That’s probably a really, really bad sign…
There Is No Internet, Only Zuul
January 27th, 2011This Week in Jihad for January 27, 2011
January 27th, 2011The big Jihad news this week, of course, was the Moscow bombing. But that was hardly the only thing of note:
Dokka Umerov has repeatedly made it very clear that he wants nothing to do with al Qaeda, or bin Laden.
The latter point reveals the following about the global War on Terror. First, the US and British efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq have succeeded in destroying al Qaeda’s reputation amongst Islamist organizations. If an Islamist cause as major as the Caucasus Emirate wants to stay clean of al Qaeda, it means that al Qaeda equals trouble. Al Qaeda involvement means interference from the world’s great powers.
Second, Russia’s situation reveals that the US and British efforts have failed to do significant damage to the ideology of Islamism. If a nationalist movement turns itself into a movement with Islamist objectives in order to make itself stronger, then it proves that the ideals to which al Qaeda subscribes have not been significantly damaged.
Texas 2012 Senate Race Updates for January 26, 2011
January 26th, 2011A few Texas 2012 Senate Race updates:
Press Releases
Elizabeth Ames Jones Reports $563,000 Raised Since Announcing For The U.S SenateAUSTIN, TX – Elizabeth Ames Jones’ U.S. Senate campaign today announced fundraising numbers for the 2nd Quarter of 2009. The report filed with the FEC shows that $356,000 was raised between April 1st and June 30th. The campaign has raised more than $563,000 since Commissioner Jones filed to run for the U.S. Senate and the campaign has $443,000 on hand at the close of the quarter.
“We are very pleased with the 2nd Quarter filing. We not only met, but exceeded our goals and have demonstrated growing support from around Texas. This is further proof that Texans know Elizabeth Ames Jones has the steady leadership needed to be their next U.S. Senator. Her conservative message is clearly resonating with people and this is just the beginning,” stated Alicia Collins, Campaign Manager.
Last month the Jones campaign announced that Governor and Mrs. William P. Clements will serve as the Honorary Chairmen for Commissioner Jones’ U.S. Senate campaign and Secretary and Mrs. Robert Mosbacher will serve as Honorary Chairman of the Campaign Finance Committee.
Texas Railroad Commissioner Elizabeth Ames Jones, 52, was elected to the Texas Legislature in a landslide upset victory in 2000. In 2005, she was appointed by Governor Rick Perry to a vacancy on the Texas Railroad Commission and was overwhelmingly elected to serve a six-year term in 2006. Her energy commentaries have been published in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post and other major newspapers. Jones is a candidate for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison.
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Posted on Tuesday, July 14, 2009 by Project BIG fish
Texas 2012 Senate Campaign Fundraising Reports
January 25th, 2011Just as a modern army runs on gasoline, a modern political campaign runs on money. Several of the Senate candidates have been quite active in that regard, according to FEC documents for the 2009-2010 period:
I can’t find any Senate fundraising reports on any of the other likely serious candidates. (Democrat Chet Edwards shows up, but only for his unsuccessful attempt to hold onto his House seat.)
Keep in mind that these are very early figures, only go through 9/30/10 for most candidates, and several potential candidates haven’t started raising funds yet. I have little doubt that, should David Dewhurst jump into the race as expected, he would easily be able to amass somewhere in the neighborhood of $10 million by year’s end.
We’re not even at the starting line yet, but contestants are already starting to mosey out to the track…
How Facebook Responded to Tunisian Hacks
January 24th, 2011I still don’t feel like I have a good handle on the Tunisian Revolution yet. (Indeed, my fingers keep wanting to type “Tunesian,” which suggests a government based on iTunes…) Jihadi? Non-Jihadi? Both? (Probably the the last.) But the fact that the government-owned ISPs were running a massive “man in the middle” attack by capturing every password for Facebook (and what the Facebook team did about it, certainly suggests that the (semi-deposed) government were no angels. In fact, it brings back memories of East Germany, where Stasi monitoring stations were literally built right on top of telephone exchanges…
(And speaking of the Stasi, if you haven’t done so already, you should see The Lives of Others, one of the greatest films of the last decade…)
Footage from Moscow Bombing Aftermath
January 24th, 2011Not particularly graphic, but lots of dead bodies:
(Hat tip: NRO’s The Corner.)
23 31 35 Killed in Moscow Airport Bombing
January 24th, 2011
Chechnyan separatists? Jihadists? (Remember that Jihaist suicide bombers have struck in Russia before.) Who knows? News is still coming in.
Added: Death toll updated to 31
Edited to add 2: Seeing reports of 35 deaths now. Also seeing reports that it was a suicide bomber.
A Question for Mark Steyn
January 23rd, 2011Mark Steyn is justly famous for many things: His stalwart opposition to Jihad, his grasp of demographics, his clever and eminently readable prose, and his once (and future?) gig on the last page of National Review (currently held by the also-formidable James Lileks). He’s also known for stating that China, thanks to its one-child-per-couple mandate, will get old before it gets rich.
However, on reading this Lawrence Solomon piece on China’s inevitable collapse, something occurred to me. Particular in response to this part:
Like the Soviet Union before it, much of China’s supposed boom is illusory — and just as likely to come crashing down
In 1975, while I was in Siberia on a two-month trip through the U.S.S.R., the illusion of the Soviet Union’s rise became self-evident. In the major cities, the downtowns seemed modern, comparable to what you might see in a North American city. But a 20-minute walk from the centre of downtown revealed another world — people filling water buckets at communal pumps at street corners. The U.S.S.R. could put a man in space and dazzle the world with scores of other accomplishments yet it could not satisfy the basic needs of its citizens. That economic system, though it would largely fool the West until its final collapse 15 years later, was bankrupt, and obviously so to anyone who saw the contradictions in Soviet society.
The Chinese economy today parallels that of the latter-day Soviet Union — immense accomplishments co-existing with immense failures. In some ways, China’s stability today is more precarious than was the Soviet Union’s before its fall. China’s poor are poorer than the Soviet Union’s poor, and they are much more numerous — about one billion in a country of 1.3 billion. Moreover, in the Soviet Union there was no sizeable middle class — just about everyone was poor and shared in the same hardships, avoiding resentments that might otherwise have arisen.
In China, the resentments are palpable. Many of the 300 million people who have risen out of poverty flaunt their new wealth, often egregiously so. This is especially so with the new class of rich, all but non-existent just a few years ago, which now includes some 500,000 millionaires and 200 billionaires. Worse, the gap between rich and poor has been increasing. Ominously, the bottom billion views as illegitimate the wealth of the top 300 million.
How did so many become so rich so quickly? For the most part, through corruption. Twenty years ago, the Communist Party decided that “getting rich is glorious,” giving the green light to lawless capitalism. The rulers in China started by awarding themselves and their families the lion’s share of the state’s resources in the guise of privatization, and by selling licences and other access to the economy to cronies in exchange for bribes. The system of corruption, and the public acceptance of corruption, is now pervasive — even minor officials in government backwaters are now able to enrich themselves handsomely.
In light of that: What if “one child per couple,” like paying taxes for members of the Obama administration, is just for the little people? What if the upper crust of China feels such rules don’t apply to them? Assume both that the Chinese ruling class can pop out offspring to their heart’s content and still manages, somehow, to avoid the explosion Solomon posits. (Dictatorships can run a whole lot longer than you think possible. Just ask Saddam Hussein or Kim Jong-Il.) Just how much cheating would it take for China to put off its demographic crash until they do get rich?
LinkSwarm for Sunday, January 23, 2011
January 23rd, 2011A few links of potential interest for a lazy Sunday:
- Here’s a Boston Globe piece wondering why people don’t want to move to Massachusetts, and concluding that regulations make it too hard to build more housing. Well, that probably doesn’t help. But it takes a Harvard economist to miss the obvious truth that commentors point out directly below: People don’t want to move to the expensive, corrupt, failing People’s Republic of Taxachusetts. Why would anyone want to suffer with Massachusetts’ state income tax when they can move to Texas or Florida, pay no state income tax, and afford a house?
- Krauthammer on ObamaCare: everything begins with repeal.
- How China managed to corner the rare earth market, mainly because rare earths aren’t really rare and no one else wanted to.
- William A. Jacobson over at Legal Insurrection had made BattleSwarmBlog his blog of the day. Thanks!