Secular Blasphemy
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  12. april 2004


No lingerie shows, please, we're American

Keidi Klum in Victoria's Secret underwearPartly as a result of the massive media panic after Janet Jackson's "costume malfunction", Victoria's Secret has decided to cancel its traditional nationally televised fashion show.

The usual fanatics are very happy. Yes, probably John Ashcroft, too, but this time I refer to some of his puritanical strange bedfellows:

Olga Vives, vice president of the National Organization for Women, praised the cancellation, saying the show only objectifies women.

Ah, "objectify", one of these feminist slogans that means absolutely nothing at all. But the term sounds evil when ripped out of its grammatical origin, so it must be bad.


10:27:53 PM    comment []  trackback []

It is their intellectual property, after all

"RIAA Singing the Same Old Song" (Wired headline)


9:19:07 PM    comment []  trackback []

War and politics then and now

Marstonalia argues convincingly that while parallels between the Vietnam war and the current Iraq conflict are overdone, there is some basis for comparing the political situation surrounding it with the Korean war.

The man who challenged president Truman on the increasingly unpopular Korean war was hardly a peace activist bent on appeasement, it was national hero Ike Eisenhower. So he had to play to both those voters who wanted to end the war and withdraw, and those who thought Truman was not aggressive enough.

Recall that many of the soldiers in Korea were national guardsmen who were quietly leading private lives before the outbreak of the war; criticisms abounded that the troops were not well armed or trained, and many critics of the administration worried that the war was unwinnable and should simply be abandoned. In 1951 and 1952, "the majority of Americans . . .considered entering the war a mistake, wanted to pull American troops out of Korea as rapidly as posisble, and supported numerous proposals to achieve a negotiated peace" (from Ralph Levering's The Public and American Foreign Policy 1918 - 1978, 102, quoted in Richard Melason, "The Foundations of Eisenhower's Foreign Policy: Continuity, Community and Consensus," in R. Melanson and D. Mayers, Reevaluating Eisenhower (1987), p.41). [...]

The war was a "divisive, increasingly partisan domestic political issue" (Melanson 41). Charges of treason and "appeasement" flew from the halls of the Senate and from the press. Senator Joseph McCarthy argued that the foreign policy of the Truman administration was part of a nefarious plot "to diminish the United States in world affairs, to weaken us military, to confuse our spirit with talk of surrender in the Far East, and to impair our will to resist evil" (America's Retreat from Victory (1951), 171).

Political conflict in the midts of war is hardly new. And roles reverse quickly between America's two main political parties.


6:54:01 PM    comment []  trackback []

Nuclear missiles go environment-friendly

I am sure this will be a big relief for Greenpeace et al:

The last of the Minuteman III missiles will receive their new motors by 2008. It costs about $5.2 million to replace the rockets on each missile. The new rocket motors, which have to comply with EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) rules, will have a shorter range (which was classified, but thought to be nearly 10,000 kilometers, based on where the missiles were stationed and where likely Russian targets were.) than the original motors 

So this means that when the nukes are on their way to annihilate cities and lay waste to continents, the missiles will not pollute the environment! Now isn't that cute? We wouldn't want it to damage the ozone layer or something.

More sarcasm from Dean's World


4:28:41 PM    comment []  trackback []

"The weaker we are, the more they will come after us"

Nobody does this like Tony Blair. In a recent letter to The Observer, he explains clearly and powerfully what is going on in Iraq, why the coaltion is acting as it does, and why it is extremely important for all of us that the coalition wins.

Or if we scorned our American allies and told them to go and fight on their own, that somehow we would be spared? If we withdraw from Iraq, they will tell us to withdraw from Afghanistan and, after that, to withdraw from the Middle East completely and, after that, who knows? But one thing is for sure: they have faith in our weakness just as they have faith in their own religious fanaticism. And the weaker we are, the more they will come after us.

It is not easy to persuade people of all this; to say that terrorism and unstable states with WMD are just two sides of the same coin; to tell people what they don't want to hear; that, in a world in which we in the West enjoy all the pleasures, profound and trivial, of modern existence, we are in grave danger.

Read every word!

PS: Why can't Bush come out and explain this equally clearly?

PS 2: If Tony Blair has a fanclub, I will join it.


8:22:59 AM    comment []  trackback []

"Makes Mr Gibson look like a wimp"

Kontraband keeps track of the most popular virals, film clips and funnies that are passed around the Net. At the top right now you'll find a "TV ad" for a Jesus Christ action figure. Go see it!


5:26:48 AM    comment []  trackback []

Rice pushes Bush upwards in polls

Bloggers and pundits who try to paint Condi Rice' testimony for the 9/11 commission as deceptive and unsatisfactory are tooting very partisan horns, and are only preaching to the choir.

No doubt scared by the outbreak of serious unrest in Iraq, Bush dropped notably in the tracking polls last weekend, and Kerry surged correspondingly through no action of his own. However, a few days later voters forgot this, and equilibrum was restored.

Now, after Dr Rice's statements, Bush is ahead with 47 to 44.

Make no mistake about it: 50% of voters had a favourable view of Dr Rice immediately after her testimony on TV, and only 24% unfavourable. This essentially means only those who were determined to interpret the Bush adminstration's sayings and doings negatively in either case disapproved. For Dick Clarke, only 27% were favourable and 42% unfavourable. Fair or not, the Bush administration's attempt to portray him as a disgruntled ex-employee has largly succeeded.

Message from voters: Democrats harping on 9/11 errors and trying to make the hearings a partisan circus are not swaying any doubters.

A significant portion of voters are obviously still up for grabs, and with months to go before the election, the result is wide open. However, Bush is vulnerable if the Iraq situation worsens further.


4:41:25 AM    comment []  trackback []

Directly from the frontline

BuzzMachine has a good roundup of writings by Iraqi bloggers that discusses the current unrest. Somehow it is not exactly the same picture the media has tried to paint for us. Now, who do we believe?

Hat tip to Spartacus.


2:26:07 AM    comment []  trackback []

The Commercial Closet

Give a prescription of these pills (qt, sound) to John Ashcroft, quick!

Word is Dick Cheney needed them for a while.


2:01:09 AM    comment []  trackback []


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"Can you hear me, Maggie Thatcher?"

9/11 conspiracies

Debunking Michael Meacher

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Don't mess with my false memories

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Does the soul exist? (Part 2)

Love to Hate

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Is it right because God says so?

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The lost philological battles

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So you think you are having a bad time?

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Living on sunlight, or feeding on gullability?

Jan/Male/31-35. Lives in Norway/Bergen, speaks Norwegian and English. Eye color is hazel. I am a god. I am also modest.
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