Saturday, May 7, 2011

Issa Calls Holder to Account

Pajamas Media  "Project Gunrunner was the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) operation in which as many as 2,000 firearms were allegedly allowed to walk across the Mexican border in an attempt to track down the “big fish” in the gun trafficking rings — and, presumably, the drug cartels. The attempt not only failed but, according to Issa, resulted in the deaths of two federal agents.
"Issa had previously subpoenaed documents and personnel from the Department of Justice and from ATF — and was flatly refused."




More on bin Laden

FURIOUS BIN LADEN SUPPORTERS VOW TO TAKE REVENGE
Story Image

Muslim demonstrators march on the US embassy in London this afternoon



















"However, another man who prayed at the Mosque said the group were a dangerous minority. He said: "They are crazy. They all benefit from UK education and UK benefits.
""They get everything for free and yet they still complain. They are not Islam, they are for Osama.
""You see the people walking past and ignoring them. Most Muslims have better things to do then this."
"Meanwhile, EDL members chanted “USA, USA” as Muslims knelt to pray for bin Laden at the opposite end of the highly-secured embassy, in central London."

Osama Bin Laden Raid: Al Qaeda 'Playbook' Revealed 
"U.S. intelligence is now in possession of a veritable "playbook" of al Qaeda operations -- from potential terror attack targets to information on international safe houses and top commanders -- thanks to the Navy SEAL raid that took down Osama bin Laden Sunday, officials told ABC News today."

5 State of the Art Military Technologies That Helped Take Out Bin Laden
Navy SEALs go in for the kill.
The last thing Osama bin Laden saw in this life












"Here are five cool technologies that very likely helped the elite members of Navy SEAL Team 6 get the job done."  Including dogs. PETA will issue a statement in three...two...one...

Pakistan's ex-FM urges resignations over bin Laden  Via Drudge

A Most Justified Jubilation "Why there should not be any moral qualms about celebrating bin Laden’s demise."   Do you think our left will now begin to condemn America for the killing of Admiral Yamamoto in WW2?   I believe we can assume he was unarmed.

Osama, Obama, and the Media  "On the eve of the killing of Osama bin Laden, President Obama was being criticized by his base as “leading from behind.” In a matter of hours, the president went from being an ineffectual leader to being roundly called “courageous” for authorizing a military operation on which no modern president would have demurred."

Is the Obama administration setting up to toss the SEALs under the bus?  "The Obama administration would be making a colossal mistake if it goes anywhere near turning on the SEALs who got bin Laden. But they have been making mistake after mistake since the successful raid. So I’m no longer confident they can manage to dodge making this one. And if your agenda of frittering away American power and influence remains in place, it’s not a mistake at all.
"Plus: The New York Times Magazine suffers from a case of bad timing…and worse judgment."

The Mahdi vs. Bin Laden  "My New York Post column today takes a look back at how Kitchener handled the forces of the Mahdi after Gordon’s death at Khartoum, and compares it with the recent killing of Osama bin Laden. My thesis is that, historically, jihadist movements have faltered and collapsed in the face of overwhelming defeats:"

Victor Davis Hanson:  The First-Person Presidency  "Here are a few excerpts from President Obama’s speech on Sunday night about the killing of Osama bin Laden."
“Tonight, I can report . . . And so shortly after taking office, I directed Leon Panetta . . . I was briefed on a possible lead to bin Laden . . . I met repeatedly with my national security team . . . I determined that we had enough intelligence to take action. . . . Today, at my direction . . . I’ve made clear . . . Over the years, I’ve repeatedly made clear . . . Tonight, I called President Zardari . . . and my team has also spoken. . .These efforts weigh on me every time I, as Commander-in-Chief . . . Finally, let me say to the families . . . I know that it has, at times, frayed. . . .”
...."The problem of first-personalizing national security is twofold. One, it is not consistent. Good news is reported by Obama in terms of “I”; bad news is delivered as “reset,” “the previous administration,” “in the past”: All good things abroad are due to Obama himself; all bad things are still the blowback from George W. Bush."

Related to the previous article:  RUSH: The Man Who Shot Osama bin Laden – Liberty Valance Parody Song  "From I, Me, Mine Productions..."
Some time back a man in his early twenties asked me to proof-read an essay he wrote that was full of first-person references. In pointing that out to him, we discussed the fact that the abundance of first-person references in his writing indicated a very young man and one whose opinions should be taken with a grain of salt. It all pointed to self-absorption and the feeling that the source was only concerned with how the world's events affected him personally.

A Motivational Poster for George W. Bush’s Library

NRO via Lucianne
 When the loudest critic of your policies achieves his greatest success because of them."
"I can hear the liberal cries of outrage, so to recap: The interrogations of KSM (which included waterboarding) and the interrogation of Hassan Ghul (held in “black site” prisons) were key to identifying the courier; the president then authorized military action in a foreign country without going to the United Nations or informing the host government; the military action was unilateral, and we did not consult with our allies; Congress was not informed of the military action; and it increasingly appears that no serious effort was made to treat Osama bin Laden as a criminal (reading him his rights, etc.). The monitoring of Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti’s phone call was a result of an extensive global wiretapping system. Furthermore, as Charles Krauthammer notes, the helicopters used in the raid came from Bagram and Jalalabad; if we had withdrawn from Afghanistan on the antiwar Left’s timetable, we would have had no bases from which to launch this operation.
"Well done to one president for enacting all of these policy changes, and well done to his successor for keeping them in place."

Krauthammer: Evil does not die of natural causes

Charles Krauthammer  "The bin Laden operation is the perfect vindication of the war on terror. It was made possible precisely by the vast, warlike infrastructure that the Bush administration created post-9/11, a fierce regime of capture and interrogation, of dropped bombs and commando strikes. That regime, of course, followed the more conventional war that brought down the Taliban, scattered and decimated al-Qaeda and made bin Laden a fugitive.
"Without all of this, the bin Laden operation could never have happened."
....
"...But it was not until 9/11 that we took him seriously. At which point we answered with a declaration of war of our own, offering the brutal, unrelenting and ferocious response that war demands and that police work prohibits.
"Including bin Laden’s execution. It’s clear there was no intention of capturing him. And for good reason. Doing so would have been insane, gratuitously granting him a second life of immense publicity on a worldwide stage from which to propagandize."  Emphasis added.
http://www.mideasttruth.com/cartoons.html

Rectal-Cranial Inversion Moment of the Day

Kathleen Sebelius photo
Kathleen Sebelius
Neal Boortz  "C’mon folks … seniors are going to “die sooner” if we implement a voucher system for Medicare? I thought that we had gotten rid of moonbats like this when we sent Alan Grayson packing.
"Government bureaucrats can be counted on to support government control to the end."



 

No Tears For Osama In Pakistan

GlobalSecurity.org  "Aside from the conspiracy theories and hearsay, the unexpected silence of the religious parties and public points to a change in the popular mood. The people of Pakistan seem to be fed up with Taliban and Al-Qaeda violence both in and out of the country. The same people have already rejected the religious and political parties on several occasions in the recent past, including the Safia Siddiqi case, the Raymond Davis release, and the drone strikes.
"The immediate impact of bin Laden's killing will be to demoralize the militants. In the longer run, we might see some fragmentation of Al-Qaeda, something like what happened with the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, which split into four groups after the killing of its leader, Baitullah Mehsud. Yet far more important, as the relative lack of reaction on the streets demonstrates, is the deepening disenchantment of ordinary Pakistanis with jihadi ideology. This, in turn, will lead to a decline in sympathy with militant organizations and the pro-Taliban religious parties. And that can only be for the good."
Political Cartoons by Ken Catalino
http://townhall.com/political-cartoons/kencatalino
















Michael Moore to America: Shame on You For Celebrating ‘Execution’ of Bin Laden  "Somewhere a child is going hungry, somewhere an American serviceman or woman could use a helping hand, somewhere someone is losing their home — and THIS is what Michael Moore is using his power of celebrity to call attention to.
"What an extraordinarily revealing set of priorities:"...