Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Stumbling Into Syria

From David Bromwich, at the New York Review:
Reporters working in Syria—most recently Robert Worth in an article in The New York Times Magazine—have converged on a single unhappy perception: far and away the largest and most capable groups of rebels are jihadists. That is a central fact of this uprising. But the fall of the town of Qusair to Hezbollah forces, in the first week of June, and the realization that Aleppo is also in jeopardy have turned the war so heavily in Assad’s favor that an all-out campaign for French, British, and American intervention has now been launched. The French “new philosopher” and journalist Bernard-Henri Levy did much to persuade Nicholas Sarkozy of the propriety of organizing a NATO war to overthrow Qaddafi; in a characteristic recent column for The Daily Beast, Levy nicknames Assad “the Syrian killer” and speaks of the danger that now threatens the morale and substance of the West:
The surrender of Aleppo to the death squads of Hezbollah would be a fresh eruption of carnage whose victims would be heaped atop the hundred thousand already claimed by this atrocious war against a civilian population.
He affirms that “Aleppo belongs not to Syria but to the world”—a stirring phrase of ambiguous import—and he numbers the recent crimes against civilization by Serbs and Islamists: “those past crimes haunt our collective conscience.” The failures of the West have all been failures to wage the necessary humanitarian wars against Slavic or Islamist fanatics.

It must be admitted that American policy has fallen short of demands like these. We sided with Islamist rebels in Afghanistan, under the name of Mujahideen fighters, and against the same rebels under the names of Taliban and al-Qaeda; we fought against them in Iraq during the 2004 insurgency, and stood at their side as paymasters and allies when they became the “Sunni Awakening” in 2007; we were against them in Mali, Somalia, and Yemen, but allied with them as the courageous militias in Libya; and now in Syria, we are both for them and against them—allies insofar as they agree with us in attacking the government, but opponents because they want to dominate or kill the moderate rebels to whom we intend to ship arms. We will wage war against them after they help us to win the war against Assad.
That's an excellent analysis, and Bromwich lays the blame for an inevitable fiasco right at the feet of Barack Obama.

Be sure to RTWT.

Al-Nusra Front Beheads Assad Supporters in Syria

Allegedly so, according to this video at Live Leak, "Big Crowd & Beheading Syria [Graphic]."

President Obama is supporting these rebels.

HAT TIP: Golem.

PREVIOUSLY: "NBC's Richard Engel: 'Just Back From #Syria ... Lots of Black Banners at Checkpoints...'" And, "Child Chained Up and Forced to Watch Parents Murdered by Obama-Backed Syrian Rebels."

The Economist Argues for Further Western Intervention in Syria

An interesting case, although as I always say, the moment has passed.

See, "Can Iran be stopped? The West should intervene in Syria for many reasons. One is to stem the rise of Persian power":
The growing risk of a nuclear Iran is one reason why the West should intervene decisively in Syria not just by arming the rebels, but also by establishing a no-fly zone. That would deprive Mr Assad of his most effective weapon—bombs dropped from planes—and allow the rebels to establish military bases inside Syria. This newspaper has argued many times for doing so on humanitarian grounds; but Iran’s growing clout is another reason to intervene, for it is not in the West’s interest that a state that sponsors terrorism and rejects Israel’s right to exist should become the regional hegemon.

The West still has the economic and military clout to influence events in the region, and an interest in doing so. When Persian power is on the rise, it is not the time to back away from the Middle East.
RTWT.

Emily Gets Her Gun...

That's Emily Miller, who's writing a book about becoming a gun owner.

Emily Miller photo dsc00028_s640x954_zps89433350.jpg

Katie Pavlich on Obama's International Embarrassment

With Emily Tisch Sussman on Hannity's last night:

Better Naked Than Burka

Well, I guess they have a point.

A FEMEN interview at Euronews.


And at Blazing Cat Fur, "'Femen Is Pornography' Say Facebook."

"The six-year old 'transgender girl' is actually a boy and the couple's 'daughter' is actually their son, but since this confused child thinks he is actually a girl, he now is a girl in the eyes of the media, and the son is now a daughter..."

A great piece from Michael Brown, at Town Hall, "This Battle is For Your Children's Future."

And at Pat Dollard, "Transgender First-Grader Wins Civil Rights Suit After Girls’ Bathroom Ban."

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Parents of Trayvon Martin Devastated by Graphic Pictures in George Zimmerman Trial

A huge piece, with lots of photos, at London's Daily Mail, "Drama at George Zimmerman trial as Trayvon Martin's parents walk out of court after jury is shown graphic pictures of their son's body."

And in case you've not been following, Andrew Branca is blogging the trial at Legal Insurrection, "Zimmerman Trial Day 2 – Analysis of State’s Witnesses."

Here's yesterday's main entry as well, "Zimmerman Trial Day One – Analysis of State’s First Four Witnesses."

Hollywood Slaying Suspect Arrested 46 Times

How many times have I heard this story?

How many multiple times have the perps been in and out of jail, only to have these vile criminals murder another innocent?

At the Los Angeles Times, "Suspect in Hollywood stabbing had been arrested 46 times."

PREVIOUSLY: "Death of Christine Calderon Recalls Hollywood's Crime-Ridden Past."

Lacey Banghard on Curvy Women

A commentary piece, at the Sun UK, "We are sick of stick ... curvy is the new size 0: Page 3 beauty Lacey Banghard on model Chloe Hayward — a size 12."

Previous Lacey Banghard blogging at the link.

'Classic Reactionary Liberalism'

That's an interesting concept, via WFB, "Krauthammer: ‘Classic Reactionary Liberalism’ On Display After Voting Rights Act Decision."


Some background here, "Civil Rights Icon John Lewis: Supreme Court Put 'Dagger in Heart of Voting Rights Act...'"

Sarah Palin Slams Obama Tool David Plouffe on Twitter

Awesome.

At Twitchy, "‘Is this all a game to you?’: Sarah Palin slams David Plouffe and his ‘messiah’ Obama."



NBC's Richard Engel: 'Just Back From #Syria ... Lots of Black Banners at Checkpoints...'

On Twitter:



Blake Hounshell forwarded to John McCain.

RELATED: At Telegraph UK, from last month, "Under the Black Flag of al-Qaeda, the Syrian City Rule by Gang of Extremists."

Well, once Obama has his way, the whole country will be ruled by al Qaeda.

Alan Dershowitz Trashes 'Anti-American' Glenn Greenwald

Well, it's about time somebody trashed him.

Via John Sexton at Breitbart:

Obama's Fading Foreign Policy Influence

From Bret Stephens, at the Wall Street Journal, "The Age of American Impotence":
... however the Snowden episode turns out (and don't be surprised if the Russians wind up handing him over in exchange for an unspecified American favor), what it mainly illustrates is that we are living in an age of American impotence. The Obama administration has decided it wants out from nettlesome foreign entanglements, and now finds itself surprised that it's running out of foreign influence.

That is the larger significance of last week's Afghan diplomatic debacle, in which the Taliban opened an office in Doha for the "Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan"—the name Mullah Omar grandiloquently gave his regime in Kabul before its 2001 downfall. Afghan President Hamid Karzai responded by shutting down negotiations with the U.S. over post-2014 security cooperation.

Now the U.S. finds itself in an amazing position. Merely to get the Taliban to the table for a bogus peace process, the administration agreed at Pakistan's urging to let Mullah Omar come to the table on his owns terms: no acceptance of the Afghan Constitution, no cease-fire with international forces, not even a formal pledge to never again allow Afghanistan to become a haven for international terrorism. The U.S. also agreed, according to Pakistani sources, to allow the terrorist Haqqani network—whose exploits include the 2011 siege of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul—a seat at the table.

Yet having legitimized Haqqani and given the Taliban everything it wanted in exchange for nothing, the U.S. finds itself being dumped by its own client government in Kabul, which can always turn to Iran as a substitute patron. Incredible: no peace, no peace process, no ally, no leverage and no moral standing, all in a single stroke. John Kerry is off to quite a start.

What's happening in Afghanistan is of a piece with the larger pattern of U.S. diplomacy. Iraq? The administration made the complete withdrawal of our troops a cornerstone of its first-term foreign policy, and now finds itself surprised that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki won't lift a finger to prevent Iranian cargo planes from overflying his airspace en route to resupplying Bashar Assad's military. Syria? President Obama spent two years giving the country's civil war the widest berth, creating the power vacuum in which Iran, Hezbollah and Russia may soon achieve their strategic goals.
Continue reading.

Stephens' discussion of Snowden has been overtaken a bit by events. Snowden may be under arrest in Moscow, being interrogated and having his laptops stripped from him. More on that later. I'm just watching CNN and Fox News to keep up with developments.

Man, Debbie Wasserman Schultz is One Butt-Freakin' Fugly Woman!

I just saw this on Twitter, and man, the DNC Chair and Congresswoman is one gawd-awful lookin' dog. Notice Wasserman Schultz at left.


It's from the Congressional Women's Softball Game. I'm sure there's a couple of Republican congressional hotties who aren't so butt-freakin' fugly!

Added: From the Mad Jewess, "Debbie Wasserman Schultz Gets A Serena Williams Make-Over By The Mad Jewess."Debbie Wasserman Schultz Gets a Serena Williams Make-Over by The Mad Jewess."

Civil Rights Icon John Lewis: Supreme Court Put 'Dagger in Heart of Voting Rights Act...'

Man, it's like the day Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated or something.

These civil rights icons really need to step into the 21st century. Poor baby.

At the Hill, "Civil rights icon Lewis: Justices don't know discrimination."


And man, check out the heavy drama at ABC News, "ABC NEWS SPECIAL REPORT: Supreme Court Strikes Down Key Portion of Voting Rights Act of 1965." Terry Moran's about to have a heart attack at the clip therein. Sheesh.

'Obama has chosen to bypass the representative branch of government, and declare anyone who disagrees with him to be evil and stupid...'

From Steve Goddard, at Real Climate, "The New Dictator."

More here, "Obama Escalates His Rhetoric Against Americans."


And at the Hill, "Obama mocks skeptics of climate change as ‘flat-Earth society’" (via Memeorandum). And the New York Times, "Obama Outlines Ambitious Plan to Cut Greenhouse Gases" (via Memeorandum).

President Dronekiller can go right around Congress. See National Journal, "What’s in Obama’s Climate Plan?"

If Only Our Foreign Enemies Were Republicans

From VDH, at Pajamas Media:
I cannot recall, in the last five years, Barack Obama ever identifying the Iranians, Hezbollah, or the late Hugo Chavez as among our “enemies,” in the fashion that he once urged Latino leaders to punish conservatives at the polls: “We’re gonna punish our enemies and we’re gonna reward our friends who stand with us on issues that are important to us.” If only the president would treat those who don’t like the United States in the same manner that he does those who do, he might bring great clarity to his now listless foreign policy. Indeed, why waste his rich vocabulary of teleprompted invective on fellow Americans, when there is an entire world out there that wishes the United States ill?
Well, O was gonna heal the waters so to speak, although that's not working out too well now.

Continue reading.

Yasiel Puig Lifts #Dodgers Playoff Hopes

I've been watching this guy. He's got some kinda magic spark, or so it seems.

At LAT, "Yasiel Puig leads Dodgers past Giants, 3-1, for rare three-game win streak":
As much entertainment as Yasiel Puig has provided in his three weeks with the Dodgers, his presence hasn't had a pronounced effect on the team's win-loss record.

Until now, perhaps.

By virtue of a 3-1 victory over the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium on Monday, the Dodgers won three consecutive games for the first time since the opening week of the season.

Puig was a central figure in the triumph, as he hit his seventh home run in the first inning and drove in the go-ahead run in the eighth. The Dodgers (33-42) are 10-10 in games in which Puig has played and are eight games behind the first-place Arizona Diamondbacks in the National League West.

Meanwhile, the Giants fell to 38-38. The last time the Giants were .500 this late in the year was in 2008, their last losing season.

Until Monday night, the Dodgers had dropped five consecutive decisions to the Giants. And until the first inning, the Dodgers hadn't scored against Giants starter Madison Bumgarner in 16 consecutive innings.

Puig ended that streak right away, homering to the opposite field to put the Dodgers ahead, 1-0.

“Crazy stuff,” Manager Don Mattingly said.
RTWT.