Thursday, June 30, 2005

Its all about 9/11 !!

Andrew C. McCarthy on Iraq on National Review Online

I'm gonna snag this just incase I'm called on it:
On that score, nobody should worry about anything the Times or David Gergen or Senator Reid has to say about all this until they have some straight answers on questions like these. What does the “nothing whatsoever” crowd have to say about:

Ahmed Hikmat Shakir — the Iraqi Intelligence operative who facilitated a 9/11 hijacker into Malaysia and was in attendance at the Kuala Lampur meeting with two of the hijackers, and other conspirators, at what is roundly acknowledged to be the initial 9/11 planning session in January 2000? Who was arrested after the 9/11 attacks in possession of contact information for several known terrorists? Who managed to make his way out of Jordanian custody over our objections after the 9/11 attacks because of special pleading by Saddam’s regime?

Saddam's intelligence agency's efforts to recruit jihadists to bomb Radio Free Europe in Prague in the late 1990's?

Mohammed Atta's unexplained visits to Prague in 2000, and his alleged visit there in April 2001 which — notwithstanding the 9/11 Commission's dismissal of it (based on interviewing exactly zero relevant witnesses) — the Czechs have not retracted?

The Clinton Justice Department's allegation in a 1998 indictment (two months before the embassy bombings) against bin Laden, to wit: In addition, al Qaeda reached an understanding with the government of Iraq that al Qaeda would not work against that government and that on particular projects, specifically including weapons development, al Qaeda would work cooperatively with the Government of Iraq.

Seized Iraq Intelligence Service records indicating that Saddam's henchmen regarded bin Laden as an asset as early as 1992?

Saddam's hosting of al Qaeda No. 2, Ayman Zawahiri beginning in the early 1990’s, and reports of a large payment of money to Zawahiri in 1998?

Saddam’s ten years of harboring of 1993 World Trade Center bomber Abdul Rahman Yasin?

Iraqi Intelligence Service operatives being dispatched to meet with bin Laden in Afghanistan in 1998 (the year of bin Laden’s fatwa demanding the killing of all Americans, as well as the embassy bombings)?

Saddam’s official press lionizing bin Laden as “an Arab and Islamic hero” following the 1998 embassy bombing attacks?

The continued insistence of high-ranking Clinton administration officials to the 9/11 Commission that the 1998 retaliatory strikes (after the embassy bombings) against a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory were justified because the factory was a chemical weapons hub tied to Iraq and bin Laden?

Top Clinton administration counterterrorism official Richard Clarke’s assertions, based on intelligence reports in 1999, that Saddam had offered bin Laden asylum after the embassy bombings, and Clarke’s memo to then-National Security Adviser Sandy Berger, advising him not to fly U-2 missions against bin Laden in Afghanistan because he might be tipped off by Pakistani Intelligence, and “[a]rmed with that knowledge, old wily Usama will likely boogie to Baghdad”? (See 9/11 Commission Final Report, p. 134 & n.135.)

Terror master Abu Musab Zarqawi's choice to boogie to Baghdad of all places when he needed surgery after fighting American forces in Afghanistan in 2001?

Saddam's Intelligence Service running a training camp at Salman Pak, were terrorists were instructed in tactics for assassination, kidnapping and hijacking?

Former CIA Director George Tenet’s October 7, 2002 letter to Congress, which asserted: Our understanding of the relationship between Iraq and Al Qaeda is evolving and is based on sources of varying reliability. Some of the information we have received comes from detainees, including some of high rank.

We have solid reporting of senior level contacts between Iraq and Al Qaeda going back a decade.

Credible information indicates that Iraq and Al Qaeda have discussed safe haven and reciprocal nonaggression.

Since Operation Enduring Freedom, we have solid evidence of the presence in Iraq of Al Qaeda members, including some that have been in Baghdad.

We have credible reporting that Al Qaeda leaders sought contacts in Iraq who could help them acquire WMD capabilities. The reporting also stated that Iraq has provided training to Al Qaeda members in the areas of poisons and gases and making conventional bombs.

Iraq's increasing support to extremist Palestinians coupled with growing indications of relationship with Al Qaeda suggest that Baghdad's links to terrorists will increase, even absent U.S. military action.

There's more. Stephen Hayes’s book, The Connection, remains required reading. But these are just the questions; the answers — if someone will just investigate the questions rather than pretending there’s “nothing whatsoever” there — will provide more still.

So Gergen, Reid, the Times, and the rest are “offended” at the president's reminding us of 9/11? The rest of us should be offended, too. Offended at the “nothing whatsoever” crowd’s inexplicable lack of curiosity about these ties, and about the answers to these questions.

Just tell us one thing: Do you have any good answer to what Ahmed Hikmat Shakir was doing with the 9/11 hijackers in Kuala Lampur? Can you explain it?

If not, why aren't you moving heaven and earth to find out the answer?

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

America on the move: Goodbye Beantown, hello Gilbert

This is in line with Life 2.0 and other works:


Census Bureau figures being released Thursday show no letup in the migration to the South and West, which are home to all 10 of the fastest-growing cities with at least 100,000 people.


''People like to live in smaller places and a lot of it's propelled by the sharp spike in housing costs in the inner and more attractive cities,'' said William H. Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution in Washington. ''People want to get as much housing as they can for their dollars.'' (ed. note: DUH!!!)
The median price for a single-family home in Gilbert is around $220,000, compared with more than $387,000 in Boston and $641,000 in San Francisco


This is not shaping up to be a good decade for older cities in the United States in contrast to the 90s,'' said Lang. ''This performance probably doesn't rival the 70s, which stand out as the worst decade, but looks to be underperforming even the 80s.''

I'm telling everyone who will listen with high appreciation houses in the Northeast and other places-- the Bubble Cometh. Get out now.

The Lost Liberty Hotel

Of all the lousy Supreme Court Decisions, this latest update to eminent domain is absolutely the worst.

There is a backlash.....what happens when 290 million people don't like your decision?

Freestar Media, LLC

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Tom Cruise Kills Oprah

I don't know why, but this makes me laugh everytime I watch it. Cruise isn't losing his mind....this is now the real him!
Tom Cruise Kills Oprah

Monday, June 27, 2005

World's most expensive cities - Jun. 22, 2005

Pummeling NY is getting too easy.

World's most expensive cities - Jun. 22, 2005

Whats interesting about this list is that NY isn't the top in the world, only the top in this country. Tokyo is #1, and Osaka #2. Why on earth would anyone want to raise a family in these places? I'm guessing their not. Yuppies are competing for their piece of the pie and tolerate the 300 sq ft "loft" for 2000 bucks a month.

They can have it.

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Throw this one out to Tim Bowling, who is one cool cat.

"Words were never invented to fully explain the peaceful aura that surrounds us when we are in communion with minds of the same thoughts.

Eddie Myers"

Off to Hershey!

"The test of our progress is not whether we add to the abundance of those who have much. It is whether we provide enough to those who have little. -- Franklin Delano Roosevelt"

That quote gives me pause. Whilst sounding good, it leaves alot to the imagination. To whom do we give? To whom do we take? Is this charity to be compulsory, and if so, is it still charity? While I am all for some balancing of the genetic and socio-economic lottery that is life, I do not think it very effective in general. Most State efforts simply produce another group of powerful people to take advantage of me.

But no more words. I have a trip to prepare for. See photos at www.visuallabs.com/pictures/Summer2005 if your interested in our statue of liberty visit or the awesome Intrepid. :)



Anyway,

Monday, June 20, 2005

gaiaselene.com

Get us to the moon NOW!
We need to start this now before something bad happens here.

gaiaselene.com

Thursday, June 16, 2005

boogle.com - google search engine with quotes

Couldn't say it better myself....

"The great omission in American life is solitude... that zone of time and space, free from the outside pressures, which is the incinerator of the spirit." -- Marya Mannes

MSN Health & Fitness - The Unhealthiest Cities in America

In my "Bash NY" hobby, I add this. You will read that NYC is nearly at the bottom, and Seattle finishes in the top, taking seat #4, with 100 points for both lifestyle and activity. Throwing NY a bone, Nassau-Suffolk are in the top half, hitting a nice #15. Yet, their lifestyle is a paltry 24, which I can see since they're always on the Long Island Expressway sitting in traffic during the 5' of snow. Conversely during summer its 95 degrees out with 100% humidity, essentially the climate of Mars, and thus everyone is hiding inside or in pool, hoping they've covered their whole body in SPF 500 lotion.

whew..that felt good.

MSN Health & Fitness - The Unhealthiest Cities in America

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Downing Street Memo

This big secret memo...ooooh. Before we get all excited about how Bush "fixed" the intelligence, let us make sure that we know what fixed meant in English parlance:


USATODAY.com: "Robin Niblett of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank, says it would be easy for Americans to misunderstand the reference to intelligence being “fixed around” Iraq policy. “ ‘Fixed around' in British English means ‘bolted on' rather than altered to fit the policy,” he says.

Ombudsmen at both The New York Times and The Washington Post have been critical of their newspapers for not covering the story more aggressively.

USA TODAY chose not to publish anything about the memo before today for several reasons, says Jim Cox, the newspaper's senior assignment editor for foreign news. “We could not obtain the memo or a copy of it from a reliable source,” Cox says. “There was no explicit confirmation of its authenticity from (Blair's office). And it was disclosed four days before the British elections, raising concerns about the timing.”"


I think that is valid. Also, I was ready to attack pretty much anywhere in the middle east based on 9/11. People think Afganistan was enough, but is it not clear that the real heart of the Islamic Facism lies in the mideast? Is it not clear that we are fighting the enemy of the Future now, there, in Iraq.

Personally I wish we'd get out now, and I do think they've planned miserably for this insurgancy. It seems still to be a better place than before, and yes, I would have us clean up all the worlds dictators. We could do it without sacrifice if we did it right....

MSN Money - Why there is no housing bubble - Jubak's Journal

Adding to the confusion, we have this guy saying that while there is a correction coming, its far off in the future. This, my dear children, is why I can't make a #$@ decision. Experts are useless unless there's only one of them, or they're in accord.



MSN Money - Why there is no housing bubble - Jubak's Journal: "Housing bubble? What housing bubble?

With the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yielding below 4% and 30-year mortgages available at 5.1%, there isn’t a housing bubble

Mind you, I'm not saying that U.S. consumers don't have too much debt, or that the U.S. economy isn't dangerously dependent on the housing sector for growth, or that all the money sloshing around the globe isn't encouraging dangerous speculation.

But those are different problems from the one getting all the headline attention at the moment.

It's just that, for all the teeth-gnashing and pundit-moralizing, we really don't have a housing bubble that's anywhere near bursting. Current 10-year interest rates are just too low. And I certainly don't see interest rates rising enough in the next year or so to burst a bubble, either"

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

"'You never learn from success. Success you take as the natural order of things.'
David Ivor Young"

Aint dat the troof.

Got some information from the SmarterChild:

joefec2112 (3:43:59 PM): weather ny
SmarterChild (3:43:59 PM): Current weather conditions for New York, NY:
Currently: 89 F
Condition: Broken Clouds
Heat Index: 92 F
Dewpoint: 66
Humidity: 46 %
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: WNW/8 mph


joefec2112 (3:45:36 PM): weather seattle
SmarterChild (3:45:36 PM): Current weather conditions for Seattle, WA:

Currently: 60 F
Condition: Broken Clouds
Dewpoint: 46
Humidity: 60 %
Visibility: 10 mi
Wind: N/0 mph


Some updates:
Mikey Jackson is found innocent. I don't think anyone in that courtroom was innocent. Not Mike, not the mom, not the stars on the stand, and not the justice system which is making its money-pliable nature more and more obvious to everyone. Note I did NOT waste one minute following this nonsensical story. It followed me like a lost mongrel and this is the last I will speak of it. That mom should be arrested feeding her son to that monster. Done. Next.

USS Intrepid -- loved that. I'm fairly obsessed with Navy things. I love going back to it, and now that I've been out, goodness, 14 years, I am prepared to re-engage that part of my life. Pictures are coming. Next...

Hershey Park -- in the near future. The thing is its too hot over here, so its difficult to enjoy the outdoors. I will follow the moderate weather. done.

Monday, June 13, 2005

Mr. Rational Exhuberance, Alan Greenspan, who's words essentially converted like a master alchemist the NASDAQ to the NASDOG is at it again. His target this time? The housing market:

"When Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress on June 9 that "the apparent froth in housing markets may have spilled over into mortgage markets,"

This one alarmed me...
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett 37.2%

It seems to me that alot of speculative investors are in these markets. I assume after the market cools in these areas, and it simply has to, we can jump in.

"Speculation changes the normal market," says John H. Vogel, professor at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College. "People are buying a half-million-dollar house not because they have the salaries to support it, but because they think next year it's going to be worth $600,000."

So does this mean we're headed for a crash? That's difficult to predict. In 2002, we dubbed the housing market a bubble and predicted its fall. Since then, home prices have gone up about 32%, according to the National Association of Realtors.

But that doesn't mean a bust is not on the horizon -- at least in some places. Greenspan used the phrase "irrational exuberance" to refer to tech stocks in 1996; it took another three years for the market to tank. And when it did, it hurt."

-- Sara Clemence


The real question is, as a pure investment, where would you put 10,000 right now? What about $1000?

Sunday, June 12, 2005

Welcome to BugGuide.Net! - BugGuide.Net

Welcome to BugGuide.Net! - BugGuide.Net

Friday, June 10, 2005

Raible Designs ~ RE: Why wait for Intel?

I'll put this guys' link in my main homepage. He rocks.

Raible Designs ~ RE: Why wait for Intel?

And NO he's not working for MSFT. Why I wonder do we Java people care? Why is MSFT always seen as the dark side?

I don't have the time to go into it now, but I like to call it the Yankee Complex. Any time you have an extremely dominant player in any system the ones who are dominated tend to gang up on the leader. This is because alone they cannot topple the giant, but together they have more power. The affect is reduced when they're are several giants or even two. Not many people get emotional about the oligarchy of Pepsi and Coke. Sentiment more that anything runs rampant in automobile manufacturing preferences. Even GE, a megolithic company, doesn't draw ire because they're simply a comglomerate, even if a dominant one.

So its good to be dominant, but not too much, or at least not obviously so.

:)

Thursday, June 09, 2005

One of my favorite things, Wikis!!

A how-to wiki ! nice.....
Main Page - wikiHow

Monday, June 06, 2005

Brave New World

Wow is this site spooky...

http://www.merrickbiotech.com

Its a firm in Arizona where buyers can insure their organs. Cleints recieve their organs with no possibilty of rejection once transferred to the patient, the genetic make-up of the organ being identical to the patient's. Takes one to three years depending on the organ's complexity. 150k to just talk to these guys, averaging 1.2 million for the final pricetag. Its alot, but just like CD players, it'll come down. :)

Weird horoscopes

I normally do not subscribe to Horoscopes, and I certainly do not plan or believe that somehow the date you were born has any bearing on what your day to day issues are. Its bunk.

nevertheless.....
the msn portal by default includes it, and they've been spot on lately. Check this one out --

Pisces
February 18 - March 19
"Career matters may be undergoing some pretty heavy changes. You may change positions or jobs, or perhaps even pursuing an entirely new career. Financial matters may be a major factor in your making the change. You yourself may be going through an inner transformation which make you feel and appear more powerful, dear Pisces - which causes others to have even more confidence in you. Success is on the way - if you make the best possible use of your own talents"


I hope they're right!

I've been investigating Hinduism lately, mostly due to my interest and enjoyment of Yoga. Very interesting. Yoga is extremely old, dating more that 5000 years BC. It has spiritual roots, but I see nothing in it that would require a departure from the Christian system. "The Divine in me bows to the Divine in you" is their good bye. Is that so much different than saying "God be with you" or I'll pray for you? The Christian belief structure has a lot to learn from the eastern religions. Buddhism seems to have nearly eliminated Hinduism, but it didn't , and now India has 1/6th of the world population. But I feel that they aren't all drinking the kool-aid so to speak. All world religions are under alot of strain to change.

But I am unthreatend as a Christian. Christianity has been on the bleeding edge of religions in the world really, struggling to find redefinition in the Modern era. The others are just now really getting to it, and in my opinion things like Hinduism seem to be much more difficult to fit into any modern system. We struggle with sexuality and evolution ( well, basic Christians do), but they're still doing whole Elephant God thing, Cows hold human spirits, etc. Islam is probably worse off because of its violent nature and its integration into the political systems of its believers. Theocracy is BAD -- get over it.

Friday, June 03, 2005

MSN Money - Housing market sizzles

Tacoma holding in the 200's but going up at 19% rate! Goodness sakes no one can keep up at that rate. NY went up at a 18% rate, but median is a whooping 435.2 here. Add to that the greater tax burden.....



MSN Money - Housing market sizzles: "WA"