:: Bluestarblog ::

archive and links
*** Welcome to Bluestar *** :: blog :: library :: guitar page :: music page :: contact ::
[::..recommended opinion..::]
Ace of Spades
Alarming News
Andrew Feenberg
Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler
Armed and Dangerous
Balloon Juice
Belmont Club
BlackFive
Blogcritics
Boing Boing
BookSlut
BT: Brain Terminal
BrothersJudd Blog
BuzzMachine
Captain's Quarters
Cathy Young
Chicago Boyz
Classical Values
Clay Shirky
Cold Fury
Common Sense and Wonder
Critical Mass
Daniel Dennett
Daniel Drezner
Daniel Pipes
David Chalmers
David Warren
Dean's World
Defense Tech
Diana Hsieh
Dynamist Blog
EconLog
EconoPundit
Ed Driscoll
Eject Eject Eject
Enter Stage Right
Flit
FuturePundit
Geeks are Sexy
Gene Expression
Gene Healy
Greg Sandow
Hot Air
IMAO
Instapundit
Israpundit
John Allen Paulos
John Cramer
Joseph Traub
Kieran Healy
Knowledge Problem
Lileks: The Bleat
Marginal Revolution
Mark Steyn
Marvin Minsky
Matt Welch
Michael Totten
Michelle Malkin
Michio Kaku
Mudville Gazette
Natalie Solent
No Watermelons
The Ornery American
Oxblog
Physics Geek
Powerline
QandO
Rantburg
Rebecca's Pocket
Roger Simon
Samizdata
Shark Blog
Stephen Hawking
Stephen's Web
Steve Sailer
Steven Pinker
Stpeter
Terry Teachout
Transterrestrial Musings
Victor Davis Hanson
Viking Pundit
VodkaPundit
Volokh Conspiracy
Whatever
Winds of Change
Wizbang
collectives
Adam Smith Institute
American Enterprise Institute
Arts and Letters Daily
Ashbrook Institute
Aspen Institute
Ayn Rand Institute
Blue Eagle Commentary
Brisbane Institute
Brookings Institution
C.D. Howe Institute
Canoe columnists
Cato Institute
Center for Defense Information
Center for International Policy
Center for Strategic and International Studies
Claremont Institute
Closer to Truth
Discovery Institute
Edge
Fraser Institute
Heritage Foundation
Hoover Institute
Hudson Institute
Institute for Advanced Study
Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis
Jewish World Review
Levy Economics Institute
Ludwig von Mises Institute
Mensa
NIRA Directory: World Think Tanks
Objectivist Center
Opinion-Pages
Rand Corporation
StrategyPage
[::..journals and magazines..::]
arts
The Art Newspaper
Artfocus
ArtForum
ArtsJournal
The Atlantic
Communication Arts
Entertainment Weekly
Film Comment Magazine
Gramophone Magazine
Harper's
Literal Latte
New Criterion
New York Magazine
The New Yorker
Poets and Writers Magazine
Reader's Digest
Reader's Digest (British)
Rolling Stone
Spin
Splendid
Threepenny Review
Utne
The Writer
humanites
American Spectator
Butterflies and Wheels
Chronicles
City Journal
Commentary Magazine
Common Place
DebkaFile
Dissent Magazine
The Economist
Foreign Affairs Magazine
Foreign Policy
FrontPage Magazine
The Nation
National Interest
National Journal
National Review
New Atlantis
New Republic
New York Times Magazine
Newsweek
OpinionJournal
Parameters
Policy
Policy Review
Prospect Magazine
Real Clear Politics
Reason
Salon
Skeptic
Slate
Tech Central Station
Time
Town Hall
Village Voice
Washington Monthly
Weekly Standard
sciences
American Scientist
Astronomy
Discover
HotAir
Human Nature Daily Review
Impact Lab
National Geographic
Nature
New Scientist
Odyssey Magazine
Physics Today
Popular Mechanics
Popular Science
R&D Magazine
Science and Technology Review
Science Blog
Science & Consciousness Review
Science Magazine
Science News
Scientific American
The Scientist
Wired
[::..media and news sources..::]
American
1st Headlines
ABC News
AP Business
AP Nation
AP World
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Baltimore Chronicle
Bloomberg
Boston Globe
Boston Herald
C-Span
CBS News
Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Tribune
CNN
Dallas Morning News
Detroit Free Press
Drudge Report
Fox News
Los Angeles Daily News
Los Angeles Times
Miami Herald
Microsoft/NBC News
New York Post
New York Times
Newhouse News Service
Newsday Wire
Obscure Store and Reading Room
PBS Online NewsHour
Philadelphia Inquirer
Poynter Media News
San Francisco Examiner
Seattle Times
SF Gate
St. Louis American
Stratfor
United Press International
USA Today
Washington Post
Washington Times
The Week
World Tribune
Canadian
Bourque Newswatch
Calgary Sun
Canoe News
CBC News
Edmonton Journal
Globe and Mail
Halifax Daily News
Montreal Gazette
My Canadian News
National Post
Ottawa Citizen
Ottawa Sun
Regina Leader-Post
Sympatico News
Toronto Star
Toronto Sun
Vancouver Sun
Victoria Times Colonist
Winnipeg Sun
directories
HeadlineSpot
Kidon Media-Link
News Center
NewsDirectory
NewsLink
OnlineNewspapers
World Newspapers
European
Algarve Resident (Portugal)
Athens News Agency (Greece)
BBC News (U.K.)
Budapest Sun (Hungary)
Belfast Telegraph (U.K.)
Copenhagen Post (Denmark)
Costa Blanca News (Spain)
Cyprus Mail
Economist (U.K.)
European Voice (Belgium)
FAZ (Germany)
Guardian (U.K.)
Handelsblatt (Germany)
Irish Times
KP News (Ukraine)
Moscow Times (Russia)
NewsRoom Finland
Norway Post
Prague Post (Czech Republic)
Pravda (Russia)
Radio Netherlands
Radio Prague (Czech)
Reuters (U.K.)
RFE/RL NewsLine (East Europe)
RTE News (Ireland)
Russia News
Scandinavia Now
Sky News (U.K.)
Sweden Globe
Telegraph (U.K.)
The Times (U.K.)
Tocqueville Connection (France)
Warsaw Voice (Poland)
Zaman Daily Newspaper (Turkey)
Zenit News Agency (Italy)
Middle Eastern - African
Accra Mail (Ghana)
Addis Tribune (Ethiopia)
Afghan News Network
Al Jazeera (Qatar)
All Africa
Arab News (Saudi Arabia)
Arab Times (Kuwait)
Bahrain Tribune
Daily Star (Lebanon)
Electronic Chronicle (Zimbabwe)
Ha'aretz (Isreal)
Iraqi News Agency
Irin News (Africa)
Islamic Republic News Agency (Iran)
Jerusalem Post (Israel)
Jewish Telegraph Agency (Israel)
Khaleej Times (U.A.E.)
Kurdish Observer (Turkey)
Kuwait Times
Middle East News
Middle East Times (Egypt)
Monitor (Uganda)
Morocco Today
News24 (South Africa)
Oman Daily Obervser
Pakistan News Service
Pakistan Television
Palestine Chronicle
The Post (Zambia)
Saturday Nation (Kenya)
The Star (Jordan)
Syria Times
Sudan Net News
Yemen Times
South - Central American
Buenos Aires Herald (Argentina)
Caribbean Media Corporation
Granma International (Cuba)
Guyana Chronicle
Jamaica Gleaner
Jamaica Observer
The News (Mexico)
O Estado de S. Paulo (Brazil)
Radio Havana Cuba
South America Daily
Tico Times (Central America)
Trinidad Express
Trinidad Guardian
VHeadline (Venezuela)
Southeast Asian
Antara (Indonesia)
Asahi (Japan)
Asia Times
The Australian
Australian News Network
Bangkok Post (Thailand)
The Bulletin (Australia)
China Daily
CICC News Wire (Taiwan)
Daily News (Sri Lanka)
Herald Sun (Australia)
India Newspaper
Indian Express Group
Inside China Today
Japan Times
Japan Today
Korean News (North Korea)
Kyodo News (Japan)
Malaysian International News Agency
Montsame (Mongolia)
Nepali Times
New Zealand Herald
Philippine Star
Singapore News
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
Straits Times (Singapore)
Taipei Times (Taiwan)
Tibet Online News
Times of India
Vientiane Times (Laos)
Vietnam News Agency
Xinhua News (China)
Yonhap News (South Korea)
[::..research and directories..::]
arts
All Movie Guide
American Heritage Book of English Usage
Art.com
Artcyclopedia
Artseek
BookSpot
Celebration of Women Writers
Children's Literature Web Guide
Common Errors in English
Electronic Literaure Foundation
Guardian Book Review
Internet Movie Database
Introduction to Modern Literary Theory
Jump the Shark
Language Dictionaries and Translators
Literary Gothic
Library History Database
Literary History
Literary Resources on the Net
Literary Web
Locus Online
New York Times Book Review
Online Books Page
Online Medieval and Classical Library
Performing Arts Links
Poetry Portal
TV Stations From Around the World
TV Tome
Wisdom Knowledge and Literature Search
WWW Resources for English and American Literature
cognitive science
AI on the Web
Artificial Intelligence Resources
Berkeley Telerobotic and Neurology Units
BrainSource
Cognitive and Psychological Sciences on the Internet
Cognitive Neuroscience Society
Cognitive Science Dictionary
Cognitive Science Playroom
Cognitive Science Society
COLT: Computational Learning Theory
Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind
Generation5 Artificial Intelligence Repository
Grammatical Inference Community
History & Philosophy of Psychology Resources
Journal of Neuroscience
Memetics Publications on the Web
Neuropsychology
Neuroscience
Neurosciences on the Internet
Online papers on consciousness
Pattern Recognition on the Web
Philosophy and Cognitive Science Web Site
Philosophy of Mind: An Annotated Bibliography
PSYCHE
Researchers in Cognitive Science
humanites
Economics Internet Resources
History Central Catalogue
HistoryWorld
Internet Resources in Anthropology
Language Museum
Political Science Links Page
Social Sciences Journals
Sociology Internet Resources
music
All About Jazz
AMG Music Guide
The Best and Worst Pop Music of all Time
Billboard
Canadian Music Encyclopedia
Charts All Over the World
Classical Music Composer Index
Classical Net Information Links
ClassicalLink
CMJ
DigitalDreamDoor
Epitonic
Ethnomusicology OnLine
Ethnomusicology Resources on the Web
Folk Music Index
FYE Music
The History of Rock'n'Roll
Jazzitude
JazzWeb
MTV
Muchmusic
Music and Arts Internet Resources
Music Journals and Periodicals
Pitchfork
Popular Music and Society
RapSearch
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum
RootsWorld
That Blues Music Page
Ultimate Band List
VH1 Music Newswire
philosophy
Aesthetics Online
American Philosophical Association
Bibliography of Cognitive Science and Ethics
British Journal of Aesthetics
Buddhist History and Culture
Buffalo Ontology Site
Chinese Philosophy Page
Descriptive and Formal Ontology
Dictionary of Philosophical Terms and Names
Epistemology
Epistemology Page
Epistemology Research Guide
Ethics Center
Ethics Connection
Ethics Update
Existentialism: A Primer
Existentialism Directory
Fallacies
Film Philosophy
Greek Philosophy
Greek Philosophy Archive
Guide to Philosophy on the Internet
History of Philosophy
History of Western Philosophy
Horology: The Index
The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Janus Head
Logic
Logic and Set Theory
The Logical Fallacies
Mathematical Logic
Metaphysics: Multiple Meanings
Music Mind Machine
The Paideia Project
The Philosophers' Magazine
Philosophy of Existentialism
Philosophy of Values
Philosophy Resources on the Internet
Pre-Socratic Philosophers
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Theory of Knowledge
Utilitarianism Resources
psychology
American Psychological Association
American Psychological Society
Association for the Study of Dreams
Encyclopedia of Psychology
Existential Psychotherapy
Great Ideas in Personality
Human Nature Review
IllusionWorks
Internet Mental Health
Introduction to Social Influence
IQ Comparision Site
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
Journal of Mundane Behavior
Kinsey Institute
National Institute of Mental Health
The Psi Cafe
Psych Central
Psychoanalytic Web Directory
Psycholinks America
Psychological Anthropology
Psychology of Religion Pages
Psychology Online Resource Central
Social Cognition Paper Archive
Social Issues Research Centre
Social Psychology Network
Sport Psychology OverSite
sciences
Astronet
Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Astronomylinks
Astronomy Today
Atlas of the Universe
BioMed Central
BioReference
Chandra X-Ray Observatory News
Chemistry General Index
Discovery.com
The Electronic Library of Mathematics
European Space Agency
Geoscience Internet Links
Internet Mathematics Library
Kennedy Space Center
MathematicsWeb
Molecular Expressions
NASA
PBS - Scientific American Frontiers
Physlink Reference
PhysNet
Resources in Mathematics
Science and Math Equation Database
The Science Page
SkyNews
Space.com
SpaceRef
SpaceWeather
Starstuff
search and reference
All the Web
Bartleby
British Library Net
CIA World Factbook
Dogpile
Eeggs
Galileo Internet Resources
GeoHive Global Statistics
Google
How Stuff Works
Information Please
Ingenta Research
Internet Public Library
Kartoo
Library of Congress
LibrarySpot
LookSmart
Lycos
MapQuest
Martindale's Reference Desk
Microsoft Network
NationMaster
Refdesk
Search Engine Watch
Snopes
So You Wanna
Top 100 Network
Vivisimo
W3 Search Engines
Webcrawler
World Atlas
WWW Virtual Library
Yahoo
[::..miscellany..::]
diversions: weekly
BuzzFeed
Cheezburger
theCHIVE
Ebaum's World
Gorilla Mask
HolyLemon
Holy Taco
Know Your Meme
mental floss
Neatorama
Reddit
Urlesque
VideoSift
YesButNoButYes
diversions: monthly
Best Page in the Universe
Bored at Work
Candy Blog
Catalogue of Dr. Seuss Political Cartoons
The Daily What
Dark Roasted Blend
David Thorne
Day By Day
Despair Inc
Dot Comedy
Gender Genie
JibJab
JPL Solar System Simulator
Mighty Optical Illusions
Mirror Mazes
Museum of Bad Album Covers
Newgrounds
Oddee
The Onion
Peter Pan's Home Page
Pong
Rap Dictionary
Retrocrush
Rotten.com
Stickdeath
Strategy Page gallery
Videogum
Wikipedia Knowledge Dump
Wikipedia: unusual articles
Wordcount
Zug
games
20Q
Bill's Games
Brainjuice
CRpuzzles
Grey Labyrinth
Logicville
Mensa Tests and Puzzles
Think Labyrinth
TV and video sites
Dailymotion
Google
Metacafe
YouTube
webtools
Sitemeter
Technorati
TLB Ecosystem
google search
[::..bluestarblog archive..::]

:: Monday, April 07, 2003 ::

Ralph Peters on the intelligence booty that we can expect from Iraq:

The Iraqi regime was a bureaucracy of terror. But it was, above all, a bureaucracy. It kept voluminous files. The secret police, diplomatic and executive archives will hold information on all the region's secret deals, as well as on the private lives and personal corruption of virtually every leader, cabinet member and senior military officer throughout the Middle East.

Syria must be terrified of what we'll find. But Egypt is doubtless plenty worried, too. And the files on Saudi princes are not going to be publishable as family reading.

We are in for some shocks as we learn of unsuspected betrayals. But the states of the region will be in for much greater surprises in the coming years.

It has been noted that the French and Russians did not want this war because they knew we would learn how they cheated on U.N. sanctions against Iraq. But the treasure trove of information we will collect on the Arab world and other Islamic states will be much more important. It will enable us to see into previously opaque issues and to squeeze many a corrupt leader who believed he was safe from external scrutiny.

The Iraqi archives will be a mother lode of information for scholars. But there is much we will choose to keep under lock and key for strategic purposes. The psychological effects of our access to those archives and to former regime officials anxious to tell all will be even greater than the practical information we accumulate.

No Arab leader will know what was or wasn't in those files. Each will have to fear the worst. President-for-life X will always have to wonder what we know as we sit across the negotiating table.

Our immediate goal will be to help the Iraqi people build the first rule-of-law democracy in the Middle East. That will bring its own rewards. But the long-term dividends we will reap from our secret war will keep paying off for decades.

The destruction of Saddam's regime will result in the greatest intelligence coup in history.


:: Scot 1:07 PM [+] :: ::
...
Canadian idiocy roundup:

Mark Kingwell:

This war is unjust by any measure considered valid in the long tradition of philosophical and legal argument that stretches from Saint Augustine, through Pufendorf and Grotius, to the Geneva Convention and the Nuremberg trials.

I wonder how much the typical liberated Iraqi cares about Western philosophical and legal argument.


Antonia Zerbisias:

It seemed that, every time I flipped between CNN and MSNBC, they were telling and re-telling "Saving Private Lynch," that archetypal, blonde-in-peril, made-for-TV movie coming to a ratings sweeps period near you. (And doesn't Saddam Hussein make the perfect Oil Can Harry, tying the pure-hearted heroine to the railroad tracks?)


Linda McQuaig:

One could have easily gotten the impression last week that the war in Iraq is being fought to liberate pretty young American girls from Iraqi hospitals.

Ever heard of hot-young-blonde envy? McQuaig and Zerbisias are it.

Rick Salutin:

The most intriguing phrase to emerge from this "war," alongside the usual propagandistic bilge (shock and awe etc.), is "the other superpower," as used by The Nation, The New York Times, NDP Leader Jack Layton and others. The other superpower is global public opinion. It has the endearing ring of truth.

Global public opinion as a superpower - that's deep.

Toronto Star editorial:

By invading Iraq without a U.N. mandate, the U.S. may have usurped power from the international community. But in the grab for that power, the Americans damaged their own moral international authority, while leaving the U.N.'s intact.

I have to admit, this is the first time I've seen the phrase moral international authority, and I'm not exactly sure what it means. No matter really. The idea that the U.N. is an authority on anything other than throwing food and water from a back of a cube van at starving peasants is laughable. If you really want to chide the Yanks on this one, the above quote should read 'But in the grab for that power, the Americans damaged their own moral international authority by leaving the U.N. intact.'

A little closer to the truth at least.


:: Scot 12:56 PM [+] :: ::
...
After two and a half weeks, allied military bases are springing up throughout Iraq, public and civilian interests have been remarkably tended to (low casualty rate, secure oil wells, aid delivery and distribution), and the cities have been more than successfully engaged. A generous guess would give another three weeks for total control of all the major cities, including Baghdad, and maybe another few weeks to clean out the last of the jihadis and stalinesque yes-men as more intelligence pours in.

At this point, while the most difficult work lies ahead in the implementation of order, structure, and self-rule, it would be entirely apt to declare complete victory (though the formal declaration will probably be made sooner). Nonetheless, that's a total of eight and a half weeks. Afghanistan took six. The fine line of what is or isn't a cakewalk is usually settled by whether you descibe a battle in terms of weeks or months. Two of one, eight and a half of the other - you pick.


:: Scot 12:36 PM [+] :: ::
...
:: Saturday, April 05, 2003 ::
Also in the National Review, an excellent piece from Victor Davis Hanson. Amidst another lesson in geopolitics, he nails the Canada-Mexico connection:

There is not much need to speak of the governments of Canada and Mexico. More liberal trade agreements and concessions with Mr. Chretien are about as dead as open borders are with Mr. Fox. It is the singular achievement of the present Canadian government to turn a country — whose armed forces once stormed an entire beach at Normandy and fielded one of the most heroic armies in wars for freedom — into a bastion of anti-Americanism without a military. Both countries are de facto socialist states, and the Anglo-French pique we see in Europe is right across our northern borders in miniature. Anyone who looked at the papers in Mexico City could rightly assume our neighbors’ elite preferred an Iraqi victory.


:: Scot 10:20 PM [+] :: ::
...
Jonah Goldberg is thinking ahead:

Iraq has a bad brand name, marketing-wise. The country needs a fresh start. Any new name should be one a people can take pride in, while at the same time sending a positive, Western-oriented message to the world and its citizens alike. Also, we need to make it clear that we will not allow others to henpeck us. It seems to me there is one name which satisfies all of these requirements.

France.

We should rename Iraq, France. If the current "French" object, we can tell them it's a compliment. Already, antiwar Arabs are reportedly naming their kids after Jacques Chirac — we just want to take that principle to the next level. Colin Powell could tell them, "We take you at your word that you are the role model for the Arab world you've always claimed to be! What better way to say so than by naming a country after you?"

If having two countries both called France becomes a logistical or bureaucratic problem, we can follow Don Rumsfeld's lead and call the current "French" Old France and Iraq, "New France." Or, my preferred course would be to call the European France, "Euro-France" — a la Euro-Disney. The country's been turning into a theme park for years anyway.

Regardless, all of this can be worked out. Besides, as we've learned from this war already, there's nothing the French can do to stop us.


:: Scot 10:14 PM [+] :: ::
...
What's more interesting - armchair Rumsfelds of armchair generals? Bill Keller has a bit of both.


:: Scot 9:58 PM [+] :: ::
...
Margaret MacMillan has a good piece in the National Post on the Arab fixation with Israel.

My working theory of how the Middle East became such a mess goes back another hundred years when the Arabs were usurped of their world power status by the Europeans and East Asians. They have been in a steady state of regression since the early 1800's and have contributed to the progress of world liberalism government practices such as repression, intimidation, torture, rape, murder, misogynism, anti-Semitism, anti-Westernism, private and public censorship, and of course the appropriate levels of corruption you would expect from your typical postmodern thugocracy. Not all the Middle East Islamist nations are guilty of each of these barbarities, but you would need a Venn diagram trying to sort this out. Militant Islamism has written itself into thier history and has spiraled out of control. Bernard Lewis, Steven Den Beste, and Daniel Pipes have written extensively on this.

Like it or not - no room for these types of crackheads in the new global village.


:: Scot 9:46 PM [+] :: ::
...
Only Mark Steyn could have linked SARS and the battle in Iraq:

I tuned in to the CBC the other night and saw the pews of a church. No church in particular, just the nearest church to the CBC's Washington office. But, as the lugubrious tones of Senior Correspondent Brian Stewart made clear, that was all they needed:

"Noon today in war time Washington. More churches offer moments of quiet reflection in worrying times. A part of the new American reality. In just days, feelings about the war have swung from barely restrained exhilaration to sombre concern over dead and injured and captured. It is coming home to a population that felt it was sending its youth off to a promised rapid victory and liberators welcome. The war may be much longer and far more painful than most believed ... "

And on and on. For some of us, it's Brian's war reports that are much longer and far more painful than most believed. In the time it took his funereal delivery to complete the script, the Third Infantry Division had advanced another 120 miles. But that's no reason not to predict disaster. After all, that church was pretty sombre, eh?

Maybe it's all conga lines and whoopee cushions at Brian's church, but south of the border churches offering "quiet reflection" is a part of the "new American reality" only if by "new" you mean the best part of half a millennium. Nonetheless, Brian's rent-an-expert was happy to confirm the generally hopeless outlook: "I'm not sure even the military is fully braced for the potential loss of many hundreds of American and British lives ..."

Just for the record, as of yesterday morning fewer British servicemen had died in combat in Iraq than Ontarians had died of SARS. That may be one reason why Her Majesty's Governments in London and Canberra are now advising their citizens not to travel to Toronto. The Brits and Aussies are happy to take their chances in Basra and Mosul, but Hogtown? Forget it.

The bad news is SARS is spread by the ease of modern air travel. The good news is Air Canada's management is doing its best to eliminate that risk for Canadians. My linkage isn't entirely frivolous. Here's a challenge for the CBC. Why not try applying the "skepticism" - i.e., sneering condescension -- you reserve for the Pentagon to SARS and Air Canada?

Here are some other points of comparison between the war and SARS. As Thomas S. Axworthy pointed out yesterday, China has been lying about SARS ever since it got going. No big deal. That's what Communist regimes do: They lie, especially to the outside world, for reasons of pride as much as anything else. (That's why those Russian submariners died: Moscow waited too long before allowing in outside help.)

But the interesting thing is that the WHO continues to accept Beijing's lies, ranking Chinese provinces as high-risk or non-risk according to the info it gets from the government. Given China's pattern of sweeping everything under the carpet until the bulge becomes too big to step over, why is the WHO still taking Beijing's word for it? Meanwhile, according to Taiwan, their pleas to the WHO asking for assistance earlier this year went unanswered, mainly (according to Taiwanese legislators) because of UN politics.

SARS is "sad news" for its victims but for the rest of us it's a useful reminder of the defects of the multilateral networks in which our global statesman Jean Da Proof has put so much stock. A totalitarian state embarked on a cover-up, the relevant UN agency bought the wool-pulling routine, the problem jumped across the world. So much for "containment."


:: Scot 8:30 PM [+] :: ::
...
:: Tuesday, April 01, 2003 ::
Blogging has been light in the last week and will be for the next few days as I'm in the middle of a downloading frenzy. To date - 19000 songs, a couple thousand thousand videos, a couple thousand music lessons and transcripts, a thousand essays and articles, several hundred books, and about a hundred soundclips.

My name is Scot and I have a problem.

(I only have another 50 or 60 years left to do this)


And if you want to know how well we're doing in the war there's this piece.. ahh nevermind - just go read Reynolds, Sullivan, or Den Beste. As far as I'm concerned, Saddam and his demon offspring are dead and the regime is hanging by a thread.



:: Scot 4:39 PM [+] :: ::
...

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?