Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Hillary Parody

At First I thought this was old news ...

Three UFOs and a Blimpoid

UFOs

I cobbled together sightings from NYC, Haiti, and Italy.  This Florida sighting is impressive because of its length and the attendant banter between the husband and wife team filming it.  What?  These are nothing compared to the horror posed by this  blimp

Drones

Killer Bee



A fierce battle is brewing between Boeing and Raytheon to become the main supplier of unmanned aerial vehicles for the US Navy and Marine Corps. Currently, Boeing holds that title with their battle-tested ScanEagle drone. However, Raytheon's updated Killer Bee design is ready for sale, and the company claims that their aircraft has advantages over its competitor like more room for payloads, more than 100 miles of range, infrared feeds, and guide precision munitions with an on-board laser designator.

It sounds impressive, but with Boeing's ScanEagle having already proven itself, it won't be an easy sell. But if it ever came down to aesthetics, the Killer Bee would win hands down. It looks menacing, like some sort of underwater predator. [Popular Mechanics] via Gizmodo

Ice Fishing Gone Bad

Ice Fishing


Unplugged

Saving the world, carrot by carrot

Carrotmob Launch

Teacher
Billy, How much is 6+3?
Billy
11?
Teacher
Very good Billy!  You get a gold star.

Here's a bag Billy, go find some snipe.


Remember when progressive educators decided that a child's self-esteem trumped education?  It appears the produce from that lab experiment gone crazy are entering the real world.  They don't know that yet, however. 
Carrotmob organizes consumers to make purchases, rewarding companies who make environmentally friendly choices. This is our first campaign ever.

On Saturday, March 29th, at 1pm, come to K & D Market (on 16th St at Guerrero in San Francisco) and buy whatever you want. Buy a lot. We're going to be tracking everyone's purchases and then calculating how much revenue we brought to the store. K & D has committed to spending 22% of all the revenue we bring in on energy-saving measures identified by an SF Energy Watch audit, in order to make their store more environmentally friendly! This was the result of a bidding war, which they won, prevailing as the store most committed to environmental improvement among its competitors. You can buy all the things you usually buy, for the same price, but the more you spend during this event, the more money will go towards installing cutting-edge refrigeration and lighting equipment to help stop global warming. After we buy the place out, we're ...  Operation Carrotmob Launch!

I'd station a sniper across the street from every recruiting staion in the nation.

Did you wash after all that?

Caption

Sore Losers Syndrome

Operation "Chaos"



Boys Night Out

Oye

Unplugged



Cuzzin Ricky and me did Annapolis last night. Try finding a lawyer at 3 AM. I will be napping off and on.

New World Order

FRIED TACO
and  Salsa

Fried Taco Medellin
"Bush found unusual allies in three liberal justices:
Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and David Souter."

That single sentence,  from the BGlobe's summary of the high court's Medellin decision, is all anyone needs to know.  Doesn't matter what the case was, Bush must clearly be off the American reservation by virtue of that alliance with left-wing carbuncles.

His  plunge into one-world doctrine was appropriately, justifiably, and fortuitously smacked down.  All three dissenters, and Ginsburg especially, have espoused  reaching across borders to the law of foreign nations to determine law here in America .  That willingness alone, to cede American sovereignty to, in effect,  the United Nations is, in my view,  reason enough to remove them from the court.  The WSJ expands on the importance of the Bush bitch-slapping. 

... José Medellín, a Mexican national, murdered two Houston teenagers. He was sentenced to death by a Texas jury, but his lawyers argued on appeal that he hadn't had access to Mexico's consulate before he confessed to his crimes. This was a violation of the 1963 Vienna Convention, which holds that diplomats are supposed to be notified when their nationals are arrested. ...

... Mexican authorities made the case a referendum on capital punishment and international legal norms, ultimately suing the U.S. in the International Court of Justice at The Hague. The ICJ ruled in Mexico's favor, ordering states to give Medellín and some 51 other nationals new hearings. The question before the Supreme Court was whether such international dictates must be enforced by sovereign state courts. An affirmative answer might have gone a long way toward validating the expansive claims of liberal legal theorists that U.S. courts take instruction from the U.N., among other moral oases.

... Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the 6-3 majority, ruled that the ICJ finding was not binding because the Vienna Convention is an understanding between governments, a diplomatic compact.

While the Bush Administration did not agree with Mexico's choice of venue, or the intrusion on U.S. sovereignty, it attempted to allay the diplomatic ruckus by directing states to comply with the ICJ ruling in a 2005 executive order. The Court ruled that the President's power, too, was limited by the Constitution. The authority to make treaty commitments did not extend to unilaterally asserting new state responsibilities or legal duties. Again, the executive could only make new laws in conjunction with the legislature.

Devotees of using foreign law to overrule American politicians will squawk. But the Medellín majority has delivered a victory for legal modesty and the U.S. Constitution.


Bagdad