• North Korea,  United Nations

    North Korea Warns United Nations Security Council – Will Take “Strong Steps”

    North Korea Film footage of launch of Taepodong-2 ICBM, April 4, 2009

    The United Nations Security Council did nothing after last Saturday’s/Sunday’s launch of their Taepodong-2 ICBM missile. But, just in case, North Korea has fired back a warning.

    North Korea warned the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday that it would take “strong steps” if the 15-nation body took any action in response to Pyongyang’s launch of a long-range rocket.

    “If the Security Council, they take any kind of steps whatever, we’ll consider this is (an) encroachment on our sovereignty and the next option will be ours,” Deputy Ambassador Pak Tok Hun told reporters. “Necessary and strong steps will … follow that.”

    Washington, Tokyo and Seoul say North Korea launched a long-range ballistic missile on Sunday in violation of a 2006 U.N. Security Council resolution banning the firing of such missiles by Pyongyang. The resolution was passed after a nuclear test by North Korea.

    Although the United Nations met Monday for three hours, there was NO consensus. When the UNSC meets again on the issue it is believed that two permanent members, China and Russia, will side with North Korea and block by veto, if necessary, any condemning resolution.

    Or, the UNSC could simply agree on some sort of “WATERED DOWN” resolution.

    As permanent council members, China and Russia have veto powers and have made clear they would be prepared to use them to stop new sanctions on Pyongyang. The United States and Japan would like a resolution that expands existing financial sanctions against North Korea.

    But U.N. diplomats say the United States and Japan might have to accept a non-binding warning statement from the council instead of a legally binding resolution.

    A Western diplomat said China had proposed a weak statement, “a completely watered down text which is unacceptable to us (and) … not even worth discussing.”

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday the council “must avoid any hasty conclusions” on North Korea, which says the rocket placed a satellite into orbit.

    And, of course, North KJorea maintains the missile launch was simply for launching a communications satellite for “peaceful purposes.”

    Don’t look for any substantiative relief from the United Nations now or EVER.


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Anna Kournikova,  Maria Sharapova,  Tennis

    Are the Russians Genetically Engineering Women Tennis Players?

    MariaSharapova

    Maria Sharapova

    Well, somebody is raising the question.

    What is going on here? Has not anyone stopped to take note that an impossibly large number of young, blond Russian teenagers are now within the top 100 female tennis player? And they are, for the most part, tall, skinny and sport pulverizing forehands — all manufactured with a severe Western forehand grip–and two-handed backhands that rip through the court like steam through a samovar…

    Has anyone not said: “What are the chances?” No? Well let me ask you this: can you think of any 3 female tennis players in the history of United States tennis that were look alikes? Tracy Austin, Pam Shriver, Chris Everet, Mary Carillo, Lindsay Davenport, Mary Joe Fernandez…? No. Not even close. Even the Williams sisters — who are indeed sisters — look less alike than say, Maria Sharapova and Viktoria Azarenko; or Hantuchova and Cibulkova:…..

    Nahhhh, it ain’t so but they sure do look alike.

    azarenko

    Victoria Azaranko

    Here is the List:

    • Sharapova former #1–: Nyagan, Siberia, Russia 1987
    • Dinara Safina #2–Moscow Russia 1986
    • Elena Dementiava #4 –Moscow Russia 1981
    • Svetlana Kuznetsova #8– St. Petersburg, Russia 1985
    • Nadia Petrova #9–Moscow 1982
    • Victoria Azaranko #10–Minsk, Belarus 1989
    • Dominika Cibulkova #16– Bratislava, Slovak 1989
    • Alisa Kleybanova #17 — Moscow, Russia, 1989
    • Anna Chakvetadze #23– Moscow, Russia. 1987
    • Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova #27–Samara Russia 1991
    • Alona Bondarenko #38 –Krivyi Rig (Ukraine),1984
    • Maria Kirilenko #39– Moscow Russia 1987
    • Maria Daniela Hantuchova #43 –Poprad, Slovakia 1983
    anna kournikova

    Anna Kournikova

    And, pleasing to the eye, too!

    Technorati Tags: , ,

  • Gay Marriage

    Proposition 8 Aftermath: California Gay Marriage Backers Have Much to Do Before Returning to California Ballot

    Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
    San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom shares a hug with Kate Kendell, executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, amid celebrations of the same-sex marriage ruling Thursday at City Hall

    So says Kate Kendell, the executive director of the National Center fopr Lesbian Rights in this interview prior to today’s Vermont legislative veto override which legalized gay marriage there.

    If same-sex marriage proponents return to the ballot in 2010 to try to repeal Proposition 8 and lose again, the damage done to the larger LGBT community would be “devastating,” a key No on Prop 8 member told the Bay Area Reporter this week.

    In a wide-ranging interview Monday, March 30, Kate Kendell, a member of the No on Prop 8 executive committee, reiterated what she said at February’s San Francisco town hall meeting: she will not take on a leadership role in any future ballot fight. But Kendell, who is executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, was clear that the community must step up on a number of fronts if a second ballot fight is to be waged.

    And she suggested, based on what happened during the Prop 8 fight, that 2010 is too early to launch a repeal effort.

    This is providing the California Supreme Court does NOT rule that California’s Proposition 8, a California State Constitutional amendment that restored the traditional definition of marriage (one man and one woman) is unconstitutional. Most legal experts expect the California Supremes to uphold Propsoition 8 but allow gay marriages already performed to remain recognized.

    Not withstanding today’s Vermont legislative victory for gay marriage, California laws are different as its electorate. It will be difficult for gay marriage proponents to EVER win an election in California, since it does not enjoy majority popular support.

    While many new activists have become engaged since the passage of Prop 8, and many new groups have formed, two recent statewide polls show voters are almost exactly where they were on same-sex marriage as during last year’s campaign: about 48 percent support same-sex marriage and 47 percent oppose it. Mark DiCamillo, director of the Field Poll, said those numbers haven’t changed much since last November.

    Proposition 8 passed 52.3 percent to 47.7 percent, a difference of 4.6 percentage points.

    Kendell said she would subtract 5 percentage points from supporters of same-sex marriage in the recent surveys.

    “People lie,” she said. “We’re at 42 percent or 43 percent. We could claw our way to 48 percent but we never get past 48 percent.”

    The question, she said, is “How to get to 50 percent plus one.”

    The more likely scenatrio will be a federal constitutional challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and the United States Supreme Court declaring such marriages recognizable. On the other hand, the Vermont approval may further resolve gay marriage opponents to proceed with a United States Constituitional amendment, the Federal Marriage Amendment (FMA).

    In either case, I don’t anticipate gay marriages (except the ones already performed in California) to be recognized in California or by the federal government any time soon.


    Technorati Tags:

  • GOP,  John McCain,  Meghan McCain

    The Obligatory Meghan McCain AGAIN Shows She Knows NOTHING About the Republican Party

    In her latest missive at Tina Brown’s The Daily Beast, Meghan McCain, the 20 something blogging daughter of Senator John McCain demonstrates again that she knows and understands little about the Republican Party. A party by the way, she only joined a year ago.

    It is no secret that the Republican Party, for all its faults, consistently displays party unity. For all the criticism that the Bush administration came in for, risks were taken (like supporting the Iraq troop surge) that wound up benefiting the GOP in the long run.

    And, your father, Meghan, received the nickname “MAVERICK” why?

    There is NO Consistent party unity in the GOP. Look at these issues as a case in point:

    • illegal immigration
    • Obama’s cabinet nominees
    • Last Fall’s TARP bailout
    • Anwar oil drilling
    • Global Warming legislation

    Just to name a few.

    Meghan just because you motored about the country in your father’s tour bus with cloggged toilets does not give you any credibility with regards to the GOP.

    Try a little research and reading.


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Al Qaeda,  CIA

    Re: ICRC Report On The Treatment of Fourteen “High Value Detainees” in CIA Custody – Today’s Release

    First, this report is NOT new and today’s release is a rehash of an old story – with a new spin of medical ethics.

    Second, do you really think I give a SHIT what a LEFTY journalist and the New York Times thinks of CIA practices that keeps me and my family safe from these motherfrakker Al Qaeda terrorists?

    The LEFT and Obama may not think we are engaged in a War on Terror but a WAR it is.


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Barack Obama,  Joe Lieberman,  Missile Defense

    Obama Dodges And Plays Word Games With America’s National Missile Defense

    North Korean Taepodong-2 missile launch animation

    So Says Byron York in today’s Washington Examiner.

    In Prague on Sunday, Barack Obama boldly proclaimed that as long as there is a potential nuclear threat from Iran, the United States “will go forward with a missile defense that is cost-effective and proven.”  Many observers saw that as a statement of toughness from a president determined to counter Tehran.  It turns out it was a carefully-worded dodge from a president with little desire to build a strong American missile defense.  Here is the story behind the story:

    A few months before the January 2008 Iowa caucuses, a left-leaning group called Caucus4Priorities asked Obama and other Democratic presidential candidates to spell out their positions on defense issues.  Caucus4Priorities was an offshoot of a bigger group, the Priorities Action Fund, created by Ben Cohen, the peace activist and co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream. The organization hoped to divert billions of dollars in spending from the Pentagon to education, health care, job training, world hunger, and other causes.  One of its goals was to put an end to missile defense.

    Candidate Obama made a video in response to Caucus4Priorities.  “I will cut investments in unproven missile defense systems,” Obama said.  “I will not weaponize space. I will slow our development of future combat systems…”

    Senate Democrats, including Vice President Joe Biden have been foes of a national missile defense system for decades.

    “This premise, that one day Kim Jong Il or someone will wake up one morning and say ‘Aha, San Francisco!’ is specious,” Senator Joe Biden told AP in May 2001.

    Meanwhile in the Senate, Carl Levin (D., Mich.) offered in June to cut off funds for the ground-based interceptor program that Mr. Bush recently activated in Alaska in anticipation of the North Korean launch. Mr. Levin wants to stop new interceptors from being built, but Senate Republicans wouldn’t bring his proposal up for a vote. Mr. Levin has been waging his own private war against missile defenses for a generation, to the point of outflanking Russian objections on the political left.

    In May 2001 the Boston Herald’s Woodlief wrote that John Kerry “wants to croak the hugely costly nuclear missile defense system.” And just one day before the 9/11 attacks Joe Biden (D., Del.) gave a National Press Club speech outlining Democrat opposition to national missile defense.

    Why should President Obama be any different?

    What Obama is practicing is DOUBLESPEAK.

    So here is the lesson.  When the president says he will “go forward with a missile defense,” don’t assume that he will go forward with a missile defense. Don’t listen to what he said in Prague.  Listen to what he said in Iowa.

    But, Obama will NOT be able to use Democrat Senator Joe Lieberman for ANY political cover.

    Lieberman had begun to sing Obama’s praises in recent weeks, but his song sounded a decidedly harsh note this week. As during the campaign, the latest tension stems from disagreement over national security and foreign policy.

    Lieberman, who campaigned for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) last year, has a reputation in the Senate as a defense hawk.

    “Cooperation on missile defense is now a critical component of many of our closest security partnerships around the world,” Lieberman wrote in a letter to the president. “We fear that cuts to the budget for missile defense could inadvertently undermine these relationships and foster the impression that the United States is an unreliable ally.

    “Moreover, sharp cuts would leave us and our friends around the world less capable of responding to the growing ballistic missile threat.”

    Lieberman, a longtime supporter of a robust missile defense program, is the lead signatory on the letter.

    Stay tuned…..


    Technorati Tags: , ,

  • Day By Day

    Day By Day by Chris Muir April 7, 2009 – I Want To Have an Argument

    day by day 040709

    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    No, Skye, Michael Palin is a comedian from Monty Python.

    But, notice how the LEFT loves to perpetuate its own myths by questioning absolute facts about one of their own and scrutinizing/riciculing someone who does not agree with them?

    I see it over and over here in the comments section. Then, after you present evidence that there fact(s) are skewed they go ad hominem or leave.

    Happens every time.

    Previous:

    The Day By Day Archive


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Del.icio.us Links

    links for 2009-04-07

    • Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates announced a major reshaping of the Pentagon budget on Monday, with deep cuts in many traditional weapons systems but new billions of dollars for others, along with more troops and new technology to fight the insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    • Turkish security services have arrested a man of Syrian descent who was planning to assassinate US President Barack Obama during his current trip to Turkey, the Saudi daily Al Watan reported Monday.
    • Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., told a Monday meeting of the Little Rock Political Animals Club that she will oppose the Employee Free Choice Act.

      "While I may not have been clear about my position in the past, I am stating today that I cannot support Employee Free Choice Act in its current form and I can’t support efforts to bring it to Senate consideration in its current form," Lincoln said in a statement late Monday afternoon.

      "I will consider alternatives that have the support of both business and labor but my pledge today is to focus my full attention on the priorities I have mentioned that affect every working family in Arkansas."

    • Taking aim at the way news is spread across the Internet, The Associated Press said on Monday that it will demand that Web sites obtain permission to use the work of The A.P. or its member newspapers, and share revenue with the news organizations, and that it will take legal action those that do not.

      Associated Press executives said the policy was aimed at major search engines like Google, Yahoo and their competitors, and also at news aggregators like the Huffington Post, as well as companies that sell packaged news services. They said they do not want to stop the appearance of articles around the Web, but to exercise some control over it and to profit from it. The A.P. also said it is developing a system to track news articles online and determine whether they were used legally.

    • Auditors say the state Medicaid program may have overpaid $2.9 million for services like teeth cleaning for toothless patients.

      Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli says auditors found the state health department's Medicaid claims processing system lacks necessary controls.

      Auditors identified almost 22,000 questionable services for about 6,500 patients with dentures during the 5-year period ending June 30, 2008. That included almost 1,500 dentists who billed Medicaid $863,000 for cleanings, fillings, extractions and X-rays for about 5,000 patients with full dentures.

    • Alaska’s Republican governor, Sarah Palin, has retained DC Democratic power player Robert Barnett to sell her presumed memoir of the 2008 campaign. The expected seven-figure book advance will make it easier for Palin to pay for travel to the “lower 48” for political events and then a presidential run.

      The book could put Palin into a 2012 race with President Obama, who used the same lawyer and the same strategy—a big advance and a book—in part to back his early campaign efforts.

      During the 2008 Democratic campaign, Barnett represented Obama, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and John Edwards, and 2012 could turn into another Barnett-vs.-Barnett race.

      (tags: sarah_palin)
    • Defense Secretary Robert Gates is proposing deep cuts to some big weapons programs such as the F-22 fighter jet as the Pentagon takes a hard look at how it spends money.

      Gates announced a broad range of cuts Monday to weapons spending, saying he plans to cut programs ranging from a new helicopter for the president to ending production of the $140 billion F-22 fighter jet. The Army's modernization program would be scaled back, while a new satellite system and a search-and-rescue helicopter would be cut.

    • The folks at Daily Kos asked Research 2000 to take a look at Senator John Thune's reelection numbers.

      The good news for Thune is he has the highest "very favorable" rating among the figures polled (Thune, former Sen. Tom Daschle, Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, and President Obama) and his overall rating is 57 percent favorable, 32 percent unfavorable.

      Matched up against Daschle, Thune leads, 53-40. Matched up against Herseth Sandlin, he leads 51-39.

    • Though the leaders of the Iowa state Legislature are all for same-sex marriage, it's very unpopular in the Hawkeye state, where gay and lesbian couples will be included in civil marriage starting at the end of this month.

      Data drawn from a survey last October (.pdf) show that more than 62 percent of Iowans oppose same-sex marriage, and fewer than 30 percent support it, though about half of those opposed would support civil unions.

      The court ruled that civil unions weren't an acceptable alternative.

      The survey found that a slightly larger number than support marriage — 35 percent — would favor accepting the decision, which leaves a whole lot of room for a push for an amendment to roll it back, though that would likely hinge on GOP success at using the issue in legislative elections.

      (tags: gaymarriage)
    • Let’s face it – Twitter is amazing. But with all its greatness, it’s never been an easy task to find others on the service. Below are the 6 coolest, best places to find new tweeters.
      (tags: Twitter)
    • But as the North Korea episode shows, not everyone is so reasonable. To the men of Pyongyang, Obama is just another imperialistic swine. In fact, if they're dialecticians worth their salt, then they surely think of Obama as all the more dangerous than Bush for the precise reason that he gives imperialism a friendlier face. North Korea, like any state, has national interests, carved out by decades of history (fear of unification) or centuries (fear of China). The fact that it's a genocidal and secretive police state only exacerbates matters. The bottom line is, the North Koreans are going to do what they think they need to do. Having obviously never read their Carlyle, they couldn't care less who the American president is.
    • Barack Obama, making his first visit to a Muslim nation as president, declared Monday the United States "is not at war with Islam" and called for a greater partnership with the Islamic world.

      Addressing the Turkish parliament, Obama called the country an important U.S. ally in many areas, including the fight against terrorism. He devoted much of his speech to urging a greater bond between Americans and Muslims, portraying terrorist groups such as al Qaida as extremists who did not represent the vast majority of Muslims.

      "Let me say this as clearly as I can," Obama said. "The United States is not at war with Islam. In fact, our partnership with the Muslim world is critical in rolling back a fringe ideology that people of all faiths reject."

      Al Jazeera and Al Arabiyia, two of the biggest Arabic satellite channels, carried Obama's speech live.

    • A documentary on Russian state television has accused the U.S. of using an air base in Kyrgyzstan to spy on Russia and China — an allegation a spokesman for the base flatly denied on Monday.

      The film, aired Sunday on the Rossiya TV channel, showed a building it said was used for electronic surveillance and identified a woman it said worked in the U.S. Embassy as a CIA agent.

      Moscow has long been suspicious of the American presence in what it views as its traditional sphere of influence, and there are even some indications it may have pushed to have the Central Asian base closed.

    • Iran criticized on Monday U.S. President Barack Obama for saying Tehran posed a threat with its nuclear program and urged Washington and other countries possessing atom weapons to dismantle their arsenals.

      Foreign Ministry spokesman Hassan Qashqavi made the comments a day after Obama, who is seeking to engage Iran diplomatically in a sharp policy shift from George W. Bush's approach, set out his vision for ridding the world of such arms.