Wednesday, October 05, 2005

As I said earlier, the Family Research Council sends me E-mails.  I can't say I didn't sign up for them.  Take a close look at what they have to say about Bill Bennett's racist outburst the other day:

When Bennett offered what he called a "noxious" hypothetical example on his Morning in America talk show saying that abortion might be used to lower crime rates in the black community--but that it would be morally reprehensible to do so--liberals pounced.

That's right, they are claiming that Bennett was talking about "lowering crime rates in the black community."  Not exactly:

"you wanted to reduce crime ... if that were your sole purpose, you could abort every black baby in this country, and your crime rate would go down."

That's right--Bennett was talking about reducing crime in general, not in the "black community."

And that's where the racism is, folks.  No amount of distortion by the Family Research Council can change it.

RW
Wednesday, October 05, 2005 7:19:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [7]  |  Trackback
 Monday, October 03, 2005
 Saturday, October 01, 2005

After much time spent musing about effective crime-fighting strategies, we at the Ironmouth predict that Bill Bennett will turn his attention to Iraq and recommend bringing back genocide as a time-honored strategy for breaking pesky insurgencies.  Bill is after all a man of letters and high moral certitude and hell, if the Roman, Greek, Mongol, Ottoman and British Empires could use it effectively why not us?

RM
Saturday, October 01, 2005 6:29:39 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  |  Trackback
 Friday, September 30, 2005

I meant to say something about this the other day but couldn't find the time.  One of our local state representatives from Knoxville has made a national name for himself by going after the Black Legislative Caucus in Nashville.  Now Mr. Campfield being very white, very conservative Republican and not too smart not only tried to create some sort of controversy about the Black Legislative Caucus' bylaws and finances, he pushed the envelope and became flabbergasted that he couldn't become a member and then felt the need to remark that the KKK was a more inclusive group then the Tennessee Black Legislative Caucus.    When I read it I thought that there probably wasn't anything preventing Campfield from founding a KKK caucus but I digress. 

I bring up Rep. Campfield because he typifies something I hate about politics nowadays which is the childish perpetual bomb-throwing politician less interested in representing his district or state and more interested in clownish stunts meant to prove some broader political point.  For example, while we were home in Minnesota last summer, the state legislature was deadlocked with Gov. Pawlenty on a budget and the state faced a government shut-down.  Now there were all manner of negotiations happening but for some reason Republicans in the House and Senate felt that it would be much more effective to go after the Democratic Senate Majority leader and did so by placing a small futon outside his office where a revolving cast of Republican politicians slept, ate and stood watch 24/7.  For the life of me I couldn't quite see what they were trying to accomplish nor did most Minnesotans and of course the state government shut down during the 4th of July weekend.  Mission accomplished, I guess?  

Frankly I hate it when either party resorts to stunts reminiscent of campus radical pranks from the 60's, but I must ask:  do the RNC or College Republican have seminars on this kind of thing?  I know everybody got a kick out of them when Newt Gingrich was leading the party into the majority but when do you turn it off and actually govern? 

RM
Saturday, October 01, 2005 1:29:05 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Somebody grab Mr. Delay and tell him it doesn't look good when you're own lawyer admits that you've repeatedly lied about whether you were asked to appear before the Travis County grand jury.  Minor detail but very telling in the larger scheme of things.

RM
Friday, September 30, 2005 8:38:37 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Judith Miller, seen here with bloated and overrated defense attorney Bob Bennett (whose shameful handling of Bill Clinton's defense in the Paula Jones case led to the President's impeachment in the House - there's money well spent, Judy), is out of custody, and, evidently, she is now eager to sing for Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald. 

Judith Miller's sloppy propagandizing, er, reporting helped make Bush's case for invading Iraq.  Then she used (presumably) the same unreliable sources - high-ranking political hacks of the Bush Administration - to disclose a covert CIA officer's identity.  And she did so having substantial reason to know that these sources were not whistleblowers exposing corruption while risking retaliation, but hacks hell bent on undermining a critic of Bush.  Then she decides to go to jail to protect the identity of these sources who fed her a steady diet of political hogwash poorly disguised but unquestionably accepted by Miller as "fact."  And now she's a rat.

Please, fellow bloggers.  Post your comments ridiculing this halfwit with a word processor.  Regardless of one's place on the political pendulum, I can't see how anyone could view Judith Miller without utter, nauseating contempt.

The last few years have been tough ones for the New York Times.

GH
Friday, September 30, 2005 10:57:31 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [5]  |  Trackback
 Thursday, September 29, 2005

Ed Kilgore gives us an update on Ashley Smith who supposedly used Rick Warren's super popular "A Purpose Driven Life" to talk down a fugitive-cop killer holding her hostage in her suburban Atlanta apartment.  Well, the revised story is that she used her stash of crystal meth to sweeten the deal. 

This episode reminded me of living in Atlanta where strip clubs and Baptist mega-churches seem well represented on highway billboards as you come into town on I-75.  Furthermore, I have to agree with Ed that the "sinner-saint" dichotomy that most Southerners seem to so instinctively embrace, if not celebrate, is just one more reason to love the South.

RM
Thursday, September 29, 2005 7:59:21 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Couldn't have happened to a nicer fellow.  Everyone's favorite House Majority Leader was just indicted in Texas.

RM
Wednesday, September 28, 2005 10:15:49 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [6]  |  Trackback

If you watched or listened to Michael Brown's pathetic and indignant defense of his management of the federal response to Katrina and were looking for more evidence that that performance probably wasn't all that hot, then let me interest you in a Carnival Cruise vacation in New Orleans.  Now, you're saying to yourself, "Doesn't Carnival Cruise lines go to places like Alaska, the Caribbean or other more exotic locations?"  Well, you're right but for now there are three huge nearly empty Carnival Cruise ships docked in New Orleans and other large gulf coast ports at a cost of $236 million all courtesy of FEMA disaster preparedness.

RM
Wednesday, September 28, 2005 8:33:51 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  |  Trackback
 Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Don't believe it?  Read Saalam Pax:

Thinks have reached another record low, whole districts in Baghdad are under the insurgent’s control and the promises the Shia Coalition came to power with, the promise of security and stability are now as tattered as their posters that are still glued to the walls from the last elections. New posters of smiling political clerics are also up but these smiling faces look down at us like they are amused at the joke of a government they have created.

Districts like Ameriyah have become Jihadi Central. After they blew up all the clothes shops there they started blowing up grocery shops and now they have moved on to shops selling watches. Very symbolic isn’t it? Time stops HERE.

A couple of weeks ago I told you about my mother’s cousin who was abducted and held for ransom. He was released around a week ago. His advice for my mother’s family was: change your name. He talks about a highly organized group of Sunni extremists with lists of names, some to kill, some to squeeze for money. He came out a deeply shaken man, he is convinced this is sectarian war. His abductors were a group of young, very devout Sunni Muslims who see this as Jihad. They have people who provide them with information and names and these youngsters do the dirty work.


Yes there is stability in some regions in Iraq but that is either in Kurdistan, for all intents and purposes a separate country, and in the Shia regions controlled by SCIRI’s militia. The rest of the country is on fire. And depending on how you define civil war we are either in the middle of it or five minutes away from it.

We are at our most divided. And it is at this point in our history we write a constitution. Well hurray for us. A constitution written by the powerful two groups (Shia and Kurd) catering for their wishes and whims while the rest of the population is left with table scraps and hopes that the we will be able to make it better in the future.

Either the Sunnis or the Iranian Republican Guards will control Iraq.  That's why arguments against permanent bases in Iraq are nonsense--there's no way we can do it.

RW
Tuesday, September 27, 2005 10:15:25 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [10]  |  Trackback
 Monday, September 26, 2005

Remember how the President suspended Davis-Bacon prevailing wage provisions in order to make it easier for minority-owned businesses to get federal contracts?  Well, if this WSJ article via Daniel Gross is any indication, there are a lot of minority business owners in Mississippi and Louisiana trying figure out why they were left out of the running, especially for some of the more lucrative contracts handed out not long after Katrina hit.

RM
Monday, September 26, 2005 11:49:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

This Iron Mouth Editor attended the massive anti-war demonstration on Saturday in D.C.  At one point we were held up because march organizers did not want counter protesters in front to be photographed leading the march.  They wanted them to clear out before moving forward.  Expecting a crowd, I saw four counter protesters. 

So it was no suprise that I learned that the pro-war rally billed as a 20,000 strong demonstration of support for the troops drew 400

Oh, and remember how Bush asked for direct contributions to the Iraq reconstruction fund?  In the first two weeks of the program the donations have been rushing in:

An extraordinary appeal to Americans from the Bush administration for money to help pay for the reconstruction of Iraq has raised only $600 (£337), The Observer has learnt.

The public's reluctance to contribute much more than the cost of two iPods to the administration's attempt to offer citizens 'a further stake in building a free and prosperous Iraq' has been seized on by critics as evidence of growing ambivalence over that country.

Two ipods. Heh.

RW
Monday, September 26, 2005 9:24:11 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [4]  |  Trackback