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November 21, 2004

Heroism Runs in Families

Over at Greenside, LTC David Bellon (USMC), writes of the heroism of Corporal Yeager. Yes, that Yeager:

The first is a Marine from 3/5.  His name is Corporal Yeager (Chuck Yeager's grandson).  As the Marines cleared and apartment building, they got to the top floor and the point man kicked in the door.  As he did so, an enemy grenade and a burst of gunfire came out.  The explosion and enemy fire took off the point man's leg.  He was then immediately shot in the arm as he lay in the doorway.  Corporal Yeager tossed a grenade in the room and ran into the doorway and into the enemy fire in order to pull his buddy back to cover.  As he was dragging the wounded Marine to cover, his own grenade came back through the doorway.  Without pausing, he reached down and threw the grenade back through the door while he heaved his buddy to safety.  The grenade went off inside the room and Cpl Yeager threw another in.  He immediately entered the room following the second explosion.  He gunned down three enemy all within three feet of where he stood and then let fly a third grenade as he backed out of the room to complete the evacuation of the wounded Marine.  You have to understand that a grenade goes off within 5 seconds of having the pin pulled.  Marines usually let them "cook off" for a second or two before tossing them in.   Therefore, this entire episode took place in less than 30 seconds. 

November 20, 2004

First Snow

It snowed last weekend - here's a couple shots that the sidekick took of our first snow of the 2004 winter season here in Taunton:

Dsc00001

Dsc00008

Statement of Purpose

Livestrong

November 14, 2004

Letter to the Editor - "It's Not Us, Stupid!"

From today's Boston Globe was this gem of a Letter to the Editor:

I am forced to chuckle each time I read yet another letter to the editor stating that those who exercised their right to vote for anyone other than John Kerry are less than intelligent or, as some writers frankly state, stupid.

It seems to me that if these individuals maintain their position of arrogance and pomposity, then they will have a future of utilizing their self-professed genius in writing concession speeches for their candidates.

Seth Rubinson
Andover, MA

November 13, 2004

Picture Update

Pictures are now posted for the Naval Air Station Jacksonville (NAS JAX) Airshow and the November Biking Trip at Myles Standish State Forest.

Enjoy!

November 11, 2004

Arafat

The Boston Globe's Jeff Jacoby has a few words on the death of Yassir Arafat:

YASSER ARAFAT died at age 75, lying in bed surrounded by familiar faces. He left this world peacefully, unlike the thousands of victims he sent to early graves.

In a better world, the PLO chief would have met his end on a gallows, hanged for mass murder much as the Nazi chiefs were hanged at Nuremberg. In a better world, the French president would not have paid a visit to the bedside of such a monster. In a better world, George Bush would not have said, on hearing the first reports that Arafat had died, "God bless his soul."

God bless his soul? What a grotesque idea! Bless the soul of the man who brought modern terrorism to the world? Who sent his agents to slaughter athletes at the Olympics, blow airliners out of the sky, bomb schools and pizzerias, machine-gun passengers in airline terminals? Who lied, cheated, and stole without compunction? Who inculcated the vilest culture of Jew-hatred since the Third Reich? Human beings might stoop to bless a creature so evil -- as indeed Arafat was blessed, with money, deference, even a Nobel Prize -- but God, I am quite sure, will damn him for eternity.

Veterans's Day 2004

For all of my readers who have served - or who serve today - you have my thanks.

Bryan

November 10, 2004

Happy 229th Birthday

November 10, 1775, the Continental Congress met and passed the following resolution - in secret - thus establishing an American Marine Corps (based on the Royal Marine Corps model):

Resolved: That two battalions of Marines be raised consisting of one colonel, two lieutenant colonels, two majors & other officers as usual in other regiments, that they consist of an equal number of privates with other battalions; that particular care be taken that no person be appointed to office or enlisted into said battalions, but such as are good seamen, or so acquainted with maritime affairs as to be able to serve to advantage by sea, when required. That they be enlisted and commissioned for and during the present war between Great Britain and the colonies, unless dismissed by order of Congress. That they be distinguished by the names of the first & second battalions of American Marines, and that they be considered a part of the number, which the Continental Army before Boston is ordered to consist of.

November 07, 2004

Cycling Diary: 11/7/2004

Cycling at Myles Standish State Forest today:

71:38, 11.56 Miles, 9.6 mph average speed, 21.8 mph top speed, 435.8 calories

Laptop Screenshot

It's been 5 months since I've posted a screenshot - here's one of the PowerBook G4:

Laptopscreenshot-110504

November 04, 2004

The Election Aftermath: Respect

I wrote recently about the concept of respect in terms of the Presidential election. I thought it would be interesting to take a look around the blogosphere and see the reactions to the election results:

NewsNation:

How did Bush win?

He had too many hillbilly redneck fools in this country vote. People that know nothing about Bush and the things he has done. Poor people that blindly vote for a president that will never stand for them, that lied to their faces and forced us into a war that should have never been, a man that drove this country into financial ruins and social disaster! These people STILL think that we are in 2 wars with more to come in the name of terrorism and that we are fighting for freedom! They need to be institutionalized because this way of thinking goes above and beyond the limits of acceptable stupidity!

So the only folks that voted for Bush are those who are poor and vote blindly. Yup, that's it.

More NewsNation:

How did Bush win?

Because Americans have been brainwashed. The Nazi party was also very popular with the German masses back then, while the rest of the world looked on in horror. Just like today.

If you ever want to understand how millions of people cheeringly followed Hitler into war, all you have to do is look at America today. History is repeating itself.

If you ever want to understand how Nazis could care so little about all those dead jews, all you need to do is look at America's total indifference to 100,000 dead muslims.

Isn't it written somewhere that as soon as you start comparing your opponent to Hitler that you lose your argument? I sure wish that were true. The author of this particular comment, by the way, often refers to conservatives as "fascists". Great rhetoric.

Blurbomat (comments);

This doesn't even skim the surface of ways in which he's really screwed our country over, inside and out. This is an inept wealth-serving man who claims the identity of God-hearing Christian but is really a monarch ruling by his own version of divine right. He could not understand the plight of anyone not born the son of a wealthy oilman/senator if his life depended on it and will, whether unwittingly or apathetically, screw over the masses even further if he is back in order to privatize social security (exposing it to the vagaries of the stock market), install more meat industry flunky friends to head the USDA and FDA so testing on our food supply is reduced even further, and opens up another 5000+ acres of national parkland for industrial development. And I'm sure I speak for many besides myself who have at least bachelor's degrees when I say: STOP TRYING TO MAKE ME GO TO COMMUNITY COLLEGE. Why doesn't bush go and take a public speaking course or ten?

But then again, considering the CEO of one of the companies manufacturing the voting machines, namely Diebold, donated generously to his campaign and pledged to deliver the vote to him, who's to say all those people really voted for him?

Yup, you got it. Bush only won Florida because of the Diebold machines. Ignore that 350,000+ vote margin - it was rigged, Yup, rigged. HE WAS SELECTED, NOT ELECTED. Or so they say.

Blurbomat (comments):

I am crying this morning and trying really hard not to throw up. I am so fucking disgusted and upset at this, that the election is going to Bush, that it was even CLOSE made me ill!! I just don't understand how people could be so ignorant about what his agenda is and how fucking SCARY it is. Say goodbye to your rights. Say goodbye to the Constitution as you know it. Say goodbye to the environment. Say goodbye to your JOB, probably. Say goodbye to separation of Church and State. And say goodbye to your friends and family in the military.
My country voted out of FEAR not BRAINS. I am sick. Truly sick. In my opinion, the terrorists won this election. The terrorists.

God help us all, and I mean the whole world not just America, because this will affect everyone.

Yup, no rights. The constitution is just going to be shredded. The environment will be destroyed. In fact, I heard that the new EPA Director ran out in the woods this morning and started cutting down trees herself - just for fun. And then to make things even better, she threw a couple babies out in the street and pumped bullets into them. Yup, BABYKILLERS.

Blurbomat (comments):

Better to be unborn and aborted if Bush is reelected than be brought into a country of misery and the creation of an entirely new second class citizenry.

Yup, it's better to just be dead rather than to have to live under a Bush Presidency.

Blurbomat (comments):

To Bush supporters, I say this: Put your life where your mouth is: ENLIST. Please. Hurry. If life is so expendible to you, please go DIE IN WAR. Quickly, before any more truly valuable lives are lost.

This is my personal favorite. If you voted for Bush, just go DIE. Yup, dead. That's the voice of our "loyal opposition"

Blurbomat (comments):

First off, there's the obvious fiasco of the voting machines. These were manufactured by an ardent Bush supporter who (I still can't believe he was so brazen as to say it) PLEDGED to give bush the vote, dubious machines which leave no paper trail and in at least one case so far actually changed a person's vote from Democrat to Republican on the last reviewing screen of the process . These hackable machines in no way reassure me of accuracy or fairness.

And there were questionable practices in play during the voting process, with reports of thousands of Hispanic voters having been turned away from polls in Ohio because the particular polling place did not "deal with" Hispanic voters. You also had reports of bushmongerers trying to intimidate voters at polling sites: I mean, wtf?

That's just from what I've read so far. I have a feeling the story gets a lot uglier.

So excuse me if I really don't feel having bush inflicted on us another 4 years was a fair or even actual outcome.

In this person's mind, as in the minds of many others, the only way for Bush to win was to CHEAT, LIE, STEAL. So all 3.5 million of those votes for Bush that put him ahead of Kerry were STOLEN. Diebold and the Freemason were behind it.

Megacity:

You get what you fucking deserve, assholes. This country is going to be annihilated under the sheer force of its own stupid citizens. "Go America!" half of you shout, but you don't know anything. Anything at all. Personally, I'm not a huge fan of England, but I guess you all are. By the time four years is up, we'll have a white christian country with a consistently low IQ, no health care of any kind, and no economy. Congratulations. If you're a Bush supporter, delete me from your list. You're no friend of mine. Frankly, I hope you die, slowly, painfully, and that your family goes with you, for spawning you.

Derek at Megacity posted this - it was someone's "Away" message on an instant messaging client. Classic, eh? You can't be my friend because you voted for Bush. Unbelievable.

Daily Kos (comments):

How the hell could the exit polls be so wrong? I suspect foul play--the Bushes are involved. Also, Bush said something at a rally last week to the effect of "I know one thing we're going to win Florida this time"

Not that I would expect anything less from a reader of the Daily Kos - here's one where clearly voter fraud was involved for Bush to win - after all, the exit polls couldn't possibly be wrong. Could they?

Russell Beattie:

I just don't understand how so many people in the U.S. could vote for such an ignorant, cowardly, lying, close-minded, intolerant, wicked person.

Wow. Cowardly? Ignorant? Intolerant? Wicked?

Kerri:

Apparently you can win an election, by the way you did it - by lying, cheating, and using scare tactics -- just stinks.

I'm ashamed of Americans. How stupid can you be people?

Come on Kerri - I'm not a stupid person, you know that. Neither are most of those who voted for Bush - we knew exactly what we were getting. And we found him much better than the candidate that you supported. Cheating? Oh yeah, I forgot. Bush can only win if he cheats.

Asia Times:

Total concentration of right-wing power - legitimized by the popular vote: this is the new neo-conservative dream turned reality. So the road ahead is to flatten the Sunni stronghold of Fallujah in Iraq, bomb Iran because of its supposed nuclear aspirations, depose President Hafez Assad in Syria, crush the Palestinian resistance, and remodel the Middle East by "precision strike" democracy.

There will be serious blowback. A new pan-Islamic nationalism, for example, featuring Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani's Shi'ite masses allied with the Sunni triangle to kick out the Americans from Iraq, eventually supported by both Iran and Saudi Arabia. Iraq crisscrossed by guerrillas and Iran penetrated by US intelligence, both leading - plus Shi'ite eastern Saudi Arabia, where the oil is - to a new, catastrophic oil shock.

And then the neo-conservative Project for the New American Century (PNAC) - which virtually took over the US government - will create a major confrontation with China. Asia, beware.

Not that I would expect anything different from a foreign newspaper - but this one is a bit behind the pale, don't you think. We're going to bomb Iran, depose the Syrian government, and then provoke a confrontation with China. Hmmm.

We may indeed have confrontation with both Iran and Syria. If they continue on their present paths of supporting terrorism and developing nuclear weapons - I'm not so sure that's a bad thing.

Joi Ito:

It was close, but the Americans have chosen Bush. It's a sad day, but in a democracy, you get the politicians you deserve/vote for. This was their chance to change their leader and they have failed. For awhile, many of us thought that they had been conned into voting for Bush - that they didn't know he wanted to be a War President. Many people didn't equate the US policies with the people of America. We thought they had made a mistake. Now US policies = US Citizens. You Americans have my sympathies, but it's still your fault.

It's all our fault? Wow.

I like Bush. I wanted him as President - and I wasn't presented with an alternative that made sense to me, so I stuck with what I knew. So did many others. So be it.

So there's the recap - and that's just a glimpse of what I found last night. When people talk about a divided country and how the Republicans (or conservatives in general) are trying to divide the nation - I have news for you. It's not just the conservatives. Perhaps the solution for the Democrats (or liberals in general) is to take a long hard look at your own house.

It's going to be an interesting four years watching the opposition to see how they handle another for years in their role as the minority party in the United States.

Respect? Not really.

November 03, 2004

Sour Grapes

I stayed up until 2:30am this morning watching the election results. At this point, it looks like Bush has Ohio in the bag, but I know it's probably still early to call based on what I knew at 6:30am this morning when I left for the airport. I'm writing this on the plane from Jacksonville to Charlotte, so I can't see the news right now in any event.

I spent a goodly amount of time in an IRC chat room - and then this morning reading the blogosphere's reaction to Bush's reelection - here's generally the things that I heard:

  • "I am moving to Canada or [insert country here] if Bush wins"
  • "We're all gonna die in the next four years"
  • "There's clearly fraud in [insert state here] - Bush can't possibly be the winner"
  • "Four more wars! I can't believe it"
  • "My fellow citizens are idiots - the whole world wanted Kerry to win"
  • "We're far less free today than we were four years ago - the Brownshirts are coming"
  • "I'm going to monster.com and start searching for foreign jobs"

And that's just a sampling. There were some really horrible things being said about Bush. One individual from the IRC channel asked for my weblog (as I was the only Bush supporter in that channel) and proceeded to leave a comment about how half of what I said "made sense" and the other half "was rabid".

Rabid. Yup, I've got rabies folks. How did you know?

In another forum that I participate in that has more of an international flavor in terms of membership, even worse things were said. "Re-electing Bush is like re-electing Hitler", said one poster. Apparently he's forgotten his history - or he just has a selective memory. Or both. And there were more allegations of voter fraud, Jeb Bush's manipulation, and so on.

It's going to be an interesting four years listening to the Democrats and those on the Left once this election wraps up. Bush is leading, as of this morning, with 3.5 million votes in the popular vote, and will lock up the electoral vote later this week depending on how long it takes for Ohio to shake out.

I wrote about "Respect" in a post earlier this week. If Bush wins, it's time for the left to acknowledge defeat and start moving towards some modicum of respect for the President.

LIke it or not, he won. Get over it.

Family Portrait

Here's a picture from my recently completed vacation to Florida. This is at Ormond Beach, just north of Daytona Beach. And yes, I'm really that burned. The airshow really whooped my tail.

Family-Daytona

Me on the left in the Boston cap, my mother Nancy in the middle, my father Butch on the right.

Yes, that's really his name ;)

Family Pets

My parents have two cats - Sadie and Katie - who are around a year old. The dog in the house is Bishop, whom my mother and I picked up at the Vermillion County Humane Society in the fall of 1992. She's now twelve years old and has two rebuilt knees that she managed to snap in the backyard across the years. She doesn't get around as well as she used to, but she's still Bishop ;)

Here's Katie hanging out in the kitchen:

Katie

Bishop spending some time with me down on the floor. A bit grayer than I remember, but still the same old dog:

Bishop

Despite my best efforts, Sadie refused to pose for any noteworthy photographs.

St. Augustine Florida

My last full day in Florida took us south of Jacksonville down to St. Augustine, where I have spent many days over the years. My parents and I toured the recently renovated Castillo de San Marcos National Monument and some of the surrounding areas. A few pictures:

Sanmarcos

Fort

There will be more posted shortly in the online pictures section - check the menu up above for the link.

My Father's Office

Over the years, I've given many gifts to my father that have ended up in his office. One of my recent gifts to him was a Navy Jack and a link to Lex's posting about seeing the colors raised on the USS Stennis one morning. Here's what I found in his office yesterday:

Dad-Navy-Jack

If you look to the left and below the Navy Jack - you'll see a picture of the Navy Jack being raised on a navy vessel - next to that was this posting from Lex:

Lex-Colors-On-The-Stennis

It was Lex's blog post that inspired this gift to him earlier this year.

My father also has some pictures of his recruit class, his discharge from the Navy, his certificate from crossing the equator, and a picture of the USS Duluth (the ship he served on during Vietnam) hanging in his office. Here's a pic of him sitting at his desk:

Dad-At-Desk

My father, for the curious, is the Junior Vice General Chairman and General Secretary Treasurer of the CSX Western Lines for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers.

Tom Daschle

When I left Florida this morning, NBC was reporting that Tom Daschle had been defeated in his bid for Senate re-election.

TOM DASCHLE DEFEATED

Now that rocks my world.

November 02, 2004

This Blog Supports George W. Bush

This morning I wrote a very long post about my endorsement for George W. Bush for President. When I went to post it, my blog editor (ecto) crashed and took the post with it.

I'm sorry but I'm not going to take a bunch of time to rewrite that post. Once was enough!

In any event, I support George W. Bush for President.

I can't vote libertarian, though I'm a registered libertarian still, because their candidate this time is a nutjob and I completely disagree with their approach to the war on terrorism and our role in Iraq.

I can't support Kerry for a number of reasons - many of which revolve around his flip-flopping, his choice of a running mate, his general approach to the war on terrorism, our role in Iraq, his desire to use the UN for everything, his tax policy, and his record in the US Senate. Not to mention that he's been my Senator for the last six years and I'm still trying to figure out what he's done during that time.

Bush gets my vote for a number of reasons - somewhat because he's not Kerry, but more importantly because I believe he sees a changed world before us and is attempting to deal with that world. I'm not going to say that I agree with all of his policies and decisions, but he is the better candidate in my mind. Living in Massachusetts, I'm well aware that my vote will be canceled out due to Kerry taking Massachusetts by storm, but I voted my conscience.

I do lament the fact that once again, the best folks are not running. I would have preferred a challenge between Giuliani or Romney against Hillary or Evan Bayh or others. But that's not to be. Perhaps in 2008. And if Evan Bayh runs, I'm going to be hard pressed to vote against him. Gotta support those Hoosiers.

I'm in Florida tonight, we're planning on watching the election results at a local watering hole and then here at home in front of the television. I do hope that this election ends sometime in the next 24 hours. And whoever wins, I'll support them as President. And that's alot more than many on the left are going to do should Bush be re-elected.

Ohio Results

You can view live Ohio Presidential Election Results on the Ohio Election Night 2004 website from Ohio.gov.

Florida Results

You can monitor the Florida election results live at the Florida Department of State Website

Indiana Comes Through for Bush

Bush: 62%

Yeah baby!

WOOT: Bayh wins Re-Election in Indiana

The Boston Globe is reporting that Evan Bayh has won re-election in his Senate seat in Indiana:

Democrat Evan Bayh, a leading voice in moderate "New Democrat" circles, swept to a second term in the Senate for Indiana.

The Indianapolis Star reports that Bayh won re-election 62% to 36% with 24% of the precincts reporting.

YEAH!

Blackfive: No Matter What Happens Today

Once again, Blackfive reflects my own thoughts pretty clearly - there's nothing here I disagree with:

No Matter What Happens Today

America will survive tomorrow.

Bin Laden and the Islamofascists will continue to attempt to destroy us. We haven't had a Democrat that wants to fight since Roosevelt. Hopefully, the Democrats will be more on board with conducting the "war" on terror and Islamofascism. It's not a cake party, it's a war.

If John Kerry is NOT elected President, I sincerely hope that he follows through on his promises for a stronger America in the Senate. So far, he hasn't done crap as a Senator to make us stronger.

If George Bush is NOT re-elected President, I sincerely hope that we will unleash HELL on the jihadis the world over. I would expect that he will transition the War management properly in a bi-partisan manner.

I'd like to see us partner more with India and other countries on the WoT. We partnered with the Communists during WWII. Depending on how far the war takes us, China may be a partner, too. France can go to hell...oh, too late, they've already taken that trip.

Republicans Kept from Voting in Chicago

In Chicago, Blackfive has been kept from voting - and interestingly enough - ten of the others who were kept from voting were all Republicans.

They turned everyone (that was not in the books) away.

As I left on my way to the County Election Commission to file a complaint, I asked ten different people who were also denied a vote because they weren't in the book, "Are you Republicans?"

All ten replied, "Yes."

"Did you vote in the primary?"

Nine, "Yes."

It's impossible to know if the Republicans were removed from the book. But this is Chicago...where the dead count more than the living.

I'll let you know what happens in a few hours. I'm calling my friend who's an editor for the Tribune and another who's an Assistant State's Attorney.

A Final Thought from Bill Whittle

The always eloquent Bill Whittle over at Eject! Eject! Eject! has this missive about today's election:

On Tuesday, Americans will choose between the conservative hawk from Texas, and the conservative hawk from Massachusetts. Both are running on a platform to strengthen the military and track down terrorists wherever they may live. Draw your own conclusions about who has the most convincing track record in this regard.

I have tried to make clear the reasons I have, and continue to support, President Bush. Despite his many faults, he seems to understand that the only nations serious about this fight are already in the field at our side. We have recovered from budget deficits before. We have been debating abortion and gay rights and all the other lifestyle issues for decades, and these debates will not go away if John Kerry is elected.

I will be able to live with a Kerry Presidency. But what tortures me is the thought that this country is no longer capable of doing hard, dirty work -- that we have reached the point where nothing difficult is attainable because the cost is something less than free.

I believe, from a reading of the history and the very words of the leaders of North Vietnam, that John Kerry was instrumental in convincing them that if they were able to hang on and inflict enough American casualties, eventually we would tire and go home.

I further believe that history shows that the Ayatollah Khomeini had our number in this regard, and I regard the start of this current conflict as the day they overran the US Embassy in Tehran, to which our response was...what?

The murdering, beheading savages who are trying to steal victory from defeat in the American ballot box have seen these lessons of Vietnam, and Iran, and Somalia, and they are -- and have openly said they are -- doing their best to kill as many Americans as they can to win this election for the man they certainly seem to fear less. That tells me something.

[...]

President Bush has already done much to re-program our mortal enemies assumptions about our determination to finish what we start, no matter the cost. Three dangerous enemies have fallen during his watch -- Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. The first two were predicted to cause American streets to run red with blood as the Jihadists took their vengeance upon us. In the three years since 9/11, there have been no terrorist attacks on this country. That is a record to be proud of, and one that deserves the reward of my vote, at least.

I want to finish this fight, now. I don't think our children should have to worry about this five or ten or twenty years from now, when Iran or North Korea has had a chance to spread some nuclear largesse around. I believe a badly wounded enemy is more dangerous than a dead one. I want this fight to be over so that the country can afford to elect someone who panders to everyone and speaks French and can undo all this animosity from Europe with a few well-placed toasts and a conciliatory speech at the UN. The time for that is when this thing is over.

There is much to dislike, and even some to despise, about the current American President. But he means to finish this fight, and by that, I believe he means to finish it by winning.

Afghanistan did not go to the warlords. It went to the polls. There were not one million refugees. Iraq did not produce 10,000 US casualties in house-to-house fighting, nor did it splinter into 3-way civil war as so many predicted. In three months, Iraqis will also go to the polls, and they, by all accounts, will continue their widespread support for secular candidates and repudiation of the extremists that are fighting so hard to terrorize and dishearten them. But the Iraqis are not terrorized. They are signing on for their army and police forces in the face of great danger. We owe those brave men and women something better than "wrong war, wrong place and wrong time."

This is failure?

Not by my standards, it isn't.

So I promised you a final thought, and everything above this point is mere preamble to it. Here it is:

People are telling you that Tuesday will be the most important election of your lives.

That is not true.

The most important election of your lives was held on Tuesday, November 7th, 2000. You just didn't know it. Neither did I.

What happened on that day led to one man being in the White House these past four years, rather than the other one. Whether he has done enough to keep us safe, even if he should lose on Tuesday, remains to be seen. But the fact remains that George W. Bush was Commander in Chief and President when we needed him the most.

I made a mistake when I cast my vote for Al Gore in the most important election of my lifetime. I won't make that mistake again on Tuesday

NAS JAX: More Pictures

Another picture from the Naval Air Station Jacksonville's 2004 Air Show - featuring the Blue Angels:

Dsc00099

November 01, 2004

Daily Telegraph: Kerry isn't the Answer

Telegraph | Opinion | Kerry isn't the answer:

Britain has 9,000 troops in Iraq, hundreds of whom are being drawn into the less stable regions of the country at American request. For the foreseeable future, our troops will play a central role in the bringing of order to the liberated country. Mr Bush has made many mistakes in Iraq. But one thing is certain: Saddam Hussein has been deposed. Mr Kerry is not even sure that the Iraqi dictator's tyranny would be over had he been President. "He might be gone," is as far as he was willing to go in an interview with NBC last week.

Indeed, Mr Kerry's position on the war could scarcely be more muddled. The Senator voted for the invasion (unlike the first Gulf War, which he voted against). However, last October, he voted against an appropriation to support American soldiers dealing with the aftermath of a war he had approved. He has said that Mr Bush failed to commit enough troops to Iraq, but at the same time has promised to start bringing American soldiers home six months after taking office. Who, then, will plug the gap? The French foreign minister, Michel Barnier, has said that France will "never" send its troops to Iraq, even if Mr Kerry does win. Germany is no less forthright. How does the Democrat candidate propose to "win" in Iraq - as he says he would - in such operational circumstances?

Mr Kerry has done everything to encourage the charge that he is stranded in the world of September 10. "We have to get back to the place we were," he said this month, "where terrorists are not the focus of our lives, but they're a nuisance." That would no doubt be desirable. But nothing Mr Kerry has said suggests that he knows how to achieve this goal. The intellectual vacuum at the heart of his candidacy has profound implications for Britain's strategic interests and the lives of our troops: in both cases, this country would be better served by the re-election of Mr Bush.

Lileks: Find Bin Laden

As usual, James Lileks adds much to the debate over the elections:

I am certain Bin Laden fears a Kerry presidency more than a Bush second term. He knows – and I think we all know this – that Kerry would summon in the military guys, and say “I want you to find bin Laden.”

Uh – sir, I don’t quite –

"I mean it. Find him. "

You mean, find him? Why – such a thing has never been considered, sir; we’ve just been waiting for him to wander into camp looking for directions, or perhaps to use the bathroom. That whole Abu Ghraib thing - well as you no doubt know, we were just trying to provoke him to set his ol' beard on fire and run screaming into camp waving a big-ass scimitar, and then we'd be like all Indy on him and pow! Pow! But it never worked out. We never even had a Plan B. Find him? You serious? This is so totally unexpected! You mean, actually go try and get him?

"That’s exactly what I mean. And I have a plan."

Sir?

"I want you to go here –"

Where, exactly? Your hand is covering all of Afghanistan and northern Pakistan on the map –

"That’s right. I want you to go here, and I want you to look for him. And when you see him, get him. "

Is that the plan, sir?

"No, there’s more. See this? I’ve drawn a blue line, making a wide new river to his exact position. Send the Navy."

Uh – yes. Yes of course sir. Anything else, sir?

"Yes. Take this hat. If he’s invisible, you’ll see him – but only if you have the hat on. Now find him! "

NY Daily News Endorses Bush

New York Daily News - Politics - Editorial: Right war, right time, right man:

Kerry's votes for and against the war and his shifting campaign rhetoric raise grave doubts about what, exactly, a President Kerry would do in Iraq. He emphasizes persuading countries like France and Germany to join the war effort, but they have said no and never. He promises to prosecute the war better than Bush, but he has not gone beyond pointing out every setback in the conflict.

Most seriously, Candidate Kerry's clearest position on the war undercuts the cause a President Kerry would be obligated to fight. As Washington Post columnist Jim Hoagland put it: "Kerry's repeated denunciations of Iraq as the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time weaken the moral and perhaps even the legal base for ordering Americans to continue to fight there if he becomes President." World leaders — those Kerry intends to rally and those already committed — could not responsibly risk their citizens in a misbegotten fight.

At this critical juncture, America cannot afford such a lack of clarity — or even a hint that a President would revert to playing defense rather than staying on the offensive. Nor would it be wise to change commanders midbattle in Iraq and around the globe, replacing a tested leader with a man who would have to learn on the job under the most difficult circumstances. With so much at stake, that's a transition not to be wished for.

Returning Bush to office is the wise course, The News believes, despite our sharp disagreement with his domestic policies. Those pale in comparison with the overarching challenge of securing the nation and preserving New York's vital way of life. Of the two candidates, Bush has the clearer vision for accomplishing the goal, as well as the greater experience. He gets our endorsement.

SGM Hook

From Sgt. Hook comes this bit of fantastic news:

Well it seems that the senior leadership of our Army have once again been hitting the sauce with their lunches, or they’ve totally lost their minds, as they’ve selected yours truly for promotion to Sergeant Major (E9) and have reserved a seat for my attendance to the Sergeants Major Academy this spring. I’ll be damned.

Congratulations Sergeant Major! Good news all around today!

NAS JAX Preview

Went to the airshow at Naval Air Station Jacksonville yesterday with my parents and saw the Blue Angels for the first time. As I'm on dialup, this will just be a preview of the pictures to come once I get back to a high speed internet connection. More to come!

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