Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Bernard-Henri Lévy: Regime Change in Damascus

The French philosopher supports Western military intervention in Syria, and sees France leading the charge.

At The Daily Beast, "End the Syria Slaughter Now!":
Is it possible to intervene? What can be done in the face of the Russian and Chinese vetoes in the U.N. Security Council? The answer is not as complicated as those who are determined not to intervene would have us believe. It is the answer that French President Nicolas Sarkozy gave to the representatives of Libya’s Transitional National Council on March 11, 2011, when they asked him what would happen if France and the United States could not persuade the Security Council to go along with their plans. “That would be very unfortunate,” Sarkozy responded. “And we have to do everything we can to keep that from happening, but if we don’t succeed, then it will be necessary, together with the appropriate regional organizations (the Arab League, the African Union), to establish an alternative supervisory authority that will enable us to act.” Indeed, that is just what Susan Rice, the U.S. permanent representative to the Security Council, suggested with respect to Syria on May 30, 2012, following a briefing by Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Kofi Annan’s deputy, who was already beginning to come to grips with the failure of the U.N. mediation. If it did fail, Rice said, the international community would have to consider “whether they’re prepared to take actions outside of the Annan plan and the authority of this Council.” From the American ambassador! In this case, it was a question of law. Or more precisely of the need to amend the law when its provisions conflict with the requirements of natural law and justice. The Russian and Chinese vetoes are not an argument—they’re an alibi, the alibi of those who secretly believe that Assad will be strong enough to crush the insurrection and get us off the hook. The bloodbath is his—the crocodile tears, ours.
Keep reading.

He's not calling for a full-on Iraq-style ground invasion, favoring limited measures like a no-fly zone instead, but I doubt a stepped-up military initiative would avoid a large ground deployment in the long run. Interestingly, BHL sounds a lot like Max Boot on this.

Obama Emerges From the Bunker to Declare 'Rape is Rape'

Interesting.

Obama's finally facing the press. He couldn't pass up a chance to smear the GOP on Todd Akin faux-troversy, no doubt. At least the left's Sandra Fluke wannabes are swooning.

At The Hill, "President Obama: ‘Rape is rape’":

President Obama on Monday called Rep. Todd Akin’s remarks about rape “offensive” and sought to tie the Republican Senate candidate to the GOP presidential ticket.

“Rape is rape,” Obama said at a White House press briefing. He called Akin's comments “way out there.”

Defining rape, he said, “doesn't make sense to the American people and doesn't make sense to me.”
“What I think these comments do underscore is why we shouldn’t have a bunch of politicians, the majority of which are men, making decisions that affect health of women,” Obama said.

Democrats have pounced on Akin’s comments, which could make Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) a favorite in the Missouri Senate race overnight.
Akin wasn't defending rape, and he's apologized for those comments, but O's got his meme and he's sticking with it.

More news at Legal Insurrection, "PPP finds Akin still leads McCaskill – Troll poll?"

PREVIOUSLY:

* "Progressives Call for Rape of Missouri Rep. Todd Akin."

* "Conservatives Push for Todd Akin to Quit Missouri Senate Race."

* "'I Would Be Thinking About What's In the Best Interest of the Party' — Sean Hannity Interview With Embattled Missouri Senate Candidate Todd Akin."

* "Social Conservatives Stand Up for Todd Akin."

This will be the big story throughout the day, especially whether Akin changes his mind on dropping out. The pressure might be unbearable.

Social Conservatives Stand Up for Todd Akin

At CNN, "Leading social conservatives rally to Akin's defense" (via Memeorandum):
Tampa, Florida (CNN) – While much of the Republican universe spent Monday condemning Missouri Senate hopeful Todd Akin for his comments about "legitimate rape" and abortion, one of the nation's most prominent conservative organizations rallied to his defense.

Two top officials from the Family Research Council said the Missouri congressman is the target of a Democratic smear campaign and chided those Republicans who have condemned Akin.

Connie Mackey, who heads the group's political action committee, said the group "strongly supports" Todd Akin.

"We feel this is a case of gotcha politics," Mackey told reporters in Tampa, where the Republican National Committee was gathering ahead of the party's convention next week. "He has been elected five times in that community in Missouri. They know who Todd Akin is. We know who Todd Akin is. We've worked with him up on the hill. He's a defender of life."

"Todd Akin is getting a really bad break here," she added. "I don't know anything about the science or the legal implications of his statement. I do know politics, and I know gotcha politics when I see it."

Family Research Council president Tony Perkins fired back at Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown, a leading moderate voice in the GOP who called Akin's remarks "outrageous" and encouraged him to drop his challenge to Democrat Claire McCaskill.

"He should be careful because based on some of his statements there may be some call for him to get out of his race," Perkins said of Brown. "He has been off the reservation on a number of Republican issues, conservative issues I should say. His support among conservatives is very shallow."
Actually, a lot of very conservative people are calling on Akin to quit, although I'm inclined towards Perkins' argument. More at Memeorandum.

So far, it doesn't look like Akin is quitting. Here's the New York Times's report, "G.O.P. Presses Akin to Quit Race Over Rape Remark." But see TPM, "Todd Akin Launches 'I'm Not Quitting' Ad Campaign."

PREVIOUSLY:

* "Progressives Call for Rape of Missouri Rep. Todd Akin."

* "Conservatives Push for Todd Akin to Quit Missouri Senate Race."

* "'I Would Be Thinking About What's In the Best Interest of the Party' — Sean Hannity Interview With Embattled Missouri Senate Candidate Todd Akin."

Still more news at Memeorandum.

Heidi Klum Chillin'

That looks relaxing, from Ms. Klum's Twitter feed:

Heidi Klum Chillin'

And at London's Daily Mail, "Now that's just showing off! Heidi Klum tweets picture of her impeccable bikini body."

Monday, August 20, 2012

'I Would Be Thinking About What's In the Best Interest of the Party' — Sean Hannity Interview With Embattled Missouri Senate Candidate Todd Akin

At RCP, "Hannity Urges Akin to Consider Dropping Out In Interview With Him" (via Memeorandum).

And the Wall Street Journal weighs in, "Todd Akin's Sinking Ship":
Mr. Akin may not be a quitter, but the question now is whether he is a sure loser in November. He had won a three-way primary earlier this month and faced a tough but winnable race against vulnerable Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill. The race will be that much tougher given that his remarks about rape are likely to repel the women voters he will need to prevail.

National Republicans, including GOP Senators Scott Brown of Massachusetts and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, quickly suggested Mr. Akin should drop out. The Senate GOP campaign committee let it be known that if Mr. Akin stays in the race, it won't be advertising on his behalf, and conservative groups American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS are reported to have pulled their advertising for the candidate. Mitt Romney also made a point to criticize the remarks. If Mr. Akin withdraws before 5 p.m. today, another GOP candidate can still get on the ballot.

Mr. Akin and his most loyal supporters may consider this party reaction unfair given that it is only one comment and he has apologized. But Senate control could well be decided by a single seat, and on that hangs the future of ObamaCare and much more than one candidate's fate. As John Paul Jones might have put it, Mr. Akin has sunk his own ship.
Ouch.

Dana Loesch is still pulling for Akin.

WSJ's argument is that the dude hung himself. Perhaps. But again, it's a campaign, and things like this are rarely decided by one gaffe. The national GOP --- and I saw Reince Priebus on CNN a bit earlier --- thinks Akin should go. Clearly, what folks worry about is the distraction Akin will cause, and how his staying in the race would be gift to Democrats. There's a way the GOP to try to minimize the issue, and that's for the top of the ticket to say that the left's remorselessly demagoguing, and that attacks on Akin are just one more indicator that Obama can't talk about the real issues facing the country, the economy and lingering high unemployment.

That, alas, is a tall order (Romney pretty much blew Akin off, in any case), and folks rightly worry about the damage to the party's gains in November. At this point it's basically a countdown to see when Akin will quit.

The Hill has a comprehensive report, "Republicans pressure Akin to drop out of Missouri Senate race," and it notes:
The initial deadline for a candidate to withdraw from the race is Tuesday at 5 p.m., but the final deadline, with a court order, is Sept. 25 by 5 p.m. The state party committee would then have to choose a new nominee within 28 days or by 5 p.m. on Oct. 12, whichever comes sooner.
PREVIOUSLY: "Progressives Call for Rape of Missouri Rep. Todd Akin," and "Conservatives Push for Todd Akin to Quit Missouri Senate Race."

Pamela Anderson Photo Shoot for Lovecat Magazine

Very summery, at Lovecat, "Pamela Anderson by Sante D’Orazio for LOVECAT MAG 5."

Conservatives Push for Todd Akin to Quit Missouri Senate Race

I posted on Rep. Akin's comments previously, "Progressives Call for Rape of Missouri Rep. Todd Akin." His comments were dumb, but throwing him under the bus to appease the radical left is the last thing I'd do. This is why we have political campaigns. People make gaffes. They have to stand up for the comments, apologize, and move on. I see no reason for someone like Akin to drop out for what clearly was a garbled message on a controversial topic, comments for which the candidate has now apologized. But now there are cries across the conservatives 'sphere for Akin to step aside, most prominently, at National Review, "Step Aside, Todd Akin" (via Memeorandum). William Jacobson weighs in, "Yes, Akin should drop out." And Robert Stacy McCain has a huge roundup, and laments that Akin's campaign is "beyond recovery."

The obvious reason for Akin to bail is that his continued presence in the race threatens a possible GOP takeover of the Senate in November. RCP's Missouri Senate polling is here. Claire McCaskill is the most vulnerable Democrat Senate incumbent facing reelection this year, and Obama is expected to lose Missouri, a defeat which will negatively impact down-ballot races. But Republicans need to pick up 4 seats with little room to spare. A Missouri pick-up is deemed essential, and Akin's comments have caused problems, "'Legitimate Rape' Gaffe May Cost GOP Senate Control." So while there's a pretty good case for Akin's withdrawal, the larger implication is that conservatives will have caved to a larger progressive Democrat progressive narrative, no only on political speech, but on abortion and health care reform.

Dana Loesch has been a stalwart voice for standing up against the left's thuggery on this. See, "AKIN ON 'LEGITIMATE RAPE': 'I MISSPOKE'." And below from Dana's timeline on Twitter, her first and second tweets yesterday on the Akin affair, and a couple of powerful later tweets. And check Dana's feed for updates. A leftist lynch mob has attacked her, screaming to have her raped.





Michelle Malkin has a sobering must read on this as well, "The Todd Akin mess." And all the news updates are at Memeorandum.

Akin's campaign has rejected calls to drop out, despite earlier reports.

Expect updates...

Testing the Surge in Iraq

I read this piece a few weeks back, as soon as the journal hit my mailbox. I meant to get this posted earlier, but better late than never.

This is excellent research, from Stephen Biddle, Jeffrey Friedman, and Jacob Shapiro, at International Security, "Testing the Surge: Why Did Violence Decline in Iraq in 2007?"

At issue: What explains the decline of military and civilian fatalities in Iraq after mid-2007? The decline in violence coincides with the Bush administration's high-profile shift in war strategy, popularly called "the surge." Opponents of the war dismissed the administration's claims that the decline in violence was the result of a successful military reorientation under General David Petraeus, who combined increased troop contingents with a new war-fighting doctrine that sent patrols out into the most dangerous Baghdad neighborhoods to clear and hold the areas most wracked by sectarian violence. Troops were dismounted and mobile and military bases were dispersed, in contrast to pre-surge war-fighting that stressed large, fortified bases and mounted troop patrols. The antiwar opponents argued instead that sectarian violence was so unchecked that there remained no more ethnic groups left to cleanse. Ethno-religious rivalry played out between Sunni and Shiite Muslim factions. According to the authors:
Proponents of the cleansing thesis argue that it was the spatial intermingling of prewar Sunnis and Shiites that led to violence: large, internally homogeneous communities would be defensible and thus secure, but the prewar patchwork quilt of interpenetrated neighborhoods created a security dilemma in which each group was exposed to violence from the other. In this view, the war was chiefly a response to mutual threat, with each side fighting to evict rivals from areas that could then be made homogeneous and secure. While the populations were intermingled, the violence was intense, but the fighting progressively unmixed the two groups, yielding large, contiguous areas of uniform makeup with defensible borders between them. This in turn resolved the security dilemma, and as neighborhoods were cleansed, the fighting petered out as a product of its own dynamics rather than as a response to U.S. reinforcements [p. 14].
Political bloggers will remember these debates quite well, which makes this research especially interesting. It provides a careful empirical rebuttal to the debased arguments of the antiwar left, groups who worked to politically destroy the Bush administration, and often gave aid and comfort to the enemies of the United States.

The authors demonstrate that the cleansing thesis, despite its intuitive appeal, cannot explain the reduction in violence over the time period. However, it wasn't just the surge alone that prepared the way for the military victory in Iraq. The authors indicate that a complex interaction took place between the surge of military force (and the change in troop deployments) and the rise of what's been called the "Anbar Awakening" --- the mobilization of local Sunni tribal forces in an uprising against the insurgency of al Qaeda in Iraq. Antiwar opponents also latched onto the Awakening thesis as a means to deny the Bush administration credit for the improvement of conditions on the ground. If local tribesman rose up against outside forces, aided by cash payments (amid the decline of sectarian violence, since everything was all cleansed out), then it wasn't more troops or the innovations of the COIN doctrine. It was local contingencies, and the Bush adminstration was not only wrong about the war, but its top officials should be tried as war criminals.

But the authors show that there was synergy between the surge and the Awakening, and that military improvement would not have taken place without the synergistic interaction of these two variables. Folks will want to read the piece for the full argument and evidence. The authors employ historical process-tracing analysis combined with a statistical data set charting the "standing up" of the Sons of Iraq forces (SOI). From the article:
The surge-Awakening synergy thesis ... sees the reinforcements and doctrinal changes as necessary but insuficient. In this view, the surge was too small, and the impact of doctrinal changes insufªcient, to defeat a determined insurgency before the reinforcements’ time limit was reached and their withdrawal began. Hence the surge without the Awakening would have improved security temporarily but would not have broken the insurgency, which would have survived and returned as the reinforcements went home. The surge added a temporary, yearlong boost of about 30,000 U.S. troops to a pre-surge coalition strength of about 155,000 foreign and 323,000 Iraqi troops and police as of December 2006 (Iraqi Security Forces, or ISF, grew by about another 37,000 by September 2007, when violence had begun to drop). Thus the surge entailed only a marginal increase in troop density: an expansion of less than 15 percent overall and perhaps 20 percent in U.S. strength. Half of the overall increase, moreover, was in Iraqi forces, which were far from proªcient in the new U.S. methods by 2006–07.

And as mentioned above, the U.S. component had only about a year in which to function at this strength, after which it was to return to pre-surge numbers or fewer. For this reinforcement per se to have been decisive, one must assume that previous troop density lay just below some critical threshold that happened to be within 20 percent of the presurge value. Although this coincidence cannot be excluded, there is no prima facie reason to expect it.

For synergy proponents, the Awakening was thus necessary for the surge to succeed. In this view, the Awakening had three central effects. First, it took most of the Sunni insurgency off the battleªeld as an opponent, radically weakening the enemy. Second, it provided crucial information on remaining holdouts, and especially AQI, which greatly increased coalition combat effectiveness. And third, these effects among Sunnis reshaped Shiite incentives, leading their primary militias to stand down in turn.

As for the first two points, although the SOI movement never comprised just former insurgents, the insurgency nevertheless provided much of the SOIs’ combatant strength—and the bulk of the secular Sunni insurgency nationwide became SOIs over the course of 2007. By the end of the year, SOI strength nationwide had reached 100,000 members, under more than 200 separate contracts. As insurgents progressively realigned in this way, the remaining insurgency shrank dramatically. The fact that so many SOIs were former insurgents also made the SOIs uniquely valuable coalition allies: they knew their erstwhile associates’ identities, methods, and whereabouts in ways that government counterinsurgents rarely do. When insurgents who had been allied with AQI realigned as Sons of Iraq, the coalition suddenly gained intelligence on AQI membership, cell structure, the identity of safe houses and bombmaking workshops, and locations of roadside bombs and booby traps. Guerrillas rely on stealth and secrecy to survive against heavily armed government soldiers. When SOIs lifted this veil of secrecy, coalition ªrepower guided by SOI intelligence became extremely lethal, creating ever-increasing incentives for holdouts to seek similar deals for themselves; soon only committed AQI fanatics remained, marginalized in a few districts in Iraq’s northwest.

In the synergy account, Sunni realignment in turn had major consequences for Shiite militias such as the Jaish al-Mahdi. Many of these militias began as self-defense mechanisms to protect Shiite civilians from Sunni attack, but they grew increasingly predatory as they realized they could exploit a dependent population. Rising criminality in turn created fissiparous tendencies as factions with their own income grew increasingly independent of their leadership. When the SOIs began appearing, the Sunni threat waned, and with it the need for defenders. At the same time, the SOI cease-fires freed arriving U.S. surge brigades to focus on Shiite militiamen. These developments created multiple perils for militia leadership. In previous firefights with U.S. forces, the JAM in particular had sustained heavy losses but easily made them up with new recruits given its popularity. Shiites’ growing disaffection with militia predation, however, coupled with declining fear of Sunni attack, threatened leaders’ ability to make up losses with new recruits. At the same time, intraShiite violence among rival militias, especially between the Badr Brigade and the JAM, posed a rising threat from a different direction. When Shiites were united by a mortal Sunni threat and U.S. forces were tied down by insurgents and AQI, these internal problems were manageable. But as the Sunni threat waned, Shiite support weakened, internal divisions multiplied, and U.S. troop strength grew, Shiite militias’ ability to survive new battles with coalition forces fell. In the synergy account, these challenges persuaded Muqtada al-Sadr to stand down rather than risk another beating from the coalition, and the result was his announced cease-ªre of August 2007—which took the primary Shiite militia off the battlefield, leaving all of 2006’s major militant groups under cease-ªres, save a marginalized remnant of AQI, and producing the radical violence reduction of late 2007 and thereafter.

Proponents of the synergy thesis thus see the Awakening as necessary for the surge to succeed. In this view, however, neither the surge nor the Awakening was sufficient, nor did these factors combine in an additive way. As noted above, Sunni groups had attempted similar realignments on previous occasions—and those earlier attempts had all failed at great cost. For the synergy school, what distinguished the failures from the successful 2007 Awakening was a coalition force that could protect insurgent defectors from counterattack. The surge may not have been large enough to suffocate a determined insurgency, but it was large enough to enable cooperation with turncoat Sunnis and exploit their knowledge to direct coalition firepower against the still-active insurgents, enabling them to survive the kind of retaliation that had crippled their predecessors... [pp. 23-26]
The full article is here.

The authors caution against applying the lessons from their research to the war in Afghanistan. The correlation of factors in Iraq were highly idiosyncratic, and not likely to be replicated elsewhere. But the authors do indicate that much remains to be teased out on theories of counterinsurgency, that much more work along these lines awaits, which in turn will provide important information for policymakers.

Dude In a Coffee Shop Strikes Up Conversation With the Man Who Invented the World's First Internally-Programmable Computer

And it all started out with, "Do you like Apple?"

And the dude, Joel Runyan, for a second thought the man was dicking him around. Actually, not.

See, "An Unexpected Ass Kicking" (via Instapundit).

Russell Kirsch

The man is Russell Kirsch. He also scanned the first digital image, of his baby son, in 1957. Check the Wikipedia entry, where that photo of Kirsch and Runyon is available from the Wikimedia Commons.

Candice Cohen-Ahnine, French Jewess in Custody Fight With Saudi Prince, Falls to Her Death From Four-Story Apartment

This sounded suspicious immediately, at Telegraph UK, "French mother in custody battle with Saudi prince falls to her death":
A French Jewish mother at the centre of a high profile custody battle with a Saudi prince has died after falling from a fourth storey apartment, amid suspicions of foul play.
Candice Cohen-Ahnine
Police are still investigating what caused the death of Candice Cohen-Ahnine, 35, who fell from her Paris apartment window on Thursday night.

Investigators reportedly had been leaning towards an accident as cause of death, but by Sunday reports in the French media suggested Ms Cohen-Ahnine had slipped and fallen to her death "as if she was escaping something dangerous".

Police refused to confirm the reports when contacted by The Daily Telegraph.

Ms Cohen-Ahnine's lawyer, Laurence Tarquiny-Charpentier, said the death "seemed to be some sort of accident," and did not know whether foul play was involved. She said witnesses had been at the scene of the crime, and more information about the circumstances of the death is expected Monday.

"What I can tell you is that it wasn't a suicide," Ms Tarquiny-Charpentier said.
Also at Atlas Shrugs, "'IT WASN'T A SUICIDE': FRENCH JEWESS IN CUSTODY BATTLE WITH SAUDI PRINCE HAS DIED UNDER "MYSTERIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES'":
I have been reading about this horrid custody battle for years. I didn't blog on it because any Jewish girl that marries a devout Muslim, let alone a Saudi royal, is in for a world of pain. Now I have to write her obituary. There is no doubt in my mind that he had her killed.

Progressives Call for Rape of Missouri Rep. Todd Akin

Twitchy reports, "Twitter Lynch Mob calls for rape of Rep. Todd Akin."

Also, "Dana Loesch: Stop overreacting to Todd Akin’s comments."

And at the Wall Street Journal, "Missouri Senate Hopeful Steps Back Rape Remarks":

The Republican vying for Democrat Claire McCaskill's Senate seat in Missouri said Sunday that he misspoke during an earlier television interview when he said pregnancies in the case of "legitimate rape" are rare and that women have a biological ability to prevent pregnancy in such cases.

Rep. Todd Akin (R., Mo.), who recently won the GOP primary to run for Ms. McCaskill's seat, made his comments in an interview broadcast Sunday by St. Louis television station KTVI and posted on its website. Mr. Akin was asked about whether abortion should be legal in the case of rape.

"From what I understand from doctors, that's really rare," Mr. Akin said of pregnancy caused by rape. "If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down. But let's assume that maybe that didn't work or something…I think there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be on the rapist and not attacking the child."

In a statement later, Mr. Akin said: "In reviewing my off-the-cuff remarks, it's clear that I misspoke in this interview and it does not reflect the deep empathy I hold for the thousands of women who are raped and abused every year. Those who perpetrate these crimes are the lowest of the low in our society and their victims will have no stronger advocate in the Senate to help ensure they have the justice they deserve."

Ms. McCaskill, whose seat is widely seen as one of the Democrats' most vulnerable to a GOP pickup, was quick to seize on the issue. Her campaign featured Mr. Akin's earlier comments on its website and sought contributions.

"It is beyond comprehension that someone can be so ignorant about the emotional and physical trauma brought on by rape," Ms. McCaskill said in a statement. "The ideas that Todd Akin has expressed about the serious crime of rape and the impact on its victims are offensive."

Abortion is a key issue for Mr. Akin, a six-term representative from the St. Louis suburbs. In 2011, he supported a bill that would have redefined the circumstances under which some federally funded health-care programs could be used for abortions to include only cases of "forcible rape" as opposed to "rape," which critics said might prevent funding for abortions in cases of statutory rape and other circumstances.

Mr. Akin's Senate campaign website lists "Life," referring to his opposition to abortion, as the first of a handful of priority issues. "Our founders understood that life is a fundamental right granted to us by our Creator and that the government's role is to protect this right," he writes on his campaign site. "A government that doesn't protect innocent life fails at one of its most basic roles."
RTWT.

He misspoke, apparently. Suck it up and move on.

This isn't something that would normally sink a campaign. But the progs want this guy reamed, so we'll see.

California Teachers Association is State's Top Political Bully

I posted on CTA recently, "California Progressives Fight Desperately Against 'Paycheck Protection' Initiative, Proposition 32."

And here they are again, at the Los Angeles Times, "California Teachers Assn. a powerful force in Sacramento":
SACRAMENTO — Last year, as Gov. Jerry Brown hammered out final details of the state budget, he huddled around a conference table with three of the most powerful people in state government: the Assembly speaker, the Senate leader — and Joe Nuñez, chief lobbyist for the California Teachers Assn.

California was on the edge of fiscal crisis. Negotiations had come down to one sticking point: Brown and the legislators would balance the books by assuming that billions of dollars in extra revenue would materialize, then cut deeply from schools if it didn't.

Nuñez said no.

Opposition from the powerful union, which had just staged a week of public protests against budget cuts, could mean a costly legal challenge. So the group took a break, and the officials retired to another room to hash out something acceptable to CTA while Nuñez awaited their return.

It may seem unorthodox for an unelected citizen to sit with Sacramento's elite as they pick winners and losers in the annual spending sweepstakes. But few major financial decisions in California are made without Nuñez, who represents what is arguably the most potent force in state politics.

The union views itself as "the co-equal fourth branch of government," said Oakland Democrat Don Perata, a former teacher who crossed swords with the group when he was state Senate leader.

Backed by an army of 325,000 teachers and a war chest as sizable as those of the major political parties, CTA can make or break all sorts of deals. It holds sway over Democrats, labor's traditional ally, and Republicans alike.

Jim Brulte, a former leader of the state Senate's GOP caucus, recalled once attending a CTA reception with a Republican colleague who told the union's leaders that he had come to "check with the owners."

CTA is one of the biggest political spenders in California. It outpaced all other special interests, including corporate players such as telecommunications giant AT&T and the Chevron oil company, from 2000 through 2009, according to a state study. In that decade, the labor group shelled out more than $211 million in political contributions and lobbying expenses — roughly twice that of the next largest spender, the Service Employees International Union.

Since then it has spent nearly $40 million more, including $4.7 million to help Brown become governor, according to the union's filings with the secretary of state.

And CTA's influence, unlike that of other interests, is written directly into California's Constitution. More than two decades ago, the group drafted an initiative to guarantee public schools at least 40% of the general fund and waged a successful multimillion-dollar campaign for it. As author and defender of that law, the union established a firm grip on the largest chunk of the budget.
Continue reading.

'This is Our Defining Moment ... This is Our Generation's Time...'

California's no swing state, which is a bummer: I doubt I'll get a chance to see a #RomneyRyan2012 campaign rally.

Paul Ryan is a spectacular candidate, and Team Romney has the progressives shakin' and quakin' so hard, it's almost unreal.

See Glenn Reynolds, "DOUBLE STANDARDS: Post-racial progressives count white faces at The Villages; President campaigns in ‘affluent’ 97%-white Windham, NH. 97% white? That’s almost as white as Obama’s Chicago Campaign headquarters. Too bad these folks can’t achieve the diversity of a Tea Party Rally."


VIDEO HAT TIP: Theo Spark.

Julian Assange Calls on President Obama to End 'Witch Hunt'

At the Guardian UK, "Julian Assange takes aim at United States as row deepens."

'Crimson Tide' Director Tony Scott Jumps to Death

The man appeared to have everything. But suicide is so wrong. Perhaps there was nothing, no counseling, no medication, no words of love and healing, that could help him. I don't know.

Say a prayer for those he left behind.

At the Los Angeles Times, "'Top Gun' director Tony Scott leaps to his death from bridge."

Also, "Witnesses saw 'Top Gun' director Tony Scott jump off bridge, police say."

More at Guardian UK, "Hollywood director Tony Scott dies."

And the Vincent Thomas Bridge is a huge landmark, a massive structure. Wikipedia's entry is here, with lots of pictures.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Sunday Cartoons

At Flopping Aces, "Sunday Funnies."

William Warren

Also at Reaganite Republican, "Reaganite's Sunday Funnies," and Theo Spark, "Cartoon Round Up..."

More a Jill Stanek's, "Stanek Sunday funnies: “Biden, chains of fool” edition."

CARTOON CREDIT: William Warren.

Obama's Gotta Go? Newsweek Tries to Save the Brand

I wrote just a couple of weeks ago, "Newsweek Circles its Final Swirls Down the Drain."
At issue was Michael Tomasky's completely lame cover story, "Mitt Romney: Too Wimpy for the White House?" So I guess Tina Brown's reading my blog, or something. Because this Niall Ferguson piece is way more in line with the prevailing zeitgeist, "Obama's Gotta Go" (at Memeorandum):

Obama Gotta Go
I was a good loser four years ago. “In the grand scheme of history,” I wrote the day after Barack Obama’s election as president, “four decades is not an especially long time. Yet in that brief period America has gone from the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. to the apotheosis of Barack Obama. You would not be human if you failed to acknowledge this as a cause for great rejoicing.”

Despite having been—full disclosure—an adviser to John McCain, I acknowledged his opponent’s remarkable qualities: his soaring oratory, his cool, hard-to-ruffle temperament, and his near faultless campaign organization.

Yet the question confronting the country nearly four years later is not who was the better candidate four years ago. It is whether the winner has delivered on his promises. And the sad truth is that he has not...
No, has not. Which is why Obama can't run on his record. He's a presidential failure.

But keep reading.

And the progressives are outraged. Outraged! How dare Ferguson take over the cover of the Democrat house organ?!!

Paul Krugman, the depression economist, quibbles with CBO numbers on ObamaCare deficits --- numbers of which no one outside the think tanks have read --- and even then it's not the numbers that bother Krugman, but Ferguson's interpretation of them. See, "Unethical Commentary, Newsweek Edition."

And Jew-bashing Scott Lemieux, at the discredited hate-blog LGM, posts yet another "Hactacular!" entry --- number 24 according to the URL, which means that when the idiot "Lame-ieux" can't actually rebut an argument, he attacks the author as a "hack." And remember, the LGM blog publisher over there screens "Che"-worshipping movies for his seminars in American counter-insurgency strategy, amazingly, since that gets the arrows of national loyalty going the wrong way, "Patterson School of Diplomacy, University of Kentucky, Screens Steven Soderbergh's Che to Commemorate Fiftieth Anniversary of Bay of Pigs."

In any event, you gotta hand it to Tina Brown. Some say she's actually a quite savvy editor, with her finger to the pulse of cutting-edge opinion. And no doubt that's the case with the Ferguson cover story. Indeed, Obama's gotta go, and not a moment too soon.

Britney Spears Picture Perfect in White Bikini Summer Beach Photo

She tweets, "Y'all ready for summer to end? I'm definitely not!"

May all your summers be endless, sweetie.

Britney Spears

More babe blogging at Bob Belvedere's, "Mary Elizabeth Winstead Rule 5." And Teresamerica, "Jenna Jameson Supports Mitt Romney Rule 5."

More still at Pirate's Cove, "If All You See…is a planet healing bicycle which everyone else should be forced to ride, you might just be a Warmist," and "Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup."

Also from The Last Tradition, "Rule 5 Sunday - Maureen O’Hara, red-haired beauty of the 40 and 50s."

Randy's Roundtable has my favorite, Kelly Brook, for his "Thursday Nite Tart." And Gator Doug has "DaleyBabe Giulia Olivetti."

And from Three Beers Later, "Rule 5 — Hillbilly Girl!"

And check this, at It's a Mad, Mad, Mad World, "The Friday Pin Up." Plus, "A Man, A Dog, and His Gun, "Weekend Women #55, Olivia Wilde."

Plus don't miss Eye of Polyphemus, "Christina Ricci." Also at Wirecutter's, "Feel good picture of the day."

Reaganite Republican has some hot policy orientation, "Paul Ryan Medicare Plan Clearly Explained by the Stunning Michelle Fields."

Still more from First Street Journal, "Rule 5 Blogging: Advanced Rifle Marksmanship." A View From the Beach has "Rule 5 Saturday – Tara Reid."

And as always, don't miss Theo, "Sunday Totty..."

BONUS: Some non-Rule 5 family pics from American Perspective, "Greetings from California (pics of kids)."

If I've missed your hot babe-blogging post, drop it in the comments and I'll update.

Thanks for ogling!

ADDED: From Proof Positive, "49'er Preseason Continues (cheerleader hotties)."

MORE: At From Bear Creek, "Saturday Gingermageddon."

Al-Quds Day a Celebration of Hatred and Terrorism

From Michael Coren, at Sun TV, "It's all about power" (via Five Feet of Fury):
Beyond the hatred, the racism and the anger, there’s a certain irony surrounding Al-Quds Day, commemorated this weekend internationally and to its shame — in Toronto.

The event was founded by the Ayatollah Khomeini, and is an overwhelmingly Shiite Islam event. Anybody who knows Islam will understand that the Shiites are despised in most of the majority Sunni world. They were treated as second-class citizens in Lebanon, they are murdered in Pakistan, they are thought as being, golly, even worse than the Jews in Syria, and there aren’t any in Egypt because Saladin killed them all.

So spare me the lies and propaganda about Islamic brotherhood and the fraternity of Muslim believers. You have not seen genuine hatred if you haven’t seen how Muslim sect treats Muslim sect. And you’ll see a lot more of it when President Assad falls, and his fellow Alawites, a version of Shiite Islam, are likely slaughtered like cattle.

While this sordid event can take place in Canada, it would likely be banned or violently suppressed in most Muslim countries. Believe me, it’s not about Jews; it’s about power, and the psychotic inability of international Muslim leadership to tolerate anybody who does not agree with the established position.
Continue reading.

And Blazing Cat Fur updates on yesterday's hate fest, "What The World Needs Now - Isn't Al-Quds Day."

Americans Continue to Give Obama Low Marks on the Economy

At Gallup:
Obama's ratings on the economy are significantly worse than all three prior successful presidential incumbents at this same point in their first term, according to the available Gallup trends. His 36% approval rating on the economy is well below George W. Bush's rating in August 2004 (46%), Bill Clinton's in August 1996 (54%), and Ronald Reagan's in July 1984 (50%). Still, in terms of comparisons to presidents who lost, Obama's economic rating is substantially better than that of George H.W. Bush in July 1992 (18%).
He sucks.

Nothing Obama Won't Say

IMAGE CREDIT: The Looking Spoon, "Why There Is Nothing Obama Won't Say About Romney..."