Discovery Launch Success!

July 26th, 2005

So far, the launch appears to be clean! I watched the launch live on my local Fox 4 affiliate… it was amazing as always. You hold your breath as the smoke starts to rise, then you just watch as the blast takes place … Hoping beyond hope everything you see is what you are supposed to see! And that is what happened today. :D

Lift-off NASA/KSC

Lots of pictures are here.

Discovery’s mission: “During their 12-day mission to the International Space Station, Commander Eileen Collins and her six fellow astronauts will test new techniques and equipment designed to make Space Shuttles safer. They also will deliver supplies and make repairs to the Space Station.”

NASA <-- For more info.

Brilliant!

July 25th, 2005

From the Washington Post

I heard it on the Mark Davis Show.

After London, Tough Questions for Muslims
(free subscription required)
By Mona Eltahawy

Sunday, July 24, 2005; Page B07

The July 7 London bombings did it for me. Perhaps it was because my parents moved us from Cairo to the British capital when I was 7 years old, and so London was my childhood “home.” Or maybe it was because our route to work and school every morning crisscrossed those same Underground stations that were targeted.

I’m sure it was also those dog-eared statements that our clerics and religious leaders read out telling us that Islam means peace — it actually means submission — and asking us to please forget everything they had ever said before July 6, because as of July 7 they truly believe violence is bad. Their backpedaling is so furious you can smell the skid marks.

Some are not even bothering to put their feet on the pedals, such as the 22 imams and scholars who met at London’s largest mosque to condemn the bombings but who would not criticize all suicide attacks.

Sayed Mohammed Musawi, the head of the World Islamic League in London, insisted “there should be a clear distinction between the suicide bombing of those who are trying to defend themselves from occupiers, which is something different from those who kill civilians, which is a big crime.”

In a classic example of laying blame everywhere but at our own door, Musawi actually criticized the Western media (for supposedly confusing frustrated young Muslims) rather than those scholars who had blessed suicide bombings as long as they targeted Israelis.

Suicide bombings are the Muslim weapon of choice not only in London and Israel but in Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. They are killing Muslims and non-Muslims alike, and yet our imams and scholars cannot condemn them.

As I said, the London bombings did it for me. Or maybe it’s the knowledge that the more these faceless cowards strike, the more Muslim men in the West like my brother are pushed onto the stage of suspicion. After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Ehab — who spends virtually all of his time caring for his cardiology patients or fulfilling his role as husband and father — was one of the 5,000 Muslim men questioned by the FBI; two years later he was among the thousands more who had to submit to being fingerprinted and photographed as part of a special registration.

But most of all, the London bombings rid me of all patience with the excuse that “George Bush [or Tony Blair or take your pick of Western leaders] made me do it.” We don’t know who was behind Thursday’s explosions, but an Arab analyst told a satellite channel that if Blair hadn’t learned the mistake of the Iraq war, these new attacks were a firm reminder.

I never bought the explanation that U.S. foreign policy had “brought on” the Sept. 11 attacks, and I certainly don’t buy the idea that the Iraq war is behind the attacks in London. Many people across the world have opposed U.S. and British foreign policy, but that doesn’t mean they are rushing to fly planes into buildings or to blow up buses and Underground trains in London.

I was against the invasion of Iraq and would not have voted for George Bush if I were a U.S. citizen, but I’m done with the “George Bush made me do it” excuse. We must accept responsibility for this mess if we are ever to find a way out.

And for those non-Muslims who accept the George Bush excuse, I have a question: Do you think Muslims are incapable of accepting responsibility? It is at least in some way bigoted to think that Muslims can only react violently.

We all must ask a host of difficult questions. How about beginning by acknowledging once and for all that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not a Muslim issue? It is a dispute over land that too many clerics and religious leaders, radical or otherwise, use to flesh out the victimized-Muslim scenario.

Yes, Palestinians deserve a state, and, yes, Israel must end its occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

But rather than dwelling endlessly on these issues, we would do well to spend time encouraging our young people to become more active members of their communities and to not live caught between two worlds: a Muslim one at home and in the mosque, an “infidel” one outside.

And what about assimilation? It is not bigoted to ask Muslims if they are integrating into the societies they are living in. Just as the British government has responsibilities toward its citizens, immigrants included, so too do those immigrants. Muslims ask for time off work for prayer, for example, and they often get it. But are they truly living in Britain or are they perpetuating an existence that even their relatives “back home” long ago left behind? Domestic policy is too often ignored by many Muslims who are more concerned with Palestine, Iraq or any other place where Muslims are believed to have suffered injustice.

I raise these questions because London might have done it for me, but I’m not done with Islam. The clerics and the terrorists will not take it away from me. God belongs to me, too.

Excellent article!

Common Sense!!

July 22nd, 2005

I am sure by now most of you have read the comments of Australian Prime Minister John Howard at a press conference in London yesterday. In case you haven’t though,

The reporter asked …

To both Prime Ministers, what was your immediate reaction on hearing that some incidents had occurred, was it here we go again? And do incidents like this, coming just 14 days after the horrific attacks, suggest that the war against terror is being lost on the streets? And yesterday an Australian bomb victim of July 7 linked the bombings to Iraq. Does that suggest that the propaganda war against terrorists is also being lost?

and the unexpected answer … at least unexpected by the snippy reporter :D

PRIME MINISTER HOWARD:

Could I start by saying the Prime Minister and I were having a discussion when we heard about it, and my first reaction was to get some more information, and I really don’t want to add to what the Prime Minister has said. It is a matter for the police and a matter for the British authorities to talk in detail about what has happened here. Could I just say very directly, Paul, on the issue of the policies of my government, and indeed the policies of the British and American government on Iraq, that the first point of reference is that once a country allows its foreign policy to be determined by terrorism, it has given the game away, to use the vernacular. And no Australian government that I lead will ever have policies determined by terrorism or terrorist threats, and no self-respecting government of any political stripe in Australia would allow that to happen. Can I remind you that the murder of 88 Australians in Bali took place before the operation in Iraq; and could I remind you that the 11 September occurred before the operation in Iraq; can I also remind you that the very first occasion that Bin Laden specifically referred to Australia was in the context of Australia’s involvement in liberating the people of East Timor. Are people, by implication, suggesting that we shouldn’t have done that? When a group claimed responsibility on the website for the attacks on 7 July, they talked about British policy, not just in Iraq, but in Afghanistan. Are people suggesting we shouldn’t be in Afghanistan? When Sergio de Melo was murdered in Iraq, a brave man, a distinguished international diplomat, immensely respected for his work in the United Nations, when al Queda gloated about that they referred specifically to the role that de Melo had carried out in East Timor because he was the United Nations administrator in East Timor. Now I don’t know the mind of the terrorist, by definition you can’t put yourself in the mind of a successful suicide bomber, I can only look at objective facts, and the objective facts are as I have cited. The objective evidence is that Australia was a terrorist target long before the operation in Iraq, and indeed all the evidence, as distinct from the suppositions, suggest to me that this is about hatred of a way of life, this is about the perverted use of the principles of a great world religion that at its root preaches peace and cooperation, and I think we lose sight of the challenge we have if we allow ourselves to see these attacks in the context of particular circumstances, rather than the abuse through a perverted ideology of people and their murder.

PRIME MINISTER BLAIR:

I agree 100% with that.

And with that Australia stood proud with Britain and the United States in not allowing street thugs control world politics. Granted they are well organized, trained, and armed street thugs, but that is all they will ever be. The Left would have us cower in fear and give the terrorist what ever they want to bribe them into stopping their Reign of Attacks. (Note: Not Reign of Terror)

There is hardly a country that has not seen a terrorist attack of some kind, yet few have stood up and said “We will not stand for this.” Some have crumbled in fear and given in to the terrorists. Maybe the terrorists are testing the water in countries they fell may crumble, however they obviously don’t know much about history. The day Britain and the United States and Australia (and a few other countries) crumble in fear to terrorists … will never come.

Great Blogs:
John Howard sets a reporter straight (if possible)
Good on ya, John Howard!
A Friend From Down Under
Heroes, heroes everywhere
Its All Our FaultThat, at any rate, is the position of our leftwing friends

Government Sites:
Prime Minister John Howard
Prime Minister Tony Blair
President George W. Bush

Hat Tip: Sawa

Now you know

July 13th, 2005

I’m sure all of you have heard of Shasta Groene, her traumatic kidnapping, and the brutal murders of her family members. More and more information is coming out about her time with her abductor, Joseph Edward Duncan. This from today …

In court on Tuesday a detective revealed that Duncan used night vision equipment to stalk the family after seeing Shasta Groene wearing a swimsuit

.

Yes, children should be able to wear swimsuits in their own front yard. However, with a growing number of abductions, molestations, and murders … Why take that risk when it can so easily be avoided? Criminals make life difficult everyday for honest people. You are required to remember all kinds of passwords and security questions to find out information about your own credit or business accounts. I, as a woman, do not go shopping late at night alone. Everyone says that it will not be my child or my neighborhood or my friends. A friend of my family just had her identity stolen and hundreds of dollars charged to her account. Over a year ago, a family of 7 I know was driving home from selling produce at a city market when their car was hit by a speeding car whose driver lost control. Both people in the other car were killed, and the parents of 5 little kids are still dealing with serious health issues.

I am not unique in knowing people affected by differing degrees of tragedy and hardship, and I am quite lucky that everyone I know has survived their hard times. Others are not so lucky. Bad things happen. Hopefully, stricter laws and punishments will stem the tide of child molesters, but until then … why take such a risk when there are alternative ways to enjoy the summer … fenced backyards, neighborhood pools with adult supervision to and from the pool. It is not that you do not trust your child. No, the kids do not understand the difference in trusting them and not trusting other people. While it is impossible to completely insulate your loved ones from harm, you can take every reasonable precaution to avoid harm to yourself or your child. Almost daily, new things that are beneficial or detrimental for our health come out, and many of us adjust our behavior accordingly … the same should apply to personal safety. As G.I. Joe always said … Now you know, and knowing is half the battle.

Hat Tip: Sean Hannity

Launch Scrubbed

July 13th, 2005

NASA has scrubbed the launch for today because of a faulty fuel sensor.

Lisa Stark for ABC News said that 1 of 4 sensors that are considered back-ups of back-ups was failing. NASA, not wanting to take any chances at all, canceled the launch.

With only a 10-minute window, because of lighting (100 cameras taking pictures of the launch to catch any problems) and for the planned meeting with the Space Station, today was just not the day.

The new launch time/date has not yet been determined.

Update:
NASA Calls Off Launch of Shuttle Discovery

As astronaut commentator in launch control said that it was unlikely the problem could be solved quickly and that another launch attempt on Thursday was all but impossible.

The problem was with one of the four engine cut-off sensors, which are responsible for making sure the spacecraft’s engines shut down at the proper point during the ascent. NASA said it appeared that the sensor was showing a low fuel level, even though the tank was full.

From NASA:

Discovery Launch Scrubbed

NASA has scrubbed the launch of Discovery because of a problem with a fuel tank sensor designed to protect the Shuttle’s engines by shutting them down if fuel runs low.

STS-114 — the first Shuttle mission in more than two years — is set to test new safety procedures and deliver supplies and equipment to the International Space Station.

Lil’ Kim is sentenced

July 6th, 2005

Kimberly Jones, a.k.a Lil’ Kim, was sentenced earlier today for three perjury counts and one conspiracy charge. Each count carried a maximum of 5 years each, the prosecutors were asking for 33 months and the sentence … was one year and one day, plus $50,000.

Why?

Judge Lynch said he was concerned that Ms. Jones’s rap followers would cry discrimination and get the wrong message from her sentence if he imposed a far harsher prison term than Ms. Stewart’s on “a younger African-American woman who is popular with a different segment of society.”

Hmm. Martha Stewart was convicted of lying to a jury about the sale of stock shares. Kimberly Jones lied about people involved in a shooting that resulted in the injury of a person … and it probably could have been worse. Now to me … those two crimes while both perjury … are very different. One had no clear victim while the other had a very real victim, Efrain Ocasio. The 31 year old was shot in the back.

A security videotape seized by police apparently shows a woman walking with a baby stroller in front of the Hot 97 offices moments before the gunshots began, according to the newspaper.

So there could have been far more serious injuries if things had been a little different.

Prosecutors claimed Lil’ Kim told some “preposterous lies” about what went down to protect her posse–the most egregious being that she had no relationship with one of the triggermen, Suif “Gutta” Jackson, a longtime friend and bodyguard, and that another, manager Damion Butler, wasn’t present at the time of the shooting.

The most laughable part of this whole situation is when she asked the judge for lenience … [links are graphic and added by me]

She also asked the judge “to consider my entire life’s work and not just the days in the grand jury and on the witness stand in the courtroom. I’m a God-fearing, good person.”

I hope in my lifetime I will see an end to sentencing based on public opinion or the fear of a public reaction. Sentencing should be based on nothing less than the crime involved and the circumstances surrounding it. Court rooms are not high school classrooms and can not be concerned with upsetting the other “kids.”

Amazing “Fireworks”

July 6th, 2005

Images and data flooded in before and after Impactor crashed into it’s target … the Temple I comet.

The Hubble Space Telescope took a series of pictures of the July 4 impact that initially showed comet Tempel 1 as a fuzzy dot that grew four times brighter 15 minutes after the collision. The fan-shaped cloud of gas and dust flew outward at about 500 mph.

The dazzling images and data made all the long hours worth every second for all the people involved with the long project.

ImpactorNASA/JPL

WITH THE accuracy of a speeding bullet hitting another speeding bullet, a projectile launched from a NASA spacecraft slammed into a comet 83 million miles from Earth on Monday, right in time for the Fourth of July.

I think it is simply amazing how the people at NASA and their associates can build/program something to travel 268 million miles and hit a target the size of Manhattan that is moving even faster with only 3 course corrections. All that with the up-to-the-second information being 7 1/2 minutes old!

Bullseye: Deep Impact Slams Into Comet
Worldwide telescopes analyze NASA’s comet collision
Bull’s-Eye

Blogger Spots:
Nice Shooting, Tex. Deep Impact scores
Deep Impact - A Success!!!
Shooting at Shooting Stars

If you want more information on how NASA has been working on their “issues,” here is a summary of articles: Fixing NASA: Complete Return to Flight Story Archive

From “a military wife”

July 1st, 2005

If you are a regular here (Thanks!) … you should remember my cousin, “Sawa” who comments here regularly. She just e-mailed me –

One of their contributors had a great article yesterday about the connections between Iraq and al Qaeda. I fired off an e-mail to him, which was part praise for him, and part rant about the war. He posted it!

Wow! Go Sawa!!

The “great article” was “It’s All About 9/11” by Andy McCarthy at NRO.

It was good to hear the commander-in-chief remind people that this is still the war against terror. Specifically, against Islamo-fascists who slaughtered 3000 Americans on September 11, 2001. Who spent the eight years before those atrocities murdering and promising to murder Americans — as their leader put it in 1998, all Americans, including civilians, anywhere in the world where they could be found.


When he posted portions of her e-mail, he withheld her name.
Well you are privileged to not only read the great e-mail, but know who it is from, well sorta ;) !

From The Corner at National Review

HOW THE LEFT DOESN’T GET RED STATE AMERICA [Andy McCarthy]
Regarding Iraq and the war on terror, I got this email from a patriot who describes herself as “a military wife”:

… I like to see facts presented in a simple, straightforward manner. I have long been baffled as to why some people still do not understand why we are in Iraq. I am “just” a homemaker, most of my time being spent taking care of my husband and my home. But I read, and I listen, and even I have been aware of many of the Iraqi terrorist connections mentioned in your article. So it has been puzzling to me that self-sharpened pointy-headed liberals, like Reid and Gergen and those at the New York Times, so stridently deny any connections between Iraq and al Qaeda. What is the motive? Is it that ignoring or denying the connections frees them from the responsibility of taking or supporting action? Could it be that simple?

Things are pretty simple in my world.

You recognize the connections, you support the action (or take it, if you are able). You don’t recognize the connections, you don’t support the action.

Men and women rotate in and out of Iraq. We call it “The Sandbox.” When they leave, we cry. When they get home, we cry some more. They go off to fight, we hold the fort. Everybody does their job.

The terrorists are bent on attacking Americans. The Americans are going to be either highly trained, heavily armed professionals over there, or happily oblivious, defenseless civilians over here. You choose.

Some say the above is only valid until we are attacked on U.S. soil again. Oh, I don’t know. I’ve kind of enjoyed the last four years of being able to go to Wal-Mart without fear of being blown to smithereens by a suicide bomber.

The media lament the influx of “insurgents” into Iraq. So…the terrorists flooding into the waiting arms of the most lethal military around is a bad thing?

Many want a “timetable” for the end of the war. Me too. As soon as the terrorists announce their timetable for implementing a “Be Sweet to Infidels” policy, we should reciprocate by announcing our timetable for ending the war.

Too many troops killed, they say. Now if the troops are the ones fighting and dying in the war (and they are), and the President enjoys overwhelming support among the troops (and he does), then there must be something the media are missing. Hmmmm…

Too much money spent, they say. There is always a price to be paid. You pay in taxes, the troops pay in blood. You choose. (Also, see above.)

So what is my point? Simply this: The politicians, the pundits and the media need to get out of the military’s way and let them do their job. Reid and Gergen and their ilk don’t have to worry that they’ll be asked to do anything scary if they acknowledge the obvious connections between Iraq and al Qaeda. Lots of people have already recognized them and have volunteered for the scary stuff. It’s 9/11, stupid.

[Name withheld]

Posted at 06:56 PM

My cousin is a military wife. She is addicted to news and her opinions are always informed, accurate, and passionate. Her husband has served almost 3 years in the Air Force.

A new Web-series to follow!

June 30th, 2005

Greyhawk at the Mudville Gazette started a new series yesterday, called A Year At War.

In the upcoming days here at Mudville we’re going to look back at the past year of combat in Iraq in hopes of answering the fundamental questions: Are we winning, and if so, why are so few people aware of it? The introduction to this series is here. This entry will provide brief background information on the situation on the ground in Iraq at this time last year.


From the first installment
:

This week in Iraq Operation SWORD was launched - the latest effort to deny foreign fighters entering Iraq from Syria passage to the country’s interior. The US and Iraqis are not negotiating out of weakness - far from it. And though the insurgents are still capable of killing large numbers of people in a spectacular manner their political effectiveness, once nil, has since dwindled.

From the second installment:

This entry will provide brief background information on the situation on the ground in Iraq at this time last year.

This post discusses the insurgency and highlights the book “Thunder Run: The Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad” by Mark Bowden.

The elements that comprise the Iraqi insurgency are varied in composition, motivation, and determination.

Greyhawk details the main four groups of insurgents.

1. “Former regime loyalists” or “ex-Baathist elements”
2. Al-Qaeda and the “foreign fighters”.
3. Muqtada al Sadr’s Shiite militia.
4. Others without political motivations.

I am looking forward to the next installment!

Latest WTC Design Released

June 29th, 2005

I have been wary of some of the designs for the new WTC Building. Some have been excellent while others were just sad. This latest design I really like.

“This new design reflects a soaring tribute to freedom and a bedrock commitment to safety and security,” Pataki said.

Hat Tip: Aaron @ Pardon My English
More:
September 11 News.com — WTC Plans
Redesigned Freedom Tower Steps Up Safety Measures

Harry Potter & Chicken with Orange Sauce

June 26th, 2005

Sounds like a nice evening, does it not?

John at Powerline posted today about Congress’ Field Trip to Guantanamo Bay.

The Democrats’ anti-military PR offensive is petering out.

He links to an article that says …

After getting a classified briefing from base commanders, the House delegation ate lunch with troops - the same meal of chicken with orange sauce, rice and okra that detainees were served.

Hmm, that sounds pretty good and fancy for that matter.

In another, a female interrogator took an unusual approach to wear down a detainee, reading a Harry Potter book aloud for hours. He turned his back and put his hands over his ears.

Oh no!! Anything but that!

You may also want to check out the Club G’itmo collection from Rush Limbaugh! The shirts are great and the brochure is full of information. :P

The whole article:
Lawmakers: Guantanamo Conditions Improve

Will the Senate come through?

June 22nd, 2005

I have never understood how an action can qualify for protection under the First Amendment for Free Speech. But that is just me!

A constitutional amendment that would allow Congress to ban flag burning passed the House yesterday, and congressional leaders said it has a strong chance to clear the Senate for the first time, sending it to the states for ratification.

The House has been quite consistent with passing this bill several times previously, however the Senate has always killed it. This time supporters of the bill are concerned but hopeful.

“There are too many scenarios where we lose,” said Terri Ann Schroeder, senior lobbyist for the American Civil Liberties Union. “We’re very concerned.” Schroeder counts 65 solid votes in favor of the amendment of the 67 needed for passage. “We still have a number of folks that have never voted, and we still have a potential problem if 100 members do not . . . vote,” she said.

And of course, following in the footsteps of the libs and/or Dems …

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) said in a statement that she would “support federal legislation that would outlaw flag desecration, much like laws that currently prohibit the burning of crosses, but I don’t believe a constitutional amendment is the answer.”

Meaning — Yes, but not really … thoroughly degrading the meaning of the words yes and no.

The proposed one-line amendment to the Constitution reads, “The Congress shall have power to prohibit the physical desecration of the flag of the United States.” For the language to be added to the Constitution, it must be approved by two-thirds of those present in each chamber, then ratified within seven years by at least 38 state legislatures.

It’s sad that there is a need for a bill like this, but there is. I will believe the Senate will pass this when they actually do pass it, not before. If passed, I hope all states follow suit ASAP, however I can see several blue states causing enough problems so that it will fail the seven year deadline. I don’t know when exactly patriotism became such an evil thing in the eyes of a Democrat, but it has.

House Passes Constitutional Amendment to Ban Flag Burning
House approves move to outlaw flag burning