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Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Friday, September 16. 2005Roberts refers to Calder v. Bull on Kelo: Samizdata. Sounds unambiguous to me. Ms. Zanotti sums up the Roberts hearings. Yes, Roberts does believe that blacks have a right to vote. Whew. Was worried about that. Flight 93 Memorial: Is it a covert pro-Islam thing, or is it a sappy Hallmark card embarassment? You decide. Angela Merkel: Learn about her now. Germany's next Chancellor, probably. Her father, a pastor, moved the family from West to East Germany as a religious missionary. In the NYT
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05:50
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Thursday, September 15. 2005
The prospect of trying to rebuild New Orleans "safely" seems beyond stupid to me. Indeed, to do so would be to rip off every American taxpayer to make a futile gesture of defiance towards Mother Nature. It has been estimated that it would take 15-20 years to build levees which could handle a Cat 4 storm, much less a Cat 5 - which is why the decision was made, years ago, not to. There will be another big storm before that time. Thus another disaster is guaranteed, regardless of expense. My first reaction is "Not on my nickel." As an investor, I wouldn't invest a penny. Would you? But I have had an inspiration. Disney New Orleans. Call it "Disney NO" for short. Let Disney rebuild it as a tourist attraction, with their own money and their own insurance. I can see it now - Disney's jewel in their crown. A cleaner, neater, civilized New Orleans that America could be proud of. No poverty, no creeps, no dirt, no crime and no-one who would make a church lady from Dubuque uncomfortable. Happy, upbeat lite jazz coming at you through loudspeakers on the streets. Blackened Seafood-like Product at Chez Mickey's. Aerial tramways not just for around town, but also with express lines running to high ground shelters, just in case. Just rebuild the charming tourist stuff, OK? The French Quarter, the jazz bars, the restaurants, etc. Maybe a golf course or two, of course, where the rest of the city has been bulldozed. Golfers love seeing gators lying around: they add a bit of excitement to the otherwise brain-damaging effects of the game. Or they could kill all the gators and scatter mechanical gators around. Hey, and the best part - they could do a Mardi Gras parade daily from 1-4 pm. Maybe they could run the numbers and depreciate the entire investment and collect massive profits before the next hurricane drives Mickey to Baton Rouge.
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06:04
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Don't rebuild NO Logic from Chapman at RCP:
Lehman Bros is a Weenie Can you believe apologizing for slavery? The Lehman leadership may have some things on their conscience - I don't know - but moral responsibility for slavery isn't on the list. Someone scared them enough to cough up an apology, but no cash. Lame, pathetic, and disgusting. Hey - if they really felt bad, they'd give the whole company to the Rainbow Coalition. Minimum Wage Debate It's an endless debate, but what semi-clinches it for me is that 50% of the people earning min. wage are youngsters. Anyway, here's a nice summary of the perennial issues.
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06:01
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Wednesday, September 14. 2005A rational conclusion from Hinderaker: "It seems increasingly likely that when the history of Hurricane Katrina is written, the conclusion will be that it is a wonder that such a powerful storm, striking a uniquely vulnerable area, did not kill more people, considering the gross negligence and sometimes illegal conduct of many individuals and local government officials during the days that preceded and immediately followed the hurricane." Shots of Beer? Right Thinking discusses the world's strongest beer. Rick Moran goes Sane on us:
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06:20
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Tuesday, September 13. 2005Text of Judge Roberts' Remarks without notes, mind you. Here. Russert interviews Nagin Ace of Spades covers it Iran web sites In addition to Regime Change Iran, we have been alerted to another serious and interesting Iranian site, the English translation of Iran-Va-Jahan. SDA on Katrina Coverage "Especially for those of you new to SDA and the blogosphere, I suggest you read Jeff's entry. In his disassembly of the Newsweek article, he exposes that much of the coverage we've been treated to on Katrina and the responses of the various levels of government is, at best, pathetically superficial and selectively factual. At worst (and most of it falls into the worst category) it's intentionally politicized and misleading. Journalists, take note. This is why increasing numbers of Americans - and Canadians - are turning off their network news and cancelling subscriptions. The "art of omission" is a dangerous ploy in an age where the media consumer has near instant, unfiltered free access to legal and constitutional experts, transcripts, archival material, and witnesses on the scene. When viewers and readers discover you are ignoring the details - in this case, details like the limitations placed on presidential powers by the US Constitution - in a transparent ploy to score political points, you damage the relationship with the information consumer on a multitude of levels. That you inflict long term damage on your own professional credibility goes without saying. What seems less understood by your profession is that your actions convey a profound contempt for your readers and listeners. Disingenuously superficial and/or inappropriately politicized versions of current events are an insult to our intelligence - and we know it. " Read entire.
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06:16
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Monday, September 12. 2005NYT Honors 9-11 Victims by noting the clamor for "answers" re Abu Ghraib. Clamor from whom? Besides them? Perhaps the two issues are "moral equivalents"? Kinsley on Disasters Kinsley appears to represent a return to sanity: "You never gave five seconds of thought to the risk of flooding in New Orleans until it became impossible to think about anything else? Me neither. Nor have I given much thought to the risk of a big earthquake along the West Coast — the only one of the top three catastrophes that hasn’t happened yet — even though I live and work in the earthquake zone. Of course, my job isn’t to predict and prepare for disasters. My job is to recriminate when they occur. It’s not easy. These days the recriminations business is overrun with amateurs, who are squatting on all the high ground. The fetid aroma of hindsight is everywhere." The European Social Model Dead or alive?
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06:30
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Friday, September 9. 2005Propaganda Techniques used by Media At Dr. Sanity, via Atlas Shrugs
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15:12
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Thursday, September 8. 2005Arafat died of AIDS Why don't they just say so? Story at Gateway. Nagin and Blanco: They Ain't Kissin' Thanks, P'line. Story here.
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14:19
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More Plans and Schemes to politicize Katrina From Michelle - how ugly can this get? Daniel Pipes on the Thwarted L.A. Terror Spree "Terrorist plans that fail don't make headlines, but they should. This was a near-miss. Home-grown radical Islam has arrived and will do damage. American prisons are comparable to the banlieues in France, the principal recruiting grounds for a criminal form of Islam. As Frank Gaffney observes, "The alleged New Folsom State plot had better rouse us out of our stupor." Will it? Senate hearings in 2003 on prison jihadism yielded distressingly few results. The emergence of a primarily African-American Islamist terrorist cell signals a new trend. Native-born Americans have taken part in terrorist operations before, but (again, as in London), this case this marks their first large-scale plot." Read entire.
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08:27
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Wednesday, September 7. 2005Sometimes, it's just fun to play the immature gotcha blame game. So I will. I blame the storm. So does Rick. Fact: Search and rescue and evacuation is not FEMA's job. Fact: Governments don't do very much, very well, except spend $. Dems strategize about how to best profit from Katrina, here. Bolton on the job. HT, View from 1776. He has already quietly done a great service.
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03:37
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Tuesday, September 6. 2005"If you don't leave, you're on your own." When Nagin said it, he meant it. They still can't get everyone to leave town. Can't leave is one thing. Won't leave is another. At this point, I would suggest "reasonable force." Anyone still there is either deranged or wants to stay and loot. Owning firearms is a good idea. Auster. Ayatollah Komenei calls for Jihad against World Nagin blames Blanco. And the pumps are working now. But anyone who wants to move back to that cesspool is nuts. Reason # 7,657,789 not to trust the NYT (P'line) Minor problem: No more NO Etouffe. Open call to NO chefs and sauciers - email us - we'll find work for you here. Patterico's primary function, IMO, is to find dishonesty, failures of intellectual integrity, and bias at the LAT. He found one here and one here.
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09:48
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Monday, September 5. 2005NOW gives women a bad name: Shrieking hormonal hysteria re Rehnquist's replacement (and of course, Bush caused the hurricane,too, they say). Meanwhile, Dems exult in his death (via Michelle). Evacuation Failure - at Pennywit. Hurricane Graph - Proof the wacko enviros are lying thru the Sen. Landrieu threatens violence if anyone criticizes LA: Powerline. Come and get me, Senator. I'd never hit a lady. Reason # 7,387,563 that I cannot read the NYT: Captain Ed. Shays and Lieberman vow probe into f-ups. Cole asks whether it is possible to evacaute any place. Probably not any city. Excellent timeline of the disaster from Env. Economics. Oh, and now I see NO did have a plan - they just didn't follow it: Macho Nachos
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05:22
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Sunday, September 4. 2005Chertoff: "We're in Control" My thoughts: Three or four days late and a dollar short. Finally, the Feds are forced to shove the locals out of the way and take over NO. Just like we said. Here. It may not be legal, but we now have de-facto martial law and a federal take-over of the failed LA and NO govts. But where was FEMA on Weds? And why wouldn't the Gov. call in the National Guard to deal with the "insurgents"? And why did the Fed agencies watch while the local authorities were paralyzed with indecision, ignorance, and obvious incompetence, with barbarians running rampant? (We read that as late as Friday the Governor refused to let the Feds take over.) I want to hear the story from Bush, the head of FEMA, Chertoff, the Gov. of LA, the LA National Guard, the Mayor of NO, the NO Chief of Police, and the NO Chief of the Fire and Rescue Dept., the Chief of the LA State Police, the head of the LA National Guard, and the the person in charge of NO disaster planning. Under oath, please. Again, not that this was a manageable situation but rather one which was certain to result in death and destruction - but you try anything. It was clear on Tuesday that things were going to hell, and all of the past predictions for NO came true. Heck, even Maggie's Farm predicted it last Sunday: "Crash on the Levee." But I already know the answers: there was no real plan for a Cat 4 or Cat 5 storm, other than hope. And hope is not a plan. And, may I ask, what is Chertoff doing with this? This isn't Homeland Security. Is it? Oh, I see, FEMA is now under Homeland Security. Why? Combat operations in NO: An American Somalia "Numerous soldiers also told Army Times that they have been shot at by armed civilians in New Orleans. Spokesmen for the Joint Task Force Headquarters at the Superdome were unaware of any servicemen being wounded in the streets, although one soldier is recovering from a gunshot wound sustained during a struggle with a civilian in the dome Wednesday night. “I never thought that at a National Guardsman I would be shot at by other Americans,” said Spc. Philip Baccus of the 527th Engineer Battalion. “And I never thought I’d have to carry a rifle when on a hurricane relief mission. This is a disgrace.” " Read entire. Gov. Blanco refused help From the Anchoress:
Indeed it would - and needed, too. Read entire. Lessons learned from Ivan ignored "A feckless state governor and New Orleans' mayor repeated the same mistakes they made with Ivan, and hundreds of thousands of largely poor people were forced to endure conditions that one associates with the Third World - not the richest nation on the planet." Read entire. The Race Issue: Bring it on, says Rick Moran Rick discusses the destructiveness of the War on Poverty, Moynihan's prescient warnings, and the govt-created culture of dependency. I think he overstates the case, however: the black middle class has been growing rapidly, and it is not only blacks who got caught in the culture of dependency - more whites than blacks. Still, it's a thoughtful essay on a subject which has been highlighted by NO. One paragraph, re LBJ's War on Poverty:
From a Lousiana guy, now living in New England Brewton from View from 1776. commented on our NO post yesterday, re LA culture. One paragraph:
Bill Clinton tells the truth...more or less: "Shit happens." Re Katrina, on Captain's Quarters
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07:46
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Saturday, September 3. 2005New Orleans The Anchoress has two good pieces on the failure of local and state govt (thanks for the intro, neo-neocon). And Neo-neocon addresses the failure to prepare. View from 1776 discusses the moral failures of NO. Right Thinking has a little debate with the reflex Bush-bashers. Vilmar agrees with us - don't rebuild. RWNH covers the territory - the Bush-bashing, the immature blame-game, the racism issues, and mainly, money-raising to help out. And of course Michelle is on top of things. My humble opinion: Despite total incompetence, ignorance, stupidity, and corruption of the local hack, low-life politicians, and unprofessional police (one third abandoned their posts, and many joined in the looting) no-one can quickly manage a natural disaster on this scale. Even if they weren't such losers. That's why they call it a "disaster." If it were manageable, it would be called a "problem." This is beyond a "problem." This is the nature-imposed destruction of a city, with a local response which was an embarrassment, both practically and morally. And why didn't Bush know they were too incompetent to handle things? Don't know. He should have been told they were incompetent losers who would pass the buck and give him the blame for their failures. Still, he was the guy who told the gov. to order evacuation, but she had no plan to do so even though everyone knew this would be a problem, for decades. And the mayor - forget it - what a pathetic grandstanding, alligator-tears, manipulative schmuck who evades responsibility for his shortcomings and errors like a seasoned politico-sociopath. I'm surprised he didn't bring out a dead puppy or dead ma or drowned grandma to the cameras, to emotionally strong-arm people in an amateur political way in a pathetic effort to save his political life. Who took care of 9-11? Guiliani and Pataki. Who has taken care of all of the hurricanes in Fla? Jeb. What is the purpose of local and state govts, if not to protect their folks? Hello. Well, I guess this isn't New York City. It's Amateur Hour. No local heroes here - too bad. They had their chance-of-a-lifetime to be national heroes instead of whining crybabies, and they flunked the test of life. And they know it, too - hence their immature blaming to conceal their shame: that's usually what blaming is all about. Well, the nation is now on the job, and those local "officials" should get out of the way and hide themselves in disgrace. Including the NO sleazebag cops and sleazebag politicians. Get out of the way. The grown-ups are arriving, now that these people have made a mockery of the concept of federalism and the notion of state and local responsibility. Because of local corrupt politics and idiot politicians, it is Bush's, and OUR, problem now. But fear not - we will pick up the slack. For donations, we still prefer the Salvation Army - always first to arrive and last to leave. Still annoyed with the Red Cross. The $ is flowing in like a hurricane's flood. $5 or $100 - it all helps people, regardless of their characters. And thanks, Editor Bird Dog, for unleashing me. You may need to kennel me up when you return, with a good whack with a newspaper, if you get any of them anymore. Read our tasteless (post-hurricane, but pre-flood, satire) here, (which is coming true), and our piece on Send Money, Don't Rebuild, here. Friday, September 2. 2005
Truth from Kate at small dead animals Blog, in Canada:
Read the entire excellent piece.
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15:13
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Lord of the Flies From Newsmax:
From Gov. Barbour (Mississippi):
Do you call that "learning from experience"? And a quote from Powerline (we rarely quote them, since we assume you read them, but I can't help it: "Dr. David Caskey writes from Louisiana. We can't vouch for what he says; all I know is, he's there and we're not:
Confirmation of above from a reader: "That's right--cops are seriously corrupt and if you do not act like a racist - avoiding black neighborhoods, which is most of the city - and being careful of where you go and what you do - by the time you have lived in New Orleans one month, you will be forced to. Expect no help from their cops. Its' a big dirty secret. Relief does not get in because they are scared shitless and they should be--I personally know over ten people held at gunpoint including my best friend and roommate while I lived there. You don't garner a name like the Big Easy for nothing. NO is the crime capital of the US, and it has never bothered the Mayor. This isn't about race - I am not white - it's just a black city, and a city with minimal morals." And more confirmation here. But, despite all of the politicization and lies and problems, the main thing now is just to help those folks, the good and the bad.
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11:31
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A few quotes from Stratfor Geopolitical Intelligence "During the Cold War, a macabre topic of discussion among bored graduate students who studied such things was this: If the Soviets could destroy one city with a large nuclear device, which would it be? The usual answers were Washington or New York. For me, the answer was simple: New Orleans. If the Mississippi River was shut to traffic, then the foundations of the economy would be shattered. The industrial minerals needed in the factories wouldn't come in, and the agricultural wealth wouldn't flow out. Alternative routes really weren't available. The Germans knew it too: A U-boat campaign occurred near the mouth of the Mississippi during World War II. Both the Germans and Stratfor have stood with Andy Jackson: New Orleans was the prize." and "The Ports of South Louisiana and New Orleans, which run north and south of the city, are as important today as at any point during the history of the republic. On its own merit, POSL is the largest port in the United States by tonnage and the fifth-largest in the world. It exports more than 52 million tons a year, of which more than half are agricultural products -- corn, soybeans and so on. A large proportion of U.S. agriculture flows out of the port. Almost as much cargo, nearly 17 million tons, comes in through the port -- including not only crude oil, but chemicals and fertilizers, coal, concrete and so on." and I would quote more from the excellent report by Friedman at Stratfor, but it is a subscription site, and a valuable one, so I hope they won't mind our quotes if we provide their site, here.
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11:19
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We need more Bubbas:
Michelle is up to date on the moonbats, flood relief, and related issues, here.
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10:26
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The Help Pours In - Up to $100 million as of yesterday noon, according to this piece in the NYT. The Cavalry Arrives - 12,000 National Guard troops arrive. Denny Hastert must be a Maggie's Farm reader: "Don't re-build." Here. And so must the Editorial writers at the NYT - "The conceit that we can control the natural world is what made New Orleans vulnerable." Here. However, they undo that statement by proceeding to explain how if govt had spent 17 billion, it might have helped. Press urges Gov. Barbour to blame Bush for Katrina. And BlameBush has the grisly truth about Bush's visit today to New Orleans:
Katrina effects on travel, here. Bayou Looters in CT - Not all of the looters are in New Orleans. Also from the NYT: "Federal prosecutors sued the Bayou Funds yesterday, saying the hedge fund company and securities firm run by Samuel Israel III directed a years-long fraud that attracted more than $300 million from investors. Mr. Israel is said to be at the Westchester County house he rents for $32,000 a month from Donald J. Trump. "Click here: U.S. Sues Bayou; Fraud Cited - New York Times
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07:33
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Exploiting Katrina It's not news that the Left is at war with America and with the Bush administration. Lies are no problems for them - war is hell. After all, we all know that hurricanes are caused by Bush's refusal to sign Kyoto, the levees were weak because Bush didn't give enough $, the blacks in New Orleans were poor because of Bush's racism, New Orleans is mainly black because, well, maybe Bush put them all there, Bush was too busy flirting with Cindy "Sheehan-Crawford" to pay attention to the crisis, gas prices are up because of Bush's Saudi cabal, we have too few National Guard units because of Bush's wrong and illegal war against the lovable and misunderstood Saddam ... what have I missed? Oh, of course - Bush has no heart and no feelings and no brain. Glassman at TCS hits the contemptible exploiters of natural disaster here. Thursday, September 1. 2005QQQIf the minimum wasn't acceptable it wouldn't be called the minimum. George Muncaster (Air Force Wisdom) Wednesday, August 31. 2005God Banned from US Air Force So who is your co-pilot now, fly-boys? The ACLU? You will not believe this. What weenies let this happen? Never give in to the Moonbats because it will only encourage them. How California Destroyed Rambo and anyone else who tries to govern a wacko state. Good, serious piece by Judis at New Republic. High Water Just when everyone relaxed on Monday night, figuring New Orleans had been spared the brunt of the storm, we started to see the high water rising. You don't need me to bring this news, but surely it is scarey to think you're out of trouble, and then begin to notice the water coming up. Can you really blame these people for not believing the government? It's clear to me that the USA, and the Red Cross, are on the job. How does Norm find this stuff? Check this out - Word Count - which has now ranked the top 88,000 most commonly-used words in English. My only problem with it is that it lists plurals, verb forms, etc. separately from their roots. "Shotgun" is number 12559, and "chagrin" is number 25703. Thanks, Norm at Normblog. Coffee good for your health: Here Sheehan antics backfiring, here:http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/8/30/163939.shtml
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05:03
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QQQWhen a nation goes down, or a society perishes, one condition may always be found; they forgot where they came from. They lost sight of what had brought them along.Carl SandburgTuesday, August 30. 2005National Catastrophe: Despite fierce rainstorm in Mississippi and Louisiana, needed military equipment is far away, in Iraq. (doing nothing, and for no good reason, is the implication). Thanks, RWNH. Murdoch does China, and blows it. Even though he tried to play ball with their police state dictatorship: Click here: TIME.com: Testing Beijing's Limits -- Sep. 05, 2005 -- Page 1 The Monitor has no cat, no coat, inside the cannons. Still cool. Free San Francisco. Let 'em go. Miller at TCS.
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05:06
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