klan are protesting against each other. The cause: Illegal Immigration. Ken Mier (oddly semitic name for a racist…) a investigator for the Alabama KKK said his group is opposed to the tactics of the National organization.

    “We are opposed to the ignorance and stupidity as displayed by the individuals that thumbed their nose at the area churches by continuing to use racial slurs, threats and avoided Christian deportment,” he said.

    Wait, what? A Klansman opposed to racial slurs? Does this guy not understand the history of his group?
    Cullman Times/WAFF/AP Story