Miscellany
Reply to John Taylor
[email protected]
Special to TLE
THEY COULD CALL THE REGISTRATION PROGRAM "INSTANT CHECHEN"
The Russians are nominally allied with a local militia in Argun --
clans as well as prominent or wealthy Chechens usually possess
private armies. But such is the level of mistrust that the Russians
collected their allies' rifles and machine guns, leaving them only
pistols to defend themselves.
"They said they were only taking the arms to register them. But that
was weeks ago, and I haven't seen my automatic since," said Ayub, a
young Chechen who aspires to learn German and emigrate.
- - - - - - - - - - -
SAIGON ON THE TEREK
Downtown [Argun, Chechnya], where Moscow's representative to
Chechnya, Nikolai Koshman, was giving residents a pep talk, women
berated him for the artillery barrage that drove the rebels out.
"Kill the terrorists, not us," they shouted.
The Russian soldiers looked on impassively. "These women show up
every time we have visitors," one murmured. "Who can tell the
terrorists from anyone else? I can't."
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source (for both):
www.washingtonpost.com/wp%2Ddyn/articles/A43704%2D2000Jan13.html
REVISED STATIST VERSION
January 17, 2000
Giving Honor to Treason
by Glenn C. Loury (director of the Institute on Race and Social
Division at Boston University)
[...]
Fortunately, the right to equal protection guaranteed by the 14th
Amendment won out over the purported right of states to practice
segregation. As a result, a century after the end of the Civil
War, Americans of all races in every region finally came to enjoy the
full benefits of citizenship. There is no question that the right
side prevailed in that struggle of the early 1960's, just as the
right side had prevailed 100 years before.
[...]
Let us stipulate that the senator's forefathers thought that
bearing arms for the Confederacy was honorable. This does not change
the fact that they were wrong to have thought so.
[...]
Although my African-American forefathers were persecuted under the
battle flag of the Confederacy, I take no offense when I see it
in the back window of a pickup truck, or sewn on a denim jacket, or
draped across a dormitory window.
[...]
But as an American citizen I am disgusted by the spectacle of civil
authorities in South Carolina officially and publicly embracing a
symbol of illegal rebellion against legitimate national
authority.
[...]
The fundamental issue here is not racism, slavery or respect for the
Southern way of life. Ultimately, what is at stake is national
unity and loyalty to the collective civic enterprise that we call the
United States of America.
In retrospect, we can now see that those who fought under the
Confederate flag were treasonous rebels bent on the destruction of
our union. And those who hoisted that flag over their state's
capitol during the height of the civil-rights struggle were
obstructing social justice.
[...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
[emphasis added -- ed.]
Source:
http://www.nytimes.com/yr/mo/day/oped/17lour.html
[REASON #38] WHY I FLED MARYLAND (JUST AHEAD OF NEAL KNOX)
Glendening Assails Gun Manufacturers
By Daniel LeDuc and Matthew Mosk
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 20, 2000; Page B1
Gov. Parris N. Glendening declared yesterday that gun manufacturers'
claims that they cannot make a childproof handgun were "nonsense" and
told Maryland legislators that "we can make them do it."
In some of his sharpest language on the subject yet, Glendening (D)
dismissed gunmakers' claims that the technology is not yet reliable
or affordable to make guns so that they can be fired only by
authorized users.
"Absolute nonsense," Glendening told legislators during his State of
the State address. "Whether it is air bags or childproof aspirin
bottles, we know the industry will not do what is right until we make
them do what is right. And we can make them do it."
[...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp%2Ddyn/metro/A1924%2D2000Jan19.html
NEXT THING YOU KNOW, THEY'LL BE REJECTING VICTIM DISARMAMENT
Japanese Panel Advises a Move to the West
By Doug Struck
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday , January 20, 2000 ; A01
TOKYO, Jan. 19 -- Are the Japanese too, well ... Japanese?
For decades, the very traits that have defined Japanese society --
conformity, decision-making by consensus, a follow-the-rule
orderliness -- have been nurtured and praised here as the glue that
keeps this nation together.
But now a government-appointed panel has concluded Japanese society
must change. The Japanese should become more independent, the
commission said. More tolerant of people who veer from the norm. Less
preoccupied with rules, peer pressure and school tests. There should
be more immigrants. And more lawyers.
[...]
The report laments an "ossified" society in which an allegiance to
rules and conformity have "leached Japan's vitality." For Japan to
succeed, the group noted, there must be "a spirit of self-reliance
and the spirit of tolerance, neither of which has been given
sufficient latitude so far."
It recommends a Japan "where people's vitality is not inhibited by
precedents, regulations and established interests." In a society
where group consensus is preferred over individual initiative, the
report recommends "empowerment of the individual" and more support
for risk takers.
[And now the predictable statist reaction; I see Japan has already
adopted the US' government lapdance media -- ed.]
"The report stresses individuality too much," protested the daily
Sankei newspaper. "We already have too-shallow national unity, and
too much respect for personal rights."
There will be opposition, "a contrary wind to reform," warned the
Nikkei newspaper. "A lot of people would like to stay where we are
and do not want to change."
"We already are being criticized for putting too much emphasis on the
individual, for forgetting the critical importance of 'community' and
'Japanese-ness,' acknowledged commission member Yoichi Funabashi,
diplomatic columnist for the Asahi Shimbun newspaper.
[...]
[But, a small ray of hope from two commission members. -- ed.]
"The 21st century will be the era of individuals. Individuals have
become more important through globalization, the Internet,
networking," [commission executive director Tadashi] Yamamoto said.
During years of poverty following World War II, Japanese looked to
the government for all decisions. Now, individuals must take the
lead, said [member of the commission and political science professor
Makoto] Iokibe.
[...]
"I don't think dynamism is an American monopoly. In a sense,
democracy is not necessarily an American thing," [Yamamoto] said.
"It's a universal value."
'LIE DOWN WITH DOGS' DEPARTMENT
Gun makers halt settlement talks with cities
By Bill Sammon
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Settlement talks between gun makers and municipalities that are suing
them have broken off because the gun makers objected to White House
intervention in negotiations that had been scheduled for tomorrow in
Las Vegas.
Gun manufacturers are blaming White House meddling for the
cancellation of tomorrow's talks, saying President Clinton injected
politics into the negotiations.
But administration officials said the gun industry is playing
politics and blamed the "hard-line" stance of some gun
representatives for the breakdown. [...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://208.246.212.80/national/news3%2D01202000.htm
[Let's see ... the parents try to negotiate with the
kidnappers/rapists, and are actually _surprised_ that the lead
hostage-taker doesn't play fair, or keep his word?]
[Better yet ... after the industry kow-tows to the feral government,
practically breaks its back bowing down to the crooks with
briefcases, the government takes the first opportunity to label them
"hard-liners" (read "extremists"). Gee -- that sounds a lot like the
infamous NRA "jack-booted thugs" incident, wherein the nation's
largest gun control organization revealed inadvertently that, while
boot-licking, they had actually identified the government's Bruno
Malis -- ed.]
THE FIRST THING THEY DO IS SHOOT YOUR MICE
Clinton Favors Computer Snooping
by Declan McCullagh
6:00 p.m. 19.Jan.2000 PST
The Clinton administration wants to be able to send federal agents
armed with search warrants into homes to copy encryption keys and
implant secret back doors onto computers.
"When criminals like drug dealers and terrorists use encryption to
conceal their communications, law enforcement must be able to respond
in a manner that will not thwart an investigation or tip off a
suspect," Attorney General Janet Reno and Deputy Defense Secretary
John Hamre wrote in a seven-page letter to Congress. [...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0%2C1367%2C33779%2C00.html
ALL PARTIES DISCRIMINATE INDISCRIMINATELY
Group Calls Lee Banner Burning a Hate Crime
By Craig Timberg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 18, 2000; 12:40 PM
RICHMOND - The Sons of Confederate Veterans are demanding that
yesterday's torching of a banner of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee on
a holiday in his honor be treated by police and prosecutors as a hate
crime against Southerners.
"The city should not treat this as a normal crime. They should treat
it as a hate crime," said Brag Bowling, central Virginia commander of
the Sons of Confederate Veterans. "The heritage of a lot of
Southerners has really been violated."
Richmond police said the fire was started by a Molotov cocktail,
typically a bottle filled with an inflammatory [sic -- ed.] liquid.
While investigators reported this morning that they had a suspect and
were nearing an arrest, police now say they no longer believe they
have a suspect. Interviews with potential witnesses are continuing,
they said.
Police spokeswoman Jennifer Reilly said investigators will determine
later if the burning, which destroyed the Lee banner, qualifies as a
hate crime. "Right now it's not being treated that way," she said.
[...]
"I promise you if that was the Arthur Ashe statue [also on Monument
Avenue], there'd be some action," [Bowling] said.
WHICH GIVES ME AN IDEA ...
Buyers have to show they can use handgun to buy one
Thursday, January 20, 2000
Breaking News Sections
(01-20) 11:33 PST SACRAMENTO (AP) -- Anyone buying a handgun would
have to show the dealer he or she knows how to use the weapon under a
bill moving through the California Legislature.
The bill would require the buyer to show "basic proficiency,"
including how to load and unload the gun, operate safety devices and
determine whether it is loaded.
The bill is aimed at "the small population of buyers that don't know
what they're doing," said the author, Assemblyman Mike Honda, D-San
Jose. [...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/news/archive/2000/01/20/state1433EST0031.DTL
[I think we ought to insist that anyone running for office would have
to show the voters that he or she knows and understands the
Constitution of the United States, especially the Bill of Rights.
This initiative is aimed at the large population of office-seekers
who don't know what they're doing. -- ed.]
THE DEATH OF "ADVICE AND CONSENT"
"So let me be clear," [US Ambassador to the UN Madeline Albright]
continued, "only the president and the executive branch can speak for
the United States." -- in a speech to th UN Security Council,
01/24/00
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20000124/pl/un_helms_fallout_2.html
WELL THERE YOU HAVE IT ... DEMOCRACY IN ACTION
"I like him [Bill Clinton], he's raising your check every month,"
said Wilma Peetles, a retiree from Olar, S.C.
- - - - - - - - - - -
ALL ABOUT EVE
"I think he's made a good president. He's done a lot for this
country. If women hadn't gotten ahold of him, he'd have been all
right." -- George Hill, a 78-year-old retired masonry worker from
Hamer, S.C.
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source (for both):
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20000126/pl/clinton_mood_of_union_1.html
THE EMPEROR BILL
"If I had my way there would be laws restricting cigarettes and
handguns. But Congress won't even pass halfway measures. ... Almost
makes you lose faith in democracy, doesn't it? Apparently that's
exactly what's happened to the Clinton administration. Fed up with
trying to move legislation, the White House is launching lawsuits to
succeed where legislation has failed. The strategy may work, but at
the cost of making our frail democracy even weaker." --Robert Reich,
in the Wall Street Journal, 01/12/00, as reported in The New
American.
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/tna/2000/02-14-2000/vo16no04_dictator.htm
SPORTING PURPOSES ... OR ... THE GREEK ROOTS OF GUN CONTROL
"Athens -- A funny thing happened on my way to an Athenian forum last
week. On an Olympic Airways flight to the Greek capital, some of my
countrymen asked the cabin attendant whether they could smoke. Not if
other people object, was his Solomonic answer. The plane was almost
empty, everyone was in a good mood, so we all lit up and enjoyed
ourselves. The attendant nodded his approval and pretended nothing
had happened. This is what civilized travel is all about. There were
one or two grumbles from a couple of Americans, but we politely told
them to get lost. After all, this is also what democracy is about,
and to hell with the whims of an unsporting few." -- "Taki"
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.nypress.com/frame.cfm?author_id=7&site_id=1
[emphasis added -- ed.]
"Let us consider, my lords, that arbitrary power has seldom or never
been introduced into a country at once. It must be introduced by slow
degrees, and, as it were, step by step, lest the people should see it
approach. The barriers and fences of the people's liberty must be
plucked up one by one, and some plausible pretense must be found for
removing or hoodwinking, one after another, those sentries who are
posted by the constitution of a free country, for warning the people
of their danger. When these - preparatory steps are once made, the
people may then, indeed, with regret, see slavery and arbitrary power
making long strides over their land; but it will be too late to think
of preventing or avoiding the impending ruin." -- Lord Erskine,
defending Thomas Paine in London, 1792
"The essence of all slavery consists in taking the produce of
another's labor by force. It is immaterial whether this force be
founded on ownership of the slave or ownership of the money that he
must get to live on." -- Leo Tolstoy, 1891
THEY'RE ALSO THINKING OF CHANGING THEIR REGIONAL NICKNAME IN PROTEST
"With some members comparing the symbol to the Nazi swastika, the
[Los Angeles] City Council voted unanimously Tuesday, to condemn the
display of the Confederate flag over the Capitol in Columbia, S.C.
[...]
The council also voted to bar city employees from visiting South
Carolina on official business unless the flag is taken down. [...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.msnbc.com/local/knbc/352647.asp
TANSTAAFB!
"The government thinks fewer middle-class children would skip
breakfast if schools provided it to all students free, and it is
looking for some schools willing to try the idea at federal expense.
[...]
"Legislation has been introduced in Congress to offer free breakfasts
to all students at an estimated cost to taxpayers of about $400
million a year."
[...]
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://www.hotcoco.com/timeout/food/stories/dan49293.htm
ONE MORE HARD YEAR
"I think that we have, given what we could have accomplished within
the framework of possibility that was there and the job that was
there before us, I think we've done pretty well. But all I can tell
you is I've worked every day and I did the best I could, and I'm
going to let the historians make their judgement after I give it one
more hard year." -- Bill Clinton
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000126/pl/clinton_history_1.html
SOTU, BRUTE?
"Every state in this country already requires hunters and automobile
drivers to have a license. I think they ought to do the same thing
for handgun purchases. Now, specifically, I propose a plan to ensure
that all new handgun buyers must first have a photo license from
their state showing they passed the Brady background check and a gun
safety course, before they get the gun. I hope you'll help me pass
that in this Congress." -- William the Concupiscent, State of the
Union, 1/27/00
AND JUSTICE FOR ALL
[Loyola law professor Laurie] Levenson also noted that many of those
wrongly accused [in the latest LAPD corruption scandal] were
self-described gang members who, although innocent of the crimes they
were convicted of, were "not exactly productive members of society"
and therefore were less likely to receive a great deal of sympathy
from juries.
- - - - - - - - - - -
Source:
http://news.excite.com/news/r/000127/19/crime%2Dpolice
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