September 13, 2005

A Tale of Two Radio Stations...

California radio station KOMY began broadcasting Air America back in July and the station owner, Michael Zwerling, has been begging and pleading local advertisers to by ad time on the station. That's right, since the station began airing the Liberal programming not a SINGLE BUSINESS has purchased advertising time!

However it's sister station, KSCO, which broadcasts Rush Limbaugh's show, is virtually SOLD OUT of its available ad time.

Boo-freaking-Hoo!

Limbaugh suggested Zwerling change his strategy towards looking for donors rather than sponsors:

"I think this is the lesson for all of you who wish to show some sort of financial revenue income by carrying liberal radio. You have to orient yourself to fund-raising, not commerce. Commerce has never been part of the recipe here. ... This guy has made a terrible blunder. He thought liberal radio was about commerce and dollars and business and selling advertising, and that's not what it's about. ... You are doing something good for the cause."
Gee, where are all those rich Hollywood Liberals when you really need them?

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The 40-Year Old Hobbit Virgin...

What follows is a transcript of a scene that didn't make it into the Extended Edition of Peter Jackson's "The Two Towers", reproduced in full.


frodo1.jpg

Sam?



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Yes Mr. Frodo?



frodo1.jpg

Why do you keep looking at me like that?



sam2.jpg

Like what, Mr. Frodo?

more...

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September 12, 2005

Tolkien Geek Update

Fellowship of the Ring, Book One, Chapter Seven is posted.

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John Roberts' Opening Statement...

Can be found here, courtesy of NRO's Bench Memos.

Two notable quotes:

"Judges and justices are servants of the law, not the other way around. Judges are like umpires. Umpires don't make the rules; they apply them. The role of an umpire and a judge is critical. They make sure everybody plays by the rules. But it is a limited role. Nobody ever went to a ball game to see the umpire."

"If I am confirmed, I will confront every case with an open mind. I will fully and fairly analyze the legal arguments that are presented. I will be open to the considered views of my colleagues on the bench. And I will decide every case based on the record, according to the rule of law, without fear or favor, to the best of my ability. And I will remember that it's my job to call balls and strikes and not to pitch or bat." [emphasis mine]

The whole statement is worth reading. And was delivered without notes.

Roberts gets it. He'll make a fine Chief Justice.

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Gore: Bush Knew! (About Katrina!)...

Crazy old Uncle Al is at it again. In a speech to the Sierra Club in San Fran, he not only blames Bush for the aftermath of Katrina but implies that, because of Global Warming, the President knew just how bad it would be:

Bush administration officials have said Katrina's damage could not have been anticipated, but Gore rejected that.

"What happened was not only knowable, it was known in advance, in great and painstaking detail. They did tabletop planning exercises. They identified exactly what the scientific evidence showed would take place," Gore said.

Implicit in this charge is that the extent of the damage could have somehow been prevented - and that the administration did nothing about it.

Clearly the former Vice-President is off his meds again. So Al, how's your multi-million dollar public access channel doing these days?

UPDATE: 4:55pm
On a related note, Mac Johnson of Human Events lays out five proposals that would make future efforts more successful.

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I'll never be able to watch "The Princess Bride" the same way again...

Princess Buttercup recently unleashed some gratuitous F-bombs for the benefit of the press. Angered by recent critics of her husband Sean Penn's recent jaunt to New Orleans, she let 'er rip:

"To them, I say 'F--k you!'" Robin Wright Penn told me yesterday at the Toronto International Film Festival, where she was hawking a very peculiar indie movie, "Sorry, Haters," in which she stars as a deranged but beautiful rap video channel employee who's seeking post-9/11 vengeance against a Syrian taxi driver.

"I think it's f-----g pathetic to be belittling him," Wright Penn raged - a blond, blue-eyed lioness protecting her mate.

Reportedly, her PR guy pulled her aside and said "I would not say such things if I were you" after which he sent her off with a six-fingered man to the Pit of Despair.

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How the "Patriots" on the Left Commemorated 9/11...

BullDogPundit did a check of the Lefty Blogosphere to see how the kind of folks that reflexively bitch about having their patriotism questioned honored the fallen.

The result was not pretty, when it was there at all.

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September 11, 2005

Giants Win!!!

wk1.jpg

Giants - 42
Cards - 19

Off to a good start. The offense proves that if they give Manning enough weapons in his arsenal, good things will happen. Defense dominates. Special Teams not only didn't suck, they scored twice!

Ex-Donkey happy. :-)

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9/11: A Look Back

It hardly seems possible that four years has gone by. And yet the memory of that day is starting to fade. It'll never completely go away, nor should it.

September 11th has additional significance for me personally. On this day in 1993, my wife and I said "I Do" in front of a church full of friends and family. It was as beautiful a late summer day then as it was that morning four years ago. It's pretty hard to forget your wedding anniversary when it coincides with such an significant event in American history.

My wife and I were unsure what to do late that evening. We had already arranged for babysitting and we had planned to go out somewhere to celebrate. We didn't feel much like celebrating but being as it was such a long and emotionally draining day, we felt like we needed to get out of the house. We decided to get a bite to eat and go see a movie.

The restaurant was fairly empty, although being a Tuesday night this was not out of the ordinary. I had heard that President Bush was to make a statement at 8:30 and I wanted to watch it, but there were no TVs available so we headed on to the theater. It was one of those smaller venues with two or three screens that usually showed movies only after they had been out for a while. As we sat in our seats, we noticed that we were the only ones there. Some theaters had actually closed that evening and we were surprised that this particular one was open. We saw "The Others" and if it wasn't scary enough to begin with, try watching it all alone in a dark theater.

It takes place during World War II, on an island off the coast of England. There is one scene where the mother, played by Nicole Kidman, is reading to her children. One of the kids asks mummy, "Why are we at war with the Germans?" Without missing a beat, Kidman's character says (quite matter-of-factly) "Because we're the Goodies and they're the Baddies". For a split second, this answer seemed to me to be too simplistic and black-and-white - which is certainly the same point of view most of the Left still have today. But it wasn't long before it clicked that this was as apt a description of what we faced that day as any I would ever hear.

It WAS that simple. The United States and her allies, though far from perfect themselves, represented the Good that is the love of freedom and liberty. And the Islamofascists who would target innocent men, women and children and wantonly murder them represented the Bad - as Bad as you can imagine. There really is no middle ground. Either you support the cause of Hope or you tolerate the force of fear.

God help America if most of its citizens one day decide that the principles and ideals we hold dear are - in Cindy Sheehan's words - no longer "worth fighting for". However, I believe that will not happen. I remember clearly the words of President Bush when he addressed the Congress and the nation nine days after the attacks: "We will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail".

We must always remember what is at stake. And we must always hold the families of those we lost in our prayers.

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September 10, 2005

Tolkien Geek Update

Fellowship of the Ring, Book One, Chapter Six is posted.

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United Flight 93 Memorial...You've got to be kidding me...

Captain's Quarters

Have you seen the design for the new memorial for the victims of the ill-fated flight 93, which crash landed into an open field in Shanksville, PA - after the passengers and crew fought back against their Islamofascist killers? The so-called "Crescent of Embrace" is so obviously symbolic of the Islamic Crescent - as recognizable a symbol as the Christian Cross - but the architects thought people would be too stupid to notice.

How offensive is this? Captain Ed puts it into perspective by describing a known memorial as it could have been had these guys gotten a crack at building it.

Update: 11:20pm - Michelle Malkin links the graphic that reveals all...

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Diane Lane Photo of the Week

Diane Wind 2.0.jpg

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September 09, 2005

Crystal Ball Into Next Week's Judicial Hearings

Ace has outdone himself on this one. He channels the events on Capitol Hill next week during the Roberts hearings and reveals all. This already made my weekend.

Warning: Not exactly "familty friendly" material.

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Tolkien Geek Update

Fellowship of the Ring, Book One, Chapter Five is posted.

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4th Circuit Court of Appeals Rules against Padilla...

Appeals Court overturns ruling by a Federal Judge on the status of the "dirty bomber" Jose Padilla as an "enemy combatant"

A three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the president has the authority to detain a U.S. citizen closely associated with al Qaida.

A federal judge in South Carolina had ruled in March that the government cannot hold Padilla indefinitely as an "enemy combatant," a designation President Bush gave him in 2002.

If he isn't already there, I say send him down to Club Gitmo. Maybe his Al Qaida buddies can talk him into going on a hunger strike.

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Sitemeter SNAFU...

Something's going kaflooey with Site Meter this morning. Thought is was just me at first, but I checked around on some other sites and they've all had their hit counts cut off at some point in the morning. Hey, can't really complain as this is the first time I remember this happening in over seven months.

Anybody know what the scoop is?

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Set your VCR's...

Arthur Chrenkoff alerts us to a documentary scheduled to be broadcast this Sunday - September 11 - on The Discovery Channel.

It's called "The Flight That Fought Back" and it focuses on Flight 93, which crashed into a Pennsylvania field on 9/11. Chrenkoff has seen a sneak peek and not only recommends it but testifies that it is a "must see".

You simply cannot miss it. I never type in capitals to make a point, but you can take it that I am now. Extensively researched and drawing on some previously unpublished information, "The Flight That Fought Back" provides the most complete and comprehensive recreation of events onboard Flight 93. It's a stunning, immensely moving production.

The film, part re-enactment, part interview with family members, fleshes out the stories of those ordinary men and women who had found themselves in a situation that was far from ordinary, and who performed, too, in a way that was far from ordinary. Those onboard were a cross-section of America - young and old, all races and walks of life, everymen and everywomen - they were America. The sadness at so many lives interrupted and so much potential destroyed can only be mixed with the admiration for the spirit of the 33 passengers and 7 crew members, and the hope that springs from their sacrifice.

Spread the word!

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Looks like there'll soon be 200 fewer terrorists at Gitmo...

From the UK Guardian: Hunger Strikers Pledge To Die in Guantanamo

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Quantifying Poverty: The "Broken Yardstick"

Nicholas Eberstadt has on op-ed in the NYT that looks at the outdated way the Federal Govt. defines "poverty rate". The untold story, of course, is the fact that the Johnson Administration began the so-called "War on Poverty" in 1965 and, forty years and $3 Billion later, Poverty won. An objective analysis of these policies shows what an utter failure they have been.

The Census Bureau's lastest poverty rate estimates released on Aug. 30 determined that the percentage of Americans living in poverty was 12.7% compared to 11.2% in 1974. The problem is that the standards being applied were created in 1974 and don't take into consideration changes in economic trends or standard of living. For example:

The unemployment rate is lower, and the percentage of adults with paying jobs is distinctly higher. Thirty years ago, the proportion of adults without a high school diploma was more than twice as high as today (39 percent versus 16 percent). And antipoverty spending is vastly higher today than in 1974, even after inflation adjustments.

In the face of such evidence, what do you call an indicator that stubbornly insists that the percentage of Americans below a fixed poverty threshold has increased? How about "a broken compass?"

Sometime late in July, I received the very Census form on which this study is based. It was very tedious to fill out for a family of five persons but, after several prodding phone calls from the Census Bureau, I managed to complete it and return it in time for the August 25th deadline. The questions were focused on employment, household income, and home ownership. Here are some of the questions that the form did not ask me:

- How many cars I owned
- What is my weekly/monthly grocery bill estimate and do I belong to any warehouse/wholesale outlets, like Costco or Sam's Club
- How much do I estimate that I spend on entertainment
- How many televisions do I own and do I subscribe to cable or pay TV service
- Do I own a DVD player
- Do I pay for special education services for my dependents
- Have I taken any vacations in the last year and what are the cost estimates for them

I could go on and on, but the bottom line is that the answers to such questions would go a long way to determining my standard of living. I define "poor" as being barely able to meet the minimum standard of living - food, shelter, clothing, etc.

As Eberstadt explains:

The poverty rate is out of step with all these other readings about deprivation in modern America because it was designed to measure the wrong thing. The poverty rate has always been derived from reported household income. (Exigency played a role here: at the start of the war on poverty 40 years ago, those income numbers were already available from the Census Bureau.) But a better gauge of a household's material deprivation is not what it earns, but what it spends. When we look at spending patterns, we immediately see a huge discrepancy between reported incomes and reported expenditures for low-income Americans.
Hey, I'm no Rockefeller (or Kerry or Kennedy for that matter) and I have to make hard choices all the time between what I want and what I really need. But I can personally attest to the fact that the gauge that the Federal Government uses to quantify "poverty rate" is - in the words of Eberstadt - the "single worst measure in our government's statistical arsenal".

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September 08, 2005

No New Posts Tonight...

Stomach bug or possibly (dum, dum...DUM!!!) food poisoning. I've had that before and it seems all too familiar. Hopefully a good night's sleep and a bucket of NyQuil will do the trick.

Update: 9/9/05 8:30am
Feeling better today. Still not 100%, but whatever it is it's subsiding. Thanks for the tip, Vic. Flat Coke has always been a part of my medicinal regimen! Works great for hangovers, too.

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