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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (16655)10/14/2007 7:31:03 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
When Amateurs Make Foreign Policy
By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Friday, October 12, 2007 4:20 PM PT

Justice: Of course, it's right to recognize the wrong that the former Ottoman Empire did to the millions of Armenians it slaughtered and deported from 1915 and 1922. That said, does Congress have to recognize it now?

The answer is no. The country that was formed following the Ottoman Empire's collapse in 1922, Turkey, is today a stable, democratic and secular country — and an ally of the U.S. and Europe. Believe it or not, after ours its army is the second-largest in the NATO alliance — bigger than Britain's, France's or Germany's.

More importantly, it straddles a swath of what may be the most strategically important piece of land in the world.

Turkey is situated in both Europe and Asia Minor, guards the oil- rich and strategically vital Black Sea, dominates the back end of the Mediterranean, and shares borders and geography with some of the most troubled spots in the world. These include Iraq, Syria, Iran, the former Soviet Union and parts of Eastern Europe.

How puzzling, then, that the Democrat-led House Foreign Affairs Committee would choose this time to push through a resolution recognizing as genocide the murder of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians at the end of the first World War. We hope the rest of Congress — House and Senate alike — pass on the chance to vote on it.

Today's Turkey, founded on the ashes of the Ottomans, didn't commit these crimes. We wonder: Will Congress now also condemn our own government for genocide against the American Indians?

We fail to see what good comes of this. But it's easy to see the bad.

To repeat: Turkey is an ally — though an imperfect one. Recently, it has been angered by hit-and-run attacks staged from Kurdistan in northern Iraq (a fifth of Turkey's population is Kurdish, and it adamantly opposes the creation of an independent Kurdistan on its border). It has threatened to invade Iraq repeatedly, only to be talked out of it by the U.S.

Now, after it recalled its ambassador following the committee's action, will Turkey continue to show patience? Maybe not. We hope Democrat Tom Lantos, who heads the foreign affairs panel and who pushed H.R. 106, remembers this. The blood's on his hands.

Don't get us wrong. We think Turkey should have recognized its acts a long time ago. And the U.S. is only one of a number of democracies that have already recognized the killings as genocide. Others include Argentina, Canada, Chile, Cyprus, France, Greece, the European Parliament, Lithuania, Slovakia and Switzerland.

But the timing of this resolution simply stinks, and we're made to wonder if this isn't some Democrats' way of making President Bush's Middle East policy even harder to implement.

Americans might not realize it, but Turkey is strategically indispensable. About 70% of our flights into Iraq come from our Turkish base at Incirlik. About 30% of our fuel comes from there.

Our ability to base in Turkey gives the U.S. and NATO reach far beyond our borders. A carelessly delivered diplomatic slap to the face of a key American ally — the Turks see the resolution as undermining the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, elected to a second term only in July — can hardly be helpful.

(By the way, this isn't the first time Congress has done this. It voted on similar resolutions in 1975 and in 1984. We're already on the record.)

Turkey struggled to create a modern identity for much of the 20th century, and continues to do so today. At great political cost, it has turned itself toward the West — building a modern, secular and democratic state in a region not known for any of those things. It has undergone wrenching but necessary change over the last decade in an effort to join the European Union.

But its 71 million people, let's not forget, are still mostly Islamic, and the same forces at work in the rest of the Middle East, namely Islamic fundamentalism, are at work there. The committee's vote didn't help that one bit, and will only give the extremists more fodder.

No wonder Turkey is furious — talking even of shutting down Incirlik, which would cost the U.S. war effort in Iraq dearly and could even delay what appears to be a likely victory there.

This is where the Democrats' foreign-policy meddling and incompetence will get us: echoes of Jimmy Carter, who embarked on a badly-thought-out human rights campaign as the Soviet Union gobbled up more territory around the world.

Democrats style themselves as highly intellectual, nuanced global thinkers. But both in Congress and on the campaign trail they've shown themselves to be a bunch of bumbling, foreign-policy-challenged amateurs. Is this the best they can do?



To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (16655)10/14/2007 7:33:59 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
Some Inconvenient Truths For Gore
By INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Thursday, October 11, 2007 4:20 PM PT

Junk Science: Al Gore's documentary on climate disaster has been ruled a work of fiction by a British judge. In legal terms, his global warming hysteria has been assuming facts not in evidence.
Gore has long insisted that the debate over disastrous and imminent climate change induced by man-made global warming is over. A unanimous scientific "consensus" had formed, and the only doubters were "deniers" who also believe the moon landings were filmed on a movie lot in Arizona.

The British government apparently believed this, making Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" part of the British secondary school curriculum. The greenies were happy, if for no other reason than convincing impressionable children and future voters is easier than defending their theories before award-winning pioneers in the field.

Stewart Dimmock, a school governor in Kent, said the government's decision amounted to brainwashing of children. Justice Michael Burton of the High Court in London, while agreeing warming is man-induced, also supported Dimmock's view that "(Gore's film) is not simply a science film . . . but that it is a political film."

Burton ruled that the film could be shown to British students, but only on the condition it be accompanied by new guidance notes for teachers to balance Gore's "one-sided" views. Burton documented nine major errors in Gore's film and wrote that some of Gore's claims had arisen "in the context of alarmism and exaggeration."

The first error Gore made, according to Burton, was in his apocalyptic vision of the devastation from a rise in sea levels caused by melting polar ice caps. Gore's claim of a 20-foot rise "in the near future" was dismissed as "distinctly alarmist." Burton wrote that such a rise could occur "only after, and over, millennia" and to suggest otherwise "is not in line with the scientific consensus."

As we have noted, the scientific consensus is that sea levels might rise anywhere from 7 inches to 23 inches, but it would take a century for that to occur. Even the latest IPCC report suggested that it would take a thousand years of higher-than-historic temperatures to melt the Greenland ice sheet, the basis of Gore's claim.

On Gore's claim that the loss of Mount Kilimanjaro's snows was due to climate change, the judge said the scientific community had been unable to find evidence of a direct link. In fact, it found the opposite.

In 2002, glaciologist Lonnie Thompson reported that from 1953 to 1976, a period of global cooling that had some predicting a new ice age, a full 21% of Kilimanjaro's main glacier disappeared. It was caused not by man-induced warming, but by deforestation.

Burton said Gore's suggestion that the Gulf Stream that warms the North Atlantic would shut down also was contradicted by the IPCC's assessment that it was "very unlikely" to happen.

Burton also ridiculed Gore's claim that polar bears were drowning while searching for ice melted by global warming. The only drowned polar bears the court said it was aware of were four bears that died following a storm.

There is no word from Gore on whether he thinks Judge Burton was paid off by Big Oil, drives an SUV or thinks the moon landing was fake. For Gore, it's an inconvenient truth that in its first court case, the Industrial Revolution was put on trial and found not guilty on at least nine counts.



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To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (16655)10/14/2007 9:39:05 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
Limbaugh has gotten a lot of US troops killed and recently called those (who may be the silent majority) who detest Bush's policies "phony soldiers". While Limbaugh himself and all his top Bushie heros were cowardly draft-dodgers who would never risk a scraped knee for their country, yet are gleeful about smearing real war heros and covering up the murder of Pat Tillman and many other Bushie war crimes and failures.