Friday, November 13, 2009

The Great Carbon Swindle




Ruth Lea, an economist from Arbuthnot Banking Group, told the Daily Mail: "This is all about control of the individual and you begin to wonder whether this is what the green agenda has always been about. It's Orwellian. This will be an enormous tax on business."

Ya think?

--TWM

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

UPS vs FedEx

UPS trying to shackle FedEx with unions (it is afflicted with the Teamsters). Article

--TWM

A New Euphemism

So this is what they are calling terrorism these days (mind you this is from Fox News article):

Hasan's leanings toward faith-inspired violence.

--TWM

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Brazil Plunged Into Darkness

Massive Blackouts


--TWM

This Says It All


--TWM

Liberty

 We the people need to understand and keep in mind that liberty is not lost all at once; it is lost incrementally. The bigger our government becomes the more involved it will be in our lives. It all starts with the little things. Whether it be the smoking ban, attacks on fast food, universal healthcare coverage  or a  host of other things, this all leads us down the road of losing our liberty one step at a time. What will come next?   Government control over what jobs we have and how much we should earn? The list goes on and on. The only way for a 24 hour freedoms is to keep the government small and out of our in

These two people have it pretty right.




When will the Republican Party finally follow its true ideals? The current is sailing us down the wrong path, and rather quickly. I implore Republicans to finally stand up and fight for we the people by following its  foundational  principles.

--P

Friday, November 6, 2009

The Big Mystery

Why did he do it? It is such a huge mystery. This guy is such a clown.

--TWM

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Open Sesame!

This one's for Pierrot:





--TWM

Only do half of your work!

Less work means better productivity  says a Harvard study.

--P

MUST WATCH: Don't copy Europe's healthcare model!



--P

The Good People of Iran, I wish you luck

Down with the dictatorship! The best part of the video are the last few seconds of it.



--P

Tehran Pt 2



--P

The Scene in Tehran

Fight the good fight for freedom.





--p

..........



--P

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Many young Swedes doubt al-Qaida 9/11 guilt - The Local

In other words, either 20% of Swedes are sympathetic to the Al-Qaeda cause, or 1 in every 5 young Swedes has a mental disorder.

Many young Swedes doubt al-Qaida 9/11 guilt - The Local

--P

Quack doctor indicted over cabbage cure for cancer - The Local

Speechless.......

Quack doctor indicted over cabbage cure for cancer - The Local

--P

Christie Gives GOP Stunning Win In N.J. - wcbstv.com

"President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden had stumped for Corzine several times during the campaign, and they had hoped the result would speak positively to the job they are doing in Washington."

I love it.


Christie Gives GOP Stunning Win In N.J. - wcbstv.com

--P

Very Cool

New Navy ship honors 9/11 victims - CNN.com

--P

Maybe we should get some grizzly bears on the payroll

When smoking the militants out fails, send in the bears. 

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Bear kills militants in Kashmir

--P

Obama A Blood Thirsty Space Lizard?

http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-tc-tvcolumn-v-1102-1103nov03,0,7062976.story

Saturday, October 31, 2009

An oldie but goodie: Hitchens exposes Hannity's stupidity

Hacks like Hannity unfortunately polarize and brainwash  the masses. Make no mistake about it, the  Left is just as guilty.

I can scarcely imagine how embarrassed and outclassed  Hannity felt after this  cerebral beat down. If I were Hannity I would never have Hitchens on my program to embarrass me again.  The funniest part of the interview was when  Hannity was at a loss for words as Hitchens correctly pointed out that Sean had never read the arguments against his faith and religion.

Shouldn't it have been the other way around?

I'm very sorry but I had to laugh at this one. It's all in good fun, please don't be offended and start sending me hate mail. 


--P

We are in a sad state of affairs

So, throw a couple of greenbacks at the enemy and hope it all works out. My oh my...

BBC NEWS | South Asia | US to pay Taliban to switch sides

--P

The recession: not over yet (duh)

I couldn't believe my ears on financial news stations this past week. "The recession is over" proclaimed one reporter. I can't recall exactly who made that knuckle-headed statement, but this particular guru of the financial markets, unfortunately wasn't the only one to state such nonsense. One sure fire way to know what the people are thinking is to just go to your local shopping center. Moods and spending habits are undoubtedly down; what better indicator is there? Every savvy investor knows that the market can act very irrationally at times; psychology most definitely affects the markets in a big way and should not be forgotten. As you've probably gathered by now, I am very bearish on the current market. I sure hope that I'm wrong.....

BBC NEWS | Business | Shares slump on US spending data

--P

The first White House visitors

George Clooney, Oprah..... you can probably figure out the rest.

BBC NEWS | Americas | White House visitor list revealed


--P

Fidel, Fidel oh my

So it's the capitalist pigs, I mean swine, that are bringing H1N1 to your homeland. Where are these ideas even developed? To his credit though,  he stopped short of blaming the United States for concocting a conspiracy.

--P

Bloomberg versus Thompson

Perhaps it's just me, but is anyone paying attention to the New York City mayoral election? What are the issues that will enthusiastically bring people out to the polls?  Is there actually a difference between the two candidates? I'd love to be filled in if anyone has any comments  or insight. All I know is that I was bombarded with " Vote for Bloomberg" pamphlets. One final thought... aren't they both Democrats?


--P

Health Care: Not a Human Right

While Nancy Pelosi and President Obama say that health care is a right of the people, I sit here throwing my TV brick. The federal government has absolutely no business poking it's nose in to the health care system. In my mind the solution, in a broad sense, is Armageddon to policy makers, pundits and health insurance companies. Firstly, we must abolish the employer based system. When did people arrive to the false conclusion that everybody has a right, a god given right, to health and happiness? In my opinion, there should be a much simpler plan. I will not pretend to know the ins and outs of this debacle, but I do have what I believe to be a viable alternative.

Regular visits to your doctor should be paid out of pocket. This creates a more efficient and competitive market. Anyone who has recently been to a hospital or to their primary care physician knows exactly how ridiculous the charges are. Firstly, a regular doctor's visit should be treated just like any other service. When did people forget that health care on all levels is a business? A more competitive market would lower costs all around. The second point that I'd like to make is that I am not a uncaring SOB. My proposal would include an emergency insurance policy that would cover ER visits and catastrophic accidents.

Perhaps I'm wrong on all counts, but it is definitely a step up from our current system that is run by the federal government and their cronies at the big insurance companies. Isn't it strange that so many political donations come straight out of the coffers of big Pharma?

--P

It's time to legalize drugs

America has had some success in slowing down the distribution of illegal drugs, however, this is a war that cannot be won. How long have we been fighting this battle? How much money have we spent on this war? Let's just take a look at what happened in Rio de Janeiro after winning the bid for the summer Olympics in 2016. The New York Times reported that just one mile from Maracana Stadium an anti-aircraft gun shot down a police helicopter. We hardly have a clue of how much violence there constantly is, especially in Latin and South America. The gang violence that takes place in Brazil is almost unbelievable; there were approximately 5,000 people murdered last year alone. Paramilitary gangs are assaulting the state itself and the police. Our demand for narcotics is responsible for many of these crimes. Even Brazil's former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso has declared prohibition a failure.

Unfortunately, we are still many years away from decriminalization of these drugs. Do we have a moral obligation to keep these drugs illegal? Or should we take a rational approach and end prohibition? While it's true, that many of these narcotics are extremely harmful, wouldn't it be a better idea if the Government had oversight? They could control the way the market (s) operates and in doing so it could also collect more tax dollars. The problems that we face domestically are nothing compared to the destruction it is wreaking in South America. Rio de Janeiro alone has at least 100,000 people working in the drug trade.

The answer to this old question of legalization or prohibition certainly isn't an easy one. Yes, drugs are harmful, but we must weigh the pros and cons. Regardless of our decision, there will be drugs and they will be used; so why not have them regulated by the Government. It will be interesting to see how this all unfolds during the Olympics of 2016.

--P

I do not know what happened to this post. But I do not see it on the blog. One thing I would like to add is that the drug trade and our anti drug efforts are responsible for funding and creating sympathy for the Taliban.

--TWM

DA YANKEES WIN

This is by no means a sports blog. However, it puts a big smile on my face whenever a team from Philadelphia loses. So as much as I don't care about baseball, Let's Go Yankees, keep beating up on the Filthies.

--P

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Anglo-Catholicism?

Could there ever be a union of the two? What are the implications? Is this going to involve a showdown between Islam and the West? There's certainly higher tension now.

--P

Op-Ed Columnist - Benedict’s Gambit - NYTimes.com

Glenn Greenwald's take.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Iraq War Book

Chuck Grist (fellow blogger http://americanranger.blogspot.com/) has a book out http://www.mylastwar.com/ about his experiences in Iraq from the perspective of a Vietnam war vet.


--TWM

Alarmist or Alarming?

I don't know what to make of this. I do not know who this guy is. I could not find the actual document anywhere.



--TWM

Strange Bedfellows

Verizon Wireless crosses the net nuetrality lines and joins with Google. It's parent corps, Vodaphone and Verizon are clearly against net neutrality.

In addition they are partnering to bring android smartphones to the Verizon Wireless network. This is clearly aimed directly at AT&T and iPhone.

Austrian Space Tourism on Sale at your local supermarket

Austria Space Tourism | Rocketplane

Net Neutrality: What will the internet look like in the future?

Net Neutrality FAQ: What's in it for You - PC World

-- P

Ron Paul on Tavis Smiley Pt 2



-- P

Ron Paul on Tavis Smiley Pt 1

A voice of reason.



-- P

More on Iran

Obama's engagement strategy has a chance of being successful if he can get Iranian allies Russia and China onto his side in a hurry. Iran is undoubtedly working to create nuclear weapons. The longer things drag out the more leverage Iran will have.  All of Iran's delays and posturing are nothing more than a test to see how far they can push the West. The West needs to finally come to terms with the fact that Iran is not necessarily a rational actor. Is anyone surprised that this situation is unfolding the way it is? President Obama and the rest of the West must be ready to act quickly and decisively before it's too late.

Michael Adler has a good piece here.

-- P

Germany cuts income taxes, really?

It took 3 weeks of tough bargaining but Germany has announced a coalition deal that will cut its income taxes by 24 bn euros ($36bn). Pleasantly surprising.


-- P

Saudi journalist sentenced to 60 lashes - CNN.com

Just a reminder that it's great to be an American.

Saudi journalist sentenced to 60 lashes - CNN.com

When will people learn.....

That large wild animals, even bears on ice skates, are deadly. 

-- P

Cell phones, deadly?

A new study finds that there is a correlation between long term cell phone use and cancer. I've believed that to be the case for a long time; but the debate will continue.

-- P

Follow Up: Rich Germans petition to pay higher taxes

A group of wealthy Germans wants to pay higher taxes. It is estimated that a 5% wealth tax lasting 2 years would raise approximately 100bn euros. 

-- P

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Portfolio's Worst American CEOs of All Time - Slideshows - CNBC.com

Here's a list that you don't want your name appearing on.

Portfolio's Worst American CEOs of All Time - Slideshows - CNBC.com

-- P

Gorbachev hops onto the Obama bandwagon

In an exclusive interview with Radio Free Europe Mikhail Gorbachev remarked:

"That's why [we have to] support a president of such stature, who gave his own country and the world such a strong push forward. And it's already showing real effects. That's honorable."  


I have great respect for Mr. Gorbachev so I'll give him the benefit of the doubt; I'll assume that he was just being polite and stately.  Can anyone explain why Pres. Obama received this award so prematurely? What has he done in his young nine-month old presidency to warrant receiving The Nobel Peace Prize?  Someone, anyone, please step forward and explain to me why Pres. Obama won this award.  Of course it's not President Obama's fault that he was chosen and I send my sincerest congratulations to him. 

One more thought, I'd love to know how anyone can take the Nobel Peace Prize seriously anymore, just take a look at the list of its past recipients.


--P



Swedish expedition team finds lost World War I British sub

The discovery was made near an island close to the Estonian coast. The HMS E18 was sent to the Baltic Sea to support Russia and to sink German vessels. The submarine was last seen in May of 1916.

--P

Friday, October 23, 2009

Iraqi's seeking asylum in Europe, many denied

Turns out that good old Europe isn't quite as progressive and open as they'd like us to think. Countries such as Sweden and Denmark are sending refugees back to central Iraq.

-- P

Break Time

Enjoy a good laugh!

-- P

The Press Stands Up

Imagine if a Republican President had tried this: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/10/23/white-house-loses-bid-exclude-fox-news-pay-czar-interview/

Can you imagine if sports broadcasters dropped their impartiality and made it known that they were rooting for one team against the other? The press did it in the below clip and laughed about it. The difference being the press has the ability to change the outcome in politics. Note the irrepressible hubris of Obama:



--TWM

Sage Words

From the philosophers Stone Temple Pilots:

Does anybody know how the story really goes
Or do we all just hum along?



--TWM

Iran and nukes ctd.

Time is running out.

-- P

Music Stars Rage Against Government

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/21/music-stars-demand-record_n_329476.html


--P


We are running out of time

The world needs to unite and finally address this major issue head-on while there still may be time left. It is completely unacceptable for the world community to simply spectate and allow Iran, and the madman at its helm, to acquire nuclear weapons. What will our options be when Iran has accomplished its goal? Who will stand up when a nuclear-armed Iran marches all over the Middle East?

Christopher Hitchens gets it.



-- P

Situation Report From Afghanistan

From www.stratfor.com

The U.S. Challenge in Afghanistan

By George Friedman and Reva Bhalla

The decision over whether to send more U.S. troops into Afghanistan may wait until the contested Afghan election is resolved, U.S. officials said Oct. 18. The announcement comes asU.S. President Barack Obama is approaching a decision on the war in Afghanistan. During the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, Obama argued that Iraq was the wrong war at the wrong time, but Afghanistan was a necessary war. His reasoning went that the threat to the United States came from al Qaeda, Afghanistan had been al Qaeda's sanctuary, and if the United States were to abandon Afghanistan, al Qaeda would re-establish itself and once again threaten the U.S. homeland. Withdrawal from Afghanistan would hence be dangerous, and prosecution of the war was therefore necessary.

After Obama took office, it became necessary to define a war-fighting strategy in Afghanistan. The most likely model was based on the one used in Iraq by Gen. David Petraeus, now head of U.S. Central Command, whose area of responsibility covers both Afghanistan and Iraq. Paradoxically, the tactical and strategic framework for fighting the so-called "right war" derived from U.S. military successes in executing the so-called "wrong war." But grand strategy, or selecting the right wars to fight, and war strategy, or how to fight the right wars, are not necessarily linked.

Afghanistan, Iraq and the McChrystal Plan

Making sense of the arguments over Afghanistan requires an understanding of how the Iraq war is read by the strategists fighting it, since a great deal of proposed Afghan strategy involves transferring lessons learned from Iraq. Those strategists see the Iraq war as having had three phases. The first was the short conventional war that saw the defeat of Saddam Hussein's military. The second was the period from 2003-2006 during which the United States faced a Sunni insurgency and resistance from the Shiite population, as well as a civil war between those two communities. During this phase, the United States sought to destroy the insurgency primarily by military means while simultaneously working to scrape a national unity government together and hold elections. The third phase, which began in late 2006, was primarily a political phase. It consisted of enticing Iraqi Sunni leaders to desert the foreign jihadists in Iraq, splitting the Shiite community among its various factions, and reaching political -- and financial -- accommodations among the various factions. Military operations focused on supporting political processes, such as pressuring recalcitrant factions and protecting those who aligned with the United States. The troop increase -- aka the surge -- was designed to facilitate this strategy. Even more, it was meant to convince Iraqi factions (not to mention Iran) that the United States was not going to pull out of Iraq, and that therefore a continuing American presence would back up guarantees made to Iraqis.

It is important to understand this last bit and its effect on Afghanistan. As in Iraq, the idea that the United States will not abandon local allies by withdrawing until Afghan security forces could guarantee the allies' security lies at the heart of U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. The premature withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, e.g., before local allies' security could be guaranteed, would undermine U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. To a great extent, the process of U.S. security guarantees in Afghanistan depends on the credibility of those guarantees: Withdrawal from Iraq followed by retribution against U.S. allies in Iraq would undermine the core of the Afghan strategy.

U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal's strategy in Afghanistan ultimately is built around the principle that the United States and its NATO allies are capable of protecting Afghans prepared to cooperate with Western forces. This explains why the heart of McChrystal's strategy involves putting U.S. troops as close to the Afghan people as possible. Doing so will entail closing many smaller bases in remote valleys -- like the isolated outpost recently attacked in Nuristan province -- and opening bases in more densely populated areas.

McChrystal's strategy therefore has three basic phases. In phase one, his forces would fight their way into regions where a large portion of the population lives and where the Taliban currently operates, namely Kabul, Khost, Helmand and Kandahar provinces. The United States would assume a strategic defensive posture in these populated areas. Because these areas are essential to the Taliban, phase two would see a Taliban counterattack in a bid to drive McChrystal's forces out, or at least to demonstrate that the U.S. forces cannot provide security for the local population. Paralleling the first two phases, phase three would see McChrystal using his military successes to forge alliances with indigenous leaders and their followers.

It should be noted that while McChrystal's traditional counterinsurgency strategy would be employed in populated areas, U.S. forces would also rely on traditional counterterrorism tactics in more remote areas where the Taliban have a heavy presence and can be pursued through drone strikes. The hope is that down the road, the strategy would allow the United States to use its military successes to fracture the Taliban, thereby encouraging defections and facilitating political reconciliation with Taliban elements driven more by political power than ideology.

There is a fundamental difference between Iraq and Afghanistan, however. In Iraq, resistance forces rarely operated in sufficient concentrations to block access to the population. By contrast, the Taliban on several occasions have struck with concentrations of forces numbering in the hundreds, essentially at company-size strength. If Iraq was a level one conflict, with irregular forces generally refusing conventional engagement with coalition forces, Afghanistan is beginning to bridge the gap from a level one to a level two conflict, with the Taliban holding territory with forces both able to provide conventional resistance and to mount some offensives at the company level (and perhaps at the battalion level in the future). This means that occupying, securing and defending areas such that the inhabitants see the coalition forces as defenders rather than as magnets for conflict is the key challenge.

Adding to the challenge, elements of McChrystal's strategy are in tension. First, local inhabitants will experience multilevel conflict as coalition forces move into a given region. Second, McChrystal is hoping that the Taliban goes on the offensive in response. And this means that the first and second steps will collide with the third, which is demonstrating to locals that the presence of coalition forces makes them more secure as conflict increases (which McChrystal acknowledges will happen). To convince locals that Western forces enhance their security, the coalition will thus have to be stunningly successful both at defeating Taliban defenders when they first move in and in repulsing subsequent Taliban attacks.

In its conflict with the Taliban, the coalition's main advantage is firepower, both in terms of artillery and airpower. The Taliban must concentrate its forces to attack the coalition; to counter such attacks, the weapons of choice are airstrikes and artillery. The problem with both of these weapons is first, a certain degree of inaccuracy is built into their use, and second, the attackers will be moving through population centers (the area held by both sides is important precisely because it has population). This means that air- and ground-fire missions, both important in a defensive strategy, run counter to the doctrine of protecting population.

McChrystal is fully aware of this dilemma, and he has therefore changed the rules of engagement to sharply curtail airstrikes in areas of concentrated population, even in areas where U.S. troops are in danger of being overrun. As McChrystal said in a recent interview, these rules of engagement will hold "Even if it means we are going to step away from a firefight and fight them another day."

This strategy poses two main challenges. First, it shifts the burden of the fighting onto U.S. infantry forces. Second, by declining combat in populated areas, the strategy runs the risk of making the populated areas where political arrangements might already be in place more vulnerable. In avoiding air and missile strikes, McChrystal avoids alienating the population through civilian casualties. But by declining combat, McChrystal risks alienating populations subject to Taliban offensives. Simply put, while airstrikes can devastate a civilian population, avoiding airstrikes could also devastate Western efforts, as local populations could see declining combat as a betrayal. McChrystal is thus stuck between the proverbial rock and a hard place on this one.

One of his efforts at a solution has been to ask for more troops. The point of these troops is not to occupy Afghanistan and impose a new reality through military force, which is impossible (especially given the limited number of troops the United States is willing to dedicate to the problem). Instead, it is to provide infantry forces not only to hold larger areas, but to serve as reinforcements during Taliban attacks so the use of airpower can be avoided. Putting the onus of this counterinsurgency on the infantry, and having the infantry operate without airpower, is a radical departure from U.S. fighting doctrine since World War II.

Seismic Shift in War Doctrine

Geopolitically, the United States fights at the end of a long supply line. Moreover, U.S. forces operate at a demographic disadvantage. Once in Eurasia, U.S. forces are always outnumbered. Infantry-on-infantry warfare is attritional, and the United States runs out of troops before the other side does. Infantry warfare does not provide the United States any advantage, and in fact, it places the United States at a disadvantage. Opponents of the United States thus have larger numbers of fighters; greater familiarity and acclimation to the terrain; and typically, better intelligence from countrymen behind U.S. lines. The U.S. counter always has been force multipliers -- normally artillery and airpower -- capable of destroying enemy concentrations before they close with U.S. troops. McChrystal's strategy, if applied rigorously, shifts doctrine toward infantry-on-infantry combat. His plan assumes that superior U.S. training will be the force multiplier in Afghanistan (as it may). But that assumes that the Taliban, a light infantry force with numerous battle-hardened formations optimized for fighting in Afghanistan, is an inferior infantry force. And it assumes that U.S. infantry fighting larger concentrations of Taliban forces will consistently defeat them.

Obviously, if McChrystal drives the Taliban out of secured areas and into uninhabited areas, the United States will have a tremendous opportunity to engage in strategic bombardment both against Taliban militants themselves and against supply lines no longer plugged into populated areas. But this assumes that the Taliban would not reduce its operations from company-level and higher assaults down to guerrilla-level operations in response to being driven out of population centers. If the Taliban did make such a reduction, it would become indistinguishable from the population. This would allow it to engage in attritional warfare against coalition forces and against the protected population to demonstrate that coalition forces can't protect them. The Taliban already has demonstrated the ability to thrive in both populated and rural areas of Afghanistan, where the terrain favors the insurgent far more than the counterinsurgent.

The strategy of training Afghan soldiers and police to take up the battle and persuading insurgents to change sides faces several realities. The Taliban has an excellent intelligence service built up during the period of its rule and afterward, allowing it to populate the new security forces with its agents and loyalists. And while persuading insurgents to change sides certainly can happen, whether it can happen to the extent of leaving the Taliban materially weakened remains in doubt. In Iraq, this happened not because of individual changes, but because regional ethnic leadership -- with their own excellent intelligence capabilities -- changed sides and drove out opposing factions. Individual defections were frequently liquidated.

But Taliban leaders have not shown any inclination for changing sides. They do not believe the United States is in Afghanistan to stay. Getting individual Taliban militants to change sides creates an intelligence-security battle. But McChrystal is betting that his forces will form bonds with the local population so deep that the locals will provide intelligence against Taliban forces operating in the region. The coalition must thus demonstrate that the risks of defection are dwarfed by the advantages. To do this, the coalition security and counterintelligence must consistently and effectively block the Taliban's ability to identify, locate and liquidate defectors. If McChrystal cannot do that, large-scale defection will be impossible, because well before such defection becomes large scale, the first defectors will be dead, as will anyone seen by the Taliban as a collaborator.

Ultimately, the entire strategy depends on how you read Iraq. In Iraq, a political decision was made by an intact Sunni leadership able to enforce its will among its followers. Squeezed between the foreign jihadists who wanted to usurp their position and the Shia, provided with political and financial incentives, and possessing their own forces able to provide a degree of security themselves, the Sunni leadership came to the see the Americans as the lesser evil. They controlled a critical mass, and they shifted. McChrystal has made it clear that the defections he expects are not a Taliban faction whose leadership decides to shift, but Taliban soldiers as individuals or small groups. That isn't ultimately what turned the Iraq war but something very different -- and quite elusive in counterinsurgency. He is looking for retail defections to turn into a strategic event.

Moreover, it seems much too early to speak of the successful strategy in Iraq. First, there is increasing intracommunal violence in anticipation of coming elections early next year. Second, some 120,000 U.S. forces remain in Iraq to guarantee the political and security agreements of 2007-2008, and it is far from clear what would happen if those troops left. Finally, where in Afghanistan there is the Pakistan question, in Iraq there remains the Iran question. Instability thus becomes a cross-border issue beyond the scope of existing forces.

The Pakistan situation is particularly problematic. If the strategic objective of the war in Afghanistan is to cut the legs out from under al Qaeda and deny these foreign jihadists sanctuary, then what of the sanctuaries in Pakistan's tribal belt where high-value al Qaeda targets are believed to be located? Pakistan is fighting its share of jihadists according to its own rules; the United States cannot realistically expect Islamabad to fulfill its end of the bargain in containing al Qaeda. The primary U.S. targets in this war are on the wrong side of the border, and in areas where U.S. forces are not free to operate. The American interest in Afghanistan is to defeat al Qaeda and prevent the emergence of follow-on jihadist forces. The problem is that regardless of how secure Afghanistan is, jihadist forces can (to varying degrees) train and plan in Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen, Indonesia -- or even Cleveland for that matter. Securing Afghanistan is thus not necessarily a precondition for defeating al Qaeda.

Iraq is used as the argument in favor of the new strategy in Afghanistan. What happened in Iraq was that a situation that was completely out of hand became substantially less unstable because of a set of political accommodations initially rejected by the Americans and the Sunnis from 2003-2006. Once accepted, a disastrous situation became an unstable situation with many unknowns still in place.

If the goal of Afghanistan is to forge the kind of tenuous political accords that govern Iraq, the factional conflicts that tore Iraq apart are needed. Afghanistan certainly has factional conflicts, but the Taliban, the main adversary, does not seem to be torn by them. It is possible that under sufficient pressure such splits might occur, but the Taliban has been a cohesive force for a generation. When it has experienced divisions, it hasn't split decisively.

On the other hand, it is not clear that Western forces in Afghanistan can sustain long-term infantry conflict in which the offensive is deliberately ceded to a capable enemy and where airpower's use is severely circumscribed to avoid civilian casualties, overturning half a century of military doctrine of combined arms operations.

The Bigger Picture

The best argument for fighting in Afghanistan is powerful and similar to the one for fighting in Iraq: credibility. The abandonment of either country will create a powerful tool in the Islamic world for jihadists to argue that the United States is a weak power. Withdrawal from either place without a degree of political success could destabilize other regimes that cooperate with the United States. Given that, staying in either country has little to do with strategy and everything to do with the perception of simply being there.

The best argument against fighting in either country is equally persuasive. The jihadists are right: The United States has neither the interest nor forces for long-term engagements in these countries. American interests go far beyond the Islamic world, and there are many present (to say nothing of future) threats from outside the region that require forces. Overcommitment in any one area of interest at the expense of others could be even more disastrous than the consequences of withdrawal.

In our view, Obama's decision depends not on choosing between McChrystal's strategy and others, but on a careful consideration of how to manage the consequences of withdrawal. An excellent case can be made that now is not the time to leave Afghanistan, and we expect Obama to be influenced by that thinking far more than by the details of McChrystal's strategy. As McChrystal himself points out, there are many unknowns and many risks in his own strategy; he is guaranteeing nothing.

Reducing American national strategy to the Islamic world, or worse, Afghanistan, is the greater threat. Nations find their balance, and the heavy pressures on Obama in this decision basically represent those impersonal forces battering him. The question he must ask himself is simple: In what way is the future of Afghanistan of importance to the United States? The answer that securing it will hobble al Qaeda is simply wrong. U.S. Afghan policy will not stop a global terrorist organization; terrorists will just go elsewhere. The answer that U.S. involvement in Afghanistan is important in shaping the Islamic world's sense of American power is better, but even that must be taken in context of other global interests.

Obama does not want this to be his war. He does not want to be remembered for Afghanistan the way George W. Bush is remembered for Iraq or Lyndon Johnson is for Vietnam. Right now, we suspect Obama plans to demonstrate commitment, and to disengage at a more politically opportune time. Johnson and Bush showed that disengagement after commitment is nice in theory. For our part, we do not think there is an effective strategy for winning in Afghanistan, but that McChrystal has proposed a good one for "hold until relieved." We suspect that Obama will hold to show that he gave the strategy a chance, but that the decision to leave won't be too far off.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Chairman Mao FTW...

If you work in the White House that is. http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/20/what-would-mao-do/?feat=article_top10_read


--TWM

Cracking down on the heroine pipeline

Good luck with that. Interesting fact, Russians are the world's biggest users of heroine. 



-- P

Geert Wilder Visits The Land of Make Believe

Part I





--TWM

Wall Street, a place filled with arrogant egomaniacs

Is anyone still surprised that this stuff happens on Wall Street? Most successful Wall Streeters are so full of themselves that they think the world will stop turning if they weren't around. The fact is, they're so wrong.

-- P

White House vs. FOX News

Interesting story. Any comments?

-- P

This Was Too Funny To Pass Up

Not really a substantive post but this item on Geekologie was too funny to pass up. All conspiracy theory adherents out there should take note: Governments can barely keep anything secret any more.

Windows 7

Will it be just as crappy or even worse than Vista?

-- P

The media

 I really wish that the right and left wing loons weren't a part of the daily news agenda. Whether it's  O'Reilly or Olbermann, every channel relies on ratings to make money. It's all really about pure entertainment. Any intelligent person can see that the television and radio pundits are nothing but party hacks. It's truly a shame that the White House  gets itself into the middle of this nonsense.

--P

Child Abuse

A painful reminder of just how cruel this world can be, so sad.


--P

Where's the change?: Afghanistan

 Perhaps I'm not close enough to the situation but what gives with President Obama's  handling of our war in Afghanistan; the war that he called the "necessary war."   However, what I do know is that Anti-Americanism  is on the rise in Afghanistan and its citizens are losing their patience.  This administration has yet to come up with a plan that speaks to the Afghan people. Nor have they been able to craft a definitive strategy to win the war and bring our brave men and women home as quickly as promised.  Our generals are in a state of limbo waiting for decisions to be made in the White House. Elise Jordan has a good piece on this topic over on the Daily Beast.

Truth be told it is refreshing to have a president back in the White House that can give a speech without embarrassing himself at every turn. Equally wonderful is the fact that we finally have an African-American president. Now that we have the cheeriness out of the way, it's time to go to work. The honeymoon is over.  I ask, what are Barack Obama's qualifications for the job. Foreign policy experience? No.  Governmental  experience?  Little. Hey,  even I was almost swept  off my feet by the Obamamania  euphoria.   Obama's team put together a brilliant campaign.  They were able to energize the youth of this nation to vote and to believe in a cause.  But what really is the cause?  I fear that it may all just be  more of the same empty rhetoric.

Personally, I would like an answer to the question  " What has Barack Obama accomplished in his nine month old presidency?" Can anyone point to something tangible?  Losing the war in Afghanistan is not an option, the ramifications would be of otherworldly proportions. Let's all hope that the eloquent and charming man we elected is quick on his feet and extraordinarily talented at learning on the job.
One thing not to be forgotten is that no one can blame me for any bad decisions Obama may make.
I voted for Ron Paul.

-- P

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

H1N1 Information

Some interesting information regarding the H1N1 influenza A outbreak. This is a very interesting case study on a group of travelers to China: http://infectious-diseases.jwatch.org/cgi/content/full/2009/1014/2 It seems that this virus has a somewhat limited airborne transition area.

Additionally it seems that secondary infections, such as pneumonia are responsible for a lot of the deaths in healthy people. This makes a strong case for pneumonia vaccine and/or antibiotics to be administered in suspected H1N1 cases. The CDC has said that over 50% of H1N1 cases will be asymptomatic and that places that had been hard hit in the spring are not showing many cases in the fall. This could mean that large segments of the population have already had the virus and are now immune. Adding to this is the fact that the fast test for the virus is highly unreliable, providing a large portion of false negative results.

When you digest the actual information about this bug, you begin to realize that it is not the global killer that the press hoped it was. However it is an interesting virus as its emergence was unusual due to rapidity and genetic makeup. The former might be more of a reflection of the modern world than of the virus's properties.

--TWM


Picture of the Day





Monday, October 19, 2009

Those crazy Germans...

You wouldn't believe it unless you read it. I love Kebabs and I love them spicy (at least I used to love them) until the tainted meat scandal spread throughout Germany. Now the German government is involved; they are afraid of the very spiciness that I love.

KL

Further Asteroid Discussion

In an earlier post Pierrot talked about asteroid impacts. I just wanted to post a couple of links relating to Apophis, a near Earth asteroid that will make close passes in 2029 and 2036. Also check out this cool sientific principle: the Yarkovsky effect.

B612 Foundation is a foundation dedicated to studying NEO's and NEA's and trying to develop a plan to deflect a dangerous one.

Here is the NASA page on NEO's.

After all, it is just a matter of time.....

--TWM

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Politics? No, entertainment

As time marches on, the more disturbingly obvious it becomes that so much of the blather from the right and left is nothing more than entertainment. I have no proof of this but I can just "imagine" the pundits on both sides having a good laugh and a beer together behind the scenes. People like Glenn Beck and his drama machine can't possibly believe most of the things he says. It's entertainment folks nothing more nothing less. It's the ultimate in reality television drama. The most troubling thing about all of this is that the average viewer is incited by this cesspool of information that these drama queens spew.  It's the ultra-righteous that are generally the worst, because they are the ones that usually have the most skeletons in their respective closets. So the next time you sit down to watch these hacks from the right and the left, make yourself some popcorn and enjoy the best damn reality shows on tv. Beware spinsters....

-- P

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Another gem from the "You can't make this stuff up" file

Apparently when you're a celebrity getting your car keyed is an emergency worthy of a 911 call. At least Usher thinks so.

Old wooden wine boxes make....

for some cool recycled trash art.

Your pictures

We'd love it if visitors to our blog would send in pictures of wherever they may be around the globe; we'll post a few each day. Send them to PierrotBlogs@gmail.com

--P

No NFL juggernaut in Rush Limbaugh's near future

In my opinion this isn't really worth commenting on except for the fact that this cartoon is hysterical and probably pretty on target. 

--P

President Obama caricatured after winning Noble Prize

A funny take on an equally comical event.

From the "You can't make this stuff up" file..........

The other Germany, Bayern, apparently has ideas other than swigging beer during Oktoberfest. The town of Straubing seems to have lost its collective mind. 

--P

Putting things in perspective...

As we worry about economies domestic and foreign, terrorist strikes and wars there's also the threat of earth's destruction by large rocks to put things into perspective.

--P

Where does our money go?

Here's a nice interactive look at how our fiscal mess maps out.

--P