Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Friday, March 23, 2007

20070321 The secret life of baby spiders

Photo caption: “Fired spiders and gum” from the web site, “Photography by Ewen Bell.” Neat site – check it out.

March 21, 2007

This post is for my wife. Read it quickly before it is prevailed upon me to amend it or take the post down.

Me: spiders gotta live somewhere. I just Zen them. As long as they don’t change the settings on my computer or eat my ice cream – I’m good. Whatever.

My wife: Spiders seem to make my normally unfazed, calm, and sedate wife go from zero to animated in a nanosecond. I know of nothing else that bothers my wife (except liberals… fortunately she doesn’t feel the need to squish them… .)

It is somewhat the source of amusement with me. Trust me, my amusement is not shared by my wife, and I have long since learned to adjust my approach. [Soccer Dad doesn’t wear paisley (My goodness that was an ugly tie.) - - I take spiders seriously – when they are the source of my wife’s undivided attention…]

Me to wife: Wife, I just saw on Nancy Grace that Anna Nicole Smith is still dead and the world is going to come to an end. Could ya please help me grab my computer before we go to the bomb shelter?

Wife: I don’t care - - There’s a spider in the house! Get it.

Over the years we have come to a sorta agreement. Found spiders in the house are not to be killed. They are to be invited to go outside… This seems to work as long as the spider is cooperative.

For the safety of spiders, I have posted a sign at the back door that our house is not safe for spiders. It seems to have worked.

Sooo, it was with some amusement that I saw that “Spiders Love to Snuggle.”

Perhaps Jeremy Bruno up at Voltage Gate (Besides, Mr. Bruno has not one article about spiders on his blog. What gives”) may have to interpret some of this for us, but according to Jeanna Bryner LiveScience Staff Writer LiveScience.com Wed Mar 21, 8:45 AM ET :

While not usually considered paragons of tender, familial love, some spiders do have a touchy-feely side. Scientists have discovered two arachnids that caress their young and snuggle together.

Social behavior is extremely rare in arachnids, a group of critters typically defined by their aggression, clever hunting methods and even predatory cannibalism.

"This was the best example I had ever seen of friendly behavior in an arachnid," said lead study author Linda Rayor, a Cornell University entomologist.

[…]

Video: Spider Baby Rub

Video: Spider Tickle

For (Phrynus) marginemaculatus, the stroking was mutual, with the three-week-olds also whip-caressing their moms and one another.

Video: Spider Siblings

[…]

Video: Spiders' Psychedelic Courtship Dance

Images: Creepy Spiders

Original Story: Creepy: Spiders Love to Snuggle

Since this is a family blog – we may wanna have Attila pick up the story here and here… . He goes places I can’t.

Read the rest of the article here: “Spiders Love to Snuggle.”

####

20070322 Frank Lloyd Wright on God

Frank Lloyd Wright on God

March 22, 2007

H/t: Jeremy Bruno’s Voltage Gate

Roaming through the blogosphere this evening, I came across this quote on Jeremy Bruno’s Voltage Gate:

"I believe in God, only I spell it 'Nature'," - credited to Frank Lloyd Wright.

Clips http://scienceblogs.com/voltagegate/

Category: Conservation Posted by Jeremy Bruno at 09:26 AM

If you have not been to Voltage Gate recently – take this opportunity. It’s better than ice cream – well almost.

I’ve always been a huge fan of the work of Frank Lloyd Wright.





I’ve visited Falling Water and the Guggenheim and if I am not mistaken, isn’t there a Frank Lloyd Wright designed home in Baltimore? I haven’t a clue as to where my file on him is at present. Nor do I have the time… But if I am not mistaken, it is on Cross Country Boulevard

All right, if I can get a few things done, I’ll venture to where my old landscape design business records are in the basement and see what I can find… The only problem with going to the basement is that I tend to get lost down there – and I’m on deadline for my Westminster Eagle column

Kevin

Thursday, March 22, 2007

20070313 Mindless ramblings about peripatetic artisans of the keyboard


Mindless ramblings about old geezers, old columnists, young writers, and peripatetic artisans of the keyboard

March 13th, 2007 – March 22, 2007

Joe Volz writes a column for the Frederick News-Post and I re-read a recent column today and enjoyed it… Old Soldiers Never Die by Joe Volz.

As a columnist Mr. Volz maintains a rather frenetic pace. If I am not mistaken, he writes three columns a week. I write two columns a week and sometimes that maxes me out. I marvel at the folks like Rick Weldon, Joe Volz and Wendi Thomas, who just seem to effortlessly knock out one interesting and well written column after another.

Certainly another writer for which I have always been impressed is the editor of the Carroll County Times, Jim Lee, who if I am not mistaken, writes most all of the 6 editorials a week that appear in the paper and a weekly column…

Then there is Kelsey Volkmann who just seems to knock out several articles a day – all week… and still have time to chat.

But anyway, where was I - - Oh, getting back to Mr. Volz

I do not always agree with Mr. Volz but I try to read his column as often as possible. My favorite Joe Volz column in 2006 was his June 6th, 2006, “The Obit Page.”

I wish I had a link – but then again, I don’t think the Frederick News-Post uses permalinks - - and their archives hidden behind a pay-wall is just really quite annoying, bit involves a scope well beyond this piece… Maybe Joe’ll consider letting me post it.

My favorite paragraph (among many) was: “Perhaps, the amateur obit writers may not match the skill of the late New York quip-witted humorist, Dorothy Parker, who once observed, ‘I don't care what is written about me as long as it isn't true.’ ”

Yes, I’m a huge Dorothy Parker fan.

Jim Lee over at the Carroll County Times has recently ventured into the world of blogs. In one of his recent posts, “Mega-bust,” in which he questioned aloud what you would do if you won the lottery, I wrote in the comment section:

Kevin Dayhoff wrote on March 12, 2007 1:27 AM: "If I were to win the lottery, the first thing I would want is advice; so I would probably endeavor to interview Annabel and Midge from Dorothy Parker’s “The Standard of Living.” Of course things were different in 1941; nevertheless, one can be sure that their guidance would be crucial. Then I would go get a Hoffman’s milkshake and a package of Starbuck’s coffee – and go back to my desk and go back to work. "

I wish I could link ya to the post on the Carroll County Times web site, but the paper does not use permalinks and the post, to the best of my knowledge, the blog entry has long since disappeared into cyber-space….

A recent Joe Volz column involved a human-interest story and I just thought it was a nice read – I guess especially since I had a number of friends who either live, work or went to school in New Jersey.

One of the great joys of toiling as a New Jersey newspaperman for a number of years was that I got to cover the state's great cultural institution -- organized crime.

So, when I moved to Maryland 30 years ago, where the crime is of a decidedly different caliber -- mainly disorganized -- I was distraught.

[…]

Down in Maryland, I encountered a bunch of non-violent criminals, like Vice President Spiro Agnew, who had no difficulty getting in trouble with the law. Frankly, their exploits weren't as colorful.

[…]

The prevailing wisdom among us Mafia watchers was that mobsters didn't have to worry about Medicare. They didn't live that long, invariably dying in their prime from a lethal dose of lead poisoning.

So, it is heartening to read the latest news from Fort Lauderdale. At least one old Mafia soldier has defied the odds.

[…]

You would think that Albert Facchiano, who turns 97 tomorrow and is appropriately nicknamed "The Old Man," would have gotten a little respect from Florida law enforcers just for dodging so many bullets for so long.

Read the rest of the column here and enjoy it: “Old Soldiers Never Die by Joe Volz.”

####

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

20070321 Have a cup of tea

Have a cup of tea

Top of the morning to ya. Have a cup of tea.

© Kevin Dayhoff

March 21st, 2007

20070321 Four Years Later: New Strategy Requires Patience And Determination

Four Years Later: New Strategy Requires Patience And Determination

March 16, 2007 – posted March 21st, 2007

H/t: GOPCharlie

On The Fourth Anniversary Of The Beginning Of Operation Iraqi Freedom, The Regime Of A Brutal Dictator Has Been Replaced By A Democratically Elected Government Operating Under One Of The Most Progressive Constitutions In The Arab World. While there is much work to be done, there are encouraging signs of progress.

Achieving Our Goals Will Require Patience And Determination

Iraqi Security Forces Are Stepping Up To Take Control Of Their Country's Security. Iraqi Security Forces continue to gain strength and are fighting alongside Coalition forces. Their commitment and sacrifice are real: Casualty levels for Iraqi Security Forces are now higher than for Coalition forces.

Iraq is now operating 9 National Police brigades and 31 Iraqi Army brigades, meaning almost 329,000 Iraqi Security Force members are now risking their lives to secure their country and allow political progress to continue.

9 of Iraq's 10 Army divisions are taking the lead in their areas of operation.

3 of Iraq's 18 provinces have acquired full responsibility for their own security.

Iraqi-planned, Iraqi-conducted, and, most important of all, Iraqi-led missions continue throughout Iraq.

Iraqis Are Beginning To Meet Benchmarks To Achieve Political Reconciliation.

In February 2007, Iraq's Council of Ministers approved a national hydrocarbon law that provides for an equitable distribution of oil revenues throughout the country. It now needs to be approved by the Council of Representatives and then implemented.

Last month, the Iraqi government also approved a $41 billion budget that includes $10 billion for reconstruction and capital investment and $7.3 billion for development of Iraqi Security Forces and security related expenses.

Iraq's leaders must meet the other pledges they have made. These include:

1) Narrowing the limitations of the de-Baathification law;

2) Establishing the framework and setting a date for provincial elections; and

3) Continuing to pursue the constitutional review process: The Constitutional Review Committee, with representation from all major political blocs and technical assistance from the United Nations, is now working and is likely to present potential amendments to parliament in the next two months.

On March 12, 2007, Iraq Convened A Regional Conference Of Thirteen Nations, Including Neighboring Countries And The U.S., As Well As The United Nations, The Islamic Conference, And The Arab League. Conference attendees discussed issues of common concern regarding Iraq and agreed to form working groups on border security, fuel imports, and refugees. They plan to hold another regional me eting at the ministerial level in April, which U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will attend.

On July 27, 2006, Iraq And The UN Announced The Formal Launch Of The International Compact With Iraq. This Compact, jointly shared by the Government of Iraq and the United Nations, with the support of the World Bank, will bring together the international community and multilateral organizations over five years to help Iraq implement key reforms and grow fully integrated into the international economic community .

On March 16, 2007, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon Urged Representatives From Over 90 Countries To Back The Compact. Representatives at this meeting closed the text of the Compact and are now moving on to the formal signing and implementation stage.

The New Way Forward In Iraq

In January, President Bush Announced A New Strategy For Iraq. This strategy has as its top priority reducing violence in Baghdad, to give Iraqi leaders the breathing room they need to make political progress. It gives our troops the reinforcements they need, and it demands more from Iraq's elected government. We have seen tangible progress, but this is work that will not be accomplished in days or weeks it requires a sustained course of action over many months. The strategy includes:

Establishing More Than 45 "Joint Security Stations" Throughout Baghdad. These stations are neighborhood outposts where U.S. and Iraqi forces are jointly deployed 24 hours a day to secure the population, provide emergency aid to local communities, and gather information to root out extremist networks throughout the capital.

Stepping Up Training The Iraqi Army And Police So We Can Help Ensure That The Iraqi Forces Are Capable Of Providing The Security That Iraq Needs.

Ordering Reinforcements Of More Than 20,000 Combat Forces To Iraq. The vast majority of these troops will go to Baghdad. Two of the five additional American combat brigades we committed to this fight are now in place and involved in operations with their Iraqi counterparts. The flow and movement of the third brigade to Kuwait has begun, and troops continue to arrive every day.

Enhancing Our Civilian And Diplomatic Efforts. As our military reinforces its mission in the greater Baghdad area and Anbar province, a complementary effort is underway on the civilian side in the form of a joint Defense Department and State Department initiative to double the number of Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq, with a primary focus on Baghdad and Anbar province. The first wave of civilian volun teers has completed training and will deploy to Iraq by the end of this month.

Implementing This Strategy Will Require Sustained Action Over Many Months, But We Have Already Seen Progress.

The Iraqi government has completed the deployment of three additional Iraqi Army brigades to the capital. These additional forces join the nine National Police and seven Iraqi Army brigades already in the Greater Baghdad area.

Prime Minister Maliki has affirmed that there will be no political interference in security operations. Iraq's leaders have lifted restrictions on Iraqi and Coalition forces that prevented them from going into certain areas, and U.S. and Iraqi troops are now pursuing the enemy in neighborhoods like Sadr City, where operations were once restricted.

About half of the planned joint security stations have been established in neighborhoods across Baghdad.

Iraqi and U.S. forces have rounded up hundreds of people affiliated with violent extremist groups, discovered and destroyed weapons production facilities, and recovered large weapons caches, including mortar weapons systems and rocket-propelled grenades.

Iraqi and U.S. forces have launched successful operations against Sunni extremists.

Sectarian killings have been lower in Baghdad over the past several weeks than in the previous month.

Two major car bomb factories have been destroyed on the outskirts of Baghdad.

Several trucks equipped with heavy machine guns used for engaging Coalition aircraft have been destroyed.

In Anbar province, a number of Sunni tribes have begun to unite against extremists, providing a new wave of Iraqi recruits to join the fight against the terrorists.

Millions Of Iraqis Have Risked Their Lives To Secure A Democratic Future For Their Nation, And America Will Not Abandon Them In Their Hour Of Need. The vast majority of Iraq's citizens want to live in peace, and they are showing their courage every day.

In October 2005, Iraqi voters approved a new permanent constitution.

In December 2005, nearly 12 million Iraqis braved car bombers and assassins to choose a permanent government in free elections under the new constitution.

In April 2006, Iraqi leaders announced agreement on the top leadership posts for a national government uniting Sunni, Shiite, and Kurd, led by President Jalal Talabani and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

In November 2006, an Iraqi Court convicted and sentenced Saddam Hussein for the massacres committed by his regime in the town of Dujayl. The former dictator was put to death in December 2006.

Our New Strategy Builds On What Has Proven To Work And Corrects For What Has Not Worked In Iraq. It specifically accounts for the heightened levels of sectarian violence seen over the course of 2006 and is designed to help Iraqis defeat extremists from all communities and provide the space necessary for advancing meaningful political reconciliation.

20070320 News Clips

News Clips

March 20th, 2007 H/t: GOPCharlie

GOP pledges to block tax rise

http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20070319-103739-8073r.htm

Senate Republicans say they will attempt to block tax increases during budget debates tomorrow, as tension increases over Maryland's fiscal future.

"We're planning on something to attempt to give people a choice and obviate any necessity for tax increases," said Senate Minority Leader David R. Brinkley, Frederick Republican.

Democrats, who control the House, Senate and governor's office, agreed that some form of tax increase is needed to close a $1.5 billion budget gap in 2009.

Deficit debate on hold

Sales tax protest previews future budget battles

http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/03_19-32/GOV

The budget passed the House of Delegates last week, but some lawmakers are worried about the financial battles - and sweeping tax increases - that could still lie ahead.

"It's not just storm clouds," said Del. Ron George, R-Arnold, a member of the House Ways and Means Committee. "It's like seeing a tsunami wave coming."

The revised version of Gov. Martin O'Malley's $30 billion operating budget passed Friday by a vote of 134-5. The House Appropriations Committee made cuts of more than $192 million in the budget, which will go into effect in July.

Senate panel approves state smoking ban

Committee gives OK to bill on a 6-5 vote; measure is expected to pass full Senate

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.smoking20mar20001517,0,6036288.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

A state Senate panel approved yesterday a statewide ban on smoking in bars and restaurants, a vote that marks the first time such a measure has won approval from a General Assembly committee.

The Senate panel also decided to exempt tobacco shops and fraternal organizations, such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion. Sen. George C. Edwards, a Garrett County Republican, described people gathering after military funerals at the local American Legion where they might share a meal and drinks and perhaps a cigarette or cigar.

"These people put their life on the line for this country," Edwards said, saying it would be wrong to ban smoking in the clubs.

Sen. E.J. Pipkin, an Eastern Shore Republican, said enforcing a ban on smoking in those kinds of clubs amounted to telling smokers to stay home from events. "And we already have a problem with isolation in rural parts of the state," he said. "This is the only game in town for them."

While they pushed for the club exemption, neither Pipkin nor Edwards voted for the final bill.

Smoking ban gets panel nod

http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=161280&format=html

A panel of Maryland senators voted Monday to ban smoking in bars and restaurants, a vote seen as a critical first step for passage of a statewide smoking ban this year.

The 6-5 vote by the Senate Finance Committee means the full Senate will vote in coming days on whether to approve the ban, long advocated by health activists but opposed by some restaurant owners. A House committee is considering a similar smoking ban, with a vote expected in that committee by midweek.

Editorial: Shine a light on government spending

http://www.examiner.com/a-628428~Editorial__Shine_a_light_on_government_spending.html

If members of Congress can agree transparency is the best policy for government, so can Maryland legislators.

Thats why its encouraging news that Del. Warren Miller, a Republican from Howard County, introduced House Bill 1252. The Maryland Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2007, if passed, would require the state to build a searchable Web site of government contracts and spending above $25,000. Think of it as a public service Google.

Panel votes down bill on coastal-area insurance

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.coastal20mar20,0,1256999.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

A Maryland Senate committee voted down a bill yesterday that would have required Allstate Corp. and other insurers to write homeowner policies in coastal areas that some companies have deemed too risky.

Several legislators expressed dismay after Allstate announced last year that it would stop writing new homeowner policies in all or part of 11 counties, noting warnings by scientists that a warmer Atlantic Ocean will lead to more intense hurricanes hitting the Northeast.

Finally, Md. shuts prison

O'Malley, new facility enable state to close Victorian-era building

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.jessup20mar20,0,6272259.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

One visit to the Maryland House of Correction in Jessup in February and new Corrections Secretary Gary D. Maynard knew it shouldn't remain a maximum-security prison. But when a correctional officer was stabbed on March 2, Maynard concluded that the facility built in 1878 needed to be shut down immediately - and Gov. Martin O'Malley quickly agreed.

State prison officials have been complaining about the poor conditions, unsafe design and deteriorating structure of the House of Correction for at least 50 years. But through it all, the Maryland prison, which opened a half-century before Alcatraz, stayed open.

National News

The Wall Street Journal Says Senate Democrats' Proposed Budget Could "Slap The Economy In 2011 With The Largest Tax Increase In U.S. History." "Mr. Conrad, the Senate Budget Chairman, pulled off the neat magic trick of claiming his budget includes 'no tax increase,' even as it anticipates repeal of the Bush tax cuts after 2010. ... Mr. Conrad has no intention of extending the B ush tax cuts, which he voted against and whose repeal would slap the economy in 2011 with the largest tax increase in U.S. history. ... So Mr. Conrad says his budget revenue estimates 'assume that Congress will take steps to counter the effects of the expiration of tax cuts in 2010 in a manner that does not add to the nation's debt burden.' How so? Well, 'this additional revenue can be achieved without raising taxes by closing the tax gap, shutting down illegal tax shelters, addressing tax havens, and simplifying the tax code,' he avers. ... But if this magical $345 billion a year (as of 2001) were easily found, don't you think the army of IRS auditors and tax collectors would have found it by now?" (Editorial, "Conrad's Tax," The Wall Street Journal, 3/20/07)

House Republicans Regaining Their Footing

http://public.cq.com/docs/cqt/news110-000002473295.html

After reeling from a Democratic knock-out punch in November, House Republicans seem to be regrouping, achieving some wins they believe will force the majority to negotiate with them.

Ultimately, they have an eye toward such victories enabling them to win back the House in 2008.

Having surprised even themselves with the unity they displayed against a resolution denouncing the troop surge in Iraq (H Con Res 63), invigorated Republicans say theyll stay nearly in lock step this week against supplemental spending legislation for the war that includes a timetable for withdrawal, among other conditions.

Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, D-Md., has met twice with Boehner to try to find a way to garner some GOP support for the supplemental, although no agreement was reached.

Global warming panel makeup questioned

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070320/NEWS01/703200302/1002

House Republican Leader John Boehner would have appointed Rep. Wayne Gilchrest to the bipartisan Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming -- but only if the Maryland Republican would say humans are not causing climate change, Gilchrest said.

"I said, 'John, I can't do that,' " Gilchrest, R-1st-Md., said in an interview. "He said, 'Come on. Do me a favor. I want to help you here.' "

Gilchrest didn't make the committee. Neither did other Republican moderates or science-minded members, whose guidance centrist GOP members usually seek on the issue. Republican moderates, called the Tuesday Group, invited Boehner to this week's meeting to push for different representation.

Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, a research scientist from Maryland, and Michigan's Rep. Vern Ehlers, the first research physicist to serve in Congress, also made cases for a seat, but weren't appointed, he said.

Patience for Iraq war waning, say leaders

http://www.examiner.com/a-628513~Patience_for_Iraq_war_waning__say_leaders.html

Four years into the Iraq war, all sides in the bitter debate agree that President Bushs troop surge plan represents the final drop of American patience for the war. If Iraqis fail to control the violence, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said, The American taxpayer has a reasonable expectation that we will bring our people home.

BRAC move seen at risk

Walter Reed controversy might threaten shift of jobs to Bethesda site

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.brac20mar20,0,7545749.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

Plans to expand the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda - part of a military realignment plan expected to bring thousands of jobs to Maryland - might be in jeopardy as a result of the controversy over medical care at the Walter Reed Army hospital, according to members of the state's congressional delegation.

The House of Representatives is expected to consider a measure this week that would keep Walter Reed Army Medical Center open. If approved, it could delay or cancel plans to move Walter Reed's existing operations, and nearly 1,900 workers, from the District of Columbia to Maryland.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the Montgomery County Democrat whose district includes Bethesda, said he had not determined the best course of action regarding the move.

"I think this requires an overall assessment of what is best for our wounded soldiers at Walter Reed and an assessment of what makes sense in the future," Van Hollen said.

"Obviously, the BRAC commission believed that it was in the interests of the military health care system to consolidate their operations at Bethesda. But there may be a short-term desire to delay the move, given the fact that you have lots of wounded soldiers there now," he said.

President Bush Says Premature Withdrawal From Iraq Would Have "Devastating" Consequences For U.S. Security. "'It can be tempting to look at the challenges in Iraq and conclude our best option is to pack up and go home,' Bush said in an address from the Roosevelt Room of the White House. 'That that may be satisfying in the short run, but I believe that the consequences for American security interests would be devastating.' Bush said his new strategy, which sent more than 20,000 additional U.S. troops to Iraq to secure Baghdad, is still in its early stages and 'success will take months, not days or weeks.' 'Those on the ground are seeing some hopeful signs,' Bush said. 'Four years after this war began, the fight is difficult, but it can be won,' Bush said. 'It will be won if we have the courage and resolve to see it through.'" ("Bush Urges Patience In Iraq War," USA Today, 3/20/07)

White House Denounces Democrats' War Spending Bill For "Excessive And Extraneous Non-Emergency Spending." "House Democratic leaders are offering billions in federal funds for lawmakers' pet projects large and small to secure enough votes this week to pass an Iraq funding bill that would end the war next year. ... But in a formal veto statement last night, the White House denounced what it called 'excessive and extraneous non-emergency spending.' With unusually caustic and combative language, the statement dismissed provisions of the bill as 'unconscionable,' an d said it 'would place freedom and democracy in Iraq at grave risk' and 'embolden our enemies.' ... The bill contains billions for agriculture and drought relief, children's health care and Gulf Coast hurricane recovery." (Jonathan Weisman, "War Bill Includes Tempting Projects," The Washington Post, 3/20/07)

National Security Council Iraq Director Brett McGurk Discusses The New Strategy In Iraq. MCGURK: "We're focused on the new strategy that's in place. And remember, it's very early. The Iraqi people are starting to see some changes, but we're still at the input stage. The President heard from the Prime Minister today in a joint video teleconference about the inputs and the Iraqis stepping up to the plate. We're starting to see security gains in Baghdad. These are all very early indicators, they're not trends yet. But murders and executions are down by about 50 percent. We're getting more tips from Iraqis than we ever have had before. February set an al l-time high. That's a sign of growing confidence among the Iraqi people. This is going to take time. This is entirely new strategy, fundamentally different than what we were doing a year ago. And patience is the word of the day." (CNN International, 3/19/07)

Retired U.S. Army Officer Gordon Cucullu Says "We Need To Give [Gen. Petraeus] The Time And Space Needed To Win This War." "'Sure we see improvements - major improvements,' [Gen. Petraeus] said in our interview, 'but we still have a long way to go.' What tactics are working? 'We got down at the people level and are staying,' he said flatly. 'Once the people know we are going to be around, then all kinds of things start to happen.' Where once tactical units were 'scraping' for intelligence information, they now have 'information overload,' the general said. And the t ribal leaders in Sunni al Anbar Province, the general reports, 'have had enough.' Not only are the al Qaeda fighters causing civil disruption by fomenting sectarian violence and killing civilians, but on a more prosaic but practical side, al Qaeda is bad for business. As Petraeus cautiously concluded, 'We'll be able to evaluate the situation for sure by late summer.' That's his job. Our job? We need to give him the time and space needed to win this war." (Gordon Cucullu, Op-Ed, "The Iraq Surge: Why It's Working," New York Post, 3/20/07)

Al Qaeda Operative In U.S. Custody Admits Planning The 2000 Attack On The USS Cole. "A top operative of Al Qaeda has acknowledged his role in the bombings of two American embassies in Africa in 1998 and in the attack on the destroyer Cole off Yemen in 2000, according to a hearing transcript released yesterday by the Pentagon. The operative, Walid bin Attash, who is also known as Khallad, made his statement, according to the transcript, to a combatant status review tribunal on March 12 at the United States naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.... 'I participated in the buying or purchasing of the explosives. I put together the plan for the operation a year and a half prior to the operation. Buying the boat and recruiting the members that did the operation.' He added that he had been with Osama bin Laden in Kandahar, Afghanistan, at the time of the attack on the Cole." (Adam Liptak, "Qaeda Operative Confesses Role In Cole Bombing," The New York Times, 3/20/07)

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

20070320 Weekend Commentary On Iraq

What They're Saying: Weekend Commentary On Iraq

March 20, 2007 H/T: GOPCharlie

Defense Secretary Robert Gates

Defense Secretary Robert Gates: "With Respect To The Specific Bill In The House, The Concern I Have Is That If You Have Specific Deadlines And Very Strict Conditions, It Makes It Difficult, If Not Impossible, For Our Commanders To Achieve Their Objectives." "And frankly, as I read it, the House bill is more about withdrawal, regardless of the circumstances on the ground, than it is about trying to produce a positive outcome by incentivizing the Iraqis." (CBS' "Face The Nation," 3/18/07)

Secretary Gates: "So The Issue That We're All Trying To Figure Out Is How Best Do You Get The Iraqis To Reconcile Their Differences, Because After All, This Is Not Going To Be Solved By The Military." "It has to involve political reconciliation in Iraq among Iraqis. We're basically buying them time. That's the whole purpose of this strategy. And they're going to have to step up to the plate, and we can help them by giving them the time to do that and to make their military forces able to carry the burden by themselves." (CBS' "Face The Nation," 3/18/07)

National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley

National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley: "The Problem [With The Democrats' Legislation] Is Arbitrary Timelines." "It's difficult to get reconciliation on a timeline, but the steps are right. And the Iraqis are beginning to perform. They did get their legislature, the legislature approved the Baghdad security plan, approved an extension of the emergency authorities the government needs. There is an oil law that has now been agreed by the major communities and been approved by the cabinet, will go to the Council of Representatives, their parliament. So they're beginning to make these steps. [The Democrats' legislation] sets t hese benchmarks for the Iraqis, but basically, if you read the bill, what it says is whether or not the Iraqis meet he benchmarks, the troops are coming out, and the troops are coming out without regard to progress on the ground against the enemy. And the problem is, that is mandating failure, and that is forfeiting the sacrifice we have made in Iraq." (ABC's "This Week," 3/18/07)

Hadley: "Let's Not Go Through This Charade." "Let's have the Congress present to the president a responsible bill that gives General Petraeus and the men and women in uniform the funding they need and the flexibility they need to get the job done. This is a bill to try to fund the troops. There is domestic spending that has been adding to the bill. Let's do domestic spending in the normal process. Let us get a bill that funds the troops and gives General Petraeus and our men and women in uniform what they need to get the job done." (ABC's "This Week," 3/18/07)

The Wall Street Journal

The Wall Street Journal: House Democrats' Bill Is "'Peanuts' for Petraeus." "To understand why the Founders put Presidents in charge of war fighting, look no further than the supplemental war spending bill now moving through the House. Everybody's a four-star in Congress's Army, and every general wants his own command, especially if it includes cash for the troops, er, campaign contributors. Too bad none of this bears any relation to what real General David Petraeus is trying to accomplish in Iraq." (Editorial, "'Peanuts' for Petraeus," The Wall Street Journal, 3/17/07)

"So What's A Leader Of Congress To Do To Get A Majority? You Know The Answer: Let The Vote-Buying Begin!" "Thus has Mr. Bush's request for $100 billion to fund the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, plus $3 billion to replenish the disaster-relief fund, devolved into a $124.6 billion logrolling extravaganza."

"In Any Case, Democrats Still Aren't Taking Any Real War Responsibility." "Instead of cutting off funds right now, which would at least be a policy, they kick the issue down the road by imposing 'benchmarks.' So unless the Iraqis meet certain conditions set by Congress by July 1 and October 1 of this year, U.S. troops will have to redeploy at once and finish within 180 days. And even if these earmarks sorry, benchmarks are met, all U.S. troops must begin to retreat by March 2008."

"All Of This Is Flatly Unconstitutional, But Far Worse It Is An Insult To The Troops In The Field." "If Iraq's parliament somehow gets bogged down like Congress? on de-Baathification or dividing up oil revenues, American troops have to end their mission. So General Petraeus's war strategy is made hostage to two legislatures, in Baghdad and the Beltway."

"Meanwhile, On The Baghdad Battlefield, General Petraeus Is Moving Ahead And Signs Of Tentative Progress Are Visible." "Shiite death squads are laying low or leaving town, so casualties are down. The new oil law looks like a political breakthrough that would share revenues with all parts of Iraq based on population. Suc cess isn't certain, but the Democratic Congress's only contribution is to make victory more difficult."

Secretary Of State Condoleezza Rice

Secretary Of State Condoleezza Rice Says The Iraqis Have A "New Government That Is Committed Now To A Better Life For Its People." "The fact is that we've achieved a great deal with the Iraqis, but there is still much more to do. And of course, one as always thinks about the tremendous sacrifice, the men and women who have been lost in this war and the innocent Iraqis who have died. But we also have to remember the 12.5 million people who voted, Iraqis who voted, for a new government and a new life, and I think the new possibilities that are opened up by the Baghdad security plan, which thus far is well on the way. ... Thi s is a new government that is committed now to a better life for its people. I think they're making some progress in these first days of the Baghdad security plan, although I would be the first to say there are still going to be hard days ahead. And we do have a more committed government, better Iraqi security forces and frankly more American help for them in the form of American security forces." (ABC's "Good Morning America," 3/19/07)

General David Petraeus

General David Petraeus "'Encouraged' By Surge In US Troops." "The US commander in Iraq said Sunday that there were 'encouraging signs' that a sharp increase in American troops would help quell violence in Iraq, according to a BBC interview. General David Petraeus told the BBC that sectarian attacks had fallen in recent weeks, w ith two of the five extra US brigades now on the ground in Iraq. Despite the 'encouraging signs,' Petraeus cautioned that he did not want to get 'overly optimistic at all on the basis of several weeks of a reduced sectarian murder rate,' according to the BBC. Petraeus was quoted as saying: 'By early June, we should then have everyone roughly in place -- and that will allow us to establish the density in partnership with Iraqi security forces that you need to really get a good grip on the security situation.'" ("US Iraq Chief 'Encouraged' By Surge In US Troops," Agence France Presse, 3/18/07)

"Petraeus Vowed That He Would Speak Out If The Current Operation In Iraq Did Not Go According To Plan." "'I have an obligation to the young men and women in uniform out here, that if I think it's not going to happen, to tell them that it's not going to happen, and (that) there needs to be a change,' the BBC quoted him as saying." ("US Iraq Chief 'Encouraged' By Surge In US Troops," Agence France Presse, 3/18/07)

20070320 BEWARE THE PANDER BEAR


Hillary Clinton – She’ll Say Anything To Be President

BEWARE THE PANDER BEAR

Citizen Alert: Hillary Clinton Kicks Off Campaign Of Pandering With D.C. Fundraising Gala Near The National Zoo

March 20th, 2007

_____________________________________________________________

Hillary To Kick Off Campaign:

Tonight, Clinton Will "Have The Official Washington, D.C., Kickoff For Her Campaign At The Marriott Wardman Park Hotel Near The National Zoo." (Josh Kurtz, Lauren W. Whittington and Matthew Murray, "Clinton's Umpteenth Kickoff," Roll Call, 3/7/07)

The Senator From New York Is "One Big Pander Bear":

The Washington Post's Colbert King: "You Had One Big Pander Bear There And That Was Hillary Who Was Pandering." (WJLA's "Inside Washington," 3/11/07)

"In One Of The Most Blatant Examples Of Political Pandering In Modern History, Clinton Claimed She Was A Yankees Fan When She Ran For The Senate." (Richard Roeper, "Academic Team Makes One Proud To Say: We Are Marshall," The Chicago Sun-Times, 2/15/07)

"Eyeing The 2008 Presidential Race," Clinton "Pulled A Chameleon Act" To Pander To More Conservative Voters. "Meanwhile, Clinton took her lefty base for granted and pandered to the right. She pulled a chameleon act. Eyeing the 2008 presidential race, she morphed from blue to a finely calibrated shade of red." (Phil Reisman, Op-Ed, "In Our Blue Haven, Red State Tactics Fizzle," The [Westchester County] Journal News, 6/22/06)

Clinton Pandered To Farmers On Dairy Supports: The New York Times' Gail Collins: "The dairy thing is a little bit more interesting in that that's sort of much more like the in-depth pandering you really do need to do when you are a candidate. ...This is the sort of thing you have to do when you're running for senator from New York, and she's doing it." (CBS' "Face The Nation," 7/11/99)

Newspapers Note Hilary's Compulsive Pandering:

Chattanooga Times Free Press: "In our feel-good age, we want to be told what we want to hear, and Hillary Clinton is the ideal pander candidate." (Editorial, "The Hillary Factor," Chattanooga Times Free Press, 6/5/06)

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: "So how does Hillary Clinton celebrate [MLK Day]? She goes from fawning before Letterman to pandering to Al Sharpton." (Editorial, "Looking For Hillary On The Streets Of Manhattan, Ark.," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, 1/26/00)

The New York Post: "In her pandering for votes, Mrs. Clinton now claims Yankee allegiance and revels in her alleged Jewish ancestry." (Editorial, "Hillary's Jewish Roots -Rooted In Political Pandering," The New York Post, 8/8/99)

Hillary Is A Pop-Culture Pander Icon:

The View's Elisabeth Hasselbeck: "You want to talk about the environment all the time until we get to Hillary Clinton and her pandering about ethanol production." (ABC's "The View," 2/27/07)

Late Night's Conan O'Brien: "Hillary Clinton marched in today's St. Patrick's Day Parade, and spectators accused her of pandering to voters. They might be right because Hillary was wearing a button that said, 'Kiss me, I'm also Jewish, black, Puerto Rican, and a huge Yankee fan.'" ("Campaign Laugh Track," The New York Times, 3/26/00)

20070319 African orphans make special visit by KVolkmann

Mar 19, 2007

by Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner

Photo credit: (Kristine Buls/Baltimore Examiner) Nicky Berego, 13, of Namibia, Africa, rides Bucky next to volunteer Caroline Babylon at Petticoat’s Advance, a farm in Hampstead in Carroll County. Nicky is part of a group of orphans touring Md.

Bel Air, Md. - They watched Disney on Ice, shopped at a mall and rode escalators for the first time.

Maryland, after all, is far away from the girls’ home in Namibia, Africa the Children of Mount Zion Village, an orphanage established by Mount Zion United Methodist Church in Bel Air and still operating thanks to donations and volunteers from churches throughout the state.

“It’s a lot for them to take in,” said Sarah Dorrance, a seminary student and missionary advocate at Calvary United Methodist Church in Mount Airy, one of the orphanage’s sponsors.

But the girls appeared at ease recently while riding horses at Petticoat’s Advance, a farm in Hampstead in Carroll County.

Mary Shunk, an instructor with the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County, praised the teenagers for their riding skills.

[…]

Dorrance volunteered at the orphanage last summer and plans to go back in July.

In Africa, “we played with the kids,” she said, “taught, cooked and just gave them some attention.”

kvolkmann@baltimoreexaminer.com

Read the entire article here: African orphans make special visit

20070319 Children of Zion Namibia on Soundtrack


Children of Zion Namibia on Soundtrack

March 19th, 2007

For other posts and information on “Soundtrack” on Children of Zion Namibia Africa, please click here.

Click here for Children of Zion web site information: 20070319 Children of Zion Namibia Africa information

For more information go to: http://www.childrenofzionvillage.org/

UPDATE: For a blog on the Children of Zion initiative, to “Kevin Meadows in Namibia” - http://www.kevinmeadows.us/ - or http://www.kevininnamibia.blogspot.com/

20070319 Children of Zion Namibia Africa information



Children of Zion, Namibia, Africa

Africa Namibia Children of Zion Village

March 20th, 2007

"For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in."

-Matthew 24:35

http://www.childrenofzionvillage.org/

Contact Us – info AT childrenofzionvillage DOT org

Telephone: (410) 836-2121

Postal: Children of Zion, Inc., P.O. Box 413, Churchville, MD 21028 USA

Welcome to Children of Zion Village

The Children of Zion Village is a Christian home for orphans in the country of Namibia, in southern Africa. Located on the Zambezi River in the northeast corner of Namibia, our children come from several different tribal and language groups.

They have been placed in our care because they have lost their parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles to AIDS. The home opened in January, 2003, and is now home to 55 children.

Here the boys and girls receive love, nutrition, shelter, healthcare, academic, vocational and Bible education, and become part of one large Christian family. Our missionaries, volunteers, and Namibian staff work together to raise the children in our "village".

For more information go to: http://www.childrenofzionvillage.org/

For other posts and information on “Soundtrack” on Children of Zion Namibia Africa, please click here.

Click here for Children of Zion web site information: 20070319 Children of Zion Namibia Africa information

For more information go to: http://www.childrenofzionvillage.org/

For a blog on the Children of Zion initiative, to “Kevin Meadows in Namibia” - http://www.kevinmeadows.us/