3D Tip Jar

Amazon mp3s

SiteMeter

Promote Your Blog

Amen, Brother

Good little article over at the National Review On-Line about how we really won in Iraq.

Best line of the whole piece…

shake hands in the light and kill at night

Go read it HERE

I can tell you I was in Baghdad the same time as the author of that piece and while there was outreach going on, every single day we were out there killing our enemies on the field of battle. It’s not pretty or something a lot of people want to think about, but that’s how the job got done.

A Can Of Whoop Ass, As Viewed From The Inside

This Afternoon’s Broadcast is brought to you by…

Sweet. You think you’ve got a pretty face…

Classic Pick O’ the Day — December 30

Shaft (1971)
A slick black detective enlists gangsters and African nationals to fight the mob.
Dir: Gordon Parks Cast: Richard Roundtree, Moses Gunn, Charles Cioffi. TV-MA. 11:30 CST. TCM.

TCM highlights films on the National Film Registry tomorrow and it is an eclectic group of classics tomorrow. I’ll pick this one for its awesomeness and for the fact that it will rarely appear on TCM so I’ll take my opportunity today and save Trouble in Paradise (2:30 PM) for another day. Shaft is a bit dated but cool nonetheless (and the remake was useless) — the quintessential 1970s urban movie (a perfect companion to Dirty Harry imho). I am in the camp that this is not a blaxploitation movie but a bona fide film. In any case… take advantage of the opportunity to watch it uncut on TCM. Also on tomorrow are prior CPODs: A Raisin in the Sun (8:45 AM), The Bank Dick (11:00 AM), The Heiress (12:30 PM), The Searchers (4:00 PM), Tootsie (7:00 PM), Oklahoma! (9:00 PM), and Night of the Living Dead (1:45 AM).

Also check out classic shorts The Great Train Robbery from 1903 (8:30 AM) and Buster Keaton’s One Week (6:00 PM).

Night of the Living Dead is available via Netflix Streaming. The Great Train Robbery is available on YouTube as is One Week… here’s a clip

It’s a beautiful t’ing

How do, fellow Threedonians? If you’re a fan of the above graphic, please be sure to change that final cross “t” to an “m” and head to The Vast Conspiracy site and buy one (or two or five). With 10% of all sales going to military charity, they and I equals we, and we thank you for your support.

Daily Dose of Ramirez

H/T: GOPUSA

Hey Bulldog!

Instapundit links to this awesome take down by a man named Ari Armstrong of a Denver Post reporter who wrote a story about the dangers of guns using bogus stats — or sketchy sourcing (he wrote diplomatically). From Armstrong’s blog Free Colorado:

[Update 6:31 pm: The Denver Post has issued a revised correction for the online article in question.]

In their article for today’s Denver Post, Joey Bunch and Kieran Nicholson claim, “More than 500 children in the United States die in gun accidents each year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in a 2007 report, which estimated 1.7 million children live in homes where guns are kept.” However, there seems to be no factual basis for that claim.

As Bunch is listed as first author and his contact information appears below the article, I contacted him to see where he got his figures. Unfortunately, in a series of emails (see below) he flatly refused to provide me with a citation. Apparently that is because no such citation exists.

CDC provides a search page for reviewing mortality statistics. The results for unintentional firearm deaths for 2007, ages zero through seventeen, is 112. Notice that the anti-gun Brady Campaign reports comparable figures. (Of the estimated 2,436,652 deaths in the U.S. in 2009, a total of 588 for all age groups resulted from “accidental discharge of firearms.” Final figures for 2007 show a total of 613 deaths. Please see pages 19 and 39 of the linked CDC report, and notice that I provided an actual citation for my claim.) To get figures as high as Bunch claims, one has to look at decades-old data. (Note that, in this article, I am concerned only with Bunch’s factual claims. I will address the “big picture” issues elsewhere.)

The original Denver Post article related to accidental gun deaths and children is here. Kudos to Armstrong for his pursuit of the truth and for highlighting that properly sourcing a story — or any claim — often takes just a few minutes worth of work. I don’t think Bunch was lying originally, I think he was ideologically lazy resulting in actual laziness when he found a superficial link that fit his narrative on guns which then fed into the topic of his piece on accidental gun deaths. His lack of curiosity and mortification at printing an untruth (unintentionally or carelessly) is disturbing (but not surprising given the state of journalism today). IN ym ethics courses I talk about the virtue of competence… this will be an example I will use in those courses.

h/t: Instapundit

After the State… Networks?

Here’s an interesting piece from Foreign Policy in which the author posits that the world took a turn away from states and towards networks. I haven’t had time to chew on it, but he thinks loose networks (both pro and anti-social) will predominate. Anyway… read the whole thing here.

How the new pattern will unfold is still unclear, but just as the first nation-states were often tempted to become empires, there may be a pattern in which nations and networks somehow seek to fuse rather than fight. Iran, in its relations with Hezbollah, provides perhaps the best example of a nation embracing and nurturing a network. So much so that, in parsing the 2006 Lebanon war between Israel and Hezbollah, most of the world — and most Israelis — counted it as a win for the network. China, too, has shown a skill and a proclivity for involving itself with networks, whether of hackers, high-sea pirates, or operatives who flow along the many tendrils of the Asian triads’ criminal enterprises. The attraction may be mutual, as nations may feel more empowered with networks in their arsenals and networks may be far more vibrant and resilient when backed by a nation. All this sets the stage for a world that may have 10 al Qaedas operating 10 years from now — many of them in dark alliances with nations — a sure sign that the Cold War–era arms race has given way to a new “organizational race” to build or align with networks.

Clearly, a turning has occurred. With empires gone and the field seemingly left to nations, networks of all sorts have emerged to take up a new challenge, to usher in a new age. Virtually all networks have been “born fighting,” like the first wave of modern nation-states some 500 years ago. If the last “bend of history” is any indicator, this latest turning speaks to a continued epoch of conflict.

This time, however, the way of war will be different. For centuries, nations competed effectively by imitating the great forces of empires on land and sea — and later in the air. Today, networks fight in fundamentally different ways, from waging “battles of the story” in places like Tahrir Square — whose echoes can be seen in “Occupy” events — to conducting terrorist and insurgent campaigns in dozens of places around the world. The challenge will be for nations to learn to emulate, where appropriate, the successful tactics of the networks — and to become adept at countering them as well.

Persian Roulette

Iran Says U.S. Aircraft Carrier Has Entered Zone Near Key Oil Route, http://fxn.ws/tP4b8I

Iran threatens the Strait of Hormuz… build the pipeline D’oh bama.

Thursday Open Thread


NHL Winter Classic — New Year’s Day 2011.

How Bazaar


Powerline links to a sobering story from The Investigative Project on Terrorism about a ring of used car dealerships around the U.S. in places like Tulsa, OK, and Mt. Joliet, TN with ties to Hezbollah and Mexican drug cartels….:

A Treasury designation, a criminal indictment and a civil lawsuit allege the Lebanese drug dealer Ayman Joumaa is part of a complex cocaine and automobile smuggling enterprise in the United States and West Africa that handles hundreds of millions of dollars each month. Some of those profits are routed to Hizballah through the Lebanese Canadian Bank (LCB).

More than $300 million was wired into the United States through Lebanese financial institutions, according to the civil suit. The money laundering scheme allegedly involves at least 30 car dealerships throughout the country. As part of the investigation, federal agents raided a dealership in Tulsa.

“They’re making big time money and it’s going right into weapons acquisition, terrorist training, recruiting, corruption,” DEA official Rusty Payne told Fox News. “Things needed to carry out terrorist attacks around the world. Some of the money is flowing back to the United States, back to these used car companies, to purchase more used cars to ship them to West Africa to sell those at a profit and then mix those used car proceeds in with the drug dollars.”

The growing nexus between Hizballah and Mexican drug cartels allows the Iran-backed extremist group to make use of drug cartel transit routes to gain entry into the United States through its porous border with Mexico. Hizballah, in turn, offers Mexican syndicates expertise on smuggling and explosives as well as access to its drug trafficking networks in the Middle East and South Asia.

Iran-backed Hizballah and Mexican drug syndicates share “the same criminal weapons smugglers, document traffickers and transportation experts,” former DEA operations chief Michael Braun told the Washington Times. “They rely on the same shadow facilitators. One way or another they’re all connected.”

Braun also alleged that members of Iran’s Quds Force are “commanding and controlling” Hizballah’s criminal operations in Latin America.

Lots of links to the complaints and other docs at the IPT link above.

h/t: Powerline

You Be the Judge

Kevin Williamson of National Review Online lays out the case that this Administration excels at crony capitalism in this article:

For a few measly millions, Wall Street not only bought itself a president, but got the start-up firm of B. H. Obama & Co. LLC to throw a cabinet into the deal, too — on remarkably generous terms. President Obama, for a guy prone to delivering prim and smug little homilies denouncing greed, greed, greed — the only of the seven deadly sins that truly offends Democrats (though Mrs. Obama has done some desultory work on gluttony) — is strangely comfortable among the Gordon Gekkos of this world. Shall we have a partial roll call? Beat the drum slowly and call out the names: With unemployment still topping 9 percent, the catastatic world economy teetering on the brink of another, even larger financial catastrophe, and trillion-dollar U.S. deficits as far as the green-shaded eye can see, let’s hear it for Obama’s first National Economic Council director, Lawrence Summers (of hedge-fund giant D. E. Shaw and venture-capital firm Andreessen Horowitz), who has had some nice paydays courtesy of Lehman Bros., JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup. Let’s hear it for Citigroup’s Michael Froman, deputy assistant to the president and deputy national-security adviser for international economic affairs, for Hartford Financial’s Neal Wolin, deputy Treasury secretary, for JPMorgan’s William Daley, Obama’s chief of staff, and for his predecessor, Rahm Emanuel of Wasserstein Perella. Let’s hear it for Fannie Mae’s Tom Donilon, national-security adviser. (No, seriously: One of the luminous interstellar geniuses who brought Fannie Mae to its current aphotic state of affairs, upside down to the tune of trillions of dollars, is running national security, and the former director of the White House Military Office, Louis Caldera, was on the board of IndyMac when it finally went toes up — sleep tight, America!) And, lest we forget, let’s have three big, sloppy cheers for economic-transition team leaders Robert Rubin (Goldman Sachs, Citigroup) and folksy tax enthusiast/ghoulish billionaire vulture Warren Buffett.

That’s a pretty fantastic lineup, from Wall Street’s point of view, but the real bonus turned out to be Treasury secretary Tim Geithner, who came up through the ranks as part of the bipartisan Robert Rubin–Hank Paulson–Citigroup–Goldman Sachs cabal. Geithner, a government-and-academe man from way back, never really worked on Wall Street, though he once was offered a gig as CEO of Citigroup, which apparently thought he did an outstanding job as chairman of the New York Fed, where one of his main tasks was regulating Citigroup — until it collapsed into the yawning suckhole of its own cavernous ineptitude, at which point Geithner’s main job became shoveling tens of billions of federal dollars into Citigroup, in an ingeniously structured investment that allowed the government to buy a 27 percent share in the bank, for which it paid more than the entire market value of the bank. If you can’t figure out why you’d pay 100-plus percent of a bank’s value for 27 percent of it, then you just don’t understand high finance or high politics.

I think the article is pretty damning. It seems as if, as Williamson notes, like a fevered conspiracy theory. Apparently Hugh Hewitt compared Williamson to a Bilderberger conspiracy nut for this article.

Clerical Error


Greek and Armenian Orthodox priests were duking it out with brooms at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem earlier…

Here’s the story from the BBCL

Greek Orthodox and Armenian priests and monks came to blows during preparations for Orthodox Christmas celebrations

Scuffles have broken out between rival groups of Greek Orthodox and Armenian clerics in a turf war at Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity.

Bemused tourists looked on as about 100 priests fought with brooms while cleaning the church in preparation for Orthodox Christmas, on 7 January.

Palestinian police armed with batons and shields broke up the clashes.

Groups of priests have clashed before in the church, built on the spot where Christians believe Jesus was born.

“It was a trivial problem that… occurs every year,” Bethlehem police Lt-Col Khaled al-Tamimi told Reuters.

“No one was arrested because all those involved were men of God,” he said.

Nobody was seriously injured in the scuffles, according to the police.

Previous clashes between the denominations which share the administration of the church have been sparked by perceived encroachments on one group’s territory by another.

Where is Father Ron? :-)

The Afternoon’s Broadcast is brought to you by…

The Babys. Just trying to decide…

Just-As-Classic Pick o’ the Day — December 29

Junebug (2005)
Months after his wedding, a man travels to his North Carolina hometown to introduce his wife to his family.
Director: Phil Morrison | Cast: Embeth Davidtz, Alessandro Nivola, Celia Weston, Amy Adams, Benjamin McKenzie, Scott Wilson, Frank Hoyt Taylor | Rated R for sexual content and language | 10:30 AM EST | 106 minutes | IFC

An indie/art-house standard, quite literally, Junebug ‘s also a great showcase of Amy Adams’ transition to meatier roles. Benjamin McKenzie’s also got the simmering, resentful small-town little brother down pat, his wispy “Larry Bird” ‘stache a brilliant character choice to boot.

The “Chokin and Tokin” episode of Freaks and Geeks, a few Malcolm in the Middles and the first (and probably best) Scary Movie also on IFC throughout the day/night, House Party in the overnight hours. While Junebug, House Party and Freaks and Geeks aren’t available via Netflix streaming, Malcolm in the Middle and Scary Movie can be found there as well (ditto House Parties 2 and 3).

Goodbye Cheetah


Cheetah, from the Johnny Weismuller Tarzan movies, has died — at age 80. From Yahoo! News:

A Florida animal sanctuary says Cheetah the chimpanzee sidekick in the Tarzan movies of the early 1930s has died at age 80.

The Suncoast Primate Sanctuary in Palm Harbor announced that Cheetah died Dec. 24 of kidney failure.

Sanctuary outreach director Debbie Cobb on Wednesday told The Tampa Tribune newspaper that Cheetah was outgoing, loved finger painting and liked to see people laugh. She says he seemed to be tuned into human feelings.

Based on the works of author Edgar Rice Burroughs, the Tarzan stories, which have spawned scores of books and films over the years, chronicle the adventures of a man who was raised by apes in Africa.

Cheetah was the comic relief in the Tarzan films that starred American Olympic gold medal swimmer Johnny Weissmuller. Cobb says Cheetah came to the sanctuary from Weissmuller’s estate sometime around 1960.

Cobb says Cheetah wasn’t a troublemaker. Still, sanctuary volunteer Ron Priest says that when the chimp didn’t like what was going on, he would throw feces.

King of the Jewpanese?


I learn something new everyday. Jesus is buried in Japan dontchaknow…. from io9:

In the 2,800-person village of Shing? in Japan’s Aomori prefecture, you can visit a tourist attraction that earns almost doodlysquat fanfare despite its world-shattering theological ramifications. I am, of course, talking about the grave of Jesus Christ. What, you didn’t know that Jesus escaped crucifixion and emigrated to northern Japan to become a rice farmer?

This radical revision of Jesus’ life kicked off in 1935, when Kyomaro Takenouchi suddenly uncovered a series of millennia-old documents that detailed the Christian messiah’s escape from the Holy Land.

The full story from The Japan Times is here.

h/t: JJ

Six strings (and others) down

Favorite music picks o’ the year coming later in the week (ooooh, the anticipation), but first remembering those we lost in 2011. RIP, all …

The world of music lost many of its treasured voices in 2011, from the heartbreak of Amy Winehouse and Heavy D, to singular talents like Gil Scott-Heron and Clarence Clemons. Iconic bluesmen, salsa stars, disco divas, a hair metal wailer, a punk icon, songwriting legends, and a tech genius that changed the way we enjoy music — all gone, but never forgotten.

Continue reading Six strings (and others) down

Classic Pick O’ the Day — December 29

That’s Entertainment! (1974)
An all-star cast, including Fred Astaire and Frank Sinatra, introduces clips from MGM’s greatest musicals.
Dir: Jack Haley Jr. TV-G. 1:00 PM EST. TCM.

This was my introduction to the great MGM musicals when I was 6 years old. Donald O’Connor dancing to “Make ‘em Laugh” in Singin’ in the Rain sealed the deal for me and it’s a master history class when introduced by the still living greats back in 1974. Maybe this was MGM’s act of contrition for hocking the fabled back lots to go into the casino business (does that mean MGM killed Tupac?) — if so, then I’m thankful for the class (and the second and third installments that follow on TCM (3:30 and 5:45 PM). Also on tomorrow are prior CPODs The Great Ziegfeld (8:00 PM), I Love You Again (1:00 AM) with William Powell and Myrna Loy, Manhattan Melodrama also with Powell and Loy –plus Gable, and Libeled Lady (4:30 AM).

Guaranteed Weight Loss


Want to lose weight? Don’t worry about counting calories or exercising… just talk about food endlessly... nothing kills an appetite like “the philosophy of food”. The downside… it might increase your alcohol intake.

Philosophers have a long but scattered history of analyzing food. Plato famously details an appropriate diet in Book II of the Republic. The Roman Stoics, Epicurus and Seneca, as well as Enlightenment philosophers such as Locke, Rousseau, Voltaire, Marx, and Nietzsche, all discuss various aspects of food production and consumption. In the twentieth century, philosophers considered such issues as vegetarianism, agricultural ethics, food rights, biotechnology, and gustatory aesthetics. In the twenty-first century, philosophers continue to address these issues and new ones concerning the globalization of food, the role of technology, and the rights and responsibilities of consumers and producers. Typically, these philosophers call their work “food ethics” or “agricultural ethics.” But I think they sell themselves short. Philosophers do more than treat food as a branch of ethical theory. They also examine how it relates to the fundamental areas of philosophical inquiry: metaphysics, epistemology, aesthetics, political theory, and, of course, ethics. The phrase “philosophy of food” is more accurate. We might eventually come to think of the philosophy of food as a perfectly ordinary “philosophy of” if more philosophers address food issues and more colleges offer courses on the subject—or at least that is my hope.

h/t: Arts & Letters Daily