Mexico's Left Tries To (over)Throw A Party, But No One Came

Approximate number of voters who did voted for left of center partys? 23 Million

Number of left of center Mexicans who came out to protest election results? 100,000

Number of votes the PAN party won the election by? 243,000

Value of having a conservative party win the Mexican election? Priceless!!

Don’t let the left wing media let you think 100,000 is a lot. When compared to how many voted left of center in the Mexican elections last week, this number is a paltry 0.4% of their number. To me this implies there is little or no interest in the general populace to get involved in reversing the election results.

H/T to Jack’s Newswatch

Booming Under Bush??

And we don’t mean booming as in bombs. But in a real bombshell of a story, Larry Kudlow cracks open the economic benefit of the Bush tax cuts.

Did you know that just over the past 11 quarters, dating back to the June 2003 Bush tax cuts, America has increased the size of its entire economy by 20 percent? In less than three years, the U.S. economic pie has expanded by $2.2 trillion, an output add-on that is roughly the same size as the total Chinese economy, and much larger than the total economic size of nations like India, Mexico, Ireland, and Belgium.

Once again the right shows that tax cuts benefit the economy and the public.  I can see the Democrats running for cover as we speak.
H/T to Kate

Peace Moonbeam Joins Peace Mother Sheehan (PMS) On Hunger Strike

People who simply pass over my link to Peace Moonbeam Chronicles due to the name, HAVE to start reading this blog.

The recent edition is simply priceless.

ADDENDUM:  Just a taste…

I’m very weak but will try to do my best to fill you in on this week’s activities. As you may have heard, Peace Mother Sheehan (PMS), as well as the biggest and brightest stars in media and politics, gathered in front of the White House to fast for an end to the Iraq war. Among those in attendance were Susan Sarandon, Sean Penn, and the Reverend Al Sharpton. I knew there was no way I could sit at home while these brave patriots were starving to death, so Scooter and I flew to Washington and joined them.

Softwood Lumber Deal Gives GDub Potential To Bitchslap Liberals

There is much talk about the 23 month lock in period for the softwood deal and the option for the Americans to pull out after this time. Try to follow along.

Month 0 – July 2006 – softwood deal struck

Month 5 – December 2006 – $995 Liberal Party Leadership convention (I have to put that $995 in ‘cuz it’s so damn expensive)

Months 11 to 17 – June 2007 to December 2007 – Liberals set a bit of policy (estimated as 6 months to a year following leadership convention)

Month 18 – 21 – January 2008 to April 2008 – Tories drop 2008 budget in early 2008 which might be looked at as a good time for left wing parties to take down the government on the money bill.

Month 23 – June 2008 – Softwood deal option can be excercised

Month 19 to 23 – February 2008 to June 2008 – Potential Canadian election timeframe if the Liberals feel comfy. (Note it could always happen sooner but this might be the first reasonable attempt for taking down the Tories)

Month 29 – November 2008 – American Elections (which Republicans stand a decent chance of losing unless they find Osama bin Laden)

Month 31 – January 2009 – New President of USA sworn in.

Did you see that? Let’s look closer at 2008.

The option to cancel the softwood deal happens after the Liberals elect a new leader and at a time many pundits think the Tory minority may be taken down but BEFORE George W. is gone. This gives him a nice chance to bitchslap Canada if we put Liberals back in power.

Sweet!!! That would make my Smackdown list for sure!!

Did The Korean Missile Fail? Or Were The Americans Successful?

Reprinted from Jack’s Newswatch

I was thinking about the huge missile that Korea launched all day today as I followed the news

Bravo to the Bush administration for its measured response to North Korea’s Fourth of July fireworks display.

The North’s missile tests, their date chosen to coincide with America’s Independence Day, were, as the president’s national security adviser called them, “provocative behavior.”

Yet the firing of the single intercontinental Taepodong II, which exploded in mid-air less than a minute after launch, just shows how unsophisticated Pyongyang is. The overall display, which included up to six other missile launches as of this morning, also demonstrates how desperate the country is for international attention.

And I just chased something down that has been bothering me.

The ABL is designed to detect and destroy theatre ballistic missiles in the powered boost phase of flight immediately after missile launch. The aircraft loiters at an altitude of 40,000 feet. Missile launch is detected by a reconnaissance system such as satellite or Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft and threat data is transmitted to the ABL aircraft by Link 16 communications. A suite of infrared, wide-field telescopes installed along the length of the aircraft’s fuselage detects the missile plume at ranges up to several hundred km.

The pointing and tracking system tracks the missile and provides launch and predicted impact locations. The turret at the nose of the aircraft swivels towards the target and a 1.5 metre telescope mirror system inside the nose focuses the laser beam onto the missile. The laser beam is locked onto the missile, which is destroyed near its launch area within seconds of lock-on. Where the missile carries liquid fuel, the laser can heat a spot on the missile’s fuel tank, causing an increase in internal pressure resulting in catastrophic failure. Alternatively, the missile is heated in an arc around its circumference and crumples under atmospheric drag force or its own G-force.

“Nah, couldn’t be – could it?”

It sure could be Jack!! I was never a true believer that the Star Wars SDI program was something that would work, but I also know laser technology fairly well. I also know that computers these days can accomplish amazing things, and the capability to use DSPs and high speed sampling is quite possible. In fact, capabilities of processors and DSPs are often measured in MIPS (millions of instructions per second) and sampling in the 100’s of millions of samples per second can easily keep a focus on a moving object at high speed. Lasers travelling at the speed of light can zip (or zap as the case may be) 300km in 1 millisecond. i.e 1/1000th of a second.

If I were Pyongyang, I would be quite concerned about that failure.

Behind Every Scary Man …

… is an even scarier woman!

I know I know, I replaced the word “great” but you HAVE TO READ THIS ARTICLE FROM BEGINNING TO END to understand why. (i.e. all four pages)

Wives of four of the central figures arrested last month were among the most active on the website, sharing, among other things, their passion for holy war, disgust at virtually every aspect of non-Muslim society and a hatred of Canada. The posts were made on personal blogs belonging to both Mr. Amara and Ms. Farooq, as well as a semi-private forum founded by Ms. Farooq where dozens of teens in the Meadowvale Secondary School area chatted. The vast majority of the posts were made over a period of about 20 months, mostly in 2004, and the majority of those were made by the group’s female members.

I could not stop reading how these wives crying foul on the news following the arrests were, in many cases, more anti-Canadian than their arrested husbands.

I would even go so far as to ponder why people like Ernst Zundel are arrested for hate literature while these ladies roam free and harp to our media how their husbands are innocent. (One would think that if these women were pushing their husbands to commit Jihad, they may find themselves charged with the same crimes their husbands are charged with.)

H/T to DustMyBroom

Smackdown (June 24th, 2006)

Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay has called for the arrest of Iranion Prosecutor General Saeed Mortazavi for his … ahem General PERsecution which lead to the death of Canadian journalist Zahra Kazemi.

The Iranian Justice Minister responded:

But in an interview with CBC News, Iranian Justice Minister Jamal Karimirad dismissed Canada’s claims, calling them “highly regrettable, a violation of international protocols.”

According to Karimirad, allegations that Mortazavi had any involvement in the death of Kazemi are unfounded.

“The allegations are fabrications,” he said, “baseless lies.”

“The fact Canada’s foreign minister was repeating them,” he added, “was libelous.”

To these comments, Peter MacKay laid the smack down Canadian style:

“Take me to court. Come to Canada and face it in the justice system, if that’s what he believes. I don’t put a lot of faith in what the Iranian justice minister has to say, frankly.”

Ouch. That had to hurt.

I just can’t imagine why Iran has such disdain for Canada.

H/T to Seanblog

Is Today April 1st? It Must Be With Stuff Like This

Saudis Offered Scholarships For Aviation Courses In US

I am not making this up … but I wish I were. Talk about Officially Screwed information.

The scholarships are available in majors such as communications, electrical and computer engineering, computer science, systems analysis, air traffic control, flight safety, and other majors related to the airline transport industry.

Applicants for the bachelor’s program must have a minimum score of 85 percent in the science section and 90 percent in other sections, such as Qur’an memorizing, administrative and commercial sciences.

There are various scholarships this year being offered by the Saudi government to the US, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, India, China, Australia and New Zealand.

(Bold emphasis mine)

H/T to Kerplonka

Multiculturalism Has Failed … This From The Son Of An Immigrant

In 1966, my parents came to Canada.

My father lead the way for my mother and my two older sisters. But back then, immigrants knew they were getting away from cultures and societies that were no longer providing them with opportunity for a better life than their parents. My father was one of seven children looking at a worn down farm in Northern Greece, a sixth grade education and a future of hard back breaking work.

He chose instead to come to thriving North America and they settled down in a house in the suburbs of Toronto where my mother still lives to this day. He and his brothers went into the restaurant business and helped introduce Canadians to great dishes like Souvlaki and Tzatziki, but they never EVER took it for granted that the burger and fries would be the staples on the menus.

To this day, my father’s four surviving brothers all work in the restaurant business and have been pretty successful at it.

My father, no longer with us, used to tell me about what it was like. He worked hard to learn English and read the papers daily. He would say to himself “Canadians like hockey? Then I will like Hockey!!”

This to me is the epitome of what multiculturalism should be. They knew what side of the bread was buttered for them, and they added a dash of Greek spices to the mix. I grew up watching hockey twice a week. Saturday’s on CBC and Wednesday’s on CHCH. I did not grow up watching Soccer on a satellite dish.

I guess what I am trying to say is that multiculturalism back in the days before Trudeau was not what it is today. The acceptance of Canadian culture and an oath to Canada, to the Canadian nation, to the Canadian flag, to Canadian languages should be first and foremost.

The multiculturalism of today has turned our nation into a microcosm of the globe with pockets of culture building up neighbourhoods locked into one ethnicity or another. Yet none choose Canada and it’s culture anymore. Instead they choose to bring their own cultures, languages and set up their own neighbourhoods and follow their old traditions.
Quebec was smart to protect itself with the language laws, but the English speaking cities and provinces choose not to.  This creates confusion when you see signs in various languages across a single city. Yet Anglophones rail against Quebec and the language laws when it is those same language laws that English speaking Canada needs to adopt to protect itself.

I think the overall failure of multiculturalism is echoed by Salim Mansur in his column from yesterday.

As we politely enjoyed each other’s music and cuisines, new immigrants learned less about the country they adopted as home — and less was demanded of them from a country increasingly preoccupied by its threatened breakup.

We cannot return to the years before 1967. But we can no longer deceive ourselves about building a secure and prosperous country while indulging ourselves as polite strangers in a Canada soaked with multicultural illusions.

All I need to do to remember is recall those words my father used to say. “Canadians like hockey? Then I will like Hockey.” And he always did.