Just Asking

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

A Reason to Vote Republican

As I understand it, the Muslim terrorists thoroughly believe that the Quran is instructing them to convert us or kill us. Like any population group, Muslims have a broad spectrum of beliefs on how they are supposed to treat infidels. How unclear is the Quran on this issue?

There are apparently hundreds of millions of Muslims around the world who are not plotting to convert or kill infidels. Let’s call them ordinary Muslims. Is that group of ordinary Muslims generally ashamed at the actions of the terrorists, or is that group quietly supportive of the terrorists, and would join them if provoked? If the former is true, then I believe we have a chance of resolving this conflict. If the latter is true, then it will never end until one side or the other is all converted or dead. As I understand it, large portions of that group of ordinary Muslims are also terrorist targets, because they are too liberal (in the sense that they are not living up to the strict religious standards of the terrorist Muslims). Do you agree?

How can this conflict ever be resolved if the terrorists are willing to die to convert us or kill us, and Americans are also willing to die to keep from being converted or killed? Will this become, or has this already become, a holy war of global proportions? I think ultimately that the ordinary Muslims will decide this question by choosing to become terrorists in large numbers or by choosing to hunt down and kill terrorists. Iraq is a microcosm of this conflict, where ordinary Muslims have voted in great numbers, ordinary Muslims have joined the Iraqi police and military to fight the terrorists, but thousands of other Iraqis have joined the terrorist and insurgency movements.

I am sure I have oversimplified this massively complex issue, but perhaps I am starting to grasp its scale?

What plan do the Democrats have for resolving this global conflict? Appeasement? I doubt there is any way to appease a devoutly religious terrorist. Clearly, the Republicans are willing to send our military to fight the terrorists on foreign soil. Does anything else really matter when we vote?

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Winter is coming

Winter is coming to the Pacific Northwest. We had a hailstorm today in the lowlands, and snow in the mountains that closed Snoqualmie Pass (I-90 over the Cascade Mountains) for over four hours. And tonight it will be below freezing in most of the lowlands, with ice in the commute forecast for Monday morning.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Reasons to Vote Republican

I have been formulating a good list of reasons to vote for a Republican and not a Democrat for Congress. Mona Charen beat me to the punch:

13 Reasons to vote Republican on Nov. 7
By Mona Charen
Friday, October 27, 2006

...

Republicans have abundant reasons to reserve a spot at their polling places on Election Day:

1) The economy. More than 6.6 million new jobs have been created since August 2003. Our 4.1 annual growth rate is superior to all other major industrialized nations. The Dow has set record highs multiple times in the past several weeks. Productivity is up, and the deficit is down. Real, after-tax income has grown by 15 percent since 2001. Inflation has remained low. As Vice President Cheney summed it up at a recent meeting with journalists, "What more do you want?" The tax cuts proposed by President Bush and passed by a Republican Congress can take a bow.

2) The Patriot Act. Democrats and liberals mourn this law as a gross infringement upon civil liberties. Yet the much-discussed abuses simply haven't materialized. The law has, on the other hand, permitted the CIA and FBI to cooperate and share information about terrorist threats -- at least so long as The New York Times isn't publishing the details of our counterterrorism efforts on the front page.

3) The Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, to which liberals clung with passionate intensity, has been cancelled, permitting us to work on missile defense. In the age of Kim Jong Il and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is anyone (except Nancy Pelosi) sorry?

4) Immigration. Republicans in Congress insisted upon and got the first serious immigration restriction in decades. On Oct. 26, the president signed a law that will build a 700-mile fence along our southern border and, what is more important, does not offer amnesty.

5) There has not been another terrorist attack on American soil since 9/11. Who would have predicted that on 9/12?

6) Libya has surrendered its nuclear program.

7) A.Q. Khan's nuclear smuggling network has been rolled up.

8) John Roberts and Samuel Alito sit on the U.S. Supreme Court.

9) Those Democrats who do not want to close Guantanamo Bay altogether want to give all of its inmates the full panoply of rights Americans enjoy in criminal procedures.

10) Democrats believe in immediate withdrawal from Iraq. If they succeed in forcing us to leave under these circumstances, the United States will suffer a stinging defeat in the war on terror. The terrorists already believe that they drove the Russians from Afghanistan and Israel from Lebanon and Gaza. They are convinced they chased us out of Lebanon in 1983 and from Somalia in 1993. According to Osama bin Laden and those who share his views, we are militarily strong but psychologically and spiritually weak. Like it or not -- and no one likes it -- we cannot leave Iraq now without utterly and decisively validating this analysis. We might as well run a white flag up the flagpole at the Capitol.

11) Democrats would like to eliminate the terrorist surveillance program.

12) If Democrats achieve a majority in the House, Barney Frank will chair the Financial Services Committee, Henry Waxman will head the Government Reform Committee, and Alcee Hastings will chair the Intelligence Committee.

13) Democrats believe that the proper response to Kim Jong Il's nuclear test is "face to face talks." That's what the Clinton administration did for years. It worked out well, didn't it?

Mona Charen is a syndicated columnist, political analyst and author of Do-Gooders: How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help .

Copyright © 2006 Salem Web Network. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Is there an election coming up?

The radio and television stations have been pummelling me with political advertisements, mud-slinging, and news reports on who insulted whom. I have a pretty high tolerance for political discussion, and I am getting my fill, so all of you with a low tolerance must be going out of your minds. Am I right?

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

It would be a first

The pollsters are predicting that control of the U.S. House of Representatives will change hands, but the Senate will not. In the entire history of the U.S., this has never happened before. It would be a first.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Rainfall

We have had a lot of rain in Kent in the last year. Considering the October-September season, it was the wettest since 1998-1999. The December-January wet spell made a big difference. This plot compares the cumulative rainfall after October 1 for the last five years.

Ouch

My favorite football team, the University of Washington Huskies led for awhile yesterday against a very good team from California, took it to overtime, but lost.

Ouch.

The favored Seattle Seahawks played at home today against the Minnesota Vikings and were tied at halftime 10-10. But Superbowl quarterback Hasselbeck was injured (4-8 weeks) by a freakish roll-over accident. The Hawks lost at home (31-13), the first time since St. Louis beat them here in 2004, a game I happened to have attended.

Ouch.

I tried helping to teach outdoor cooking at adult leader training yesterday. I am not much of a cook (I am very good at boiling water), but I worked with an expert chef and we had a good time. Except we managed to burn up a box oven.

Ouch.

Friday, October 20, 2006

Voter ID Law

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1020scotus-voterID20-ON.html

How is a utility bill a valid form of personal identification for voting?

As far as I know, utilities never check a person's passport or birth certificate before signing up a new customer.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

What To Do When She Gets Sick

I received this helpful list in the context of a cousin fighting cancer, but these are solid suggestions for anyone wanting to do more to support a sick person.

1. No Mr. Fix-It. Try to listen to her without judgment. It’s best not to try to fix this.

2. Say it with Flowers, and Hugs and Kisses. Now more than ever, she needs to know how much you love her. Bring her flowers, hug her often and say “I love you,” with actions and words, over and over again. Write her a love note and talk about what you love about her and what she means in your life.

3. Offer Specific Help. “Anything I can do?” might be hard for her to answer. So offer specific help. Can I shop for your groceries? Can I drive you to your doctor’s appointments? Take notes when you are at the doctor’s office. Be creative and tell us, what did you do? Wash her car. Take up a collection and buy a day of housecleaning, window washing or carpet cleaning while she is away at chemotherapy. Arrange for a day of babysitting so she can rest. Run errands – the cleaners, drug store, post office, bank deposits. Arrange among your circle of friends to deliver meals, organize carpools to drive her kids to school and their activities. Set up a cooler outside her door – so she doesn’t feel obligated to meet and greet each meal delivery – and drop off dinners there.

4. Faraway Friends. You’re halfway across the country, but you desperately want to help. Knowing your friend might feel passionately about helping others struggle with breast cancer and finding new treatments, she will appreciate if you participate in a walk-a-thon, or rally a group to do so in her honor.

5. Deliver Comfort - Pamper Her. If she’s in the hospital or at home bring her special little things to make her feel special. Take a cozy blanket, a favorite lotion and bath gel. A good book. A roomy shirt with buttons in front or a comfy robe. Arrange for an in-home/at hospital manicure or facial. Drop by with a milkshake or her favorite coffee drink or favorite gourmet

6. Just Be There.“When you are hit with such a difficult diagnosis you are catapulted into a world that is very foreign,” says CarePage member Penny Nuttall. “Suddenly you do not feel like you are a person anymore but a disease and people react to you in very interesting ways. Some good some bad.” She adds: “Be supportive in the way the person afflicted needs you to be, not in ways "you" think they should be. Everyone is an individual who deals with stress in their own way. Ask that person what they need without judgment. Some want to talk some don't. Some need to retreat some don't. This a time when people need to garner all their physical, emotional spiritual strength to get well so take care of other concerns i.e. kids, house etc... so that person can do this. Always make them feel unconditionally loved, supported, respected and part of you world. Love is such a curative property that cannot be quantified.”

7. Throw a Feel-Good Shower. If her hair is falling out and she asks for your advice, take her shopping for a wig or oversized scarves and a pair of pretty earrings too. Hold a hat shower and ask friends to bring cool hats and scarves. Also, ask everyone to bring an inspirational letter for your friend too.

Eric and Sharon Langshur
www.carepages.com

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Common good

Apparently, the new slogan of the Democrat party is "For the common good."

It reminds me of the Communist party slogan, "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs."

When I grow up

When I grow up, I want to be a "Fitness and Wellness Counselor". I already give unsolicited fitness advice, and this way I could get paid for it! :)

Monday, October 16, 2006

Retail Tale #1

While I was standing in line to buy my lunch at Whole Foods, I listened to the woman ahead of me in line ask the clerk, "Have you been to one of these?" And she pointed at a sign advertising a singles event that was posted on the check-out stand facing the customers. The clerk looked confused and was speechless.

[This is where I thought of the Retail Tales blog. The link is on this page.]

The customer persisted, and they ended up having a pleasant two-way conversation during which the customer recommended that the clerk try it, that it was a fun event. Having been trained by the Retail Tales blog, I was flabberghasted at the number of implicit assumptions made by the customer (that the clerk could read the back of the sign, that the clerk was single, that the clerk was looking for a man, that the clerk wanted to go to such an event, that the clerk was willing to take advice on her love life from a stranger, have I missed some?). All considered, I thought the clerk handled it with grace.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

It's Raining

Not hard, just steady.

Actually, October has been way nicer than normal, so far.

Friday, October 13, 2006

Fox News Sunday

Be sure to watch or record the Fox News Sunday television show this Sunday. It is at 8 AM on Channel 13 in Seattle. Chris Wallace will have both John Kerry and Condi Rice on the show. Watch it and decide for yourself if Chris Wallace is a right-winger as some have said after the Bill Clinton interview.

Peggy Noonan

The Sounds of Silencing, by Peggy Noonan

Friday, October 13, 2006 12:01 a.m. EDT

Why do Americans on the left think only they have the right to dissent?

Four moments in the recent annals of free speech in America. Actually annals is too fancy a word. This all happened in the past 10 days:

At Columbia University, members of the Minutemen, the group that patrols the U.S. border with Mexico and reports illegal crossings, were asked to address a forum on immigration policy. As Jim Gilchrist, the
founder, spoke, angry students stormed the stage, shouting and knocking over chairs and tables. "Having wreaked havoc," said the New York Sun, they unfurled a banner in Arabic and English that said, "No one is ever illegal." The auditorium was cleared, the Minutemen silenced. Afterward a student protester told the Columbia Spectator, "I don't feel we need to apologize or anything. It was fundamentally a part of free speech. . . . The Minutemen are not a legitimate part of the debate on immigration."

On Oct. 2, on Katie Couric's "CBS Evening News," in the segment called "Free Speech," the father of a boy killed at Columbine shared his views on the deeper causes of the recent shootings in Amish country. Brian Rohrbough said violence entered our schools when we threw God out of them. "This country is in a moral freefall. For over two generations the public school system has taught in a moral vacuum. . . . We teach there are no moral absolutes, no right or wrong, and I assure you the murder of innocent children is always wrong, including abortion. Abortion has diminished the value of children." This was not exactly the usual mush.

Mr. Rohrbough was quickly informed he was not part of the legitimate debate, either. Howard Kurtz in the Washington Post: "The decision . . . to air his views prompted a storm of criticism, some of it within the ranks of CBS News." A blog critic: Grief makes people say "stupid" things, but "what made them put this man on television?" Good question. How did they neglect to silence him?

Soon after, at Madison Square Garden, Barbra Streisand, began her latest farewell tour with what friends who were there tell me was a moving, beautiful concert. She was in great form and brought the audience together in appreciation of her great ballads, which are part of the aural tapestry of our lives. And then . . . the moment. Suddenly she decided to bang away on politics. Fine, she's a Democrat, Bush is bad. But midway through the bangaway a man in the audience called out. Most could not hear him, but everyone seems to agree he at least said, "What is this, a fund-raiser?"

At this, Ms. Streisand became enraged, stormed the stage and pummeled herself. Wait, that was Columbia. Actually she became enraged and cursed the man. A friend who was there, a liberal Democrat, said what was most interesting was Ms. Streisand made a physical movement with her arms and hands--"those talon hands"--as if to say, See what I have to put up with when I attempt to educate the masses? She soon apologized, to her credit. Though apparently in the manner of a teacher who'd just kind of lost it with an unruly and ignorant student.

On "The View" a few days earlier it was Rosie O'Donnell. She was banging away on gun control. Guns are bad and should be banned. Elizabeth Hasselbeck, who plays the role of the young, attractive mom, tentatively responded. "I want to be fair," she said. Obviously there should be "restrictions," but women have a right to defend themselves, and there's "the right to bear arms" in the Constitution. Rosie accused Elizabeth of yelling. The panel, surprised, agreed that Elizabeth was not yelling. Rosie then went blank-faced with what someone must have told her along the way is legitimately felt rage. Elizabeth was not bowing to Rosie's views. Elizabeth needed to be educated. The education commenced, Rosie gesturing broadly and Elizabeth constricting herself as if she knew physical assault were a possibility. When Rosie gets going on the Second Amendment I always think, Oh I hope she's not armed! Actually I wonder what Freud would have made of an enraged woman obsessed with gun control. Ach, classic projection. Eef she had a gun she would kill. Therefore no one must haf guns.

There's a pattern here, isn't there? It is not only about rage and resentment, and how some have come to see them as virtues, as an emblem of rightness. I feel so much, therefore my views are correct and must prevail. It is about something so obvious it is almost embarrassing to state. Free speech means hearing things you like and agree with, and it means allowing others to speak whose views you do not like or agree with. This--listening to the other person with respect and forbearance, and with an acceptance of human diversity--is the price we pay for living in a great democracy. And it is a really low price for such a great thing.

We all know this, at least in the abstract. Why are so many forgetting it in the particular?

Let us be more pointed. Students, stars, media movers, academics: They are always saying they want debate, but they don't. They want their vision imposed. They want to win. And if the win doesn't come quickly, they'll rush the stage, curse you out, attempt to intimidate.

And they don't always recognize themselves to be bullying. So full of their righteousness are they that they have lost the ability to judge themselves and their manner.

And all this continues to come more from the left than the right in America.

Which is, at least in terms of timing, strange. The left in America--Democrats, liberals, Bush haters, skeptics of many sorts--seems to be poised for a significant electoral victory. Do they understand that if it comes it will be not because of Columbia, Streisand, O'Donnell, et al., but in spite of them?

What is most missing from the left in America is an element of grace--of civic grace, democratic grace, the kind that assumes disagreements are part of the fabric, but we can make the fabric hold together. The Democratic Party hasn't had enough of this kind of thing since Bobby Kennedy died. What also seems missing is the courage to ask a question. Conservatives these days are asking themselves very many questions, but I wonder if the left could tolerate asking itself even a few. Such as: Why are we producing so many adherents who defy the old liberal virtues of free and open inquiry, free and open speech? Why are we producing so many bullies? And dim dullard ones, at that.

Ms. Noonan is a contributing editor of The Wall Street Journal and author of "John Paul the Great: Remembering a Spiritual Father" (Penguin, 2005), which you can order from the OpinionJournal bookstore. Her column appears Fridays on OpinionJournal.com.

October 13

Aarrgghh! It's Friday the 13th!!!

Thursday, October 12, 2006

October 12, 1492

Happy Columbus Day!

Today is the day, not the day that Congress set a few years back.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Cursive

Is cursive handwriting dying?
Do only girls use cursive?
Can you write the alphabet in cursive, both lower case and capitals?

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Winter is Coming

I downloaded this webcam photo of Mt. St. Helens (in Washington State) showing its first dusting of snow on September 14.



In case you are interested, the link to the webcam is

Mt. St. Helens WebCam


We had our first frost this morning at our house. Low temperature was only 35 F, however, so we are not sure whether the dahlias will turn black. I took some photos this morning in case they do.

Winter is indeed coming.

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Robbed!

The UW Husky football team was robbed of an opportunity to beat the USC Trojans in Los Angeles today, by a sloppy timekeeper. The Huskies were down 26-20 and were driving for a touchdown, on the 15-yard line. The timekeeper and the referees has already cheated the Huskies out of 5 seconds in the final minute by stopping the clock 2-3 seconds late at the end of several play, but on the last play, the clock was started before the referees gave the whistle to start the play, and the last 2 seconds dribbled off the clock while the quarterback was waiting for permission to start the play! They were robbed of their last chance to throw the ball into the endzone for a touchdoen to beat USC! Grrr.