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 March, 2008

March 21, 2008

Theft of a graphic? (Update – LIKELY)

by @ 12:35. Filed under Presstitute Follies.

Jim Lynch did a recreation of one of Geno’s “Speak English” signs yesterday. Indeed, he noted that it was a reproduction as he could not find a clear picture of the sign in question.

Imagine his surprise when, while surfing through Yahoo’s news, he found a story from Agence France-Presse that contained a very familiar graphic (I do have screen prints of both pages at his request). I don’t have the equipment to compare what AFP is claiming is their own to Jim’s graphic (especially the large version) so I don’t have the “Presstitute Follies” tag on it, but they are eerily-similar. Indeed, if it were a photo, why would it be cropped so closely?

Revisions/extensions (12:58 pm 3/21/2008) – Jim sends along a site, specifically WFMZ-TV 69News, that has an actual photo of the sign. Though it is not a high-quality picture, neither Jim’s graphic nor the one APF claims is a picture taken by them is the sign; “America” is capitalized on the sign, and is not on the graphic.

Hence, I’ve moved this into the “Presstitute Follies” category. Guess AFP’s too lazy to send an actual photographer to Philly for an actual picture and would prefer to rip off bloggers. Bad decision.

Snow bowl

by @ 12:29. Filed under Weather.

The view out of my living room window a few minutes ago…

snow-3-21-2008-small.jpg
(click for the full-size pic)

A couple of things to note:

– The snow’s already a good 5 inches deep
– The water tower, about a quarter-mile away, is all-but-invisible

And here I am without a working snowblower. Figures.

The definitive commentary on Wright and Obama

by @ 11:32. Filed under Politics - National.

I defer to James T. Harris. He too brings up his grandmother, but the takeaway is in the last two paragraphs:

When I asked my grandma about how she felt about the interracial marriage, she looked up at me with a perplexed expression; “What’s the matter with you?” she asked. I reminded her of what she had told me a few years back. Her response was: “James, people change. That was a long time ago." She was in her late 80’s.

Now that’s the audacity of hope.

Go, read.

“But the truth is, that isn’t all that I know of the man.”…He should’ve paid more attention!

by @ 11:17. Filed under Politics - National.

Many church’s are known to be giving organizations.   In the case of Barack Obama’s church, they just keep giving support to the thought that Barack Obama is an opportunist who will say and do anything that will serve his personal purpose.

Reported at Worldnetdaily.com, Jeremiah Wright reprinted a Hamas terror manifesto as his “Pastor’s Page” in the church newsletter.  

How much more does Barack need to know about Wright’s views before he goes beyond simply denouncing them and separates himself from this person?  

On this Good Friday we are reminded  that the Gospels are ultimately a story of  forgiveness, hope and salvation.     This  does not appear to be the gosple  of Jeremiah Wright.   His gospel appears to  be a gospel of hate!

Programming note

by @ 10:45. Filed under Sports.

The regularily-scheduled bracket coverage will be found at TheWisconsinSportsBar today. That is all on the Moldy Mozzarella front.

The Morning Scramble – 3/21/2008

by @ 6:56. Filed under The Morning Scramble.

I guess I should celebrate going better than .500 yesterday considering my 2008 record, but since I know that’s the high point of my tournament this year, I feel the need for some more blues.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1y4RsNFKjs[/youtube]

– Speaking of songs, James Wigderson breaks out into song.
Lawhawk discovers who is behind the scandals in New York and New Jersey’s governor’s offices.
– I bet that Elliot Spitzer is wishing he hung onto power right about now; Brian notes that his replacement is suspected of billing his campaign for some of the costs of his affair. Next in line for the governorship is a Pubbie (or at least what passes for one in New York).
Plebian goes back into the memory vault to pull yet another wrong prediction or two from the Gorebal “Warming” crowd back from the memory hole.
Jo Egelhoff put together a list of programs the state could cut to get rid of the deficit. I’ll bet you didn’t know that the state of Wisconsin subsidizes ethanol at the rate of 20 cents per gallon (which is on top of the federal 51-cent-per-gallon subsidy).
Justin Higgins notes the ‘Rats believe a yearly salary of $31,850 makes one “rich”.
Doubleplusundead is shocked, SHOCKED the ‘Rats selectively enforce election laws they routinely break.
Stan bemoans the fact that President Bush will still be going to Red China for the 1936 Muni…er, 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Curt asks Obama, “Was the Iraq front for oil or not?”
Stable Hand finds a pastor not afraid of the big bad Obama wolf.
John Hawkins answers a heap of questions.

March 20, 2008

Round 1, day 1

by @ 23:13. Filed under Sports.

This will be bumped as necessary, so there may or may not be newer posts below. I’m getting this started at 1:50 pm 3/20/2008.

1:50 pm – So far, not too much damage. Kansas simply crushed Portland State; not unexpected so no real commentary there.

Xavier came back to beat a very game Georgia; that final doesn’t reflect just how in control the Bulldogs were most of the game.

Unfortunately, there was some damage. Michigan State survived an ice-cold Neitzel to knock off Temple to take out one of my 12-5 upset specials. At least I wasn’t stupid enough to have Temple surviving the weekend.

6:12 pm – Unlike previous years, I didn’t wait until Day 2 to have my bracket become number 2. I lost my Cinderella (badly), and none of my other upset specials (Kentucky, Baylor) survived. At least Pittsburgh didn’t disappoint.

8:38 pm – About the only good thing is I don’t have to extend the Suicide Watch to North Carolina and the patriarch Ham (it’s already been issued for MK). There’s also the fact I’ve yet to lose an Elite Eight team, though I’m already missing a Sweet 16. That was very close to an 0-3 early-evening performance, as Belmont gave Duke all they could handle, the Aggies gig BYU, and K-State gives us the first actual upset of the tourney.

11:13 pm – Who said it was a down year for the Big Ten, and why did I listen to them? The Badgers and Purdue make the Big Ten 3-0 in the tourney so far, and I missed two of those. The Boilermakers were the last game I missed tonight, as UCLA almost tripled up on poor Mississippi Valley State, my first 7-10 split came in with West Virginia, and the Golden Domers take out last year’s Cindy.

10-6 on Day 1, one of my Sweet 16 teams toastified. Not my usual Day One performance, but considering my 2008 performance to date, not too bad.

Ahmadinejad – Obama’s other crazy Uncle?

by @ 15:18. Filed under Politics - National.

I read the transcript of Barack Obama’s speech on race.   As I was reading it, I was struck that this speech while intended to address race relations,  gave great incite as to how Obama would handle international relations, especially with countries like Iran.  

In his speech , Barack Obama said about Jeremiah Wright’s abominable comments:

Instead, they expressed a profoundly distorted view of this country — a view that sees white racism as endemic, and that elevates what is wrong with America above all that we know is right with America, a view that sees the conflicts in the Middle East as rooted primarily in the actions of stalwart allies like Israel, instead of emanating from the perverse and hateful ideologies of radical Islam.

As such, Rev. Wright’s comments were not only wrong but divisive, divisive at a time when we need unity; racially charged at a time when we need to come together to solve a set of monumental problems — two wars, a terrorist threat, a falling economy, a chronic health care crisis and potentially devastating climate change; problems that are neither black or white or Latino or Asian, but rather problems that confront us all.

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The Fed…Ready, Fire, Aim

by @ 12:15. Filed under Business.

I spent a large part of my business career in the wireless industry.   When I started, it was a very new industry with few standards and  no history or parallels to draw on.    Throw in  extremely fast growth and we found that many times  the need to make quick significant decisions didn’t  allow us the luxury of  completely analysing and  understanding all the implications of a specific move.   Sometimes it was more necessary to “do something”  rather than “doing nothing” because detailed information wasn’t available, either because  we didn’t have the history  or things moved so fast that  to study and plan for all the implications would make any determined action too late.   Often, we would make an educated guess, implement our decision and have to adjust, or in some cases, clean up later.   Rather than “Ready, Aim, Fire,” we often found ourselves doing “Ready, Fire, Aim.”   I look at the Feds  action regarding Bear Stearns as a “Ready, Fire, Aim” situation.

I’ve read numerous articles this week decrying the Feds action to save, support, bail out (pick your favorite descriptive) of Bear Stearns.   The complaints range from the capitalism purists who want the market and only the market, to determine the winners and losers without outside influence, to those who see the Feds action as more corporate welfare that gift wrapped a lifetime of Christmas and birthday gifts in one pretty package  for JP Morgan.   I don’t think either of these perspectives are accurate.   In fact, I don’t the the Fed’s action had anything to do with “Bear Stearns” the company at all.
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Let’s bounce the mozzarella

by @ 9:09. Filed under Sports.

Selected highlights (soon to be lowlights) of the Bouncing Mozzarella bracket:

– You heard it here first; Wisconsin 63, Memphis 62 in the championship.
– Sorry, Hams (Georgia) and Care Bears (Marquette), for the first-round exits.
– The yearly 7-10 splits: Butler (#7), Davidson (#10), St. Mary’s (#10), West Virginia (#10)
– The first #1 gone; Kansas missing the Sweet 16 to the benefit of this year’s weak Cinderella, Kent State.
– Sorry, Bruce Pearl. We still love ya in the land of cheese and beer, but the road to a Bucky championship goes right through you in the national semi-final.
– There will be 5 opportunities to chant, “Beat (UC)LA!”
– The highest seed to drop in the first round: Vanderbilt.

There’s still time to try to beat me. The Bar and The Morons still have room in their brackets, and they close at tipoff at 11:20 (probably a few minutes early).

The folly of Kelo v City of New London

by @ 8:25. Filed under Business, Politics.

(H/T – Jon Ham)

Remember the Kelo decision almost 2 years ago, giving the city of New London, Connecticut and developer Corcoran Jennison carte blanche to force out a bunch of homeowners for the sole purpose of gentrifying the Fort Trumbill area? It looks like that gentrification won’t happen anytime soon, even in a reduced role:

Faced with a tight lending climate, the Corcoran Jennison company has asked the Federal Housing Authority to back an $11.5 million loan to fund the long-delayed construction of housing on the Fort Trumbull peninsula.

Corcoran Jennison applied for the mortgage insurance last Friday, said Kristine Foye, spokeswoman for the New England Regional Office of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The request was filed three months before a crucial May 29 deadline for the Boston-based developer to secure financing and sign a construction contract for an 80-unit complex of rental apartments and townhouses.

City officials and residents have closely watched the progress of the project, which would be the first new construction since eminent domain cleared portions of the peninsula for redevelopment.

Newsbusters notes the New London Day (the source of the blockquote) couldn’t bring itself to remember Sue Kelo. Between the legal bills and the extended time the land has sat vacant, I wonder if that apartment complex will ever replace the tax money that Kelo and her fellow former residents were paying.

I know it’s not quite the same, but I have a question for the folks at Milwaukee City Hall; how’s that Park East footprint looking? Do we have any construction going on that land?

The Morning Scramble/Open Thread Thursday – 3/20/2008

I really need to thank Mary Katharine Ham for putting music in her linkage posts. Mea culpa maxima for not tipping my hat yesterday.

It’s spring, so it’s flood season (at least if you’re not in Wisconsin, where we’re getting more snow starting tonight). That means it’s time for some blues while you pop through the abbreviated linkage here and hopefully provide some things I miss on a regular basis in the comments.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWLw7nozO_U[/youtube]

– I’ll be on this one in more detail in a bit, but Jon Ham points out why the Kelo decision was so bad.
Eric doesn’t care about CAIR.
Todd Lohenry talks change.
The Emperor has the Smackdown of the Day™.
Jim Lynch reports there is some sanity left in Philadelphia. Hey AB, next time you and the Big Pilot decide to do a $100 lunch at Geno’s, let me know.
Rusty says the latest M-m-m-m-m-max bin Laden audiotape is more evidence Osama is dead. Since M-m-m-m-max bitched about the Mohammed cartoons, it’s time to put them back up…
jyllands.jpg

There’s a lot more out there, but it’s time to do some bracketology. That mozzarella doesn’t bounce by itself, you know.

March 19, 2008

Democrats and the Irony of Race

by @ 11:52. Filed under Politics - National.

Of the two major parties, the Democrats are the party of race.

Exit polls in 2004 showed that John Kerry won 88% of the African American vote.   In the same race, Zogby claimed that Kerry out drew Bush in Hispanic voters  by 65%/34%.

In the 2008 primaries there has barely been a Democratic contest that didn’t have stories talking about how Obama or Hillary were likely to win or lose a particular state due to the presence, absence or mix of race included in the state.
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The Morning Scramble – 3/19/2008

by @ 8:00. Filed under The Morning Scramble.

Once again, I stress that this is not yet a regular feature, but methinks we need some music to get me…er, you in the mood. Maestro,….

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Sam5omG0v0[/youtube]

Whilest you’re listening to one of the best metal songs of all time, go ahead and start reading.

Michelle Malkin points to a full rise out of Chris Matthew’s Leg.
Tom McMahon works his Photoshop magic once again on the Obama/Wright fiasco.
John Hawkins nails what Barack Obama really is.
Flashy has some more questions for Obama.
– One of those was also asked by Jim Geraghty.
– I guess the NYT should have listened to Tom; Allahpundit has the sordid details of their faceplant into the tank.
PJ-Comix has been invited to the 2008 Media Research Center Gala Awards.
Lawhawk cheers the pending release of much of Hillary Clinton’s daily schedule from her time as first lady/co-President.
Kevin Fischer says, “Teach your children well about taxes.”
Mary Lazich points out half the country, including Wisconsin, have corporate income taxes that make doing business in the US the most-taxing in the industrialized world.
– The NRSC isn’t the only Senatorial entity dealing with retirements; the odds of the Pubbies retaking the state Senate just dropped with the announcement of Carol Roessler’s retirement (via JSOnline’s AllPolitics). Of course, it could also be a golden opportunity to replace a RINO with a conservative.
Gateway Pundit reminds us the gulags in Cuba are not at Club Gitmo.
USCitizen has links to the transcripts of the Heller oral arguments. Stan has a link to the audio.
Bill Quick uses the Heller case to highlight why I’m a conservative, not a card-carrying Republican (though because I paid my $29 for the Milwaukee County Lincoln Day dinner, I’m in the party).
Pete wants to be a Knight at White Castle without going to the far side of the Root River Divide (side note; I miss Ed Zeppelin).
– From the Religion of Pieces file, Wolking’s World finds 84% of Palestinians support the deadly attack on a Jerusalem seminary earlier this month.
– Continuing with the Pieces theme, Weasel Zippers found out that our friends the Saudis (® James Taranto) once again refuse to recognize religions other than Islam.
– The Winter That Won’t Die™ will be dumping some more snow on us Friday, or so says the National Weather Service now (the link will update with the latest forecast).
Charlie Sykes says, “Ahhhh, the power of Wisconsin cheese.”
CDR Salamander exposes the boondoggle that is the VH-71, which is slated to be Marine One when/if it enters service. Maybe it’s just me, but the combo behind the VH-71 sounds just a wee bit like the one behind the KC-45.
Swint answers Zimbabwe dictator Robert Mugabe’s question, “Who is better than Zimbabwe?”
Uncle Jimbo is touring the country on the Heroes Tour, and he has a damn good interview with Mark Finelli.
Jo Egelhoff asks what brand of police station Appleton is getting for its over-budget money.
Mary wants the fidelity-challenged governors to “speak now or forever hold their peace”.
Youssef Ibrahim says it’s time to push the Saudis on oil prices.

Blogging will be a bit light on my end. Between a trip to Madison and final (or is that first?) prep for the first fantasy baseball draft, I won’t be around a computer much the rest of the day.

March 18, 2008

Obama – “I don’t want to be an enabler”…Uh huh!

by @ 22:37. Filed under Politics - National.

Barack Obama has yet to explain why, when he knew about Jeremiah Wright’s hateful speech, he remained a part of Wright’s congregation for 20 years.   Maybe he just has a tin ear for hateful speech?   Maybe he has a heart larger than any of us and is able to forgive heinous comments that you and I would recoil at?

Apparently not.  

Take a look at this video of Barack commenting on the Imus’  remark about female basketball players.


Obama imus
by dollarsandsense123

In case you missed it or don’t want to watch the link, here are the relevant questions and Obama’s answer:

David Gregory – "¦Do you think (Imus) should be fired?

Barack Obama – I don’t think MSNBC should be carrying the kinds of hateful remarks that Imus uttered the other day.   He has a track record of making those kinds of remarks"¦

David Gregory"¦will you or would you be a guest on his show in the future?

Barack Obama – no I would not"¦.he was fine when I was on that show.   I don’t want to be an enabler or be encouraging in any way of the kind of programming that results in the unbelievably offensive statements that were made just a few days ago.

So….Obama believes appearing on another Imus show, a show that Barack says has a track record for hateful remarks would be enabling or encouraging that kind of behavior.

Wow!   1 appearance or 20 years, 1 appearance or 20 years, 1 appearance or 20 years, 1 appearance or 20 years.

Revisions/extensions (11:24 pm 3/18/2008, steveegg) – Attempted to fix the embedded video.

Mandatory YouTubage

by @ 21:44. Filed under Politics - National.

(H/T – Cuffy via doubleplusundead)

Correct me if I’m wrong, but I didn’t exactly hear a specific repudiation of the post-9/11 sermon from Rev. Wright…

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9HUdF9OZa8[/youtube]

…by Barack Hussein Obama today.

Is the NRE Spring Hill campaign about to backfire?

by @ 18:18. Filed under Politics - National.

Cross-posting from the TownHall version

That’s pretty much what Shoebox is saying in stating we are going to see a Clinton/Obama ticket on the Dem end. I’m not yet quite sold on that inevitability, either as a ticket or as the next occupants of the Oval Office and the Naval Observatory. At this point, all that ticket is guaranteed to do is prevent the collapse of the Democratic Party that the various campaigns to keep Clinton alive, from MKH’s efforts to Rush Limbaugh’s quite-successful Operation Chaos to my own Spring Hill campaign, was designed to bring about.

It definitely is (I am not ready to say “was”) a high-risk/high-reward effort. I can’t speak for anybody else, but my hope is that things would get so caustic, the Nightmare Ticket would not happen and a major core constituency would take November off. Unlike Shoebox, I believe things are that caustic, though like him, I doubt that we will see John Edwards or Bill Richardson on the ticket for much the same reason he believes that ticket is inevitable. Even at that, most of those on that short list have the same “racialism” problem, only that would be in the open.

If the Nightmare Ticket does happen, I am counting on so many panders to the left being made that it would be rather difficult for them to return to the center. Fortunately, Obama made that job a bit harder with today’s speech. I’ll also state that neither we nor the middle were Obama’s target audience. Ed Morrissey believes it was the superdelegates. I humbly disagree; they’re looking for electability in the general election, and on that front, this speech sure seems sorely lacking. Rather, I believe it was to reunite the various colors of the radical wing of the Dems behind him, the general election be damned.

That speech, and the reaction to it, also plays into something Shoebox put up yesterday on Obama losing Generation Y. Because The Hammer is a Gen Y’er, I’ll point in the general direction of her take on that speech. The $192,000,000 (or whatever is going to be spent on the general election) question is whether the Gen Y’ers and the middle are simply going to be turned off to Obama or turned off to politics entirely. If it simply is to Obama, the election will be John McCain’s for the taking regardless of his missteps with conservatives and regardless of whether the Dems heal themselves between now and November.

If, however, the trend of the middle to disappear from politics entirely continues, it will be a “base turnout” election. If there is the Nightmare Ticket or “Son of Nightmare” Ticket, the various portions of the Dem base will be united, the middle will be pretty much out of play, and it will be up to McCain to actually heal his rift with conservatives to come out on top. Unfortunately, for every step McCain takes to heal that rift, he takes one to reopen it.

I haven’t said it enough, but I would be remiss if I didn’t say I thank God I got him blogging. Very short story – he was a regular commenter over at Michelle Malkin’s place, and stumbled into a few of my debate liveblogs from my pingbacks to her liveblogs. Eventually, I recognized just how good he was and he eventually agreed to try blogging as a guest-blogger. I’ll say he took to it like a duck to water; he’s bailed me out of a couple of blogging funks I’ve been in, and he’s improved the discussion here a lot.

The “Dream Team” is now guaranteed!

by @ 16:47. Filed under Politics - National.

WARNING: What you are about to read could cause black helicopters to hover over your house.   Read with extreme caution!

To steal a style from Glenn Beck:

What you need to know:

Barack Obama’s implosion over Jeremiah Wright has guaranteed that the Democratic ticket will include both Barack and Hillary.
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Congress calls for the end of DC’s gun ban

by @ 16:24. Filed under Guns, Politics - National.

Matt Lewis, among others, noted that John McCain joined a rather extraordinary amicus brief on District of Columbia v. Heller. It is rather extraordinary for a couple of reasons. First, it is extraordinary in its conclusion:

In sum, historically Congress has interpreted the Second Amendment as recognizing the right of law-abiding individuals to keep and bear arms. This Court should give due deference to the repeated findings over different historical epochs by Congress, a co-equal branch of government, that the Amendment guarantees the personal right to possess firearms.

The District’s prohibitions on mere possession by law-abiding persons of handguns in the home and having usable firearms there are unreasonable per se. No purpose would be served by remanding this case for further fact finding or other proceedings. This Court should affirm the decision below, Parker v. District of Columbia, 478 F.3d 370 (D.C. Cir. 2007).

That in itself is a rather stunning and refreshing change from the official position of the executive branch, which in essence is that, while there is an individual Second Amendment right, all existing gun controls, including the DC gun ban, do not run afoul of that.

The second is who else joined this brief. At the top is Vice President Dick Cheney, who joined in his capacity as President of the Senate. I guess that blows the notion of him actually running the country out of the water. There are also a smattering of Democrats, some of whom I would never have guessed would say that an outright ban on handguns is unreasonable.

Specifically, those in the Wisconsin delegation that signed on are Senator Russ Feingold and Representatives Steve Kagen, Ron Kind, Tom Petri, Paul Ryan and Jim Sensenbrenner (the latter 3 I would expect as they are what remains of the Republican half of the delegation).

Hey Doyle. Hey Decker. You mopes listening?

Is this “Change” we can believe in?

by @ 13:56. Filed under Politics - National.

Talking constantly about change, I wonder if this is the kind of change Barack Obama refers to:

Regarding his knowledge of Jerimiah Wright’s sermon content:

Huffington Post Blog  3/14/08

The statements that Rev. Wright made that are the cause of this controversy were not statements I personally heard him preach while I sat in the pews of Trinity or heard him utter in private conversation.

In Barack’s “speech on race” 3/18/08

Did I know him to be an occasionally fierce critic of American domestic and foreign policy? Of course. Did I ever hear him make remarks that could be considered controversial while I sat in church? Yes.

Regarding funds he received from Rezko:

From the Chicago Sun-Times June, 2007

Obama has collected at least $168,308 from Rezko and his circle. Obama also has taken in an unknown amount of money from people who attended fund-raising events hosted by Rezko since the mid-1990s.

But seven months ago, Obama told the Sun-Times his “best estimate” was that Rezko raised “between $50,000 and $60,000” during Obama’s political career.

From the Politico  3/14/08

Obama’s acknowledgment that Rezko raised as much as $250,000 for earlier campaigns, initially made in an interview with The Chicago Tribune and confirmed later to Politico, came after a year-and-a-half-long trickle of admissions about Rezko’s fundraising role and more than a month after Obama’s aides contended that they had identified and jettisoned all Rezko-linked cash. It also came as Rezko’s trial on corruption charges, underway in Chicago, brought increased scrutiny of Obama’s ties to the real estate developer, fast-food magnate and political insider.

Democratic Presidential Candidate, Barack Obama, seems to have a problem getting his arms around the facts!

Obama speech – live thread

by @ 9:16. Filed under Politics - National.

Even though I’m also on the Hot Air live thread, I may as well do one as well. I won’t guarantee the dignity lamp will remain lit; that depends on Barack Obama.

The Morning Scramble – 3/18/2008

by @ 8:49. Filed under The Morning Scramble.

I don’t know if this is going to be a regular feature, but why not take some mandatory linkage out for a test spin? After all, what good is a feed reader with 150 or so blogs in it if I don’t share the love?

James Wigderson hates yard signs with a passion.
– Why? Uncle Fred found a yard sign without the “paid for by” text.
Weasel Zippers found some sanity in Jolly Old England as female Islamic doctors no longer can use their religion to hide behind their veils
Kevin Fischer points out the inanity of Jim “Craps” Doyle’s (WEAC/Potawatomi-For Sale) position that in order to fix potholes, we have to raid the transportation fund that is designated to, among other things, fix potholes.
Tom McMahon shows off the best Pez dispenser evah (at least if you’re a guy).
Ragnar Danneskjold, R.I.N.O. Hunter, finds out John McCain still doesn’t get it on illegal immigration.
Jim Geraghty catches Hillary Clinton in a fish story.
Mark McNally breaks out in song on the Obama/Wright mess.
Mike points us to a great piece by Shelby Steele on the Obama/Wright mess.
– Continuing on the Obama theme, Bruce has a few questions.
Erick at RedState has the phrase of the day – Demasochist Party.
The American Pundit and Gabriel Malor both report on a 85-year-old story of melting Arctic ice. Yep, Gorebal Warming’s been around that long.
– Speaking of Gorebal Warming, Dean points out that bacteria pump out more carbon than we do.
Warner Todd Huston at Stop the ACLU has some good news on the “Fairness” Doctrine, at least for the next 10 months.
Alan Steinberg has the headline of the day – “Prices Going Up… Confidence in Government Going Down”.
Silent E is bucking for a fill-in gig for WSJ’s Best of the Web with his exposing of the Dumb Headline of the Day.
See-Dubya has some not-so-breaking news on the lack of conservatives in the LeftStreamMedia.
– There’s so many places to choose from for news on freshly-minted New York Governor David Paterson’s admission that he cheated on his wife (and that she cheated on him), but I’ll go with Slublog’s fingering of the water supply in Albany. Also, don’t miss the comments that flashy dug up.
– Speaking of New York, JammieWearingFool relays a report that the former governor was headed toward Swimmer territory in the alcohol department.
Skinbad does the math on Elliot Spitzer and Paul McCartney, and finds that it pays to pay by the day.
Rick Esenberg catches up on the flurry of ads in the Supreme Court race.
Rick Moran asks whether capitalism and hence conservatism is dead.
William Teach brings news that the UN doesn’t know what’s in its own “Universal Declaration of Human Rights”.
Jib questions the wisdom of touting plans to be number two when by the time the structure in question is built, it will be no better than number four.
– You know sports doping is bad when Janet Evans catches a story on doping in German billiards.
– Since the idiots at Fox won’t have a new season of “24” until next January, the folks at Blogs4Bauer continue their strike replacement episodes with Episode 11.

Revisions/extensions (9:00 am 3/18/2008) – And one more I was going to add before the hamsters in the server briefly went on strike (let me put it this way; the dogs are happy now):
Gateway Pundit is offering a special on Wright’s Greatest Hits.

Roll bloat – more oppressor vs. oppressed

by @ 6:45. Filed under Politics, The Blog.

First, I have to give a shout-out to Free Whitewater. The proprietor, who goes by the nom de blog John Adams, has been rather controversial in local politics, so much so that the police chief of Whitewater, James Coan, with the blessing of City Manager Kevin Brunner, used city resources to try to unmask and silence Adams.

Needless to say, Messrs. Coan and Brunner, along with Whitewater Police Detective Tina Winger, have earned their departments not-exactly-honored spots on the Harrassers In Government portion of the roll for ignoring Article I, Section 3 of the Wisconsin Constitution.

March 17, 2008

Recommended reading – St. Paddy’s Day edition

by @ 17:57. Filed under Miscellaneous.

It’s been a while since I brought out the linking stick and gave you a good idea of what is in my overbloated feed reader. Since doubleplusundead started his “links from around the moronosphere”, I may as well do something like that (a bit abbreviated because I have some green beer to drink and some cards to play):

E.M. Zanotti notes that, a mere 5 years after he called for a ban on gambling on college sports, John McCain is running a NCAA tournament pool, complete with prizes.

– Related to that, both the morons and the bar have pools up. Time to bounce some mozzarella.

Brian Fraley fills out his own bracket, and no it’s not basketball.

Anwyn has the quote of the day on the Obama/Wright mess.

Christian Schneider recalibrates the Obama-Meter.

Jim Lynch questions the wisdom of using the La Raza card to defend against the Wright card.

– Speaking of moonbats, Daniel checked up on state Senator (and Milwaukee County executive candidate) Lena Taylor’s MySpace page and found a very telling pic.

Sean Hackbarth finds all three surviving Presidential candidates’ positions on the economy wanting.

The NRE Spring Hill campaign bearing fruit

by @ 15:13. Filed under Politics - National.

I’ve been strangely silent on the Barack Obama/Jeremiah Wright bomb; fortunately, Shoebox hasn’t been. All I really have to add is, if the fine conservatives in Texas and Ohio had not listened to Rush Limbaugh and joined what he calls Operation Chaos and what I call the NRE Spring Hill campaign, this would have continued to be buried by the media. It isn’t like Wright all of a sudden started going off the deep end a couple weeks ago.

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