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January 31, 2005Our Friends, The SaudisFrom Freedom House's Center for Religious Freedom comes a chilling report that Saudi Arabia's government has been distributing hate literature in American mosques. The 89-page report, "Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology Fill American Mosques," is based on a year-long study of over two hundred original documents, all disseminated, published or otherwise generated by the government of Saudi Arabia and collected from more than a dozen mosques in the United States.Press release here. Report here. The hate-literature was collected from the following mosques, according to the report's bibliography: Masjid Abu Bakr, San Diego, CA Sticking Fingers in The Eye of Terror and TyrannyMohammed at Iraq the Model reflects on the Iraqi election:
The people think of elections as a one day struggle that can prevent suffering on the long term. The silent majority has realized that elections are good and serve the people's interests; they don't know much about practicing democracy as they never lived under one but it's the common sense of the people who see how democratic nations enjoy stability and prosperity that led them to this conclusion.Powerline has a nice collection of photos from the Iraqi election. For ground-level reporting from Iraq, check out Friends of Democracy. Is blogging journalism? At FoD it most certainly is - and of the highest quality. And don't miss this piece at Powerline commenting on a Reuters news account. The terrorists, relying on the power of fear, had intended to destroy the democratic process. They didn't make a dent. President Bush, conversely, bet his legacy on the power of freedom. While, as everyone keeps saying, there is a long road ahead, right now that's looking like a pretty good bet.Yep. And it's time to double down. UPDATE: Terrorists used a handicapped kid in a wheelchair as a suicide bomber tryng to kill unarmed voters in Iraq. The lefty "human shields" who were all gung-ho to protect Saddam's tyrannical blood-soaked regime from American bombers were, uh, not trying to protect Iraqi voters from "insurgents" yesterday. Why?, you ask? Here's a good answer. Election ReflectionI listened to President Bush's second inaugural speech today as I drove in to work, thinking all the way of the millions of brave Iraqis who risked death to cast a vote in yesterday's election, and Bush's words were all the more stirring. Not since Reagan have we had a president who believed so strongly in the power of freedom to transform lives and nations. If you haven't already downloaded a copy of the inaugural speech and burned it to a CD, you can get it here for free. "This voting card is a bullet in the heart of the terrorists."Today's Tennessean has a nice wrap-up of the Iraq election voting . In the national media, I was amazed to hear the following broadcast on CNN last night during the Lou Dobbs Tonight program DOBBS: There was a huge turnout in many parts of the countries as voters defied terrorists and insurgents who launched a series of deadly suicide bomb attacks. Anderson Cooper reports now from Baghdad - Anderson.The huge Iraqi election voter turnout was a stunning victory of freedom over cynicism. According to this CNN report, voter turnout appeared to be larger than anticipated, even in Sunni Arab areas of Iraq where insurgent attacks have occurred on a near-daily basis. Indeed it was a good day in Iraq - a good day that only happened because President George W. Bush - despite the naysayers of the Left - insisted upon it.
January 30, 2005Sign the PetitionIf you favor Social Security reform and want to help President Bush get it done, please sign the petition. Wet BlanketsDemocrats react to the stunningly positive Iraqi election. But no matter how much cold water they try to throw on it, the Iraqi election - the mere fact that it happened and the fact that millions of Iraqis risked terror attacks to vote - is a credit to President George W. Bush. UPDATE: On the ground in Iraq, Lance Frizzell says the election's big winner is the Iraqi people. And here's a headline from today's Tennessean: Iraqi expatriates revel in voting experience. Also, good commentary re the Iraqi election - and lots of great links - from Hugh Hewitt here.
January 29, 2005Shooting Themselves In The FootI'm sorry, but these people are not ready to govern a country. Read The Whole ThingI don't have to blog about Iraq anymore because Mike Silverman has completely summed it up. From now on, all idiocy of the Left regarding Iraq can be answered by saying Read This. Read the Whole Thing. CongratulationsI just received the Winter 2005 issue of ACU Today, the magazine for alumni of Abilene Christian University, and learned that David Leeson, who graduated from ACU seven years before I arrived, won the Pulitzer Prize in 2004 for his work as an embedded photographer (for the Dallas Morning News) during the Iraq war. Leeson, a Pulitzer finalist in 1986, 1990 and 1995, richly deserves the award. I did a little Googling and ran across this article where he describes the experience of being "embedded" with Task Force 2-69 Armored of the Third Brigade - a unit that saw 23 straight days of combat. In the fall of 2000, Leeson began shooting video for The Dallas Morning News making him one of the first staff photographers in the nation shooting video for a newspaper on a full-time basis. Since then he has completed more than 70 short features and seven documentaries which have won him numerous awards in film and television including, a national Edward R. Murrow award, National Headliners award and a regional Emmy award for best television documentary. He was a finalist for best short film at the USA Film Festival in 2004. The Pulitzers are handed out each April. I'm not sure how I missed Leeson's win until now. But I did. So a very belated congratulations to a very fine journalist and fellow alum. Photos From IraqNashville photographer Katherine Bomboy has an exhibition of photographs taken during a recent extended visit to northern Iraq, at the Belcourt Theatre now through the next several weeks. You can see a sample of her photographs, and hear an interview with here, at the website of the Nashville NPR affiliate WPLN. A Letter From Dr. James DobsonEditor's note: I have reproduced in full a letter posted on the website of Focus on the Family founder and chairman Dr. James Dobson. If you have children and you care about their future, you will read it in its entirety. Dear Friends: In truth, this tale has very little to do with SpongeBob himself, and everything to do with the media's ability to obscure the facts and to direct lies and scorn toward those of us who care about defending children. It all began on an evening in late January, during Inaugural Week in Washington, D.C. At that time, I spoke briefly to 350 guests attending a banquet hosted by Tony Perkins and the Family Research Council, Focus on the Family, and Gary Bauer's American Values. I concluded by sharing a word of concern about a video that will be distributed to 61,000 public and private elementary schools across the nation, for use on the proposed "We Are Family Day," March 11. The video, which millions of children will soon see, features nearly 100 favorite cartoon characters that kids will instantly recognize, including not only SpongeBob, but also Barney the Dinosaur, the Muppets, Dora the Explorer, Bob the Builder, Winnie the Pooh, Clifford the Big Red Dog, Jimmy Neutron and Big Bird. The video itself is innocent enough and does not mention anything overtly sexual. Rather, it features the children's cartoon characters singing and dancing along to the popular disco hit "We Are Family." But while the video is harmless on its own, I believe the agenda behind it is sinister. My brief comments at the FRC gathering were intended to express concern not about SpongeBob or Big Bird or any of their other cartoon friends, but about the way in which those childhood symbols are apparently being hijacked to promote an agenda that involves teaching homosexual propaganda to children. Nevertheless, the media jumped on the story by claiming that I had accused SpongeBob of being "gay." Some suggested that I had confused the organization that had created the video with a similarly named gay-rights group. In both cases, the press was dead wrong, and I welcome this opportunity to help them get their facts straight. I want to be clear: the We Are Family Foundation - the organization that sponsored the video featuring SpongeBob and the other characters was, until this flap occurred, making available a variety of explicitly pro-homosexual materials on its Web site. It has since endeavored to hide that fact (more on this later), but my concerns are as legitimate today as they were when I first expressed them in January. So let us consider the evidence. One of the first resources to catch our attention on the foundation's Web site was a booklet that lists a number of organizational "allies," including five of the largest pro-homosexual organizations in the nation: the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the National Gay and Lesbian Taskforce, and Parents, Family and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG). Also, the Web site made available school lesson plans that suggested teachers ask these questions of students: From a handout entitled, "Talking About Being Out" there was this: One of the lesson plans, titled, Uncovering Attitudes About Sexual Orientation, presents what are deemed "stereotypical definitions" of words that encourage bigotry and bias. If you have any doubt about the pro-homosexual agenda inherent to these materials, check out these loaded terms, which could be coming soon to an elementary school near you. (All are direct quotes. ) Is this the kind of nonsense you want taught to your kids, especially if the nation's most popular cartoon characters are used to get across the concepts? I pray not! If you're planning on visiting the We Are Family Foundation's Web site [www. wearefamilyfoundation. org] to verify the accuracy of the above information, don't bother. In the days since this story broke, the majority of overtly pro-homosexual content has been removed. The founder of the organization, Nile Rodgers, appeared on the "Today Show" and said that we had the wrong site and that they had nothing to do with homosexuality. That was Jan. 21. Two days later, most of the homosexual content disappeared or became inaccessible. I will leave it for you to determine the motive behind the mysterious vanishing of such material by the We Are Family Foundation. Suffice to say that we have clear documentation that these materials were being promoted on the Web site as recently as late January, despite denials to the contrary. I'm sure you can see, now, why I expressed great concern about the intention of the We Are Family Foundation in using SpongeBob and company to promote the theme of "tolerance and diversity," which are almost always buzzwords for homosexual advocacy. It seems evident that had this connection not been exposed, the materials accompanying the video would have promoted a pro-homosexual ideology. Again, why do I believe that? Simply put, it's because the past is often the best predictor of the future. In addition to the above material, a 2003 manual, produced in partnership with the We Are Family Foundation, featured exercises that attempted to equate homosexuality with immutable characteristics, such as race or gender. Of particular significance is a so called "Tolerance Pledge" that appears to complement the pro-homosexual propaganda found within the once available school curricula. The second paragraph of the pledge reads as follows: "To help keep diversity a wellspring of strength and make America a better place for all, I pledge to have respect for people whose abilities, beliefs, culture, race, sexual identity or other characteristics are different from my own."[Emphasis added. ] The words "sexual identity" in that last sentence hold the key to understanding what is going on here. They reveal a very clever and subtle intent lying below the water line. The stated purpose, as we have seen, is to teach children to respect each other and to accept those who are different. We are entirely supportive of that message. I have been teaching it for years. There appears to be another agenda operating here, however, that has serious implications for your kids. Quite simply, it is to desensitize very young children to homosexual and bisexual behavior. During my remarks in Washington, I shared my suspicion about children being coerced into signing this "Tolerance Pledge." My critics quickly sought to marginalize my warning. Nile Rodgers exasperatingly explained to "FOX News'" Bill O'Reilly that, "Even on our Web site, we don't ask people to sign the pledge." Oh really? Prior to my speech, the pledge, as it appeared on the foundation's Web site, concluded with the following paragraph: "To fulfill my pledge, I __________________ will examine my own biases and work to overcome them, set a positive example for my family and friends, work for tolerance in my own community, speak out against hate and injustice. We share a world. For all our differences, we share one world. To be tolerant is to welcome the differences and delight in the sharing." Once the individual filled in his or her name, there was a "submit" button to the right of the pledge that would, ostensibly, officially record that "pledge" commitment. This portion of the pledge has also disappeared from the Web site. Let me say it again for emphasis: Every individual is entitled to respect and human dignity, including those with whom we disagree strongly. The problem is not with acceptance or kindness, certainly. But kids should not be taught that homosexuality is just another "lifestyle," or that it is morally equivalent to heterosexuality. Scripture teaches that all overt sexual activity outside the bonds of marriage is sinful and harmful. Children should not be taught otherwise by their teachers, and certainly not if their parents are unaware of the instruction. This is why I brought up this subject at the FRC banquet, explaining that there is a spiritual dimension to the culture war that many parents and grandparents are too busy to have noticed. It targets the values and attitudes of children, which after 12 years of propaganda in the public schools, can mold and shape the next generation. If a million or more very young children are going to be exposed to an organization through a video that encourages people to sign a "tolerance pledge," shouldn't their moms and dads be told about it? We are just a few days away from the proposed "We Are Family Day" in the schools. Have you been informed of the discussions that may take place in your child's elementary school in connection with the video, or the pledge that could possibly be placed before them? What appears to be the case in the We Are Family program is an effort to replicate nationwide the curricula being implemented in California's elementary schools. From my perspective, it is terribly dangerous. Imagine a classroom full of wide-eyed five-year olds, sitting in a circle in front of the teacher. These kindergarteners will believe anything they are told, from the notion that reindeer can fly on Christmas Eve to the idea that bunnies lay candy eggs during "Spring Break." They are vulnerable to whatever adults tell them. In this instance, the kids are not learning about the alphabet or about exciting fairy tales; they are potentially hearing incomprehensible references to adult perverse sexuality. And the rationale for this instruction is "tolerance and diversity." Generations past would have been shocked and outraged by the very thought of such nonsense. Yet many parents either don't know of the teaching or are passively willing to go along with it. I could go on, but I think you get the idea. In response, we received more than 100 requests for interviews within 24 hours from media entities within the United States and around the world, including the "Today Show," "CNN," the "BBC," "ABC News," the CBS "Early Show," "Good Morning America," "MSNBC," "National Public Radio," and "Hannity & Colmes" (the only one I accepted). Some of you heard the bogus story and believed it. We received more than 1,200 e-mails in the first few days, almost all of them critical because of my perceived attack on poor SpongeBob. One more time, let me say that the problem is not with SpongeBob or the other cartoon characters. It is with the way they will be used in the classroom. And that brings me to the larger issue. It does not matter what the secular media says about me. In the final analysis, who cares? What is vitally important, however, are the children of this country and the effort being made to manipulate them for political purposes. As my father reminded Shirley and me when our daughter was in preschool, "Danae is growing up in a world much farther gone into moral decline than the world into which you were born." How much more true that is today than then! We just came through a Christmas season where, in many schools, traditional carols were prohibited and the birth of Christ could not be mentioned. Macy's Department Store in New York City banned any reference to Christmas. Bible reading and prayer in schools have been outlawed, and since 1980, the Ten Commandments could not be posted on bulletin boards. The Ninth Circuit Court in California did its best to prohibit the words "under God" from being cited by children in the Pledge of Allegiance. On March 2, the U. S. Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of displaying the Ten Commandments on government property. Easter has become "Spring Break," and the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ cannot be celebrated. But Earth Day can be observed in the curricula."Father God" is out and "Mother Earth" is in. And in the midst of all this secularism, some schools that are having a hard time teaching kids to read, write and compute are giving precious classroom time to homosexual propaganda. That was the observation that motivated my remarks, not some fictitious cartoon character that children love. If you believed the media after having heard me and read my books for years, the question I would ask is, "Why?" Parents, I urge you to keep a close eye on your sons and daughters. Watch carefully everything that goes into their little minds. Monitor their textbooks and the words of their teachers. Do not turn them over to harmful television programs. When God's name is used in vain, or when sex and violence come on the screen, turn off the tube and then read and discuss together the scriptures found in Psalm 103:1: "I will set before my eyes no vile thing" [NIV]. Read uplifting and inspiring stories to your children daily. This obligation to teach your children biblical truths continually is unmistakably written in Deuteronomy 6:6-8, which tells us: These commandments that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands, and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates. [NIV] Focus on the Family will continue to help you fulfill this task of bringing up your children "in the fear and admonition of the Lord" (Ephesians 6:4). If you have little ones at home, you might consider signing up for our Focus on Your Child program, which provides a wealth of resources that will help parents implement a decidedly Christian approach to raising children. This donor-sponsored service delivers practical, age-appropriate advice and encouragement right to your home each month. In addition to receiving newsletters and audio journals, members have round-the-clock access to a Web site filled with helpful articles and topical advice. For more information, please visit our Web site at www. focusonyourchild. com. Thank you for helping us continue to nourish and defend the institution of the family. We would appreciate your help in two ways. First, to pray for us as we seek to fulfill this mission, and second, to assist us financially as you can - after you have met your responsibilities to your local church. Together, we can make a difference. Sincerely in Christ,
January 28, 2005Hey Phil! Coloradans Don't Think TABOR Is A Disaster
Poll Shows Little Support to Weaken TABOR or Raise TaxesTennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen claims Colorado's TABOR amendment has been a fiscal "disaster" for that state. To believe that Bredesen is right, you have to believe the following: that Bredesen knows better than do the people of Colorado about their Taxpayers Bill of Rights. To know that Bredesen is utterly wrong and uninformed about Colorado's Taxpayers Bill of Rights, all you have to do is read this. Another View of Bredesen
A credible opponent will also serve to take some of the shine off of him by getting the word out about what I've been writing about for months now. This man is not governing like you think he is. (I know from observing it firsthand). Someone needs to hold his feet to the fire and only an opponent can do that.White notes that Bredesen portrays himself as a fiscal conservative (and, might I add, so does the the lap-dog friendly Tennessee capital press corps), but the state budghet was $20 billion the year before Bredesen took office and, in his fourt year in office, it will exceed $25 billion. Says White, "He's cut the budget by adding $5 billion." In a more recent post, White argues that Bredesen is arrogant, disengenuous and hates Republicans and, because of the latter, the Democratic party faithful "will love him in the Presidential primaries. Hey, Matt, would you like to become a regular contributor to the forthcoming new blog BredesenWatch.com? Ad Space Sale ContinuesThe ad space sale continues here at HobbsOnline, where I have cut the cost to advertise to a mere $20 per month in all three Blogads slots - for a limited time. The right sidebar slot and the top left sidebar slot were both full yesterday, but two ads have expired and now each has one opening. Grab the prime real estate while you can. Also, the second ads slot left sidebar has two openings. Get in cheap while you can... Is he The Best They Have To Offer?
Not so his uncle, the aforementioned state Sen. John Ford, who is currently embroiled in a child-support case and who recently revealed that he lives in two houses, one he shares with his ex-wife and their children, and the other he shares with his current girlfriend and their children. Oh, and there's a third woman and another child. According to today's Tennessean, neither house is located in his state senate district. Ford's voter registration lists his address as 12 South Parkway W., said Shelby County election administrator James Johnson. That is the address of the N.J. Ford & Sons Funeral Parlor, the senator's family business that is located within his district, the 29th District.I wonder... is Ford's business zoned for residential use? Does the Memphis zoning code allow a person to live at a business that isn't zoned for residential use? If not, then Ford is either living at his business illegally, or he's not really living there and, therefore, is not living in his senate district as required by law. Ford's residency became an issue after he testified in a child-support case that he keeps two homes with two different women whose children he fathered.[snort] For the past year, he has tried to make use of a law he authored that keeps court-ordered support lower when a father is financially responsible for other children.Oh, by the way - his ex-wife is six months pregnant, and Ford is the father. As important as it is to determine where Sen. John Ford actually lives, I think there is a much more important question that needs to be answered. But it's going to take sending a team of 100s of psychologists to the 23rd state Senate district in Memphis to determine why those numbnuts keep electing someone as immoral and embarrassing as John Ford. Can the Tennessee Democratic Party find no one better in the entire 23rd district? As for Ford, he is threatening to sue the head of the Tennessee Republican Party for daring to suggest that Ford might not live in his senate district. "Anyone who impugns my name is subject to a lawsuit," Ford told the AP. In December 2003, Ford apologized to taxpayers and agreed to repay as much as $1,300 in Federal Express charges on his state account for personal packages, including some 30 purchases made by his ex-wife and her relatives at such retailers as Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman-Marcus in Atlanta. In February 1997, Ford was charged with five counts of aggravated assault after he allegedly brandished a loaded shotgun and ordered a Memphis Light Gas & Water crew off his property. The charges placed on diversion and he completed 250 hours of community service. In 1996 a federal civil trial resulted in a finding that Ford had sexually harassed a female employee when he was General Sessions Court clerk. Sen. John Ford, you are impugned by your own actions. Help WantedI have designed a new business model for blog advertising that would complement, not compete with, Henry Copeland's Blogads, and take advantage of the viral and global nature of the blogosphere to tap into a $100 billion global industry. My problem: I'm not a programmer. I also don't have funds to pay a programmer. So I'm looking for the following things: 2. A programmer capable of building a system that, like Blogads, serves content to a variety of websites and allows any blogger to easily add the enabling script to their blog's template, supported by a database that serves the content and tracks and distributes the money. 2. Low five-figure angel capital to fund the venture. Contact me at bill at billhobbs.com. Bredesen Falsely Claims TABOR a "Disaster" In Colorado
The Knoxville News Sentinel has the story, here (free registration required). Gov. Phil Bredesen said he is adamantly against putting a proposed "taxpayer bill of rights" into the state constitution, but he will not actively oppose an amendment to forbid gay marriage.Based on his comments, I would bet money Gov. Bredesen hasn't studied Colorado's TABOR amendment and its impact on state government in depth, and is relying only on the criticisms of it from left-wing Big Government types in Colorado who hope to gut TABOR in order to resume more-rapid growth in government spending and taxes. I have researched Colorado's TABOR extensively. It is doubtful there is anyone in the entire state of Tennessee, except perhaps TABOR amendment sponsors Casada and Bryson, who know more about it than I do. Bredesen certainly doesn't. By calling TABOR a "disaster" for Colorado, Bredesen is showing his ignorance. Unless he has studied Colorado's TABOR. Then he's just flat-out lying. I researched the impact of Colorado's TABOR on that state's economy in the decade since it was adopted and here is what I found: Before it was adopted, Colorado and Tennessee were very similar economically. A decade later, Colorado has far surpassed Tennessee in almost every useful measure. In fact, thanks to the faster economic growth fueled by TABOR, Colorado was able increase state government spending per capita faster than Tennessee over the decade, while still reducing Coloradoan's taxes by $3 billion. Here are some key data comparing Colorado and Tennessee, from a research paper I published in January 2003... Because of the sluggish economy, there is no TABOR surplus in Colorado this year. In fact, less-than-expected revenue has led the state to cut its budget. The legislature planned to spend $13.8 billion but instead the governor of the Rocky Mountain state has reduced spending to $13.1 billion. That's a real spending cut of $700 million. As you know, Tennessee took the opposite approach to its similar-sized revenue shortfall this year, raising taxes by around $900 million.Those are the facts. When Phil Bredesen calls TABOR a "disaster" for Colorado, he is either showing his ignorance, or just flat-out lying. The real fiscal disaster is Tennessee, where the legislature and every governor from Lamar Alexander up to and including Phil Bredesen have routinely flouted the state constitution's weak cap on the annual growth of government spending, resulting in the state spending billions of dollars more than the growth of the state's economy can keep pace with. In May 2004, Bredesen approved a budget that busted the spending growth cap by $105 million. And that's just the first-year cost of the excess spending. Because each year's budget increase is based on the previous year's budget, Bredesen's cap-busting spending will cost Tennessee taxpayers $1 billion - the Bredesen Billion - over the next decade. That's the real record of the self-professed "fiscal conservative" who opposes having the constitution of Tennessee protect the people of Tennessee from excessive taxes and unaffordable government budgets.
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Bredesen: Tolerance Doesn't Require Allowing Gay MarriageTennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen, increasingly touted recently as a possible presidential candidate for the Democrats in 2008, is sure to anger the party's liberal base with his comments in today's Knoxville News Sentinel about "gay marriage," which he called "a vastly different issue from tolerance for gays." "I certainly have said frequently over the years that I would happily promote hire or discharge of people in state government without regard to sexual orientation or anything like that," he said. "But it seems to me that's a long way from putting official imprimatur of the state on a union where, you know, there's many thousands of years of history to the contrary. It strikes me as unnecessary and contrary to the values of most Americans."Lance Frizzell comments: "It's worth noting that Republicans get called vile bigots when they say such things." Bredesen says he won't oppose a proposed state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. His stance - tolerance for gays but no change to the millennia-old definition of marriage - likely reflects that of a majority of Americans, but will anger the Left and the gay-activist special interest wing of the Democratic Party. Just one more reason why Bredesen would be more likely to win the White House than the Democratic Primary. UPDATE: GayLinkNews.com, an online news aggregator of gay-relevant news from MSM news sources, gay media and weblogs, has linked to this post. I have no clue if GayLinkNews.com is a popular news website among gays, but if it is, Phil Bredesen just lost the gay vote. The Front Line
Iraqi immigrants are voting today. The security perimeter around the Nashville voting site for the Iraqi elections is rather large - essentially, half of the Tennessee State Fairgrounds, with the actual voting taking place in large tents in the center of a large parking lot. I have requested media-access permission (from but have no clue if it will be granted. I may swing back by at lunchtime and take a few more photos from outside the perimeter to give you a better idea of what it looks like. Meanwhile, there's a must-read story in today's Tennessean about a local Kurdish immmigrant who views his ballot today as a "bullet" to avenge the deaths of 26 family members killed by Saddam Hussein's soldiers. Ibrahim Abdullatif's family tree has many missing branches. ''I don't know where to begin counting,'' he said. His eyelids close for a moment as he thinks. When they reopen, the young Kurd stares ahead, his iridescent brown eyes focusing intently on a point in midair. The names of cousins, aunts, uncles, all members of his mother's family, scroll through his memory. There were 26, he said.Praying for his continued steadfastness on behalf of the Iraqi people and the cause of liberty, no doubt. Iraqis voting and people praying - front lines in the war against terror.
January 27, 2005Soul MusicChristianity Today's Books & Culture website has a review of Get Up Off Your Knees: Preaching the U2 Catalog, "the first book of sermons inspired by what just might be the world's most influential rock 'n' roll band." Reminding, comforting, and challenging are recurring themes in Get Up Off Your Knees: Preaching the U2 Catalog. Editors Raewynne J. Whiteley and Beth Maynard, both Episcopalian ministers, have produced the first book of sermons inspired by what just might be the world's most influential rock 'n' roll band. Gathering 26 contributors from across the landscape of U2 fandom to offer a collection of homilies, meditations, and essays, they offer a welcome portrait of what's possible when you have three chords and the truth.U2's latst album, How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb, concludes with a song titled "Yahweh." I've posted the lyrics in the extended-entry portion of this post. Yahweh Take these shoes Yahweh, Yahweh Take these hands Yahweh, Yahweh Still waiting for the dawn, the sun is coming up Yahweh, Yahweh Take this city Nashville SceneOne of the more amazing sights is this full-scale replica of the ancient Parthenon in Greece, recently rehabbed at a cost of millions of dollars. It houses an art museum in the basement and, on the main floor, a 42-foot-high statue of Athena, Athena Parthenos, perhaps the most expensive piece of kitsch in America. It really does look ridiculous, like a giant gilded piece from some ancient Grecian Goofy Golf franchise. The good news: Athena Putt Putt is tucked safely inside the building so you can enjoy the Parthenon and the surrounding Centennial Park without ever having to see the big statue and, involuntarily, blurting out, "that's one big woman." Incidentally, one of Nashville's nicknames is "The Athens of the South," but it isn't because of the Parthenon. It's because of the myriad of colleges and universities located in the city. Bubba Blows It BigtimeSouth Knox Bubba slams Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen in a long and rambling post today in which he voices concern that some "heartless right-wing 'Christian' conservatives and rabid neo-conservatives bent on world domination" are "singing his praises" and talking up Bredesen's 2008 presidential prospects and claims I have been "inconsistent" in what I've written about Bredesen. As a whole, SKB's post is a fine example of the incoherence of the Left today in the aftermath of its wide and deep 2004 electoral defeat. On the one hand, he says he supported John Kerry even though "he wasn't my first choice," but then wonders if Bredesen might be a "sellout" because - get this - Bredesen doesn't kowtow to the Left's ideology lock, stock and barrel. He then goes on to link to and quote from things that both Glenn Reynolds and I have written about Bredesen: Just look at some of these gushingly backhanded endorsements of the Bredesen Way...Except, Bubba, I have not endorsed Bredesen for president, nor do I "support" him, nor are those two posts in any way inconsistent. In 2002, I commented that Bredesen did not have a fiscally-conservative record as mayor of Nashville and that, as a gubernatorial candidate, he was not in favor of many of the measures that fiscally conservative voters might like. In 2005, I was writing about Bredesen's economic-development deals during his eight years as Mayor of Nashville and commenting that, while they are hard to defend fiscally, they did have a positive impact on the city's self-esteem. Inconsistent? No, not at all. And, for the record, I have not endorsed nor will I endorse Phil Bredesen for president. I'd lose less sleep if he won than if, say, Barbara Boxer won the White House - but there is no likely Republican nominee - not Condi or Rudy, not Bill Owens, or Jeb Bush, or George Allen - whom I would reject in order to vote for Bredesen in 2008. I do think Bredesen is one of the better candidates the Democrats could nominate if they want to have a chance to win. I do think Bredesen understands how to win as a Democrat in a red state. Bredesen could win the White House if he's nominated. Republicans need to know that. And that's part of the reason I write about Bredesen and started Bredesen Watch (and registered the BredesenWatch.com domain name) - to highlight Bredesen's policy and political successes so that Republicans outside of Tennessee know what they're up against if Bredesen manages to get the nomination. The other reason? To expose the warts of Bredesen's record, and highlight the non-liberal portions that will turn more liberals against him so that, like Bubba, they are less likely to vote for him in the Democratic primaries. The way for Republicans to keep Bredesen from winning the White House in 2008 is to convince the Left to reject him in the Democratic primaries. The link to Bubba's post today is: http://www.southknoxbubba.net/skblog/archive_2005_01.php#3900 Copy and paste if Bubba is still playing his juvenile game of redirecting traffic from a link from HobbsOnline to FreeRepublic.com. Tsunami: Stingy List UpdateBlogger Chuck Simmins, keeper of The Stingy List, reports that donations for tsunami disaster relief by American individuals and corporations have topped $786 million in cash and in-kind contributions. UPDATE: Here's a copy of The Stingy List with hyperlinks added to the nearly 700 different news stories and web postings Simmins has collected to compile the list. Your Morning CoffeeFor Good Or EvilTwo news stories about music today. This one illustrate musicians using music for good. This one illustrates musicians using music for evil. Review of the former here. As for the latter, how anybody can make fun of the death of a quarter million people is beyond me.
January 26, 2005Signs of NashvilleI photographed the detour sign at a road construction site on 12th Avenue today. Honestly, can you be sure you are supposed to turn left? So, I had a little fun with the image. In case the sign was upside down: | ||||||||||