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October 30, 2007

More On Going After Iran

                                   

                                  (Image from chinadaily.com)

Just since yesterday's article about taking on Iran, the situation has changed greatly for the worse.  The respected writer 'Spengler' writes about it today in the Asia Times Online, 10-30-07, here, making these points:

-The situation in Iran changed irreversibly with the elections of last week.  Ahmadinejad is definitely in charge now.  Rafsanjani is out of it.  Firing the old nuclear negotiator was only a sign of the change.  "European diplomats woefully concede that Rafsanjani...is no longer a viable alternative.  Arab commentators are watching with alarm..."

-Iran has only two choices: continue its downhill economic and demographic slide with the coming depletion of its oil.  Or move to take the Sunni oil countries.  It is also a once-in-1000-years chance to bring about the millenium.  With his new power, Admadjinidad will go for Iran's big chance.  This is the Shiite moment.

-The U.S. media has predictably failed to recognize the significance of the huge shift in the Iranian landscape during the past week.

-"Elias Harfouche wrote in the Lebanese daily Dal al-Hayat on October 28, "The unease that accompanied the replacement of Ali Larijani with Saeed Jalili as the head of the negotiating nuclear team was exceptional.:"

-Fears "that if the U.S. or Israel were to strike Iran's nuclear facilities, Iran would retaliate through such proxies as Hezbollah and various terrorist operations under its control.  These fears are well-founded."

Spengler agrees, but argues that letting Iran become nuclear-armed is infinitely worse.

He also argues that the longer we delay a strike against Iran, the more time we are giving Iran to prepare a defense and counter-attacks, such as:

  • Upgrading Hezbollah's offensive-weapon capabilities in Lebanon.
  • Integrating Hamas into its sphere of influence and military operations.
  • Putting in place terrorist capability against the West.
  • Preparing its Shi'ite auxiliaries in Iraq for insurrection.
  • "One might add to this complications on the Turkish-Iraqi border, as Iran and its ally Syria have taken the Turkish side against Kurdish rebels, which Iran claims have the covert assistance of the United States. "

    He predicts "war with Iran on the worst terms."  But he warns "if Washington waits another year to deliver an ultimatum to Iran, the results will be civil war to the death in Iraq, the direct engagement of Israel in a regional war through Hezbollah and Hamas, and extensive terrorist action throughout the West, with extensive loss of American life. There are no good outcomes, only less terrible ones. The West will attack Iran, but only when such an attack will do the least good and the most harm...My proposed mantra for President George W. Bush is, 'There are no good options.'"

    Spengler warns, "To be precise, there are options that are considerably worse for others than for the United States. The use of force against Iran without doubt will make the Iraqi mess completely unmanageable. It will have spillover effects in Turkey, where the electoral majority that supported the Islamists in this year's elections will rise in outrage against the United States and Israel. It may reignite the war between Israel and Hezbollah. Nor should we have any illusions about Iran's terrorist capacities. Western civilians well may pay a heavy price for the excision of Iran's nuclear program in the form of terror attacks."

    But then he concludes, "The price may be steep, but it's worth it...The West has no choice but to attack Iran."

    Not a comforting situation.  In short, if we attack Iran's nuclear capability, we will pay a horrible price.  But if we do not, the price will be unimaginably higher.  And the longer we postpone our attack, the higher the price we will pay.

    You really should read the whole article.

    (Update: for "The Herman Option," click here.)

    Bill Clinton to 9/11 Conspiracy Protestor: How Dare You!

    Bill Clinton Takes On 9/11 Conspiracy Protesters
    Bill Clinton Takes On 9/11 Conspiracy Protesters

    From LiveLeak.com here :  Bill Clinton addressed a crowd in Minneapolis, Minnesota at a fundraiser for his wife's campaign on Tuesday.

    Clinton's 50-minute speech, which started about an hour behind schedule, was derailed briefly by several hecklers in the audience who shouted that the 2001 terrorist attacks were a fraud. Rather than ignoring them, Clinton seemed to relish a direct confrontation.

    "A fraud? No, it wasn't a fraud," Clinton said, as the crowd cheered him on. "I'll be glad to talk to you if you shut up and let me talk."

    When another heckler shouted that the attacks were an "inside job," Clinton took even greater umbrage.

    "An inside job? How dare you. How dare you. It was not an inside job," Clinton said. "You guys have got to be careful, you're going to give Minnesota a bad reputation."

    October 29, 2007

    Are We Going After Iran?

                                       (Image from chinadaily.com)

    Caroline Glick, the astute and well-sourced Israeli journalist, has a good summary here, in "Trying to Prevent WWIII."  She writes:

    It goes without saying that if and when a decision is made in Jerusalem or Washington to carry out an attack against Iran's nuclear installations the public will only learn of the decision in retrospect. All the same, over the last few weeks, it has been impossible to miss the fact that the Iranian nuclear program has become the subject of intense and ever increasing international scrutiny. This naturally gives rise to the impression that something is afoot.

    Take for example the head of the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency Muhammad elBaradei's recent remarks on the subject. Speaking to ,i>Le Monde on Monday, elBaradei asserted that it will take Iran between three to eight years to acquire a nuclear arsenal. Consequently, he argued, there is no reason to consider conducting a military strike against Teheran's program. There is still plenty of time for diplomacy, or sanctions or even incentives for the ayatollahs, he said.

    ElBaradei's statement is only interesting when it is compared to a statement he made in December 2005 to the Independent. Back then Baradei's view was that Iran was just "a few months" away from producing atomic bombs. But then too he saw no reason to attack. As he put it when he warned that Iran was on the precipice of nuclear weapons, using force would just "open Pandora's box." "There would be efforts to isolate Iran; Iran would retaliate, and at the end of the day, you have to go back to the negotiation table to find the solution," elBaradei warned.

    Given that the IAEA's Egyptian chief has been unstinting in his view that no obstacle should be placed in Iran's path to nuclear bombs, what makes his statements from 2005 and today interesting is what they tell us about his changing perception of the West's intentions. At the end of 2005, he was fairly certain that the West - led by the US - lacked the will to attack Iran. By making the statement he made at the time, he sought to demoralize the West and so convince it that there was nothing to be done to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

    Now, when faced with a real possibility that the US or Israel or a combination of states are ready and willing to attack Iran's nuclear installations, elBaradei seeks to undermine them by questioning the salience of the threat.

    ElBaradei's statement of course was not made in a vacuum. It came against the backdrop of an increasing unanimity of opinion among top Bush administration members that Iran must be prevented from acquiring nuclear weapons. Last Thursday, President George W. Bush said that a nuclear armed Iran would foment World War III.

    The next day, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who until recently was known to oppose military action against Iran and to minimize the danger that a nuclear-armed Iran would constitute to the US, said at a press briefing that a nuclear-armed Iran would likely spark a nuclear arms race in the Middle East and was liable to foment a major war. Gates added that in light of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's stated desire to destroy Israel, "Washington couldn't trust that Iran would handle nuclear weapons responsibly." Standing next to Gates last Thursday was Admiral Michael Mullen, the new Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Mullen rebuffed assertions that the US campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq have strained military resources to the point that the US today cannot mount an effective campaign against Iran. As he put it, "From a military standpoint, there is more than enough reserve" to mount an attack against Iran's nuclear installations.

    While Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice continues to champion negotiations with the mullahs, in testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday Rice acknowledged that "the policies of Iran constitute perhaps the single greatest challenge for American security interests in the Middle East and possibly around the world." And then there is Israel. It appears that both the IDF and the government are earnestly preparing for the possibility of war. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's sudden visits to Moscow, Paris and London, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak's trip to Washington this week were all devoted to the Iranian nuclear project.

    One of the main things that we have learned from these reports about the September 6 Israeli strike against the North Korean nuclear installation in Syria is that Israeli intelligence on nuclear proliferation is more comprehensive, and at least in certain areas, superior to US intelligence. According to media reports of the strike, the US approved the Israeli operation after Israel brought the US incontrovertible evidence of the threat posed by the nuclear site.

    In light of Israel's apparent intelligence prowess, it seems reasonable to assume that Olmert and Barak did not fly to those foreign capitals empty-handed. Indeed by some accounts they brought with them new and incriminating information regarding the current status of Iran's nuclear program.

    Then there is Iran's neighbor Turkey to consider.

    This week Turkish Prime Minister Recip Erdogan paid a sudden visit to London. There he met with Olmert, who was also in the city that day. The meeting took place less than two weeks after Turkey's Foreign Minister Ali Babacan visited Israel. In an analysis this week in The Asia Times, M.K. Bhadrakumar, India's former ambassador to Turkey tied Turkey's pro-Hamas government's sudden interest in speaking to Israel to the tension between Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan. Bhadrakumar noted that Israel has close relations with Kurdish President Massoud Barzani. He hypothesized that the intensification of high-level discussions likely signals that a deal is being crafted which involves Turkey's position on Iran, and Iraqi Kurdistan's position on Turkey and the PKK. His view is buttressed by the fact that Erdogan is scheduled to meet with Bush at the White House on November 5.

    Finally it is important to note Barak's crash-program aimed at purchasing and deploying missile defense systems capable of covering all of Israel as quickly as possible, and last week's media reports that US, British and Australian commandos are fighting Iranian forces inside of Iran close to the Iran-Iraq border by Basra.

    Assuming that all of these developments do in fact mean that the day is quickly approaching where Iran's nuclear installations come under attack, a discussion of some of the likely outcomes of such a strike seems in order. How would Iran respond? What would be the long-term effect of such a strike? Until Israel attacked the North Korean nuclear installation in Syria last month, according to the foreign reports, most analysts assumed that Iran will retaliate against such a strike with as much force as it is able to muster, and that a successful attack against Iran's nuclear sites will push back Iran's nuclear program for approximately five years.

    As this scenario has it, Iran will direct a counter-strike against Israel that will include a ballistic missile attack carried out jointly by Iran, Syria and Hizbullah in Lebanon. Furthermore, Iran will direct Hizbullah terror cells throughout the world to carry out attacks against Jewish and American targets.

    But again, as bad as it may be, there is no comparison between an Iranian missile and terror offensive and Armageddon. By pushing back Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons by several years, a strike against Iran gives the world the opportunity to bring down the regime through non-military means by fomenting an internal revolution of Iranians.

    This outcome remains the most likely scenario. And it is because it remains the likeliest consequence of an attack that Barak is keen to get a missile defense system up and running. And it is because this is the likeliest scenario that most analysts have suggested that Israel will have to attack Syrian and Hizbullah missile sites at the same time as Iran's nuclear sites are under attack, But the Israeli strike on Syria also points to other possible scenarios - for better and for worse. In an interview with the British Spectator, a senior British governmental said of the Israeli operation: "If people had known how close we came to World War III that day there'd have been mass panic." According to reports in the Washington Post and the Sunday Times, in the days before the attack IDF commandos collected soil samples which indicated the presence of fissile materials at the site. That together with intelligence regarding the transfer of nuclear materials, perhaps even a nuclear warhead from North Korea some three days before the attack, leads to the conclusion that far from being the start of a long-term undertaking, the site in Syria was advanced and nearly operational. Given the strategic nature of the installation that Israel attacked, perhaps the most astounding aspect of the operation is Syria's decision not to respond.

    Syria's non-response may be telling something very optimistic about the consequences of an attack against Iran. It is possible that what we learn from Syria's decision not to respond is that under certain circumstances Iran too may opt not to react to a strike against its nuclear installations.

    On the negative side, the Israeli strike on Syria brought a harsh reality into full view. The nature of the target and subsequent reports make clear that the nuclear collaboration between Syria, Iran, North Korea and perhaps other states is close, active, deep and strategic. In an article published in last Saturday's Wall Street Journal, the ranking Republican members of the House Intelligence and Foreign Relations committees, Peter Hokstra and Ileana Ros-Lehiten - who both received classified briefings on the Israeli strike - emphasized the threat arising from this close collaboration. Their article complemented a report in Jane's Defense Weekly from last month. According to that report, Syrian and Iranian engineers were killed when a North Korean Scud-C missile they were attaching a mustard gas warhead to exploded accidentally. The explosion took place at a Syrian military depot near Aleppo on July 26.

    What this is liable to mean is that even if an attack against Iran's nuclear installations inside of Iran were completely successful, there is a possibility that Iran's nuclear capabilities will not be significantly downgraded. What the Syrian operation indicates is that Iran's program may be dispersed in Syria, North Korea, and in Pakistan which transferred nuclear technologies to Iran and North Korea, (as well as Libya and Egypt). In other words, there is now a distinct possibility that Iran is not the only country that will have to be attacked to prevent Iran and its allied rogue states from acquiring nuclear weapons.

    And yet, when one looks at Iran, and sees the genocidal fanaticism not merely of Ahmadinejad but of the regime as a whole, one understands that whatever the cost, Israel and all who wish to prevent a massive worldwide conflagration cannot allow Iran to become a nuclear power. Everything must be done everywhere to prevent Teheran from acquiring the wherewithal to foment a new world war and destroy the State of Israel.

    What Our Soldiers Are Like

    This photo is not about a soldier grieving for a fallen comrade.  Rather it is....

    U.S. military police officer Brian Pacholski comforts his hometown friend and fellow officer David Borell, both from Toledo, Ohio, at the entrance of the military base in Balad, Iraq, about 30 miles northwest of Baghdad, on June 13. Borell broke down after seeing three Iraqi children who were brought to the base seeking medical help after they were injured while playing with and burning a powder that was inside a plastic bag near their farm.

    These strong, tough men who break down when seeing an injured child ... how noble they are; how different from our enemy, who plant bombs on children.

    From www.cheatseekingmissles.blogspot.com, with many thanks.  Photo from "A Soldier's Blog" at http://www.brandonblog.com/war-blog-96.html

    October 28, 2007

    This Is About YOUR Mom

    And about my mom too.  (Well OK - about me too.)  3 minutes.  Enjoy!

    Hat Tip to Bookworm at www.bookwormroom.wordpress.com.

    October 27, 2007

    Syrian Suspected-Nuclear Site After Bombing

          (Image from Washington Post)

    Click on http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2007/10/25/PH2007102502100.jpg to see all of both photos. 

    The cube-like tall building in the center of the photo on the left is just like the nuclear facilities built in North Korea.  Notice the building is totally missing in the second photo on the right.

    'The Golden Compass' - Toxic Stealth Movie for Kids

                  Toxic Stealth  Movie for Kids

      (Image from songphon.files.wordpress.com)

    The Golden Compass is a movie that will be released on December 7.  It is aimed at children by a well-known atheist.  It is the first of his trilogy, which ends by having the children kill God in the last book. 

    This introductory movie has been watered down, in order to draw as many children as possible to the movie.  It is also bait to get the kids to buy the books and to see the future movies.  (This critique is no "urban legend" - Snopes classifies such criticisms of the movie as true, here.) 

    Bill Donovan of the Catholic League critiques the movie

                       CLICK here TO SEE VIDEO

                (Image from menbcmedia2.msn.com)

    Below is the transcript of this video, also here:

    A film called "The Golden Compass" opens December 7. It is based on the first book of a trilogy titled His Dark Materials. The author of this children's fantasy is Philip Pullman, a noted English atheist. It is his objective to bash Christianity and promote atheism. To kids. "The Golden Compass" is a film version of the book by that name, and it is being toned down so that Catholics, as well as Protestants, are not enraged.

    The second book of the trilogy, The Subtle Knife, is more overt in its hatred of Christianity than the first book, and the third entry, The Amber Spyglass, is even more blatant. Because "The Golden Compass" is based on the least offensive of the three books, and because it is being further watered down for the big screen, some might wonder why parents should be wary of the film.

    The Catholic League wants Christians to stay away from this movie precisely because it knows that the film is bait for the books: unsuspecting parents who take their children to see the movie may be impelled to buy the three books as a Christmas present. And no parent who wants to bring their children up in the faith will want any part of these books.

    "The Golden Compass: Agenda Unmasked" is the Catholic League's response. It provides information about the film, "The Golden Compass," and details what book reviewers have said about Pullman's books; a synopsis of his trilogy is also included.

    If you would like to order copies, you can do so by sending $5 (includes shipping and handling) to:

    Catholic League
    Publications Dept.
    450 Seventh Avenue
    New York, NY 10123

    Or order using our online form. (If you choose an electronic copy, a pdf will me emailed to you.)

    On orders of 10 or more, the cost is $3 per copy.

    It is important that all Christians, especially those with children or grandchildren, read this booklet. Anyone who does will be armed with all the ammo they need to convince friends and family members that there is nothing innocent about Pullman's agenda. Though the movie promises to be fairly non-controversial, it may very well act as an inducement to buy Pullman's trilogy, His Dark Materials. And remember, his twin goals are to promote atheism and denigrate Christianity. To kids.

    Please get the word out.

    October 26, 2007

    Kipling Gets It Right

                                    Mark Twain and Rudyard Kipling

                                        (Image from twainquotes.com)

    This is from Wolf Pangloss, here.  Tremendous for our day and this time.  Enjoy!

    Kipling: The Gods of the Copybook Headings

    October 24th, 2007

    Copybooks were for handwriting practice, back in the days when handwriting mattered. A timeless gem of old wisdom was written at the top of the page in a beautiful hand, and the user of the book would copy it all the way down the page.

    By 1919, when he wrote this poem, Kipling had lost his son in World War I. He had lost his faith, though he yearned for faith in something. As is clear from the language of the poem, mentioning “Social Progress,” the “brave new world,” “robbing selected Peter to pay for collective Paul,” the dangers of disarmament and immorality, and with the overall structure following the evolutionary narrative, the subject is the progressive movement that attempts to reduce human life to scientific, animalistic principles. The poem reminds the reader constantly that old wisdom is still wise and true even if we have lost faith in it, and the last line echoes the toll of the first two years of the Russian Revolution. For the reader in 2007, it echoes the 100 million death toll from Communism, the ultimate progressive movement for the scientific reformation of society and humanity. And it echoes in the toll of 40 million abortions in the United States since Roe vs. Wade. And finally, it echoes the threat of an even greater death toll from the Global Jihad, which in the worst case could end up with multiple American, European, and Muslim cities being attacked by nuclear weapons and a death toll better than half a billion souls.

    To all of this, the God who inspired the copybook headings is the answer. Believe if you can believe. Keep trying if you can’t. Chin up old bean. Never give up. Never give in.

    The Gods of the Copybook Headings
    1919
    Rudyard Kipling

    As I pass through my incarnations in every age and race,
    I make my proper prostrations to the Gods of the Market-Place.
    Peering through reverent fingers I watch them flourish and fall,
    And the Gods of the Copybook Headings, I notice, outlast them all.

    We were living in trees when they met us. They showed us each in turn
    That Water would certainly wet us, as Fire would certainly burn:
    But we found them lacking in Uplift, Vision and Breadth of Mind,
    So we left them to teach the Gorillas while we followed the March of Mankind.

    We moved as the Spirit listed. They never altered their pace,
    Being neither cloud nor wind-borne like the Gods of the Market-Place.
    But they always caught up with our progress, and presently word would come
    That a tribe had been wiped off its icefield, or the lights had gone out in Rome.

    With the Hopes that our World is built on they were utterly out of touch
    They denied that the Moon was Stilton; they denied she was even Dutch
    They denied that Wishes were Horses; they denied that a Pig had Wings.
    So we worshipped the Gods of the Market Who promised these beautiful things.

    When the Cambrian measures were forming, They promised perpetual peace.
    They swore, if we gave them our weapons, that the wars of the tribes would cease.
    But when we disarmed They sold us and delivered us bound to our foe,
    And the Gods of the Copybook Heading said: “Stick to the Devil you know.”

    On the first Feminian Sandstones we were promised the Fuller Life
    (Which started by loving our neighbour and ended by loving his wife)
    Till our women had no more children and the men lost reason and faith,
    And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: “The Wages of Sin is Death.”

    In the Carboniferous Epoch we were promised abundance for all,
    By robbing selected Peter to pay for collective Paul;
    But, though we had plenty of money, there was nothing our money could buy,
    And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: “If you don’t work you die.”

    Then the Gods of the Market tumbled, and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew,
    And the hearts of the meanest were humbled and began to believe it was true
    That All is not Gold that Glitters, and Two and Two make Four—
    And the Gods of the Copybook Headings limped up to explain it once more.

    As it will be in the future, it was at the birth of Man—
    There are only four things certain since Social Progress began —
    That the Dog returns to his Vomit and the Sow returns to her Mire,
    And the burnt Fool’s bandaged finger goes wabbling back to the Fire—

    And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins
    When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins
    As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will burn
    The Gods of the Copybook Headings with terror and slaughter return!

    Flight Paths of 9/11 Airplanes

                              (Image from uweb.txstate.edu)

    See the flight paths of the four 9/11 planes that struck the twin towers, the Pentagon and the one that crashed in a Pennsylvania field., at http://www.kerman94.com/911-Flights.HTM   The flight paths of the two planes that struck the twin towers actually cross each other at one point.  Fascinating!  And strange. 

    (You interact with the site to see the 4 flights separately, or all at once.)

    Hat Tip to Bob Bailey

    October 25, 2007

    The Power of the Poor - Part 1

                                  (Image from menbcmedia3.men.com)

    Actually, this is really about the power of the poor in the West, on the Weat and for the West, not everywhere.  And not the poor alone, but also all their cousins - the weak, the oppressed and the afflicted.  But I will use "poor" here to include all of these.

    Why would the poor have power in the West?  Because the West, like other cultures, is founded on the base of its religion.  Like it or not, that religion - Christianity and its parent, Judaism - underlies not only our laws, but our institutions, governments and how Westerners grow up thinking.  It shaped what we think is right and wrong, what is worthy and unworthy behavior and what is admirable or detestable.  And that religion has very strong views about the poor and the afflicted.

    That is to say, it shaped the conscience of Western civilization.  One part of that conscience has to do with how we view the poor and other disadvantaged people.  To the Western conscience, they should be a protected group.  Westerners may not always protect them, but they don't feel at ease about it.when they don't  They admire those who do protect and help them.

    Here is the test:  how do you feel when confronted by a beggar?  Are you at all torn by the question of what to do?  Do you think about it longer than you mean to?

    And here is the big test.  Do you realize how much your feelings about the poor shape your politics?  Even how you view your religion, or your lack of religion?

    Questions about the poor are also questions of fairness and justice.  They are questions about our own humanity or inhumanity.  Ultimately, they are questions about God, or about the nature of the universe.  Why is there poverty?  Suffering?  Unfairness?  Injustice?   What, if anything, should we do about them?

    What I recently realized is that what we believe to be the causes of poverty are perhaps the deciding factor in where we stand politically.  Think about it. 

    For those who think that the poor are poor simply because they are oppressed, that belief will push them to the left.  They may go as far left as the Marxists, believing the only moral course is to enforce equality of income among all.  (Well, for all except for the favored few leaders, that is.)  They are drawn to the Marxist motto "From each according to his means, to each according to his need."  In their view, capitalism is the monster that oppresses the poor and therefore causes most poverty.

    Or they may go only as far as working for a welfare state, with a "safety net" for the poor and afflicted.  Or only as far as "statism" where the government controls and plans a "mixed" economy (part capitalist, part socialist).  Or even only as far as "mercantilism" where the government regulates some businesses, subsidizes others, and controls foreign trade in favor of domestic businesses and labor.  Or perhaps they only go so far as being pro-union, believing that without unions, workers will be exploited by business and poorer as a result.

    But which ever position they take on the sliding scale of the left, what they believe to be the causes of poverty is the major factor determining their political position.

    On the other hand, those who believe that most of the poor have a reasonably good chance to stop being poor through their own efforts will tend to move to the right.  They focus more on opportunities to move up than on financial support for the poor.  They tend toward wanting pure capitalism, unregulated and lightly taxed, with government supplying enforcement of contracts plus protection from fraud, crime and foreign attacks.  They are convinced that capitalism does more for the poor than any other system, and that restricting capitalism results in more poverty.

    What guidance do we have as to the actual causes of poverty?  The Bible points to numerous causes, including  oppression, denying the poor their rights, crime (no one could travel the roads because of robbers, until Deborah arose in Israel - very bad for the economy), fraud, abuse of workers, laziness, drunkeness, profligate spending (the Prodigal Son), partying all the time, sexual excesses, illness or disability, natural disasters, losing a war, being taken into slavery, being in debt, and being a widow, an orphan or an abandoned woman or child. 

    And that is just the Old Testament!  The New Testament goes even further.  Then there is the stunning example of the first church in the book of Acts, where "all possessions were held in common, and no one said that anything was his own."  The Bible points to many causes of poverty.  But what it makes clear is that we have obligations to the poor and afflicted.  That is profoundly a part of the conscience that the West inherited from the Judeo-Christian teachings.  We are all influenced by it, regardless of whether we understand where it came from or its power over us.

    So then, what are the causes of poverty today?  What can be done about them?  What actions are most helpful to the poor?  How can we tell? 

    Also, how does the Western conscience concerning the poor and afflicted differ from the conscience of other traditions?  How does it affect the attitudes and tactics of activists?  Of non-Westerners? 

    Tune in next time for Part 2.

    Hammer King

                   
                              (Image from antique-used-tools.com)
    -
    Watch what this guy does while juggling hammers.  Incredible!  52 seconds.  Click on HAMMER KING
    _
    (Hat Tip to Robert Martin)

    October 24, 2007

    This Dog Is Not Going To Heaven

                            (Image from dogbreedinfo.com)

    This is really great!  31 Seconds.  Click here

    (Hat Tip to LeeAnn Clark)

    October 23, 2007

    When God Allows Tragedy

                        (Image from billspringer.com)

    What effect does a disaster have on us?  In his weekly newsletter, The Fax of Life, Rubel has this to say:

    The Means to Growth

    Most of us have areas of life in which we need to grow.  We need more patience.  We want greater self-discipline.  We long to strengthen our families, contribute to our friends, and make a difference.

    Then come the setbacks.  She doesn't get the educational opportunities she had dreamed of and sought.  He is seriously hurt in a car wreck.  A business fails.  There is a chronic illness.  Some terrible personal tragedy strikes.

    Believe it or not, growth and setbacks seem to be related.  All sorts of studies point to it.  Most people who survive great personal trauma aren't destroyed by it.  They survive.  They learn.  They develop still-closer personal relationships.  They grow from their experience.

    Most of us know the term post-traumatic stress, but some experts in the field of mental health are now using the term post-traumatic growth.  They point to people who emerge from severe life crises feeling enlarged rather than diminished.  They speak of spiritual development, stronger personal relationships, greater personal strength, deeper appreciation of life, and clarity about priorities.

    "We're talking about a positive change that comes about as a result of the struggle with something very difficult," Dr. Lawrence Calhoun of the University of North Carolina said.  "It's not just some automatic outcome of a bad thing."  To be sure some people bring a fuller sense of security in life to a trauma.  They have a better support system.  They had already learned to rely more on God than self.

    I know people who illustrate this phenomonon.  A woman who survived a painful divorce from a cruelly abusive man is doing well in a career she never planned to have and caring for two children who have been protected from what she once had to endure.  A man who wasn't supposed to survive widespread cancer seems perfectly healthy seven years after his diagnosis.  A woman who didn't think she could survive her husband's death is happily married to a man who felt equally devastated at the loss of his wife two years earlier.

    God made body, mind and spirit to be marvelously resilient.  Injury or illness, divorce or bankruptcy, relocation or cherished person's death -- each has the capacity to crush or dignify, disorient forever or reorient to the people and things that matter most.  Since God gave us the capacity to overcome, we are more likely to do so by consciously seeking him than by fleeing in our confusion.

    Tragedy spares no one.  God gives grace not only to survive but to grow.

    (You can subscribe to get The Fax of Life by email weekly at GBCIII@aol.com.)

    Republicans Have A Deep Bench

                                         (Image from jophan.org)

    The last GOP debate showed the depth of the bench on the Republican side.  While no candidate is viewed as ideal by almost anyone, there are at least 5 candidates who would be conditionally acceptable, possibly to most Republicans.  Giuliani, Romney, McCain, Thompson and Huckaby all are criticized by large and important parts of the party.  Yet when Republicans look over their shoulders at the alternative, Hillary Clinton, they almost run toward any of the above.

    On the Democratic side, there is really only one candidate.  Mrs. Clinton is now running almost 30% ahead of her closest competitor.  She is such a cinch for the nomination that now she is running more to the center, as if the primaries are over.  For the Dems, it probably has already been decided.  There is no depth on the Demo bench, no one who could beat Hillary and the formidable Clinton machine for the nomination.  Dems are stuck with her. 

    But Hillary also has the highest negatives of any major candidate in memory.  Over 50% of Americans now say they would not vote for her under any circumstances.

    Right now, the GOP is having a genuine, interesting campaign.  They are rich in good candidates.  In each debate, they are sharpening each other in debate, getting better and more skilled each time.  In comparison to the Dem bench, the GOP bench of candidates looks, well, pretty fantastic.

    October 22, 2007

    Gingrich - Modern Road to White House 'Verges on Insane'

    art.gingrich.gi.jpg

                         (Image from cnn.com)

    This is Newt Gingrich at the National Press Club.  Talking about the elections, he gives as brief and to-the-point summary as you are ever likely to find, about why the Global War on Terror is the main election issue, bar none.  Click here to view.   Time - 5 minutes. 

    (Hat Tip to Robert Martin) 

    October 21, 2007

    7 Year Old Sings National Anthem for College Game

                                        (Image from truveo.com)

    You simply will not believe the terrific sound that comes out of this young man of seven.  Time is 1-1/2 minutes.

    (Hat Tip to Joan Archibald)

    October 20, 2007

    Boy of 3 Sings National Anthem

             

    He's just great too!  Go here to see it - watch video.  Time - 1-1/2 minutes

    (Hat Tip to Joan Archibald).

    October 19, 2007

    See Jon Stewart Blister Chris Matthews

                (Image from montgomerycollege.edu)

    Watch Jon Stewart blister Chris Matthews of MSNBC's Hardball on the Daily Show.  Six minutes.

    October 18, 2007

    Are We Leaving the Age of Antibiotics?

    ("In the center of the plate is a colony of Penicillium notatum, a mold that produces penicillin. After appearance of the mold colony, the plate was overlaid with a bacterial culture of Micrococcus luteus which forms a yellow "lawn" of growth. A zone of inhibition of bacterial growth surrounds the fungal colony where penicillin has diffused into the medium."  Source here)

                    (Image from bact.wisc.edu)

    On Monday, October 15, 2007, Ashton Bonds died of an antibiotic-resistant staph infection.  A senior and athlete at Staunton River High Scoool, Bedford VA, the 17 year old had been hospitilized for more than a week.  The infecton that entered deep into his body had infected his kidneys, liver, lungs and the muscles around his heart.  He could not be saved. 

    Drug-resistant infections until recently were spread mostly from hospitals.  Now, disturbingly, they have jumped into communities and are spreading there.  It is not only staph infections.  It is also drug-resistant forms of TB, gonorrhea, malaria and childhood ear infections, among many others, here

    It is an over-due bill which we have been fortunate to escape paying until now.  Doctors and scientists have warned us for years that what we were doing would make this time arrive.  But until now we really did not believe that. 

    How did we get here?.

    The world of antibiotics began for the human race on a large scale during World War II.  That war saw countless soldiers saved from death from infected wounds, on a scale unimagined before then   As antibiotics entered the civilian world, drastic changes came.  Many old diseases that had cursed humankind from the beginning all but disappeared.  A ruptured appendix was no longer an automatic death sentence.  (Before anti-biotics, I saw my best friend die in a few days from a ruptured appendix.  She was just 10.  The doctors were helpless.)

    Significantly, by now some 20 years have been added to the human life span in the developed countries.  This was important in leading to the "graying" of the populations of Japan and Europe, with the U.S. not far behind. 

    It hsa also been a big contributor to our Social Security crisis.  When Social Security started, people lived to an average age of 65.  Most people died before they could collect benefits for even a year!  Now American men live to 78 and women to 83 on the average., thanks in no small part to antibiotics.  They collect benefits for 13 and 18 years respectively.  That has helped overwhelm the Social Security system.

    Vaccinations may account for around half of this longer life span, but antibiotics account for much of it.

    How did we manage to abuse antibiotics to the point that we are in danger of losing their usefulness?  Here are the major ways:

    -Overusing antibiotics.  For years we have been warned not to take them for every little thing, but that didn't stop us.  We insisted on them for colds and flu, especially for our kids.  But colds and flu are caused by viruses, not germs.  Antibiotics are useless for them.  Such overuse of antibiotics has accelerated the development of germs resistant to them.

    -Misusing antibiotics.  When we take them, we tend to stop as soon as we feel OK instead of taking the "full course" our doctors warn us to take.  We don't see why we should keep taking them after we are well.  But the reason is that germs have a life cycle.  We have to keep taking the antibiotic until after the next generation spawns in our bodies, so the antibiotic can get the new crop too.  We mostly haven't done that.  Which is how we got drug-resistanc TB, for instance.  And how TB has made a big comeback, after it was thought to have disappeared.  It was mostly from TB patients not taking their antibiotics for as long as the doctor told them to.

    -Industrial use of antibiotics on a massive scale.  Not only indiscriminate use of antibiotics by veterinarians, but also by agriculture.  Factory farms and feed lots use an incredible amount of antibiotics.  They use them not only when the animals are sick, but also when they are well, to prevent them from getting sick.  Fish farms also use tremendous amounts of antibiotics.  Why?  The animals and the fish are kept so close together in such a small space, surrounded by their own excrement, that they get sick very easily.  Using antibiotics on such a gigantic scale helps to accelerate the development of antibiotic-resistant strains of germs even more.  It also adds antibiotics to our bodies when we eat such animals and fish.

    So what do we do now?  We have to start using stronger personal hygiene, especially with cleaning our hands.  We have to cleanse and sanitize our surroundings in ways that have not seemed necessary for some 60 years.  We have to be more careful about what we eat and drink.  We have to be more careful about what we touch and what we put in our mouths.  We will need to limit intimate contact to a very few people.  (Faithful monogamy might even make a comeback!)   We also need to be more concerned about where we travel and how to protect ourselves better when we do.  If we bring home a strange illness, it could be much harder to cure.  And we need to take a new look at centralized air conditioning and heating systems.  They can spread germs widely through entire buildings - not only hospitals, but also hotels, office buildings, stores and other large buildings.  Not to mention planes, trains and buses.  (See here for additional protective precautions.) 

    We may be on the verge of leaving this comforting 60-year-old age of broad protection by antibiotics from disabling diseases and shorter life spans.  The times, they are a-changing.  We will have to learn how to change with them. 

    October 16, 2007

    Ethan Laughing

                                 (Image from theycatalog.com)

    Hilarious!  So much fun!  Just  1-1/2 minutes.  Click here for video. 

    October 15, 2007

    Gore Gets A Cold Shoulder

                                  (Image from aboutmyplanet.com)

    "We'll look back on all of this in 10 or 15 years and realize how foolish it was." 

    So said Dr. William Gray, 78, about the global warming scare on the day Al Gore got the Nobel Peace Prize, here

    ONE of the world's foremost meteorologists has called the theory that helped Al Gore share the Nobel Peace Prize "ridiculous" and the product of "people who don't understand how the atmosphere works".

    Dr William Gray, a pioneer in the science of seasonal hurricane forecasts, told a packed lecture hall at the University of North Carolina that humans were not responsible for the warming of the earth.

    His comments came on the same day that the Nobel committee honoured Mr Gore for his work in support of the link between humans and global warming.

    "We're brainwashing our children," said Dr Gray, 78, a long-time professor at Colorado State University. "They're going to the Gore movie [An Inconvenient Truth] and being fed all this. It's ridiculous."

    At his first appearance since the award was announced in Oslo, Mr Gore said: "We have to quickly find a way to change the world's consciousness about exactly what we're facing."

    Mr Gore shared the Nobel prize with the United Nations climate panel for their work in helping to galvanise international action against global warming.

    But Dr Gray, whose annual forecasts of the number of tropical storms and hurricanes are widely publicised, said a natural cycle of ocean water temperatures - related to the amount of salt in ocean water - was responsible for the global warming that he acknowledges has taken place.

    However, he said, that same cycle meant a period of cooling would begin soon and last for several years.

    "We'll look back on all of this in 10 or 15 years and realise how foolish it was," Dr Gray said.

    During his speech to a crowd of about 300 that included meteorology students and a host of professional meteorologists, Dr Gray also said those who had linked global warming to the increased number of hurricanes in recent years were in error.

    He cited statistics showing there were 101 hurricanes from 1900 to 1949, in a period of cooler global temperatures, compared to 83 from 1957 to 2006 when the earth warmed.

    "The human impact on the atmosphere is simply too small to have a major effect on global temperatures," Dr Gray said.

    He said his beliefs had made him an outsider in popular science.

    "It bothers me that my fellow scientists are not speaking out against something they know is wrong," he said. "But they also know that they'd never get any grants if they spoke out. I don't care about grants."

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    October 13, 2007

    Apologetics Is Getting Big

                                     (Image from seopher.com)

    Which of us has never had any doubts about our faith?  And when we doubt, who is there to help?  That is what Christian apologists have done through the centuries.  They don't "apologize" for the faith; they defend it.

    Many people do not know that Christianity can be defended on every front, including scientific, philosophical, and historical.  Most people have heard claims that science has disproved the Bible and the existence of God.   

    Now atheists have become more militant and angry.  A spate of books by well-known atheists arrived this year.  As a result, many more Christians have questions about their faith. 

    Recently a debate took place in Birmingham, Alabama between the famous Oxford biologist and atheist Richard Dawkins, author of "The God Delusion," and Oxford mathetician and Christian, John Lennox  It was sold out 3 weeks in advance and tickets were going for 3 times their face value, according to Naomi Schaefer Riley at the Wall Street Journal, here.

    Such propositions were debated as:

    "Faith is blind; science is evidence based," "Design is dead, otherwise one must explain who designed the designer" and "Christianity is dangerous."  The two oxford professors, who had never met before this evening, both displayed rhetorical skills in the best British tradition.

    They clashed over whether it was Christianity that began the scientific revolution, whether the universe's complexity was evidence for a creator and whether atheism was itself a sort of faith.  Some of the exchanges were funny, as when Mr. Lennox suggested that his opponent believed that his wife loved him even though it's not scientifically provable.  "Is there any evidence for that?" Mr. Lennox asked.  "Yes, plenty of evidence," Mr. Dawkins answered.  "Never mind about my wife."

    Pastors say that congregants are aware of these recent atheist best-sellers and want to know how to respond to such arguments.  Such works as "The Case for Christ" and "The Case for Faith" by Lee Strobel, formerly a teaching pastor at Saddleback Church, have sold well.  So have Josh McDowell's "Evidence that Demands a Verdict," Ravi Zacharias' "Reasons for Faith" and this month's "Apologetics Study Bible," whose contributors include Chuck Colson and former Southern Baptist Seminary   

    Then there is my own favorite, "The Defender's Bible" by Henry Morris, Bible teacher, scientist and founder of the Institute for Creation Research, www.icr.org.  Plus his book "Many Infallible Proofs."

    Defenders of the faith are drawing crowds of thousands in person as well.  Next month, the Southern Evangelical Seminary will host a National Conference on Christian Apologetics, which will include a special segment for teens.  Younger people are some of the most avid consumers of apologetics texts, according to Christian author Johalyn Fincher, who speaks to college and high-school groups regularly.  She says that in the 20th century, Christians often reacted to science's attacks on religion by "running away from culture."  But in recent years more Christians have begun to take the attitude, "If our God is the God of truth, what are we afraid of?"

    Note: If you like this article and would like for others to read it, please go here and vote for it.  (If 5 votes accumulate soon enough, this post will appear on the front page of realclearpolitics.com, then will be read by many people.)

    October 12, 2007

    Socialists and Greens Ruin Complex Systems

                              (Image from commondreams.com)

    One of life's little pleasures is reading the excellent posts by Wretchard at the Belmont Club blog, here. But the comments there are also exceptional. Recently it was about how Socialism and Environmentalism are attempts to manage very complex systems through government, here

    Wretchard comments:

    Both Communism and Environmentalism are attempts to manage very complex systems. The first attempted to plan human societies. The second attempts to "heal nature". In neither case is there enough of the information necessary to accomplish those ends. Not until we have quantum computers and even then.

    This partly explains why, despite the best of intentions, these enterprises can have such disastrous results.

    Because complex systems often behave in a nonlinear way, relating to them with a very short feedback loop is usually superior to the Five Year Plans or Multi-Decade Climate Target Goals characteristic of these endeavors.

    We can only reliably predict how complex systems will behave in the nearly immediate future. Market mechanisms and decision-making with a great deal of subsidiarity approach the "real-time" feedback loop ideal more closely than big, bureaucratic projects coordinated through the UN or some similar mechanism.

    In contrast these massive geo-engineering projects will probably be managed through equally massive bureaucracies and ponderous consultations. They will be projects with all the maneuverability of a 4-mile long freight train. Long after the first signs that something is going wrong are detected, the juggernaut will keep plowing ahead, driven by sheer unstoppable momentum toward whatever cliff yawns before it.

    and then The Wobbly Guy commented:

    That's why environmentalists are watermelons. Green on the outside, red, or even yellow, on the inside. They're either commies or cowards.

    Any reasonable scientist would conclude we simply do not know enough to do anything. Too bad pseudo-science has won out. From HIV to global warming to th ozone layer, science has been led astray. I am anticipating a severe backlash once the lies are exposed.

    So  LarryD commented:

    Heh, a study back in 1998 showed that North America was a net CO2 sink, probably due to forest regrowth. Forest regrowth can't be continued indefinitely, but timber harvesting would be a sustainable CO2 sink with out new technology or great expense.

    The tree-huggers will just loath it..

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    October 11, 2007

    Ozone Hole Shrinks by One Third

                                (Image from epa.gov)

    The European Space Agency (ESA) announces that the ozone hole has shrunk by nearly a third.

    That's this year.  But last year it also shrank by another 40%.  That's something like a 70% shrinkage in 2 years!  (40 million tonnes lst year, 27.7 million tonnes this year.)

    The experts have told us:

    Ozone, a molecule of oxygen, forms a thin layer in the stratosphere, filtering out dangerous ultraviolet sunlight that damages vegetation and can cause skin cancer and cataracts.

    The protective layer has been badly damaged by man-made chlorine-based chemicals.

    Does anyone remember all the hype a decade ago about our danger from the ozone hole?  Then why isn't there some huge, very-relieved hype now about this great news - the ozone hole has shrunk by some 70% in just 2 years!

    Maybe the hypers just don't like good news.

    Or maybe they don't want us to remember that because of their hype a decade ago, we had to junk all of our perfectly-good cholrine-gas-based air conditioning systems, because of ozone-hole alarmists.

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    October 10, 2007

    Cleaning Up Intellectuals' Messes

              (Image from montanalibraries.org)

    Ideally, intellectuals help us all by showing what is important, and which way to go in the future.  But as smart as they are, intellectuals have made huge mistakes.  Because they have shaped the thought of whole societies, their impact has been powerful and lasting.  So their mistakes have led to disasters on a global scale.  How do we clean up their mess?

    One such cleaner-up was Ayn Rand, whose landmark book "Atlas Shrugged" was published 50 years ago today, as noted by Robert Tracinski in "The Historic Significance of Atlas Shrugged."

    Tracinski notes that:

    The most important event of the past two centuries, with which artists and intellectuals ought to have come to grips, is the rise of capitalism and the Industrial Revolution--a social revolution that has radically transformed human life for the better.

    No one could have conceived of the achievements of capitalism and the Industrial Revolution before they happened--and these new events required a radical re-evaluation of conventional ideas. Yet the intellectuals failed to perform such a re-evaluation.

    Instead, intellectuals were looking backward, many to the Middle Ages.  They feared all the new science and technology, the soaring new industrialization and predicted it would bring disaster.

    A German intellectual named Karl Marx gave one of the most influential accounts of the new capitalist system--and he got everything wrong. An Industrial Revolution driven by scientific and technological advances springing from the minds of a few extraordinary individuals, he would describe as the anonymous, collective product of brute physical labor; an economic system of liberty, he would describe as a system of oppression; a system built on the right to property he would describe as a system based on expropriation--and then he would propose actual oppression and expropriation as the solution.

    This has been the pattern of the artists and intellectuals in dealing with the most significant phenomenon of our age. While the world was transformed around them, they refused to grasp the real meaning of these events, choosing to ignore or denigrate the forces that were rapidly improving human life.

    What Ayn Rand did was to grasp the meaning of these forces and illuminate them in both fiction and philosophy.  She found heroism in the achievements of the entrepreneurs and industrialists who were making it happen.

    Atlas Shrugged was written in an age of creeping global socialism. Extrapolating from the trends of the day,  Rand projected a future in which most of the world's nations are collapsing into the poverty and oppression of socialist "people's states," while America itself is collapsing under the weight of an increasing government takeover of the economy.

    She saw the dramatic potential in asking a single question: what would happen if the innovative entrepreneurs and businessmen--after decades of being vilified and regulated--started to disappear?

    This involved the novel's philosophical question - what is the moral status of the businessman and industrialist?

    Capitalism unleashed an extraordinary burst of scientific and technological innovation and of human creativity--yet this had largely gone unrecognized as a phenomenon with any moral or intellectual significance. Ayn Rand was the first to celebrate the accomplishments of the James Watts and Andrew Carnegies and Thomas Edisons and to recognize in their productive energies an example of moral heroism.

    The central philosophical theme of Atlas Shrugged is Ayn Rand's demolition of the intellectuals' dichotomy between the high-minded pursuits of the intellect and the allegedly grubby, un-intellectual world of business and industry.

    Now, 50 years later, we recognize that knowledge and ideas are the engine of wealth-creation, more than physical labor or raw materials.  Ayn Rand originated this idea during the old industrial age, when the "brute muscle power of union workers was still widely put forward as the source of American's industrial might."

    Throughout most of mankind's history, moralists have warned that individuals driven by "greed" and left free to pursue their self-interest would plunge society into a destructive war of all against all, a system of brutality, plunder, and exploitation--precisely the qualities Marx projected onto the new capitalist system.

    Instead, capitalism produced a system of freedom, independence, prosperity, and super-abundant creative energy--while the societies most thoroughly dedicated to the sacrifice of the individual to the collective, the 20th century's Communist regimes, were guilty of the greatest crimes ever recorded.

    As a Christian and an economist, I part company with Rand on the issue of selfishness.  She pointed to the now widely-accepted fact that self-interest works out for the greater good of all in capitalism.  But she also claimed that pure selfishness in personal relationships works out for the greater good of all.  As a social scientist, I do not think that can be demonstrated to be true.  On the contrary, there is broad evidence it ruins marriages, families, communities and describes narcissistic sociopaths.

    Still, Rand should be celebrated for pioneer work in giving philosophical and intellectual recognition to business people and entrepreneurs, whose efforts and innovations undergird the revolution in technology that is shrinking poverty all over the world.

    October 09, 2007

    Over The Rainbow - Who Sings It Best?

                     Israel Kamakawiwo'Ole sings it at Israel Kamakawiwo'Ole

                            (Image from dcwhawaii.com)

          Six-year-old Connie Talbot sings it on Britain's "Idol," "Got Talent"

                                   (Image from dailymail.co.uk)

    Or Judy Garland at Judy Garland - Somewhere Over The Rainbow in the movie "Wizard of Oz"?

                                (Image from us.movies1.yimg.com)

    Which version did you like best - Israel's, Connie's or Judy's?  Let us all know by leaving a comment below.

    October 08, 2007

    The World Is Getting Better - Shhh!

                                       (Image from taratours.com)

    Ten years ago or so, billionaire investor and philanthropist John Templeton shocked many by saying in an interview that the world had never been better.  It seemed a strange attitude.

    Now the UN has also shocked many by saying that the world has never been better-off, here.  Oddly, very few in the major media have reported it.  But here is the UN conclusion at the end of its "State of the Future" report: 

    People around the world are becoming healthier, wealthier, better educated, more peaceful, more connected, and they are living longer.

    Wait!  Isn't the outlook supposed to be bleak?  Hasn't it been bad all our lives?  Anyone remember the "Stop the planet, I want to get off" buttons of the 60s?  Then -

    A group of scientists calling themselves the Club of Rome issued a report called "Limits to Growth." It explained that lifeboat Earth had become so weighed down with humans that we were running out of food, minerals, forests, water, energy and just about everything else that we need for survival.

    Paul Ehrlich's best-selling book "The Population Bomb" (1968) gave England a 50-50 chance of surviving into the 21st century.

    In 1980, Jimmy Carter released the "Global 2000 Report," which declared that life on Earth was getting worse in every measurable way.

    "Doom and gloom" journalism is about the same today.  Yet the UN reports that:

    -World-wide illiteracy rates have fallen by half since 1970 and now stand at an all-time low of 18%.

    -More people live in free countries than ever before.

    -The average human being today will live 50% longer in 2025 than one born in 1955.

    And how did all these good things happen?  According to the UN report, it was -

    Capitalism, according to the U.N. Free trade is rightly recognized as the engine of global prosperity in recent years.

    True, we still have problems.  Global warming is said to be getting worse and income disparities are widening.  But while incomes are more unequal, most also have higher incomes.

    -In 1981, 40% of the world's population lived on less than $1 a day. Now that percentage is only 25%, adjusted for inflation.

    -At current rates of growth, "world poverty will be cut in half between 2000 and 2015"--which is arguably one of the greatest triumphs in human history.

    -Trade and technology are closing the global "digital divide," and the report notes hopefully that soon laptop computers will cost $100 and almost every schoolchild will be a mouse click away from the Internet

    -The world's six billion people are living longer, healthier and more comfortably than ever

    The population-controllers also got the story wrong.  Now -

    Demographers now say that in the second half of this century, the human population will stabilize and then fall

    Maybe what we need is fewer "doom-sayers" and more "doom-slayers."  That would fit the facts better.