October 29, 2004
Why Universities Scare Me
This
article at Front Page Mag. details the adventures of a journalist who infiltrated the "no press allowed" workshop sessions at the recent Duke University sponsored hate fest known as the Palestinian Solidarity Movement and smuggled in a tape recorder. Go and read it. It is, well, horrifying. It is also very long and very detailed.
Posted by: Random Penseur at
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I read a fair amount of it -- it's long -- and it is somewhat disturbing. It's worth pointing out, though, that there's nothing new to US academic elites supporting wacky and self-destructive agendas -- look at the support received by Alger Hiss, for instance, or the appeal that various forms of "fellow traveling" in the 1930s had for upper and upper-middle class WASPs. I'm not especially pleased to see the Presbyterians involved, either, but the "respectable Protestant" wing, Presbyterians, Methodists, and UCC haven't had a whole lot to bring people in to church for many years, so it's not surprising that they go off the deep end. That will continue. The more encouraging news, it seems to me, is that the populist-Jacksonian tradition has been moving over to the Republican side and is communicating its impatience with well-bred crazies. I have a feeling the upcoming election may reflect this more than people expect.
Posted by: John Bruce at October 29, 2004 03:48 PM (Orixf)
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Gee, John, I have you are right about a, let's call it, a backlash of common sense. I am spectical but hopeful. This article really disturbed me.
Posted by: RP at October 30, 2004 12:26 PM (LlPKh)
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I scanned the article and was disturbed by its content. Nonetheless, thanks for posting it. I was surprised that the dept. of Homeland Security wasn't beating down the doors.
Posted by: Azalea at October 30, 2004 04:47 PM (hRxUm)
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Add that to what's going on in Columbia U. and, well in the schools across the nation. I really was upset by the going into inner-city schools. Is this currently happening or is it a project for the future? I was confused on the issue, or maybe simply hoping it hasn't occured yet. Where are the principals?
I'm sending the URL to a list I'm on. I hope people wake up and quickly.
Posted by: Rachel Ann at October 31, 2004 03:40 PM (aD0/j)
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I had to link. I couldn't not. Good work.
Posted by: Rachel Ann at October 31, 2004 03:57 PM (aD0/j)
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These
remarks by Teresa H. Kerry's son Chris on the campaign trail have been noted on Instapundit and elsewhere, including reference to implicit anti-Semitism -- when Heinz gets done calling W a cokehead, he outlines his problems with W treating "Israel as the 51st state". I think Heinz normally lives in Sweden, by the way, and is slumming to tell the rest of us how to vote. I would not underestimate the level of snobbiness and anti-Semitism among the university "elites", but again, I think there have always been countervailing forces against it.
Posted by: John Bruce at October 31, 2004 04:17 PM (/3UoZ)
Posted by: Simon at November 01, 2004 04:02 AM (FUPxT)
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John, I saw the Heinz remarks. For a long time now, I have believed that there is no place for a Jew in the Democratic Party. I keep looking for those countervailing forces and I am not cheered.
Thanks for the link, Rachel Anne.
Simon, I gather you must have read it. It is quite scary stuff, I think.
Posted by: RP at November 01, 2004 08:43 AM (LlPKh)
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October 07, 2004
Spain and Columbus Day
The Spaniards have disinvited the United States to their Columbus Day celebration, according to the guys at
Diplomad, in favor instead of inviting French troops to take part. Their take on it was pretty damn funny.
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Uganda -- pity the children
I write, from time to time, about Africa. Indeed, I ought to give it its very own category, I suppose. From a safe distance removed, it is impossible not to find Africa compelling and fascinating, scary and sad.
The NY Times has written this morning about Uganda and the boy king. This is a far from gripping article about the 12 year old boy who sits the throne in Uganda. His name is King Oyo. It is a typical puff piece about young royalty thrust onto the throne at 3 1/2 and how he wishes he could be just like every other normal kid. He runs with his dogs and goes to school and his mother tries to resist the attempts of Parliament to remove him as king. *Yawn* The piece does note that Uganda is very poor but after we make our expected obesiance to that inconvenient fact, we move on the the leopard covered chairs and the business class plane trips.
Now, if you are the typical American reader (whatever that means) you will have turned the page in your NY Times, secure in the fact that Uganda, while poor, is a happy place where everyone loves their boy king. You can now turn your attention to the more interesting sports section.
But wait a second. What if you happened to read the NY Sun last night on the train home? Maybe you'd have a different take on Uganda. Maybe you'd be forced to ask yourself if the NY Times has even the barest beginnings of a glimmer of a clue about Uganda.
Uganda is a basket case. The Sun reproduced an article from the Telegraph, entitled, Broken Lives of the Twlight Children. Don't follow this link unless you need a good cry, ok? This is seriously horrible stuff.
Uganda's children are not all playing with dogs and running around with leopard skins. Some of them, over 20,000 children, have been kidnapped, tortured, raped, and forced to become soldiers in the "Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), Africa's most brutal rebel group led by a self-styled prophet called Joseph Kony." Here is some information about the LRA.
Since the onset of his campaign 18 years ago, the LRA has kidnapped 20,000 children, brainwashing and enslaving them for use as soldiers and sexual playthings. More than 10,000 have disappeared in the last two years.
Kony targets children, devoting his messianic energies towards the abduction, indoctrination and often murder of as many as possible.
The catastrophe inflicted is almost without parallel. At least 1.6 million people - virtually the entire rural population - have fled their villages for squalid refugee camps. The number of refugees has trebled since 2002 and exceeds the 1.2 million in Sudan's war-torn Darfur.
The conflict has being going on for 18 years. Where is the much vaunted United Nations in this? More people have been displaced here than in Darfur, which is getting a lot of press and attention. The UN is nowhere, instead suggesting that other NGO's do a little more.
[T]he UN has passed five resolutions in as many years on the protection of children in armed conflicts, including specific calls for action in Uganda, but the rate of abductions is higher than ever. "While the extreme abuses of children in northern Uganda are well documented and widely known, the international community has failed to find an effective way to protect them," it adds.
It says the 18-year conflict has cost the country £725 million. More than 20,000 children have been abducted by the LRA, made to kill their parents and forced into bondage as child soldiers, sex slaves and weapons porters.
Two million people are living in squalid and cramped camps for the homeless and malnutrition among displaced children is up to 21 per cent in some areas. "Many international appeals were made to the UN and world leaders, Ugandan children addressed the UN. "Each time their stories shocked audiences, each time they went home with hope. Their hopes turned to despair," the report says.
Denis McNamara, the UN special adviser on displacement, rejected charges that the UN has offered "too little, too late" suggesting instead that groups such as World Vision should increase their own staff in the countryside.
Once again, the UN rides to the rescue. By the way, I've left out a lot of the gruesome details, like about the boy who was forced to kill his own family by setting fire to their hut. It pains me to even write that last sentence. Go see for yourself, if you can.
The article in the Telegraph starts by telling you about a child named Simple who walks six miles into town to sleep on the concrete outside by the hospital to avoid being taken by Kony's army. The little girl is 12 years old. Can you imagine what it must be like to have to send your child out of your house for her own protection? And then not know if she was safe until she came back the next day?
And King Oyo wants to be just like a normal kid. He doesn't mean the kids who have to sneak into town to sleep, does he?
Posted by: Random Penseur at
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It's awful, Random. Thanks for bringing it to our attention!
Posted by: Mick at October 08, 2004 10:04 AM (VhRca)
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How many times has the media been writing about the atrocities in Northern Uganda?? This issue has been in the media for a long time. Not much is being done to help the people there. Why is the positive news in Africa considered boring? News about Africa doesnt have to be negative. The `begging bowl´images of children are hardly representative of life there. No wonder people in the west still ask Afircans questions like,`Oh...you live in real house! I always thought people in Africa live in huts and wear loin cloths!!!
Posted by: Anna at June 27, 2005 04:42 AM (Ya8G3)
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October 06, 2004
The Debates: V.P. Edition
Well, I am keeping with my practice of giving my views on this before looking at any newspaper or other blog. My view is that Cheney won last night and I'm not sure that it was particularly close. Remember, if I'm changing presidents in the middle of a war, I need a good reason. Edwards did not give me a good reason last night, although I really liked what he had to say about Israel. To my surprise, I thought Cheney was a stronger supporter of gay marriage than Edwards was. Cheney seemed to have a better handle on the facts and figures and if he was wrong, well, he at least sounded confident and in command. Who would I like to see one heart beat away from the oval office? Last night, it would have to be Cheney.
By the way, I am going to go check out the factcheck.org or .com site he spoke about in relation to Haliburton.
Advantage: Cheney.
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Posted by: standing naked at October 06, 2004 10:03 AM (IAJcf)
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It's factcheck.org. He gave it as .com but that's wrong. In fact, Soros snagged the .com and has it forwarding to an anti-Bush site.
Posted by: Jim at October 06, 2004 11:25 AM (GCA5m)
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Edwards shocked me with his stance on Gay marriage. But that wasn't a prime issue to me....
I thought they both did well in the debate. I thought it was a tie, with Edwards sounding exuberant and lively, appealing to the ones who want change and Cheney showing great control, doing his Roosevelt, elderly statesman best, appealing to those who want status-quo.
You say "one-heartbeat" away? I say, he should BE the heartbeat, rather than Bush. Cheney appears much more in command, much more authoritative than Bush does. He always has.
Whenever I look at a Presidential candidate, I ask myself, if I were on the battleground, preparing to charge a hill, bearing my rifle, scared to death, which man would I want to throw his arm up and say, "C'mon, troops, follow me!" Who would I believe had the best ability to get me and my comrades out alive?
I have to say, out of the four men I've seen so far, Bush would be my last choice. He does not inspire me. I worry about him. I don't worry about the others so much. I must be missing something the rest of you see in him, because so many seem to have that kind of faith in him and I just...don't. *shrugs*
Posted by: Amber at October 06, 2004 12:15 PM (zQE5D)
Posted by: Jocosa at December 21, 2004 05:19 PM (qw2qh)
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October 05, 2004
Australian Politics
Before I got involved with blogging -- both reading and writing -- I knew next to nothing about Australian politics. Now I am just slightly farther along on the continuim after reading people like
Yobbo,
Simon,
Michael, and
Chrenkoff. First of all, what the hell do they feed these people in Australia in order to produce such articulate political commentators? Where can I get some of that and it better not be
Vegemite?
Now, you may think to yourself, "Self, why should I care?" You should care because Australia is a critical ally and partner in Iraq and in the WoT (War on Terror) generally. It is headed, at the moment, by John Howard and he is in quite a fight with Mark Latham, head of the Labour Party. I'd turn here for more of an explanation: Decision Time, an excellent piece.
I admit that I am finding the Australian campaigns to be much more interesting, or at least more entertaining, than the American one. The reason? We're not getting quotes like this one in our campaign (Mark Latham on John Howard):
Mr Howard and his government are just yes-men to the United States. There they are, a conga line of suckholes on the conservative side of Australian politics. The backbench sucks up to the Prime Minister, and the Prime Minister sucks up to George W. [...] In my book they are not Australian at all. They are just the little tories—the little tory suckholes.
I am not informed enough to have an opinion, unlike the blogger I took the above quote from, but I must admit I wish we had a more colorful campaign going on over here.
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October 01, 2004
Ghurkas: An Update
I saw this
misleading little blurb, buried in the middle of the NY Times this morning and wanted to highlight it:
BRITAIN: GURKHAS GAIN CITIZENSHIP Gurkhas, who have served with the British Army for nearly 200 years, won a court battle to settle in Britain and become citizens. The soldiers, recruited in Nepal, are continuing to demand equality in pay and conditions with their British Army counterparts. The right to settle in Britain is restricted to those who left the army after July 1, 1997, when the Gurkhas were rebased from Hong Kong to Britain. The Home Office estimates 230 soldiers and about 800 dependants will settle in Britain each year. Gurkhas have served in the army since 1815 when a peace agreement was reached by the British East India Company after it suffered heavy casualties during an invasion of Nepal. From a peak of 112,000 in World War II, their numbers have dwindled to about 3,400.
Why is it misleading? Because the Ghurkas who served in Hong Kong, while they may be permitted to settle in Great Britain, are excluded from citizenship (link has lots of pop ups so I reproduce relevant bits below).
Former Nepalese-born Gurkha soldiers who helped defend Hong Kong under British rule are fuming at London's decision to exclude them from a new law giving the crack fighters British citizenship, a spokesman said Thursday.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Thursday that serving and retired fighters of the army's famous Ghurka Brigade would be allowed to settle in Britain.
But the law applies only to those demobilised after July 1, 1997, the day Britain disbanded its Hong Kong regiment and returned the city to Chinese control.
"The law has been stacked against Hong Kong's Gurkhas, they have been deliberately left out," said Hem Thapa, an agent at Gurkha International, an employment agency that finds work for former Gurkhas who still live here.
"Those who went back to Nepal will definitely be making some noise about this -- many were definitely counting on Britain offering them citizenship."
Why can't the Brits treat these men properly?
UPDATE: Predictably, and I should have looked before posting the above, Simon has a great post on this subject.
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It is an absolute disgrace and just makes Great Britain look not so Great.
Posted by: Simon at October 03, 2004 11:46 AM (FdZCB)
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It is anabsoultley unfair.
Posted by: Gyan Rai at January 31, 2005 01:57 AM (i959t)
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These great soldiers are more British than the British. I served with the 48 Ghurka Infantry Brigade (56 Field Sqn Royal Engineers) in Hong Kong in the 50's and am in agreement that these fine soldiers should be given British Citizenship.
Posted by: Bill Purcell at November 08, 2005 03:31 PM (Icrem)
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The Debates
I stayed up past my bedtime last night with my wife to watch the debate. I was not impressed overly much although, on the whole, I liked Bush better. I am keeping in open mind, despite the oft quoted danger of having my brain fall out, but I know that I am going to need a reason to change presidents in the middle of a war and I was anxious for John Kerry to give me that reason. He didn't. You see, I'm still not really sure what he stands for. I know what he's against -- Bush. But what is he for? Lehrer asked him several times to give specifics about how he would handle things differently from Bush. I actually moved physically to the edge of my seat when he was asked this question because I didn't want to miss a single word. I sat back disappointed when he concluded his answer. There was no substance to the reply, it was just another attack on Bush. Kerry referred us to his website for the "details". Go see it yourself. I did, last night. I looked up the homeland security platform and walked away with no greater understanding than I had after the debate. Basically, it says on the website that they'll identify sensitive targets and do a better job guarding them. That doesn't make me feel safer.
Advantage last night: Bush.
Posted by: Random Penseur at
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i checked out Kerry's website too.
felt the same way.
been reading all kinds of stuff since the debate.
mmm...going to be a tough one i think.
Posted by: standing naked at October 02, 2004 08:24 AM (IAJcf)
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