Saturday, July 28, 2007
Good short videos
by Max Blumenthal.
Rapture Ready: The Unauthorized Christians United for Israel Tour from huffpost and Vimeo.
And another one: "Generation Chickenhawk: With the College Republicans."
Rapture Ready: The Unauthorized Christians United for Israel Tour from huffpost and Vimeo.
And another one: "Generation Chickenhawk: With the College Republicans."
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Terrorist Memorial Mosque to Be Built in Somerset County
Clipped from the pages of Johnstown, PA's free community newspaper Our Town:
The problem, as Mr. Rawls points out, is obvious: "We hosted an open design competition in time of war."
The wily terrorists have, naturally, hit America just where she's weakest: in the arena of public memorial design.
The problem, as Mr. Rawls points out, is obvious: "We hosted an open design competition in time of war."
The wily terrorists have, naturally, hit America just where she's weakest: in the arena of public memorial design.
...not to mention the WaPo
...which can't even do a puff piece on Bush's solidifying status as the most unpopular president ever, without lapsing into a fit of coprophagic-induced anoesia, which takes the form of this "analysis":
I challenge anyone to explain what that sentence "means."
"...We don't have that immediate crisis, yet the anxiety about the future is palpable. And the feeling about him is he's irrelevant to that. I think they've basically given up on him."
That may stem in part from the changing nature of society. When [Jimmy Carter] was president, there were three major broadcast networks. Today cable news, talk radio and the Internet have made information far more available, while providing easy outlets for rage and polarization.
I challenge anyone to explain what that sentence "means."
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
The Ongoing Murderous Stupidity of the New York Times...
... courtesy Sally Fisher.
“At the time that we went into Iraq, we had just come out of 9/11. The nation was in shock, frightened,” Sally Fisher of Garden City, Mich., said in a follow-up interview after the poll was conducted. “Looking back, I still think we should have gone in. Should we have stayed as long as we did? No.”
“At the time that we went into Iraq, we had just come out of 9/11. The nation was in shock, frightened,” Sally Fisher of Garden City, Mich., said in a follow-up interview after the poll was conducted. “Looking back, I still think we should have gone in. Should we have stayed as long as we did? No.”