Monday, November 28, 2005

Across The Atlantic & Back

Here's an interesting piece from London. The second paragraph:

"The investigation, by the Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH), comes amid growing unease among clinicians over a legal ambiguity that could see them being charged with infanticide."

Afraid of being accused of infanticide? Uhm, what do you call a kicking, breathing, wailing post birth fetus? A baby. So attempting to end the life of said fetus is what? Equivalent to removing an infected tooth? Oh, I see my mistake...it's alive post-birth, not before. Then how exactly does a fetus SURVIVE an abortion? Absurd thinking. The unconscious mind is screaming infanticide at you doctor, because that is exactly what you're committing!

On a much lighter note, please take a moment to consider the following domestic issue.

Plane ticket to Crawford Texas? $340
Rent a car? $180
Finding out that you are over? Priceless!

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Wi, Wi, James!

The ever erudite James Lileks, comments on the French riots in Thursday's ScreedBlog. Key graph:

"Chirac, after all, spoke of a national “crisis of meaning, a crisis of identity.” Hardly a call to the barricades, especially when ordinary Frenchmen are thinking about a crisis of flaming cars. He also used the deadly word “malaise” to describe the French mood, and if history is any judge this means that Ronald Reagan will be elected President in a landslide.Unfortunately, he is unavailable for the task. Too bad for Europe. Their modern vision – a post-national multiethnic welfare state linked by nothing but the language in which people curse one another – is fatally flawed. The rioters can’t be dispelled with Brussels-based regulations specifying the number of cars one can burn per night. But the ruling class will accept no alternatives, brook no heresies. The revolutions of ’68 brought to power the romantic leftists who despised the old order, its sense of tradition, its bourgeois values, its confident (if unexamined) sense of cultural coherence. They built a new order based on dorm-room bong-fest ideas, and now they face the future unmanned. They can’t even revert to the hypernationalist models of the 30s, either - Le Pen only drew 300 people at a recent rally. Fascism is too much work these days. Even for the old pros."

So much for Progress.

Monday, November 14, 2005

War Of The Worlds

There has been recent discussion on this blog as to the nature of the Great War, that the United States and her allies in the GWOT, find themselves engaged in. It is a clash for the very heart of civilization. As stated, this war is inherently values based.

The Western World, espousing two chief ethics; namely, that of a Judeo-Christian ethic or secular/socialist, finds itself in stark contrast to a radical adherence to Islam, here-to-for, referenced as Islamo-facism. The Counter Terrorism blog, conducted and interview this past summer with French documentary filmmaker (and Middle East reporter) Pierre Rehov. The interview exposes the sickening psychology of suicide bombers. As such, I've provided the link to further elucidate the mindset of this maddening ideology.

Additionally, Tony Blankley and Robert Spencer provide much needed analysis and commentary as two what the uprising in Europe portends for the West. Mr. Spencer, near the end of his article, links to several Islamist blogs. This should leave you fairly convinced as to the coordination and scope of the problem. As such, I believe this to further commend the necessity and urgency of prevailing in this great struggle.

On Hate Crimes

The article below was sent to me by a regular reader. It encapsulates my own view plainly, and is so logically damning, I had to put it up.

Hate crime laws and the path to tyranny
October 25th, 2005
By Selwyn Duke

The insidious thing about evolutionary tyranny is that it’s gradual progression. It doesn’t beat you over the head with the iron fist of a despot or sweep you aside with a wave of revolution, but, rather, is a death by a thousand doses of bad medicine that makes benign neglect seem utopian.

One example of this brand of tyranny is the proliferation of hate-crime laws in the Western World. The very concept of hate-crime law itself is an offense against freedom and, as such, is quintessentially un-American. Yes, I hate hate-crime laws. And so should you.

The main problem with hate-crime law is that it is an effort at thought-control masquerading as legitimate criminal-justice legislation. Let’s examine why this is so.

Consider this example: two identical illegal acts are committed; the perpetrator of one is motivated by hate, whereas the perpetrator of the other is motivated by good old greed. I’ll call the latter Mr. Greed and the former Mr. Hate. The punishment deemed appropriate for Mr. Greed is ten years in prison, but the punishment visited upon Mr. Hate is twenty years up the river because his crime was motivated by a worse impulse.

Now, let’s analyze the reason for this disparity between their sentences. Obviously, the law determined that the act itself warranted ten years in prison because that’s what was received by Mr. Greed when only the nature of the act was taken into consideration. So, this begs the question, since the two men committed the same act, what were the extra ten years imposed in
Mr. Hate’s case for? They could only have been for one thing: the thoughts that motivated the act or were expressed through it.

So, now the government has been appointed both clairvoyant and arbiter of the acceptability of thoughts, bringing us one giant step closer to an Orwellian nightmare in which the state plays God, reading and judging minds and hearts and damning people based on its determinations. What’s next, “Bless me Big Brother for I have sinned; I have had proscribed thoughts”? The truth is that the government should punish actions, not motivations.

Ironically, while part of the supposed purpose of hate-crime legislation is to combat prejudice and discrimination, it is the very embodiment of it. After all, there are seven deadly sins: sloth, gluttony, lust, envy, pride, greed and wrath (hate), and this legislation discriminates by placing an undue onus on those who exhibit the one that is most out of fashion.

Why is hate being turned into our national boogeyman? The social-engineers have deemed that hate – and dreaded permutations of it, such as “racism” – are the end all and be all, the source of all our ills, as they formulate their very own hierarchy of sin. Of course, lust would never find a prominent place on the totem pole, since the libertine formulators in question have tried to turn the exercise of it into a national pastime. Nor would envy strike them as something bedeviling us, since it infuses their souls and animates their schemes to redistribute wealth. But their version of hate is the bee in their bonnet; so much so, that they don’t see the forest for the trees. After all, if crime is at issue, the focus should be on that which probably constitutes ninety-five percent of all crime: greed-crime. In fact, this brings to mind a pearl of wisdom from a rather highly regarded and widely sold book: “The lust for money is the root of all evil.”

Hate-crime laws also facilitate discrimination, as they provide ideological prosecutors with a vehicle through which members of groups that are out of favor socially can be hammered with disproportionate punishment. For a crime isn’t a hate-crime until it is judged so, and this judgment often reflects the prejudices of the arbiters more than it does reality. For instance, if a crime is white-on-black or straight-on-homosexual, it’s far more likely that it will be labeled a hate-crime than a scenario involving the reverse.

One example of this is the very different treatment of the Matthew Sheppard and Jesse Derkhising cases. The quite notorious Sheppard case involved two men who murdered a homosexual, while the Derkhising case involved two homosexuals who tortured and murdered a 13-year-old boy. However, while the Sheppard case became a cause célebre in the media and was labeled a hate-crime, young Derkhising was barely a blip on the radar screen.

And this brings to light another odious aspect of this topic. Because the media determine what events and causes will see the light of day and how they will be cast, they’re instrumental in shaping the perception of criminal acts. Yes, the media’s biases determine the content and nature of coverage, and this serves to put pressure on authorities and shape their thinking, and this, in turn, means that those biases will be reflected in the treatment of crime.

These biases in the media will shape punishment. If one of your loved ones were killed for his money and his murderer received a lesser sentence than someone who killed motivated by “hate,” would you find the relative slap-on-the-wrist palatable because your loved one died for a politically-correct reason? And, if someone else were in those mournful shoes, would you want to be the one charged with the task of explaining to him that the lesser punishment was justifiable because the motivation for his loved one’s murder was more “acceptable”? If you would answer no, you cannot in good conscience support these misbegotten laws.

Far more distressing than anything I’ve mentioned, though, are the social changes that are both a cause and an effect of the hate-crime philosophy. Remember, laws don’t emerge in a vacuum, rather, they are an expression of the collective values of a society. And pondering this reminds me of an experience I had earlier this year.

After speaking about so-called racial-profiling at the World Affairs Conference in Toronto, Canada, I learned that certain elements of my presentation didn’t sit too well with a student in attendance. Some representatives of the host institution were kind enough to apprise me of the fact that he found certain comments of mine “offensive.” Although I forged on undeterred with the same speech and approach during the second session, the fact that sensitivity-police are no longer uncommon should give us all pause for thought.

You see, what does the fact that students would lodge such complaints mean in terms of social change? I’m not that old, but in “my day” it wasn’t uncommon to hear the adage, “Sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me.” Of course, we all know that sharp words can cut hearts, but this principle was, nevertheless, a good one to bear in mind. After all, we don’t want to raise children who are so thin-skinned that they can’t cope and whose self-image hinges on others’ estimation of them. More importantly, however, the saying also implicitly transmits the message that it’s a given that people are free to say what they wish, even if it’s not what we wish. And freedom of speech must be a given if we are to remain a free land.

Ominously, though, that erstwhile ubiquitous old saying has fallen by the wayside, supplanted by psycho-babble that casts “hate-speech” as the ultimate sin. It’s not as if the school officials in question seek merely to root out meanness across the board and encourage civility and charity; this would be just fine. No, what they are doing is cherry-picking speech from the realms of both illegitimate and legitimate discourse and earmarking some for demonization. And, of course, the only thing these examples of speech – the good, the bad and the ugly – have in common is that they’re politically-incorrect.

And it has taken hold. I remember some years ago a student of mine telling me that one shouldn’t be allowed to use “hateful words.” And sadly, his is not an unusual belief among those weaned on a steady diet of leftist tripe. These youth have been transformed into good, unthinking foot soldiers for the left and have been conditioned to mistake facile analyses for intellectualism and the embrace of the spirit of the age for sophistication. They blindly accept the dogma that hate should be criminalized and the dogma that hate is whatever the social engineers say it is. When you have enough such obedient dogmatists and they reach voting age, you no longer have a free nation.

This is why we see our neighbor in the great white north descending into what can rightly be called fascism. You see, Canada is proceeding down the hate-speech road, and its rather heavy-handed, euphemistically-named “Human Rights Tribunals” have assiduously been imposing an orthodoxy upon the people. Case in point: in 2003 Hugh Owens of Regina, Saskatchewan, was found guilty of “inciting hatred” and was forced to pay 1,500 Canadian Dollars to each of three homosexual men who filed a complaint against him. His “crime”? He took out a newspaper advertisement that included four Bible citations pertaining to homosexuality.

Then there was the 2002 case of Mark Harding, a man who committed the unpardonable sin of distributing pamphlets in which he was critical of Islam. A Canadian court sentenced Harding to two years probation and community service under the direction of one Mohammad Ashraf, general secretary of the Islamic Society of North America. His service involved being indoctrinated with Islamic ideas by Ashraf, who emphasized that if Harding said anything negative about Islam or its Prophet Muhammad or failed to follow Ashraf’s instructions, he would be sent back to prison.

Of course, we are all so sure this could never happen here. We have our First Amendment guaranteeing us freedom of speech, after all. But with Supreme Court Justices embracing the notion that our Constitution can be interpreted in light of international law, it may just be a matter of time. For, there are deeds, words and thoughts, and the ultimate goal of any fervent social-engineer is to gain control over the last of those. Punishing thoughts as expressed through action – otherwise known as hate-crime laws – is the first step. The next logical move is to punish the most direct expression of thoughts: speech. This is why this pattern of moving toward an Orwellian oblivion should be broken.

Hate-crime laws should be abolished. Hate them, hate them with a burning fire of a thousand suns. For, to hate them is to love freedom.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Veteran's Day

Thank you veterans for all that you have done, and continue to do every day to keep our country safe. You are loved and honored.

Click here for the President's Veteran's Day address.





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Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Happy Birthday!!!!!

Yes it's true, we are officially one year old. Although, in the interest of full-disclosure, our actual birthday was yesterday, but I didn't have access to the blog. Oh well! It's been a fun year for me and at times has felt like an additing habit. One I anticipate will continue for some time.

Additionally, I anticipate some cosmetic changes to the blog, once Mr. Squirrel and I are able to get in the same room with our lap-tops and figure out what we want this to look like.

To all who have read and commented--we appreciate it!

Reality Check

Lileks has long contended that words matter. Often times, a word will find its way into the everyday vernacular, only to have its meaning misapporpriated by the user. Consider the word "fetish." I have heard this word attributed to salads, mayonaise, chocolate, and many other mundane items. In such cases, the user is utilizing the term "fetish" to indicate his or her proclivity for the item in question. This is problematic, for if repeated often enough--by enough people, the meaning of the word becomes changed.

The word fetish, in it's common clinical application, refers to an inanimate object, or non-sexual body part, that elicits sexual arousal and which may become necessary for sexual gratification. So literally translated, the aformentioned uses, indicate an arousal from salads, mayonaise, or chocolate.

Of course, this is but one small example in a world of thousands of misuses. If repeated often enough, words may come to have new meanings. "Holy Cow! That's sweet dude!" When used precisely, words convey the message of the communciator in a powerful manner. In fact, such a communicator is likely to be termed articulate.

This governance of words and meanings, is equally applicable to other domains. For instance, axiomatic wisdom, and other phrases or concepts that have found their way into our nomenclature. Consider the following notions: "The separation of church and state" and "Bush lied." The former is touted widely as a constitutional issue, and yet those six words do not appear anywhere in the constitution. They come from a letter between a Baptist denomination and Thomas Jefferson. Is this an important issue? Absolutely, because the concept was intended to keep government out of church affairs, i.e., the establishment of a state chuch, which is something the framers were all to familiar with in Europe and did not want to replicate.

It seems readily obvious, that meanings and intent are crucial to understanding and interpretation. The implications are far reaching--from SCOTUS nominees, to Biblical scholarship, to how the newspapers are read, it is inherently epistimeological, and world-view shaping.

This brings me to the latter issue of "Bush lied." This has been so touted, it appears to be regarded as fact, with no need for quibbling. The latest debacle concerning Valerie Plame, Scooter Libby, and "the leak", seems to have furhter cemented this notion with the public, e.g., Bush's approval ratings.

I feel compelled to respond with--"Did he really?" The blogosphere has widely challenged this assertion, from the professional punditry at The Weekly Standard & National Review, and yet it seems to fall on deaf ears with most media outlets and the general public. Does truth matter? Absolutely. What then are the facts? Norman Podhoretz recapitulates the facts, with a thorough time-line, and searing analysis. A convincing response to this specious charge. Read the whole-thing. It will be a shot of adrenaline to your discourse.

Friday, November 04, 2005

One For The Road

For the lefties out there...........

Prager has consistently stated that we are engaged in a cultural civil war. Furthermore, he asserts that the values that will prevail in this war will be:

1) The American value system of the Judeo-Christian ethic
2) Secularism
3) Islamo-facism

Many have denied the significance of what is happening on this front, but Europe is on notice and surely we will begin to see reforms, for the survival of their culture depends on it.

A Few Things............

Wow! It's been entirely too long since I've posted. The trick is to keep posting. I get into a rhythm, the writing happens more easily, and I find that I'm in the groove. Since, I haven't been posting, this first one back may be more laborious.

Last week's withdrawl of Harriet Mier's nomination to SCOTUS upset me. I was not upset because of her reputation for demonstrating her legal acumen, but rather, that what seemed to be the most prudent course of action, that is, see what develops in the hearings and make an informed decision via an up or down vote. I wrote previously of the necessity for calmness and an open mind, but the punditry of the right ensured that this did not happen. I find this unfortunate and prejudicial as the center right has long argued for the fairness of an up or down vote in the hearings.

Was Mier's as convoluted as her nearly 20 year old writings and speeches indicated? Was she the solid conservative that many believed her to be? We'll never really know, and frankly this creates some implications. Hugh has written extensively on this, and suffice it to say, October 27th, postings were much needed and largely unheeded. Later this month, the SCOTUS is set to hear an important case on parental notification. This is an important first step in the courts role regarding the abortion controversy. While unlikely, it is possible that conservatives may have shot themselves in the foot on this one.

Anyway.....moving on to Judge Alito. A fine pick if you ask me. He's a solid jurist, and an I-TIE to boot! I'm liking what I see thus far.

On other fronts, there are many things to cover of more interest, but I will keep this short and save something for later. Have a great weekend!

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

We Are Not Dead

Greetings Faithful Readers.

No, there has been no foul play. We have not been stricken by the bird-flu (knock-on-wood). The Squirrel has not gone into early hibernation. Grisby has not been the victim of a drive-by in the "hood." Ms. Socks has not gotten lost in the dryer.

I don't know about the others, but I have been busy enjoying the nice weather and battening down the hatches before the first snow. Politics has not inspired me yet this fall. It is an non-election year. Although the new SCOTUS nomination raises some possibilities for topics.

Enjoy the last days of fall. Old Man Winter is approaching.