Welcome to Medary.com Sunday, November 24 2024 @ 09:53 AM CST

Iraq, and who's responsible for national security, anyway?

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I've been trying hard to avoid politics lately--it's gotten so bitter and silly that it's much more fun to simply go on a cruise or two and watch some college basketball.

But, in the interim, a couple of things have happened.

First, Iraq elected a parliament. Now, we don't know who won yet, but the fact remains that for the first time in history, an Arab nation has elected a fully representative government.

Of course, to the extent that this remarkable achievement has been reported in Old Media, it's been spun largely as "what will go wrong now and how it will hurt Bush."

Riiiiiiiggghhhtttt.

Next, we have the New York Times story on government monitoring of communications between terror suspects in foreign countries and those in the U.S. It is an open question as to what the story really is. Is it "domestic spying" as the Old Media is largely spinning it, or is it the illegal leaking of intelligence information as the Administration asserts?

Or maybe a bit of both?

Certainly we need to be concerned whenever the government monitors U.S. citizens' communications. But should we also be concerned that an intelligence operation, maybe an ongoing one, was (by admission of the New York Times) illegally leaked to them?

Old Media keeps trying to re-live their successes with the Pentagon Papers and Watergate.

But have they, in their zeal to "get" a sitting Administration, gone too far?

We are in the curious position, it seems, of allowing (unelected and therefore fundamentally undemocratic) major media outlets to decide whether national security will be harmed by revealing secret information.

Despite the libertarian/anarchical notion that "information should be free," I'd suggest that this is, generally, not a good idea.

Hopefully a court will decide who, if anyone, should go to prison for a long, long, long, long time in this affair.

Where we've been this time

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This latest extended hiatus from posting started with being snowed/iced in by a blizzard/ice storm after Thanksgiving in South Dakota. We lived by candle-light and generator at my sister's place for a couple of days, then escaped back home to Kansas City, just in time to board an airplane for Ft. Lauderdale and take a Caribbean cruise.

So, there are lots of pictures to post and stories to tell. Snookums and I are entering a (relatively) slow period travel-wise, so hopefully I'll be able to catch up on some of those stories over the next month or so. That doesn't mean we won't be on the road--we've got a couple of basketball trips planned. And, generally, we'll also be catching up on some of the UT and SDSU basketball and sports news.

The Conference Map Project has been stagnant for far too long, too. I really need to crank out the 2005-06 Division I and Division II maps, preferably before the Final Four is completed. Sigh.

SDSU's RPI

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It will be a few weeks before the RPI settles down, but this Monday finds South Dakota State at #64.

The Jackrabbits' opponents:
#24 -- Kentucky (L)
#207 -- Northern Colorado (W)
#47 -- Illinois (L)

Up next:
#212 -- Southeast Missouri State
#212 -- Cal State Fullerton

Rabbit Week, Nov. 21-28

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Thanksgiving week finds SDSU Jackrabbits winter sports cranking up, with both basketball teams in action, wrestling off for the week, and the swim teams idle until January.

Men's Basketball
After facing two of the top twenty teams in the country and coming away with a 1-2 record, Scott Nagy's Rabbits have two home games this week. On Thanksgiving Day night, SDSU hosts Southeast Missouri State in the Jackrabbits' home opener. Medary.com sees a home opener win from this young and entertaining Jackrabbits team against the SEMO Redhawks.

Then, next Monday night, the 28th, the Rabbits host a Cal State Fullerton team which is picked to win the Big West Conference. The Titans present a big challenge for the Jacks in the first of this home-and-home matchup (the Jacks play their final season game at Fullerton). It will be an upset, but we'll root for the Rabbits to successfully defend the home court against the Titans.

Women's Basketball
After a big win against Nebraska and a disappointing squeaker loss to Drake, Aaron Johnston's squad heads to Ft. Collins with a 1-1 record to participate in Colorado State's Coors Rocky Mountain Invitational. The Jacks play Colorado State on Friday night Nov. 25. The Rams are picked to finish fifth in the Mountain West Conference behind Utah, New Mexico, TCU, and UNLV. This is another winnable game for the Jackrabbits.

The Jackrabbits then play the Anteaters of UC Irvine on Monday night, Nov. 27th. The Anteaters are the fifth place pick by the coaches of the Big West Conference. Medary.com sees another win for the Rabbits against the Anteaters.

The next home action for the Rabbits is against Middle Tennessee State on Dec. 2.

Wrestling
The Jackrabbits are off until the Cliff Keen Invitational, December 2-3 in Las Vegas.

Women's Swimming and Diving
The new Mid-Continent member Jackrabbits are off until a January 13th dual with Northern Colorado in Greeley.

Men's Swimming and Diving
The Mid-Con Rabbit men's swim team is off until a January 14th dual at Denver.

Jackrabbit Basketball is here!

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College basketball is back, and that means SDSU Jackrabbit hoops!

SDSU played a decent game against the Kentucky Wildcats, and followed up with a nailbiter win against former NCC conference foe Northern Colorado in the opening rounds of the Guardians tournament.

Next up, Friday night, it's the Illini in Champaign, on ESPNU. Tune in if you get it, the Rabbits will be fun to watch this year.

Abolish the CIA!

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I think the CIA should be abolished.

If you look at the CIA's astonishingly bad intelligence to the President and the U.S. government on the Iraq matter, throw in the whole Valerie Plame thing which looks more and more like a CIA operation against the duly elected President of the U.S., and lay on top of that story after story of general CIA incompetence and you realize that Jack Ryan is very, very much a fictional character.

Shut the CIA down, and round up all of those former "Able Danger" military intelligence types and tell them that it's their show now.

Michael Barone agrees with me.

Via Instapundit.

Back Home Again

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Snookums and I are back from a Mediterranean cruise, where I had time to sit back and think about lots of things, including where this blog has been and where it should be going.

More:
Travel photos, basketball commentary, lifestyle-type stories.

Less:
Us vs. Them commentary (unless the Them are the barbarian Islamic extremists).

The No-Blood-For-Freedom Quagmire Deepens

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With the apparent passage of the Iraqi constitution, the quagmire in which anti-liberty forces such as Teddy Kennedy, George Soros, and Cindy Sheehan find themselves grows deeper. They have no exit strategy for their myopic and cynical opposition towards the ultimate WMD (weapon of mass democracy): individual freedom and liberty.

We can only continue to call on Kennedy, Soros, Move-On, the New York Times, the Democratic Party, and all other No-Blood-For-Freedom forces to pull out of their doomed foray into politics and to bring the rent-a-mobs home.