Thursday, July 29, 2010

A Compelling Reason to Mention the Wedding of Chelsea Clinton


All this time we have been trying to avoid mentioning the upcoming Clinton-Mezvinsky wedding, which will likely take place in a Rhinebeck, NY mansion. The traditional media has been providing saturation coverage, but when NBC News mentioned that even the porta-potties would have porcelain commodes, hot running water, and stereo music ($15,000 to rent them for a day), it confirmed the widely-held belief that no expense was being spared to make this an extra special occasion.

Sow the Wind, Reap the Whirlwind

EDITOR'S NOTE: I had the pleasure of meeting the late Doyle Roberts once, but we clicked immediately, so it gives me great pleasure to post this prescient speech on the blog. It describes the tendency of bureaucrats to create complex organizations [or lack thereof], promote mediocrity, and avoid accountability, because that is what they do. Reading it gives you an insight as to why the state of California is on the verge of bankruptcy.

On the Occasion of My Retirement
by Doyle L. Roberts (delivered in Westminster, CA on March 5, 1981)

The Youth Authority has had over 25 years to make up its mind about Doyle Roberts. So what I say in a single speech is unlikely to change anybody’s mind.

I am retiring early rather than continue to implement policies I consider ethically repugnant. The Youth Authority is more than a big P.T.A. social, it is a necessary public agency. It is California’s best tool for fighting delinquency. I worked for and merited my job. So…

I don’t have to knuckle under. I can pick up my retirement pay and hang a “go-to-hell” sign on my door. I will no longer assist the “team” in turning the Youth Authority into political garbage.

Every year since 1975, when I took the CEA assignment, I have had to close my eyes and compromise my conscience on the way to the bank. The psychological blows have been numerous. It is like being nibbled to death by ducks.

In hindsight, it would have been better to shut my mouth. I criticized Sacramento and the bizarre policies often and in writing. That was not the wisest procedure. I put my CEA job on the line. I knew what could happen. I believe that management has the right to select and reject subordinates – hell, that was a primary principle. But they demote efficient and promote defective employees. My ethical breaking point was not the director’s loss of confidence. The plain facts are that I had little confidence in the invincible woman as director and no confidence in the executive team: the leg hangers and the wonder wimps.

My heroes have always been cowboys. My models were Heman [Herman?] Star, R.G. Harvey, Lyle Egan and Vic Kirk. Administrators who spoke with a straight tongue, who did what they had to do, took action and were responsible for their decisions. Power does not come in a can to be picked up and passed around. Authority must be earned. Managers of principle do not kowtow to politics but speak out on public issues. The Youth Authority must not be allowed to shift priorities and resources away from its public protective role.

When I transferred to the clinic I got to know another side of YA. The kind of people that make a dangerously overcrowded and under budgeted institution function safely for staff and wards. In the history of corrections SRCC shines like a “good deed in a naughty world.” I am proud to have been part of that work.

Three things must be kept in mind to understand my leaving.

One factor is that the Y.A. of today is very complex. The old Y.A. had three divisions, the new Y.A. is a hydra-headed department with a duplication of service and a multiplication of irresponsible decision-makers. I do not know who is running the Youth Authority. I do know that the Director is not. I was forbidden, in writing, to talk business with her. But is the Chief Deputy in charge or is one of the others? The Y.A. has not issued an organizational chart since 1975. There are so many chiefs at such high levels the traditional pyramid would be inverted on a chart. With all the “bookkeepers” in charge the “Executive Team” knows the cost of everything and the value of nothing. The symbol is no longer a torch but a green eyeshade.

A second factor is the lack of communication. There are many levels of command but there is not a clear voice from the top. Just a vast horde of superordinates generating enormous amounts of paper to justify their level of classification. People who need continual interchange to do their job are separated by branch organization and people who need to talk cannot and those who should not, do. The politically responsible people are isolated from the realities of the department. Sacramento head office is incapable of the level of leadership necessary to revitalize the system.

The third point is the myth. The public and the Legislature no longer view the Y.A. as important. Our image is so loose and vague that what we are supposed to be doing has become lost. For example: while Los Angeles is working to put police supervisors out of the office and into the streets, the Y.A. is forcing their parole forces out of the streets by taking away their transportation. Doesn’t Sacramento know that young offenders do not volunteer? The delinquent does not come into the office asking for treatment. If you are going to fight street crime you have to go out and do your thing “eyeball to eyeball” in the criminal’s natural habitat.

I consider myself an expert on the Youth Authority. I believe that my service gives me a perspective for valid criticism. I refuse to be a “closet” protestor. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the heart of the issue. Stay and be nibbled to death or walk away with human dignity. I have never feasted on toad, either in Upland or Sacramento. I am not dead, I feel fine. I have to retire because I no longer have hope that the department can reform itself. Let me recite a poem I scribbled for the occasion:

Oh where are the shouters and gripers?
They are vanished before they grow old
The silent ones now are your leaders
And the reason is – Silence is Gold.

The Youth Authority is too valuable a social tool to be left to third-rate hacks.

I am sure that the administration will try to muddy the waters. Already plausible rumors are moving. The smallest of small potatoes will be unearthed to discredit my actions. SRCC has been overpopulated. The SRCC employees work excessive overtime. Wards’ rights and volunteer programs are not “free.” Permit me to relate an experience from the year last past. A Task Force swooped down on the clinic looking for something wrong. The resulting report was so hokey that you did not know whether to laugh yourself into hysteria, or attempt to track down the lout who wrote it and flog him with old copies of clinic studies. We pointed out that all the so-called “discrepancies” were the exclusive responsibilities of the SRCC “mole” and I would be pleased to take assertive action. Not surprisingly, the report was deep-sixed.

I resigned in protest but am taking my peace officer retirement (I earned it) by leaving. I may put an additional burden on you but the battle is not over. I have recommended a new director and a new organization to restore public confidence. I was going to say to turn the organization around, but it’s been turned around so often I forget which direction it’s headed. I will do everything I can publicly and politically to see that you get the support you need and that those responsible for bad management are held accountable.

Well, since I didn’t ask anybody’s permission to retire early, I can now follow my own advice. Forgive me.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Take the Money and Run!

Bloomberg.com relates the sad tale of Cindy Lohman of Great Mills, MD, who lost her son, a 24-year-old Army sergeant, in Afghanistan. She received a 9x12 in. envelope with a "checkbook" from Prudential Financial Inc., but when she tried to buy a bed and later a camera with the checks, they were rejected for the simple reason that Prudential had not deposited a single cent into a checking account, but was using the entire $400,000 in their general corporate account. So in addition to check fraud, insurance companies such as Prudential and MetLife could well be in violation of a 1933 law that forbids companies from accepting deposits without state or federal authorization. Thus a beneficiary is better off putting his or her money into an FDIC-insured savings account or interest-bearing checking account rather than leaving it in a "retained-asset account."

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Wisdom of Thomas Jefferson

John F. Kennedy held a dinner in the White House for a group of the brightest minds in the nation at that time. He made this statement: "This is perhaps the assembly of the most intelligence ever to gather at one time in the White House with the exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone."

The following quotes are all by the third President of the United States, Thomas Jefferson:

When we get piled upon one another in large cities, as in Europe, we shall become as corrupt as Europe.

The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not.

It is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debts as it goes. A principle which if acted on would save one-half the wars of the world.

I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.

My reading of history convinces me that most bad government results from too much government.

No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms.

Leave no authority existing not responsible to the people.

The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government.

I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that His justice cannot sleep forever.

The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.

He who knows nothing is closer to the truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods and errors.

To compel a man to subsidize with his taxes the propagation of ideas which he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.

I have no fear that the result of our experiment will be that men may be trusted to govern themselves without a master.

Thomas Jefferson said in 1802:
'I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around the banks will deprive the people of all property - until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.'

Monday, July 26, 2010

Arizona Boy Thanks Troops Overseas with Handmade Greeting Cards

It gives great pleasure for this military-friendly blog to mention the name of Stephen Goodman of Surprise, AZ, who is making 180,000 cards to personally thank combat veterans for their service, with help from his grandfather, Manuel Noriega (no, not that Noriega).

More Compelling Reasons Why Democrats Don't Welcome the Military Vote

Investor's Business Daily describes how the Democrats regard the military budget as an easy target for cuts at a time when sacrifices have to be made across-the-board.

"The New York Times reported last week that thanks in large part to 'big budget deficits,'the Defense Department is under 'intensifying political and economic pressures to restrain its budget, setting up the first serious debate since the terrorist attacks of 2001 about the size and cost of the armed services.' The House and Senate are considering cuts.

"The more things change, the more they stay the same.

"Defense is the only part of the budget Democrats seem to want to cut. And they've supplied themselves with the perfect cover to do so: the all-too-familiar 'bipartisan commission.'"

UPDATE: Pajamas Media has an article about how 17,000 service members were cheated out of the opportunity to have their absentee ballots counted because of government inefficiency.

People Have Been Thown Into Prison for Less!

It's not often I refer to a leftist publication such as the Guardian (U.K.), but they were among the first to break a story that made the release of the Pentagon Papers look like a trickle. According to this article the mass leak consists of, "92,201 internal records of actions by the US military in Afghanistan between January 2004 and December 2009." A U.S. Soldier, Bradley Manning, aka Bradass87, has been arrested in this case.

The New York Times, one of the publications which received this mass shipment of classified documents, revealed that Pakistan's rogue military intelligence service has been supporting the Taliban behind the scenes. This must be the same duplicitous Pakistani ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence) that the Government of India suspects planned and equipped the 2008 Mumbai massacre.

This flood of documents could well force the United States government to change much of its military and diplomatic policy.

If you are wondering what all the excitement is about, check out Wikileaks.

Sources as different from each other as Slate.com and Rightwing Nuthouse agree that this flood of classified documents should not be compared to the Pentagon Papers, but Rick Moran of Righwing Nuthouse writes, "As for the question of should the documents have been published? Of course not. Anyone who gave that anti-American nutcase Julian Assange - an Australian by birth - access to those documents should be arrested, tried, convicted, and sent to jail for a very long time. Untold damage is being done simply because no one knows what use of this information will be made by the enemy. What intelligence can they glean from its contents? Certainly the Taliban can figure out some of our weaknesses by reading through these documents. For that reason alone, Assange himself should be relentlessly pursued and arrested."

Saturday, July 24, 2010

What Happens When Politicians Lack Adult Supervision

An AP-Comcast story describes how the city manager of Bell, CA (population 40,000) ended up being paid more than the president of the United States, the police chief had a higher salary than the chief of police of Los Angeles, and how such fiscal irresponsibility dragged the town's finances into the toilet.

The Incredible Whiteness of JournoList

Here's a list of 107 journalists, bloggers, and academicians admitted to the elitist (I heard there were no blacks among them) listserv (hat tip: Free Republic). Keith Olberman is noticeably absent; he was too repulsive even for them.

See also: "The Unbearable Whiteness of Being on JournoList" in American Thinker.
IOwnTheWorld.com offers some mugshot goodness.

JournoList: 107 Names Confirmed (with news organizations)
Source List Included | 07/24/2010 | BuckeyeTexan

Posted on Saturday, July 24, 2010 11:38:36 AM by BuckeyeTexan

The following 107 names are confirmed members of the now-defunct JournoList listserv.

1. Spencer Ackerman – Wired, FireDogLake, Washington
Independent, Talking Points Memo, The American Prospect
2. Ben Adler – Newsweek, POLITICO
3. Mike Allen - POLITICO
4. Eric Alterman – The Nation, Media Matters for America
5. Marc Ambinder - The Atlantic
6. Greg Anrig – The Century Foundation
7. Ryan Avent – Economist
8. Dean Baker - The American Prospect
9. Nick Baumann – Mother Jones
10. Josh Bearman – LA Weekly
11. Steven Benen - The Carpetbagger Report
12. Jared Bernstein – Economic Policy Institute
13. Michael Berube - Crooked Timber (blog), Pennsylvania State University
14. Lindsay Beyerstein - (blogger)
15. Joel Bleifuss - In These Times
16. John Blevins – South Texas College of Law
17. Sam Boyd - The American Prospect
18. Rich Byrne - Playwright and freelancer
19. Ta-Nehisi Coates - The Atlantic
20. Jonathan Chait – The New Republic
21. Lakshmi Chaudry - In These Times
22. Isaac Chotiner – The New Republic
23. Michael Cohen – New America Foundation
24. Jonathan Cohn – The New Republic
25. Joe Conason – The New York Observer
26. David Corn – Mother Jones
27. Daniel Davies – The Guardian
28. David Dayen - FireDogLake
29. Brad DeLong – The Economists’ Voice, University of California at Berkley
30. Ryan Donmoyer - Bloomberg
31. Kevin Drum – Washington Monthly
32. Matt Duss – Center for American Progress
33. Eve Fairbanks – The New Republic
34. Henry Farrell – George Washington University
35. Tim Fernholz – American Prospect
36. James Galbraith - University of Texas at Austin (professor)
37. Todd Gitlin – Columbia University
38. Ilan Goldenberg - National Security Network
39. Dana Goldstein – The Daily Beast
40. Merrill Goozner - Chicago Tribune
41. David Greenberg - Slate
42. Robert Greenwald - Brave New Films
43. Chris Hayes – The Nation
44. Don Hazen - Alternet
45. Michael Hirsh - Newsweek
46. John Judis – The New Republic, The American Prospect
47. Michael Kazin - Georgetown University (law professor)
48. Ed Kilgore – Democratic Stategist
49. Richard Kim – The Nation
50. Mark Kleiman - The Reality Based Community
51. Ezra Klein - Washington Post, Newsweek, The American Prospect
52. Joe Klein - TIME
53. Paul Krugman – The New York Times, Princeton University
54. Lisa Lerer - POLITICO
55. Daniel Levy – Century Foundation
56. Alec McGillis – Washington Post
57. Scott McLemee - Inside Higher Ed
58. Ari Melber - The Nation
59. Seth Michaels – MyDD.com
60. Luke Mitchell – Harper’s Magazine
61. Gautham Nagesh – The Hill, Daily Caller
62. Suzanne Nossel – Human Rights Watch
63. Michael O’Hare - University of California, Berkeley
64. Rick Perlstein – Author, Campaign for America’s Future
65. Harold Pollack – University of Chicago
66. Foster Kamer – The Village Voice
67. Katha Pollitt – The Nation
68. Ari Rabin-Havt - Media Matters
69. David Roberts - Grist
70. Alyssa Rosenberg – Washingtonian, The Atlantic, Government Executive
71. Alex Rossmiller – National Security Network
72. Laura Rozen – Politico, Mother Jones
73. Greg Sargent – Washington Post
74. Thomas Schaller – Baltimore Sun
75. Noam Scheiber – The New Republic
76. Michael Scherer - TIME
77. Mark Schmitt – American Prospect
78. Adam Serwer – American Prospect
79. Thomas Schaller - Baltimore Sun (columnist), University of Maryland, Baltimore County (professor), FiveThirtyEight.com (contributing writer)
80. Julie Bergman Sender - Balcony Films
81. Walter Shapiro – PoliticsDaily.com
82. Nate Silver - FiveThirtyEight.com
83. Jesse Singal – The Boston Globe, Washington Monthly
84. Ben Smith - POLITICO
85. Sarah Spitz – NPR
86. Adele Stan – The Media Consortium
87. Kate Steadman – Kaiser Health News
88. Jonathan Stein – Mother Jones
89. Sam Stein - The Huffington Post
90. Jesse Taylor – Pandagon.net
91. Steven Teles – Yale University
92. Thoma - The Economist's View (blog), University of Oregon (professor)
93. Michael Tomasky – The Guardian
94. Jeffrey Toobin – CNN, The New Yorker
95. Rebecca Traister - Salon (columnist)
96. Cenk Uygur - The Young Turks
97. Tracy Van Slyke - The Media Consortium
98. Dave Weigel - Washington Post, MSNBC, The Washington Independent
99. Moira Whelan – National Security Network
100. Scott Winship – Pew Economic Mobility Project
101. Kai Wright - The Root
102. Holly Yeager – Columbia Journalism Review
103. Rich Yeselson – Change to Win
104. Matthew Yglesias – Center for American Progress, The Atlantic Monthly
105. Jonathan Zasloff – UCLA
106. Julian Zelizer - Princeton professor and CNN contributor
107. Avi Zenilman – POLITICO

Friday, July 23, 2010

A Dog's Life


Patriot Post dutifully reports: Barack Obama wants Americans to tighten their belts in these trying times -- and pay more taxes to boot -- but he refuses to lead by example. When the First Family took their recent vacation in Maine, they chose to let their dog Bo fly on a separate jet. No word on how much this lavish expense cost, but don't worry: We taxpayers will be picking up the tab. Granted, due to the small airstrip at their destination, Air Force One was a Gulfstream G3 instead of the usual 747, but surely it wasn't too crowded for the little Portuguese water dog to travel with the president and his kin. Maybe BO just didn't want to smell like Bo when he got off the plane.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Tancredo Throws Down the Gauntlet

Politico.com published a story that had been brewing for some time in Colorado: former Congressman Tom Tancredo is threatening to run as a gubernatorial candidate for the American Constitution Party if Scott McInnis and Dan Maes, the two Republican candidates whom he regards as being fatally flawed, do not drop out of the race.

UPDATE1: There is quite a lot of drama and negative campaigning going on for the hotly contested U.S. Senate seat held by appointed Sen. Michael Bennet, who is fighting off a challenge by former speaker of the state house Andrew Romanoff, who has loyal grassroots support. On the Republican side, Ken Buck (generously backed by "Americans for Job Security") and former lieutenant governor Jane Norton have been clawing at each other for the nomination.

UPDATE2: Not surprisingly, the Colorado Republican Party refuses to let Tancredo force its hand, accordng to a Denver Post article.

UPDATE3: Former Rep. Tancredo's decision to run for governor today [26 July] after both McInnis and Maes refused to step aside is widely regarded as suddenly improving Democratic Mayor Hickenlooper's prospects.

Hezbollah Theme Park


While other news sources have been exposing the JournoList media bias scandal, we can take a ride in the Hezbollah theme park that just opened up in Lebanon:

"The Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah, after decades of anti-Israel and anti-U.S. violence, has decided to try something new and open an amusement park. The million-dollar attraction, enticingly named 'Museum for Resistance Tourism,' includes documentary videos, an aerial tramway, and a terrace called 'The Abyss' that showcases remnants of Israeli tanks. Located on the Lebanese mountain town of Mleeta, the museum is meant to cement Hezbollah, which was founded only in the 1980s, into the ancient and storied Lebanese culture. ABC News' Lara Setrakian visits the center that is sometimes called 'HezbollahLand'"...

UPDATE: The Hot Air blog has more juicy info on the JournoList scandal, in which some prominent reporters advocate that the government close down FOX News, oblivious to the probability that such autocratic power can just as easily be directed against them.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

More Proof that Politics Is Not for the Faint-Hearted or Thin-Skinned

Controversial [i.e., popular] talk-show host Glenn Beck lashed out at the Obama administration over the firing of Shirley Sherrod from the USDA, according to this NewsMax article.

Woe unto anyone who invites the wrath of Ann Coulter, for her columns can be devastating. Check out "Obama's Poll Numbers Down, Imaginary Racism Up."

Dick Morris in Human Events releases this bombshell: as dean of Harvard Law School, Elena Kagan, who is Jewish, promoted Sharia law! Harvard now has three Saudi-funded institutions devoted to the study and promotion of Sharia law.

Rob Cunningham, an Air Force veteran, writes words to storm the battlements by in American Thinker.
"As a former USAF Captain, Instructor Pilot, Desert Storm Veteran, Air Medal Recipient with 33 combat missions, Investment Banker and current small business owner, I now find myself a government target. Citizens are being purposefully re-defined, in a highly coordinated and pre-meditated manner, as racist, bitter Tea Party terrorists, religious zealots and "out of the main stream" radicals by liberal politicians and media elites advocating for Socialism.

"Our heinous crime is the voicing of our dissent. The grotesque level of political corruption, illegality, deception and outright political contempt for me and you is a total disgrace...."

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Who Can We Believe?

According to this AP-Yahoo.com article, the World Health Organization (WHO) has criticized Amnesty International for describing the North Korean healthcare system as a "shambles," when its director-general, Margaret Chan, visited North Korea in April and declared its healthcare sytem the "envy of most developing nations." It is up to you, the reader, to decide who's right, in light of North Korea's track record for honesty.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Obama Not a Post-Racial President After All


It is our sad duty to post the Obama race card on this blog once again, in light of David Limbaugh's article in Newsmax.com, which presents a long list of events that indicate that black racism is every bit as ugly and ignorant as white racism.

"... a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll revealed that fewer and fewer people believe Obama's presidency has advanced racial relations — 4 in 10, compared with 6 in 10 when he was inaugurated."

Roger Hedgecock at Human Events says that resorting to the race card multiple times can be interpreted as a sign of desperation.

Dick Morris and Eileen McGann have a few choice words in "The End of the Post Racial Presidency on Townhall.com.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

For Your Viewing Pleasure

Here are some YouTube videos that have been brought to my attention.

11 Reasons to Vote for Democrats in November

Funny, Hillarious, CommieTunes - Episode 1

"We the People" by Ray Stevens - "You vote ObamaCare, we're gonna vote you outta there!"

A Refreshing Change from Funnel Cakes and Hamburgers

The Sacramento Bee reports the following mouth-watering treats for this year's California State Fair: deep fried scorpions covered in chocolate, grilled python kabobs, chocolate-covered bacon, deep-fried Twinkies and Moon Pies.

Another Blog Validates What We Believe: Political Violence More Likely to Come from the Left

This just in from Vocal Minority:

Liberal Lie #14: The Right Is Violent, the Left Is Civil - Oil Exec's Wife Hurt by Mail Bomb

For over a year-and-a-half now Democrat politicians, their accomplices in the media, and President Obama himself have lamented that the “inflammatory” and “incendiary” rhetoric of the Right can have violent consequences. Right-wing talk radio, the Tea Party movement, and certain outspoken Republican politicians who have the nerve to question President Golden Calf (e.g., Sarah Palin) have all been accused of stoking violence against Obama and Democrat Congress. Janet “Big Sis” Napolitano officially had the Tea Party movement labeled terrorists and extremists!

Yet, those predicted acts of violence from the Right never seem to happen, do they?

But you know who we do get plenty of actual instances of violences from? The Left. The Obama-loving, Democrat-voting, conservative-bashing, capitalism-despising, Republican-fearing Left.

And who does the stoking of this violence? Well, Democrat politicians of course. Consider these gems:

•“I want you to argue with them and get in their face.”

•“I’ll put Mr. Burgess up against Sean Hannity. He’ll tear him up.”

•“If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun”

•“My administration is the only thing between you and the pitchforks.”

•“… so I know whose ass to kick.”

Those incitements to violence, my friends, are from the mouth of the President of the United States. The same guy who is constantly worried that any opposition to his destructive policies is enough to drive someone to anti-Obama violence.

It’s bad enough that liberals/Democrats live in an entirely upside-down Bizarro world. It’s even worse when our own president does.

And it’s just happened again:

Woman injured when box explodes outside home...(the list goes on and on)

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

How Can Obama Fight Declining Confidence in His Leadership?

One Newsweek article makes this incredible claim: He isn't blaming Bush enough!!

Obama inherited a big mess, and people are frustrated that he hasn’t fixed the economy. Counseling patience together with a show of resolve and determination helped President Reagan weather the storm in his first midterm election under conditions remarkably similar to today. Unemployment stood at 10.8 percent when voters went to the polls in November 1982, and Reagan’s numbers were 49-47, almost identical to Obama’s (50-47).

One key difference: Obama hasn’t done as good a job as Reagan of blaming his predecessor. Jimmy Carter for years served as the GOP’s version of Herbert Hoover while Obama let George W. Bush slip away into the ether, a former president so invisible that he might as well be in a witness-protection program. Bush’s upcoming book, Decision Points, won’t be released until a week after the November election, reinforcing the GOP’s decision to keep the unpopular president out of the mix in the midterms.

UPDATE: Meanwhille, Z. Byron Wolf of ABC News wonders out loud if the Democrats will become victims of their own success in the upcoming election.

Squat Toilets Installed in British Shopping Center


The Daily Mail (U.K.) reports that the management of a shopping center installed two squat toilets in a shopping center restroom at the cost of several thousand pounds, in the sacred name of "cultural awareness." They are sometimes referred to as Turkish toilets or Nile pans, although one can find them in India and the Far East.