Last month, I wrote about how our culture teaches children to fear men. Hundreds of men responded, many lamenting that they've now become fearful of children.
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Saturday, September 08, 2007
The Fear
NSA On The Job
Congress set a deadline on September 15th as well -- the due date for a progress report on the Iraq War from President Bush.
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Friday, September 07, 2007
Those "Superior" Conventional Subs
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The Double O License To Lie
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It's Not Cool To Be Smart (Part 92366)
I think one of the main reasons for this is that, just as, say, much of the Islamic world is a "shame culture," we in the United States have a "cool culture." To put it another way, we are terrified of appearing uncool. Uncoolness is a shameful state. There is no question that this is a powerful motivator. Indeed, many liberal stances can be comprehended on the basis that the adherent believes it would be uncool to believe otherwise. Gay marriage? Cool! The military? Uncool!! Environmentalism? Cool!!! |
Dragging Their Corpses
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The Sound Of Silence
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Of Guilt And Surveys
Unfortunately, the facts of that second half of the war remain a relative blank in the knowledge and memories of many people Do your own informal survey. I’d be extremely curious to hear the results |
Troof Hurts
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Dyeing Young
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An Unfair Compare
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Those Angry Lefties
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I'm So Damned Tired Of This...
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The Once And Future Enemas
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DeNoamimg Democracy
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Today's Iran Shocka
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The Mythic Military
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The Temporary Thing
Now, this is the critical |
Shukran!
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Our So-Called Saviours
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Before The Door
Finally, a successful campaign against the Islamic Republic would require internalizing the lessons of the last four years of war, especially those gained of its recent successes in Anbar. It would imply the repair of US human intelligence capability, reportedly so poor that agent networks in Iran were rolled up shortly after they were deployed. America has to learn how to mobilize all the resources of its national power if it is to confidently confront the Islamic Republic. In summary Iran may well be “the greatest strategic challenge to U.S. interests in the Middle East in a generation”, in the words of Barack Obama. It might even be, as Michael Ledeen says “the key to this war” which if turned will cause “the world [to] change overnight”. But it presents a formidable challenge; one which America must be ready to face before it turns the key to meet whatever lies beyond the door. |
Ships, Rats and Democrats
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Satire Would Seem To Be An Understatement
A few years ago, Chomsky and his tax attorney (funny, I thought only rich Republicans had those) opened the Diane Chomsky Irrevocable Trust (named after his daughter) with the venerable Palmer and Dodge law firm. That fund now serves to protect his income from taxation, or as Chomsky would say, it's one of those "tax havens to shift the burden to the general population and away from the rich."Hmmm... Maybe Chomsky has decided in his old age that he likes the bin Laden no-tax plan. But will he accept the bin Laden nomination? |
Thursday, September 06, 2007
The Stench Goes On
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Wednesday, September 05, 2007
The Grand Inquisitor Does Iraq
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The Deinsertion
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And The Judge Who Allowed Bail ...
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The High Cost Of Psychopathy
The cost, however, will be high. |
Unimportant My You-Know-What
I find it hard to accept the concept of an unimportant terrorist training camp that's sending its graduates to Iraq. This is especially so when the camp is run by an outfit as formidable as the IRGC-QF and backed by the government of Iran. |
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Ghosts
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McCarthy On Ledeen On The Thugs
Ledeen’s theme is as simple as it is incontestable: the theocratic regime ushered in by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s ascendancy in 1979 is not a conventional government motivated by and ruled in accordance with familiar interests and protocols. It is, instead, a revolutionary movement, It tames its increasingly unhappy subjects with a sophisticated brand of barbarity — unlike Nazi and Soviet torturers, the mullahs tend to furlough their victims back into the general population so all can bare witness to the wages of resistance. And, as tyrants must, it has its bogeymen — the United States, the West generally, and, of course, Israel — to fuel its revolutionary ardor despite a cratering economy and the oppression that hangs ever more heavily on its citizens, in particular, its women, who, in the model of Khomeini, a misogynist of the first order, are reduced to chadored chattel: subjected to official second-class status, child-marriages, polygamy, and systematic ignorance. |
Without A Clue II -- A Great Country
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Without A Clue
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Leisure Day?
Mexican workers are ranked #3 in the world at 1,980 hours per year, right after South Korea and Poland. Maybe it's just as well that lots of hard-working Koreans and Mexicans are coming to the United States. Otherwise we might have to rename Labor Day as Leisure Day. |
Success All Around?
When I asked him why conservative blogs don't do the same thing as the Netroots, Johnson responded, "None of us purports to lead a movement, and we're working for a living." Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit, the most widely read center-right blogger, amplifies Johnson's point. "Different needs produce different approaches," he says. "People on the right think their political machine works, but that the media is out to get them. Hence rightish blogging
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High On The Hog
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Lomborg: Taking On Hysterical Climate Innumeracy
While Lomborg is quite attuned to the pathologies of the climate-policy debate, he pays little attention to the pathologies of climate policymaking. To be sure, spending billions on alternative energy R&D could result in significant technological breakthroughs, but it is not as if governments have not tried this for years. The problem is that government subsidies are doled out according to political criteria, not the advice of technical experts like Lomborg. Given the power of the corn lobby, millions of taxpayer dollars go to ethanol in the name of environmental protection, but the environment is hardly better off.
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