
HINT: It ain't Paris . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . STORMBRINGER
Thursday, 5 August 2010
NAME THAT CITY
From
STORMBRINGER
at
12:19
0
comments
From
Theo Spark
at
09:00
0
comments
From
Theo Spark
at
08:59
0
comments

U.S. Army troops from the 1st Battalion 320th Alpha Battery, 2nd Brigade of the 101st Airborne Division, duck as an Afghan soldier fires a rocket propelled grenade towards insurgent positions at Combat Outpost Nolen, in the volatile Arghandab Valley, in Kandahar, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File)
MORE HERE
From
Theo Spark
at
08:36
0
comments
News..........
Day 27 – August 5th 1940
LA City Councilman, wife indicted on multiple counts of voter fraud...
The litmus test .... it is time for john bolton to step forward and lead, not just show that he is smart and erudite .... but to lead, and to risk ....
Wolves lurking in the shadows provide an exceptional line of defense for the United States
Ban the Burqa
Tim Brown Destroys CAIR Executive Nihad Awad Debating Ground Zero Mosque…
Shariah Comes to the Supreme Court: Elena Kagan’s Decisions
Back Door Amnesty for Illegals?
UK banks 'weren't bust at all'
Obamunism Made Easy
The greatest charity giveaway in history? 34 billionaires pledge half of their fortunes
BP oil spill: three-quarters of the oil has gone as Obama says it's close to ending
UFO files: Winston Churchill 'feared panic' over Second World War RAF incident
Ahmadinejad 'assassination attempt' was a firework, Iran claims
UFO files: dozens of Cold War sightings 'mainly Russian jets'
Denmark's deputy prime minister 'world's worst foreign minister'
New York Mosque plans face lawsuit
Iran claims to have smuggled anti aircraft missile systems into country
and finally.......
Birthright Citizenship
From
Theo Spark
at
08:02
0
comments
The writing on the wall...........from Rico
If you can "read" a balance sheet....like THIS one from Bank of America...you can read the "writing on the wall" and understand what you are not, and WILL NOT be told by the Financial Media, the MSM (aka The Minsitry of Truth), the Fed, Congress, or anyone who is 'connected' (this includes Comrade Berry, our Dear Reader).
This balance sheet clearly says:
- sitting on CASH
- reducing LOANS outstanding
- INVESTING (speculating) on Wall Street using cheap Fed money (well, our cheap TAXPAYER MONEY)
And the rest of us mere mortals who are not on the Mt. Olympus of TBTF (too big to fail)...namely taxpayers, well: just keep running on that wheel (paying your taxes) so Berry & Timmy & Benny etr al don't run out of YOUR money!!
.......sssshhhhhhhhhh!! Hey, that's not the wheel squeeking! It must be the hamsters........
From
Theo Spark
at
07:15
0
comments
'Gender No Longer Forms An Essential Part of Marriage'
Folks are reacting to that line at the ruling.
AoSHQ is especially good. And Jeff Goldstein responds:
... this ruling does nothing more than enshrine the notion that what has always been the definition for marriage can no longer be the definition for marriage, because defining marriage as it has always been defined is discriminatory against those who wish it was defined in a way more to their liking, and in a way that changes what it is and has always been into something it never was nor ever has been. But be that as it may.I've tired of writing about this, frankly. I'm not so much in the business of seeking to deprive people rights --- contrived rights, be that as it may as well --- and I'm to the point where the only legitimate solution I see would be a federalist one, to let the voters in their own states decide how they want to define marriage. The courts will not reflect the people on this, and the law will be tweaked to extend the right to marry to a faction that's not interested in the traditional bases of that institution. I'm reminded of Robert Bork's comments on the larger implications:
What we are seeing in modern liberalism is the ultimate triumph of the New Left of the 1960s - the New Left that collapsed as a unified political movement and splintered into a multitude of intense, single-issue groups. We now have, to name but a few, radical feminists, black extremists, animal rights groups, radical environmentalists, activist homosexual groups, multiculturalists, People for the American Way, Planned Parenthood, the American Civil Liberties Union, and many more. In a real sense, however, the New Left did not collapse. Each of its splinters pursues a leftist agenda, but there is no publicly announced overarching philosophy that enables people to see easily that the separate groups and causes add up to a general radical left philosophy. The groups support one another and come together easily on many issues. In that sense, the splintering of the New Left made it less visible and therefore more powerful, its goals more attainable, than ever before.NYT has a story up now (FWIW), "Court Rejects Same-Sex Marriage Ban in California" (via Memeorandum).
In their final stages, radical egalitarianism becomes tyranny and radical individualism descends into hedonism. These translate as bread and circuses. Government grows larger and more intrusive in order to direct the distribution of goods and services in an ever more equal fashion, while people are diverted, led to believe that their freedoms are increasing, by a great variety of entertainments featuring violence and sex ...
Cross-posted from American Power.
From
AmPowerBlog
at
02:35
1 comments
Wednesday, 4 August 2010
E.D. Kain Joins Balloon Juice: ‘Please Allow Me to Introduce Myself’
Posted at American Power. There's some history there. Tells you a lot about the ethics of those who claim to be "true" conservatives.
From
AmPowerBlog
at
18:00
0
comments
Understanding Engineers.........
Normal people believe that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
Engineers believe that if it ain’t broke, it doesn’t have enough features yet.
H/T DML
From
Theo Spark
at
12:23
1 comments
CHARLES MARTELL

a.k.a. Charles THE HAMMER . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . STORMBRINGER
From
STORMBRINGER
at
11:51
0
comments
Attack on Israel's Northern Border Map and Video
Map of attack. The unprovoked attack on IDF Maintenance crew from Lebanon happened on the Israel side of the Blue Line (demarcating the border). The fence is set a few meters inside Israeli territory for tactical and functional reasons.

As you can see in the above map, in some areas, there is a gap between the IDF security fence and the actual border, which is...
More at DoubleTapper
---
From
DoubleTapper
at
10:10
0
comments
From
Theo Spark
at
09:19
0
comments
Video: Water Catapult Big Air
Water Catapult Launch - Watch more Funny Videos
From
Theo Spark
at
08:56
0
comments
News.........
Day 26 – August 4th 1940
Missile Defense Obama Style
Geert Wilders ... a man for all seasons ... a man who leads ...
Someone is leaving signs
Doug Hagin Radio Show: If You are Left, You Just ain't Right #9
Illegals Defining Trait
British holidaymakers face travel chaos as Spanish air traffic controllers threaten strike
EPA to Crack Down on Farm Dust
Pakistan floods: Islamic fundamentalists fill state aid void
Viral email discloses 'what women really mean'
Savers to get €100,000 protection
AMERICA'S NEW HEALTH CARE SYSTEM REVEALED
Democrats Disillusioned
The Other Side of Shirley Sherrod
Council houses should no longer be 'for life', Cameron tells PM Direct public meeting
British soldier shot in Afghanistan is saved by his ROSARY... just like his great-grandfather in WWII
NHS waiting lists rise after doctors' hours cut
MoD scientist's death in top-secret blast to be investigated after eight years
Hizbollah threatens to join violence on Lebanese border with Israel
Trident is too important to play politics with
China's Real Estate Bubble Threatens to Burst
Census of Marine Life Reveals Endless Diversity of Sea Creatures
United States Department of Defense takes shape on September 11th
Dawson's Creek Star Marries in Israel
Forgotten Eurotunnel passengers taken back to England
From
Theo Spark
at
08:15
0
comments
Tuesday, 3 August 2010
New Zealand combat casualties Afghanistan
We have experienceed our first combat death in Afghanistan and the first since Pte Leonard Manning was killed in East Timor in 2000.
Two other soldiers were wounded in the attack in which a vehicle patrol was attacked with an IED follwed up with RPG's and small arms fire begining at approx 12.30 GMT. As comms with the patrol are intermitent at this stage all the details are unclear.
However the Prime Minister John Key has conformed New Zealands commitment to the deployment and said this death is not a reason to withdraw. The SAS deployment is due to end in September but this is being reconsidered in order to allow the force to complete its mission.
We're one of the smallest countries in the world with a population that would be a suburb of London or New York, we do many things. Running away isn't one of them.
More here.
Afghanistan War a Mistake?
"Another of our country's children, giving his life for our freedom from terrorism. God bless you, soldier, thank you for your ultimate sacrifice. You will never be forgotten." --- From the comments at the Orange County Register.The photo shows U.S. Marine Michael Chang grieving at the memorial for his best friend, Army Sgt. Daniel Lim. The Orange County Register has the front-page story and slideshow, "O.C. soldier's love for family and friends ran deep." A picture of Chang is also on the front-page of the hardcopy edition of today's Wall Street Journal. Looking at the images from the Sgt. Lim ceremonies, can we really believe the war was a mistake? Have the lives of those who've sacrificed been for naught? I don't believe so. But at almost 9 years, the war in Afghanistan may be stretching the limits of America's patience.

The partisan political splits have been longstanding. The Democratic Party used the war for cheap political purposes during the Bush administration. Democrats argued that America was fighting the wrong war in Iraq, that Afghanistan was the "good war" in the post-9/11 era. But as soon as it looked like the U.S. has secured a lasting stability --- if not all-out victory --- in Iraq, the Democrats' political calculus turned to antiwar mobilization against the Afghanistan deployment. Sober analysts are correct to contrast and justify the commitment of U.S. resources with the war aims in Afghanistan. They've suggested that U.S. goals have not always been well-defined and that nation-building seems supported more by U.S. contingents on the ground than the Afghan political officials being propped up by American power. Then you have the neo-communist leftists, who have two political cards against the modern capitalist system: "racism" and "neo-imperialism." Some of these folks have in fact given direct support to our enemies, treasonous behavior that sadly reaches to the Obama administration itself. Not far behind the left are the "realist" paleocons, who for my money are not much better than the neo-communists in their wild conspiracies of alleged U.S. neo-colonial adventures. Such talk ultimately aids and abets our enemies. It places such a narrow desideratum on our interests that basically the U.S. would never intervene abroad unless a couple of our largest cities were incinerated by nuclear mushroom clouds.
In any case, I'm prompted to this discussion by today's front-page report at USA Today, "Poll: Waning Support for Obama On Wars," and more specifically, the Gallup Poll behind it, "In U.S., New High of 43% Call Afghanistan War a 'Mistake'." Ed Morrissey focuses on the political angle, and the likihood the USA Today buried the lede on Obama's collapsing numbers. That's important, although it's the Gallup entry that's more interesting to me, since the poll cites WikiLeaks as a reason for the declining support:
After the Internet publication of tens of thousands of leaked classified documents on the war in Afghanistan, 43% of Americans now say the United States made a mistake in sending troops there, up slightly from just before the release (38%). While Americans are still more likely to support than oppose the war, the percentage who say it was a mistake to get involved is at a new high ....
The 43% of Americans calling the decision to send U.S. military forces into Afghanistan a mistake marks the high point in the nearly nine-year war, although a slight majority continue to support the decision. Public support persists even though for most of the last several years Americans have generally thought the war has been going badly for the United States, and many more currently disapprove than approve of President Obama's handling of the situation.
Thus, the leaking of the documents may not be providing new information to the general public about the progress of the war. And given Americans' subdued attention to the story, it's also not clear that Americans are highly familiar with what information those documents reveal.
But the documents do remind Americans of the challenges the United States is facing in Afghanistan, and they may have caused an increasing number to question whether the efforts there are worth it. Last week, Congress approved President Obama's request for continued funding of the war, though by a narrower margin than last year.
That sounds like a decent assessment. I'd simply add that most MSM outlets are in the tank for WikiLeaks, and this despite the fact that Julian Assange is almost certainly running a criminal enterprise. I think at this point the U.S. is now to a point of winding down the Bush-era wars. President Obama has never embraced them as his own. Of course he campaigned vociferously against Iraq in 2007-08 and is today claiming credit for victory there; and on Afghanistan he's been at most lukewarm in his support, while some of his decision-making has in fact put U.S. troops in greater danger. But there's more to the WikiLeaks story than meets the eye. American interests remain great in Afghanistan. Despite the increasing drumbeats for a precipitous withdrawal, AfPAK will remain a top global security threat for years to come. We'd be foolish to cut and run. On that score, I'll give the last word to Thomas Joscelyn at Weekly Standard. See, "The Taliban's Savagery: The Documents Released by WikiLeaks Say Much About the Evil of Our Enemies":
When WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange announced the massive leak of more than 90,000 classified documents, he claimed that he was exposing “thousands” of possible American war crimes. The documents show nothing of the sort. Some of the documents do detail the brutality of war, and the unsurprising fact that mistakes are made. Assange’s anti-American myopia prevented him from seeing what the documents really demonstrate: American-led forces face an especially savage enemy.
Of course, we didn’t need the WikiLeaks cache of documents to tell us this. There is plenty of evidence for the whole world to see. Still, the documents demonstrate just how pervasive the Taliban’s brutality is in this fight. The Taliban and its jihadist allies have an unparalleled lust for blood, beheading their enemies (both real and imagined) on a regular basis. It is difficult to think of a more savage act.
Here are just some examples, chosen from many, found in the documents released by WikiLeaks ....
RTWT.
Cross-posted from American Power.
From
AmPowerBlog
at
21:42
0
comments
What happened on Israel's Northern Border
The attack by the Lebanese army against the IDF, took place in Israeli territory along Israeli's Northern border. In some areas, there is a gap between the IDF security fence and the actual border, which is where this attack took place. IDF soldiers were conducting routine maintenance work including clearing bushes from the area...
Watch the video at DoubleTapper
From
DoubleTapper
at
21:08
0
comments
Remembering the Battle of Athens
Virgil Remembers the Battle of Athens. Tennessee.
Also known as The GI Revolt.
A society that destroys "inconveniences" that happen to have faces, and
heartbeats, and that ridicules the old doesn't love. It despises. Remembering
the Script.
From
Anonymous
at
18:46
1 comments
Palestinian Panty Police
Call for backup!
The ever risible Strip - same cats who fairly and freely voted in the world's very first suicide regime (rocket rich - natch! ) are battling crime with a new squad of coppers.
Applications online for HAMAS's new school law enforcement can be sent here.
Help keep Palestinian shame and honor betwixt a girl's legs, instead of where it really belongs...
Pic 'Commentary deleted" by the staff at GrEaT sAtAn"s gIrLfRiEnD
From
GrEaT sAtAn'S gIrLfRiEnD
at
18:16
0
comments
Impact: United Airlines Flight 175 September 11, 2001
At Israel Matzav, "Why There Shouldn't Be a Mosque at Ground Zero."
More on Flight 175 here.
RELATED: "'WE HAVE SOME PLANES'."
BREAKING: Dan Senor, at WSJ, "An Open Letter on the Ground Zero Mosque" (via Memeorandum):
Our deeper concern is what effect Cordoba House would have on the families of 9/11 victims, survivors of and first responders to the attacks, New Yorkers in general, and all Americans. As you have seen in the public reaction to the Cordoba House, 9/11 remains a deep wound for Americans—especially those who experienced it directly in some way. They understandably see the area as sacred ground. Nearly all of them also reject the equation of Islam with terrorism and do not blame the attacks on Muslims generally or on the Muslim faith. But many believe that Ground Zero should be reserved for memorials to the event itself and to its victims. They do not understand why of all possible locations in the city, Cordoba House must be sited so near to there.
And the contrary opinion from Wordsmith at Flopping Aces, "Refudiating the Islamophobes." And Jennifer Rubin, "The Left Defends Ground Zero Mosque."
Cross-posted from American Power.
From
AmPowerBlog
at
15:06
0
comments
Coming Soon: VBS TV - Oregon Fire Lines - Teaser
Whenever someone at our office bitches about being overworked, our stock response is “Beats digging ditches.” While the express intention of the statement is usually not-so-supportive, we think it’s a healthy reminder that at the end of the day, we are all basically professional emailers and should be thankful for such.
The wildland firefighters who work for Grayback Forestry in Southern Oregon have no such motivational adages because their job is actually digging ditches. Around active forest fires. On the sides of mountains.
You can’t even bitch at these guys for having cushy government pensions to fall back on when they get older, because they’re all private-sector contractors. Which means if they aren’t out fighting forest fires or doing preventative forestry on unburned woods (basically extreme landscaping), they are losing money. They are literally the hardest working men in tree business.
We spent a few days following a crew of Grayback forest-firefighters walk up the sides of what most people would consider a cliff to chop down underbrush in preparation for a controlled burn. This is what they like to call “project work,” aka the light stuff in between fires, and yet it was still some of the hardest most least-rewarding work we have ever tried to do in our lives. Unless you consider 12-hour-plus shifts of backbreaking labor, virtually zero outside recognition, and occasional accusations of being shills for the timber industry rewards. Which we do not.
From
Theo Spark
at
12:21
0
comments
Attack on Israel's Northern Border
Reports of attack on IDF troops near the South Lebanon border. IDF responding with tank, artillery, attack helicopter and...

More at DoubleTapper
---
From
DoubleTapper
at
11:49
0
comments







.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
















.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)








