Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Anthony Porter case breaks wide open; the Porter story triggered the emptying of Illinois' death row

I had a hunch that something was up with this case, as you'll read in these Marathon Pundit posts here and here. Not everything added up to me when I read the press reports of Anthony Porter's civil suit against the City of Chicago. Porter lost the case, as this AP story explains.

Here is the part of that story that caught my eye:

And an attorney for the city in the civil trial argued that police had the right man in Porter.

"The killer has been sitting in that room right there all day," Walter Jones said, pointing to the table where Porter sat.

Tonight CBS 2 Chicago's John Drummond, in an exclusive story, has dropped a bombshell on the Chicago's media and the local legal community.

This is what I'm wondering at this late hour. Will the rest of the local media pursue Simon's story as aggressively as it did other controversial high-profile cases, such as Roland Cruz/Alex Hernandez/Brian Dugan, or the 1999 version of the Anthony Porter case?

From CBS 2 Chicago:

The push is on to get a convicted killer a new trial. Attorneys for Alstory Simon believe their client was framed and plan to petition the courts Thursday.

John Drummond has the CBS 2 exclusive.

It was the Anthony Porter case that triggered then Gov. George Ryan's moratorium on the death penalty.

Porter was released in 1999 after a Milwaukee man, Alstory Simon, confessed to a private investigator retained by Northwestern University, that Simon, not Porter, killed two people in Washington Park back in 1982.

"I just pulled it up and started shooting," Simon said in his confession.

But now, two Chicago area attorneys, Jim Sotos and Terry Ekl, contend that Simon was coerced and pressured into that confession and that Simon was not the killer.

"People working on Anthony Porter's behalf framed Alstory Simon for a crime he did not commit, with fabricated, false, and flimsy evidence," Sotos said.

"I would not be involved with Alstory Simon unless I felt he was innocent and an injustice had occurred," Ekl said.

Sotos and Ekl say that veteran private investigator Paul Ciolino made several promises or money and leniency to Simon to persuade him to confess. Ciolino disagrees.

"The only promise I made to him was that I would try to make sure he didn't get the death penalty," Ciolino said.

Ciolino denies that he did anything improper.

"I don't have any rules. The Supreme Court says I can lie, cheat, and do anything I can to get him to say whatever I want him to say. The Chicago Police Department is a master at that. So is every other police department," Ciolino said.

Simon's estranged wife, Inez, told Northwestern's Project Innocence in 1999 that she witnessed her husband kill the two people in Washington Park in 1982. One year later she implicated him again.

But in a videotaped statement taped earlier this month by investigators working for Sotos and Ekl, Inez Simon, in failing health, says that she was offered money in 1999 to say that her husband was the killer. Now she recants that version and claims her husband was innocent all along.

Professor David Protess of the Northwestern University Project Innocence denied that neither he nor his staff made any promises of compensation to Inez Simon or her family. He said there is no question about Alstory Simon's guilt.

Lawyers Sotos and Ekl will request the court vacate the conviction of Simon, who's serving a 37-and-a-half-year sentence in Danville.

There is a video link on the CBS 2 Chicago web site.

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My fall road trip: Omaha


Omaha, Nebraska is one of those cities on the prairie. This picture here exemplifies that. That little gray matter in the middle--click on the image to make it larger--is the Omaha skyline. Although the grasses you see are Iowa grasses: I took this photo from Council Bluffs, IA.

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News from Australia: John Howard is a "fascist" too; Marathon Pundit gets a mention in Oz newspaper

One of the new blogroll additions is Australian Politics, started up recently by friend-the-blog Jon Ray. Apparently, George W. Bush is not alone in his status as a "fascist," Jon learned. Australian Prime Minister John Howard is being tarred with that slur too.

From The Australian:

In recent weeks, an array of columnists, cartoonists, politicians, not to mention a plethora of letter writers, have taken to depicting the Howard Government's legislative agenda, especially its industrial relations laws, as "fascist".

Of course, fascist is a cheap insult because its meaning is difficult to pin down and it invariably casts a slur on the person so described. Back in the Comintern days of the 1930s, everybody who was not a communist was a fascist, from the social democrats through to liberals, to the real thing. In the heyday of the New Left, the word fascist was flung around with gay abandon to describe anyone who did not share the ideological preferences of student radicals.

The word has been debased in the public arena. It has been misused for political purposes in the past and it continues to be misused by people who should know better.

Also of note in Australia, is that Marathon Pundit got a brief mention in the Courier-Mail newspaper there. It's the newspaper in the province of Queensland with the largest circulation, another Aussie friend-of-the-blog tells me.

I'm right under mega-blog Captain's Quarters.

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Some moron Congressman Bobby Rush

Sent by a tipster. From yesterday's Daily Southtown:

After urging the slating committee to question Dart's record on supporting minority issues in Springfield, Rush (D-1st), of Chicago, told reporters he found Dart "repulsive."

"Dart represents to me a kind of Klansman," Rush said. "One that don't wear a hood over the head but one that has a hood in the head."

(Thomas Dart, as I mentioned below, was slated by the Cook County Dems for the office of Sheriff.)

Klansman? Lovely analogy. Incidentally, I wonder what Bobby Rush thinks of his colleague on the other end of the Capitol Building, Senator Robert "Sheets" Byrd, D-West Virginia.

I did a Google search, and couldn't find any links to regarding Bobby Rush's opinion of Byrd, who once was a Kleagle in the Ku Klux Klan.

And if Bobby Rush's proposal for slavery reparations ever becomes law, the first paycheck to be docked should be, in my opinion, Senator Byrd's.

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Paul Konerko re-signs with Chicago White Sox

Whoah....there's some good news for the World Champs. ESPN has the details.


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Moron Congressman Bobby Rush

Can anyone enlighten me on what the heck Congressman Bobby Rush, D-IL, is talking about here? This comes from ABC 7 Chicago's site Monday:

"I don't have anything personally against you, but you're just repulsive to me in regards to the fact that you say one thing and do another," said U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, (D) Chicago.

Chicago Congressman Bobby Rush is accusing Dart of racial insensitivity and calling for an open primary with no party endorsement of anyone. But party leaders overwhelmingly reject that proposal.

Tom Dart received the Cook County Regular Democratic Organization's endorsement for Sheriff of Cook County in next year's primary election on Monday.

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Fred Phelps and his Westboro Baptist Church coming to Southern Ill. University to picket speech by Matthew Shepard's mother

Matthew Shepard was the unfortunate gay University of Wyoming college student who was brutally murdered by hateful hooligans in 1998.

Matthew's mother Judy is scheduled to speak at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale on December 6. And that vile cretin, Fred Phelps, plans to bring some of his Westboro Baptist Church followers to SIU to picket her appearance there.

Phelps, who is repeatedly denounced by the Southern Baptist Convention and other mainstream Christian groups, advocates the death penalty for gays, as you'll learn in this Phelps flier (which also contains a picketer claiming Matthew Shepard is in Hell).

Phelps first gained his ill-repute for showing up at the funerals of AIDS victims. Lately, he and his "church" have been picketing funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq; Phelps is under the belief that God in punishing America because of our toleration for gay rights here.

Thankfully, counterprotesters usually are there to confront the Westboro Church members, as they did earlier this month in Galesburg, IL.

Hopefully Phelps and his group will be greeted in a similar manner in Carbondale next week.

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Trolls and hackers continue to wreck milblogger's site

Illinois bloggers Mr. Right of In the Right Place and Jake of Freedom Folks once again have brought to my attention the plight of Grey Eagle's blog, A Female Soldier 2.

The actions of these "peaceful" anti-war trolls is disgraceful.

If they don't like the war in Iraq, fine; they can start their own blogs.

These "peaceniks" are vile turds.

From Grey Eagle's blog:


It was brought to my attention that my polls had been changed. When I went there, I was completely shocked by all the questions. Once again, it was originally designed to offer a voice in things. And once again it was abused. Do you people think that this is cute, or just hell-bent on trying to get me into trouble? Did I do something so offensive to you personally that you feel the need to attack me in such a personal way? Currently someone has offered to completely redesign this website with built in security. I cannot tell you how happy I am with that. To finally have a website where I can post my stories, and have visitors who do not have to contend with your hacks on soldier's tributes, insulting people with changing the polls, and the many other things you have done to this website. I know that this isn't the most secure website, I didn't realize that it was going be such a requirement when I designed it. I was obviously wrong. I wish to personally say I am sorry to anyone who has had to read or endure the messages or polls that may have been offensive on this website. You will note that the units have been removed from the menu in addition to the polls for the same security reasons. As upset and humilitaed as I am, I am not going to quit. I am not going to abandon this project, or terminate the website. I will learn, improve, adapt, and overcome your childish attacks. I should have known as soon as I saw that you were coming back out of hiding to resume posting your hateful and spiteful comments that something like this would occur.

I will hope and pray this will be the last time I have to post another message like this. But if not, know that I will not be defeated. I will not let your emails refering to me as a "baby killer", your calls for me to walk away from my duties, your questioning of my loyality to this county discourage me. I will not let your small minded attacks to my website deny me my voice, I have earned that right. And I will not continue to allow you to insult the visitors who come to this website to read or learn about life here. This is not a political website so please refrain from making it one. I will begin to delete your comments, I will backup this website so as to overcome your attacks, and I will await the completion of the new website.

Grey Eagle
"Air Assault"

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Bush defends Iraq policy

It's about time that Bush spoke up for the work that still needs to be done in Iraq.

The speech he gave at the US Naval Academy should've been given a year ago.

From AP:

"Some critics continue to assert that we have no plan in Iraq except to `stay the course,'" Bush said. "If by `stay the course' they mean we will not allow the terrorists to break our will, they're right. If by `stay the course' they mean we will not permit al Qaida to turn Iraq into what Afghanistan was under the Taliban, a safe haven for terrorists and a launching pad for attacks on America, they're right as well. If by `stay the course' they mean that we're not learning from our experience or adjusting our tactics to meet the challenges on the ground, then they're flat wrong."


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Scott Turow on killer Brian Dugan

Yesterday a DuPage County grand jury indicted Brian Dugan for murder in the Jeanine Nicarico case.

The vicious crime occurred in 1983, and to say the story is complicated is understating the issue enormously.

Instead of rehashing every detail of the case here--which would take hours, I'd like to focus on this comment from author and uber-liberal Scott Turow, from the Chicago Sun-Times:

"I hope the jury that ultimately considers Brian Dugan's fate bears in mind that whatever horrible acts he committed, he somehow had the strength of character to take responsibility for a murder for which other men had been sentenced to death," Turow said.

Strength of character? This already-convicted killer is a monster.

The Sun-Times article does a pretty good job of summarizing the Nicarico case.

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Tuesday, November 29, 2005

My fall road trip: The California Trail


As I touched on in my Platte River post from last night, many of the 19th century pioneer trails passed through Nebraska, one of those trails was the California Trail. This picture was taken a quarter of a mile from yesterday's Platte River picture.

(Click on the image to make it larger.)

A map of the trail is here.

The California Trail was the route that many fortune seekers took to California during the Gold Rush. Farmers, entrepreneurs, and people just looking to get away from the troubles back east followed them.

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Britain's Telegraph: Suicide bomber in Iraq was a Belgian woman

Another sad first in the War on Terror.

From the UK's Daily Telegraph:

A Belgian-born convert to Islam has become the first European woman suicide bomber, killing herself recently in Iraq, French intelligence officials have claimed.

The reports are being taken "seriously", Belgian sources said last night. If the woman, whose identity has not been released, is confirmed as a suicide bomber, she would be the first European female known to have taken part in such an attack.

European intelligence officials learned that US troops in Iraq recently found the remains of a European woman at the site of a suicide attack with a Belgian passport.

Unconfirmed reports on RTL France radio, said that the woman's Belgian nationality had been established by her home country's security service, the Sûreté de l'État.

Belgian counter-terrorism experts had established that the woman converted to Islam and was married to an Islamist radical. Her passport showed that she had reached Iraq via Turkey, and that the journey was carried out partly overland, RTL stated.


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Congressman Bobby Rush faces mortgage foreclosure

Congressman Bobby Rush, D-Chicago, may be looking for a new home. Not voluntarily, however.

From NBC 5.com:

Chicago congressman Bobby Rush is the target of a mortgage foreclosure lawsuit.

The suit alleges Rush has failed to make payments on his South Calumet Avenue home since July.

The three-story 3,400-square-foot home is valued at $215,000.

Rush and his wife run the Englewood Community Development Corp. and the congressman has used political campaign funds to support the church where he is a pastor, NBC5 reported.

Rush calls the foreclosure action "a challenge that has been rectified."

Interesting. Chicagoans send this guy to Congress to manage taxpayers' money, but he can't seem to manage his own funds. About about that church of where he's a pastor: Wouldn't its acceptance of political funds violate--assuming it has it--its tax exempt status?

The South Side congressman does know the value of money: Rush is a big proponent of slavery reparations, as you'll read here and here.

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Video shows activists kidnapped in Iraq

I hope the peace activists are released unharmed. However, for those against the war, here is a reminder that we are fighting against people who can not be reasoned with.

From AP:

Al-Jazeera broadcast an insurgent video Tuesday showing four peace activists taken hostage in Iraq, with a previously unknown group claiming responsibility for the kidnappings.

The Swords of Righteousness Brigade said the four were spies working undercover as Christian peace activists, Al-Jazeera said. The station said it could not verify any of the information on the tape.

The aid group Christian Peacemaker Teams has confirmed that four of its members were taken hostage Saturday.

Lemont High School chooses new nickname: Indians

Well, here is one high school that isn't caving in to the PC forces. Lemont High School, located about 30 miles southwest of Chicago, had been using the nickname of "Injuns" since 1969.

The school board, under the threat of a lawsuit, changed Lemont's nickname to the Titans. That didn't go over too well with the people of Lemont, so for this school year Lemont High's teams competed under no nickname.

Last night the school board voted 5-2 to adopt Indians as the new nickname for Lemont High School.

Not everyone is happy. From the Daily Southtown:

The head of the Illinois Native American Bar Association said his group opposes the new mascot as well.

"We find it demeaning and humiliating," said INABA president Kim Edward Cook, declining to say whether his group would file suit. "It kind of takes away our identity."


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Blogroll addition: McHenry County Blog

Friend-of-the-blog Cal Skinnner was a longtime state representative in the Crystal Lake area. In 2002 he ran for governor of Illinois on the Libertarian ticket.

Cal's half of the team of the McHenry County Blog, the newest blogroll addition here.


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State Representative Beth Coulson's ice cream party


Beth Coulson, R-Glenview, organized a summer reading program for local elementary students. My daughter, Little Marathon Pundit, took part and got to meet Beth at an ice cream party to celebrate her successfully completing the program. That's the state rep with my daughter.

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Monday, November 28, 2005

My fall road trip: The Platte River


"A mile and a mile deep" is what I remember hearing in school about the Platte River of Nebraska. It's pretty shallow, but no where near a mile wide. I'm sure that was just an exaggeration, but the Platte has shrunk in the recent decades. Supplying irrigation water for dry farm lands to the west has diminished the Platte, and the growing population of Colorado has also contributed to the shrunken waterway.

The Platte River was very important in the development of the American West. Several of the pioneer trails paralleled the path of the Platte. The first Transcontinental Railroad, the Lincoln Highway and Interstate 80 all were laid along the swath of the Platte River valley.

I took this picture at the southern end of Sarpy County, near South Bend, Nebraska.

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New Illinois political blog: Illinoize

Rich Miller runs the very popular Capitol Fax blog, the "go to" site for Illinois political news. Rich has spun that off, and now is the first-among-equals with his new Illinoize blog.

Marathon Pundit is one of the site's featured bloggers. My first post, Cong. Jan Schakowsky, Just full of it, is a repost of my Schakowsky post from earlier this month. Jan is a far-left Congresswoman who sad to say, represents me in Congress. It's the most popular--measured by the number of comments left--posting on the site. I was getting roughed up by the liberals there, but in one comment, #17, I put their pathetic arguments where they belong: in the cyberspace shredder. But Illinoize is a collaborative project, those libs are my co-workers.

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Chicago Sun-Times' Neil Steinberg is back

Neil Steinberg is a very good newspaper columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times. Two months ago he was arrested for hitting his wife during an argument. He was drunk when that happened. Since then, Neil has spent a lot of time in rehab.

Here is his "I'm back" column from today's Sun-Times.

Steinberg was an instigator, but not in a purposeful fashion, in the Thomas Klocek-DePaul free speech battle.

From the FIRE (Foundation for Individual Rights in Education) web site.

This is our understanding of the facts based on university documents, press reports, and information provided by Professor Klocek. Please inform us if you believe we are in error. On September 15, 2004, Professor Klocek was at a student activities fair held at DePaul’s Loop campus, and approached tables set up by Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and United Muslims Moving Ahead (UMMA). Professor Klocek picked up an SJP handout which decried Israeli policy in the Palestinian territories, and engaged in a debate with the students at the table. During this debate, Professor Klocek cited an article by Neil Steinberg of the Chicago Sun-Times that quoted the general manager of the Al-Arabiya television network as saying, “It is a certain fact that not all Muslims are terrorists, but it is equally certain, and exceptionally painful, that almost all terrorists are Muslims.” A heated but strictly verbal argument ensued, during which time Professor Klocek argued that a Christian viewpoint, not merely a Muslim or Jewish one, should be considered in dealing with the issue at hand. The argument concluded when Professor Klocek walked away from the SJP and UMMA tables and thumbed his chin at the students in what he believed to be an Italian hand gesture meaning “I’m outta here.”

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Warren Community College student Rebecca Beach to be on Hannity & Colmes tonight

Rebecca Beach is the Warren Community College student who was the target of the ire of Professor John Daly.

After announcing the on-campus visit of an Iraq war hero on campus, Daly sent a hateful e-mail to Rebecca. Here is an excerpt:
I will continue to expose your right-wing, anti-people politics until groups like your won't dare show their face on a college campus. Real freedom will come when soldiers in Iraq turn their guns on their superiors and fight for just causes and for people's needs -- such freedom fighters can be counted throughout American history and they certainly will be counted again.

Tonight at 9pm Eastern Time (8pm Central), Beach will be a guest on the Hannity & Colmes Show on Fox News.

Professor Daly did one decent thing. He resigned once the e-mail became public. Too bad Ward Churchill hasn't followed the same honorable path.

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Jonah Goldberg in the latest National Review

Goldberg is a great writer. In the latest print edition of the National Review, Jonah has an article titled "Citizens of the World." Cosmopolitanism is discussed, in the original sense of the word. As Goldberg writes, "The World actually harks back to the Greek thinker Diogenes, who explained that he wasn't a citizen of any city (polis), but rather a citizen of the world (cosmos)."

Of course this helps explain the anti-US group think of the Left.

Goldberg goes on to say:

In a vast array of policy areas, the Left increasingly defines itself as pro-world and anti-U.S. According to a recent Pew survey, the less you like to fly the American flag, the more likely you are to be a Democrat. The more you believe the United Nations is the last, best hope in the world, the more likely you are to be a Democrat. And, saddest of all, the more you believe America is a negative factor on the world stage, the more likely you are to be a Democrat.

"Citizens of the World" isn't online yet, but here is a whole load of Jonah Goldberg National Review Online articles.

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Blogroll addition: WindyPundit

Mark of WindyPundit is a conservative blogger from Chicago's Northwest Side, and a photo-essayist as well. He told me he just picked up photography as a hobby, but based on his work, it looks as if he's been taking pictures for years.

In September, he started a photoblog series on property threatened with Kelo-type eminent domain seizures. The first entry was about the Sportif bike shop in Chicago's Jefferson Park neighborhood. The second one brought Mark into the suburbs, as he visited the threatened International Plaza in Arlington Heights.

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Fire (my coach) dot.com

A column by Mike Downey of the Chicago Tribune got me thinking on this subject of web sites dedicated to firing coaches. Fire Joe Paterno.com, the subject of Downey's wrath, has backed down a bit from its "noble" cause, and the domain owner has reserved the domain name "Keep Joe Paterno.com." Too bad the board of directors at Penn State didn't reserve it first.

My first foray into internet activism was Blue States for Bush. I got some hate e-mails, which I expected. The e-mails I got that really troubled me usually followed this line of thought.

"Your site sucks as much as Bush does. What really pisses me off is that we live in an age where any idiot can set up his own web site to spread his BS."

That "idiot" of course was me. Naturally, I disagreed with statements like that, but now I'm going to follow suit with my detractors and pretty much say the same thing, and say that "It's sad we live in an age where any idiot...."

Yes, these men (I don't know of any "Fire My Coach Sites" aimed at female coaches), are well-paid, and they're public figures who, as if it was in their job description, tolerate heckling in every imaginable form. But I've been fired from a job more than once--it's very painful.

And about these webmasters who create the sites? Are they deluded enough to believe that their "Fire My Coach Sites" have any effect on the personnel decision making of professional sports team general manager or college athletic directors?

Sad to say, my belief is yes, they probably believe they're on top of some great wave of public emotion.

In truth these people are more likely colossal jerks. There probably the same people who regularly cut into supermarket checkout lines.

In tracking down these sites, I didn't use a scientific approach. However, it seems the "Fire My Coach" phenomenon is concentrated within collegiate sports.

Below are some more of these "Fire My Coach Sites." I'm sure there are plenty more out there.

FireJoPa.com. Yes, there is another site dedicated to having Joe Paterno getting a pink slip.
Fire Quin Snyder. The Missouri Tigers basketball coach.
Fire Ty Willinhgam. The Washington Huskies (and former Notre Dame head football coach). This domain, established while Ty was the Notre Dame coach (until he got fired), was apparently started by a Fighting Irish "fan." Oh, the domain is for sale. Mean spirited inquirers need only apply.
Fire Dusty Baker.com. Chicago Cubs manager. Steve Bartman's victim.
Fire Mike Tice Now.com. The Minnesota Vikings head coach. The Vikings just ended an undefeated November.
Fire Ron Zook.com A very cruel site. The site owner got his wish, the University of Florida fired Zook, who is now the head football coach at Illinois.
Fire Joe Torre.com He's only won a few World Series trophies while manager of the New York Yankees.
Fire Mike Shula.com. Head football coach at Alabama. Looks like this soon-to-be masterpiece just got set up.
Fire Tiller.com. Tiller as in Joe Tiller, head football coach at Purdue. The guy had one bad season, and now this indignity.
Fire Mike Davis.com.Another "fan" site, from a "supporter" of the Indiana Hoosiers basketball team.
Fire Dave Wannstedt.com. The owner of this site got his wish: Dave was fired as head coach of the Miami Dolphins. He's now at the University of Pittsburgh in the same role. The site domain name is for sale, and for just $500, a Pittsburgh Panther "fan" can take over this web site.

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Sunday, November 27, 2005

My fall road trip: The I-80 Church near Milford, Nebraska


Of course that is not what this church was called. For the many of you who've driven on I-80 in eastern Nebraska, this church is familiar to you. I thought it would be pretty easy to find out some of the history of the church, but I found nothing after numerous Google and Yahoo! searches.

If anyone knows anything about this former church, please leave a comment below. It's located near Milford, Nebraska, although the town of Ruby is also close by.

Thanks to WindyPundit, a Chicago area blogger who also photoblogs, for the link.


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Immigrant Justice Convention held in Chicago last weekend

The Bald Chick of the Freedom Folks attended the November 19 Immigration Justice Convention at Navy Pier. She found plenty of things to blog about, starting with this post here.

Congressman Luis Gutierrez was there, along with my rep in Washington, Jan Schakowsky.

BC writes:

Immigrants and their supporters gathered today at Chicago's Navy Pier. Organized by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR), the convention brought together people from a melting pot of ethnicities and backgrounds to cheer on immigration reform, judiciously substitute the word "undocumented" for "illegal," and repeatedly call for "justice" for all immigrants.

After a number of speakers had made their way to and from podium, I lost track of how many times I was greeted and addressed in Spanish. One speaker was introduced as "a German-American with a Mexican spirit." (???) Another speaker opened with a "buenos tardes" to the cheering crowd, made several statements about making our country a better place, then closed with "Viva Mexico!" Rather confusing to the untrained, (American) flag-waving patriot, I must confess. Just whose country does he want to make a better place?

Groups of students were trotted out. Some stepped forward to speak, including a couple who passionately lamented the way they were being denied the right to succeed in this country because they and their parents are undocumented. Rep. Janet Schakowsky announced that Sen. Dick Durbin reintroduced his Dream Act yesterday to address students in limbo because of their and their parents' immigration status.

Then there is this bit about Illnois' Democratic Governor, Rod Blagojevich:

The governor commented that...

Only in America could the fifth largest state have a governor with a name like Blagojevich." (Much audience laughter and applause.)"Only in America could the largest state have a governor with a name like Schwarzenegger." (Loud booing from the audience.)

What an idiotic (but nasty) statement. The nation's third largest state is New York, who's governor is George Pataki, by the way Rod. Pataki, like Schwarzenegger, is a Republican.

Bald Chick was not alone in documenting, from a conservative perspective, the Immigrant Justice Convention. I'm not sure who is behind this site, but it's a good one. I'm not even certain what the proper name of the site is. But I'm going to excerpt from it all the same.

How 'bout this frightening passage?

I think the absolute most disturbing comment came from a woman (yes....another bold "illegal Mexican Immigrant"), who actually made the statement in English first, then in Spanish:

"Hey......you know, half of the United States used to belong to Mexico.....I think it's about time we took it back!" (as the crowd cheers...)

Does this woman really want to be a citizen of the US? And were Blagojevich, Schakowsky, and Gutierrez in the room when the bile was poured?

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The American Thinker's Richard Baehr on Reform Judaism

Friend-of-the-blog Richard Baehr has an excellent article (a redundancy, I know) in the American Thinker here about the liberal bent of the Reform Judaism movement.

The article led Betsy's Page to remark that "reading the list of resolutions passed at their last convention reads a lot like the list of resolutions that the NEA regularly passes at its conventions."

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British professor weighs in on the Klocek case

Denis MacEoin of Newcastle University in England offers his take on Thomas Klocek's free speech struggle at DePaul.

Here's a viewpoint I've had in the back of my head, but not seen expressed before:

The ACLU has said not one word on the matter. The Association of American Professors has not lifted a finger. And the Muslim students have sent out an e-mail through DePaul, declaring a fatwa on Klocek for insulting Islam. His only hope of redress lies in taking the university to court, an action that has now been taken.

The rest of his write-up is here; MacEoin offers a good summary of Klocek's predicament as well as some other links to stories about the case, including, I'm pleased to say, a Free Republic reposting of something from Marathon Pundit.

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The Green Bay Packers and the Curse of the Packalope

Tee Bee over at Guide to Midwestern Culture has been keeping an eye on the story of the Packalope, whose distinctive headgear has been banned from Lambert, I mean Lambeau Field, because his antlers, according to Green Bay officials, fall under the "anything that can be used as a weapon" category."

The ban was announced in August. The Packalope, whose real name is Larry Primeau, has had a tough go of it recently. Visiting his web site, I learned Primeau's wife passed away last November.

The Green Bay Packers have had a terrible 2005. Does this have anything to do with the Packalope's symbolic beheading? Primeau became the Packalope in 1990. Below are the year-by-year records for the Green Bay Packers since then.

1990 6 10 0 4th NFC Central --
1991 4 12 0 4th NFC Central --
1992 9 7 0 2nd NFC Central --
1993 9 7 0 3rd NFC Central Lost Divisional Playoffs (Cowboys)
1994 9 7 0 2nd NFC Central Lost Divisional Playoffs (Cowboys)
1995 11 5 0 1st NFC Central Lost Conference Championship (Cowboys)
1996 13 3 0 1st NFC Central Won Super Bowl XXXI
1997 13 3 0 1st NFC Central Lost Super Bowl XXXII (Broncos)
1998 11 5 0 2nd NFC Central Lost Wild Card Playoffs (49ers)
1999 8 8 0 4th NFC Central --
2000 9 7 0 3rd NFC Central --
2001 12 4 0 2nd NFC Central Lost Divisional Playoffs (Rams)
2002 12 4 0 1st NFC North Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Falcons)
2003 10 6 0 1st NFC North Lost Divisional Playoffs (Eagles)
2004 10 6 0 1st NFC North Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Vikings)
*2005 2 8 0 4th NFC North --

Interesting. Since the ban, the Packers have been stinking up the NFL; they're in the basement of the weak NFC North Division. Coincidence? Maybe not.

The Chicago Cubs have the "Curse of the Billy Goat," brought on, it's alleged, by Cubs security's decision to throw William "Billy Goat" Sianis and his pet goat out of Wrigley Field during Game 4 of the 1945 World Series.

The Cubs haven't been back to the World Series since.

This afternoon, the Packers play the Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles are heavily favored.

Oh, I have my own Packalope story. In 2003, I ran in the Green Bay Marathon. It's a good race. Around the third mile, offering encouragement and giving "high fives" was the Packalope. I'm sure he wasn't being paid for that appearance, he was out there, I guess, because he's a decent, fun-loving guy who genuinely likes people.

The world needs more Packalopes.

About the Green Bay Marathon: Like all marathons, there was plenty of water and Gatorade at the finish line of the event. But this race also has beer and bratwursts awaiting the thirsty and hungry marathoners.

Only in Wisconsin.

UPDATE 7:00 PM: The Curse continues. The Eagles defeated the Packers today, 19-14. The Pack is assured of its first losing season since 1992.

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Saturday, November 26, 2005

My fall road trip: South Loup River in Buffalo County, Nebraska


Still on Nebraska State Route 2, the Sandhills Scenic Byway. A few days ago I posted a picture of the Loup River at sunset. The picture shows the South Loup River near the town of Ravenna in Buffalo County.


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Blogroll addition: DePaul GOP

Very good friend of the blog Derrick Wlodarz is working hard to make the DePaul Blue Demons a little less blue with his new web site, DePaul GOP.

The site is here. Good work, as always, Derrick!


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Multiple gay wedding ceremony busted in the United Arab Emirates

Well, attempting something like this in the Persian Gulf region takes a lot of guts.

My old pal, the Reverend Fred Phelps of the Westboro Baptist Church, surely will approve of the harshness of the penalties that may await the "brides and grooms" from these ceremonies.

From AP:

More than two dozen gay Arab men arrested at what police called a mass homosexual wedding could face government-ordered hormone treatments, five years in jail and a lashing, authorities said Saturday.

The Interior Ministry said police raided a hotel chalet earlier this month and arrested 22 men from the Emirates as they celebrated the wedding ceremony, one of a string of recent group arrests of homosexuals here.

The men are likely to be tried under Muslim law on charges related to adultery and prostitution, said Interior Ministry spokesman Issam Azouri.

Outward homosexual behavior is banned in the United Arab Emirates, and the gay group wedding has alarmed leaders of this once-isolated Muslim country as it grapples with a sweeping influx of Western residents and culture.

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John Kerry: Flip, flop, flip

The opening paragraph of this AP article by Liz Sidoti tells all we need to know about our old pal, John Kerry:

Sen. John Kerry initially voted in favor of a Republican-sponsored resolution calling on President Bush to explain his strategy for success in Iraq. Minutes later, the Democrat changed his vote.

It's nice that by being inconsistent, John Kerry remains consistent.


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Iran watch: Leader suggests charging Bush with war crimes

Iran is a problem that, short of a revolution, won't go away any time soon.

From AP:

Iran's hard-line president said Saturday the Bush administration should be tried on war crimes charges, and he denounced the West for pressuring Iran to curb its controversial nuclear program.


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Blogroll addition: Muhammad al-Harbi site

For those who don't know his story, the site is here.

Muhammad al-Harbi was a Saudi high school teacher who repeatedly denounced terrorism.

On what seem to be trumped up charges, al-Harbi has been sentenced to serve 3 years in prison, as well as a weekly dose public floggings for almost a year.

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My fall road trip: Sherman County, Nebraska


Sherman County Nebraska had over 9,000 residents in 1930; now is has a little over 3,000.

I took this photo near Hazard, NE on State Road 68. This house was probably occupied in 1930.

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Friday, November 25, 2005

Accused Black Panther-cop shooter ordered to be extradited back to the US

Hooray for Canada today. Joseph Pannell allegedly shot Chicago police officer Terrence Knox in 1969, leaving Knox paralyzed. Four years later, Pannell jumped bail, ending up in Canada.

He's been found, and barring a successful appeal, Pannell will be coming back home for the holidays.

This AP story has more details.

Today, the Black Panthers for the most part are portrayed by the mainstream media as a slightly more radical offshoot of the Civil Rights movement. But the Panthers were Marxists, and violence followed the group around. In fact the group's original name was The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense. The "Self-Defense" part of the name was later dropped.

Among the famous "alumni" of the Black Panthers include Mumia Abu-Jamal, Danny Glover, and Illinois Congressman Bobby Rush.

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Sheehan-palooza redux: Monument to Cindy unveiled in Crawford

Here's a woman who just won't go away. The next round of Iraqi elections are next month, I'm sure the Sheehan spin-machine will dismiss them as some sort of Bush-engineered gimmick.

As for the monument: Her whole movement is becoming a celebration of herself.

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Is golf next? NHL steroid problem alleged

This story does not surprise me one bit. Besides, the player had a whole season off to bulk up. From AP:

NHL players and executives denied allegations by World Anti-Doping Agency president Dick Pound that as many as a third of the league’s 700 players may take some form of performance-enhancing substances.

“I would respectfully suggest that Mr. Pound’s comments have absolutely no basis in fact,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told The Canadian Press on Thursday. “I find it troubling, to say the least, that he would find it necessary to comment on something he has absolutely no knowledge of.”

In an interview for a story published Friday, Pound told the London Free Press on Thursday that he spoke to league commissioner Gary Bettman and told him he thought there was widespread use of performance-enhancing substances in the NHL.


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Muhammad al-Harbi update

Found this on Roger L. Simon's site.

This is the third time I've blogged about the case of Saudi high school chemistry teacher, Mohammed al-Harbi.

A summary, from NewsMax:

A teacher in Saudi Arabia was sentenced to 40 months in jail and 750 lashes for discussing the Bible and praising Jews.

Secondary school teacher Mohammed al-Harbi, who will be flogged in public, was taken to court by his colleagues and students, according to the Saudi newspaper Al-Madina.

He was charged with promoting a "dubious ideology, mocking religion, saying the Jews were right, discussing the Gospel and preventing students from leaving class to wash for prayer,” the newspaper disclosed.

Last week a U.S. State Department report criticized Saudi Arabia for its religious intolerance, saying religious freedoms "are denied to all but those who adhere to the state-sanctioned version of Sunni Islam.”

More...
In Saudi Arabia the public practice of any religion other than Islam is forbidden, only Muslims can be Saudi citizens and non-Muslims cannot enter Mecca, Islam’s holy city.

A site supporting al-Harbi is up, you can find the site here.

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My fall road trip: Nebraska's Route 2 in Custer County


Today is a big driving day for a lot of folks, so I figured today is a good day to blog about highways and traveling.

Nebraska has several designated Scenic Byways. I'm on Nebraska's Route 2, dubbed the Sandhills Scenic Byway, which according to Nebraska's state tourism site, has been named as "one of the 10 most scenic routes in the nation."

Although, where this picture was taken, I'm east of the Sand Hills region. This part of Nebraska is the Dissected Till Plains area of the state.

Although the Sand Hills are in my rear view mirror, I did manage to find plenty of opportunities to take great photographs.

She's back in Crawford

Yes, we all know who "she" is. From AP.


Thursday, November 24, 2005

Happy 80th Birthday William F. Buckley!

There are many claimers to the title of "Father of Modern Conservatism"; Bill Buckley's claim is the strongest. It's a big month for Buckley, the magazine he founded, National Review, turned 50 earlier this month.

And Mr. Buckley celebrates his 80th birthday today. This George Will column nicely sums up this great man's career.


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Happy Thanksgiving America!


That's Plymouth Rock in the photo.

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My fall road trip: Loup River sunset


The Loup River drains much of Nebraska's Sand Hills region. This picture was taken in Blaine County, another one of those under-one-thousand residents counties in the Cornhusker State.

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Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Victor Davis Hanson: The Dems' Iraq crying game

Well, according to the always insightful VDH, even the Democrats suspect we're doing better than expected in Iraq. From his Wednesday NRO article:

First, are the metrics of this war in the terrorists’ or our favor? Are the Iraqi security forces growing or shrinking? Are elections postponed or on schedule? Are Europe, Jordan, Lebanon, and others more or less sympathetic to a war against Islamic terrorism in Iraq? Are bin Laden, Zawahiri, and Zarqawi more or less popular or secure after we removed Saddam? Is al Qaeda in a strengthened or weakened position? Is the Arab world more or less receptive to democracy in the Gulf, Egypt, Lebanon, and the West Bank? And is the United States more or less vulnerable to a terrorist attack as we go into our fifth year since September 11?

I ask those questions in all sincerity since the conventional wisdom — compared to the true wisdom and compassion of those valiantly fighting the terrorists under the most impossible of conditions — is that we are losing in Iraq, our enemies are emboldened, and the Arab world has turned against us. But if we forget the banality of New York Times columnists, the admonitions of NPR experts, and the daily rants of a Barbara Boxer, Nancy Pelosi, Ted Kennedy, or Al Gore, more sober and street-smart Democrats are in fact not so sure of these answers.

So these wiser ones wait and hedge their wagers. They give full rein to the usefully idiotic and irresponsible in their midst, but make no move yet to undo what thousands of brave American soldiers have accomplished in Iraq.

What exactly is that? Despite acrimony at home, the politics of two national elections and a third on the horizon, and the slander of war crimes and incompetence, those on the battlefield of Iraq have almost pulled off the unthinkable — the restructuring of the politics of the Middle East in less than three years.

And for now that is still a strong hand to bet against.


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Anti-military professor resigns from New Jersey community college

Freedom Folks first tipped me off to this story, their original post is here.

Excerpted from their blog:

Professor John Daly e-mailed her back. Read the whole story and the professor's e-mail in its entirety here.

My note...it's moved to the bottom of the page.)

Referring to Rebecca's poster advertising the event, the professor wrote...

"Your literature and signs in the entrance lobby look like fascist propaganda and is extremely offensive."

He rambles on for a while about the evils of capitalism, the war in Iraq, Hurricane Katrina, Exxon and racism, then offers this threat...

"I will continue to expose your right-wing, anti-people politics until groups like your won't dare show their face on a college campus."

And, as if that wasn't bad enough, the professor finishes up with this gem of a suggestion...

"Real freedom will come when soldiers in Iraq turn their guns on their superiors and fight for just causes and for people's needs..."

Well, Daly's days at Warren Community College have seen their sunset. He resigned today, as this powderpuff article from NJ.com explains.

Buh-bye!

Hat tip to Brainster.

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Welcome Eric Zorn readers!

As I noted yesterday, Marathon Pundit was asked by the Chicago Tribune's Eric Zorn to participate in his regular Month in Review feature on his Tribune blog, Change of Subject. Eric's November month in review is here.

Follow up on Matt Barber: Conservative online journalist fired by Allstate

I've blogged about this story a few times. Matt Barber is a Chicago area resident who seems to have been fired--Allstate denies it--because of something we wrote.

From the Daily Herald:

To insurance giant Allstate Corp., former employee J. Matt Barber is simply “one guy disputing his termination.”

But to same-sex marriage opponents, the circumstances behind Barber’s dismissal from the Northbrook-based company have made him a 36-year-old cause celebre.

Barber, a born-again Christian, says he was fired for writing an online article defending marriage and criticizing homosexuality. The Villa Park resident later filed a federal lawsuit alleging that Allstate’s action constituted discrimination on the basis of religion.

“This is about free speech,” said Barber, a non-practicing attorney. “It’s about the chilling effect that Allstate’s actions have on individual rights. How much control does a corporation have over their employees’ private activities?”

An Allstate representative, however, says Barber was using company resources on company time to dabble as an online conservative columnist.

Matt Barber is gaining the support of conservative groups and even gubernatorial candidate Jim Oberweis. who has hired Barber to coordinate his campaign in DuPage County.

“No employee of Allstate has ever been terminated for expressing their personal views using their own equipment on their own time,” spokesman Michael Trevino said.

Some conservative groups aren’t buying that explanation. They have been using newsletters and the Internet to spread Barber’s story and urge Allstate customers to cancel their policies.

“Matt’s become the symbol for politically correct repression,” said Peter LaBarbera, executive director of the Glen Ellyn-based Illinois Family Institute. “He lost his job for just giving his thoughts

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Tuesday, November 22, 2005

My fall road trip: Nebraska National Forest


I didn't make it in time to take decent photos of the Nebraska National Forest to get some decent photos, as you can tell by this picture, dusk had arrived.

The junction of US Route 83 and Nebraska Route 2 is a few miles east of Thedford, in Thomas County. Thomas is one of the rarities among US counties: It has fewer that 1,000 residents. Many of the counties in the Nebraska Sand Hills also fall below the four-digit threshold.

Yes, there really is a national forest among the Sand Hills. The mostly Ponderosa Pine forest is the largest hand planted forest in the world. When designated by Theodore Roosevelt, the Nebraska National Forest had no virtually no trees.

TR was a unique president. And a great one.

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My fall road trip: Valentine National Wildlife Refuge


One more Sand Hills post. This lake is located within the Valentine National Wildlife Refuge. For the hunters out there, I discovered that this is the one place in the country where both prairie chickens and sharp-tailed grouse can be hunted. My brother the hunter was impressed.

More on the Sand Hills from this National Geographic Wild World site.


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Pajamas Media: I'm in


Well, I made a similar pronouncement a week ago regarding Open Source Media. Since then Open Source Media morphed into OSM. Now it's Pajamas Media, which was its original name, as Roger L. Simon explains in this post here.

As far the kind of pajamas I like, well they're pictured above.

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Blogroll additions from around the world

I'm getting ready for additional visitors to this blog, with the Pajamas Media (formerly Open Source Media) launch coming soon. I'm cleaning up the Blogroll, getting rid of dead boards, finally alphabetizing it. I had the Illinois blogs on the bottom of the page. But I've decided to put them all together, the same way Billy Jack wanted it.

I'd like to highlight three recent blogroll additions. It's a great honor that a soldier from US Central Command sent me an e-mail asking that I add CentCom to the blogroll. It's here.

The other two blogs tie in to the Thomas Klocek-DePaul free speech battle.

Dr. Steven Plaut is a professor in Israel; he's written several books and contributes regularly to FrontPage Magazine. His blog is here.

Here is an excerpt of his most recent entry:

Subject: Hebron Arabs Sick of "Anarchists"

I am translating parts of the article that appears at
http://www.inn.co.il/news.php?id=130800 (in Hebrew on web site)

The Arabs of Hebron are Sick of Anarchists

In recent days officials of the "Palestinian Authority" have coordinated with the Jewish community of Hebron attempt to bring to an end the activities of leftist extremist "anarchist" activists from all around the world who have congregated in order to assist the Israeli Far Left in its activism, supposedly on behalf of the Arabs of Hebron.

The collaboration began due to the arrival of the "anarchists" in the city of Hebron. Local Arabs in Hebron claim that the same anarchists who supposedly are trying to assist them are in fact behaving in a provocative and offensive manner, in violation of the moral and religious norms and standards of respect upheld by local Hebron Arabs, and especially undermine the morals of local youths.

Dr. Plaut also tipped me off to this essay from Norman Finkelstein's web site--here the Holocaust-dismissing write talks about Mother Finkelstein.

Finally, our gaze heads down to Oz, where John Ray has a new blog, Australian Politics. John helped spread the word there about Klocek's struggles with DePaul University.

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Coming soon: Marathon Pundit's participation in the Chicago Tribune's Eric Zorn's Month in Review

Eric Zorn, who I agree with on some things but not others, is one mainstream media reporter who "gets" the new media. I'll be part of a monthly feature of his, Month in Review. Eric asks Illinois bloggers to contribute their opionions on what they think are important stories (or over-reported stories) each month, with the emphasis on Illinois.

Here is Eric's blog, Change of Subject.

My contributions follow this post.

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Most significant story of the month

This posting is part of Eric Zorn's November Month in Review:

The war in Iraq. Not just the war itself, but also the controversy at home; Should we stay? Should we go? November saw two funerals for soldiers from Illinois who were killed in action over there.

Winner of the month

This posting is part of Eric Zorn's November Month in Review:

Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. The Hired Truck Scandal hasn't been forgotten. But Daley had a good month. Legal obstacles to the O'Hare expansion have been cleared away--at least for now. And the federal government just kicked in over $300 million for the O'Hare project. The mayor's recent call for year-round schooling--which won't see the light of day for years, if ever--still puts Daley on the side of improving education--always a good spot for a politician to be in.

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Loser of the month

This posting is part of Eric Zorn's November Month in Review:

Governor Rod Blagojevich. Scandals. Subpoenas. A possible primary challenge next year from Edwin Eisendrath.

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Most over-reported story

This posting is part of Eric Zorn's November Month in Review:

Fitzmas. The continuing infatuation among the Internet and mainstream media over US Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald, particularly for his role in the "Plamegate" scandal. The phenomenon has been dubbed "Fitzmas," (as in Christmas). Fitzgerald got a mention in People Magazine's "Sexiest Man Alive" issue, as a "Brainy Guy." Fitzgerald himself is uncomfortable with that distinction--as well as-- would guess, the whole Fitzmas craze.

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Most under-reported story

This posting is part of Eric Zorn's November Month in Review:

The financial mess within Cook County Government. The Cook County Forest Preserve District is seeking an 8.5% property tax increase. Other county taxes may go up as well. The patronage-driven hiring practices of the county continue to raise eyebrows. Stroger is up for re-election next year--two Democrats and a Republican plan to run against him.

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The story to watch next month

This posting is part of Eric Zorn's November Month in Review:

The fallout from the Anthony Porter civil suit against the City of Chicago. Porter sued the city for wrongful arrest, a jury ruled in favor of Chicago earlier this month. Porter was convicted of double-murder--he was just two days away from being executed for that crime. A Northwestern University professor and some of his students uncovered evidence that delayed that execution. Based on that information, Governor George Ryan later pardoned Porter. A lawyer hired by the city for the civil suit insists Porter is the murderer. Porter's attorney, James Montgomery, says a defamation suit because of that remark is "something to consider."


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"Dirty Bomber" Jose Padilla indicted

Chicago's contribution to Islamic terrorism, Jose Padilla, was indicted this morning.

The onetime resident of the Northwest Side Logan Square neighborhood and former member of the Latin Kings street gang, has been held as an "enemy combatant" for his alleged role in acquiring a radioactive "dirty bomb" to be detonated in the United States.

This AP story has more details.

Update 6:20PM: Michelle Malkin has more deatils here.

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Britain's Daily Mirror: Bush wanted to bomb al-Jazeera

Yes, that's what it says here.

President Bush planned to bomb Arab TV station al-Jazeera in friendly Qatar, a "Top Secret" No 10 memo reveals.

But he was talked out of it at a White House summit by Tony Blair, who said it would provoke a worldwide backlash.

A source said: "There's no doubt what Bush wanted, and no doubt Blair didn't want him to do it." Al-Jazeera is accused by the US of fuelling the Iraqi insurgency.

The attack would have led to a massacre of innocents on the territory of a key ally, enraged the Middle East and almost certainly have sparked bloody retaliation.

A source said last night: "The memo is explosive and hugely damaging to Bush.

"He made clear he wanted to bomb al-Jazeera in Qatar and elsewhere. Blair replied that would cause a big problem.

I wouldn't take this report too seriously, based on the source. The Daily Mirror hired Saddam appeaser Peter Arnett shortly after he was fired by MSNBC. And the Mirror is the same which that two days after Election Day 2004, greeted its readers with the headline: "How can 59,054,087 be so DUMB?"

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My fall road trip: Still in Cherry County, Nebraska


...and heading home. Yes, the Sandhills of Nebraska consist of sand. How did that sand get there?

From Bob Dexter in 2003 for the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:

The Sandhills have their roots in an inland sea that covered much of the United States 60 million years ago. When the continent pushed up, river systems ran down, carrying a thick layer of sand across the plains. After the last glaciers rumbled through about 10,000 years ago, the sand blew into a desert of undulating dunes. Over time, grass gained a foothold, holding the dunes in place.

The Sandhills aren't fertile country. It takes a massive amount of land to make a functional ranch, and many of them are measured in square miles instead of acres. There are more cows than people in the Sandhills. (Only 1.1 humans, on average, occupy each square mile in Cherry County, which is substantially larger than Connecticut.) But the people you find are usually happy for company.

Tomorrow: Leaving Cherry County.

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Monday, November 21, 2005

Hollinger to lose three well-known board members

Don't look for these three famous men to put their Hollinger stint on their resumes.

From AP:

Hollinger International Inc., a newspaper publisher formerly run by fallen media tycoon Conrad Black, announced Monday it will lose three well-known members of its board of directors.

Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former Illinois Gov. Jim Thompson and former Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard N. Perle are among six board members who won't seek re-election at the annual shareholders meeting in January, according to a company statement.

The announcement comes less than a week after federal prosecutors indicted Black, the company's former chairman and CEO, on charges that he siphoned millions of dollars from Hollinger. The Chicago-based company publishes the Chicago Sun-Times, community newspapers in the Chicago area and a few small publications in Canada. It sold the Jerusalem Post and The Daily Telegraph of London in 2004.

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Cheney, Rumsfeld back current Iraq policy

In recent comments, both Vice President Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld don't see the need to change course in Iraq. Congressman John Murtha has not swayed their opionions.

From AP:

Vice President Dick Cheney on Monday said he strongly disagrees with a battle-tested congressman who advocates quickly pulling all U.S. troops from Iraq, calling such a proposal "a dangerous illusion."

But Cheney stopped short of joining those Republicans who have questioned the patriotism and courage of Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., calling him "a good man, a Marine, a patriot." Cheney's subdued comments about Murtha followed those of President Bush and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.

Another phony vet uncovered, a suburban alderman

This time it's in Marengo, IL.

From the Northwest Herald:

Community members and veterans expressed surprise and outrage over alderman Werner "Jack" Genot's confession that his war record was a figment of his imagination.

Prompted by mounting questions over his service record and factual errors in his accounts, Genot confessed in Sunday's paper that he concocted his well-known story that he was a Marine veteran of the Chosin Reservoir battle during the Korean War and spent more than 10 months as a prisoner of war.

"I'm just like everyone else in town. It shocked everybody," said Eugene Boxleitner, adjutant of American Legion Post 192, where Genot has been a member for 28 years.

Genot had been known for decades as a battle-hardened veteran. He was elected as a 4th ward alderman in 2003, and has been the face of the county's Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots for 21 years.

He spoke regularly at veterans events and told his tale to schoolchildren and area media.

Marine Corps League State Commandant Mike Ruffner, formerly commandant of the McHenry County chapter, was not impressed with Genot's confession. He said Genot sounded like he was sorry that he got caught.

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Holocaust denier/minimizer references DePaul's Norman Finkelstein

Here is John Kaminski's web site. He's "out there." Very "out there."

Kaminski writes in the Official Wire:
As trenchant Jewish critic Norman Finkelstein has pointed out, the Jewish community has made a mockery of decency by shoving this holocaust worship down the throats of everyone else.

Here's how that Kaminski article starts out:

One by one, those who oppose the manipulated version Jewish version of history are forcibly being removed from society, and silenced because their views conflict with the program of mind-contolled slavery that has been meticulously crafted by the people who control the world who control the money.

Yes, DePaul is the same school that fired pro-Israel professor Thomas Klocek for defending the Jewish state in front of some Muslim students, as this Steven Plaut article explains.

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Update of the case of the Saudi teacher sentenced to three years in prison and public lashings

Last week I blogged about the sad situation of Saudi high school teacher Muhammad Al-Harbi, who was sentenced to three years in prison as well as a weekly dose of public lashings.

From the November 14 Arab News:

The controversial case of Muhammad Al-Harbi, a Saudi high school teacher accused of mocking religion, came to a surprising end on Saturday. Al-Harbi was sentenced to three years in prison and 750 lashes--50 lashes per week for 15 weeks. The lashes are to be given in the public market in the town of Al-Bikeriya in Al-Qassim.

A number of 12th Grade students, along with some teachers from the same school, filed a lawsuit a year-and-a-half ago against Al-Harbi. He was accused of mocking Islam, favoring Jews and Christians, preventing students from performing ablutions. He was also charged with studying witchcraft. At the time, he was a chemistry teacher at Al-Fowailiq High School in the town of Ein Al-Juwa in Al-Qassim.

Today's Arab News has an update, and there is a bit of good news: There are some people in Saudi Arabia who possess common sense.

Here's an excerpt from that article:

The case of Mohammad Al-Harbi, the high school teacher charged with mocking religion and sentenced to three years in prison and 750 lashes, has not attracted attention only in the local press. Both Saudi columnists and the Saudi street in general strongly attacked what is widely seen as a harsh and unjust sentence.

The case has been a prime topic on Saudi Internet forums with Saudis of both sexes from all over the country joining in the discussions. The majority showed deep concern, not simply for Al-Harbi but also for other important factors that have been raised as a result of the case's publicity.

Many Saudis asked about the efficiency and fairness of the Saudi legal system; others severely criticized the absence of the Ministry of Education's participation in a case that not only affects a teacher's career but also affects the future of Saudi students who are apparently being taught by some teachers who sympathize with terrorists.

Well, in a cruel manner, the Saudi legal system seems pretty efficient.

Oh, in yesterday's Arab News, this article appeared: Terrorism Will Be Put to an End Within Two Years: Crown Prince.

Since there appears to be at least some Saudi teachers who "sympathize with terrorists," I don't expect the Saudi crown prince's prophecy to be fulfilled. In that article, there is nothing mentioned about Saudi Arabia reining in those Islamic "charities" that have funded so much terrorism the last twenty years.

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My fall road trip, driving south in Nebraska


I took this picture about 5:00 pm on a Wednesday. There is no rush hour south of Valentine on U.S. Route 83 in Nebraska's Sand Hills.

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Sunday, November 20, 2005

Phelps cult headed to Morris, IL Monday

Looks who is coming back to Illinois: Fred Phelps and his Westboro Baptist Church.

On Monday, Nov. 21 at 10am, Fred and his "church" will picket to funeral of Army Sgt. Jesse A. Terando in Morris. Here is the vile flier.

Morris is about 80 miles west of Chicago.

Phelps, as I've noted many times before, is operating under that delusion that God is punishing America--and will continue to do so--because of our toleration of Gay rights.

Residents of Morris can expect clowns like this guy to pollute their town Monday.

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Milblogger's dilemna: Freedom of speech isn't free when vandals and hackers trash a pro-troop blog

Two Illinois bloggers, Mr. Right of In the Right Place and Jake at Freedom Folks alerted me to the plight of Mili-blogger A Female Soldier 2.

Anti-war hackers and trolls have bombarded her site.

This is what A Female Soldier 2 has to say, in an excerpt:

I wish to express my congratulations to the hackers, vandals, and anti-war visitors who successfully blocked my ability to post any further tributes to the soldiers. I am sure you find victory in preventing myself and others from having a place to read and pay our respects to the Fallen Female Soldiers, and my brother’s in arms, the brave soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division. I can only imagine your satisfaction in justifying the disgrace of men and women who died for this country. You may not feel it was justified, but they gave their lives believing in what they were doing. Apparently freedom of speech is merely a phrase to you, not something you believe, in unless it applies to you. If you do not share the person’s view you justify your actions in removing the ability for them to express their opinions. In doing so, you have only displayed to me that your cause is unjust, and strengthen my resolve and beliefs in what we are doing here. You have dishonored those who did believe in something, and toke away my right to mourn their memories. These were men and women who actually took a stand in what they believed in, sacrificed their time with their families, and put themselves in danger simply because they believed in something. So to support your beliefs what have you done? Oh, that is right, you took away my freedom to pay tribute and mourn my fellow soldiers.

Not everyone agrees with our nation's Iraq policy. But in the pursuit of their version of "free speech," the hackers and trolls should hold their heads in shame.

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Saturday, November 19, 2005

Cong. Jan Schakowsky: Just full of it

Marathon Pundit's rep in Congress is Jan Schakowsky of Evanston, IL. She's a hard-left liberal, and here once again is the write-up on Jan from FrontPage Magazine's Discover the Network.

On Thursday, this press release came out of Schakowsky's Washington office:

SCHAKOWSKY COMMENDS CONGRESSMAN MURTHA FOR HIS CALL TO WITHDRAW AMERICAN TROOPS FROM IRAQ

WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Representative Jan Schakowsky, a founding member of the Out-of-Iraq Caucus, today released a statement commending Congressman John Murtha's call for the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq.

Representative Schakowsky's full statement is below:

"Today, Congressman John Murtha, a decorated war veteran and national leader on defense, called for the immediate withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. Congressman Murtha's principled stand is a breakthrough moment in the effort to bring our troops home. A majority of Democrats in the House voted against this disastrous war, but now, those who supported it agree that the situation on the ground is untenable, that the Administration has mishandled the war, and that our troops deserve better than to be left in Iraq indefinitely."

"Last month, we lost our 2,000th American soldier in Iraq. The situation is getting worse and less stable. The Bush administration has left our men and women in harm's way with no exit strategy and no way out. It is time to bring them home."

"I commend Congressman Murtha for his leadership."

Well, last night Jan had her biq chance on the floor of the House to vote to bring our troops home from Iraq. And you know what? She voted to keep the troops there.

Murtha, Jan's new hero, voted the same way. Murtha says he wants the troops to leave Iraq, but in six months.

Schakowsky wanted the troops to leave Iraq after the January elections there. From Buzzflash, quoting Jan:

"A political process has begun, admittedly fragile, and it is time for the United States to leave. Once the January 30 elections are concluded, the new Iraqi government takes responsibility for forging its own path toward stability and democracy. The U.S. should provide financial and material assistance for that effort and encourage the international community to help."

Just full of it.

Oh, Jan is by no measure a screaming lib backbencher. She's in contention to become vice chair of the house caucus, the Democrats' fourth-ranking member in the lower chamber.

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Chief Illiniwek's last stand?

The Illinois-Northwestern game is on TV now. Halftime is over, and Chief Illiniwek's last gridiron dance may have taken place a few minutes ago. The "braintrust" at the NCAA has ruled that the Fighting Illini nickname is okay for the University of Illinois to use--but the Indianhead logo and the Chief Illiniwek mascot have to go.

As with every Big 10 football game this weekend--Ohio State-Michigan being the exception--this one is played for a trophy. The winner of today's Illinois-Northwestern game gets to take home the Sweet Sioux Tomahawk trophy, which is pictured above, next to the Chief.

(But keep that quiet, before the NCAA bans it.)

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Codepink planning group charter trip to Cuba next month

No, it's not a one-way trip. The beloved-by-the-mainstream-media group of left-wing loons is planning a getaway to Cuba.

From their web site:

Cuba is one of the most beautiful and fascinating countries on Earth—and George Bush says you can’t go there. Well, we’re going anyway, and we invite you to join us!

This New Year’s CODEPINK will be organizing a large group of fun-loving and freedom-loving Americans to break George Bush’s ban on travel to Cuba. Join co-founders Medea Benjamin and Jodie Evans, together with other prominent activists from around the country, as we visit with farmers at their co-ops, doctors at their family clinics, dancers at the National Folklore Group, and young people at the ballpark. Don’t miss this historic chance to dance salsa, drink mojitos, and visit beautiful beaches—all while defending our constitutional rights!!!

The federal restrictions barring travel to Cuba are not only counterproductive and outmoded in this post-Cold War context, but also a violation of our constitutional freedom to travel.

Interesting but incorrect viewpoints. US restraints on travel to Cuba go back to the final days of the Eisenhower administration. I'm not aware of any clause in the constitution granting the right of Americans to travel to hostile nations.

Where will the Codepinkos be staying? Most of the hotels catering to tourists in Cuba are off-limits to Cubans--unless they work there. Read more about this irony in this Salon article. Yes that's right. Salon.

Oh, what about the travel rights of Cubans? They don't exist.

Man, are these Codepink people dense.

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Friday, November 18, 2005

The three Dems who voted for the Iraq pullout

Courtsy of the House of Representatives web site:

Jose Serrano, D-NY (Bronx)
Cynthia McKinney, D-GA (Atlanta) No surprise, there.
Robert Wexler, D-FL (Palm Beach and Broward counties) No surprise there, either.

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Congress votes against Iraq troop pullout, 403-3

Yeah, there was a lot of posturing on both sides, but a vote is a vote As I type this--the story is still breaking--I don't know who the three who voted against the bill are. I'll post it as soon as I found out who they are.

From AP:

"We want to make sure that we support our troops that are fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. We will not retreat," Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., said as the GOP leadership pushed the issue to a vote over the protest of Democrats.

Sounds good to me.

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My fall road trip: Back in Nebraska


What'a a series of Nebraska photos without a windmill shot? In Cherry County.

Thanks to "the Bald Chick" with Freedom Folks for the compliment about my Nebraka pictures.

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More Al-Zarqawi: He wants to chop Jordan king's head off

Man...and he seemed so nice in my previous post. From AP:

An audiotape in the name of al-Qaida in Iraq threatened on Friday to chop off King Abdullah II's head and bomb more hotels and tourist sites.

Al-Zarqawi: Bombers didn't target wedding

Well, it's too late for the victims of the bombing.

From AP:

An audiotape purportedly from the head of al-Qaida in Iraq said Friday the group's suicide bombers did not intend to bomb a Jordanian wedding party at an Amman hotel last week, killing about 30 people.

The speaker on the tape, identified as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, said the bomber who detonated his explosives in the Radisson SAS hotel on Nov. 9 was targeting a hall where he claimed Israeli and American intelligence officials were meeting.

That bomb caused part of the roof to fall in the wedding hall.

Al-Zarqawi accused the Jordanian government of hiding casualties among Israeli and American intelligence agents, and he insisted al-Qaida in Iraq was not targeting fellow Muslims.

"We want to assure you that ... you are more beloved to us than ourselves," al-Zarqawi said, addressing Jordanians.

Earlier today in Iraq, two Shiite mosques were bombed, killing at least 74 people. Although there has been no claim of responsibility, al-Qaida in Iraq must be the chief suspect.

If they were behind this latest bombing, then I those Shiites are "less beloved to us than ourselves."

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Open Source Media, fomerly Pajamas: I'm in

Just got my (invisible) tracking meter last night. For more on Open Source Media, click here.

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Another (lack of) free speech story on a college campus

This time it's Warren Community College in Washington, New Jersey. "The Bald Chick" at Freedom Folks has the story of English professor John Daly:

Here's an excerpt of an e-mail Daly sent to student Rebecca Beach.

"I will continue to expose your right-wing, anti-people politics until groups like your won't dare show their face on a college campus."

In the private sector, Rebecca Beach would be called a "paying customer." Jerks like Professor Daly wouldn't last a week working at a restaurant or shoe store.

What got Daly so upset? Rebecca sent an e-mail to the Warren faculty announcing a campus visit of Lt. Colonel Scott Rutter.

Luckily for Ms. Beach (and other students to the right of Noam Chomsky), Warren Community College is a taxpayer funded institution, so Professor Daly is feeling some pressure from the administration there.

From the front page of Warren Community College's web site:

Warren County Community College is a "students first" college where learning without limits is always the main goal. We maintain a mission of building a community of learners through accessible, quality learning opportunities designed to meet personal aspirations for all students.

It has been brought to the administration's attention that a part-time instructor, Mr. John Daly, speaking for himself and using his personal email, sent a message to a student representing the Young Americans for Freedom in response to a personal email from her requesting him to announce an upcoming event on the campus. Mr Daly responded to her alone, and expressed his own personal views regarding his beliefs about this group.

The viewpoints of this professor in no way depict the views of Warren County Community College, its administration, or the Board of Trustees. The College does however support the constitution, the first amendment, and the right to free speech.

Additionally, Mr. Daly's message was sent as a one-to-one message, via e-mail, to one person, and not to the college community. Finally, the College is viewing this message as a personnel issue and will be addressing it according to the policies and procedures of the College.

Dr. Austin, college president stated, "I firmly believe every employee and student has first amendment rights, no matter how repugnant I personally find Mr. Daly's statements. Our attorneys have advised us of our obligation to follow state laws, board policies, and college due process in regards to any personnel matter. We are now investigating this matter further."

Thank God for the new media. Ten years ago, there would've been no repercussions for Professor Daly.

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My fall road trip: South Dakota


I'm 9 miles north of Valentine, Nebraska. Up front of course is the South Dakota state line. Also at this point, the Rosebud Indian Reservation starts. Time to turn around and go home.

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Merry Fitzmas: Patrick Fitzgerald one of People Magazine's Sexiest Men Alive--Sexy prosecutor announces Conrad Black indictment

By all accounts, Patrick Fitzgerald works about 90 hours a week. Doesn't sound too "sexy" to me, but US Atty Patrick Fitzgerald, best known for his role in Plamegate, has gotten the notice of People Magazine--according to NBC 5 Chicago.

He's under the heading of "Smart Guys."

Oh, today, in surely a sexy moment, Fitzgerald's office announced the indictment of Conrad Black, the former head of newspaper giant Hollinger International on various financial fraud charges.

Hollinger used to own the Jerusalem Post, London Telegraph, and Canada's National Post. (Three of my favorite publications, I'd like to add.) Now, the Chicago Sun-Times is the last major publication in the Hollinger portfolio.

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Thursday, November 17, 2005

George Ryan trial update: He lashes out in court at ex-Sen. Phil Gramm

I've been keeping an eye on the trial of ex-Governor George Ryan, R-IL, but there's not been too much to report, especially to those visitors who live outside Illinois.

Today was much different. Former Texas Senator Phil Gramm testified for the prosecution at Ryan's trial. Gramm ran for president in 1996--his campaign never caught on. George Ryan was the secretary of state in Illinois back then (for those not from Illinois, it means he was the DMV guy), and was an early endorser of Gramm. (Most of the state's big shot Republicans lined up behind the eventual GOP nominee, Bob Dole.)

From Mike Flannery of CBS 2 Chicago:

In a stunner, former Gov. George Ryan spoke out in the middle of his corruption trial, breaking his silence and lashing out at an important witness, former U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm.

CBS 2 Political Editor Mike Flannery reports former Texas Sen. Phil Gramm’s little noticed 1996 campaign for president took center stage Thursday. On the witness stand but out of the hearing of the jury, Gramm suggested that Ryan’s taking of thousands in consulting fees for the campaign after endorsing him for president was a form of prostitution.

Ryan was furious.

“I’m angry about some of the statements that were made today by former U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm outside the presence of the jury. Mr. Gramm referred to me as a prostitute, and I really feel I absolutely have to respond to that,” Ryan said.

“I worked very hard for Phil Gramm. I raised money for him, I got delegates for him put on the ballot to see if he could win in the primary. I was paid about $11,000 for that and as a consulting fee, and I earned every penny of it,” he added.

“Mr. Gramm admitted in court today that the consulting fee had nothing to do with my decision to support him. If Senator Gramm wants to use the word prostitute perhaps he should look within,” Ryan said.

Back when Gramm was an obscure candidate for president, Ryan endorsed him, becoming Gramm's Illinois chairman. Ryan gave himself, his family and top deputies what his lawyers call legitimate campaign consulting contracts.

Prosecutors called it $30,000 worth of extortion.

More...

With the jury out of the courtroom, Gramm at one point declared:

"It's the difference between love and prostitution...you're looking for evidence of support not looking to buy support...you don't pay people to be your friends."

Ouch!

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The media and a professor told us Anthony Porter was framed, a Chicago jury disagreed

The Anthony Porter case dominated local news here for weeks, and its effect was felt in early 2003, when departing Governor George Ryan emptied Illinois' death row.

Yesterday, a jury in Chicago ruled against Porter, stating the City of Chicago did not act in a malicious matter when they investigated the double murder Porter was convicted of in 1982.

Six years ago, two days before Porter was to be executed for that crime, a Northwestern journalism professor, David Protess, and some of his students located a Milwaukee man who confessed to the murders.

That man has since recanted.

Hmmm...

What gives? The media told us endlessly that Anthony Porter was framed. I can't count the times I saw that video clip that showed Northwestern's David Protess
jumping into Porter's arms. Now he can't even get a jury to back
him.

Must be more to this story....

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Jerry Lewis heckled by protesters in wheelchairs

From CBS 2 Chicago:

A noisy protest Wednesday night cut short a Chicago appearance by entertainment legend Jerry Lewis.

Lewis was at the Chicago Library to promote his new book, "Dean and Me - A Love Story."

The auditorium was packed when disability activists in wheelchairs began heckling Lewis.

Lewis has held telethons to fund research to find cures for people with muscular dystrophy. But members of a group called Jerry's Orphans accused him of portraying the disabled as people to be pitied.

Lewis yelled at them to get out and stormed off the stage.

And if the money Lewis raises finds a cure for muscular dystrophy? Then what?

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Muslim "Honor Killings" article in Chicago Tribune

Some pretty nasty stuff on the front page of the Chicago Tribune about two women in Europe, one of Kurdish ancestry, the other of Turkish, who were brutally murdered by a family member for "disgracing" the family honor.

Free registration is required from the Chicago Tribune, the article is here.

Here's a chilling excerpt:

The idea of honor is in our cultural backyard. Ethnically and culturally, we believe it," said Mohammed Ahmed, a white-haired man who said he was a peshmerga--a fearsome mountain-fighter--with Yones before they immigrated in 1990.

"Even in court, the father insisted that he was right and that he did the right thing -- and that he'd do it again.

"I mean, I know it's a crime. We all know he's a killer," Ahmed said. "But he was very proud, and what he did . . . well, how could he accept his daughter's behavior?"

The women undoubtedly came from Muslim families, but you if your sole education on "honor killings" comes from this Tribune article, you won't know that. The Trib article is a long one-=the word "Muslim" is not used, "Islamic" is used once, and that came from a quote from a German school principal.

Yes, I'm quite aware that there is nothing in the Koran or Hadith justifying "honor killings." But there is quite lot in those texts about subjugation of women. So yes, in my opinion, Islam definitely figures into the "root causes" of "honor killings."

I'm glad the Chicago Tribune ran the article. But the Trib has to stop taking editorial advice from CAIR.

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Wednesday, November 16, 2005

My fall road trip: Nebraska's Niobrara River


Who said Nebraska isn't scenic? Well Backpacker Magazine named the Niobrara one of the Top 10 canoeing rivers in the nation. I took this picture just south of Valentine, known as Nebraska's Heart City.

Need to hear more? Well, in 2000, National Geographic Magazine placed the Niobrara in its Adventure 100.

The National Park Service designated 76 miles of the Niobrara as a Wild and Scenic River.

From the Niobrara National Scenic River web site:

The Scenic River preserves a superb example of a Great Plains river and protects a unique ecological crossroads where six distinct ecosystems and their associated flora and fauna mix, some at or beyond their normal geographic limit.

Those are Ponderosa Pines along the river banks in that picture. To me, that means "the West." And Valentine, NE, and the part of Niobrara where I took this photo, is just west of the 100th Meridian: the traditional border between east and west in the United States.

At this point of my trip, I had that old Bob Seger song in my head, Roll Me Away:

I could go east, I could go west,
it was all up to me to decide
Just then I saw a young hawk flyin'
and my soul began to rise
And pretty soon
My heart was singin'

Roll, roll me away,
I'm gonna roll me away tonight
Gotta keep rollin, gotta keep ridin',
keep searchin' till I find what's right
And as the sunset faded
I spoke to the faintest first starlight
And I said next time
Next time
We'll get it right

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Couple of more pics from the Nov. 2 Anti-Bush Rally


Tipster and friend-of-the-blog Derrick Wlodarz sent me these. They come from the Chicago part of the World Can't Wait Anti-Bush Rally on November 2. On a personal note, I took the "el" to downtown Chicago Monday, and World Can't Wait vandals had green-and-black "World Can't Wait "stickers plastered all over the interior of the train car I was in. Creeps. Yes, they're burning the flag. I'm sure these guys "are against the war but support the troops."

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Coalition forces capture al-Qaeda in Iraq terrorist

This just came out from Centcom in Florida. Nothing in the MSM yet on it.

From the United States Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base:

November 16, 2005
Release Number: 05-11-72

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

AL QAEDA IN IRAQ EMIR OF SADAH BAGGED

BAGHDAD, Iraq – Multi-National Forces used multiple intelligence sources and tips from concerned citizens to locate a known al Qaeda in Iraq safe house harboring terrorists and foreign fighters Nov. 7.

Upon arrival at the terrorist safe house, Multi-National Forces detained numerous terrorists and foreign fighters; among them was Sadiq Ayadah Husayn Matar (aka Abu Ahmed), the al Qaeda in Iraq Emir of Sadah.

Abu Ahmed admitted to being the al Qaeda in Iraq Emir of Sadah. He was responsible for all terrorist operations in Sadah. He also coordinated and conducted terrorist operations in the surrounding areas within the al Qaim region. He was in charge of directing, planning and executing bombing, mortar attacks, and ambushes against Iraqi security and Coalition Forces.

Abu Ahmed, as one of the five senior al Qaeda in Iraq terrorist leaders in the al Qaim region, which includes Husaybah, Karabilah, Sadah, Ubaydi, and al Qaim, was connected to numerous al Qaeda in Iraq senior terrorist leaders. He admitted associations, as well as conducting coordinated terrorist operations, with other senior terrorists and foreign fighters in the region. These senior terrorists were responsible for all terrorist and foreign fighter activities in the region to include the smuggling of foreign fighters into the al Qaim region from Syria.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE COMBINED PRESS INFORMATION CENTER at: cpicpressdesk@iraq.centcom.mil.

I like the part about "tips from concerned citizens." Awesome.

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Hillary ripped for hosting birthday party for Robert "Sheets" Byrd at Frederick Douglass' house

From the Charleston Daily Mail:

Possible Republican challenger Jeanine Pirro has criticized Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton for co-sponsoring a birthday party for Sen. Robert C. Byrd, citing his long-ago membership in the Ku Klux Klan and a racially charged 2001 comment.

Pirro's complaint came a day after The Washington Post reported that Clinton and the Senate's eight other Democratic female senators were hosting a 88th birthday party for Byrd, a West Virginia Democrat, Tuesday night at the home of civil rights pioneer Frederick Douglass.

"It's outrageous and shocking that Senator Clinton and her Democrat colleagues would choose Frederick Douglass' house to honor Senator Robert Byrd, who has a history of involvement with hate groups and has used racial slurs publicly,'' said Pirro spokeswoman Andrea Tantaros.

The Clinton camp, in turn, accused the Westchester County district attorney of running "a campaign of insults and attacks.''

Byrd is the dean of Senate Democrats and one of the first people the former first lady turned to for advice after her election in 2000. But he also has a past that he has said continues to haunt him, including a brief membership in the KKK in 1942.

"Becoming involved with the KKK was the most egregious mistake I have ever made,'' Byrd said in 1999.

Two years later, during a "Fox News Sunday'' interview, Byrd was discussing race relations in the United States and said, "I've seen a lot of white niggers in my time.'' The senator subsequently apologized, saying "the phrase dates back to my boyhood and has no place in today's society.''

Oh, Sheets' Klan membership may have been brief; he left the Klan, but the Klan didn't leave him.

From the Opinion Journal in 2002:

At the time of his "white nigger" remarks last year, no national papers bothered to mention two letters that the Senator had distanced himself from, Clinton-style, by saying he didn't recall writing them, though he also didn't dispute them. The New York Times reported in 1971 on a letter Mr. Byrd wrote in 1946, after leaving the Klan. Writing to the Klan's Imperial Wizard, Mr. Byrd identified himself as a former Kleagle and recommended a person to serve as state Klan coordinator. He wrote, "The Klan is needed today as never before and I am anxious to see its rebirth here in West Virginia. . . . It is necessary that the order be promoted immediately and in every state in the Union. Will you please inform me as to the possibilities of rebuilding the Klan realm of W. Va?"

And in a 1947 letter, after Mr. Byrd had been elected to the state senate, he wrote that he would "never submit to fight beneath that banner (the American flag) with a Negro by my side. Rather I should die a thousand times, and see old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds."

Flash forward to the 1960s: Byrd was one of the Democratic senators who filibustered the 1964 Civil Rights Bill:

From the US Senate web site:

At 9:51 on the morning of June 10, 1964, Senator Robert C. Byrd completed an address that he had begun fourteen hours and thirteen minutes earlier. The subject was the pending Civil Rights Act of 1964, a measure that occupied the Senate for fifty-seven working days, including six Saturdays. A day earlier, Democratic Whip Hubert Humphrey, the bill's manager, concluded he had the sixty-seven votes required at that time to end the debate.

The Civil Rights Act provided protection of voting rights; banned discrimination in public facilities including private businesses offering public services such as lunch counters, hotels, and theaters; and established equal employment opportunity as the law of the land.

And Hillary is supposed to be so smart!

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My fall road trip: In the Nebraska Sandhills


South of Valentine, Nebraska on a partly cloudy day; the partly cloudiness made this a particularly impressive photograph.

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Turkmenistan doctors must pledge allegiance to nation's leader, not Hippocrates

More craziness from the central Asian region of the former Soviet Union.

From AFP:

State media say doctors in Turkmenistan must now pledge allegiance to President Saparmurat Niyazov, instead of taking the traditional Hippocratic oath.

The "Neutralnii Turkmenistan" daily reports today that doctors must kneel solemnly and take the pledge to Niyazov and his book of moral guidance, the "Rukhnama."

The president-for-life has made his "Rukhnama" mandatory reading for all civil servants and students.

The new pledge also sets a dozen rules for new doctors, including a ban on euthanasia.

Niyazov changed his name a while back to "Serdar Turkmenbashi," which means "Great Leader of all Turkmen." He named the month of January after himself, April is named in honor of his mother. He's a classic megalomaniac. Here's more from a 2004 60 Minutes report on the "Great Leader."

The golden likeness of the former communist party boss-turned-dictator is in the center of the capitol, always rotating to face the sun. His picture is on the airplane that brings you to the main port town called Turkmenbashi. It watches over workers in the field, over children in school, over drivers on the road. He's also on the money, and he's even on the national vodka.

His face is everywhere, and you can’t walk a block without seeing either a statue or photo of him.

“If I was a worker and my president gave me all the things they have here in Turkmenistan, I would not only paint his picture, I would have his picture on my shoulder, or on my clothing,” says Turkmenbashi. “I'm personally against seeing my pictures and statues in the streets - but it's what the people want.”

I'm sure those doctors in Turkmenistan are happy with ditching the Hippocratic Oath for the moral guide of the "Great Leader of all Turkmen."

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Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Saudi journalist's car vandalized and he gets a death threat

The latest from our allies in the War on Terror, Saudi Arabia. The radicals are terrorizing a another level-headed person. A journalist, Rabah Al-Quwayi, has supported--a bit--the cause of Saudi high school teacher, Muhammad Al-Harbi. As I posted here Sunday night, Mr. Al-Harbi was recently sentenced to three years in prison as well as 50 weeks of whippings--15 lashes per week in public--for mocking Islam.

From the Arab News:

Rabah Al-Quwayi, a reporter for the Arabic daily Okaz, was about to go to work in the morning when he saw that the window of his car had been broken and a note had been left behind.

The note said: “In the name of God, the Most Gracious and the Most Merciful: This time it is your car but next time it is you. Return to your religion and forsake heresy. This is the last warning.”

“I’ve been receiving threatening SMS messages and verbal attacks for a year now,” Al-Quwayi told Arab News over the phone from Hail. “But this is the first time things have turned physical. I tried to track the numbers through the Saudi Telecom Company (STC) but it always turns out that the numbers are registered to expatriates.”

The reporter was not attacked for anything he had written in Okaz, but rather for his participation in several Internet forums. Al-Quwayi’s liberal points of view upset a number of participants in the forums.

More...
“(The journalist) wrote that the only logical explanation for Al-Harbi’s case is that he is against terrorism and some religious people seem to support terrorism and so Al-Harbi, by disagreeing with them, is against religion. It is confusing,” Al-Quwayi explained.

Another threat was made on Al-Quwayi’s life last month. The threat was made on the well-known fundamentalist website, Al-Sahat. “They took a sentence that I had written earlier out of context. In a long article I wrote in a discussion of the Holy Qur’an and posted on the Internet, I said that ‘nothing should be taken for granted.’ The fundamentalists then concluded that I did not believe in the Holy Qur’an and so I should be killed.”

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Phelps' Westboro cult pickets central Illinois soldier's funeral

Well, the nuts from the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas showed up for the funeral of Sergeant First Class Kyle Wehrly of Galesburg, IL.

They kooks weren't ignored. From WHOI TV's (Creve Coeur, IL) web site:

A group of protestors from the Westboro Baptist church in Kansas were there in opposition to the funeral, labeling American veterans "a group with no honor."

Dozens of counter-protestors from the Galesburg area blocked their view of the church.

Illinois Leader: Not dead yet?

Let's hope so. Not only conservatives missed the "suspended" Illinois Leader. Even liberal Eric Zorn of the Chicago Tribune laments its absence. From Eric's excellent blog:

As much as I disagreed with many of the commentaries posted on the Illinois Leader--an online conservative publication--I'm sorry to learn that it's "suspended until further notice" according to an e-mail from publisher Dan Proft.

Its message boards were where the cloven hooves of dueling wacko factions on the right kicked one another (and the dreaded liberals and Democrats), yet rumors and innuendo that first appeared there often provided solid leads and useful background if not early warnings.

I not only hope the Leader comes back, but I also hope that lefties in the state coalesce behind a similar, competing online publication.


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Kazakhstan's government: Comic no laughing matter


The Kazakh government is threatening to take Mr. Cohen to court. Because he's not telling the truth about Kazakhstan? Or because he is?

Kazakhstan's Foreign Ministry threatened legal action Monday against a British comedian who wins laughs by portraying the central Asian state as a country populated by drunks who enjoy cow-punching as a sport.

Sacha Baron Cohen, who portrays a spoof Kazakh television presenter Borat in his "Da Ali G Show," has won fame ridiculing Kazakhstan, the world's ninth largest country yet still little known to many in the West, on British and U.S. channels.

Cohen appears to have drawn official Kazakh ire after he hosted the annual MTV Europe Music Awards show in Lisbon earlier this month as Borat, who arrived in an Air Kazakh propeller plane controlled by a one-eyed pilot clutching a vodka bottle.

More...

Cohen's earlier jokes about the Central Asian state include claims that the people would shoot a dog and then have a party, and that local wine was made from fermented horse urine.

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Republican Iraq proposal

Interesting that the senate Republicans make a move like this when Bush is out of the country.

From AP:

Mindful that the Iraq war is growing increasingly unpopular, the Senate is calling for 2006 to be a period of significant political and military transition in Iraq that will create conditions for a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops.

The GOP-controlled chamber was voting Tuesday on a pair of proposals — one Republican and one Democratic — that tell President Bush what the Senate believes the U.S. diplomatic and military policy on Iraq should be.

Whichever proposal prevails will be added to a defense bill the Senate is hoping to complete work on as early as Tuesday.

The bill includes provisions that, taken together, mark an effort by Congress to rein in some of the wide authority lawmakers gave the president following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. For instance, the measure includes language imposing restrictions on the treatment of foreign detainees and requiring details on purportedly secret CIA prisons overseas.

Monday, November 14, 2005

My fall road trip, entering Cherry County, Nebraska, the heart of Sandhill Country


Cherry County is larger than three states. Yet it has just over 6,000 residents. The Sandhills region in excellent cattle range land, but as the terrain is truly sandy, the area couldn't be farmed with any success: Homesteaders passed this region by. This beautiful area never had many people live there.

Some pictures without signs next!

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More messiness at Southern Illinois University

Hat tip to Jason Hinds of Song of the Suburbs (and an SIU alum).

I asked Song of the Suburbs reader and SIUC history professor Jonathan Bean about the issue and he wrote back to me that DOJ investigators have missed an even bigger program:

Actually, they missed the worst program of all, the so-called "cradle-to-grave" affirmative action program DFI (Diversifying Faculty in Illinois). This program pays members of certain racial groups--including Asians who are triply OVERREPRESENTED as faculty--to go to graduate school (plus $17,000 stipend) and they pay back by taking a tenure-track job at one of 34 institutions, including private colleges in Illinois (e.g., Northwestern). This program is different because, at SIUC's behest (I am told), the state legislature established it in 1985.

He also added under the DFI program minority groups who have gotten into the program can continue to benefit when they become overrepresented in the larger faculty pool:

It's not just "anti-white," as the Sun Times implies. No "whites," no people from North Africa, no Middle Easterners, and no people from certain Asian countries need apply. However, if you were born in Latin America to a white businessman who works for a multinational -- bingo! You are "Hispanic." Defining race and distributing benefits on this basis is not only wrong and illegal, it often violates common sense (as the case of the Asians shows). When I challenged, in writing, the inclusion of Asians in the DFI program, I was later told by an administrator that, yes, they are triply overrepresented overall but still underrepresented in areas like English literature! What this means is they will never admit success: once a group is "in," it is in FOREVER.

Bad stuff from the bottom part of the state.

Read here for more information on Professor Jonathan Bean, specifically, his battles with the moonbats at Carbondale's Southern Illinois University, courtesy of the Southern Illinoisan.

A little off topic, but this excerpt from Leftist SIU history professor Robbie Lieberman was too good to pass up:

Lieberman said no one is attacking Bean's views or even his right to discuss controversial topics in class. The main problem, she said, with Bean's handout is it came from an Internet source that had questionable ties.

Using the Internet as a source of material in the history department is generally frowned upon, Lieberman said, because its validity is not always certain.

"I don't personally let students with research papers get things off the Internet," she said.

Has Lieberman ever heard of the Memogate scandal? The internet was right on that one, as well as some others.

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Illinois Leader is gone

Hat tip to Cal Skinner.

The Illinois Leader, an online conservative journal, is defunct, according to the McHenry County Blog.
It was a good publication and its reach was far: Drudge, NewsMax and the Wall Street Journal's Opionion Journal linked to it a few times. The Leader reprinted friend-of-blog's Richard Baehr's American Thinker article about the Thomas Klocek free speech struggle at DePaul.

This comes from Dave Dierson's GOP USA Illinois site:

Illinois Leader was launched by Dan Proft and Brian Timpone in mid-2002 while I was running for Governor as a Libertarian. It gave me fairer coverage than any other media source and had a vibrant discussion section.

The discussion section allowed anyone to start talking about a subject and, while requiring some policing, was “the” place to let other people know political gossip.

Having long ago run through its start-up money, it now owes tens of thousands of dollars.

It is doubtful that Proft ever earned any money directly from Illinois Leader, but he certainly became more respected among Chicago media types and, as a result, raised his public profile. He now is advising Steve Rauschenberger’s campaign for governor, Tony Peraica’s campaign for Cook County Board president, as well as being the approximately $90,000-a-year spokesman for Cicero

Capitol Fax Blog has now taken over the political gossip/news function. However, no one in cyberspace has so far stepped forward to replace the content on the conservative side of the political spectrum.


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Latvian Green parliamentarian: Soros group out to smear Latvia

A lot of this is unsubstantiated, but this sounds like the George Soros I know.

From the Baltic Times last week, an excerpt:

The controversy surrounding earlier visits by Russian exile Boris Berezovsky, as well as his recent banning, became more muddied last week when the head of Parliament’s national security commission, Indulis Emsis, announced that a clandestine network structure was operating in the country, and that billionaire George Soros was part of the conspiracy.

Emsis, a member of the Greens and Farmers Union and a former prime minister, said he would consult foreign security agencies as to the possible existence of a secret anti-democratic group in the Baltic state.

The group, or so he claimed, has exercised power partly through the Soros foundation and other NGOs. The “network structure” does not confine itself simply to Latvia’s borders, but exists in a number of “new democracies” the head of Parliament’s national security committee explained.

He mentioned former Lithuanian President Rolandas Paksas’ impeachment and the Ukrainian orange revolution as examples of the types of work sown by clock and dagger.

“The Soros Foundation’s goal to attack coincides with the state’s unfavorable goals – that is to discredit the state and its official structures,” Emsis told the Baltic News Service on Oct. 30.

He said that he wanted to determine and identify “this web’s conductors, and their intentions.” One goal, he said, might be to torpedo Latvia’s chances of hosting an upcoming NATO summit.

Emsis’ attack was followed by an equally strong statement by Ventspils Mayor Aivars Lembergs, who called Latvia “a Soros subsidiary.” Lembergs is believed to be a major financial supporter of the Greens and Farmers Union.

The comments were preceded and complemented by similar accusations from Berezovsky himself, who held that Soros was personally responsible for his blacklisting.

Soros and Berezovsky were once allies but had a falling out in 1997.

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Big deal Chicago law firm doing pro-bono defense work for ex-Governor George Ryan

I couldn't find the Chicago Sun-Times article, so this will have to do: From AP:

The Chicago Sun-Times reports this morning that the prominent Chicago law firm of Winston & Strawn is charging no fees for its defense of former Governor George Ryan in his racketeering trial.

The trial began on September 19th and is expected to run into January. Winston & Strawn's chairman, former Governor James Thompson, said the firm would be lucky if it loses only ten million dollars in fees due to the trial.

The firm is using about a dozen lawyers, including star defense counsel Dan Webb, on Ryan's case.


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Mr. Right of In The Right Place: Way out in front of the MSM


In today's front page of the Chicago Tribune internet edition, that pic is one of the Trib's "Photos of the Day."

Almost two weeks ago, Mr. Right of In The Right Place used that same picture for his weekly photo-caption contest.

Bloggers are scooping the MSM on everything, now, it seems.

Here is this week's photo-caption contest on the same blog.

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Tammy Bruce: Dems spewing false WMD claims

Now that Bush has spoken out, other are going after the Democrats: 'Bout time!

From NewsMax:

Tammy Bruce said repetitive and clearly disingenuous claims by Democrats that "Bush lied” about weapons of mass destruction are "so 18 months ago,” and don’t do a thing to advance the security of America against global terror.

Bruce, appearing Monday on Fox News Channel, said the Democrats are making no traction with their claims, despite a review of President Bush’s low approval numbers.

"The polls do not reflect reality,” Bruce said. "If all polls were right, John Kerry would be president now. Thanks goodness he is not.”

Bruce, author of "The New American Revolution: Using the Power of the Individual to Save our Nation from Extremists" blamed the intelligence community for any incorrect information regarding Saddam Hussein’s capacity to develop and use weapons of mass destruction.

"It was an intelligence community failure, not a Bush administration failure no matter how you look at it,” Bruce said. "The reality is that you have a Congress with people who have been there for decades – much longer than Bush has been president. They have seen this WMD information for years."

Bruce said Democrats should "get over" their attempts to paint Bush as a liar and focus, instead, on the Democrats' real weakness as a party - keeping America strong and safe from future attack.

"We are a world at war – a nation at war,” Bruce reminded. "Let’s get our act together and win it.”

UPDATE Nov. 16: Pat Curley at Brainster has come across an interview of Tammy Bruce on Right Wing News.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Saudi reform: Not so fast there...Teacher sentenced to jail, weekly floggings, for mocking religion

Scroll down to my first post of today: The Saudi foreign minister told an ABC reporter that women in the kingdom would eventually be allowed to drive.

But Saudi Arabia won't be confused with Sweden any time soon. From the Arab News:

The controversial case of Muhammad Al-Harbi, a Saudi high school teacher accused of mocking religion, came to a surprising end on Saturday. Al-Harbi was sentenced to three years in prison and 750 lashes — 50 lashes per week for 15 weeks. The lashes are to be given in the public market in the town of Al-Bikeriya in Al-Qassim.

A number of 12th Grade students, along with some teachers from the same school, filed a lawsuit a year-and-a-half ago against Al-Harbi. He was accused of mocking Islam, favoring Jews and Christians, preventing students from performing ablutions. He was also charged with studying witchcraft. At the time, he was a chemistry teacher at Al-Fowailiq High School in the town of Ein Al-Juwa in Al-Qassim.

More...

Deeply disturbed by the explosions at the Al-Hamra Compound in Riyadh in 2003, Al-Harbi felt it his duty as an educator to enlighten his students and warn them of terrorism and its consequences. He went to great lengths by talking to students, hanging anti-terrorism signs around the school and speaking against terrorism.

“The Ministry of Education has recently ordered all schools to lecture students on the dangers of extremism and terrorism in general, but I was a step ahead of their decision,” said Al-Harbi.

Apparently Al-Harbi’s actions and comments against terrorism upset a number of Islamic studies teachers known for their fundamentalist beliefs. After the Al-Hamra blast in Riyadh, Al-Harbi copied an article, “Cavemen Go to Hell” written by Saudi columnist Hammad Al-Salmi in Al-Jazirah newspaper, attacking terrorists and extremists. Al-Harbi posted the article on the school bulletin board but it was ripped off and torn to pieces.

He seemed like a good teacher to me.

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Chicago Bears: Longest play in NFL history

Hey, not bad for a team known for having a rotten offense. Of course it was a special teams play.

Nathan Vasher set sail on a blustery day at Soldier Field.

Vasher returned a missed field goal 108 yards Sunday, the longest play in NFL history, and the Chicago Bears beat the San Francisco 49ers 17-9 for their fifth straight victory.

When Joe Nedney's 52-yard attempt went wide right in a stiff wind on the final play of the first half, Vasher caught the ball over his shoulder, hesitated momentarily on whether to come out of the end zone, sprinted to the 15, then reversed his field, picking up a convoy of blockers.

Top Baathist may be alive after all

Alive or dead? Dunno.

U.S. troops will continue to search for Saddam Hussein's chief deputy, the U.S. command said Sunday, casting doubt on an online claim that the suspected architect of the Iraqi insurgency had died.

A Baathist Web site on Saturday reported that Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri had died the previous day; another Web site, also purporting to carry statements from the banned party, said al-Douri was alive and apologized for the false report of his death.

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Saudis pledge $1 billion to rebuild Iraq, promise to let women drive cars

From AP:

Saudi Arabia's foreign minister said he is less worried that U.S. policies in

Iraq will bring on a civil war there, and pledged anew to contribute $1 billion for rebuilding that war-ravaged country's shattered infrastructure.

And now the interesting part:

In the same ABC television interview he also said the kingdom would expand the rights of women, eventually allowing them to drive cars.


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Saturday, November 12, 2005

My fall road trip, continued


Getting close to my goal of reaching Nebraska's beautiful but sparsely populated Sandhills region.

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Phelps' cult coming back to stink up Illinois


Look who is coming back to the Land of Lincoln: Fred Phelps and the vile Westboro Baptist "Church."

Sgt. First Kyle Wehrly of the central Illinois town of Galesburg was killed by a road side bomb in Iraq. The deluded leader of the Kansas-based Westboro Baptist Church is threatening to picket Wehrly's funeral on Tuesday, November 15 in Galesburg. Here is a disgusting flier from the crazies.

This summer, his group showed up at funerals in Zion and East Peoria, IL. The group has tried to disrupt soldiers' funerals all over the United States. Sometimes the cult is a no-show.

In Tennessee, there were a couple of August protests that the Phelps' cult wished they hadn't shown up for.

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French riots now in a city center

Lyon's city center (they don't call it a "downtown" in Europe), has been hit by rioters.

The unrest is not taking a rest.

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Iran welcomes strategic cooperation with Russia

So says the Tehran Times....
From that article:

The former Russian foreign minister added that the two sides have also made joint efforts to fight terrorism, drugs trafficking, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and organized crime.

And the effort has been less than successful, I'd like to add.

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Leading Iraqi Baathist dead?


I hesitated posting this, but I have a bloggeristic hunch that this is true.

The highest ranking leader still at-large from Saddam Hussein's regime has died, a Baathist Web site reported Saturday. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan met with Iraqi leaders to call for reconciliation ahead of upcoming elections.

The Web site run by former top Baath Party members said Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri died Friday, corroborating an earlier e-mail announcing the death that could not be independently confirmed.


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Transcript of Bush Veterans Day speech at FrontPage Magazine

I'm hardly the first person to remark that "it's about time" Bush spoke up in defense of our goals in the War on Terror, but it is.

FrontPage Magazine has the complete transcript of yesterday's speech here.

Here's one of many great passages:

With the rise of a deadly enemy and the unfolding of a global ideological struggle, our time in history will be remembered for new challenges and unprecedented dangers. And yet this fight we have joined is also the current expression of an ancient struggle because those who put their faith in dictators and those who put their faith in the people. Throughout history, tyrants and would-be tyrants have always claimed that murder is justified to serve their grand vision, and they end up alienating decent people across the globe. Tyrants and would-be tyrants have always claimed that regimented societies are strong and pure, until those societies collapse in corruption and decay. Tyrants and would-be tyrants have always claimed that free men and women are weak and decadent, until the day that free men and women defeat them.

Friday, November 11, 2005

NCAA: Chief Illiniwek bad, Fighting Illini OK, Illini are not Indians


Does any of this make sense? If it does for you, then apply for a job with the NCAA.

From AP:

The University of Illinois' use of the "Fighting Illini" nickname is acceptable, but its tradition of a buckskin-clad student dancing at home sporting events is not, the NCAA declared Friday as it upheld the school's exclusion from hosting postseason tournaments.

The NCAA staff review committee also castigated the school for an Indian head logo that appears on officially licensed T-shirts and other merchandise. The logo does not appear on any team uniforms but remains approved for use, an athletic department spokesman said.

"The issue of the logo mark ... that depicts a Native American in feathered headdress adds to the use of Native American imagery that the broadest range of indigenous tribes and peoples find offensive and insulting," said Bernard Franklin, the NCAA's senior vice president for governance and membership
.
More...

In its appeal, Illinois said the "Fighting Illini" and "Illini" nicknames were derived from the name of the state, not from the name of a tribe, and refers not only to its teams, but also to students, alumni and others "who wish to associate themselves in a positive way with Illinois' largest public university."

"I am pleased the NCAA recognized what we've maintained all along," said UI Board of Trustees Chairman Lawrence C. Eppley. "Illini is a name taken from the name of our patron state and "Fighting Illini" refers to our university's winning spirit and drive to excel."

And a little bit more...
The appeal review committee asked Illinois to educate students, alumni and the public about the origin of the Illini nickname and how it is not associated with American Indians.

From Wikipedia:
Illinois (pronounced / or "ill-i-NOY") constitutes the 21st state of the United States, located in the former Northwest Territory. Its name was given by the state's French explorers after the indigenous Illiniwek people, a consortium of Algonquin tribes that thrived in the area. The word Illiniwek means simply "the people."

Real clear....

UPDATE 12:25 AM Nov. 12: The Fighting Illini play Purdue today in a battle of Big 10 football cellar denizens. As with many Big 10 gridiron contests, there is a trophy at stake; the winner gets the "The Cannon." Next week, Illinois plays Northwestern, the winner of that game takes home the politically insensitive "Sweet Sioux Tomahawk."

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My fall road trip, continued


Heading hest away from the Missouri River, I came across Johnny Carson's hometown, Norfolk, Nebraska.

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Obama addresses "voter intimidation," but not vote fraud

Cal Skinner directed this my way, thanks!

From Illini Pundit:

It’s amazing that any Illinois Senator can introduce legislation "to protect Americans from using tactics that intimidate voters" (I copied that directly from his website, so blame the odd phrasing on his staff. "To protect Americans from using tactics?") without uttering a peep about the numerous convictions of Illinois Democratic Party workers who have been convicted of actual election fraud over the past few years.

I realize that Illinois Democrats have to look the other way about voter fraud because the illegal votes help them and their allies. But to somehow use legislation like this to pretend to be concerned about voter fraud while benefitting from the thousands of illegal votes purchased by the Democratic Party in Chicago, East St. Louis and elsewhere is the height of hypocrisy. And to pretend that any of the stuff outlawed by his proposed legislation is the equivalent of the traditional voter fraud activities of Illinois Democrats is just laughable.

As for East St. Louis, votes were being purchased for $10 a head a year ago. $10 a head last year.

Perhaps someone ought to stuff this Hugh Hewitt book in Barack's Christmas stocking, If It's Not Close, They Can't Cheat

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Veterans Day morning in Illinois


Monument to the soldiers of the Great War, from 1920. Morton Grove Public Library, November 11, 2005.

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Southern Ill. Univ. accused of anti-white bias

From this morning's Chicago Sun-Times:

President Bush's administration has threatened to sue Southern Illinois University, alleging its fellowship programs for minority and female students violate federal civil rights laws by discriminating against whites, men and others.

In a move Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) said "just doesn't make sense," the U.S. Justice Department charged that three SIU programs that aim to increase minority enrollment in graduate school exclude whites, other minorities and males, in violation of Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act.

"The University has engaged in a pattern or practice of intentional discrimination against whites, non-preferred minorities and males,'' says a Justice Department letter sent to the university last week and obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.

The letter demands the university cease the fellowship programs, or the department's civil rights division will sue SIU by Nov. 18.

President Bush's administration has threatened to sue Southern Illinois University, alleging its fellowship programs for minority and female students violate federal civil rights laws by discriminating against whites, men and others.

In a move Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) said "just doesn't make sense," the U.S. Justice Department charged that three SIU programs that aim to increase minority enrollment in graduate school exclude whites, other minorities and males, in violation of Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act.

"The University has engaged in a pattern or practice of intentional discrimination against whites, non-preferred minorities and males,'' says a Justice Department letter sent to the university last week and obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.

The letter demands the university cease the fellowship programs, or the department's civil rights division will sue SIU by Nov. 18.

SIU has found itself in the media spotlight once again. Here are some other Southern stories from 2005, none of which come from the SIU PR office.

U.S. Court Says Southern Illinois U. Can't Bar Christian Group
Academic Witch-Hunt (SIU History Professor Jonathan Bean)
Elaborate Hoax Leaves Illinois Student Newspaper Reeling

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Thursday, November 10, 2005

Tehran Times interview with a holocaust denier

Maybe this guy is Norman Finkelstein's French cousin? From that trustworthy news source, the Tehran Times:

Following the designation of a day as “Holocaust Day” by the United Nations, the Mehr News Agency conducted an interview with French professor Robert Faurisson on November 2 about the motivations behind this move. In the interview, the professor says that Zionists will not tolerate any questioning of the “Holocaust” and argues that the more the Western public believes in the “Holocaust” the more Muslims will be killed.

Following is the text of the interview:

Q: As you know the UN General Assembly on Tuesday (November 1) passed a resolution designating January 27 as an international day of commemoration of the Jewish and other victims of the Holocaust. What is your view on the decision at this time?

Faurisson: For many years now I have been telling my acquaintances in the Muslim world that the Jews and the Zionists want to impose the religion of the alleged "Holocaust" of the Jews on the whole world. It is normal that Jews and Zionists should seek to foist such an imposture on us, for it is the sword and the shield of the Jews in general and of the Jewish State in particular. It is also normal that the Jews and the Zionists should have got the UN to submit to their will to power and so decree that every year the six billion people who inhabit the Earth shall be reminded of the "Holocaust". The Muslim world has been awakening from its too long torpor for only a few years. It ought to have listened to the revisionists long ago and denounced out loud the sham of an alleged German project to exterminate the Jews, the alleged Nazi gas chambers and the alleged six million Jewish victims.

The irony here is quite rich, as this interview took place on November 2, while the French riots raged. I'm sure Faurisson believes "the Jews were behind it."

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Dennis Hastert sets up blog

Yes, "The Coach," Dennis Hastert, Illinois' most prominent Republican (admittedly, that's not saying much) has a blog. However, via Brainster, I discovered Bulldog Pundit wants the former high school wrestling coach and current Speaker of the House benched. The Congressional budget mess and the ANWR punt is the last straw for a lot of Republicans.

Closer to home, for me, is another Illinois congressional blog, that of Illinois' champion Moonbat, Jan Schakowsky. Her blog is called SchaBLOGsky. Unlike Denny's blog, Jan allows comments. It'll be interesting to see how long I last before I'm booted out of SchaBLOGsky.

Jan's blog is filled with Leftist rantings; no surprise, as she's earned a "coveted reward" for her activities: an entry in FrontPage Magazine's "Discover the Network."

CAIR crticizes Congressman Kirk

CAIR, the Council on American Islamic Relations yesterday lashed out at Illinois Repubican Congressman Mark Kirk, of Chicago's North Shore, over profiling comments he made last weekend. As you'll notice in a post last night, Senator Barack Obama denounced Kirk as well.

From the Chicago "Free Registration Required" Tribune:

A Muslim civil rights group demanded an apology Wednesday from U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) for remarks he made condoning discrimination against some Arabs.

"Our Constitution guarantees that discrimination not be part of the American tradition," said Ahmed Rehab, director of communications for the Chicago Council on American-Islamic Relations.

The congressman defended his remarks Wednesday, saying it is crucial for the United States to protect its borders from foreign terrorists.

More...

In a letter faxed Wednesday to Kirk's office, Yaser Tabbara, director of the Muslim civil rights group, wrote that he was shocked by the comments.

"It's one thing for me to hear it from Joe Schmoe on the street and deal with it as an ignorant attitude and give that person the benefit of the doubt," Tabbara said. "It's another, and 100 times more disturbing and dangerous, to hear something like that spewed out of the mouth of a public figure, a political representative who represents a constituency of Americans. This, to me, is a manifestation of ... a classic, malicious, bigoted attitude."

Eloquently stated, but what Tabbara neglected to mention is that Islamofascist forces declared war on America and the West about 10 years ago.

And just last night, A Days Inn, a Hyatt, and a Radisson (Western hotel chains) were bombed in Amman, Jordan.

We're at war.

Thirty years ago today: The Edmund Fitzgerald sank in Lake Superior


Here is a memorial site honoring the 29 men who perished on November 10, 1975.

Hundreds of Jordanians take to streets shouting death to al-Zarqawi

Here's some good news. From AP again:

Hundreds of Jordanians took to the streets of their capital today, shouting "Burn in hell, Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi."

"We sacrifice our lives for you Amman," chanted the protesters, who gathered near one of three hotels that were hit by suicide bombings Wednesday in attacks claimed by the Jordanian-born al-Zarqawi's al-Qaida in Iraq group.

Jordanian officials said 56 people, mainly Jordanians, were killed in the attacks on the Grand Hyatt, the Radisson SAS and the Days Inn.

"Death to al-Zarqawi, the villain and the traitor," shouted the angry crowd _ Jordanians of all backgrounds, including women and children.

'Bout time!

Al-Qaida claims responsibility for Amman bombings

No surprise there. From AP:

Al-Qaida claimed responsibility Thursday for three suicide bomb attacks on Western hotels that killed at least 56 people in the Jordanian capital, and the terror group's Web posting linked the deadly blasts to the war in Iraq.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Ward Churchill at DePaul follow up: Ward threatens documentary filmmaker with lawsuit


Chicago-area filmmaker Grant Crowell of Walking Eagle Productions has been, without Ward Churchill's help, working on a documentary about the world's most famous phony Indian.

In the Hawaii Reporter, here is an excerpt from an article written by Crowell:

Below is Churchill’s email to me:
Okay, Mr. Walking Eagle, try this:

What I say is copyrighted, just like the work of any other "performer," to be recorded only with my express permission, and subsequently used in any fashion whatsoever only with my explicit consent.'''

You, for whatever reason(s), seem to have an extraordinarily difficult time wrapping your mind around the simple fact that I am under NO obligation to allow you to record me (or otherwise participate in your various "projects").

Translated, that means the following: although you're obviously entitled to purchase any/all of my CDs, you have NO "entitlement" to record me yourself.

The fact that you had a pocket-sized recording device smuggled into the room where I spoke at DePaul, despite the express prohibition on doing so repeatedly announced by the sponsors, has resulted in you/anyone associated with "Walking Eagle Productions" being permanently barred from recording my talks.

Should "bootleg" recordings of my material turn up in anything you happen to produce -- a "documentary film," for instance -- you may rest assurred that you will be sued on exactly the same grounds as you would were you to use material recorded without authorization at a Dylan or Steve Earle concert.

My attorney, to whom this correspondence in cc'd, has suggested I make the above absolutely clear to you. Therefore, I have. Any further communications in this or related matters will be from him/his associations.

Consider yourself warned, Ward Churchill

Here is the audio of Ward Churchill’s speech at DePaul

http://www.andrewmarcus.com/blog/mentalward

Odd, that of all the artists (besides Dylan) Ward could've mentioned, he brings up that Texas moonbat, Steve Earle.

Ward Churchill's magical misery speaking tour continues....

The good folks at Pirate Ballerina (Thanks Derrick Wlodarz for sending this my way.) are keeping up with Ward Churchill's fall speaking tour. Not an easy thing to do, since the megalomaniac likes to control the output of his bile.

Hat tip to The Rutles for the headline.

First, in chilly Winnipeg, Ward's speaking event scheduled for last week was cancelled. This comes from Dust My Broom. Dust My Broom's comments are in italics.

Ward Churchill Speech Cancelled after Aboriginal Groups Voice Concern (PDF file from The Uniter of the University of Winnipeg)

Expenses for his accommodations won’t be refunded to USWA:
Ward Churchill, a controversial advocate for indigenous peoples’ rights, will not be coming to speak at the University of Winnipeg on Nov. 4 after several aboriginal groups throughout the city and across the country brought their concerns to the office of the UWSA.

The official decision came on Oct. 25 at a UWSA board meeting where members in attendance formally voted against him speaking. “It was a decision at a board meeting to cancel his talk because of concerns by aboriginal groups and also from the Kelly family (family of Ward Churchill’s deceased wife) because it would cast his credibility in a bad light,” said UWSA vice president advocate of student services Andriy Michalchyshyn

Apparently lying about his educational and ethnic background, and plagiarism, do nothing to his crediblity.

Some of the groups in opposition were the Assembly of First Nations (AFN), Southern Chiefs organization (SCO), Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC), and the Ojibwas of Onigaming First Nation. Robert Kelly, the Chief of the Onigaming First Nation – based out of Ontario – sent a letter to the UWSA, claiming that Churchill had written a book containing defamatory material regarding his deceased wife and her family, and that his presence would not be well received in the aboriginal community.

“As the leader of my community, I feel it is imperative that I provide some protection for the safety and well-being of my members, and further believe that Mr. Churchill should not be in a position to speak on behalf of First Nations peoples,” the letter reads.

Wayne Nelson, the University of Winnipeg Aboriginal Student Council codirector can second the concern – he confirms the aboriginal community would have taken action if Churchill had spoken.

In Seattle, Bos'un Locker attended the Shoreline Community College speech, and BL discovered that his Justice of Roosting Chicken's speech was just stale leftovers.

After I returned home and wrote this article, I discovered a canned lecture on the internet, "Some People Push Back" On the Justice of Roosting Chickens By Ward Churchill and discovered that I could have saved $12 by reading his canned speech instead of going to Shoreline Community College. However, I was able to soak up $12 worth of rare atmosphere of the radial left wing agenda for a couple of hours and go a chance to see Churchill the man in person.

No word yet from Evergreen State College on Ward's antics there--he spoke at the Olympia, WA college Monday. Evergreen of course is best known as the school wild-eyed radical Rachel Corrie attended.

But as you'll see, there is more on DePaul and Ward to report on.

Obama criticizes Ill. Congressman Kirk over profiling comments

Mark Kirk, a Republican congressman from Chicago's North Shore, is someone I've never met, but people I know have met him, and they think he's a great guy. Mark could've phrased this a bit better, but I hate to say it: Remember most of the terrorism in the world is committed by Muslims, as the GM of al-Arabiya commented last year.

Our government has a duty to protect its citizens.

From AP:

Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, the Senate's only black member, criticized another lawmaker from his state on Wednesday for published comments on discrimination against young Arabs.

GOP Rep. Mark Kirk was at an event last weekend at Northwestern University when he was asked about the difficulties of the visa process for immigrants. He was quoted by the Chicago Sun-Times as saying: "I'm OK with discrimination against young Arab males from terrorist-producing states. I'm OK with that."

"I think that when we look at the threat that's out there, young men, between, say, the ages of 18 and 25 from a couple of countries, I believe a certain amount of intense scrutiny should be placed on them," Kirk was quoted as saying. "I'm not threatened by people from China. I'm not even threatened by people from Mexico. I just know where the threat is from. It's from a unique place, and I think it's OK to recognize that."

Obama took issue with the comments, which Kirk has confirmed were accurate, according to the (Arlington Heights) Daily Herald.

Some more information on Kirk. He's a Naval Reserve intelligence officer who served stateside during Opreration Iraqi Freedom.

As for Barack Obama, perhaps he wants to go back to the Clintonian bad-old-days of security.

From a 2004 Heather Mac Donald column:

In 1997, government attorneys worried that a proposed anti-terrorism system for airlines might work too well. Although an early prototype of the Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System (CAPPS I) assiduously avoided collecting information about a passenger's national origin, religion, race, or sex in assessing the risk that he might be a terrorist, civil rights lawyers in the Justice and Transportation Departments fretted that the system might still be "discriminatory." It still might pull aside "too many" people of Arab descent by looking at, say, frequent travel to the Middle East, among other risk factors.

Given the previous two decades of Islamic terrorism, such an outcome would have been appropriate. But the rights enforcers warned that airlines could face penalties if they selected more than three passengers of the same ethnicity for additional scrutiny on any given flight. So the prototype architects built random hits into their program to ensure that airline screeners would devote as much time searching Lutheran matrons from Minnesota as young men from Saudi Arabia.

Mo' voting in Motown

Mo' voting as in too much voting.

Hat tip to Cal Skinner (again).

From the Frank Beckman's Detroit News column of last week:

The question has been gnawing at me throughout the latest imbroglio involving City Clerk Jackie Currie over the questionable dispensing and counting of absentee ballots for the Detroit mayoral election, and the cloud of potential abuse that already hangs over Tuesday's election.

The question involves the announcement by state Republican party Chairman Saul Anuzis that he will place monitors at various locations in Detroit to "watch the election process and to make sure that the people who are voting are legitimate voters."

That plan would make clear sense if we were talking about an election that involved a partisan divide of Republicans vs. Democrats. But Detroit votes overwhelmingly Democratic, and the two mayoral candidates, Kwame Kilpatrick and Freman Hendrix, are both Democrats.

So why the interest by Republicans? They're already looking ahead to 2006 and the midterm elections when Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm and U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow will seek re-election.

"Sure," replied Anuzis when I asked if that is his true motivation in monitoring Detroit. "This isn't the first time there's been a problem with the election process in Detroit. It's an institutional problem."

Currie has already ignored several court rulings involving the dispensing of absentee ballots, and she's had a posse of orange-shirted "ambassadors" offering their assistance to voters throughout the city.

The problem is, according to a Detroit News investigation, Currie and her underlings have managed to collect ballots from people registered to vote at abandoned and long-demolished buildings, and they've amassed a voter list that contains almost 400,000 incorrect names and addresses, including people who have died or moved out of the city.

One need not be very cynical to recognize the threat of voter fraud, and that's what has Anuzis concerned about next year. His GOP monitors filed approximately 400 affidavits alleging infractions in Detroit during the presidential election in 2004.

"When you have votes from people living in houses that don't exist any more, that's cheating," alleges Anuzis. "That's why we need a photo ID system for voters. You can't drive without a photo ID, so why should you be able to vote without one? Only people who are legally registered to vote, should vote."


Generation Why has post-election commentary, found via Michelle Malkin's blog.

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Over 50 dead in Jordanian suicide blasts

Quite likely the work of al-Qaeda. As with many some other al-Qaeda terror strikes, (the 1999 East African bombings, Bali in '02), I'm sure many of the victims, maybe a majority of them, were Muslims.

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Follow-up: Art exhibit that offended Muslims at Harper College

I blogged about this story last month. An art exhibit at Harper College in Palatine, IL was shut down just a few hours after it opened because of complaints from Muslim students.

An excerpt from the Daily Herald:

Saba Ahmed attended a Tuesday afternoon forum at Harper College to hear a Chicago artist’s explanation as to why he included photos of nude Muslim women in a photo exhibit last month at the Palatine-based community college.

But she left the forum with more questions than answers.

Ahmed, a 19-year-old Harper student from Island Lake, said the professional artist, Amir Normandi, didn’t fully answer questions regarding his works that included photos of nude Muslim women.

“We wanted to know what was his intentions behind that. That was the main reason why we were so shocked: Muslim women naked,” Ahmed said. “If the main question wasn’t answered then I really didn’t get too much out of the forum.”

The 90-minute forum was the first opportunity for Normandi to explain in person his use of nude Muslim women, along with other images at which some Muslim students at Harper took offense, since college officials abruptly closed the exhibit on Oct. 27.

Normandi, who is of Iranian descent, told a group of about 100 attendees — many Muslim Harper students — that he did not intend to offend anyone in his exhibit titled “No Veil Is Required.”

Normandi said his aim was to draw attention to the plight some Muslim women face in countries where they are required to wear a hijab.

“If it is chosen by a person, that is democracy. If it is forced on somebody, it is oppression,” said Normandi, who runs d’Last Studio in Chicago.

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November 9, 1989: The Berlin Wall falls


And a little piece of it--note the date on the pic--ended up in Dixon, IL. Another pic from my fall road trip. (Yes, I've backtracked from Nebraska.)

Click on the image to make it bigger.

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Schwarzenegger's referendums defeated

Bad news from the west coast:

In a stinging rebuke from voters who elected him two years ago, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's efforts to reshape state government were rejected during a special election that darkened his prospects for a second term.

The Republican governor and former Hollywood actor, who likes to say he can sell anything, on Tuesday saw all four of his signature ballot proposals rejected.

The election pitted the once-dominant Republican governor against two of California's powerhouse political forces — public employee unions and Democrats who control the Legislature.

The unions spent millions of dollars to beat Schwarzenegger's propositions to limit the use of their member dues for political purposes, cap state spending, redraw legislative districts and restrict public school teacher tenure.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

My fall road trip: Route 75, the Lewis & Clark Scenic Byway in Nebraska


It gets more scenic later. It was a rainy morning just north of Blair, Nebraska on October 12.

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New Saudi ambassador to the US calls for global fight against terrorism


From the Arab News:

The newly appointed Saudi ambassador to the United States, Prince Turki Al-Faisal, yesterday called for increased international cooperation to combat extremism. The “scourge of terrorism” has “defiled our world,” he said.

As keynote speaker at the Middle East Institute’s annual conference, Prince Turki spoke to a packed standing-room-only audience and cautioned against the West’s tendency to link Islam with terrorism. “One of the greatest challenges facing our world is terrorism and the misunderstanding it has created about Islam and the Islamic world,” he said.

The ambassador called terrorism the biggest single threat to international peace and stability, which “spreads fear and destroys bonds between people and nations.”

Yo, Turk. No one believes you.

Election 2005

Early indications are that it is a bad night for the Republican Party. The Dems have won the governors' races in Virginia and New Jersey. If Arnold's referendums are defeated in California, then this will be a bad showing for the GOP.

Irony: Jacques Chirac's meeting the Latvian president

Yesterday, French president Jacques Chirac met with Vaira Vike-Freiberga, his counterpart in Latvia.

From the Baltic Times:

President Vaira Vike-Freiberga met with her French counterpart, Jacques Chirac, in Paris on Monday. Though the purpose of her three-day visit was to take part in the opening of Latvian cultural days in France, it was overshadowed by the debilitating riots and vandalism sweeping across the country.

During their meeting the two presidents discussed topical issues for the European Union, including the next budget, the Constitutional Treaty and the bloc's continuing expansion to the East.

Vaira Vike-Freiberga told reporters afterward that the two leaders' opinions coincided on all the major issues.

Not surprisingly, the president's visit, coming in the middle of increasingly dangerous riots throughout France, provided tremendous exposure to the Baltic country, since it was Vike-Freiberga's relay of Chirac's words that were carried by news services across the world.

While speaking to reporters, the Latvian president said Chirac "deplored the fact that in these neighborhoods there is a ghettoization of youths of African or North African origin." The French president acknowledged the "incapacity of French society to fully accept them," Vike-Freiberga said
.
Here's the irony: According to the biography of Vike-Freiberga, In the Name of Freedom, in 2003, Latvia and the other Vilnius 10 counties, those former east-bloc nations that aspired for NATO membership, were told by Chirac, that they "did not take advantage of an excellent opportunity to keep quiet."

Keeping quiet is what Jacques Chirac has been doing. He waited 10 days to publicly comment on the French riots. And yesterday, his "public" comments came through the Latvian president.

Perhaps Chirac asked Vike-Freigerga for advice in handling the crisis. He could do worse in finding counsel: The Latvian president lived in French-ruled Morocco for five years as a teen, leaving with her family when the Moroccan independence movement opened a new front: murdering Europeans.

Today a tactic like that is called terrorism.

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Prince Charles ends US trip: No word on if he persuaded Bush on the strengths of Islam


Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, have concluded their state visit to the U.S.

Has anyone but me remembered this October 29 (two days after the French riots started) article from the Daily Telegraph?

Free registration may be required:

The Prince of Wales will try to persuade George W. Bush and Americans of the merits of Islam this week because he thinks the United States has been too intolerant of the religion since September 11.

The Prince, who leaves on Tuesday for an eight-day tour of the US, has voiced private concerns over America's "confrontational" approach to Muslim countries and its failure to appreciate Islam's strengths.

The Prince raised his concerns when he met senior Muslims in London in November 2001. The gathering took place just two months after the attacks on New York and Washington. "I find the language and rhetoric coming from America too confrontational," the Prince said, according to one leader at the meeting.

It is understood that Prince Charles did not - and does not - believe that the actions of 19 hijackers should tarnish the reputation of hundreds of millions of law-abiding Muslims around the world.

Fair enough on that last one...but the article goes on.

He spoke warmly of the West's debt to the culture of Islam and distanced moderate Muslims from misguided militants. "Extremism is no more the monopoly of Islam than it is the monopoly of other religions, including Christianity," he said.

Uh, no.

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And some good news from Australia

Geographically, Australia is not part of the West, but socially it is. So it's a victory for our side down there in the War on Terror.

Two Islamic terror cells were rushing to become the first to stage a major "jihad" terror bombing in Australia, a prosecutor said Tuesday after armed police arrested 17 suspects in a string of coordinated pre-dawn raids in two cities.

"Thankfully, the police forces of this country might just have prevented a catastrophic act of terrorism ... either in Melbourne or in Sydney," said New South Wales state Police Minister Carl Scully.

One of the suspects, Abdulla Merhi, wanted to carry out attacks to avenge the war in Iraq, police said in a Melbourne court.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard was a strong supporter of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and still has hundreds of troops in the country.

Chirac declares a state of emergency in France

A little late, I'd say....
President Jacques Chirac declared a state of emergency Tuesday, paving the way for curfews to be imposed on riot-hit cities and towns in an extraordinary measure to halt France's worst civil unrest in decades after 12 nights of violence.

Daniel Pipes on France

I guess I don't have to say "French riots" anymore--when I say "France" everyone knows what I'm talking about.

Here's an excerpt from Dr. Pipes:

The rioting by Muslim youth that began October 27 in France to calls of "Allahu Akbar" may be a turning point in European history.

What started in Clichy-sous-Bois, on the outskirts of Paris, by its 11th night had spread to 300 French cities and towns, as well as to Belgium and Germany. The violence, which has already been called some evocative names – intifada, jihad, guerilla war, insurrection, rebellion, and civil war – prompts several reflections.

End of an era: The time of cultural innocence and political naïveté, when the French could blunder without seeing or feeling the consequences, is drawing to a close. As in other European countries (notably Denmark and Spain), a bundle of related issues, all touching on the Muslim presence, has now moved to the top of the policy agenda in France, where it likely will remain for decades.

These issues include a decline of Christian faith and the attendant demographic collapse; a cradle-to-grave welfare system that lures immigrants even as it saps long-term economic viability; an alienation from historic customs in favor of lifestyle experimentation and vapid multiculturalism; an inability to control borders or assimilate immigrants; a pattern of criminality that finds European cities far more violent than American ones, and a surge in Islam and radical Islam.

Not a first: The French insurrection is by no means the first instance of a semi-organized Muslim insurgency in Europe – it was preceded days earlier by one riot in Birmingham, England and was accompanied by another in Århus, Denmark. France itself has a history of Muslim violence going back to 1979. What is different in the current round is its duration, magnitude, planning, and ferocity.

Press denial: The French press delicately refers to the "urban violence" and presents the rioters as victims of the system. Mainstream media deny that it has to do with Islam and ignore the permeating Islamist ideology, with its vicious anti-French attitudes and its raw ambition to dominate the country and replace its civilization with Islam's.

France on fire


From the Telegraph in the UK

FrontPage Magazine shuts down Moonbat Central

Moonbat Central has been followed by a Moon Shadow. FrontPage Magazine's Moonbat Central blog is gone. What's bad news for some is good news to Noam Chomsky. Farewell.

Actually, this may not be good news to Chomsky, because David Horowitz has promised to beef up FrontPage Magazine and Discover The Networks. Those resources are invaluable to me.

Dr. Steven Plaut, a frequent contributor (sob, former frequent contributor at Moonbat) can be found on his own blog, called, Steven Plaut.

Monday, November 07, 2005

France: A dozen nasty nights

It's just getting worse in France. Now it's twelve straight nights of violence. The French "leadership" doesn't get it. By getting tough, they're talking about imposing curfews. They should've done that a week ago--the thugs feel empowered now and a curfew won't scare them.

The people on the front lines see the mayhem for what it is: a war. From Reuters:

"Nothing seems to be able to stop the civil war that spreads a bit more every day across the whole country," the Action Police CFTC union said. "The events we're living through now are without precedent since the end of the Second World War."

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Around the blogosphere

Third Wave Dave talks about grammar issues here.
I hope it wasn't my blog that was misplacing "it's" with "its."

Farther down the road (or is it further?). Cao's blog discusses France in The Devolution of France, or Pride Goeth Before the Fall

And Pam at Blogmeister USA has burned her bridges with Jennifer Aniston.

Liar: Ex-Marine Jimmy Massey

Hat tip to Respublica:

From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:

For more than a year, former Marine Staff Sgt. Jimmy Massey has been telling anybody who will listen about the atrocities that he and other Marines committed in Iraq.

In scores of newspaper, magazine and broadcast stories, at a Canadian immigration hearing and in numerous speeches across the country, Massey has told how he and other Marines recklessly, sometimes intentionally, killed dozens of innocent Iraqi civilians.

More...
News organizations worldwide published or broadcast Massey's claims without any corroboration and in most cases without investigation. Outside of the Marines, almost no one has seriously questioned whether Massey, a 12-year veteran who was honorably discharged, was telling the truth.

He wasn't.

Each of his claims is either demonstrably false or exaggerated - according to his fellow Marines, Massey's own admissions, and the five journalists who were embedded with Massey's unit, including a reporter and photographer from the Post-Dispatch and reporters from The Associated Press and The Wall Street Journal.

Michelle Malkin has more on her blog, including an excerpt from a CNN interview of Ron Harris, the reporter who wrote the Post-Dispatch article.

France: Worst night yet

From the BBC:

At least 1,400 vehicles have been burnt out and 395 people arrested in France's latest rioting, while the unrest has apparently claimed its first fatality.

More...

The two police officers shot on Sunday night were hit during what police described as an "ambush" in the Paris suburb of Grigny.

They were taken to hospital with wounds to the leg and throat.

Police chiefs said their men were being deliberately confronted by gangs apparently intent on fighting them.

Local police commander Bernard Franio said: "This is real, serious violence - not like the previous nights. I'm very worried because this is mounting."

The trade union Action Police CFTC called for night-time curfews and army help to stop the spreading "civil war".

Steven Plaut on France

Friend of the blog, Dr. Steven Plaut, has an excellent satirical piece on current situation in France in Moonbat Central.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

Indiana state legislature looking at restraining eminent domain abuse

From AP:

A state lawmaker says a congressional vote to restrain local governments from seizing private property for commercial development likely will bolster Statehouse efforts to rein in similar practices in Indiana.

Republican state Representative David Wolkins of Winona Lake is sponsoring a state bill to ban property seizures for commercial use.
He says a Statehouse study committee will recommend that eminent domain be a "last resort" and limit its use to blighted areas.

Wolkins says the panel will also recommend increasing compensation to displaced property owners and paying a larger share of legal expenses.

Indiana Republican Congressman Mark Souder says the government shouldn't be able to take your property just because someone else could make more money with it.

Meanwhile, here in Illinois, Mark at Windypundit posted the second part of his photoblogging essay about eminent domain overreach. The first in the series was about the Sportif bike shop (which I've blogged about) on Chicago's Northwest Side.

Part two takes Mark to suburban Arlington Heights, where the city council there has its hungry eyes on the International Plaza, a strip mall there. Click here to see his work.

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French riots: Is there a Zionist connection?

Found this on Islam Online.net. In this article, French Muslims to Issue Anti-riot Fatwa, I came across this bizarre, poorly written series of sentences:

UOIF's (The Union of French Islamic Organizations) chairman Lhaj Thami Breze cast doubt over the parties behind the accelerating violence.

He accused several parties, including far-rightists and Zionist lobby, of fishing in the troubled water to "smear the image of Muslims and Arabs".

The Muslim leader said many of the incidents involving the burning of public properties remain ambiguous.

"The rioting, which started as a spontaneous reaction, is not like that anymore. Some parties are feeding these incidents," Breze charged.

"The perpetrators of such actions can never be Muslims," he averred.

It'll be interesting to see the wording of this fatwa. Will it be another phony fatwa, such as CAIR's 2005 anti-terror decree?

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French riots: Is there a Saudi connection?

This comes from AP, via Drudge:

Ten nights of urban unrest that brought thousands of arson attacks on cars, nursery schools and other targets from the Mediterranean to the German border reached Paris where at least 28 cars were burned overnight in the French capital, government officials said Sunday.

Police found a gasoline bomb-making factory in a southern suburb of the city, with more than 100 bottles, gallons of fuel and hoods for hiding rioters' faces, a senior Justice Ministry official said Sunday.

Six youths, all aged under 18, were arrested in the raid Saturday night on a building in Evry south of Paris where the gasoline bombs were being put together, Jean-Marie Huet, the ministry's director of criminal affairs and pardons, told The Associated Press.

The discovery, Huet said, shows that gasoline bombs being used by rioters "are not being improvised by kids in their bathrooms."

Unless this report is a hoax, and I have no reason to believe it is, the riots in France cannot be blamed solely on the various societal reasons--which yes, do figure into this mess--but one can easily imagine outside inspiration being a guiding force for the rioters. Those 100 molotov cocktails probably were not assembled in the last ten days.

Okay, let me be blunt: At some point, the French authorities have to take a look and investigate if Saudi funded "charities" have any role within the Islamic culture-within-a-culture of France.

Are Franco-Muslim clerics directed or funded by the Saudis? Those madrassas (religious schools) in Pakistan that helped put the Taliban in power in Afghanistan: They were financed by the government of Saudi Arabia, as has been well-documented elsewhere.

Besides Qu'ran memorization, what was taught at those schools was the extremist and violent Wahhabi sect of Islam, the state creed of Saudi Arabia.

Wahhabism is the impetus behind the spread of Islamism.

From the November 7, 2005 National Review, Alex Alexiev writes:

In the West itself, Islamic extremism has made huge strides and dominates the burgeoning Muslim diaspora communities in many European cities. Under Islamist control, they are being transformed into separatist anti-societies that reject Western civilization and its norms. Many are increasingly willing to engage in violence against their fellow citizens. Fully 13 percent of British Muslims, according to a 2004 Home Office survey, approve of terrorist, and 1 percent--a staggering 16,000 people--"engaged in terrorist activity at home or abroad, or supported such activity." Earlier German studies indicate that a quarter of Muslim school students are ready to use violence on behalf of Islam.

What's amazing about Alexiev's article is that it was written before October 27, when the riots began in France.

It goes on...

The basic facts of Saudi sponsorship or radical Islam are too well known to require much rehearsal here. According to Riyadh's own admission, the kingdom has spent no less that an average of $2.5 billion a year to support "Islamic activities." This has allowed it to build and control 210 Islamic Centers, 1,500 mosques, 2,000 schools, and 200 colleges in non-Muslim countries alone. As a result, there is hardly a Western city today that does not have an Islamist-controlled institution of one kind or another spewing hatred against the West and Muslims who refuse to submit to radical Islam. It is this infrastructure of extremist mosques, madrassas, "charities," and foundations that was, and continues to be the real incubator of fanaticism worldwide and a foe vastly more potent than al-Qaeda.

If the Saudis--or their "charities" have anything beyond an oblique role in the ongoing carnage in France, then the time has arrived, in my opinion, to label Saudi Arabia an adversary, no, make that an enemy of Western civilization and nations such as France and the United States.

Nations have a right---no, a duty--to protect their citizens from enemies that wish to harm or destroy them.

If for instance, Venezuela's Hugo Chavez was discovered to be behind a similar outbreak of violence in the United States, it would be considered an act of war.

Even if the French riots are found to be spontaneous, the Saudis need to be told what is acceptable and not acceptable in the ways of Islam proselytizing.

If the Saudis don't change? Well, a lot of things can happen--all of them unpleasant.

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Mark Steyn on the French riots

Wake up, Europe, you've a war on your hands is in this morning's Chicago Sun-Times. Brilliant analysis:

Ever since 9/11, I've been gloomily predicting the European powder keg's about to go up. ''By 2010 we'll be watching burning buildings, street riots and assassinations on the news every night,'' I wrote in Canada's Western Standard back in February.

Silly me. The Eurabian civil war appears to have started some years ahead of my optimistic schedule. As Thursday's edition of the Guardian reported in London: ''French youths fired at police and burned over 300 cars last night as towns around Paris experienced their worst night of violence in a week of urban unrest.''

''French youths,'' huh? You mean Pierre and Jacques and Marcel and Alphonse? Granted that most of the "youths" are technically citizens of the French Republic, it doesn't take much time in les banlieus of Paris to discover that the rioters do not think of their primary identity as ''French'': They're young men from North Africa growing ever more estranged from the broader community with each passing year and wedded ever more intensely to an assertive Muslim identity more implacable than anything you're likely to find in the Middle East. After four somnolent years, it turns out finally that there really is an explosive ''Arab street,'' but it's in Clichy-sous-Bois.

The notion that Texas neocon arrogance was responsible for frosting up trans-Atlantic relations was always preposterous, even for someone as complacent and blinkered as John Kerry. If you had millions of seething unassimilated Muslim youths in lawless suburbs ringing every major city, would you be so eager to send your troops into an Arab country fighting alongside the Americans? For half a decade, French Arabs have been carrying on a low-level intifada against synagogues, kosher butchers, Jewish schools, etc. The concern of the political class has been to prevent the spread of these attacks to targets of more, ah, general interest. They seem to have lost that battle. Unlike America's Europhiles, France's Arab street correctly identified Chirac's opposition to the Iraq war for what it was: a sign of weakness.


UPDATE 4:00 PM: Betsy's Page, offers analysis on this article.

Saturday, November 05, 2005