Victor Davis Hanson, America’s most underrated columnist,
At War With Ourselves
We’re winning in Iraq. Let’s not lose at home
If many are determined to see the Iraqi war as lost without a plan, it hardly seems so to 130,000 U.S. soldiers still over there. They explain to visitors that they have always had a design: defeat the Islamic terrorists; train a competent Iraqi military; and provide requisite time for a democratic Iraqi government to garner public support away from the Islamists.
We point fingers at each other; soldiers under fire point to their achievements: Largely because they fight jihadists over there, there has not been another 9/11 here. Because Saddam is gone, reform is not just confined to Iraq, but taking hold in Lebanon, Egypt and the Gulf. We hear the military is nearly ruined after conducting two wars and staying on to birth two democracies; its soldiers feel that they are more experienced and lethal, and on the verge of pulling off the nearly impossible: offering a people terrorized from nightmarish oppression something other than the false choice of dictatorship or theocracy–and making the U.S. safer for the effort.
To read more, check out his National Review archive or his blog.
Only in Massachusetts do voters put up with liberal tax and spend politicians who don’t feel an obligation to pay their own taxes. Only in Massachusetts.
Boston Herald
Herald audit: Pols trip up on taxes
Six of the Hubâ??s 36 elected representatives charged with managing public finances at the State House and in City Hall have failed to pay their own taxes, a Herald review found.
Boston City Councilors Chuck Turner, Maureen Feeney and Felix Arroyo have let property taxes go unpaid for years at a time, although all are currently paid up, according to county and federal real estate records.
Among Bostonâ??s legislative delegation, tax woes also have dogged state Reps. Dianne Wilkerson, Gloria Fox and Marie St. Fleur.
Marie St. Fleur, you may recall, was Attorney General Tom Reilly’s pick for Lt. Gov on the Democrat ticket. She lasted a whole day because the Boston Globe did due dilligence that Tom Reilly should have and discovered in a matter of hours that St. Fluer owned significant back taxes. St. Fleur, a co-sponsor of the wildly unpopular and soundly defeated bill to grant state tuition tax breaks for illegal immigrants, also didn’t feel the need to repay her student loans. Ouch.
Chuck Turner is a name that may be familiar to some of you. He is the pile of garbage that slandered and smeared the US military in the early days of the Iraq war by falsely claiming GI’s were raping Iraqi women. He held an infamous press conference at Boston’s City Hall with an equally loathsome “community activist” named Sadiki,
Boston Globe publishes bogus GI rape pictures
Boston residents got more than they bargained for this morning when their copy of the Globe came complete with graphic photographic images depicting U.S. troops gang-raping Iraqi women.
Problem is the photos are fake.
The photos accompanied an article about Boston city councilor Chuck Turner, who distributed the graphic photographs yesterday at a press conference with activist Sadiki Kambon. Turner told reporters the photos showed U.S. soldiers raping Iraqi women.
“The American people have a right and responsibility to see the pictures,” Turner said.
Kambon, who is director of the Black Community Information Center, said at the news conference he received the photographs by e-mail from Akbar Muhammad, a representative for the Nation of Islam.
Only in Massachusetts.
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Instapundit’s Professor Glenn Reynolds, who appeard on our program last Sunday night to talk about his recent book “An Army of Davids” has written an article in today’s WSJ entitled “Early Warning System” in which he argues that the blogosphere has significantly helped to resolve the issue of ports by elevating the substance of the debate beyond hasty generalizations, demagoguery, and uniformed opinions. He also has some advice for the White House for the future.
I will admit that when the story first broke and I went on air and opposed the sale of the ports to the Dubai company. I had not done my homework thoroughly enough and will endeavor to educate myself more thoroughly prior to sounding off on the air.
It seems as though Professor Reynolds had the same “knee jerk reaction.”
Some bloggers, meanwhile, were having second thoughts. One of them was me: Although my initial reaction was negative, I started getting emails from readers — some of them longtime correspondents — who had experience with the UAE. One had served alongside troops from the Emirates in Afghanistan; another had spent time in Dubai. Some had worked with UAE ports officials. All were positive.Then Jim Dunnigan of StrategyPage explained why the UAE has been a good friend to the U.S. and is likely to be trustworthy here, and why this deal is in American interests. I found it pretty convincing. A lot of other bloggers, of all political persuasions, were reaching the same conclusion, even as the mass-media and talk-radio hysteria was still building. (To be fair, some Big Media like The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post were weighing in with good sense.) As the National Journal’s Blogometer reported, “This movement was generally led by the intellectual right, and the intellectual left soon found itself in guarded agreement — the deal wasn’t as bad as it first seemed.”
Here is the full article (subs req).
In a related editorial also in the WSJ today (subs req) entitled “Ports of Gall” the editors explain how the new protectionists (mostly union backed Democrats) use national security as their cover.
Although Hillary has been one of the most vocal critics of the transaction, she was signing a different tune a few years ago:
“I also believe that winning the war on terror will not happen by military strength alone. This is fundamentally about America’s values and leadership. . . . The idea of winning hearts and minds has been derided by some. But I don’t think that we can overlook its singular importance. . .”
— Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, February 25, 200
When one looks at the primary opponents of this transaction they are almost all big time recipients of Longshoreman largesse in the form of campaign contributions.
And, lo, the New York Sun reported this week that “nearly every politician who has been at the forefront of the opposition to the Dubai deal is on the receiving end of some Longshoreman largesse” in the form of campaign contributions. They include New York Representatives Peter King (R), Jerry Nadler (D) and Vito Fossella (R) and Senators Clinton, Robert Menendez (D., N.J.), Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.), Chris Dodd (D., Conn.) and Barbara Boxer (D., Calif.).
I have said all along that although Bush has not been conservative on borders, spending, and affirmative action, he has led capably and boldly in the face of constant criticism and attacks from the Defeaticrats in the War on Terror.
To take seriously the political criticisms of the DP World deal, you must also take seriously the notion that President Bush has suddenly gone soft on security. So the same Administration that’s criticized for being overly obsessed with terrorism suddenly can’t be trusted to vet a routine deal involving terminal management at a handful of U.S. ports. We can understand why some Democrats would want to make this case; the shame is that so many conservatives and Republicans have taken their political bait.
This UAE Port deal will go through and the protectionist labor backed doom and gloom liberals who are attempting to be perceived as taking a tough stand on national security will be seen for the political demagogues they have always been. The liberals who glom on to one potentially damaging story after another in their seething hatred of the Bush administration (Scooter Libby, terror suerveillance, Katrina, Cheyney’s hunting accident, etc… will eventually abate once the American public get all the facts. Then, they can turn their attention toward the next “scandal” they hope will lead to impeachment proceedings.
Only at Mark Cuban’s Blog Maverick can you find back to back posts about the influence of music on the energy in an NBA arena, followed by a complicated story about naked short selling.
A Treasure Trove is what it is.
Have you heard about this story?
Autistic teen scores 20 points in final game
Do yourself a favor, take a break and watch the video.
HT: Paul Gillin
Sunday evening (2/19) we discussed the UAE port deal and the Cheney shooting. The port deal was fresh news and we had full lines for the hour. Since then, as you can see in the blog posts below, our opinions have changed somewhat as more details have emerged. We had some great calls and got to use a good amount of sound clips, some of on the port deal and some of it having some fun with the vice president. It was fun.