February 16, 2006

Able Danger Coverage

The Strata-Sphere has primo coverage of this topic. I haven’t written about it because, truth be told, it’s over and done in my mind.

I am not surprised that the nation’s intelligence community was manipulated for political purposes. I also don’t think that finding out what happened is of any use, except to the part of the right that will bash Clinton and his cronies into the next century. If any crimes were committed, the statute of limitations has probably run on them. All that is left is the insistant and mindless Clinton bashing that replicates the worst of the loony left’s attitudes about George Bush.

Spc. Shauna Rohbock

Filed under: Military — Chuck Simmins

U.S. Army

Rhobock will now be entering her fourth season in the driver’s seat and continues to turn heads around the world. Last season Shauna finished the season ranked fifth in the world along with winning her first ever medals as a driver. Rohbock teamed with Valerie Fleming and Erin Pac and claimed three World Cup Medals (1 Silver and 2 Bronze). Shauna and Valerie also took home a bronze medal at the World Championships in Calgary, Canada after breaking the start and track records.

Shauna’s best result last season came when she teamed with Fleming to take the silver medal in Torino, Italy in the first race ever on the 2006 Olympic track. Shauna not only had a great season but also set seven world records (6 World Cup and 1 World Championships) as well. Rohbock teamed with Valerie Flemming for five records and Eric Pac for two. The only track Shauna did not set a record on was Lake Placid, NY where she still holds the track start record.

Rohbock was also recognized along with the U.S. Women’s Bobsled Team by the USOC as the recipients of the Team of the Month award for January 2005.

Shauna first came into the sport of women’s bobsledding as a push athlete in 1999. Rohbock also played forward for the San Diego Spirit of the WUSA (Women’s United Soccer Association).

Shauna was also a two-time All-American in Soccer and Track & Field at Brigham Young University.

(Read the rest of this entry…)

Sgt. Jeremy McDonald

Filed under: Military, War on Terror, Iraq, Heroes, WOT Heroes — Chuck Simmins

U.S. Army

Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Richard A. Cody, presented the Bronze Star for Valor Feb. 13 to Sgt. Jeremy McDonald at Camp Liberty, Iraq.

McDonad is assigned to Company C, 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division. He was presented the medal for his actions Jan. 15 when he was wounded by terrorists after identifying a suspicious vehicle while on dismounted patrol.

Serving as the squad leader, and placing himself as the lead element, McDonald attempted to stop the vehicle for inspection. The vehicle’s occupants commenced an unprovoked attack.

McDonald was wounded but continued to return fire. He was struck by point-blank range AK-47 fire five times. His Soldiers, inspired by his fearlessness, entered the fray and defended their leader, who continued to fire at the terrorists even as his Soldiers pulled him away from the vehicle.

McDonald continued to secure the area with his Soldiers until he was forced to evacuate 45 minutes later.

Katrina’s Learned Lessons

Filed under: Charity, Katrina relief, Disasters, Gulf Reconstruction — Chuck Simmins

Read the entire article. It’s eye opening.

Popular Mechanics

MYTH: “The aftermath of Katrina will go down as one of the worst abandonments of Americans on American soil ever in U.S. history.”-Aaron Broussard, president, Jefferson Parish, La., Meet the Press, NBC, Sept. 4, 2005

REALITY: Bumbling by top disaster-management officials fueled a perception of general inaction, one that was compounded by impassioned news anchors. In fact, the response to Hurricane Katrina was by far the largest-and fastest-rescue effort in U.S. history, with nearly 100,000 emergency personnel arriving on the scene within three days of the storm’s landfall.

Dozens of National Guard and Coast Guard helicopters flew rescue operations that first day-some just 2 hours after Katrina hit the coast. Hoistless Army helicopters improvised rescues, carefully hovering on rooftops to pick up survivors. On the ground, “guardsmen had to chop their way through, moving trees and recreating roadways,” says Jack Harrison of the National Guard. By the end of the week, 50,000 National Guard troops in the Gulf Coast region had saved 17,000 people; 4000 Coast Guard personnel saved more than 33,000.

These units had help from local, state and national responders, including five helicopters from the Navy ship Bataan and choppers from the Air Force and police. The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries dispatched 250 agents in boats. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), state police and sheriffs’ departments launched rescue flotillas. By Wednesday morning, volunteers and national teams joined the effort, including eight units from California’s Swift Water Rescue. By Sept. 8, the waterborne operation had rescued 20,000.

While the press focused on FEMA’s shortcomings, this broad array of local, state and national responders pulled off an extraordinary success-especially given the huge area devastated by the storm. Computer simulations of a Katrina-strength hurricane had estimated a worst-case-scenario death toll of more than 60,000 people in Louisiana. The actual number was 1077 in that state.

February 15, 2006

Body Armor Update

Filed under: Military, Body Armor — Chuck Simmins

American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Feb. 14, 2006 – The Defense Department announced today the revision of a memorandum on the policy and procedures for the reimbursement of privately purchased protective equipment for Operations Noble Eagle, Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.

The new memo, which was signed Feb. 10 by David S.C. Chu, undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, incorporates the original guidance published on Oct. 4, 2005, expands the list of reimbursable equipment, and extends the eligible purchase period for reimbursement.

The full reimbursable equipment list now includes:

* Complete ballistic vests;
* Most component parts of ballistic vests, including side-plate body armor;
* Helmets;
* Ballistic eye protection;
* Hydration systems;
* Gloves;
* Knee pads;
* Elbow pads;
* Bed insect netting;
* Insect repellant; and
* Reflective vests.

The eligible purchase period is now Sept. 11, 2001, through April 1, 2006, as required by the fiscal 2006 National Defense Authorization Act. The previous memo only covered purchases from Sept. 11, 2001, to July 31, 2004.

To be reimbursed for equipment, servicemembers must complete DD Form 2902, “Claim for Reimbursement for Privately Purchased Protective, Safety or Health Equipment used in Combat.” This form must be submitted to the servicemember’s chain of command or, for former members, to an authorizing official designated by their former service at an address on the form. All claims must be submitted by Oct. 3, 2006.

The original memo states that the military will reimburse servicemembers for the cost, including shipping, of any protective, safety or health equipment that was purchased by the member or by another person on behalf of the member for the member’s personal use during deployment.

To be eligible for reimbursement, the equipment must be on the approved list of shortage equipment, and the member must not have been issued equivalent government-provided equipment before they engaged in imminent danger or hostile fire operations, the original memo states.

Reimbursement for any one item is limited to $1,100, and any equipment that servicemembers are reimbursed for becomes the property of the U.S. government and must be turned in to the unit logistics officer.

Bravo, Sports Illustrated!

Filed under: Photos, Gratuitous Pics — Chuck Simmins

Reuters

Actress Molly Sims is shown wearing a $30 million diamond bikini in this publicity photograph released February 14, 2006. The bikini, designed by Susan Rosen is made up of over 150 carats of D flawless diamonds. The bikini is featured in the 2006 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue which is being released February 14.

(Read the rest of this entry…)

Dream City

It’s not often a planned community, in the 1960’s sense, gets built anymore. And, when it is, in the United States, it’s built on debt, mortgages and tax dollars.

OTOH, some very sensible people have decided to build their dream city. And they are. Paying cash for it.

Michael Totten is in Kurdistan, and provides reportage and photos of this remarkable place and extraordinary people.

Reporting the Correct Way

Filed under: Original writing, Commentary, Media, Old Media — Chuck Simmins

This is the way media is supposed to work.

Corpus Christi Caller

The next time someone argues that newspaper journalists are dinosaurs headed for extinction, I’ll remind them of Vice President Dick Cheney’s shooting accident on the Armstrong Ranch.

Radio stations and cable news channels didn’t break that news; neither did local television news stations. You didn’t see it first on national news Web sites or blogs or on the Sunday morning political talk shows.

Our own Caller-Times reporters were first with the story that Cheney had accidentally shot Austin attorney Harry Whittington during a quail hunt in Kenedy County.

We broke the national story at 1:48 p.m. Sunday with an e-mail alert and a story on our Web site Caller.com, 48 minutes before the Associated Press moved anything on the story and a full hour before CNN issued an e-mail alert.

We got the story the way dedicated journalists have tracked down news for years - through strong, consistent building of sources and good, old-fashioned reporting.

(Read the rest of this entry…)

Our Old Man

Filed under: Cats — Chuck Simmins

Shadow was found as a kitten, wandering the drainage ditch along a country road in Texas. He is 13 now, and living a life of quiet leisure.

Site Changes

Filed under: Blogging — Chuck Simmins

Minor site changes last night. I’m working on implementing an Archives page, link on the top right.

Cannot seem to get custom sidebar and footers working, however. And the javascripts are fighting it out for control of the sidebar.

I’d really like to find a way to show when my blogroll links are updated. So far, no joy.

Two Sad Tales

Boston Herald via Jay Tea:

A shortage of Boston Police detectives and a lack of cooperation from victims are fueling a spiral of unchecked violence that left 290 people shot in the city last year - but just 3 percent of those cases cleared, according to a Herald review.

Only eight gunmen have been arrested in connection with the gunfire that exploded in every corner of the city, and one of those suspects is charged with shooting two people in one day, according to a list of 290 victims obtained by the Herald.

(Read the rest of this entry…)

February 14, 2006

Kick a Donkey

Filed under: Blogging, Politics, Original writing, Commentary, Other Bloggers — Chuck Simmins

Loony Lefty Kos wrote a book. Now he’s making a commercial. A donkey will be kicked in simulation.

The cast will be paid $1.00 each and fed.

Now, just how, exactly, is this not in violation of a whole lot of labour laws? Never mind that he’s working a non-union shoot. No SAG here. Just scabs.

Burning for Islam

Filed under: Religion, War on Terror, Mocking, Islam — Chuck Simmins

Abandoned by his friends, Ronald spent the final moments of his life in defiance of the surging mob. It will be a long while til we see his like again.

Iraq How and Why

Filed under: War on Terror, Iraq, Rebuilding — Chuck Simmins

My brother comments:

How is our effort to democratize Iraq different than the effort to democratize Japan after WW2? Japan had no history of democracy. It was a brutal dictatorship (it’s hard to top the Japs with brutality). It was militarily aggressive and attacked its neighbors and us. It supported other anti American countries, forming alliances to directly oppose us. Its religion was antithetical to democracy. Why is it assumed we are doomed to fail in Iraq other than a glee in certain quarters to watch GWB fail?

Olympics: Day Whatever

Filed under: Original writing, Commentary — Chuck Simmins

Is it Torino or Turin? Oh, heck. I’ll just do what I always do in these situations. Rename the place “Bob”. I can’t misspell it.

From the Bob Olympics in Bob, Italy:

American men are doing better than expected in curling. Our women are not. One could draw a metaphor from this about modern American life and who is better with brooms. But I won’t.

Lots of people have fallen while sking. Guys who drink keep doing so.

Snowboarding is doing well. Girl snowboarders are hot.

Michelle Kwan is still hurt. I won’t comment on the blog, but you can’t control what I’m thinking!!!

Can you?

February 13, 2006

Cheney Doesn’t Shoot Quail

Filed under: Politics, American Politics, Original writing, Commentary — Chuck Simmins

Well, he didn’t. Dan is still running aound.

What’s with the NRO gang? Because Cheney is the VP, because he’s in politics, he has to take the blame, show remorse, make a big deal of the whole thing?

Shit happens. Even to Vice Presidents. Unless Cheney called out to his “target” then potted him, it was an ACCIDENT!

The NRO gang wants to have Cheney become one of those “sob sisters” they revile at other times. For crying out loud, he’s sorry. The guy he shot is sorry. I’m freakin’ sorry!

It was an accident! Iran is about to go nuclear. The Arab Street is up in arms about freedom. The Gulf Coast is still a mess. Britney is going to Mardi Gras. There are a bunch of far more important stories out there.

Britney at Mardi Gras. Do you suppose… Nah, she wouldn’t. Would she? Watch for THOSE pics on the net.

Taxes

Filed under: Original writing, Musings — Chuck Simmins

The lovely wife has decided to help me this evening by sorting out the paperwork I will need to do our taxes. Naturally, she’s doing it her way, and it’s making me very itchy to say the least. But, it’s not wrong, just not my way, and it is a help.

Still and all, it feels like someone is going through my underwear drawer… oh, wait, she does that too.

He Shoots, He Scores!

Filed under: Original writing, Commentary, Media, Old Media — Chuck Simmins

Cheney accidently shot somebody. And only the hubris of old media makes it a big deal. Old media did not find out for 18 hours about the accident. They’re annoyed no one told them.

Why should anyone tell them? Who cares? Other than the victim, his family, the ranch owner and the Vice President, who gives a rat’s ass?

And Sarah Brady can kiss mine.

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