Wednesday, October 19, 2005
Continuation
For future articles, please click on the following link:
http://www.universalobserver.blogspot.com
Futuristic Ship Part Of Military Sealift
http://www.msc.navy.mil/inventory/pics/HSVSwift.jpg
The vessel is the HSV Swift.
NASA Administrator Visits Japan
Source consulted: SpaceRef.com
Boeing Announces Guggenheim Aviation Order
(Excerpt)
Guggenheim Aviation Partners has ordered two 747-400 Boeing Converted Freighter combi-to-freighter conversions. Both deliveries will take place in 2008, according to an agreement signed by Guggenheim and Boeing.
Guggenheim previously ordered five 747-400BCF passenger-to-freighter conversions. Boeing launched the Boeing Converted Freighter program for passenger conversions in 2004; it was known as the 747-400 Special Freighter program until recently. A Boeing-approved modification facility will convert the airplanes, a process that Boeing's Commercial Aviation Services unit will manage.
The above is an excerpt from an October 18, 2005 press release issued by Boeing and all responsibility for same lies in the originator of the release.
Source: http://www.boeing.com
Media Stir Abortion Controversy Over Miers
One reporters claimed that efforts to calm the waters over the Miers nomination have only inflamed controversy over Miers' pro-life position.
However, in days past, a judge's pro-choice position seemed perfectly acceptable to the mainstream media.
This strikes me as a double standard, indeed.
Hurricane Wilma Threatens Central America
CNN said that the storm's projected track takes it in a northeasterly direction toward the southern coast of the United States.
Iraq Trial Postponed To November 28 -- CNN
The judge granted the defense motion minutes ago, according to CNN.
During the day's proceedings, Saddam faced the judge from the first of three rows of a white-colored dock seated next to another defendant. Behind him, separated by bars, were two rows each containing three other defendants, according to videotape aired by the network.
Monday, October 17, 2005
Leasing Company Orders 20 Dreamliners
The deal places Boeing in an even stronger position relative to Europe's Airbus, whose A350 will not be fielded until 2010. By comparison, Dreamliners may begin flying in mid-2008, reports say.
Charles Rocket, 1949-2005
For more information, see:
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/ae/3399742
Sunday, October 16, 2005
Another Earthquake
Isn't it nice when Mother Nature makes her presence felt?
Friday, October 14, 2005
EU Complains About India's Boeing Decision
For more information, please see:
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/5983_1339425,00430005.htm
Robot Detonates Suspicious Package In Norwalk
Sources: MSNBC, Fox News Channel.
Shuttle, ISS Not Blunders, Says NASA

From Administrator Michael Griffin's October 3, 2005 letter posted at NASA.com:
(Excerpt)
At the strategic level, I think all of you know that I believe we have been restricted to low Earth orbit for far too long and that the proper focus of our nation's space program should be the exploration of our solar system. I do understand that others will disagree. In that context, it is useful to recall Norm Augustine's observation that most people believe we should have a robust space program; it is just that no two people agree as to what that program should be! But it is my sense that this debate has been had and has been resolved for the time being. The Vision for Space Exploration is the right path, and it is the path that we are re-engaging our agency to follow. I am committed to it.
With that said, I do hope you know that I would never speak of our efforts, past or present, in a way that would be intended to denigrate the efforts of the engineers, technicians, managers, scientists, and administrative personnel who "make it happen" at NASA and at our contractors.
As I have often said publicly, the shuttle is the most amazing machine humans have ever built, and it has been the recipient of the most brilliant engineering that America can provide. The station is a more difficult engineering project, by far, than was Apollo. It is true that we have not met our original goals for these programs, for myriad reasons dating back 35 years or more, involving strategic and budgetary decisions made, properly or otherwise, above NASA. Although this is not the fault of the dedicated people, past and present, who have worked in these programs, I think we all know that we can do better, and that we will. But even if everything were in our favor -- and it is not -- it would be several years before we could have available a successor to the shuttle. In the interim, we must complete the station and the only tool with which we can accomplish that is the shuttle. At this point, an expeditious but orderly phase-out of the shuttle program, using it to complete the assembly of the station while we develop a new system, is the best thing we can do for our agency and for the nation.
These are the messages I have tried to convey. It is not my intention that they should be used to criticize or diminish the efforts of those who have devoted their lives -- and in some cases given their lives -- to the space program. Space technology is still in its infancy. To criticize the shuttle and station because our best efforts have fallen short of the goals we have set would be like criticizing the early aviation pioneers because they did not understand, then, how to build transcontinental aircraft. In this business, our goal is to push the frontiers of technology, to learn what we can by doing so, and then move on. And that is what we will do.
Thank you all for your time and attention.
Source:
http://www.nasa.gov/about/highlights/mg_message_20051003.html
Thursday, October 13, 2005
The CEV Versus The Soyuz
It would appear that the Soyuz is far too small to be part of a sustained lunar or Mars mission of the kind of which the CEV is capable. Unlike the Soyuz, CEV is not only a taxi vehicle, but, in its advanced configurations, a lunar-bound and interplanetary vehicle. The CEV would be part of dual-vehicle design.
To start with, the Soyuz is about half the size of the CEV and lacks any transorbital capability. By contrast, the much larger CEV is itself part of a system that will allow it to attain lunar insertion and, in its interplanetary configuration, break free of Earth's gravitational field altogether.
The CEV will be capable of supporting six astronauts. The Soyuz is capable of supporting only three cosmonauts.
The CEV is twice as large as the Apollo capsule, while weighing only slightly more. The Soyuz was never intended to be capable of any independent extended operations lasting many weeks or months and would need to be completely reconfigured or expanded for any such purpose. It would need to be a completely new ship.
It's important not to confuse the Soyuz with the Mir Space Station, or the Mir's predecessor, the Salyut design. Both the Mir and the Salyut were eminently capable of sustained operations. Mir is no more, having been intentionally destroyed through a de-orbit burn that plunged it into the Earth's atmosphere. Neither does the Salyut exist.
The CEV consists, notionally, of two separate internal sections: The crew capsule, and a large service module. The Soyuz does not have an equivalent service module. The CEV is also designed to link with transorbital upper stages for lunar flight. The Soyuz program has no such compatible stages.
The CEV is designed to be capable of sustained lunar operations. The Soyuz is not. It would be a mistake to characterize the CEV as merely a shuttle per se, since a shuttle would not need to be capable of independent operations 200,000 miles from Earth, or far more distantly in interplanetary operations. But it could be said, that the Soyuz, by contrast, is a taxi.
In terms of size, the maximum diameter of Soyuz craft is 2.7 meters, versus 5.5 meters for the CEV.
One would do well to consult with the following resource concerning the capability of the Soyuz, which is definitely not a lunar ship (e.g., see pp. 15 ff.): Link. Note the multiple launch failures of even unmanned attempts as well as the abortive attempt to expand the Soyuz concept. Further, even under the original 1962-1963 lunar concept (which was never realized), the expanded Soyuz would have required half a dozen launches for a lunar mission.
The CEV will be capable of reaching Mars. Will others, flying the Soyuz or an equivalent, have such technology in a decade?
Lockheed Martin's take on the CEV is available at
http://www.lockheedmartin.com/data/assets/5565.pdf
In competitive terms, it's Northrop/Boeing versus Lockheed Martin. The Boeing design has been popularized through NASA's recent release of graphics showing a "super-Apollo"-style CEV.
By contrast, in the following view of Lockheed's proposed design, note the winged configuration. http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/space/1534782.html
Northrop Grumman and Boeing have just taken steps toward making our CEV a reality. See, e.g.: http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=18022
In a competition between the CEV and the Soyuz, there is thus no doubt in my mind which is the more advanced vehicle.
A Rarity Among Rarities
The role of good will was explored in 19th Century philosophy, and my recollection is that Immanuel Kant was a great exponent of the need for good will.
What, then, is good will? It is nothing more -- or less -- than the willingness, the desire, and the belief in the need to be as helpful and as generous to one's fellow human beings as one possibly can be.
I am an admirer of Kantianism, and I believe that Professor Kant helped elaborate on what it means to be a good person. I think that he helped established a very good rationalist basis for ethics and morality in a post-modern world, and one far better than the so-called "post-modernists" of today. Immanuel Kant, living in the 18th Century, saw that the future was one of challenge. He spoke of things that most people did not believe possible -- the existence of things beyond the human ken, a scientific version of Plato's cave. Of all the European rationalists, he is foremost among my heroes.
Despite his rationalism, he was also a deeply respectful, deeply religious man. As professor at Konigsberg, he conveyed his respect for future generations, bowing before his students, telling them that he was humbled by the presence of so many scholars and representatives of the potential for a the greatness of the future.
I am saddened that in the world of today, we have no equivalent scholar, other than the religious ones that delve deep into the mystical surroundings of ancient texts, for all their tremendous contributions and value to society. I think that a Kant of today would be a Galileo of ethics, a post-post-Aristotelian who could reduce some of our most perplexing dilemmas into more easily cognizable precepts -- equations, if you will, of the social condition. And all I have read, all I have seen, all I have hoped for, in science fiction such as Star Trek and beyond, expresses my personal, internal need to discern this system of cognition, a firmly grounded, well-defended route toward moral certainty.
The journey continues. Morality, no less than death itself, is the undiscovered country.
The Shuttle: An Appreciation
Despite what NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said recently, the Shuttle is a uniquely impressive vehicle. It was and remains the only manned ascent and descent vehicle capable of acting in a multimission capacity as a crew vehicle, a cargo carrier, and a space laboratory all at once. Other vehicles can do only one of these missions at at time.
During its storied career, the Shuttle carried tons of supplies to the ISS, but even more importantly, it was the only ship dedicated to both carrying the structures for, and assembling, the ISS. None of the other ships (Soyuz, Progress, etc.) could approach these capabilities.
Without the Shuttle, the ISS would never have been assembled. And no ship could bring the numbers of passenger and supplies that the Shuttle could on a routine mission. And with the addition of Europe's Spacelab, which took up a sizeable portion of the Shuttle's vast payload bay, the Shuttle itself became a space station during certain missions.
Further, no other craft allowed either the lofting or the repair of the Hubble Space Telescope, whose scientific contributions are immeasurable. The Shuttle was capable, still further, of launching satellites into high orbit far beyond its own from its payload bay. Various pallets allowed the Shuttle to, among other things, image the Earth using shallow-penetrating radar, yielding treasures beneath the ground long hidden from view. Hundreds or thousands of important science experiments were conducted through the Shuttle.
The Shuttle has its shortcomings, but let it never be said that any other nation was capable of both building and sustaining such a wondrous vehicle. By the same token, let it not be said that any other space power can boast of the accomplishments of the United States, either in regard to the Shuttle, or in regard to recent interplanetary exploration.
Will the PRC soon overtake the U.S. in space? Will the EU? Will even Russia, with its vast experience in near-Earth orbital habitation? Extremely doubtful, indeed.
Absolutism And Morality
There are several possible answers, and each one must decide which one one believes. These answers relate to concepts such as any one or combination of the following:
1. Those absolutes that arise from one's faith.
2. Those absolutes that arise from one's solemn contemplation of the human condition, past, present, or both.
3. Those absolutes that arise from one's reflection upon one's personal history.
4. Those absolutes that arise from one's aspirations for a better future.
5. Individual precepts arising from the Golden Rule (do unto others only what you would have others do to you), or related concepts such as the Kantian idea of categorical imperatives.
6. Absolutes arising from the mere state of existence (existentialism, essentially positing the idea that nothing is certain except for one's own existence).
7. Pure religious tradition.
8. Critical analysis of specific situations generalized to rules.
9. The rule of utilitarianism itself -- that is, that which defines good as only that which benefits the greatest good for the greatest number.
10. Rules arising from utilitarianism (e.g., rule-utilitarianism).
These are only a few of the possible permutations of absolutism in morality.
It may be easier to associate absolutism with a tradition -- the Western tradition, for example, or the Eastern tradition -- than to broadly and inductively derive claims about specific absolutes as if they themselves were certain. Morality is, in practice, relativist, but by its very nature, it may be absolutist, in precisely the traditions to which I've alluded. The value of having moral absolutes depends on whether one subscribes to any of the above threads in the Western tradition of morality. (There are equivalents for Eastern traditions of morality.) If one does not, then one arguably sees no value in morality at all.
In fact, in some cases, morality cannot be absolute from the point of view of the moral agent if one subscribes to particular views of morality.
Is Morality Absolute?
It may be difficult to classify all morality as absolute, and yet, it is impossible for me to visualize a completely relativistic morality. Perhaps it's in the nature of individual mortals to think in this way. Perhaps an absolute law-giver could determine that morality shall be one way or another. Considered as an author, God could certainly define His morality in accordance with His wishes, since He is by Christian lights usually seen as omnipotent. By the same token, an absolute power could in another sense determine what morality he deems is absolute, and which he deems is not, and in that sense, he could be deemed to have made morality relative. So the answer is anything but ontologically certain. If it were, there wouldn't be so much philosophical disagreement concerning it.
If morality is not and cannot be absolute, on the other hand, then it is simply a way of looking at the world -- a philosophy, in a sense, and not a binding set of rules. This does not take away from philosophy, but it would take away from our concept of morality.
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
China Launches Second Manned Space Mission
Many other sources confirm this news and apparently the event was carried live on Chinese television.
The Iran Question
It is true, as some say, that Iran need not be invaded in order for warfare to be visited upon her, by means of an air campaign. The U.S. has the means to take out important structures including those determined by intelligence services, both American and Israeli, to be most directly responsible for Iran's nascent nuclearization. These need not be the actual locations where nuclear weapons are being developed; rather, they can be secondary and tertiary sites, such as possible launch sites for any nuclear-tipped rockets, supply sites, supply lines, critical infrastructure, and the like. The list of these targets is limited only by the first strike weapons we have on hand. These targets are relatively soft and can be struck by conventional weapons launched from our naval submarines and destroyers.
The question is still, however, whether we should, not could, engage in such a first strike. The answer to that is not certain at this point.
"No Religious Test"
In regard to the courts, at least, I believe that legal analysis should have no express or implicit religious basis, and there should be no discrimination in favor of certain religions over others, or over the areligious.
However, other than that, religious feeling should not be outlawed among public officials. Why should it?
Indeed, there should be no religious test -- which to me means that if one is religious, and even extremely so, one should not be prevented from holding office.
Morality And Constitutionalism
As an adjunct, there is considerable dispute that arises from an inability to resolve the proper role, if any, of morality relative to constitutionalism. This difficulty is also why there are shortcomings in both the strict and the liberal interpretations of the Constitution: The Constitution is sometimes made the vessel of rights for which it is not particularly suited.
On the right, the Constitution is simply discounted as a source of moral rights that could be argued to be part of the requirements of such things equal protection. For example, some strict constructionists think that the Civil Rights Act should not be Constitutionally enshrined (justified) in any way, directly or indirectly. This seems to be rather limiting, because even such constructionists would agree that equality of the races under law should be given some Constitutional purchase.
On the left, you have those who want to enshrine abortion rights as part of the Constitution. This runs afoul of the fact that the Constitution says nothing about abortion, and indeed does not use the term "right of privacy". Further, there is no moral consensus that abortion itself is a good thing, so the "right" to choose what many people a great evil is very problematical.
This is not an issue that will soon go away.
China's Internal Immigration
The People's Republic of China has about 200 to 300 million urban-dwellers, leaving about a billion who reside in the countryside. China's per capita income is very low (around $400.00 to $500.00 per year, although I've seen figures up to $1,000.00) precisely because 80% of the population basically practices semi-subsistence agriculture: They grow enough for themselves, with little left over.
The "purchasing parity" criterion may also be factored in when one considers any of the above figures. For example, a single dollar equivalent goes a long way in the PRC, particularly where rents are the equivalent of $50.00 per month in some areas. The rural agricultural sector can afford basic health care only because of Communist policies. There is, as it stands, an internal migration of seasonal workers from the countryside who want to find city jobs but evidently are not allowed to settle in the urbanized areas.
It is true, I believe, that if one were to factor out the rural population, the per capita income of the PRC would be considerably higher. Nevertheless, the claim that 80% of the population is still rural is not subject to much dispute. Domestic poverty is a national problem and must be resolved if China is to advance toward the rank of the world's most powerful nation.
Financial Rigor Will Assure U.S. Dominance
I have never been satisfied with our balance of payments or the trade imbalance we have with China, Europe, and other regions around the world. This is a fairly complex area of discussion that requires some degree of sophistication in dealing with the relevant concepts. For example, in a world where each country is to some degree both the debtor and creditor, what means are available to leverage these positions? For not only is the U.S. the recipient of investors' money, but it is also directly and indirectly an investor in the PRC and other developing nations. The U.S. is also a major, if not the predominant, voice in international financial institutions such as the World Bank, which as always had an American president.
Another factor to consider is the revaluation of the yuan. Since we have pressured the PRC to increase its value, and the PRC has definitely made some moves accordingly, there may be some relief in sight from the point of view of our trade deficits.
The continuing deficit should be reduced; nevertheless, I do not agree, at this point, that it is a critical factor that threatens U.S. dominance overall. It is much too early to forecast this effect, which may never occur.
Arnold Schwarzenegger Rides Media Circuit
The Governor's efforts have also received the endorsement of U.S. Senator John McCain of Arizona.
Propositions 74, 75, 76, and 77 affect teacher tenure, use of union dues for political purposes, State spending for schools, and redistricting. The Governor has received a chorus of opposition from public employees unions for these efforts, particularly in the form of media ad buys, as a result of which the California Teachers Association has run out of money.
I urge all Californians to support these Propositions. Vote "Yes" on Propositions 74, 75, 76, and 77. I will be supporting Arnold in each of these important causes.
For more information, please see: http://www.joinarnold.com/
Edward R. Murrow Film Will Lionize Broadcaster
Murrow's clash with Sen. Joseph McCarthy appears to be a highlight of the film. McCarthy was believed by some to have abused his position on the House Un-American Committee, which concentrated its efforts on rooting out Communist influence in a range of American institutions in the 1950's.
Michael Savage Touts Prediction
Sunday, October 09, 2005
Critic Decries Lack Of Civic Vision
The article is not atypical of the mournful elegiacs among many who see the energies of municipal creation migrating to places in Europe and Asia.
The article is well worth one's attention, in my view.
Michael Jackson Mobbed By Adoring Fans
For more information, see this story.
SpaceShipOne Inducted Into Museum
In a ceremony attended by Burt Rutan, the ship's primary designer, and other dignitaries involved in the two successful private missions last year to send a man into space, SpaceShipOne joined the ranks of dozens of other aerospace vehicles of note in the history of flight. Rutan's efforts won his team the X Prize, a million-dollar award given to the first private organization to send astronauts into suborbital flight. The SpaceShipOne team included Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen, whose financial backing help make the missions possible.
For more information, see this link.
Strong Earthquake Strikes South Asia
CNN Headline News reports that the the quake has caused widespread casualties and destruction across the region. The United States and other nations have promised to provide aid in response to the disaster.
May God help those affected by this tragedy.
_______________________
1. Edit, 12: 53 a.m.: The New York Times reports that over 18,000 have been killed in the earthquake. See: Story dated October 9, 2005.
Saturday, October 08, 2005
ESA's CryoSat Breaks Up In Flight
Russia's Federal Space Agency said that all contact was lost with CryoSat during a period of 20 minutes after it was supposed to have achieved orbit. The agency was trying to determine the exactly why the failure occurred.
The spacecraft fell harmlessly into the ocean.
Sample source: Link.
Official news report: Link.
Androids And Spiders And Humans, Oh My!
For more information, see: Link.
Boeing Looking Closely At 747 Advanced
In other Boeing news, the recent strike of machinists at Boeing has ended as the company's latest offer to their union was accepted by the rank-and-file upon recommendation of their leadership.
Further, adding to a string of successes with some of its newest aircraft, the company recently received an order for an additional 777 from Austrian Airlines.
(Excerpt from Boeing press release; responsibility for accuracy is in originator of release)
SEATTLE, Oct. 6, 2005 -- Austrian Airlines has signed an order for the purchase of one Boeing 777-200ER, taking a significant step toward simplifying the operations and reducing the maintenance costs of its long-haul fleet. Austrian Airlines already operates three 777s on routes to Melbourne via Singapore and Sydney via Kuala Lumpur. Its fourth 777 will be used primarily for flights to the U.S. and Asia. The airplane is valued at $181 million at list prices and is currently scheduled for delivery in late 2006. The agreement includes the cancellation of a previous order by Austrian Airlines for a 737. "The 777 has proven to be a most economical and reliable aircraft and one that is well liked by our passengers," said Austrian Airlines Chief Financial Officer Thomas Kleibl. "Standardizing with the 777-200ER will deliver immediate economic and operational benefits and help keep our fleet amongst the youngest in the world."
Rights In Marriage
From the point of the view of the right, it is quite arguable that liberals want to remove the right of men to have children and give the entirety of that right to the woman, therefore lessening the value of marriage and family.
In all fairness, at the very least, husbands should not be left powerless if, after both parties agreed to be married, his wife intentionally aborts a child that neither of them initially opposed. The risk that a wife takes has its counterpart in the risk that a husband takes in having to support the child for eighteen years, as the large majority of child support is transmitted from an ex-husband to his former spouse. Indeed, a father is often held liable for this child support since mothers are often award physical custody of the children of divorce, which, as a practical matter, places the father in a position of having to give money while not being able to exercise as much control over the raising of the child.
From the point of the view of the left, since child support is not dependent on marriage, marriage and relations between men and women are simply more equal than they once were.
Perhaps it's me, but I don't see how a disproportionate concentration of power in one party equalizes anything.
An Objection To Arguments Against Deterrence
However, there have been significant arrests made in connection with smaller efforts here in the U.S. The existence of such arrests suggests a large-scale attacks is not the only ones that our enemies desire to inflict.
The argument against the absence of successful attacks is therefore invalid.
Democrats Have No Answers To Bali
As it stands, there is only the vaguest of notions presented by the President's detractors as to how he could have taken a better position on foreign policy issues, which are of the greatest import today.
Indeed, the left's explanation for the President's success in preventing terrorism on American soil -- that terrorists rarely attack twice in quick succession -- was soundly disproved by the events of Bali. And despite proof of this nature that the left is full of nonsense of this kind, the left refuses to learn its lesson and continues to rail on about how bad this President allegedly is. It's simply an appeal to emotionalism without much logic, which is why many inexperienced people, who necessarily must work on instinct because they lack the personal background to apply common sense or reason, tend to buy it.
Thomas Jefferson And Prayer
But, Jefferson himself was a religious man. Jefferson even led a prayer in his Second Inaugural Address. And, it has been written:
What Jefferson omits in his letter, and which is under-examined in the book, is that the primary distinction for Jefferson is not the issue of direct and indirect support, or proclamation and recommendation. Rather, the primary distinction for Jefferson is promoting religion for the health of the republic (the political purpose of religion) versus promoting it for the salvation of people's souls. It seems that government may indirectly support the former but never the latter. This is the import of his asking Americans to join him in prayer in the Second Inaugural. Doing so assists the republic; whether it assists people in attaining salvation is of no concern for government. Whether there can be a conflict between one's conscience (what "Nature's God" commands) and the health of the republic (what the "Laws of Nature" commands [see Declaration of Independence]), depends on how one comprehends Jefferson's understanding of natural right, which is outside the scope of this book.
From a review that may be found at the following: Link.
Abortion And Criminal Laws
How can you tell? Because, in many cases, if a man kills the fetus inside the mother's womb without the mother's consent, he's liable for murder. However, if he fails in his attempt, the mother can abort the living fetus the very next day because it's "her right".
How strange!
Thursday, October 06, 2005
A Hearty Welcome To Our New Contributors!
I am pleased that they have decided to join Team Enterpriser and wish them much success in publishing to this Blog.
To our new contributors: Thank you for the privilege of hosting your posts and comments! I look forward to many days of interesting reading.
Once again, welcome aboard!
-- Enterpriser.
To our loyal readers: The Enterpriser Zone is accessed each and every day by a wide range of intelligent and perceptive readers from all over the world. Thanks to you, every day presents an opportunity to discuss issues of public concern as well as matters of personal opinion. Please contact me at EnterpriseFan001@aol.com if you wish to become a Member of Team Enterpriser. Nothing is required of you except the ability to communicate thoughtfully. Privileges include posting your own messages and leaving comments on any messages that appear. Requests to join will be carefully considered, although not all such requests can be honored. Again, thank you, and be well!
Wednesday, October 05, 2005
Faith Is The Least Of His Problems
I think that the President is weaker today than at any other point in his Presidency. However, his faith is the least of his problems. His main problem is that conservatives or former conservatives seem to be attacking him more and more viciously.
Folks from Paul Craig Roberts to Ann Coulter have fallen upon him and his Administration. Even Rush Limbaugh feels obliged to express dissatisfaction on multiple media platform about the President's pick to replace Justice O'Connor.
Perhaps, instead of fearing a President who seeks refuge in faith, we should be concerned that a siege mentality is developing at the White House. Sadly, I suspect that for many on the left, a Nixonian White House is their greatest fantasy come true.
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
ESA To Study Strange Lightning
For the full story as well as graphics on ESA's investigation, see this article.
NASA: Shuttle Foam May Have Been Damaged
For more information, see this story.
Japanese Car Sales Rise As Gas Spikes
Once again, Japanese automakers seem ahead of the curve as sales of their smaller, more efficient cars advance as orders for SUV's decline.
For more information, see this story.
The first time this happened was in the 1970's. Three decades ago, the lesson of Japanese dominance over increasing areas of the automobile market still hasn't sunk in.
And now, the Big Three in America has been reduced to what amounts to the Struggling Two, with GM and Ford fighting for market share crowded by foreign automakers. Chrysler, the absent third, is owned by a German carmaker.
And so it goes.
Monday, October 03, 2005
Roe Versus Innocent Life: Equality, Evolved
The underpinnings of the "right to privacy" in this respect may yet be re-examined, since there will be a parental consent case on the roster during this term.
There are many ways to reverse Roe, and one of them is to use the liberals' "evolving standards of decency" argument against them. As medicine and technology permits more and more reliable means of contraception, there is no longer a need for women to engage in the destructive act of abortion, whose effects are now known to be emotionally traumatic for the mother and extremely painful to the fetus. An "evolving society" can no longer stand by idly as great injury and death is created in the name of "privacy" when, by virtue of increasingly effective contraceptive measures, the woman has had every chance to exercise dominion over her own body.
Further, standards of equality have also "evolved". The risk of having a child for the mother is not unlike the risk of having pay for one on the part of the father. In this, there are nine months of great inconvenience for the mother, compared to eighteen years for the father, who is often held accountable for child support. A decent society strives to equalize the risk of sexual behavior between men and women, and an argument that pretends that abortion does not disproportionately empower women over men, for many reasons, fails the test of time. Equality of choice requires equality between the sexes.
For these and many other reasons, the Court should hold that the "right" to privacy in this area is limited to the period before conception only.
On Harriet Miers (From Kenneth Melman)
(Excerpt)
Today, President Bush announced his choice to succeed Justice Sandra Day O'Connor as the next Supreme Court Justice: Harriet Miers. Ms. Miers is the third woman to be nominated for the Supreme Court, and like Justice O'Connor is a legal trailblazer. Ms. Miers is an extremely well-qualified and fair-minded individual who is committed to interpreting the law instead of legislating from the bench.
President Bush selected Ms. Miers after embarking on a thorough and deliberate thought process. This confirmation however promises to be much more contentious than the confirmation of Judge John Roberts. Before Ms. Miers was even announced many Democrat groups said they would oppose her. They have no interest in giving Ms. Miers a fair hearing or vote. They are promising to throw every punch, make every accusation and pressure every Senator to oppose this nominee no matter what her qualifications may be. We have to be prepared to counter their actions and that is why Harriet Miers needs your help.
NASA's New Vehicles
Attorney Harriet Miers President's Choice

(White House photo.)
An attorney who has never served as a judge has been chosen by President Bush to replace U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
The announcement was officially made this morning by President Bush with Counselor Miers at his side.
President Bush on Monday nominated White House counsel Harriet Miers to replace retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor on the Supreme Court, reaching into his loyal inner circle for another pick that could reshape the nation's judiciary for years to come.Source: Yahoo! News.
Saturday, October 01, 2005
The Dark Side Of "The Dark Side Of Faith"
A writer has recently claimed, in an article entitled, "The Dark Side of Faith", that religious extremism in America is dangerous. The claim was based on a new study that alleged that sinful behavior was more prevalent in the more religious areas of the United States.
It is my considered view that the writer's claim is nonsense, because while it may be true that some aspects of religious faith seem incompatible with what actually occurs in a practical sense, the writer seems to fail to understand that religion is not for the perfect, or even the noble. Religion is particularly needed for sinners. So, given the premise evident from the reliance on the study's claim, there is no real reason to believe or even read the article, other than to be specific about why the premise and conclusion are fairly misdirected. The facts are what they are. But let us review some of what the writer wrote, nevertheless, and what was taken as a gloss upon it.
[The study] ranked societies based on the percentage of their population expressing absolute belief in God, the frequency of prayer reported by their citizens and their frequency of attendance at religious services. He then correlated this with data on rates of homicide, sexually transmitted disease, teen pregnancy, abortion and child mortality. He found that the most religious democracies exhibited substantially higher degrees of social dysfunction than societies with larger percentages of atheists and agnostics. Of the nations studied, the U.S. — which has by far the largest percentage of people who take the Bible literally and express absolute belief in God (and the lowest percentage of atheists and agnostics) — also has by far the highest levels of homicide, abortion, teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.Here is a particularly banal observation in my view:
The claim that religion can have a dark side should not be news. Does anyone doubt that Islamic extremism is linked to the recent rise in international terrorism? And since the history of Christianity is every bit as blood-drenched as the history of Islam, why should we doubt that extremist forms of modern American Christianity have their own pernicious and measurable effects on national health and well-being? Arguably, Paul's study invites us to conclude that the most serious threat humanity faces today is religious extremism: nonrational, absolutist belief systems that refuse to tolerate difference and dissent. My prediction is that right-wing evangelicals will do their best to discredit Paul's substantive findings. But when they fail, they'll just shrug: So what if highly religious societies have more murders and disease than less religious societies? Remember the trials of Job? God likes to test the faithful.The absurd argument that is made is that since Christianity once was excessive, therefore nothing that advocates Christianity today can be freed from that stain, such, and to the extent, that Christianity today can be compared to the worst of Islamic extremism. This hateful approach would consider America itself irremediably evil, since the South once held slaves.
There is truly nothing new under the sun, and religion- and America-bashing are apparently the only remaining acceptables prejudice among some opinion-meisters at the Times.
What's Not Cool
But that's arrant nonsense, really.
Politics has been simplified to a ridiculous extent, as any of us who have attended both the philharmonic and the rock concert can tell you. The yin and yang of give and take have been reduced to ossified shells, and the internal viscera that move each of them have shrunk into a pitiable state of nonrecognition. What has been left unloved, unattended, and unbelieved are nothing less than the core values of existence.
The core values of existence, that have propelled human endeavor for millennia. The irreducible values that move us.
It's all been talked down, and unto death.
And that is very, very uncool.
The Cultural History Of A New Day
The fact is that every human being alive is the beneficiary of cultural adaptations that have allowed his or her ancestors to defeat a hundred thousand years of evolutionary challenges. The achievements of each race relate in large measure to environmental issues, and to the extent that each race has failed to live up to its potential. each has failed in that way.
But the issue of race has, in any event, little to do with the survival of each individual person. Likewise, the same must be said of the merits of each individual person. It is as unimportant to take pride in one's race as to take pride in the fact that one was merely born in a particular country. It is one's own ideals, arising from various national and other sources, and personal efforts that matter. This is the American way, in my view. It is the new day that matters, and not the past.
"Said The Joker To The Thief"
It is sometimes said of the Republican Party is that it seems to have a lack of understanding for the human condition, which was and is often explored in literature of the highest order. One associates the likes of Upton Sinclair with leftism for good reason, since writers of that era who commented on society did so with a view toward reform. The same impetus for reform exists today in the left, and among Democrats, and this explains in part the unpopular themes of many among that party.
But let this not be said to detract from a counterpart on the part of conservatives. Alexander Pope, for example, is considered among the very best among poets, and yet he was quite conservative, in my view. The left is concerned with its own agenda on the pretext that it moves the world forward. The right has an agenda, as well, and that is to understand that the world of today can be what past generations have already considered ideal and worked toward.
In this respect, the left reaches for the unknown; the right perfects what is already known. By the same token, both sides should realize, and sometimes do, that money is only a means to an end, and not an end in itself. Taxation is only as good as the ends which it achieves.
So, to use the iconography of the immortal U2, let us all realize that the hour is getting late, and both the joker and the thief have much to say.