I Try Not to Be a Snob

I want to agree with Mark Steyn about hip-hop, and I almost kind of could convince myself to be snobbish enough to agree with him if I didn’t know it would just be me succumbing to my worst personality traits.

Yeah, for my money, Billie Holiday is considerably more awesome than Jay-Z. But I’m not here to tell you who is a better credit to the black community. I don’t think Billie Holiday speaks to the current generation. Do I wish she did? Yeah, kind of. But my parents didn’t get rock and roll, so…

I’m not going to talk about rap music. I stopped paying attention around 1994. I’m too busy listening to the stuff I consider timeless.

Do you think they’d do okay on American Idol?

I Don’t Care About Chuck Hagel

I’m sitting out the fight over Chuck Hagel’s nomination. His chief opponents are despicable, but I have never thought very highly of Hagel, either. He didn’t impress me at all in today’s hearing. I don’t really want him to run the Pentagon. And I think the president would get almost as much out of Hagel being blocked as he would from him winning confirmation. It just doesn’t make much difference to me.

If he is confirmed, it will be a real poke in the eye of the neo-conservatives and they’ll have to live with a Secretary of Defense who wants nothing more than to screw them. I can see the entertainment value in that, even if it isn’t a very healthy situation for our foreign policy establishment. If Obama was hoping for a lot of Republican cover for downsizing the Pentagon, I think that pipe dream just blew up like a pipe bomb, but I could still enjoy the drama and schadenfreude.

If he is not confirmed, it will be because the Republicans filibuster him. And that will give me the chance to laugh in Harry Reid’s face. But it will also highlight for every reasonable Republican in the country, including people like Brent Scowcroft and former Sen. John Warner, that the GOP cannot be entrusted with power. It will really isolate the neo-conservatives and bolster the institutional bias of Washington in the Democrats’ favor in a way not seen since Roosevelt.

It’s kind of a no-lose situation, as far as I am concerned. You’d have to work hard to convince me that there is more upside with the former scenario than the latter.

So, I’ll just be over here in the corner munching my popcorn. I could really care less what happens.

Israeli Air Force Bombs a Research Center Near Damascus in Syria

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{Update1} Video added.

Israel and the US have warned Syria for proliferation of chemical weapons to its ally Hezbollah in Lebanon. Syria has also been warned to prevent its stockpile of chemical weapons to fall into the hands of rebels or worse, the jihadists fighting alongside the rebel forces. During recent days, Israeli drones were seen flying above Lebanon and Syrian territory. This past night the IAF executed a bombing raid and targeted a weapons research center near Damascus. Not only Syria has strongly send protests about intrusion of its sovereign state, also Iran and especially Russia send a strong statement this action was unacceptable. Russia has warned there would be repercussions when any foreign state would attack Syria.

The Syrian civil war has just been handed further international dimension, an escalation no one benefits at this crucial moment. Apparently Obama gave his blessing to Israel’s attack before the strike was executed. All the chatter had a basis for truth in it after all, to my surprise. Netanyahu has gotten his focus on national security back where he had lost the focus due to the surprise results in the recent election. Netanyahu 3, Obama 0. Speaking of pre-empting any change in US foreign policy in the Middle-East. Obama is clearly not the one who will have the initiative on policy as the Arab winter settles across North Africa and Israel takes the lead in the region as it has done throughout its 65 year history.

There are two story lines put out in the media, an attack on an arms convoy transferring Russian SA 17 missile launchers to Hezbollah in Lebanon and the attack on Syria’s weapons research center.

Analysis: Syria center long been on Israel’s radar

(JPost) – Although details are still sketchy, Wednesday’s reported air strike appears to have targeted a military research center near Damascus – a center that fits the definition of Syria’s Scientific Studies and Research Center, known by its French acronym, CERS.

Syrian state television said Israel had hit “scientific research centers aimed at raising the level of resistance and self-defense,” a description that fits well with CERS, which has been labeled a state organization responsible for developing biological and chemical weapons and transferring them to Hezbollah and Hamas.

Back in 2010, Brig.-Gen. (res.) Nitzan Nuriel, a former director of the National Security Council’s Counter-terrorism Bureau, issued a warning to the international community, saying CERS would be demolished if it continued to arm terrorist organizations. The facility has long been on Israel’s radar as a top national security threat.

Scientific Studies and Research Center (SSRC) other name CERS (French)

(NTI) – In 2005, U.S. President George W. Bush issued Executive Order 13382: “Blocking Property of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferators and their Supporters,” which placed the SSRC on the U.S. Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Nationals list and prohibited U.S. citizens and residents from doing business with the SSRC. [8] In 2007, the U.S. Treasury Department froze the assets of other SSRC subsidiaries, listing SSRC as the “Syrian government agency responsible for developing and producing non-conventional weapons and the missiles to deliver them.”[9] The suspicions mostly revolved around the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons and ballistic missiles.

[Executive Order13382 targeted companies in North Korea, Iran and Syria – Oui]

Syria may respond to Israeli air strike, says ambassador

(Guardian) – ‘Scientific research centre’ north-west of Damascus was damaged in attack, according to Syrian state TV.

Syria’s ambassador to Lebanon has said Damascus has the option to respond to what it says was an Israeli air strike on a research centre on the outskirts of the Syrian capital on Wednesday. Syria could take “a surprise decision to respond to the aggression of the Israeli warplanes”, Ali Abdul Karim Ali was quoted as telling a Hezbollah-run news website.

Syrian state television said the country’s military command had confirmed a “scientific research centre” north-west of Damascus had been struck at dawn on Wednesday, causing damage. Two people were killed and five wounded in the attack on the site, it said, which was engaged in “raising the level of resistance and self-defence.”

Lebanese media claimed a dozen Israel Defence Forces (IDF) fighter planes had flown sorties over Lebanon’s airspace from Tuesday afternoon until Wednesday morning.

A Lebanese army statement said: “Four Israeli planes entered Lebanese airspace at 4.30pm on Tuesday. They were replaced four hours later by another group of planes, which overflew southern Lebanon until 2am, and a third mission took over, finally leaving at 7.55am on Wednesday morning.”

The IDF said it had no comment.

Yesterday’s diary – Israel’s Hasbara Crew: Pre-empting Any Peace Initiative by Kerry.

Weird Immigration Reform Opposition

Rich ‘Starburst’ Lowry, writing in Politico, continues the emerging convention of referring to the Gang of Eight’s immigration outline as “Rubio’s Plan.” And he doesn’t like it. What’s interesting is that he isn’t really very straightforward about why he doesn’t like it. While he makes clear that his objection is mainly about creating a “legal status” for undocumented workers and not their potential full citizenship, can he really be that hung up on the letter of the law? Is Lowry’s problem that folks who violated our immigration laws are getting a pass on it? That’s it? He wants justice?

The word is ‘amnesty,’ and it seems to have a special power over the conservative mind. Is this some relic of the amnesty that Jimmy Carter granted to the Vietnam-era draft dodgers? How did this word come to have such a negative connotation in Republican circles? Ordinary people understand that people came here to work because there was a demand for their work. Countless employers were completely complicit in this arrangement, and only political resistance to overtly allowing this immigration made it necessary for people to break the law. Does Lowry demand justice for Tyson Chicken executives or countless agricultural outfits?

There are those who oppose the browning of America on racial terms. Others oppose it on purely political terms (those Latinos are liberal). That’s self-serving and understandable. But opposing immigration reform as a matter of fairness? That’s just juvenile. If Lowry were serious, he be advocating provisions in the bill that he felt would prevent the same thing from happening all over again. He’d be promoting legal immigration of farm workers sufficient to meet demand for their labor, rather than the continuation of a racist immigration policy that won’t openly admit our need for Latino labor. But he doesn’t have any positive suggestions.

He just wants to say ‘no.’

Maybe that’s what his National Review audience demands.

Hagel Confirmation Hearing

I am still totally unenthusiastic about Chuck Hagel’s nomination to be Secretary of Defense. But, I am also a committed opponent of Stupid. Therefore, with the exception of the bashing he takes for being a former homophobe, I doubt I will agree with any of the criticism he takes today. After all, the criticism comes down to the idea that Israel’s government can never be questioned, let alone criticized, and that Iran must be bomb, bomb, bombed. Nothing could be more boring and depressing than those positions. Also, MORE DEFENSE SPENDING!!

If you are watching on CSPAN, feel free to make comments.

Israel’s Hasbara Crew: Pre-empting Any Peace Initiative by Kerry

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Whipping up public opinion on how desastrous the Obama administration views Israel and, oh horror, shaping US foreign policy towards a new peace initiative in the Middle-East. Best is to knie-cap Secretary of State John Kerry before he even started. Watch all israeli lobby groups on the Hill to inform Congress of such a treacherous act and invite the new members to spend a holiday in Eretz Israel, all expenses paid.

Here comes the pressure

(Jerusalem Post) – While last week’s elections were justifiably front-page news in the local press, it’s important to remember that for the rest of the world, particularly here in the Middle East, life continued as usual, with media reports still covering all the other events and developing stories.

While relegated to the back pages, the Syrian civil war continues to spiral out of control, with the current death toll according to the United Nations exceeding 60,000, nearly half of whom were civilians either caught in the crossfire between the regime’s forces and the insurgents or simply massacred by one side or another.

And even closer to home there was yet another instance of anti-Semitic propaganda being spewed – not by Hamas, but by our peace partner, the moderate, Fatah-affiliated Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. As reported by this newspaper, last week Abbas was quoted as saying that “the Zionist movement had links with the Nazis before World War II.”


AS REPORTED by this newspaper last Friday, at incoming US Secretary of State Sen. John Kerry’s (D-Massachusetts) confirmation hearing a day earlier, Kerry said he hoped the Israeli elections would help restart the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians.

“So much of what we aspire to achieve and what we need to do globally, what we need to do in the Maghreb and South Asia, South Central Asia, throughout the Gulf, all of this is tied to what can or doesn’t happen with respect to Israel-Palestine,” he said.


TO HIS credit, Netanyahu, who surely knows Abbas’s true sentiments (despite the fact that some of his policies don’t always reflect that knowledge), told a delegation of visiting US Congressman he is aware that instant solutions were not possible, despite the latest “peace” buzz.

As a resident of Judea and Samaria, my hope is that our prime minister, along with our newly elected representatives will withstand the pressure on Israel to make territorial concessions which will surely be applied by Kerry and many other international bodies, who not only ignore Abbas’s incitement, but are failing to prevent the death and suffering of so many other people around the world, simply because they are not part of their Israel/Palestinian infatuation.

Author is a resident of Judea and Samaria in Israel illegal occupied Palestinian territory.

Josh Hasten is the president of the Jerusalem-based Bar-Am Public Relations Firm, specializing in working with non-profit organizations, NGOs and municipalities. Josh recently launched the website www.lettersforisrael.com as a service to assist pro-Israel writers in getting their letters and op-eds published. He is also the host of several radio shows including Israel Hasbara Hour, on www.Israelnationalradio.com. Josh was the CAMERA organization’s 2009 Letter Writer of the Year, and resides in Elazar, Israel.  

Newtown Children to Sing at Super Bowl

Twenty-six kids from Sandy Hook Elementary will sing America the Beautiful at the Superbowl on Sunday. This was announced by the NFL yesterday. The number 26 is the same number of children and adults who were slaughtered at Sandy Hook in December. Apparently an anonymous donor is paying their expenses.

“It’s an honor,” said a local parent who did not wish to be identified.

I imagine this will not go over well with those who support an extreme interpretation of the 2nd amendment, however even people who comment on a popular sports blog, Pro Football Talk, where one can usually find mostly conservative comments whenever politics rears its head there, are generally supportive.

I saw a poll last night on the Rachel Maddow Show that 86% of NRA members support universal background checks, a position Wayne LaPierre yesterday at the Senate Hearing spoke adamantly, if somewhat uncomfortably, against. That’s 86% of NRA members. Support among the general public is even higher – 92%.

Perhaps we are seeing a change in the country’s views on gun control. Four senators have gone public, Republicans Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and Mark Kirk of Illinois, and Democrats Joe Manchin of West Virginia (previously a vocal NRA supporter) and Chuck Schumer of New York, regarding their discussions regarding a bill that would require universal background checks for gun purchases (the same universal background checks the NRA supported in 1999). Last year none of these Senators would have even considered advocating such a bill with the possible exception of Schumer.

In any case, even if you aren’t a football fan, you may want to tune in at six pm on Sunday to catch the kids from Newtown, CT, children who lost their schoolmates, teachers and Principal to a deranged young man with am AR-15 Bushmaster, sing America the Beautiful. I doubt anyone will dare heckle those children.

Here are members of the Sandy Hook Elementary Choir singing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” with Ingrid Michaelson:

After hearing that, I have no doubt they’ll do a great job on Sunday night with hundreds of millions watching on television.

What’s Your Political History?

I think you can learn a lot about a person by knowing who they supported politically throughout their life. Not everyone is willing to share that kind of information, of course, and some people aren’t honest about it, but I will tell you my history and I encourage you to do the same.

I was born in September 1969, during the first year of Nixon’s first term. The first presidential election of my life took place in 1972. I was too young to have an opinion, but I still remember my older brother Andrew’s McGovern/Shriver t-shirt. I think that was a consensus in my family, although I can’t swear by it.

In 1976, I was in 2nd grade and we had a straw poll. This caused me to ask my parents who I should support. My father was very angry about Gerald Ford’s pardon of Nixon, so I voted for Carter. I still remember that one very cute girl in my class voted for Ford. I held it against her all the way through high school graduation.

In 1980, I was very impressed by the campaign of John Anderson and basically supported him, but I knew enough at the age of 11 to know that Anderson didn’t have a chance. I still remember watching the election returns come in showing a Reagan landslide and being very afraid about it. I used to have drawings I made at the time that portrayed Reagan as a warmonger who would unleash a nuclear war.

In the fall of 1984, I was having trouble in school and with my parents and politics were not foremost in my mind, but I supported Gary Hart’s candidacy. I don’t remember being too disappointed or surprised when Mondale was crushed.

In 1988, I was finally old enough to vote and I supported Gary Hart again. When his campaign imploded, I supported Dukakis, and I voted for him without any reservations.

In 1992, I supported Paul Tsongas, although I was intrigued by Jerry Brown. When Clinton survived all his scandals, I enthusiastically voted for him.

In 1996, I was disgusted with Clinton and his campaign finance violations and assumed he would be impeached if reelected. I abstained.

In 2000, I got politically involved for the first time, volunteering for Bill Bradley and fully supporting his effort to reform campaign financing. I was so disgusted by the selection of Joe Lieberman as Gore’s running mate that I didn’t decide to vote for their ticket until the Saturday before for the election.

In 2004, I was intrigued and inspired by Howard Dean’s campaign, but I did not think he could win and supported John Kerry.

In 2008, I was initially ambivalent about whether to support John Edwards or Barack Obama, but was certain that I would support either against a restoration of the Clinton dynasty. I was happy when it was Obama who got the upper hand as the anti-Clinton candidate.

In 2012, I supported Obama without reservation.

So, what’s your history?

Who Says There is a Rubio Plan?

I hear people talking about Marco Rubio’s plan to do comprehensive immigration reform, but I can’t find the plan. He’s been giving interviews, and I can try to piece together a plan by reading transcripts of those interviews. The fullest explanation I could find was in a column/interview written by Matthew Kaminski in the Wall Street Journal. Then there is the brief press release that Rubio issued in response to the president’s plan. I actually agree with Marc Caputo’s take on Rubio’s plan. He is being purposefully vague on details.

What piqued my interest was seeing Erick Son of Erick’s declaration that he doesn’t like Rubio’s plan. I tried to understand his argument. I really did. I even followed his link to Ben Domenech’s objections, but I found his column almost impenetrable, as well. Some of the charges that Mr. Erickson levels at Rubio’s “plan” don’t seem to be warranted by what Rubio has so far put on the record.

I was confused almost immediately.

On the specific plan, for lack of legislation, it is clearly written by a group of men who seemingly love government, but do not love free markets, small businesses, or individuals. It is a plan based on faith in government, not free enterprise or the American people.

I read that first sentence about twelve times before I began to have confidence that it didn’t contain fatal typos and might actually be an honest effort to communicate. There is no specific plan. Rubio is not a “group of men.” Erickson appears to be conflating “Rubio’s plan” with the plan of the Group of Eight. But the Group of Eight includes Democrats Chuck Schumer, Dick Durbin, Michael Bennet, and Bob Menendez. Rubio is also part of the group, but their plan isn’t his plan. It’s not Jeff Flake’s plan, or Lindsey Graham’s plan, or John McCain’s plan. It is the Group of Eight’s plan.

In any case, Erickson seems to think that he knows what is in Rubio’s plan. I’m guessing that he is just assuming that Rubio’s plan is the same as the Gang of Eight’s plan, although Rubio has been out freelancing all over the place.

Erickson doesn’t seem to know what he is talking about in any case. The Domenech piece he attempts to use for intellectual underpinning, is really an incoherent effort to blame Cesar Chavez for creating undocumented migrant workers, and it at least seems to argue that we should let our fruit-pickers enter the country legally and gain citizenship rights. In other words, the article he links doesn’t support Erickson’s argument in any kind of direct way. Erickson opposes efforts to “secure the border” because he recognizes that the Republicans will never agree that it has been secured. He opposes any kind of E-Verify system as an effort to make employers prove a negative (that the people they’ve hired are here legally), but that is not only a stupid thing to say, it is directly contradicted by Rubio in the Wall Street Journal piece:

Mr. Rubio stands by workplace enforcement as an essential component of any immigration reform. If the guest-worker and expanded high-tech visa programs are adopted, he says, “you want to protect those folks that are coming here . . . and the value of their visa and the decision they’ve made. You’re not protecting them if you allow their wages and their status to be undermined by further illegal immigration in the future.”

He says that modern technology—whether E-Verify or something else—ought to let employers easily check whether their hires are in the country legally. Enforcement is meant not to “punish” but to provide employers “safe haven,” he says.

Finally, Erick Son of Erick offers these objections:

The plan does nothing to address the black market for unskilled, low cost migrant work. It does nothing to deal with the long delays in the present immigration system. It does nothing to actually solve our immigration problems, but hides behind the construct of “comprehensive” reform. Along the way, it potentially adds more people to already overwhelmed entitlement programs, but then that too is another kicked can.

The problem with this is that it ignores virtually everything that both the Gang of Eight and Marco Rubio have said. For example, Rubio complained that the president’s proposal “ignored the need for a modernized guest worker program that will ensure those who want to immigrate legally to meet our economy’s needs can do so in the future.” Updating the guest worker program, creating a reliable E-Verify system, tightening security at the border, and incentivizing people to enter legally rather than illegally, would all be things that address the black market for low cost migrant work. Moreover, even the president’s plan doesn’t offer ObamaCare or entitlement programs to people until they are naturalized.

Basically, Erick Erickson agonized over whether he could support a plan that he doesn’t even understand, and then concluded that he could not. It’s kind of the opposite of the ritual that Rush Limbaugh went through.