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Eight Possibilities Heading Into '08

In this season for predictions, and in keeping . . . we again offer our "possibilities" for the new year.

1. Mideast Time Bomb Ticks Down

Tehran will launch its Bushehr nuclear reactor this summer. The Islamofascist regime claims its nuclear program is peaceful, but no one should doubt Iran will have the bomb in relatively short order. Which means the global jihad will have the bomb.

The U.S. must either help engineer the overthrow of the mullahs — a tough task this late in the day — or America or Israel will be faced with bombing Iran's nuclear facilities.

Sweeping Iran under the rug could prove the greatest geopolitical blunder since Neville
Chamberlain's 1938 Munich Agreement with Hitler.

2. Global Warming 'Consensus' Fades

The fissures started to show in 2007: Prominent French physicist Claude Allegre called Gore a crook and equates Gore's French followers with religious zealots. Weather Channel founder and meteorologist John Coleman said global warming is "the greatest scam in history." Gore continued to duck open invitations to debate his theory. More than 400 scientists disputed the global warming claims.

3. Cuba Sails Into Rough Waters

With Raul vowing to maintain the status quo, many Cubans are despairing. Cuban refugee numbers fleeing to Florida and Mexico are up 30% this year, a sign of trouble. The Coast Guard apprehended 3,200 in 2007 alone. In the absence of any desirable future under Raul, turmoil in Cuba is likely, and the U.S. could feel it, too.

4. Chavez Wears Thinner

Don't expect Chavez to tone it down, however. As his social programs fail, look for aggressive distractions. He will focus on larding up his military to head off discontent growing in the ranks. He will continue to pick fights with neighbors such as Colombia and look for ways to blast the U.S.

5. The Cold War Returns

The last point is key. Thanks mainly to high energy prices, Russia's economy has grown at a healthy 6% to 7%. Putin now has some $350 billion to bankroll neo-imperialist ambitions and military expansion — including a new generation of intercontinental ballistic missiles. That means more headaches, not fewer, from our former friends in 2008.

6. The Economy Again, Stupid

It's not so much that the economy should be the top issue in 2008. It's that the success of the U.S. surge has taken what has long been the top issue — Iraq — away from the Democrats. So now they're turning back to one that served them well the last time a Clinton tried to replace a Bush.

7. Bush Reassessment Begins

If the economy does skirt recession and strengthens in the second half, expect a grudging, Trumanesque reappraisal of the Bush presidency. But as with the erosion of the global-warming consensus, it'll probably take years for an objective verdict on Bush to come in.

8. Stem Cell Researchers Win Nobel

Researchers in Japan and the U.S. in 2007 announced they had found a way to turn regular human skin cells into the equivalent of embryonic stem cells. By activating a handful of dormant genes, teams led by Dr. Shinya Yamanaka at Japan's Kyoto University and Dr. James Thompson at the University of Wisconsin were able to coax the cells back in time to a point in embryonic development before they'd committed to becoming a particular type of tissue.





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Republicans Wake Up

Sooner or later we're going to have to face the elephant in the GOP's living room: Big Education and Big Environment. You cannot have limited conservative government, more freedom, less taxes and less regulation, until you face those two issues. The new moderate Republicans are not interested in facing them because it's too difficult. We need a candidate with courage!
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Liberal Talk

The environmental movement is one of the biggest obstacles to freedom that we face worldwide, which is why the liberals love to talk about it. Isn't it a coincidence that all of the solutions to global warming just happen to be the same solutions the liberals were talking about before global warming? It's always about raising taxes.
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Education Choice

Democrat socialists hide behind "the children." Every single program they want to fund, they have to create a crisis around (global warming being the mother of all) but education is not far behind. If we don't instill choice in education, we're not going to get the best education, not to mention preventing the inevitable indoctrination that the liberal profs thrive on. 
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How About That

Explosives Found in EU Aid Bag to Palestinians...
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Just War?

Iraq an Obvious "Just War"  Even by the lofty standards to which the U.S. is held, it was right for the Americans to hold Saddam to his word.
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I Don't

Bring on Sharia?  Does a leading conservative really want to see other nations become like Saudi Arabia?
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Sarkozy A Little Smarter Than The US Senate

The Captain gives us some information into the visit by two U.S. legislators to Syria.

Nicolas Sarkozy has suspended diplomatic relations with Syria over its murderous interference with Lebanon. France's action to isolate Syria comes as two American Senators flew to Damascus to kowtow to the Assad government and force Israel to give up the Golan Heights. The bipartisan duo could learn something from French fortitude . . .

Assad wouldn't have time to meet anyway. He's going to be busy receiving Ted Kennedy and Arlen Specter on their mission to see how many concessions we can offer to Syria while the French fume on the sidelines . . .

"The time is right now, and prospects are very good," Specter told reporters Sunday on his 16th visit to Syria since 1984. "The parties will continue talks through intermediaries, and it's my hope and expectation at some point, if preliminary progress has been made, the U.S. government would be ready too."

The time is right? The prospects are good? Syria has conducted a series of assassinations in Lebanon over the past two years, killing politicians who oppose its rule over what it sees as a vassal state. The UN has demanded cooperation from Assad and his government, which has not been forthcoming, over the first assassination of Rafik Hariri.

On top of that, Syria has re-armed Hezbollah in the south in defiance of UN resolutions and a laughably inept peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon. They have interfered in Lebanon's political processes and kept its government in a stalemate. Even the French have stopped talking with Syria because of its intransigence. What prospects look good, other than enhanced concessions from Israel and the US that will only encourage further Syrian machinations?

Specter and Kennedy [Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) and Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy (D-R.I.)] will fall all over themselves to give back the Golan Heights without addressing any of these issues. They want to come back with their signature Neville Chamberlain umbrellas and wave a piece of paper to proclaim peace in our time while appeasing a murderous dictator, someone who assassinates real democrats rather than suffer their existence. Israel gave them a blessing, all right -- they must have felt blessed when the pair left Israel, and they know that the duo have no hope in wringing concessions out of Syria that Assad's trading partner France couldn't get.

First Nancy Pelosi and now Specter and Kennedy have made pilgrimages to Damascus. One might have hoped that scales would have fallen from some Congressional eyes by this time. It seems that none of them learned from Sarkozy and took a good opportunity to keep their mouths shut.


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Challenging Climate Orthodoxy

We believe that an unfounded sense of crisis - and therefore urgency - dominates public discussion of environmental issues. Thus, demands for urgent action to mitigate climate change thrive at the expense of genuine, illuminating, nuanced debate.

Neither the science nor the politics of climate change should be exempt from scrutiny. Our intention is to provide some decent commentary on how science, politics and the media handle environmental matters, for anyone interested in challenging this dangerous new orthodoxy...
read on..
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This Is Great

Al Gore

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Bad Activism

Asinine activism - (Washington Times) Activism can be a good thing. Libertarians and civil rights advocates lobby for constraints on undue government intrusion into our lives, and professional associations further the interests of its members. We all benefit from getting to shop in the marketplace of ideas.

However, all is not good-faith, constructive activism, and some of the goods in the marketplace are shoddy.

A good example is environmental activists' intractable antagonism to the spraying of pesticides to kill insects that carry disease. The spraying of any pesticides — let alone the possible resurrection of the use of DDT, which was banned in the United States several decades ago — has been greeted by near-hysterical resistance.

Since the banning of DDT, insect-borne diseases such as malaria, dengue and West Nile virus have been on the rise. The World Health Organization estimates malaria alone kills about a million people annually, and that there are between 300 million and 500 million new cases each year.

The regulators who banned DDT and the activists who oppose its resurrection ignore the inadequacy of alternatives. Because it persists after spraying, DDT works far better than many pesticides now in use, some of which are toxic to fish and other aquatic organisms. 
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The Huckabee “Difference”: Blaming America First

Look carefully at the foreign policy positions of the top five contenders for the Republican presidential nomination and you find a huge difference between those of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and the other four: former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani; former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney; Sen. John McCain; and former Sen. Fred Thompson – particularly when it comes to the usefulness (or lack of usefulness) of sitting down to negotiate with Iran.

  

Broadly speaking, the “other four” appear to understand that the United States is in a long-term struggle against the forces of radical Jihad, represented by terrorist groups such as al Qaeda and backed by state sponsors of terrorism led by Iran. They understand that, dating back to the presidency of Jimmy Carter, specifically January 1979 when Ayatollah Khomeini and his fellow Islamists overthrew the Shah, Tehran has been waging war against the United States, whether we realized it or not. This war has taken many forms: taking American diplomats hostage; sponsoring terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad; encouraging such organizations to stage murderous attacks such as the October 1983 bombing of  the U.S. Marine Barracks in Beirut; the June 1996 bombing of a housing complex for American servicemen in Saudi Arabia; and roadside bomb attacks in Iraq that have killed and maimed American troops are just some of the methods used.

He adds that “we cannot allow Iran to push its theocracy into Iraq.” All of this makes sense. But how do we make this a reality? That’s where Huckabee begins to get into trouble. Washington has “valuable incentives to offer Iran: trade and economic assistance, full diplomatic relations and security guarantees,” he says.

. . .
But judging from what Huckabee has said and written on the subject to date, he doesn’t have a clue about how to actually achieve this. . . .

But for now, Mike Huckabee seems perfectly content to recycle canards and the political Left’s talking points about the Bush Administration’s approach towards Iran. So long as he continues to spout such nonsense, he does not deserve to be taken seriously as a president capable of leading America’s struggle against Jihadist terror and its state sponsors.
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The U.S. Must Avoid Harmful Consequences Of The Bali Global Warming Conference

Bali did not pave the way for addressing global warming. It was merely a picturesque setting for an elaborate kabuki dance wherein countries testified to their great concern over global warming while calling for action that few nations will implement and setting the stage for future negotiations. Thankfully, the U.S. delegation successfully blocked the most unrealistic proposals while insisting on incorporating real-world realities like the increasing role played by the developing world in greenhouse gas emissions.

However, the specter of what could result from future negotiations under the next administration is a serious concern, and the U.S. would have been far better off to have stood by its principles; refused to join consensus on the Bali Action Plan; and pursued more flexible, effective strategies to address global warming.  In future negotiations, the U.S. should continue to block onerous, politically untenable measures while continuing its efforts to find more flexible, effective, and market-friendly strategies to address global warming.
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