Archive Listing
May 1, 2007 - April 24, 2007
Tuesday, July 04, 2006
The Declaration!
A reproduction of the original
historical document. In case you ever doubted
how patriotic Democrats are when
there's a real threat or danger of some kind.
HISTORY.
Every year on this date, we like to remind everyone about the
significance of the Fourth of July, so that no one has any excuse to
forget why this is such a special day. It's called the Declaration of
Independence, and its words should be engraved on every heart. Of
course, we know the
movie
has been shown 143 times over the Holiday Weekend, but it's also vital
that we take a few minutes to read the actual document that's being
commemorated. Just remember: when the human race was threatened with
total annihilation, the signatories were willing to do absolutely
everything necessary as long as no nuclear weapons were involved. Thank
God (or whoever) that we had a McIntosh computer to save the day.
Here's the text:
Good morning. In less than one
hour planes from here and all around
the world will launch the largest aerial battle in the history of
mankind... Mankind. The word has new meaning for all of us
now. We
are reminded not of our petty differences but of our common
interests.
Perhaps it's fate that today, July the Fourth, we will fight
for our freedom. Not from tyranny, persecution or
oppression. But
from annihilation. We're fighting for our right to live, to
exist.
From this day on, the fourth day of July will be remembered
as the day that all of mankind declared we
will not go quietly into the night. We will not vanish without a
fight. We will live on. We will survive.
Words to live by. Enjoy your barbecue.
Thursday, June 29, 2006
Al Qaida Announces New
U.S. Branch Offices, VPs
Al Qaida Headquarters on "Great Satan
Appreciation Day"
SUMWERABAD, PAKISTAN--At
a press conference in the Pakistani headquarters of Al Qaida (AQ), the
organization's press liaison announced the worldwide celebration of
"Great Satan Appreciation Day" in honor of recently concluded
agreements creating two U.S. branch offices, one in New York City and
one in Washington, DC. The new offices will coordinate all tactical
operations within the continental United States, and to oversee a
planned dramatic escalation of such activities, AQ has also named two
senior operational vice presidents within the U.S.
Press Secretary Ali Ali Aachs'n Fariq said, "We are exceptionally
pleased that our two domestic startups within the Great Satan have come
together so efficiently and easily, which we believe portends a new era
in AQ strategic successes.
"Our Senior Vice President of Operations, New York, will be the former
executive editor of the New York Times, William Keller, who has also
played a key role in enabling us to acquire financing for our lease of
the current New York Times building.
"The two organizations will share office space within the building
until the Times moves into its new headquarters sometime in 2007, if it
is still standing at that time," joked Aachs'n Fariq.
He announced a similar scheme for Washington operations. "We have also
signed an agreement to share space with the United States Supreme
Court, which occupies an extremely large edifice that's really much too
big for nine old loafers and the handful of gofers who attend to their
dietary and beverage needs," Aachs'n Fariq said.
Again, the press secretary couldn't resist the opportunity for a mild
jest. "In light of their recent decisions straitjacketing the Great
Satan's
President and the military in their competition with AQ, they were
happy to give up some of their surplus square footage in exchange for
the implicit assurance that the roof wouldn't be crashed onto their
flimsy old skulls by an American jetliner."
Aachs'n Fariq returned to a serious tone in announcing that AQ's new
Senior Vice President of Operations, Washington, DC, will be Associate
Justice John Paul Stevens, expected to retire immediately from the
Supreme Court , according to the secretary, "now that he has authored
the truly incredible Hamdan decision that eliminates our last barriers to the
full protection of the Great Satan's insane legal system."
The press secretary also explained that the plan to establish
large-scale operational facilities within the U.S. had existed on paper
for some time, but couldn't be implemented because of continual
unexpected breakdowns in funding, as well as staffing shortfalls and
other inconveniences caused by U.S. law enforcement activities that
will now be terminated.
"We are supremely confident," he concluded, "that the downturn we've
experienced during the last several fiscal years is finished and that
we will soon be delighting our shareholders the way we did in the
glorious period from 1997 to 2002."
"Happy days are here again," he said.

Al Qaida New York (left) and Al
Qaida, Washington, DC (right)
At press time, vice presidents Keller and Stevens could not be reached
for comment.
Wednesday, June 28, 2006
Gray Lady Down
To New Yorkers, the U.S. is
a foreign nation.
THE
SMART ONES. The editors of the New York Times
seem taken aback by the furious nationwide response to their exposure
of a legal and effective secret anti-terror program of the United
States. They're nonplussed by the outrage. Just as other New York-based
media titans have been nonplussed by events large and small in the new
media environment created by the internet -- from the continuing
shocked denial of Dan Rather and Mary Mapes at the lightning
absoluteness of their humiliation, to the comic befuddlement of Connie
Chung about the instant ubiquity of her
embarrassing
farewell to
MSNBC's 2,386 viewers.
There's a reason for this. They live in a very small world. Forget the
impressive population figures that tell us how many human souls reside
in New York. Most of them are irrelevant dross. Our interest is the New
York of the Press. Their city -- the locus of most of the publishing
and 80 percent of the news decision making on the continent -- actually
consists of just a few thousand of the "right" people, rightly
educated, correctly oriented in terms of culture, taste, and politics,
and perfectly isolated from what happens outside their small and
incestuous social circle. They tread the same few routes along the
avenues, congregate at the same handful of acceptable restaurants, and
inform themselves from exactly the same list of approved books,
magazines, newspapers, and 'films.' (You can forget the L.A. Times in this
particular contretemps by the way: like the rest of the community of pseudo-New
York journalists, they're just imitating the Big Bitch known as the Gray
Lady.) If you ever hope to communicate with them, you have to put
things in the extremely parochial terms they understand.
That's what we're up to today. The rest of this entry is an attempt to
explain to the New York Times what's been happening in the past few
days. Our medium of communication is one they might actually be able to
process -- the trenchant sophistication of the one-panel cartoon
perfected by the greatest magazine that ever proclaimed itself the
greatest magazine in America, The New Yorker.
Non-New Yorkers may find the following summary obscure. But don't
worry. That's the way they like it.
The Editorial Decision Process
The Scoop
Keep that up, and you won't have any
friends left.
The Editors
(Try to) Close Ranks
O.K., which one of us is talking now?
The President Responds

Defending the Decision
The Blogosphere Understands
The Editors Are "Puzzled"
O.K., so I screwed up. He didn't have
to rub my nose in it.
"The Paper of Record"
Not tonight, dear. You've gained
forty pounds and lost most of your hair.
The Silence of the Liberals
The Gray Lady of Tomorrow
Does that clear anything up for you,
boys and girls?
UPDATE.
Even though
Ace of
Spades stole my (stolen) title, he's tracking the fall of the NYT
quantitatively. And, as always,
Michelle Malkin
is all over the story too.