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How Many Dhimis Does It Take To Change A Light Bulb?

Mark Steyn's latest column delves into what other countries see when they look at Iraq. 

"As I always say, if you live in Tikrit and Ramadi, the Iraq issue is about Iraq. But, if you live anywhere else on the planet, Iraq is about America."

So, hop on over and give Light Bulbs That Don't Signify Ideas a read.  You'll be glad you did.
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Voices From The Front VIII

 With all that's going on over here right now (Virginia Tech, Presidential campaign, even Imus and Alec Baldwin), it's easy to forget about the part of us who are overseas fighting to keep the rest of us safe.  Take some time to acquaint yourself with some of them.  Lisa Yanity is a medical service officer.  She's dewormed over 14,000 Afghan children.  That's gotta be some kind of record.  Jacqueline Naylor is a family practice physician.  Check out her recount of delivering a baby that was breech.  Jerry Trotter was called to active duty while in his junior year at the University of South Florida (my alma mater).  Lorie Jewell is a journalist, and you can tell.  She's got some good stories.  Take a moment to read one or two of the interviews.  Come back for more when you have the time.

Lisa Yanity - 1/29/06

"Maybe it's the educator in me coming out, but for me, working with the young people, that's where we're truly going to effect change. Maybe they'll remember those crazy Americans - 'They gave me candy and vitamins. Maybe they're not so bad.'"

Captain Jacqueline Naylor - 2/5/06

"The worst is when our own soldiers come in. The ones killed in action, you have to look for identification. A first sergeant was blown up in an IED. I was putting oxygen on him. He looked at me with his bloody eyes, and with his bloody hand he grabbed my hand, and he said, 'I'm so sorry.'  He's responsible for the safety of troops, and he's thinking that by getting hurt, he's taking up my time. I had to sit down for a little bit. I believe he survived. If they make it on the plane to Germany, generally they're going to survive."

Corporal Jerry E. Trotter - 2/12/06

"It's kind of tough when you're trying to battle an ideology rather than individuals. In my opinion, it's going well. It's a winning battle, but it's going to be a long one, like the president says."

Journalist Lorie Jewell - 2/19/06

"You hear a lot in the news about IEDs [improvised explosive devices] going off, and the car bombs. That's a fact that shouldn't be glossed over. But for every car bomb or roadside bomb you hear of, there are probably 10 or 20 that were prevented because citizens saw what was going on and reported it. They're little things that by themselves are not real sexy stories, but I think in the big picture, that kind of attitude is going to bring about the bigger success."



History Lesson:  Ever wonder about the Shores of Tripoli?  Take a gander at Gunny G's blog post, To the Shores of Tripoli and find out why those words are in the Marine's Hymn.

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Steyn: The Reality Behind Gun Control

Mark Steyn takes a look at the world that lefties live in.  Brilliant as usual.  What are you still doing here?  Go read Let's Get Realistic About Reality.

"The 'gun-free zone' fraud isn't just about banning firearms or even a symptom of academia's distaste for an entire sensibility of which the Second Amendment is part and parcel but part of a deeper reluctance of critical segments of our culture to engage with reality."
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Ismail Ax

I decided to take a more in-depth look at the possible meanings of "Ismail Ax."  Here they are by category:

Tek:
There are a couple of ideas that were brought up in this area.  The first is that Ismail is an email program.  While Ismail is, indeed, an email program, I just can't picture a mass murderer, no matter how irrational, advertising his favorite email program.  That just doesn't make any sense.  Along this same vein is the idea that it was a misspelling of Turkish hip-hop artist Ismail YK.  Yeah, that's it.  Next.

The second idea is that it was the name of a character that he created for a computer game.  While assuming the identity of a character you fabricated while you go on a rampage does fit the bill for pure looniness, there are a couple of problems with it.  One is that his roommates never said anything about him playing video games, though they did note that he liked to download and listen to music, particularly the song "Shine" by Collective Soul.  The other problem is that it leaves you where you started from.  You still don't know what the name means...

Literature:
The first book that springs to mind is Moby Dick.  The main protagonist is a bit of a loner and calls himself Ishmael.  The problem is that the spelling of the name is different.  Granted, it's the same name, but if you're saying that this guy is borrowing from literature because he's an English major, then you have to admit that the English major would have used the same spelling.  Also, what about the ax?  Besides which, the Ishmael of Moby Dick, while perhaps a bit of a loner, did enjoy the company of some acquaintances and did not seem to have, pardon the expression, an axe to grind.  No, this one does not really fit.

Next in line is The Prairie by James Fenimore Cooper.  You have a character, Ishmael Bush, who clears land with an axe wherever he goes.  Some have said that the axe connotates destruction, death, but also life.  This could work, but once again, we have some problems.  First of all, the spelling of the name again (see comment above).  Second of all, this would be a very subtle, sophisticated allusion.  The murderer in question does not strike me as such.  One perusal of his writings shows him to be direct and over the top.  Also, The Prairie is "is really the story of how Ishmael Bush learned to value the ways of civilization, how he redeemed himself and rose up out of his brutishness to wisdom and sanity and maturity, how out in nature he exchanged the role of Caliban for that of Prospero who in the end puts all things right."  (Quote by William H. Goetzmann taken from the above link).  I'm not buying this one.

Religion:
There's two bits here.  One is of the Islamic retooling of the Abraham, Isaac account.  In the original telling, of course, Abraham is going to sacrifice his son, Isaac, half brother of Ishmael, as a test of obedience to God before God calls it off, having found Abraham obedient.   In this account, Abraham is going to use a knife.  In the Islamic reboot, Ibrahim is going to sacrifice Ismail, half brother of Ishaq.  Tradition has it that he was going to use an axe on Ismail, the Son of Sacrifice.  There's some interesting info on this
here if you are interested in finding out more about how Muhammad
reconfigured the Jewish account of Abraham and Isaac.

There's also been talk about the bit where Ibrahim takes his axe to the temple idols.  The thing is, it's Ibrahim, not Ismail using the axe.

Brain Teasers:
Some people are thinking it might be an anagram.  This seems a real stretch to me.  Again, this guy was direct.  I don't think he was into cryptoquotes or anything.  We're not Batman, and he wasn't the Riddler.  Anyway, connecting this category with Religion, is Salami.  That's right.  Salami.  It's a Buddhist thing; you wouldn't understand.  But if you want to try, here's the
info (skip down to the third paragraph).

Looking through all of these, the only one that makes any sense to me is the Son of Sacrifice account.  I would caution against linking this to some kind of Islamic terrorist plot.  It seems more likely to me that the murderer was either making a literary allusion, albeit to the Koran, or, perhaps, as a very disturbed individual, he latched onto a very disturbing philosophy (radical Islam).  At the moment, the latter seems likely to me.  If you want to know why, check out this column by
Frank Salvato.  He says:

"Hui may have been deemed mentally challenged and a danger to himself and others but that simply doesn’t preclude the notion that this mentally ill individual wasn’t emboldened by the ideas of terrorism or by the influences of fundamentalist Islam."

The whole column is good and I recommend it. 

Any other ideas on the meaning of "Ismail Ax" out there?  I don't know that we'll ever really know what the murderer meant by it, but we can speculate.
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Random Thoughts on Virginia Tech

Just some random thoughts related to V Tech:

Gun control.  I was somewhat amazed (I know I shouldn't be) that before anyone really knew anything, gun control was already a topic.  I'm not going to go into the reasons why this is actually a case study that shows the problems with gun control.  Several columnists and bloggers have already been there and done that.  What I would like to note is that just a couple of weeks ago, Republicans and Democrats, columnists and posters were saying that Rudy's stance on gun control should not be a deterrent to voting for him because gun control is a dead issue anyway.  I didn't agree with that assessment before, but I don't see how anyone can agree with it now.  Imagine if the Dems somehow expand their majorities in the House and Senate (perhaps the RNC backs RINOs again) and Rudy is President.  Think Rudy won't sign a gun control bill into law?  And even if he does, it would be unconstitutional.  Right?  Seems like I heard something similar about campaign finance reform.  I know I wouldn't want to roll the dice with the courts.

Dial H for Hero.  When I first found out about the V Tech, I immediately thought there would be tales of courage that would come out of it.  I wasn't wrong.  By now, you've probably heard of Liviu Librescu, the man who blocked the door so that his students could escape.  Scottie, the Heartland Patriot, has a good post on him here.  All I'm going to add is that I'd like to see us make a point of not using the murderer's name while we go out of our way to remember Librescu's.

South Korea.  I couldn't help but be struck by the reaction in South Korea over this incident.  My first impulse was to think there's no need to apologize.  Then I thought, while that's true, it's still a nice gesture.  Finally, I couldn't help but be struck by the comparison of South Korea's response to the dancing in the streets in many Islamic countries after 9/11.  I don't want to paint with too broad a brush, but I don't want to paint with too narrow a one either. 

Ismail Ax.  What's it mean?  I've heard several ideas, the most ridiculous of which was:  "It's an email program."  As if the killer was taking out ad space on his appendages.  Another idea was that it was his screen name.  Ok.  So, why did he pick that as his screen name?  Others said that it was from one piece of literature or another (he was an English major after all).  The problem here is that none of the literary references really match the situation very well without really stretching it.  The most likely idea is that it's from the Islamic version of Abraham's near sacrifice of his son, Isaac.  Isaac?  Like I said, it's the Islamic version.  Instead of Isaac being on the chopping block, it's Ishmael, or, as they like to spell it, Ismail.  Anyway, if you have heard a different idea, post it in a comment.

MSM.  What about 'em?  Well, I can't help but feel that we've only seen and heard what they wanted us to see and hear.  Are there more Islamic references in his videos and writings?  Not that it would matter.  This guy was too big of a nutter to reflect poorly on anything or anyone other than himself.  But it is sad that we've gotten to the point where I basically do not trust anything the MSM says. 

On that note, feel free to comment on any of these topics.  Or add your own topic to the mix. 
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BC and Id

Johnny Hart, creator of BC and Brant Parker, co-creator (with Hart) of The Wizard of Id took leave of this world within eight days of eachother. 

Hart served in Korea as an enlisted member of the Air Force.  Parker had served in the Navy during WWII.  He worked for Disney before and after the war. 

Both strips will continue with family members taking over. 

The giants have gone to sleep.  The end of an era is at hand.

Here's an interview with Hart on
Christianity Today.
And
Michelle Malkin's tribute.
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Imus Be Dreaming

How many different ways can you look at the Imus Be Crazy deal?  Is there nothing else to write about (I ask as I add yet another missive on the subject)?  I don't  know, but here's Styen's take on it:

Imus Go Down to the Idiocy Again

"It's a good rule of thumb in American scandals that, no matter how big an idiot someone is, the outrage over him will always be more idiotic."

By the way, I have this image of Imus speeding towards a bridge with a span missing.  Flags are waving, sirens are sounding.  Lights flashing.  And Imus waves them all off as he mashes the gas pedal down.  What happened to his inner editor? 

Anyway, Flagwaver has a couple of posts on this (
Apples And Oranges and Time To Call It), and Scottie has one as well (Where the Moral Relativism Hits the Road).  Check them out and join the debate.
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Steyn's Take On Iran

Well, Great Britain didn't look so great.  They totally got played.  The only thing they left out was asking Ahmadinejad if he wanted any cream or sugar with his tea.  Of course, the United States didn't look so grand either, staring at its shoes and whistling, as it were.  Anyway, here's Mark Steyn's take on it:

"Iran's Bluff Humbles Britain"
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Steyn: 15 Brits or 15 Europeans?

I want to bring your attention to two excellent columns today.  The first, of course, is by Mark Steyn.  In it, Steyn gives us his typically unique look at the 15 hostages in Iran.  Without really looking at the situation, I thought this was between Iran and Great Brittain (and technically Iraq) with, perhaps, the U.S. acting as an enforcer.  But take a look at it through Steyn's eyes.  The Brits are also Europeans.  And their mission was one from the UN.  So, what are the European Union and the United Nations doing about this affront?  Take a look at:

"Resolve Real Crises Through Pseudo-institutions?" by Mark Steyn



While you're at it, you might want to take a look at a column by Jeff Jacoby.  He examines why, with Brittain steadily withdrawing their forces and U.S. Dems promising withdrawal, the Jihadists have stepped up their attack.  With their demands being met (or on their way to being met), why would they jeopardize getting what they say the want?  Know any appeasers?  Send them over to read:

"The Smell Of Irresolution" by Jeff Jacoby
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