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The Left And Alternative Energy March 31, 2011

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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When are you guys going to wake up?
Yes, we want to develop alternative energy sources.
But your solar and your green stuff isn’t going anywhere fast.
Remember – you can’t drive your car with that stuff.
It’s going to require breakthrough technology, which is not readily on the horizon and we are going to have to deal with the current situation for a while yet. Plunging money into solar will get the same result that plunging money into ethanol went.

Mommy, These Taste Funny March 31, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Entertainment, News Of The Weird.
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Oh, those wackie Scientologist celebrities…It seems that Katie Holmes, aka Mrs. Cruise, purchased what she thought were “Swedish Fish” candies for her daughter, Suri, but didn’t look closely at the package, which turned out to be these:

Perfectly understandable mix-up.

BW

Not A Good Time To Invest In Fukushima Sushi March 31, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Environment, Politics, World Events.
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As I predicted, the news coming out of the stricken nuclear reactor complex in Japan just keeps getting worse and worse.  Now they’re finding levels of I-131 in the seawater off Fukushima that are over 4000 times normal.  That wouldn’t be so bad if I-131 was the whole story, since it has a half life of 8 days, meaning that the radiation level drops by half every eight days.  Nope, it’s the other minor contaminants like cesium, strontium, and plutonium…the last with a half life of basically forever.  The International Atomic Energy Commission has recommended extending the 20Km evacuation zone, but the Japanese insist that there’s little danger to humans beyond that range…even though there’s measurable increases in radiation on the US east coast, as far from the reactors as it is possible to get without an Apollo lunar module.  Rescuers can’t get close enough to some of the nearby villages to recover any bodies that might still be lying around, so there’s about five thousand Japanese in the zone who are still unaccounted for.  Aside from all of that, the bean counters at Merrill Lynch estimate that Tokyo Electric may be liable for something like $13 billion in damages, which is part of the total disaster cost of the earthquake and tsunami that’s estimated at $300 billion (which seems on the low side to me).  Huge Japanese corporations like Toyota are basically closed until further notice, so my wife’s and son’s Priuses had better stay healthy, because if they break and need a part, someone’s going to have to build it from scratch.

So, in regard to my blogmate’s post below, I hope Obama succeeds in decreasing US dependence on foreign oil and oil in general, but if that’s going to require building a lot more nuclear power plants, we might want to reconsider.  Again, what happened to plans for all those windmills and solar panels?  It’s no longer a question of whether we can afford alternative energy.  We can’t afford to NOT develop alternative energy.

BW

It’s Why We Elected Him – and It’s Not BS March 31, 2011

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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hat tip NRO:

Charles Krauthammer points out a sneaky manipulation by President Obama today during his speech on energy. In sum, the president wants to cut oil imports by one-third by 2025, except he’s using as his starting point the number of barrels of oil that were being imported daily as of the day he was inaugurated. And as Dr. K points out, because of the recession, barrels per day of U.S. imports have dropped from 11 million on Obama’s inauguration day to 9.7 million today.
It’s magic! The president is one-third of the way to his goal. Keep up the good work! Six more year of Obamanomics and we just might hit Obama’s target.

It’s Not BS If It’s True March 31, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Politics.
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Beck Vastly Overstates Criticism To Attack Rolling Stone Essay

A group of soldiers from the 5/2 Stryker Brigade DID commit war crimes and atrocities.  Yon does not dispute this.  The NCO’s and officers of the 5/2 Stryker Brigade either willfully ignored the crimes or actively covered them up.  Yon makes no mention of this.  Rolling Stone accurately portrayed the “motorcycle video” as one circulated by the members of the 5/2, not as one showing the members of the 5/2.  Even if the actions portrayed in the video are within the army’s rules of engagement, which seems unlikely, the video itself is basically a sanctioned “snuff video” and violates the army’s code of ethics, to say nothing of basic human decency.  The Rolling Stone piece was not about the majority of troops in Iraq and Afghanistan who are performing their duty honorably.  It was about another group of soldiers, like the ones at Abu Ghraib, who committed large scale war crimes in full view of the officers commanding them…for long periods of time before the crimes were finally exposed.  How does that qualify as bullshit?

BW

Maybe Hillary Should READ THIS March 30, 2011

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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A Bogus Report By Rolling Stone About Our Troops In Afghanistan Has Me Crying ‘Bulls**t’
By Michael Yon
Published March 30, 2011
|Seldom do I waste time with rebutting articles, and especially not from publications like Rolling Stone. Tuesday, numerous people sent links to me of the latest Rolling Stone tripe. The story is titled “The Kill Team, The Full Story.” It should be titled: “BULLS**T, from Rolling Stone.”
The story—not really an “article”—covers soldiers from 5/2 Stryker Brigade Combat Team (SBCT) in Afghanistan. A handful of soldiers were accused of murder. It does in fact appear that a tiny group of rogues committed premeditated murder. I was embedded with the 5/2 SBCT and was afforded incredible access to the brigade by the Commander, Colonel Harry Tunnell, and the brigade Command Sergeant Major, Robb Prosser. I know Robb from Iraq. Colonel Tunnell had been shot in Iraq.
The brigade gave me open access. I could go anywhere, anytime, so long as I could find a ride, which never was a problem beyond normal combat problems. If they had something to hide, it was limited and I didn’t find it. I was not with the soldiers accused of murder and had no knowledge of this. It is important to note that the murder allegations were not discovered by media vigilance, but, for instance, by at least one soldier in that tiny unit who was appalled by the behavior.
A brigade is a big place with thousands of soldiers, and in Afghanistan they were spread thinly across several provinces because we decided to wage war with too few troops. Those soldiers accused of being involved in (or who should have been knowledgeable of) the murders could fit into a minivan. You would need ten 747s for the rest of the Brigade who did their duty.
I was with many other soldiers from 5/2 SBCT. My overall impression was very positive. After scratching my memory for negative impressions from 5/2 Soldiers, I can’t think of any, actually, other than the tiny Kill Team who, to my knowledge, I never set eyes upon.

The online edition of the Rolling Stone story contains a section with a video called “Motorcycle Kill,” which includes our soldiers gunning down Taliban who were speeding on a motorcycle toward our guys. These soldiers were also with 5/2 SBCT, far away from the “Kill Team” later accused of the murders. Rolling Stone commits a literary “crime” by deceptively entwining this normal combat video with the Kill Team story. The Taliban on the motorcycle were killed during an intense operation in the Arghandab near Kandahar City. People who have been to the Arghandab realize the extreme danger there. The soviets got beaten horribly in the Arghandab, despite throwing everything including the Soviet kitchen sink into the battle that lasted over a month. Others fared little better. To my knowledge, 5/2 and supporting units were the first ever to take Arghandab, and these two dead Taliban were part of that process.
The killing of the armed Taliban on the motorcycle was legal and within the rules of engagement. Law and ROE are related but separate matters. In any case, the killing was well within both the law and ROE. The Taliban on the back of the motorcycle raised his rifle to fire at our soldiers but the rifle did not fire. I talked at length with several of the Soldiers who were there and they gave me the video. There was nothing to hide. I didn’t even know about the story until they told me. It can be good for soldiers to shoot and share videos because it provides instant replay and lessons learned. When they gave me the video and further explained what happened, I found the combat so normal that I didn’t even bother publishing it, though I should have because that little shooting of the two Taliban was the least of the accomplishments of these soldiers, and it rid the Arghandab of two Taliban.
Some people commented that our soldiers used excessive force by firing too many bullets. Hogwash. And besides, they were trying to kill each other. Anyone who has seen much combat with our weak M-4 rifles realizes that one shot is generally not enough, and the Taliban were speeding at them on a motorbike, which very often are prepared as suicide bombs. If that motorcycle had been a bomb, as they often are, and got inside the group of soldiers and exploded, they could all have been killed.
Just this week, in Paktika, three suicide attackers came in, guns blazing, and detonated a huge truck bomb. Depending on which reports you read, about twenty workers were killed and about another fifty wounded.
In the video, our guys would have been justified in firing twice that many bullets, but at some point you are wasting ammo and that is a combat sin. The soldiers involved in that shooting told me that the Taliban on the back may have pulled the AK trigger, but the loaded AK did not fire because the Taliban didn’t have a round in the chamber. Attention to detail. At least one also had an ammunition rack strapped across his chest.
This could go on for pages, but Rolling Stone is not worth it, and thrashing them might only build their readership I’ve found in the past that boycotts work. I led a boycott against one magazine and it went bankrupt. It’s doubtful that Rolling Stone will go bankrupt for its sins, but you can cost them money not by boycotting their magazine, but by boycotting their advertisers. That hurts. Just pick an advertiser whose products you already buy, boycott it, and tell the advertiser why you are not buying their product.
Now I’ve got to get back to work.

You May Have A Drinking Problem March 30, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in News Of The Weird.
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If you are resorting to the use of VODKA TAMPONS.  You definitely have a drinking problem if you are a male and are using vodka tampons.  At the very least, it qualifies you as a douche…

BW

Wendy Williams Owes Me A Thank You Note March 30, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Entertainment.
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Because when Benny the Jew makes a solid definitive bet-the-farm prediction on the outcome of an athletic event or reality television competition, he’s almost always wrong.  (Ok, I’ll stop referring to myself in the third person now.)  Yesterday I made no bones about my contention that Ms. Williams, of the EE chest pillows and the C- cha cha, would be exiting the ballroom forthwith…which, of course, promptly led to the no-surprise elimination of Mike Catherwood.  I guess massive mammaries trump bow-legs and pigeon-toes virtually every time.  I’m glad Wendy gets to dance another week.  Now that she’s missed the ignominy of being first out she might even go another few rounds.  But unless she’s got a secret connection with Bristol Palin’s Tea Party contingent, if I was her I wouldn’t be making any plans for what to wear in the finals.

BW

Competition For Stupidest Republican Presidential Contender Heats Up March 30, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Politics.
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Admittedly, winning the coveted mirror-ball trophy in this particular dance-off is no easy task when you’re pitted against heavyweights like Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann, but Rick Santorum is undeterred:

Rick Santorum Blames Abortion For Social Security Woes

Really?  I thought it was Obama’s fault.

BW

 

Can Seppuku Be Far Behind? March 30, 2011

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in World Events.
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President Of Tokyo Electric Hospitalized With High Blood Pressure

Things couldn’t be much worse at the dying Daiichi nuclear power station, and the only thing you can be sure of is that no one is telling you the whole truth.  Every day brings reports of new problems, new areas of contamination, new levels of ever increasing radiation, and every report of progress is matched with two or three reports of setbacks.  Here’s what I think, and what I think you will ultimately hear when the smoke clears: There’s been at least one and possibly three core meltdowns, which is the second worst thing that can happen to a nuclear reactor…but there’s been at least one meltdown in combination with a breach of the containment vessel, which is the worst thing that can occur to a nuclear reactor.  This thing may make Chernobyl look like a minor hiccup before it’s over.

As for the president of TEPCO, the owner/operator of Fukushima Daiichi, he knows in his heart and in whatever secret documents he has stored on his hard drive the shortcuts and cover-ups that were involved in this disaster, not the least of which was siting the emergency deisel generators in a location subject to flooding in the event of a tsunami.  Hypertension is the least of his problems.

BW

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