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August 19, 2004
Bits, Pieces

I'm not recommend anybody commit any violence here, but in a perfect world where we all get what we deserve, Ted Rall would be awakened each morning by a 13th Century Turkish Jannisary, who would then proceed to hit Mr. Rall very hard right in the testicles with an enormous iron pike.

Isn't that a cracking good start to a blog entry?

I realize that the U.S. is pulling out of Germany, and that already effeminate (yet strangely crude) culture is probably feeling a bit castrated and cut off, now that its big brother isn't there to snarl at the surly Russkis and sullen French.

But really, isn't this just a trifle premature? I mean, couldn't you have at least waited until we were out the door, Mary?

Here's Insty hammering on Tom Harkin's wildly exaggerated VietNam era exploits. Hint: He was a highly paid taxi driver. In the last week, I've realized that if I want to become a congressman, I need to turn Dem, and then wildly exaggerate my military record, while projecting a pacifist vibe and killing small animals. Of course I'll risk running against SGT Slaughter in the primaries (who has a similar service record to John Kerry's, except he beat up on Iranians), but hey, no plan is perfect.

Al Franken who?

Just testing.

So, Bush decides to bring the troops home from Germany and South Korea, and naturally, Kerry has to be stoutly opposed to it. Hmmm... gotta wonder why.

Please, may I have more? »


Hypocrisy, or Wine, can't you behave? Part 2

So, biotechnology is bad, it's "Frankenfood", it's unsuitable for human consumption, it poses a grave danger, yada yada.
Except, you know, when the French are trying to develop GM grapevine stock.

The vines to be tested were genetically engineered in a laboratory to be resistant to fanleaf disease virus, which is a significant problem in France's cooler wine regions and throughout the world. The virus is transmitted by the tiny nematode xiphinema index when it feeds on the roots of infected plants and then on healthy ones. Scientists inserted a gene fragment from the virus into the genome of a healthy grapevine rootstock.

French researchers have been trying to fight fanleaf disease for a long time, said Guy Riba, scientific director for the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), a government-run network of research centers. "[INRA] looked for means to fight the virus, and when it didn't find any, it decided to go after the disease with GMOs," Riba said.

I'm sure the starving Africans who are denied opportunities to grow GM crops will be very happy at the news.


August 17, 2004
Can't We All Just Get Along?

On his radio show last week, Mike Gallagher posed a question to his audience. In his personal experience he's seen more examples of conservatives willing to reach out in friendship to liberals than vice versa. Is this the general trend? Is the Right - or, more accurately, the non-Left (taking varying stripes of libertarians into account) - really more tolerant than the Left?

Please, may I have more? »


Alan K. Henderson at 10:13 AM; filed to Politics | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
August 14, 2004
A Holiday In Cambodia...

Apologies to Michelle, and Jello, but I like my parody better.

So you been to school at up at Yale, eh John,
And you think you've seen it all
Private islands, thinkin' you've got it won,
Back east your type don't crawl
Play gigolo pol, wed a rich ol' doll,
Buy five new Escalades,
Theresa braggin she knows how the brothers feel cold
And the slums got so much soul

It's time to taste what you most fear
The NY Times won't help you here
Brace yourself, my dear

It's your Navy buds from Cambodia
They're tough kid, but that's life
It's your Navy buds from Cambodia
And they don't like your wife.

Please, may I have more? »


Al Maviva at 01:55 AM; filed to Politics | Comments (3) | TrackBack (1)
August 13, 2004
Smear Jobs

Want to see a smear job? Go check out this CNN transcript of today's Crossfire. It's Carville and Lanny Davis screaming at John O'Neill of the Swift vets - and O'Neill can't get a word in edgewise. It's really nice - really shows you what Davis and Carville are made of. If they were my neighbors, I'd move.

How do you answer a smear job like this one in The New Republic? Um, you say "bring it on?"

What did I tell you here about how the press would respond to the Swift boat vets' allegations? That they would answer the points raised, without actually exposing those points to the public? I thank you for your applause. For my next trick, I will prove the NY Times is biased. I know I'm impressive, but please, hold your applause until the end of this entry.

Speaking of stupid beyond belief, here's Reason.com lionizing John Perry Barlow, civil liberties advocate par excellence. The article goes to great pains to point out how Barlow championed the application of the 4th Amendment to email, leading a fight to get the courts to conclude that seized email is just like seized papers, which are a thing, a piece of property, falling under the protection of the 4th Amendment. A little later on in the Reason article, Barlow's Internet Declaration of Independence is praised, in part for this declaration:

Please, may I have more? »


Al Maviva at 03:52 PM; filed to Politics | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
August 12, 2004
When life gives you lemons, part 2

In response to my plea for things to do with lemons, a kind soul sent me this recipe for lemon curd (aka lemon butter, lemon jam, lemon custard). It is super-easy and has a puckeringly lemony flavor, a sunny yellow color, and a luscious creamy texture. I have personally tested it on toast, biscuits, and straight out of the jar with a spoon. All top-notch. I'm told it works wonders in prefab tart shells too, and I expect it would.

Please, may I have more? »


Sasha Castel at 02:12 PM; filed to Food/Recipes | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
I'll See Your Insane Dare, and Raise You One Dumb Cowboy

It appears that the EU is quite unsure of how to respond to the Iranians' response to the FGB (France Britain Germany) request, asking the Iranians to cease and desist in the nuk-u-lar weapons business.

The Iranians have responded with a counteroffer to... um, well, let's just say it looks like an offer of free sex, but it is actually a rather rude demand letter ordering the EU to arm up Iran with nukes. There are some other demands - the Iranians are moving to solidify the Tehran/Jedda/Damscus/Auschwitz axis, and now demand that the EU enter into a treaty promising to kick the shit out of Israel if the Israelis create any problems for Iran.

Now, other than the Euro elite's sincere desire to kill some jews, er, excuse me, I mean to wipe out Israel, nothin' anti-semitic about that desire, right - other than wondering how to fulfill that desire, the EUro elite are a little perplexed about how to respond.

I know I am terminally un-nuanced, but might I suggest that the response of the American Commander to the German Commander at Bastogne in 1944 would be appropriate here? Yes, that's right. The most unnuanced response of all.

"Nuts."

Sadly though, that's not going to happen.

Instead, as I write this, chambermaids all over the diplomatic residences of the EU are fretting, knowing that their diplomat bosses are busy having nightmares and wetting the bed. In this hot weather, tomorrow will be a very tough day at the old laverie automatique for the femmes de chambre.

What this means, for all practical purposes, is that the U.S. is going to have another Middle Eastern shitpile to try and pick up. Maybe the Russkis will help, if we promise to give them Iran. They have been lusting after a warm water port, and ever more oil. And at least Russian oligarchs and corruptocrats are in it for business purposes; they aren't completely insane and would probably be easier to deal with than insane elderly mullahs and their fat, tooth-rotted Iraqi proteges.

A final note - Ed Morrisey thinks this ultimatum means Iran has nukes. I'm not so sure - it could be a clever bluff to make us think they have nukes. After all, who'd be crazy enough to make an ultimatum like that?* Either way, they've got some stones.

*You know, John-John has promised to send Iran nuclear technology if they agree to play nice with it. I wonder if this is their signal that they are willing to play ball, providing the next U.S. president is feckless enough to bring a glove and be catcher?

Al Maviva at 12:59 PM; filed to The War | Comments (4) | TrackBack (1)
Yee-hah!

On its Top 9 Things To Do page, D Magazine is advertising an event that opera lovers won't want to miss:

Three Redneck Tenors When opera meets Broadway and vocal talent merges with mullets, it can’t help but be a good time. Billy Ray, Billy Bob, and Billy Joe embark on the adventure of their lives when a talent agent discovers them singing in front of their trailer. Aug 13, 7:30 pm. Palace Arts Center, 300 S. Main St., Grapevine. 817-410-3100. www.palace-theatre.com.

(The content of the Top 9 Things To Do page changes monthly, so the announcement will be there for only 20 more days.)

Maybe these guys should do a performance of La Fanciulla del West (The Girl of the Golden West). Puccini would be proud.

Alan K. Henderson at 11:00 AM; filed to Opera | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
August 11, 2004
Liars, Damned Liars, "Privacy Advocates" and NY Times Editors

Orin Kerr at the Volokh Conspiracy seems to think that the NY Times and so-called "privacy groups" and Arab & Muslim advocacy groups have managed to generate a Homeland Security scandal out of thin air. It seems that the Customs and Border Patrol portion of DHS requested census data on various groups of Arabs living in the U.S. No, Ms. Malkin, it doesn't seem to have been your long hoped-for crackdown on Arab, Arab-American and Muslim men. Rather, according to Customs spokes beings, the Customs service or CBP, were looking to estimate where various dialects of Arabic were spoken, in order to translate their public posters (in airports, natch) into the correct languages. This could be a falsehood; on the other hand, it does have the ring of truth, in that it is a federal civil rights violation of at least administrative significance, to fail to provide legal warnings in the language of choice of the served population. The exact extent of this duty is uncertain so agencies do some pretty wierd things to comply with the rules here. For example, if there are three Philipinos who speak primarily Tagalog living in Bozeman, MT, does the sole Customs agent there have to provide Customs brochures in Tagalog? The extent of Customs duty isn't clear, but what is clear is that in cities with large Arab and South Asian populations, Customs probably does have a duty to do so. Moreover, if you are looking to make smuggling cases stick, it helps to have your advisements (which are available to English speakers) available to significant non-English speaking minority groups - lest you face an assertion of an equal protection violation as a defense.

Of course the Electronic Privacy Instigating C..., ah, I'm not going there. EPIC and the ACLU naturally said this was an enormous violation of people's privacy rights. And good ol' Jim Zogby - none of whose lieutenants have been indicted for terrorist ties recently - basically alleged racial profiling.

As Orrin points out, the fact that the data was in the public domain and available on the Census.gov web site seems to have escaped everyone. So Orrin concludes that this looks like a made up scandal.

Well folks, hold yer horses. There's another made-up scandal involving Homeland Security en route, delivered by the NY Times in 45 minutes or less, or you get a free order of Krazy Bread.

This scandal also involves the power-crazed rogue organization, Homeland Security. It seems they are cracking down in a big-brother-ish fashion, pickin' on dark skinned peoples of the world, and Canadians* and acting downright un-hospitable to our southern neighbors. I know this because of the NY Times lede:

U.S. to Give Border Patrol New Powers to Deport Illegal Aliens

WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 — Citing concerns about terrorists crossing the nation's land borders, the Department of Homeland Security announced today that it planned to give border patrol agents sweeping new powers to deport illegal aliens from the frontiers abutting Mexico and Canada without providing the aliens the opportunity to make their case before an immigration judge.

Please, may I have more? »


Al Maviva at 12:35 PM; filed to Media | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
August 10, 2004
Best, worst and obvious

Townhall is usually an excellent link resource, except they still publish Pat Buchanan, Jude Wanniski, and Paul Craig Roberts. Today we've got the best of Townhall (the irreplaceable Thomas Sowell, exposing the Left's hijacking of language), and the worst of it (kulturgrump Brent Bozell, who must have taken a few extra Pious Outrage pills before penning this load about How Our Airwaves Have Become Sewers.)

And is it even worth directing you to the newest Mark Steyn column on Kerry? I'd hate to think you're not clicking on www.steynonline.com either before or shortly after your daily dose of SC.

If the truth hurts, then John Kerry is going to need some OxyContin, stat.

Sasha Castel at 04:40 PM; filed to Articles | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The gorillas in heaven are smiling

Fay Wray, the self-acknowledged "King Kong Girl", has died at 96.

wray.jpg

Brava to a harworking actress, a fearless soul, a diva-like icon to some, and a great New Yorker to all. (Yeah, she was born in Canada and raised in California. So what? It's the attitude that counts.)

Sasha Castel at 03:16 PM; filed to Movies/TV , New York , Obits | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The ass-kicking you will never hear

Our Web host, designer, and all-round God Mike Hendrix is so cool and talented at so many things that I forget what he's capable of in the "deliciously vitriolic rant" department.
Never again will I make that mistake.
You're a babe, Mike. Keep up the magnificent work.

Sasha Castel at 02:58 PM; filed to Blogs | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Downsize that!

The Village Voice has been doing some housecleaning. Among the casualties was Richard Goldstein, who has been a target of mine no fewer than three times. (That last Fisking included one of my best-ever lines: "A defense policy without a defense budget would be like, well, Europe.")

I swear, I'm not smiling. Not even a little.

August 09, 2004
Er, no

From the files of the Glass Homeowners' Association Stone-Throwing Club:

First, it's telling that Kerry is using Michael Moore's propaganda as a playbook in his campaign. This has a definite whiff of desperation about it.
Secondly, where exactly was John Kerry that morning when America was under attack, and what was he doing?

In an interview with Larry King on CNN, July 8, 2004, Sen. Kerry was asked where he was the morning of September 11th. Here is part of his response:

Kerry: "...And as I came in [to a meeting in Sen. Daschle's office], Barbara Boxer and Harry Reid were standing there, and we watched the second plane come in to the building. And we shortly thereafter sat down at the table and then we just realized nobody could think, and then boom, right behind us, we saw the cloud of explosion at the Pentagon..." (emphasis added).
It should be noted that the second plane hit the World Trade Center at 9:03 a.m., and the plane hit the Pentagon at 9:43 a.m. By Kerry's own words, he and his fellow senators sat there for forty minutes, realizing "nobody could think."

In other words: Sen. Kerry, who criticized President Bush for not rushing out of the Florida classroom for seven minutes, sat paralyzed with his colleagues for a full forty minutes. He is hardly in a position to criticize President Bush for "inaction."

This whole "how fast did he leave" debate is beyond moronic. Can we all just agree that what Bush should have done is say the following:

Hey kids. I'm very sorry, but something's come up that I've got to deal with right away. I promise you I'll come back soon. Have a good morning, and God bless you all. God bless America.

Not too upsetting to the kids, and not slothful enough to worry the Kerrys and the Moores. I just said those words out loud. They took less than 15 seconds to recite, allowing for several Bushian pauses.

Sasha Castel at 09:46 PM; filed to Politics | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Think globally, act stupidly

Robert David Johnson offers a bleak glimpse into the world of "Global Studies", a field of study which will presumably be for globalization-phobes what "Women's Studies" was to feminists: a way to spend breezy, carefree, conflict-free semesters in the company of your ideological brethren; never having been challenged on your beliefs, or if you WERE challenged you raised a holy stink with the university disciplinary committee, claiming your sacred fundamental right to never be offended;and to quite probably come out more fragile and misguided than you went in.

And it contains this edifying if not exactly surprising bit (emphasis mine):

The globe in “Global Studies” departments contains exclusively negative attitudes toward one country (other than the United States): Israel. This year, St. Lawrence’s “Global Studies” major featured a special seminar on Palestinian activist and theorist Edward Said. The department also has a regular offering entitled, “Why Do ‘They’ Hate ‘Us’?” The instruction situates the 9/11 attacks “in several thematic contexts,” focused on a critique “of US involvement in the Middle East.”

Students in a “Global Studies” course called “Palestinian Identities,” finally, are introduced to Palestinian identification “as a political and cultural community as they continue to struggle to free themselves from Israeli domination.” The course concludes with a forced political activity: “using what we have learned,” Professor John Collins notes, “we organize and produce a public activity of some sort; with the goal of educating the community about the importance of understanding what Edward Said has called ‘the question of Palestine.’”

An objective portrayal of Israeli history, politics, or culture will not be found in a “Global Studies” course. That might be one reason why the Middle East Studies Association—representing a field that has come under increasing attack for its open bias against U.S. and Israeli foreign policy in the Middle East—advocated at its 2003 conference positioning Middle East studies in the context of “Global Studies.” MESA’s apparent rationale: since both “Global Studies” and “Middle East studies” courses are inherently biased against Israel, it makes sense to promote “Global Studies” offerings, since those have received less critical outside scrutiny.

Not for long, I'm hoping.

Pizza, motorbikes, and multiple digressions

I had a chance to hit the outlying town of Gundaroo for a pizza taste-test with fellow Canberra-blogger Tex(and yes I did ride on the back of a motorcycle, a Kawasaki Z1000 to be precise, and yes it was rather thrilling and terrifying in roughly equal measure. And cold. GODDAMN but it was cold. And noisy. (I'd been advised to bring earplugs.) It didn't help that I was wearing a borrowed helmet which jangled ominously about my chin while letting in blasts of Antarctic wind. And having said all that, I still loved it and easily see how one could get addicted to it.)

Where was I? Oh, yes. Gundaroo. Infinitesimal yet picturesque town about 40 minutes north of Canberra on Federal Highway 23.

Please, may I have more? »


Falling Swiftly

Those 260 guys I served with? They were all a little bit nutty, a little bit slutty. It depends on what "is" means. I don't think that's been proved. I, did not have sex, with that woman, Ms. Lewisnki.

Get ready for a tidal wave of Terry MacAuliffe-driven propaganda fecal matter to wash over us, starting Tuesday or Wednesday. Brace yourselves.

I wish I could be proud that I predicted this planned Dem smear job on the Swift boat vets, which I did in fact predict right here. I quote:

The Swift vets leadership had better have no extramarital affairs, public or private controversies, business ties to Halliburton, or angry ex-wives lurking in the closet.

Oddly, I'm not proud of my prescience. Assuming the story at that link is true, and I have no reason to believe it is not - then all this hit job means, when you get down to it, is that the Democratic Party, representing roughly one half of my country, is in the hands of a pack of pustulent, turd-chomping, power-crazed, vicious scumbags. Kerry said he was a hero in the 'Nam. The Swift boat vets said he isn't. So the Dems are employing six staffers, full time (and God alone knows how many private investigators), to get their bottom-feeding pals in the mass media to try to destroy the Swift boat vets' lives.

Nice.

Please, may I have more? »


Al Maviva at 02:20 PM; filed to Politics | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
As advertised

I have Clive Thompson's Slate article on computer games to thank for pointing me in the direction of a site which has just demolished the better half of my morning: http://www.TelevisionWithoutPity.com. Truly, the title does not disappoint.

Its raison d'être, in my humble opinion, are the delectably snarky multi-page episode reviews, which are aeons removed from the terse synopses found on most TV guide pages. I have read posts by several different authors, and truly, this is cultural satire that Christopher Buckley or Joe Queenan would be proud to have written.

Doppelganger quite hilariously deflates The West Wing's bloated self-importance. Heathen makes lunchmeat of the once-great ER. I may love Oz, but Couch Baron helps me see the lighter side of all that shanking, anal sex and drug taking:

Gym. Schillinger and Said confer quietly, much to the consternation of their respective followers....In the cafeteria, Said placates his men with this: "Like it or not, that man is a child of God. Now I have made a commitment to Allah to defend the rights of all prisoners inside of Oz, not just the ones of color. Not just the ones who believe what we believe or who pray as we pray." In much the same spirit, Schillinger informs his crew, "That nigger's gonna get me out of here." And just when you thought these two were going to sit down and sing "Ebony and Ivory" to each other. I would have enjoyed that.

Critics' raves do not confer immunity. The much-lauded Six Feet Under comes in for a savage lambasting from Aaron, who admits

I may be in a slightly snarkier mood than normal.

And how. He slickly exposes the manufactured Quirks™ of SFU's pseudo-faux-magic-realism.

And the above are all shows that I like and watch. I haven't yet had the heart to visit the TWoP pages on such televisual pollutants as The Simple Life, The Anna Nicole Show, Newlyweds, Temptation Island, or WWF Smackdown.

I think I am going to be spending a ludicrous amount of time here.

Sasha Castel at 02:06 PM; filed to Movies/TV | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Trust me, it can only help

Britons are taking so much Prozac that traces of the antidepressant are finding their way into British rivers and resevoirs.

The government's chief environment watchdog recently held a series of meetings with the pharmaceutical industry to discuss any repercussions for human health or the ecosystem, it said.

The drug found its way into the water supply from treated sewage water, the paper said. (Ed: EEEEEEEWWW!-SC)

However, the government's Drinking Water Inspectorate said Prozac was likely to be found in such a "watered down" form that it was unlikely to pose a health risk, The Observer reported.

My anecdotal opinion? Why not? It'll help relax that famous collective stiff upper lip. And folks who are worried about it can help support their local plumbers by having a filtering device installed on their sinks and showers. And they can champion their local or otherwise favorite bottled-water brands. (No points for weasel-water from Evian or Perrier, similar only in their flat taste and inability to quench thirst.)

A profoundly un-libertarian position perhaps, but an uncomfortably personal one that I will gladly stand by.

Sasha Castel at 12:40 PM; filed to UK | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
Larry Kudlow Is Not The Antichrist

Anybody ever take a nap while listening to a talk radio show, and dream about listening to the talkmeister? I did that this afternoon, when Larry Kudlow guest-hosted Bob Brinker's "Money Talk" show. (In the dream he was a white-haired balding guy. Got it half right.)

Kudlow talked about the recent economic downturn, and says there is a problem that still needs to be corrected: he says the Fed has been pursuing a deflationary monetary policy? Any econo-junkies out there? Does his claim seem on the mark?

I did a Google search to see if Kudlow is an economist worth listening to. The #6 result suggests that the answer is "yes." It's a 2002 Ether Zone column by everybody's favorite online antiwar hysteric, Antiwar.com's Justin Raimondo: PURE EVIL: Lary Kudlow & the Economics of the War Party.

He takes issue with this Kudlow statement:

"The shock therapy of decisive war will elevate the stock market by a couple-thousand points. We will know that our businesses will stay open, that our families will be safe, and that our future will be unlimited. The world will be righted in this life-and-death struggle to preserve our values and our civilization. But to do all this, we must act."

Raimondo misinterprets this as an appeal to the "broken window" fallacy. He glosses over the foundation of Kudlow's argument, that we are defending "values and civilization." Kudlow doesn't call for eternal war so that the military-industrial complex would have more "windows" to fix. He recognizes that there's a bunch of guys preparing to break our "windows," and calls for the government to stop them. The markets will go up because they foresee that a military response will sharply reduce the risk of another 9/11 coming to our shores and disrupting American commerce.

Alan K. Henderson at 11:34 AM; filed to Politics | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Send Lawyers, Guns and Money...

The attorney for the Swift vets against Kerry, the highly esteemed Mr. O'Neil, has replied to the Democrats' questionable demand letter to television stations. You will recall that the demand letter called the Swift vets hard-hitting add "libelous", called the group a "sham group" and threatened legal action against any television statements airing the ad.

Ed Morrisey is all over it, and has a copy of Mr. O'Neill's response. You need to read it, but I will summarize it. In short, it meets innuendo with facts, sets forth the Swift vets' corporate legitimacy under Section 527, and basically lays out a court-quality response to the Dems' porous demand letter.

You also need to check out the comments to that entry, and I'm not saying that just because I responded. One of Ed's correspondents points out that Kerry says the political turning point of his life was Christmas Eve, 1968, when he sat (illegally) in Cambodia and listened to President Nixon lie to the media about the absence of American troops in Cambodia. As commenter Rocket Man points out, Lyndon B. Johnson was the President on Christmas Eve, 1968. But who's counting, right?

I've got some thoughts about the legal and public relations strategy being employed by the Swift boat vets, and what the Kerry strategy will be be, based on my professional experience. Read on, if you care...

Please, may I have more? »


Al Maviva at 02:30 AM; filed to Politics | Comments (3) | TrackBack (1)
August 06, 2004
Swift Boat; Dumb Lawyers

This may be nothing, but I took a close look at the demand letter from the Kerry campaign directed at the Swift Boater Veterans Against Kerry group. As a lawyer, I am afflicted with that close reading habit. A few things I noticed about the demand letter:

1. “The advertisement contains statements by men who purport to have served on Senator Kerry's swiftboat in Vietnam."

- Really? Where do they purport to have served on his boat? That isn't in the ad...

2. "Not a single one of the men who pretend to have served with Kerry was a crewmate. . .”

- That’s a great slam because it is truthful. Only six or so men served on Kerry’s swift boat. None of these men pretend to have served on Kerry's boat. So, out of the group who claim to have served with Kerry (zero), none of them were Kerry crew members. That's rather like Shakespeare's joke from the jester Touchstone in As You Like It, which notes that if a dishonorable knight swears upon his honor, he is not bound. "If you swear by that that is not, you are not foresworn."

Of course, the implication of the DNC lawyers is that the accusers are liars, because they claim to have "served" with Kerry, yet they weren't on his six man boat. This argument is bogus. There isn't a set unit size, beyond which you cannot claim that you served with someone. Normally, if you claim to have served "with" - you knew a person, maybe from your platoon-sized element (roughly 45 men) or the same company sized element (maybe 120 men), or maybe a battalion (600 men +/-). The men in the ad were in Kerry's company sized unit, which had around 120 men and officers.

You could rephrase this non-denial denial, thusly: “okay, so they served with me, but they didn’t *serve* with me by my extremely narrow definition of the word, because they weren’t one of the six sailors on my particular boat. So they are a pack of goddam liars."

Please, may I have more? »


Al Maviva at 02:51 PM; filed to Politics | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
I Just Noticed Something

The radical Left - the same people who push the sort of "multiculturalism" that downsizes the West and supersizes the Third World - wants the US to prefer the status quo in France and Germany over that in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Now who's really supersizing the Third World?

Alan K. Henderson at 12:07 PM; filed to Politics | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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