No Runny Eggs

The repository of one hard-boiled egg from the south suburbs of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and the occassional guest-blogger). The ramblings within may or may not offend, shock and awe you, but they are what I (or my guest-bloggers) think.

Archive for April 21st, 2007

Virginia Tech thoughts

by @ 19:42. Filed under Law and order.

Aaron pretty much summed up my immediate thoughts down below. For those screaming for new gun grabs, it was a lack of communication about Cho’s mental instability that let him semi-legally get his weaponry, and Cho violated the ban on guns on campus to carry out his murderous rage. More laws wouldn’t have stopped him.

Cho Family Speaks

by @ 19:32. Filed under Miscellaneous.

The family of the Virgina Tech shooter deserves some credit. They haven’t tried to stick up for him.

Their public statement about the tragedy says all the right things and doesn’t read like it came straight from a PR firm. It makes me wonder how Seung-Hui Cho could’ve turned out the way he did.

Don’t forget to pray for this family, too.

The Cold War is back on

by @ 19:16. Filed under Politics.

(H/T – Drudge)

Tidbits from a New York Times story on the state takeover of what was Russia’s largest radio news network, the Russian News Service:

  • At least 50% of the stories on the network about Russia must be “positive”.
  • The United States is to be refered to as “the enemy” by that network’s reporters.
  • Between the government itself, its national natural gas company, Gazprom, and various “front” groups, all 3 of the national TV networks, most of the larger newspapers, and an increasing number of radio networks are government-controlled.
  • The Russian Parliament recently banned “extremism” in politics (widely defined as anything critical of the government). The police and prosecutors are already taking full advantage of that, with the KGB…er, FSS questioning former chess champion and opposition politician Garry Kasparov for 4 hours after he gave an interview on the sole surviving independent national radio network, and Moscow prosecutors using a freshly-minted “political vandalism” law to persecut…er, prosecute an activist who posted critical remarks about a member of Parliament on a web site.

I am somewhere between points 4 and 6

by @ 16:45. Filed under The Blog.

Michelle Malkin (point #4) points us to a piece from Discover Magazine that shows the map of the blogosphere.

blogmap.jpg
Pic courtesy Matthew Hurst/Neilsen Buzzmetrics via Discover Magazine

Very interesting. I would’ve thought that Kos (point #1) would be closer to the pr0n group (point #5) than Michelle. Also, knowing sports guys (point #6), putting them as a polar opposite to the pr0n group is “odd”.

Oh, and where’s MySpace? :-)

Revisions/extensions (6:40 pm 4/21/2007) – USCitizen at Traction Control provides us with a link to more maps that Matthew Hurst created

Correcting yet another blogroll oversight or two

by @ 15:29. Filed under The Blog.

If you guys aren’t yet reading JammieWearingFool, you should be.

Next, please welcome The Crocodile Cage to the Cheddarsphere.

Revisions/extensions (3:32 pm 4/21/2007) – I knew I forgot somebody; I should’ve finished catching up on my reading.

The WMDs WERE there

by @ 15:25. Filed under Politics - National, War on Terror.

(H/T – JammieWearingFool)

The Spectator‘s Melanie Phillips has the tale of Dave Gaubatz, who spent some time in Nasariyah, Iraq looking for Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction. Let’s start right in the meat of the story:

Between March and July 2003, he says, he was taken to four sites in southern Iraq "” two within Nasariyah, one 20 miles south and one near Basra "” which, he was told by numerous Iraqi sources, contained biological and chemical weapons, material for a nuclear programme and UN-proscribed missiles. He was, he says, in no doubt whatever that this was true.

This was, in the first place, because of the massive size of these sites and the extreme lengths to which the Iraqis had gone to conceal them. Three of them were bunkers buried 20 to 30 feet beneath the Euphrates. They had been constructed through building dams which were removed after the huge subterranean vaults had been excavated so that these were concealed beneath the river bed. The bunker walls were made of reinforced concrete five feet thick.

"˜There was no doubt, with so much effort having gone into hiding these constructions, that something very important was buried there’, says Mr Gaubatz. By speaking to a wide range of Iraqis, some of whom risked their lives by talking to him and whose accounts were provided in ignorance of each other, he built up a picture of the nuclear, chemical and biological materials they said were buried underground.

"˜They explained in detail why WMDs were in these areas and asked the US to remove them,’ says Mr Gaubatz. "˜Much of this material had been buried in the concrete bunkers and in the sewage pipe system. There were also missile imprints in the area and signs of chemical activity "” gas masks, decontamination kits, atropine needles. The Iraqis and my team had no doubt at all that WMDs were hidden there.’

There was yet another significant piece of circumstantial corroboration. The medical records of Mr Gaubatz and his team showed that at these sites they had been exposed to high levels of radiation.

Mr Gaubatz verbally told the Iraq Study Group (ISG) of his findings, and asked them to come with heavy equipment to breach the concrete of the bunkers and uncover their sealed contents. But to his consternation, the ISG told him they didn’t have the manpower or equipment to do it and that it would be "˜unsafe’ to try.

"˜The problem was that the ISG were concentrating their efforts in looking for WMD in northern Iraq and this was in the south,’ says Mr Gaubatz. "˜They were just swept up by reports of WMD in so many different locations. But we told them that if they
didn’t excavate these sites, others would….

Needless to say, before the CIA finally showed up in 2005 (after the ISG “conveniently” lost all 60 of Gaubatz’s written reports), somebody else showed up to cart off the contents of these weapons, specifically the Syrians and Russians. Gaubatz tried to get the news out, but he was frustrated. I’ll let Phillips continue:

Mr Gaubatz’s claims remain largely unpublicised. Last year, the New York Times dismissed him as one of a group of WMD diehard obsessives. The New York Sun produced a more balanced report, but after that the coverage died. According to Mr Gaubatz, the reason is a concerted effort by the US intelligence and political world to stifle such an explosive revelation of their own lethal incompetence.

After he and an Iraqi colleague spoke at last month’s Florida meeting of the Intelligence Summit, an annual conference of the intelligence world, they were interviewed for two hours by a US TV show "” only for the interview to be junked after the FBI repeatedly rang Mr Gaubatz and his colleague to say they would stop the interview from being broadcast….

So we know that it’s the policy of the federal government to disavow any knowledge of these 4 bunkers. The Democrats in Congress have been asked to investigate by John Loftus, the organizer of the Intelligence Summit, but they’re not touching this with a 10-foot pole. Why? I’ll leave you with the money quote from Phillips:

The Republicans won’t touch this because it would reveal the incompetence of the Bush administration in failing to neutralise the danger of Iraqi WMD. The Democrats won’t touch it because it would show President Bush was right to invade Iraq in the first place. It is an axis of embarrassment.

Presenting Brian and Kris Koch

by @ 0:21. Filed under Miscellaneous.

A couple of choice pics (slightly shrunken from the originals designed to fit on the blog – if you’re running 1600×1200; they don’t quite fit on my 1280×1024 monitor) from their wedding in Montego Bay, Jamaica on Wednesday (most of these were me using Brian and Kris’s camera; unfortunately, I got their camera just as the ceremony was starting, so I wasn’t able to immediately set it to the proper settings for the ceremony; a few of my shots did not turn out) –

(click “more” to unleash the pics)

(more…)

[No Runny Eggs is proudly powered by WordPress.]