Friday, September 30, 2011

Deadwood Mountain




"Deadwood Mountain," by Big & Rich

A Nation of Adults - or Children?

From Bill Whittle:



Quoting John Stark: "Live free or die: Death is not the worst of evils."

Close Encounters of the Nerd Kind


Apologies for the lengthy silence this past week; been traveling for work and pleasure through Montana and the Black Hills. More on that this weekend.

Monday, September 12, 2011

The Rising

I don't know about you, but this is the tune I had going through my head all weekend.


I know it's since been appropriated for dozens of other causes and beliefs; but this performance stands out. Coming just before the first anniversary of 9/11, this raw and heartfelt performance struck a chord in the heart of a battered and mourning nation.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Onward and Upward



Of all that ten years since 9/11 brings to mind, this is the truth that I want to remember: no matter how bad it is, there are always those who breathe deep and head in, trying to do as much good as they can while they can.

Where such men an women come from - what it is that creates them - I can't say. But how wonderful it is that nevertheless they are here, among us. They may even be you.

Wednesday, September 07, 2011

The Sliming of Cheney


By 2011 a gaunt and ill former vice president Cheney was the constant butt of late-night comedians and derided almost weekly by smug columnists. But how and why that metamorphosis had come about was never explored. It was as if Cheney was now and always had been Darth Vader, a man who liked to shoot his hunting pals and who sat in retirement with ill-gotten Halliburton riches. Few reminded us that for nearly 30 years Dick Cheney was a centrist fixer, praised by liberals as fair-minded, bipartisan, and sober and judicious in his rhetoric. He supported Ford over Reagan, tried to cut lavish weapons systems at the Pentagon, and brought a Wyoming humbleness to his Washington power-brokering. Then suddenly this all vanished with cries of “war criminal,” as the puerile Ronald Reagan Jr. recently exclaimed on MSNBC.

Yet if one were to carefully collate Cheney’s positions after 9/11, both domestic and foreign, the caricature seems almost inexplicable. He opposed the nomination of Harriet Miers; he thought appeasement of North Korea would not work; he thought the automobile-company bailouts would ultimately be too costly or counterproductive; he was one of the earliest proponents of the surge; and he pushed hard for almost all the protocols that Barack Obama now embraces.

The charges against Cheney seem to rest on the waterboarding of three confessed terrorists who had had a hand in the planning of 9/11 — and on Cheney’s unabashed defense that such harsh interrogation saved lives and that he would most certainly do it again if we were in similar dire circumstances. The decision remains controversial, as does the opinion of many high-ranking intelligence officials (including many now serving in the Obama administration) and apparently of Khalid Sheik Mohammed himself that valuable information — some of it life-saving — was gleaned from such harsh interrogations.

Somehow bloggers and op-ed writers have established by their selective outrage a narrative that it was immoral of Cheney to approve the waterboarding of three confessed terrorists like KSM, but quite moral of Obama to expand fivefold the Predator targeted-assassination program that served as judge, jury, and executioner of suspected terrorists — and of any living thing in their vicinity when the Hellfire missiles obliterated their compounds. It is apparently the nature of a therapeutic culture to demonize one of the architects of the present anti-terrorism policy of renditions, tribunals, Guantanamo, etc. only to apotheosize one of its chief critics — while quietly assuming that Cheney so convinced Obama of the utility of these protocols that the latter adopted nearly all of what he inherited.

The horror of 9/11 resulted in a number of subsequent enigmas, but to this day most are seldom discussed and apparently better forgotten.

Friday, September 02, 2011

This Is Why We Fight




 
 
"This Is Why We Fight," The Decemberists.

Remember Why You Left California

Tired of the ever-increasing taxes and regulations? Tired of the ever-growing state government that, as it grows, is capable of doing less and less? It's never easy to leave - I've visited enough to see its virtues - but there are plenty of places to make a new home. 

Just do your new neighbors a favor. In the words of Moe Lane: REMEMBER WHY YOU LEFT CALIFORNIA IN THE FIRST PLACE.

Thursday, September 01, 2011

First Taste of Fall

Cool this morning. Going to be warm today, but this morning had that first taste of fall...