If you wait long enough

…occasionally someone else writes the blog post I would have anyway. In this case, it’s TBogg:

YRNC 2005 Chairman Nathan Taylor has been responding to attacks by leftists who threaten protests at the 2005 Young Republican Convention.

‘In recent weeks I have received numerous e-mails from leftist groups bent on infiltrating the Convention and protesting the appearance of veterans of the War on Terror. We will not allow these cowards to dishonor our servicemen,’ stated Taylor.

Actually the protestors are protesting the fact that able-bodied (and we’re being generous here) young Republicans like Nathan are ducking out on their patriotic responsibilities and avoiding a war that they wave their little pom-poms for. That Nathan would see this as an attack on the servicemen that they say they are planning to ‘honor’ would mean that ol’ Nate plans on adding Weasel to his resume right after Chickenhawk and ‘charges-dropped embezzler’. He just can’t seem to stop from hiding behind others when attacked.”

Two articles of note

The reader is invited to ask why I link these two together.

Educational Offshoring: “

Offshoring of the educational system, part XVIIII:

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/0,,SB112052870627477026-1DMgflZ9RVqMtnbLdqA443LHSPA_20060705,00.html?mod=blogs

Enter the next phase of outsourcing: online math education. Not only does the U.S. increasingly lag behind other countries on international math scores, it’s also short of qualified math teachers. This could make it tough for America to improve its grade and retain the competitive edge that keeps good jobs at home.

Into the breach step a handful of Indian companies like Career Launcher India Ltd., which provide math tutoring through two U.S. online tutoring companies and directly to students like Ms. Basu…

(Via Brad DeLong’s Website.)

Toyota to build 100,000 vehicles per year in Woodstock, Ont., starting 2008

WOODSTOCK, Ont. (CP) – Ontario workers are well-trained.

That simple explanation was cited as a main reason why Toyota turned its back on hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies offered from several American states in favour of building a second Ontario plant.

Industry experts say Ontarians are easier and cheaper to train – helping make it more cost-efficient to train workers when the new Woodstock plant opens in 2008, 40 kilometres away from its skilled workforce in Cambridge.

‘The level of the workforce in general is so high that the training program you need for people, even for people who have not worked in a Toyota plant before, is minimal compared to what you have to go through in the southeastern United States,’ said Gerry Fedchun, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association, whose members will see increased business with the new plant.

Acknowledging it was the ‘worst-kept secret’ throughout Ontario’s automotive industry, Toyota confirmed months of speculation Thursday by announcing plans to build a 1,300-worker factory in the southwestern Ontario city.

‘Welcome to Woodstock – that’s something I’ve been waiting a long time to say,’ Ray Tanguay, president of Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada, told hundreds gathered at a high school gymnasium.

The plant will produce the RAV-4, dubbed by some as a ‘mini sport-utility vehicle’ that Toyota currently makes only in Japan. It plans to build 100,000 vehicles annually.

The factory will cost $800 million to build, with the federal and provincial governments kicking in $125 million of that to help cover research, training and infrastructure costs.

Several U.S. states were reportedly prepared to offer more than double that amount of subsidy. But Fedchun said much of that extra money would have been eaten away by higher training costs than are necessary for the Woodstock project.

He said Nissan and Honda have encountered difficulties getting new plants up to full production in recent years in Mississippi and Alabama due to an untrained – and often illiterate – workforce. In Alabama, trainers had to use ‘pictorials’ to teach some illiterate workers how to use high-tech plant equipment.

‘The educational level and the skill level of the people down there is so much lower than it is in Ontario,’ Fedchun said.

In addition to lower training costs, Canadian workers are also $4 to $5 cheaper to employ partly thanks to the taxpayer-funded health-care system in Canada, said federal Industry Minister David Emmerson.

‘Most people don’t think of our health-care system as being a competitive advantage,’ he said….”

Always nice to be a trendsetter…

HYBRID NATION: “

June auto sales results are in. And the big news was GM’s big gain in sales, thanks in large part to the extension of employee-discounts to the general public. Good for GM.

But the auto companies’ sales data also contained information of a more heartening trend–and one that is more likely to last. Sales of hybrid vehicles were up strongly again.

In June, Toyota racked up a record 194,875 sales, up 10% from last year. In the month, it sold 9,622 Priuses (up 119.3 percent from the year before), 2,869 Highlander Hybrids, and 2,605 Lexus 2006 RX 400h hybrids. In all, that’s 15,906 units, or about 7.7 percent of Toyota’s sales.

Honda’s June sales of hybrid Civics, Accords, and Insights rose 53.4 percent from a year ago to 3,001.

Ford didn’t say how many Escape hybrids it sold in June. But lets assume that it sold about 1,000.

Add it up, and Americans purchased 19,000 hybrid vehicles in June. Yes, that’s still a drop in the bucket. Car sales were running at a 17.5 million annual pace in June, while hybrid sales ran at a 228,000 annual pace. Still, it’s the trend that matters. And hybrid sales are growing far more rapidly than the overall market. Oh, and more hybrids were sold in June than their cultural and energy-consuming converses–Hummers–have been sold all year.

(Via Daniel Gross.)

Paranoia, via Google Maps

Go to Google Maps and search on “Portmeirion, Wales” or “Portmeirion, Gwynedd, LL48, UK”, and then try and get a satellite view. You’ll note that you can’t get a decent satellite view, just like if you search for Area 51.

Of course, a bit of diligent searching finds more photos… and now you know why I’m worried I’m not seeing any closeups. Particularly since I expect to see big white blobs on the photos…

Next, I’m going to use Google maps to find Jack, Kate, Sawyer, and Hurley.

Mr. Rove, meet the widow Breitweiser

Lots of people around here (here being within sight distance of lower Manhattan) are justifiably outraged at Karl Rove and his cheap shots about liberal response to 9/11, but for my money I haven’t seen anyone more on point than Kristin Breitweiser, who lost her husband in the attacks on the World Trade Center and was one of the major agitators for the 9/11 commission:

Karl Rove’s “Understanding of 9/11”:

“Mr. Rove, the first thing that I would like to address is Afghanistan – the place that anyone with a true ‘understanding of 9/11’ knows is a nation that actually has a connection to the 9/11 attacks. One month after 9/11, we invaded Afghanistan, took down the Taliban, and left without capturing Usama Bin Laden – the alleged perpetrator of the September 11th attacks. In the meantime, Afghanistan has carried out democratic elections, but continues to suffer from extreme violence and unrest. Poppy production (yes, Karl, the drug trade) is at an all time high, thus flooding the world market with heroin. And of course, the oil pipeline (a.k.a. the Caspian Sea pipeline) is better protected by U.S. troops who now have a ‘legitimate’ excuse to be in that part of Afghanistan. Interesting isn’t it Karl that the drug ‘rat line’ parallels the oil pipeline. (Yet, with all those troops guarding that same sliver of land, can you please explain how those drugs keep getting through?)

Now Karl, a question for you, since you seem to be the nation’s self-styled sensei with regard to 9/11: Is Usama Bin Laden still important? Lately, your coterie of friends seems to be giving out mixed messages. Recall that in the early days, Bin Laden was wanted ‘dead or alive.’ Then when Bin Laden slipped through your fingertips in Tora Bora, you downgraded his importance. We were told that Bin Laden was a ‘desperate man on the run,’ and a person that President Bush was not ‘too worried about’. Yet, whenever I saw Bin Laden’s videos, he looked much too comfortable to actually be a man on the run. He looked tan, rested, and calm. He certainly didn’t look the way I wanted the murderer of almost 3,000 innocent people to look: unkempt, panicked, and cowering in a corner.

Karl, I mention Bin Laden because recently Director of the CIA, Porter Goss, has mentioned that he knows exactly where Bin Laden is located but that he cannot capture him for fear of offending sovereign nations. Which frankly, I find ironic because of Iraq–and let’s just leave it at that. But, when you say that ‘moderation and restraint’ don’t work in fighting terrorists, maybe you should share those comments with Mr. Goss because he doesn’t seem to be on the same page as you. Unless of course, Porter is holding out to announce that Bin Laden is in Iran. (Karl, I want Bin Laden brought to justice, but not if it means starting a war with Iran – a country that possesses nuclear weaponry. The idea of nuclear fallout in any quadrant of the world is just not an acceptable means to any ends, be it capturing Bin Laden, oil or drugs. But, Afghanistan and Bin Laden are old news. Iraq is the story of today. And of course, it appears that Iran will be the story of next month. But, I digress.)

More to the point, Karl when you say, ‘Conservatives saw the savagery of the 9/11 attacks and prepared for war,’ what exactly did you do to prepare for your war? Did your preparations include: sound intelligence to warrant your actions; a reasonable entry and exit strategy coupled with a coherent plan to carry out that strategy; the proper training and equipment for the troops you were sending in to fight your war? Did you follow the advice of experts such as General Shinseki who correctly advised you about the troop levels needed to actually succeed in Iraq? No, you didn’t.

It has always been America’s policy that you only place soldiers’ lives in harm’s way when it is absolutely necessary and the absolute last resort. When you send troops into combat you support those troops by providing them with proper equipment and training. Why didn’t you do that with the troops that you sent into Iraq? Why weren’t their vehicles armored? Why didn’t they have protective vests? Why weren’t they properly trained about the rules of interrogation? And Karl, when our troops come home be it tragically in body bags or with missing limbs you should honor and acknowledge their service to their country. You shouldn’t hide them by bringing them home in the dark of night. Most importantly, you should take care of them for the long haul by giving them substantial veteran’s benefits and care. To me, that is being patriotic. To me, that is how you support our troops. To me, that is how you show that you know the value of a human life given for its country.

For the record Karl, does Iraq have any connection to the 9/11 attacks? Because, you and your friends with your collective ‘understanding of 9/11’ seem to be contradicting yourselves about the Iraq-9/11 connection, too. First, we were told that we went to war with Iraq because it was linked to the 9/11 attacks. Then, your rationale was changed to ‘Iraq has WMD’. Then you told us that we needed to invade Iraq because Saddam was a ‘bad man’. And now it turns out that we are in Iraq to bring them ‘democracy.’

Of course, the Downing Street memo clarifies many of these things, but for the record Karl: Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11; there were few terrorists in Iraq before our invasion, but now Iraq is a terrorist hot-bed. America had the sympathy and support of the whole world before Iraq. Now, thanks to your actions, we find ourselves hated and alienated by the rest of the world. Al Qaeda’s recruitment took a nose-dive after the 9/11 attacks, but has now skyrocketed since your invasion of Iraq; and most importantly, nearly 2,000 U.S. soldiers have been killed because of your war in Iraq. These facts speak for themselves. (And, they speak very little about effectively winning any war on terror.)

Karl, you say you ‘understand’ 9/11. Then why did you and your friends so vehemently oppose the creation of a 9/11 Independent Commission? Once the commission was established, why did you refuse to properly fund the Commission by allotting it only a $3 million budget? Why did you refuse to allow access to documents and witnesses for the 9/11 Commissioners? Why did we have to fight so hard for an extension when the Commissioners told us that they needed more time due to your footdragging and stonewalling? Why didn’t you want to cooperate so that all Americans could ‘understand’ what happened on 9/11?

Since the release of the 9/11 Commission’s Final Report, have you helped bring to fruition any of the commission’s recommendations? Have you truly made our homeland safer by hardening/eliminating soft targets? Because, to me rebuilding a tower that is 1,776 feet tall where the World Trade Center once stood seems to be only providing more soft targets for the terrorists to hit. Moreover, your support for the use of nuclear energy seems to be providing even more soft targets. Tell me, while you write your nifty little speeches about nuclear power, do you explain to your audience how our nuclear plants will be protected against terrorist attack or infiltration? What assurances do you give that nuclear waste will not find its way into terrorist’s dirty bombs and onto our city streets? And, how do you assure your audience that the shipment of radioactive material will not become a terrorist target as it rolls through their own backyards?

To date, you have done practically nothing to secure our ports, nuclear power plants, and mass transportation systems. Imagine if the billions of dollars you spent in Iraq were spent more wisely on those things here at home. Imagine what sort of alternative energy resources (bio-diesel, wind power, solar power, and hybrid automobiles) could have been researched and funded in the past three years. Talk about regaining the respect and support of the world, that is the one way to do it.

Karl, if you ‘understand 9/11’, then why don’t you understand that until we have a more environmentally friendly energy policy, we cannot effectively fight the war on terrorism. By being dependent on foreign oil, we have no choice but to cozy up to nations that sponsor terrorists. Moreover, because of oil, we may end up placing our troops and our nation at greater risk by having to invade certain oil-rich countries. Our invasion of these countries merely serves to inflame would-be terrorists by reinforcing their notion that we are gluttonous and self-centered — invading sovereign nations solely to steal their oil. Forgive me Karl, but is that how you think you ‘win hearts and minds’? Does that help in any way to ‘spread democracy’?

Finally Karl, please ‘understand’ that the reason we have not suffered a repeat attack on our homeland is because Bin Laden no longer needs to attack us. Those of us with a pure and comprehensive ‘understanding of 9/11’ know that Bin Laden committed the 9/11 attacks so he could increase recruitment for al Qaeda and increase worldwide hatred of America. That didn’t happen. Because after 9/11, the world united with Americans and al Qaeda’s recruitment levels never increased.

It was only after your invasion of Iraq, that Bin Laden’s goals were met. Because of your war in Iraq two things happened that helped Bin Laden and the terrorists: al Qaeda recruitment soared and the United States is now alienated from and hated by the rest of the world. In effect, what Bin Laden could not achieve by murdering my husband and 3,000 others on 9/11, you handed to him on a silver platter with your invasion of Iraq – a country that had nothing to do with 9/11.

Which leads me to my final questions for you Karl: What are your motives when it comes to 9/11 and are you really sure that you understand 9/11?

(Via The Huffington Post | Raw Feed.)

Never in the history of TV

We all know how Star Trek was saved by a write-in campaign the first time around, which kept it on NBC for another season. We know the write-in that kept MST3K alive until the Sci-Fi Channel could pick it up. We’ve seen Family Guy and Firefly come back from the dead, thanks to DVD sales.

But we may now have the first case where a show may be saved by fan action when the show hasn’t even aired yet.

Producer John Rogers posts on his blog Kung Fu Monkey about the strange happenings over Global Frequency ever since a version of the pilot was leaked out onto the Net. His own site has seen an additional 10,000 hits in two weeks, all the more amazing when there’s no link to the blog from the program.

Ironically, Global Frequency is a show about a smart mob that organizes to save the world and cause massive effects to happen– which we’re seeing play out right now. If you haven’t read the marvelous comic by Warren Ellis and friends, hie thee to a bookstore and get the trade. Or get it here and here.

Things you find while searching online at 2:30 AM

I came across this cinema classic, I Killed My Lesbian Wife, Hung Her on a Meat Hook, and Now I Have a Three-Picture Deal at Disney (1993), directed by Ben Affleck. So if you want the real story of how Good Will Hunting made it to Miramax, this must be it.

And no, I’m not going to tell you what I was searching for that led to that link. Trust me, you wouldn’t believe it if I told you.