• Canada,  Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: America Alone To Be SMUGGLED Into Canada

    National Post: Steyn’s book can’t be found in Canada

    A Canadian author’s book about the need to defend Western civilization against Islam’s demographic juggernaut — and the United States’ vital role in that effort — has become a best-seller in the United States, but remains all but impossible to buy at stores in this country.

    Conservative columnist Mark Steyn’s book America Alone has shot up best-seller lists: It stands at 13th on The New York Times list and 23rd on Amazon.com.

    But Canada’s largest book seller, Indigo Books and Music Inc., does not have the book in stock at its Chapters outlets or its other book-selling subsidiaries.

    Mr. Steyn has charged that Indigo and its chief executive officer, Heather Reisman, underestimated demand for his book as a means of “boycotting” it.

    His publisher made several attempts to persuade Indigo that its first order of several hundred books was inadequate, he said.

    Mr. Steyn wrote in Maclean’s, “If Heather Reisman carries on boycotting me, I should be able to retire to Tahiti within the year.”

    Flap supposes the literary elite in Canada prefers not to read what Steyn has written which is the hard truth. So, what better way to censure than to misorder the books and claim it is the American publisher’s fault.

    Now, Flap has a vested interest in this distribution of books because at future reprintings I get my name for a photo credit on the back flap (little pat on the back).

    Canadian readers (who cannot order their books online and must visit a book retailer) should do what Mark suggests:

    “My advice to Canadian readers is drive over to the Buffalo Barnes & Noble and smuggle it back in, cunningly hidden under the Algerian terrorist in the back seat.”

    Another example of the failed social democracy of Canada……a waiting line for books.

    The reader can purchase the book here.

    And it is number two on Amazon’s Canada Best Sellers List.

    Previous:

    Mark Steyn Watch: America Alone Makes New York Times Bestseller List

    Mark Steyn Watch: America Alone – A FLAP Surprise


    Technorati Tags:

  • Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: America Alone Makes New York Times Bestseller List

    NewsMax: Mark Steyn’s ‘America Alone’ Hits N.Y. Times List

    Mark Steyn’s compelling new book “America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It” has hit the New York Times bestseller list in its first week out.

    The book by the conservative columnist debuted at No. 14 on the list. It has also reached No. 3 on Amazon.com’s list of books on politics, No. 9 on its nonfiction list and No. 23 among all books.

    Congrats Mark……

    It must be the clever photo on the back FLAP.

    Previous:

    Mark Steyn Watch: America Alone – A FLAP Surprise


    Technorati Tags:

  • Iraq War,  Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: The Iraq War – Win or Lose it

    Mark and Claremont Institute President and ballistic missile expert, Brian T. Kennedy, December 2005. Photograph by Flap.

    Chicago Sun-times: Only choice on war is to win or lose it

    Read it all…….

    Bush was forceful and informed, and it seems to me he performs better in small groups of one-night-only White House correspondents than in the leaden electronic vaudeville with Helen Thomas, David Gregory and the other regulars. (You can judge for yourself: Michael Barone has posted the entire audio at U.S. News & World Report’s Web site.) He dismissed the idea that going into Iraq had only served to “recruit” more terrorists to the cause. (General Pace told me last week that, if anything, the evidence is that Iraq has tied up a big chunk of senior jihadists who’d otherwise be blowing up Afghanistan and elsewhere.) The president’s view is that before it was Iraq it was Israel; with these guys, it’s always something. Sometimes it’s East Timor — which used to be the leftie cause du jour. And, riffing on the endless list of Islamist grievances, Bush concluded with an exasperated: “If it’s not the Crusades, it’s the cartoons.” That’d make a great slogan: it encapsulates simultaneously the Islamists’ inability to move on millennium-in millennium-out, plus their propensity for instant new “root causes,” and their utter lack of proportion.

    “We need to be on the offense all the time,” said the president. I pointed out that, when the military are obviously on offense — liberating Afghanistan, toppling Saddam — the American people are behind them. But that it’s hard to see where the offense is in what to most TV viewers has dwindled down to a thankless semi-colonial policing operation with no end in sight. How about a bit more offense? Syria’s been subverting Iraq for three years. Why not return the favor?

    “We are on the offense,” he insisted, sounding sometimes as frustrated as us columnists that so much of the wider momentum had become (in Charles Krauthammer’s words) “mired in diplomacy.” Still, it was a different conversation than most Bush encounters with the media-political class. I happened to be plugging my book on a local radio show this week just as a Minnesota “conservative” (ish) Democrat joined the herd of stampeding donkeys explaining why they were now disowning their vote in favor of the Iraq war. What a sorry sight. It’s not a question of whether you’re “for” or “against” a war. Once you’re in it, the choice is to win it or lose it. And, if you’re arguing for what will look to most of the world like the latter option, you better understand what the consequences are. In this case, it would, in effect, end the American moment.

    Indeed……WIN THE IRAQ WAR.


    Technorati Tags:

  • Blogosphere,  Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: America Alone – A FLAP Surprise

    steynamericaalonecovercropw

    Mark Steyn’s America Alone

    When Flap returned home this evening after a hard day of practicing dentistry (not really!) I found my new copy of Mark’s America Alone in the post.

    I greatly anticipated the book’s arrival since the content followed up on a speech that Flap covered in this blog last December.

    Previous posts include the following:

    Mark Steyn @ The Claremont Institute Dinner: The Bear Flag League

    Mark Steyn @ The Claremont Institute Dinner: The Dinner

    Mark Steyn @ The Claremont Institute Dinner: The Reception

    Mark Steyn @ The Claremont Institute Dinner: The Departure

    Mark Steyn Honored at The Claremont Institute’s Sir Winston Churchill Dinner

    And please note the nice headshot photo of Mark:

    This is a cropped version of this photograph of Mark and Claremont Institute President and ballistic missile expert, Brian T. Kennedy:

    steynkennedyweb

    The photo was taken in Mark’s suite at the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel after his acceptance of the Winston Churchill Award. As I blogged previously he was gracious to discuss current events with a number of us, including PrestoPundit, from The Bear Flag League for hours.

    So, what does this stroll down memory lane have to do with Steyn’s new book?

    Look at this scan of America Alone’s back FLAP:

    steynamericaalonebackflapcr

    Look it is Flap’s photo!

    I am very flattered and have written to Mark and Regnery Publishing, requesting a photo credit. Mark’s assistant, Victoria Ayrsmith, has written me back and will pursue the matter tomorrow.

    In the meantime, Flap is STOKED and PUBLISHED – well sort of…….

    Previous:

    The Mark Steyn Files


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: Nude Cyclists Are Peddling Threadbare Ideas

    Mark Steyn at the Claremont Institute Dinner, December 5, 2005

    Chicago Sun-Times: Nude cyclists are peddling threadbare ideas

    Perusing reports of this month’s World Naked Bike Ride in San Francisco, I was impressed by
    the way the acres of sagging mottled flesh stayed ruthlessly on message: “RE-ELECT GORE” was the slogan on one man’s bottom, as fetchingly dimpled as a Palm Beach chad, while beneath the “GORE” of his butt his upper thighs proudly proclaimed “NO WAR” (left leg) “FOR
    OIL” (right). “I’D RATHER HAVE THIS BUSH FOR PRESIDENT” read one lady’s naked torso with an arrow pointing down to the presidential material in question. What a bleak comment on the bitter divisions in our society that even so all-American a tradition as nude bicycling down Main Street should now be so nakedly partisan. It’s as if the republic itself is now divided into a red buttock and a blue buttock permanently cleaved by the bicycle seat of war.

    OK, this metaphor’s jumped the bike path. Let me see if I can find some historical analogy.
    Ah, here we go: Back in 1559, devastated by the loss of her last continental possession, Mary Tudor, England’s queen, said that when she died they would find “Calais” engraved on her heart. When the Democratic Party dies, you’ll find “NO WAR FOR OIL” engraved on its
    upper thighs. Despite the Republicans’ best efforts to self-destruct, I can’t see the Democrats taking either the House or Senate this November. As I said a few months back, even a loser has to have someone to lose to, and the Dems refuse to fulfill even that minimum requirement. It may be true that on critical issues such as Iraq and immigration the GOP is divided. But it’s a much bigger stretch to conclude that the beneficiary of those divisions is likely to be the Democratic Party, which is about the last place one would look for a serious position on either issue.

    Read the Rest here.

    Flap agrees the Dims will continue to find a way to lose in November.  The GOP will maintain control of the House and Senate.

    Nancy Pelosi will then be replaced as Minority Leader.

    Stay tuned…..

    Previous:

    The Mark Steyn Files


    Technorati Tags:

  • Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: Steyn Wins 2006 Breindel Award for Excellence in Journalism

    Mark Steyn at the Claremont Institute Dinner, December 5, 2005

    Powerline: Congratulations, Mark Steyn

    New York Post: BREINDEL HONORS FOR DUO

    Two journalists whose writings do not try to march in lockstep with the mainstream media last night were presented with the Eric Breindel Award for Excellence in Opinion Journalism.

    Mark Steyn, a syndicated columnist whose work – on topics ranging from politics to diplomacy to popular culture – appears in National Review, The New Criterion and The Atlantic Monthly, among many other publications, won the eighth annual award, and a check for $20,000, following a reception at the New-York Historical Society.

    And Matt Mireles, a junior at Columbia University and contributor to the Daily Spectator, took home the first annual award for excellence in college journalism, which includes a $10,000 check and a summer internship at the Fox News Channel.

    This award honors The Post’s late editorial-page editor, who died in 1998 at age 42. It is bestowed by the Eric Breindel Memorial Foundation and endowed by News Corp., The Post’s parent company.

    Each year, the prize recognizes the work of a columnist, editorialist or writer whose work best reflects love of this country and its democratic institutions. Steyn, though a native of Canada, clearly reflects these virtues, as a reading of one of his prize-winning columns, “Be Glad the Flag Is Worth Burning,” demonstrates: “One of the big lessons of these last four years is that many, many beneficiaries of Western civilization loathe that civilization,” he wrote, “and the media are generally inclined to blur the extent of that loathing.”

    Congrats, Mark!


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Mark Steyn

    Mark Steyn Watch: BOAT PEOPLE

    Mark Steyn at the Claremont Institute Dinner, December 5, 2005

    Steynonline: BOAT PEOPLE

    I hate writing about immigration, really I do. I’m an immigrant myself and it’s hardly my place to say who should or shouldn’t be let into America. I feel like the weekending New Yorker who snaps up the last 18th century farmhouse in Vermont and then goes to Town Meeting to whine about the proposed subdivision on the edge of the village.

    Read it all.

    Previous:

    The Mark Steyn Files


    Technorati Tags:

  • Mark Steyn,  NSA Surveillance Leak Case

    NSA Surveillance Watch: Mark Steyn – “To Connect the Dots, You Have to See the Dots”

    Mark Steyn at the Claremont Institute Dinner, December 5, 2005

    Chicago-Sun Times: To connect the dots, you have to see the dots

    Read it all.

    Here are two news stories from the end of last week. The first one you may have heard about. As “The Today Show’s” Matt Lauer put it:

    “Does the government have your number? This morning a shocking new report that the National Security Agency has been secretly collecting the phone records of tens of millions of Americans.”

    The second story comes from the United Kingdom and what with Lauer’s hyperventilating you may have missed it. It was the official report into the July 7 bus and Tube bombings. As The Times of London summarized the conclusions:

    “Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the bomb cell, had come to the attention of MI5 [Britain’s domestic intelligence agency] on five occasions but had never been pursued as a serious suspect . . .

    “A lack of communication between police Special Branch units, MI5 and other agencies had hampered the intelligence-gathering operation;

    “There was a lack of co-operation with foreign intelligence services and inadequate intelligence coverage in . . .”

    Etc., etc., ad nauseam.

    So there are now two basic templates in terrorism media coverage:

    Template A (note to editors: to be used after every terrorist atrocity): “Angry family members, experts and opposition politicians demand to know why complacent government didn’t connect the dots.”

    Template B (note to editors: to be used in the run-up to the next terrorist atrocity): “Shocking new report leaked to New York Times for Pulitzer Prize Leak Of The Year Award nomination reveals that paranoid government officials are trying to connect the dots! See pages 3,4,6,7,8, 13-37.”

    How do you connect the dots? To take one example of what we’re up against, two days before 9/11, a very brave man, the anti-Taliban resistance leader Ahmed Shah Massoud, was assassinated in Afghanistan by killers posing as journalists. His murderers were Algerians traveling on Belgian passports who’d arrived in that part of the world on visas issued by the Pakistani High Commission in the United Kingdom. That’s three more countries than many Americans have visited. The jihadists are not “primitives”. They’re part of a sophisticated network: They travel the world, see interesting places, meet interesting people — and kill them. They’re as globalized as McDonald’s — but, on the whole, they fill in less paperwork. They’re very good at compartmentalizing operations: They don’t leave footprints, just a toeprint in Country A in Time Zone B and another toe in Country E in Time Zone K. You have to sift through millions of dots to discern two that might be worth connecting.

    I’m a strong believer in privacy rights. I don’t see why Americans are obligated to give the government their bank account details and the holdings therein. Other revenue agencies in other free societies don’t require that level of disclosure. But, given that the people of the United States are apparently entirely cool with that, it’s hard to see why lists of phone numbers (i.e., your monthly statement) with no identifying information attached to them is of such a vastly different order of magnitude. By definition, “connecting the dots” involves getting to see the dots in the first place.

    Sen. Pat Leahy (D-Vt.) feels differently. “Look at this headline,” huffed the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee. “The secret collection of phone call records of tens of millions of Americans. Now, are you telling me that tens of millions of Americans are involved with al-Qaida?”

    No. But next time he’s flying from D.C. to Burlington, Vt., on a Friday afternoon he might look at the security line: Tens of millions of Americans are having to take their coats and shoes off! Are you telling me that tens of millions of ordinary shoe-wearing Americans are involved with al-Qaida?

    Of course not. Fifteen out of 19 of the 9/11 killers were citizens of Saudi Arabia. So let’s scrap the tens of millions of law-abiding phone records, and say we only want to examine the long-distance phone bills of, say, young men of Saudi origin living in the United States. Can you imagine what Leahy and Lauer would say to that? Oh, no! Racial profiling! The government’s snooping on people whose only crime is “dialing while Arab.” In a country whose Transportation Security Administration personnel recently pulled Daniel Brown off the plane as a security threat because he had traces of gunpowder on his boots — he was a uniformed U.S. Marine on his way home from Iraq — in such a culture any security measure will involve “tens of millions of Americans”: again by definition, if one can’t profile on the basis of religion or national origin or any other identifying mark with identity-group grievance potential, every program will have to be at least nominally universal.

    Last week, apropos the Moussaoui case, I remarked on the absurdity of victims of the London Blitz demanding the German perpetrators be brought before a British court. Melanie Phillips, a columnist with the Daily Mail in London and author of the alarming new book Londonistan, responded dryly, “Ah, but if we were fighting World War Two now, we’d lose.”

    She may be right. It’s certainly hard to imagine Pat Leahy as FDR or Harry Truman or any other warmongering Democrat of yore. To be sure, most of Pat’s Vermont voters would say there is no war; it’s just a lot of fearmongering got up by Bush and Cheney to distract from the chads they stole in Florida or whatever. And they’re right — if, by “war,” you mean tank battles in the North African desert and air forces bombing English cities night after night. But today no country in the world can fight that kind of war with America. If that’s all “war” is, then (once more by definition) there can be no war. If you seek to weaken, demoralize and bleed to death the United States and its allies, you can only do it asymmetrically — by killing thousands of people and then demanding a criminal trial, by liaising with terrorist groups in Afghanistan and Pakistan and then demanding the government cease inspecting your phone records.

    I yield to no one in my antipathy to government, but not everyone who’s on the federal payroll is a boob, a time-server, a politically motivated malcontent or principal leak supplier to the New York Times. Suppose you’re a savvy mid-level guy in Washington, you’ve just noticed a pattern, you think there might be something in it. But it requires enormous will to talk your bosses into agreeing to investigate further, and everyone up the chain is thinking, gee, if this gets out, will Pat Leahy haul me before the Senate and kill my promotion prospects? There was a lot of that before 9/11, and thousands died.

    And five years on?

    Discuss this blog post and MORE…. at the FullosseousFlap’s Dental Blogs, My Dental Forum.


    Technorati Tags: ,

  • Iran Nuclear Watch,  Mark Steyn,  Politics

    Iran Nuclear Watch: Mark Steyn – Facing Down Iran

    City Journal: Facing Down Iran

    Anyone who spends half an hour looking at Iranian foreign policy over the last 27 years sees five things:

    1. contempt for the most basic international conventions;
    2. long-reach extraterritoriality;
    3. effective promotion of radical Pan-Islamism;
    4. a willingness to go the extra mile for Jew-killing (unlike, say, Osama);
    5. an all-but-total synchronization between rhetoric and action.

    READ IT ALL

    Blogosphere:

    RealClearPolitics
    Power Line
    Ed Driscoll
    Hugh Hewitt
    Little Green Footballs
    G-Scobe
    Neo-Neocon
    All Things Beautiful
    PeakTalk
    Daimnation!
    Boortz


    Technorati Tags: , ,