Bald Eagle Picture

3.9.2002

1:33 AM
Doris Kearns Goodwin is on the board of Northwest Airlines (along with that well known business icon, Walter Mondale). What qualifications did she offer to be considered a representative of shareholders? What company did she work for? What does she possibly offer at board meetings? Does she offer a lot of Lindberg anecdotes? How about stories of how much Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt just loved airplanes.

I have an idea: let's find the most rediculous, out-of-place people on corporate boards. There has to be some real laughers out there.

"Historian Goodwin Comes Under Fire"

Sean Hackbarth |

3.8.2002

1:46 AM
The government is even more justified in not telling NYC officials about a nuke threat. Dragaonfire made the whole thing up.

"Officials: Source Made up Nuclear Plot" [via Drudge]

Sean Hackbarth |

3.7.2002

11:57 PM
I wish Dr. Abd Al-Hamid Al-Ansari the best of luck in bringing a reasoned point of view to the Arab world. Here are a few comments he made about the U.S.'s response to 9.11:

"It is unfair to name the American response [to September 11] 'terrorism,' because by so doing we are confusing the concepts of terrorism and self-defense or response to aggression -- and at a time when we are demanding that the international community not confuse 'terrorism' with 'legitimate resistance.' What happened in America is terrorism; the American response is a response to that aggression, and there is a world-wide consensus on this."

"...[O]nly those with a hatred-of-America complex, whose goal is to permit the perpetrators to escape, [name America's response 'terrorism']. Any other country in which such an act of terror had taken place would have hastened to respond and to annihilate everything -- we have many examples of this in Arab history."

"Yet, although America is a superpower, and could have responded immediately, it gave other options a fair chance, until it despaired -- and then had no choice but to launch a war..."

"We feel sorrow for the innocent victims; we wish it were not a Muslim country that was being attacked. But what can be done with the group of fanatics [the Taliban] who rejected all calls for mediation, all initiatives, and all counsel, and persisted for over five years in protecting a group of terrorists..."

"...Terrorism must be fought by any and all means. All Muslims must support the struggle against terror. Terrorism has claimed more victims in many Islamic countries than in the West. Any country or group protecting and defending terrorists must be fought, and the world must be saved from their evil... The time has come to call them to account, and punish them. We must all support the efforts to repress and bring to an end the damage they do."

"There are always innocent victims of war, and we cannot prevent this? What we can do is demand protection for these innocents. Afghan refugees who escaped Kabul reported that the Taliban were concealing their tanks and heavy guns near the mosques and heavily populated areas. If this is true, who is responsible for the deaths of the victims -- America, or the Taliban...?"

"We must have the courage to admit that what happened in Afghanistan was the liberation of our Muslim brothers -- even if, unfortunately, it was by non-Muslim hands..."


Sean Hackbarth |



11:49 PM
There are thousands of frozen embryos across the country. Some people think it's alright to harvest them for their stem cells. Some encourage women to "adopt" them by having them implanted in their wombs. Some think it's immoral and a violation of the marriage sacrament to implant them. The problem arises from in vitro techniques that produce excess embryos. Doctors says it's needed to give childless couples the best chance at having a baby. Little thought is given to the fate of frozen embryos and those culled by selective abortion. Bishop Elio Sgreccia nailed it on the head when he said, "The point is we should never have gone down this road to begin with." I don't oppose in vitro fertilization. What I oppose is making child bearing the sole goal with no concern about the unborn life hurt in the process.

"Where Do Frozen Embryos Belong?"

Sean Hackbarth |



11:32 PM
Dr. Rif'at Sayyid Ahmad can spew the venom. He calls Camp X-Ray "The American Aushwitz." He even tosses in a few anti-semitic grenades calling Aushwitz an "exaggerated Jewish yarn," calling Vice President Dick Cheney "that super-racist Jew," and calling military men guarding the terrorists "impotent and homosexual fighters."

Sean Hackbarth |



6:33 PM
Clinton bashers (and freepers) are probably steaming that Robert Ray didn't prosecute Bill Clinton. I just want him forgotten. His stain (blue dress pun intended) on history is assured.

"Clinton Could Have Been Charged in Lewinsky Scandal"

Sean Hackbarth |



6:30 PM
David Vise, author of the bestselling The Bureau and the Mole is a bookseller's worst nightmare. Even though Barnesandnoble.com is only a warehouse and a website, I'm pretty sure they weren't prepared for his orders of 4,000 books at a time. Then, when the price went down because the book reached the bestseller list, he wanted to be credited. The company should have done it just to get him out of their hair, but I'm pretty sure BN.com doesn't deal with crazy orders like this. Some are accusing Vise of buying and returning books to manipulate the bestseller lists. I just think he looks like a bumbling idiot with too big of a credit line.

"A Case of Strange Book-Keeping"

Sean Hackbarth |

3.6.2002

5:17 PM
Here's a hint about music reviews: the review isn't worth much if only 25% of the writing is devoted to the album. I don't care about Scott Henkemeyer's comments on the extension of dance music into "middlebrow" America. The focus is suppose to be on Rinocerose's new album Music Kills Me. The closest he actually comes to reviewing the album is calling it "a patchwork of the duo's references and a memorable juxtaposition of countless styles." Really enlightening.

"RINOÇÉROSE: Music Kills Me"

Sean Hackbarth |



5:04 PM
A k-log (knowledge log) could be very useful for businesses to keep track of projects and for storing information. Employees would periodically comment on what they were doing, what problems they were having, and the solutions they discovered. There are two important parts to an effective k-log: easy-to-use publishing software and a very good search tool. Blogger (free of any hassles with templates and site design) can be an easy way to post items and have them archived. Google can be the ideal search tool for sifting through the information. Google's already selling a plug-and-play search box. All that would be needed is to add Blogger to the box, and you would have an Intranet killer app.

"What is a k-log?" [via Daypop]

Sean Hackbarth |



4:38 PM
Stanley Kurtz wants college conservative webloggers. Blogging would be a great way to publicize crazy, Leftist stuff happening on campuses. I willing to help any conservative student who has the weblogging bug. Just e-mail me.

Sean Hackbarth |



3:17 PM
Atlanta's Chipper Jones doesn't mind moving to left field from third base. He'll be able to focus more on his hitting. Did he say this with a straight face? Last year he hit .330, had 38 home runs, and 102 RBI. What will he do when he finally "concentrates" on his offense?

"Chipper Says Moving to Left Field Lets Him Focus on Hitting"

Sean Hackbarth |



2:57 AM
A Michael Kinlsey-less Slate got fooled, but they owed up to their readers. "We've failed your trust," writes Jack Shafer.

"Slate Gets Duped" [via Drudge]

Sean Hackbarth |

3.5.2002

4:13 AM
Gory details on the military's new thermobaric bomb.

BLU-118/B Thermobaric Weapon

Sean Hackbarth |



3:58 AM
Saddam wants the Olympics. He probably wants them just so the U.S. can boycott them. What caught my eye was that the proposed Olympic stadium must "reflect Iraqi architecture in different stages of history." That must mean the design should combine the Hanging Gardens of Babylon with a bombed out chemical weapons plant posing as a baby food factory. And smack dab in the front should be a facist sculpture of Saddam himself grinning and sticking his middle finger up toward the U.S. A design truly in the Olympic spirit.

"Baghdad to bid for 2012 Olympics"

Sean Hackbarth |



3:32 AM
So Mayor Bloomberg thinks Giuliani should have been told about last fall's nuclear threat on NYC. What's he suppose to say? "No, don't let me know about any threats. Please keep me in the dark." I don't think so.

Does that mean the federal government did something wrong by not telling NYC officials? No. The threat was rightly kept under wraps to prevent panic. Imagine if the White House informed NYC. It would have leaked out in a matter of days, if not hours. There would have been chaos. Roads would have been packed with people trying to get out of the city. Wall Street would have tanked. Any hope of getting business to move back into NYC would have been seriously threatened. All that from some rather vague intelligence from someone code-named Dragonfire?

What could NYC officials do if they had the information anyway? The threat was that terrorists were planning on blowing up the city with a 10 kiloton nuke. What could have been done? Shut down the city? Imagine the panic from that. Set up road blocks at every possible entrance into the city? Not feasible. NYC is huge and the bomb might have already gotten in before the check points were set up. Search every building? Once again, not feasible. NYC is American's largest city. There are too many places to hide a nuke in a city of 5,000 let alone in a city of 10 million. If the feds knew who had the bomb, and how it was coming into the city (if not already there), then working with local police makes sense. They didn't and decided that keeping mum was the prudent thing to do.

"Bloomberg: NY Should Have Been Told About Nuke Fear"

Sean Hackbarth |



2:49 AM
Fredrik just might have a winner with Businessfans.com. Giving praise to people who have transformed the world around us is deserving.

Sean Hackbarth |

3.4.2002

2:14 PM
With Tom Ament resigning as Milwaukee County Executive, the race to replace him is on. It's a short election, so how much money a candidate has for commericals and how quickly they can organize are keys.

"County Hopefuls Home in on Prize"

Sean Hackbarth |



1:45 PM
Ridge, Minetta, and President Bush are all wrong about not arming pilots. Armed pilots are another line of defense to stop terrorists from turning airliners into crude, manually guided cruise missiles. Ridge wonders "Where do you stop?" Other vehicle operators would want to be armed too. Good. Arming them isn't a bad thing either. To deter hijackings, terrorists' perceived costs for trying must increase. Fearing that an airline pilot, railroad engineer, or bus driver could effectively fight back would certainly do that. Guns are our friends. They could also be lifesavers.

"Ridge Says Arming Pilots 'Doesn't Make a Lot of Sense'"

Sean Hackbarth |



1:11 AM
The Weekly Standard's Matt Labash would "probably get along famously" with Britney Spears.

"Dirty Sweet: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Britney"

Sean Hackbarth |

3.3.2002

11:46 PM
In Virginia Postrel's latest NY Times column she points out that Wal-Mart had a huge impact on U.S. productivity gains in the 1990's. Wal-Mart's real effect on the economy is demonstrated with their ever increasing stock price. Compare that to the dot bombs whose hype outmatched any added value they offered.

"Lessons in Keeping Business Humming, Courtesy of Wal-Mart U."

Sean Hackbarth |

ABOUT
When I'm not pondering the fate of the universe, I'm reading, writing, or selling books. Here you'll find comments on politics, culture, books, and music. Not necessarily in that order.

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