Entries Tagged as ''

But is it cool?

So the “new” way to search is with Cuil. It seems fast, but it’s strange. I tried it first thing today, and the “about” page didn’t work. In addition, I did one search that returned zero results, claiming my terms were “too rare.” The same search on Yahoo gave me 23.5 million hits. I modified the search and Cuil returned exactly one match — but at the top right it said “368,400 results.” I don’t know where those results were, but they weren’t available to me… strange.

I really like the category search thingy. It looks like it gets the search results, then gives you the option of reducing the search results by the category you’re looking for — but when I chose some categories, it said there were no results! Why in the world would the category even show up if there’s no results? Also, a couple times this morning I got the message that the site wasn’t available because of too much traffic. Not a great start for someone who wants to challenge Google…

It seems nice, but it doesn’t seem to be good at returning results just yet.

Popularity: 16% [?]

Baseball Hall of Fame Induction

So yesterday, I decided to sit down and watch the baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremonies. I had been lobbying hard to see Goose Gossage get voted in, and I was very happy to see such a great player elected to such a great honor. I loved all the announcements and introductions of the current Hall of Fame members. On TV, they showed little clips of all the Hall of Fame members’ time in the major leagues. It was incredible and awe-inspiring.

Then Joe Morgan took the stage.

Now Joe Morgan was a great baseball player. He’s a decent announcer (for ESPN). But he’s incredibly racist, too. He never misses a chance to loudly proclaim how “hard” blacks have it. His entire speech was focused on how the black hall of fame members were black, and wasn’t that great? It really bothers me when he focuses more on the race of the person than on their accomplishments. You don’t have to stand up there and point out a single thing about the color of ANYONE’S skin — these people in the Hall of Fame aren’t there because they’re black or white — they’re there because they’re great baseball players.

The guy that got up after Joe kept on the same theme. “Oh, isn’t this guy wonderful because he did good in the negro leagues. He’d have had even better numbers if he’d been allowed in the major leagues earlier.” It just sickened me how much they really went out of their way to try and make me, personally, guilty for enslaving blacks in the 19th century. It was so bad, I had to turn the channel off — which is really sad because I really enjoyed my recent visit to Cooperstown, just last month. Why can’t we just focus on people’s accomplishments and ignore their race?

I used to think that one day we would finally reach a point where race relations might get better. When we reached the point where slave owners and actual slaves died out, I thought relations might improve. Unfortunately, due to people like Joe Morgan who continue to focus only on the race of people, instead of judging people based on their own accomplishments, I’m afraid we’re not going to get there. Thanks, Joe, and thanks, Baseball Hall of Fame, for really messing up what should have been a wonderful tribute to the baseball accomplishments of Goose Gossage and others.

Popularity: 14% [?]

New Deal III

Well, it’s official. Welcome to New Deal III, brought to you by big-government types everywhere, from Democrats to President Bush. Isn’t life wonderful? You don’t need to worry about anything any more because government will take care of you. After all, look how successful those first two New Deals were — they provided social security funds so the government could spend more. They created the massive, utterly worthless bureaucratic nightmare that is the Federal Housing Authority. And they have cost hundreds of trillions of dollars so that government will be sure that all times are good economic times and no one will ever lose a house to foreclosure… and no banks will fail… and all things will be good…

I’m sorry, but more and more I have less and less use for government. The only thing government does “for” me is to punish me for being responsible. I am very seriously considering defaulting on my mortgage, just so I can get a tiny portion of the tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars I have paid in taxes back.

Popularity: 12% [?]

You had these opportunities, America.

”You had these opportunities, America. You didn’t do anything,” FBI agent George Crouch Jr. testified Friday at Salim Hamdan’s war crimes trial.

Via Bruce Kessler

Steve Shippert, of ThreatsWatch.org just sent this email out on a small email ring of bloggers. It is simply and truly incredibly important, and eloquent. I beseech every blogger to post it on their blog. If all do, it will redound widely, and be widely heard, as it must be, if we care for our nation, our children’s future, everything we value in life and liberty. This must get out. It can really shape the debate in this country, and sway many. In every election, there is a moment when it happens, and Shippert’s message is that moment.
PLEASE, everybody post this message in their blog, without delay. Our combined voice will echo and reverberate and have major effect, if done all together and all at once.
Thank you,
Bruce Kesler

The message was, ”You had these opportunities, America. You didn’t do anything,” FBI agent George Crouch Jr. testified Friday at Salim Hamdan’s war crimes trial.

The United States could have killed bin Laden in Khartoum, Sudan, before he moved to Afghanistan in 1996, Hamdan told his interrogators. They could have killed him after al Qaida’s 1998 twin bombings at the U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. Or after the October 2000 suicide bombing of the USS Cole, at the port of Aden in Yemen, which left 17 U.S. sailors dead.

Instead, ”Bin Laden was emboldened.” So he struck with the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, leaving nearly 3,000 dead.

It is bitter irony that lawyers are conveying such through a trial. Remote controlled Tomahawks, the illusion of safety beyond the sanctuary of oceans, and the hot pursuit via attorneys and law both remote and unrecognized by murderous men who seek our death. This was how we convinced ourselves of our certain and active defense.

We were offered bin Laden in transit from Sudan to Afghanistan. But we did not want him. Our lawyers had no battle, our leaders no mettle.

Most of us, though not all, have learned nothing. After thousands smote and seven years of war, we are back to our superior ways, demanding Habeas Corpus and noting in the very first trial that bin Laden’s deputy was read no Miranda rights upon his capture - or was it arrest?

They say History repeats itself. Never before has it applied so swiftly, within the same generation and within the same conflict.

A selfish society incapable of sacrifice is equally incapable of self-defense. Our greatest concern is not the pursuit of madmen or the states which feed them. It is not even the cost of oil and its affect on our economy and future. It is the cost of the gasoline that cycles through our tanks and its affect on our personal checking account balances.

Cowardice, cloaked in arrogance and concealed behind self-assured brilliance, charts a troubled path; one which appears circular, where constant motion deceptively passes for progress. Progress towards what, we disagree, though our enemies do not, as they laugh.

Many say it will take another catastrophic attack to bring us to our collective senses. But it will likely not come. For, if al-Qaeda (et al) is smart - and they are - they will leave us alone on our own soil while we rip ourselves apart. No explosives, no bombs, no weapons of war required. We are, after all, suddenly and finally waging their centuries-long war upon ourselves. Brilliantly.

We allow ourselves to be told that we are what is wrong with the world; torturous, greedy, destructive, with disregard for the poorest and bitter intolerance for anyone not like us. We Balkanize our society and point fingers at each other, laying these same charges against one domestic group or another with the venom and aggression once reserved for distant, oppressive enemies.

Can we awaken from our own self-destructive slumber? The decisive war is not in Iraq, nor Afghanistan, nor Pakistan or any other distant place where we perceive our enemies to be. The decisive battle is right here, from Maine to San Diego, from St. Louis to Atlanta.
If we are incapable of rediscovering that which Constitutes us and what distinguishes America form every other nation on this planet, and acknowledging that America, her people, our liberty and our unequaled charity are indeed good and our values just, then what does Iraq or Afghanistan matter?

Can we truly identify that which we are defending? For if we cannot, we are not. We are simply preserving soil and borders, protecting cities and people - that which can be found anywhere else on this planet.

What will America be, what will she look like when our children are thrust at the helm? Will they write that we defended her, or will they write that we devoured and discarded her? This, not al-Qaeda or the War on Terror, keeps me up at night.

For we can defeat al-Qaeda and yet have defended nothing at all in the long, painful process. And our children will be compelled to write of us, ”You had these opportunities, America. You didn’t do anything.”

SteveSteve Schippert
http://ThreatsWatch.org/
http://tank.nationalreview.com/

Popularity: 14% [?]