Saturday, December 31, 2005

A Service Announcement

As 2005 draws to a close, I will be changing formats around a little. Instead of a catch-all blog, there will be three:
  • The Pulse, discussions regarding politics and personal life,
  • HaDofeq, Middle Eastern-related political and personal posts, and
  • The Ping, technical and technological posts
These three will provide readers with topics more germane to their searches. It's been great hearing from commenters, and I look forward to more posts in the coming year.

Friday, December 30, 2005

Ending the Year: Hamas into the Brink

I was hoping to end the year on some kind of upbeat note. But on the Israeli Broadcast Authority's Friday's Yoman program Hamas announced that they would be entering the Palestinian government, with the intent to "liberate all occupied Palestinian terrorities, including Yafo and Haifa."

The great experiment started by Faisal Husseini and the Christian Palestinian moderates in the mid-80's is now officially a failure. The "last great hope" on which a number of Israeli governments have risen -- and fallen -- has been hijacked, like the Achille Lauro or American Airlines flight 11 and United Airlines flight 175, to the advantage of terrorists that would rather see the entire world erupt in flames than find common ground and peace.

Israel's radical right has advocated a fascist solution to Arab terror: transfer. This is no longer an even discussable solution, with rockets landing at Israel's doorstep in the south and north, and the great underbelly of the east probably the next front, from which almost no major city is out of range.

On a more organized front, Hizballah's puppet masters in Iran and Syria, under increasing pressure to reform and conform the the norms of behavior of world countries, are stoking the fires of terror against Israel, just as the Bush administration distracts the American public from its felonious conduct with faux warnings illegal immigation as a terror tool and investigations about the exposure of its failures.

My fear is that the next vocalized step by the far right, the economically disaffected, the displaced Gazans and the zealot "hilltop youth" cynically deployed by their parents and "rabbies" will be Kahane's jackals despicable cant: "Death to the Arabs." And, given Israeli military capability and 'Arik, King of Israel's impending ascent to the throne, is no longer just the dream of fascists.

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Coming Soon to a Border Near You...

Americans beware: the fate of Gaza can become your fate as well. With Gazans "securely" bottled up in their little sliver of a ghetto, the PLO's putative control has faded. Sure, they got the pretty uniforms, but that's about it. For effectiveness, Hamas owns the streets, the adrenal glands, livers and guts of the people. (Note to G.W. Bush: Hearts and minds are entirely unnecessary to own in this part of the world; fear requires no thinking!)

When Israel ruled Southern Lebanon, hundreds of Lebanese crossed the borders every day, picked up at the border by Israeli busses, and ferried off to Israel to work at Rambam Hospital in Haifa, in the industrial zone all up and down the coast, and even down to the orchards near Hadera. The money they brought in bought the Lebanese security, the Israelis a cheap labor force, and generally speaking, good relations with the locals. A win-win for both sides. Of course, that's all in the past now. Those thousands of Christian families are now living under the shadow of poverty and terror, families that didn't move to Israel after Israel's cowardly withdrawal "purged" by the terrorists that moved into the power vacuum.
Americans need to worry about a Hamastan in the Western Hemisphere. Don't laugh before you think about it for a minute. There are lots of poor people with little reason to stay where they are in South and Central America, and a big, rich country up north. If Bush and his Congress deliver on their GOP-inspired promise of closing the borders to illegal immigration (usually with some references to Al Queida and terrorists), Mexico is left holding the bag. With almost one in three Latin Americans under age 15 and one in four making under $2 a day (according to the PRB's latest stats), dealing with the millions on young Mexicans, Guatemalans, Peruvians, Columbians, Venezuelans, etc. already illegally within Mexico's borders.

That makes President Fox the oppressor, puts lots of disgruntled, poorly educated and lively folks with plenty of excess energy and time on their hands on US borders. This has the very real ability to destabilize Mexico, since the Mexican economy already depends on the funds Mexican immigrants wire down from America to their families back home.

If Bush is worried about immigration helping terrorists, then he'd first better think about how many, not how few, immigrants he can afford to let into the United States. Besides, how are we supposed to open a Home Depot every 43 hours and at a Wal-Mart almost every day without all that cheap labor, let alone the McMansions being thrown up en masse?

Start taking notes, folks. The delusional worries about the Southern US border today may become the reality because of, not in spite of, our current government's policies towards immigrant or migrant labor.

Oh, despite all that: Happy Hannukah, Merry Christmas, Kwanza Greetings, a belated Eid ul-Adha, an orgiastic Saturnalia, and a Festivus for the Rest of Us!

Thursday, December 15, 2005

Arafat is Dead, Long Live Chaos!

Well, you heard it here first, folks. Hamas soundly trounced the rational parties, the parties of logic and corruption, in all but their home territory: Ramallah. And now that terrorism has won, the Palestinian counterparts to the Israeli rats are leaving the sinking ship, to founder independently or join whichever horse seems to be winning. (Sounds like the Democrat defections in the late '90s.)

Now the proof is in the eating of the pudding: will Hamas do what no other terrorist group since the Israeli pre-state cells have done, and 'go legit?' Begin and Shamir were proof that terrorists can become legitimate statespeople, better than either professional politicians or mainstream military leaders.

Sadly, I don't think it's that balanced a question. The pre-Israel Jewish cells were founded on the idea that killing civilians was abhorent with notable exceptions, unfortunately, in the King David Hotel bombing, Deir Yassin, and assassination of Count Bernadotte. carried out by the Haganah (the IDF's predecessor) Etzel and Lehi, and Lehi respectedly. The mere fact that I can name those exceptions, and Hamas, Fatah and Islamic Jihad have taken random killings of civilians into the realm of blase reportage points up the gulf between these groups. I trust only that terrorists who target, and peoples that celebrate, the killings of civilians en masse cannot be trusted with running their own affairs, let alone conducting themselves as a Nation of the World.

Monday, December 12, 2005

Skin-deep Civilization

Another quick post. Yesterday there was a blackout in my neighborhood. Nice day out, a little brisk. Sunny, pleasant. The local utility got the lights back on in under a couple of hours.

Bush has more to worry about than the angst in Iraq, or whether stuffing the Supreme Court with "his kind of people" is a good thing. See, I live in an okay neighborhood. No high density housing, definitely low-crime. The county doesn't truck with hoodlums (an ominous phrase), and there's a sense of "law and order" about the place.

So the good neighbors eschewed the outside air and descended to the local grocery store. You know the type: big box, no windows, one about every mile? The staff was average for a Sunday, and it took several minutes before the staff realized that (a) they were getting massively ripped off, and (b) they were outnumbered.

When the lights came on everyone carried on as if nothing happened. Police weren't called because there were too many of them, and there was no proof that those that had slipped outside hadn't purchased their goods. No power means no cameras. No power means the gloves are off.

This is a sentinel for the economic rebounding Bush trumpets. Give the rich their cake, and let the poor steal bread.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

You Can't Step out of the Pond...

...without taking the pond scum with you.

Monday, December 05, 2005

Change is Good?

Like Texas weather, if you don't like the politics in Israel today, just wait a while. But like the weather, it's the same old stuff that comes down. As the Labor party lost it's grip on power in the nineties to an ever-increasingly powerful religious and ultra-religious influence, so has the right and alleged centrist movement now stunningly crumbled in the face of 'Arik, King of Israel.' [1997,2005] When I was in the Army there he'd be surrounded by rabid supporters, all chanting that, which was a take-off on the religious chant: 'David, king of Israel, is alive, is alive and truly here.' Fellow peaceniks then said that he was the one politician that, if granted leadership of Israel, would be most expected not to relinquish that power.

That prophecy seems to be occuring now. By creating the Kadima party (meaning 'Forward!'), Sharon can slough off the burden of the radicalized and increasingly fractuous religious right wing, use the strategic withdrawal from Gaza as his entry visa into the camp of the peace-makers and create a faux distance from his corrupt political activities associated with his hold on power to this point. He will be elected on the basis of personality and charisma, and not on a platform or direction that is any more noble or creative than those of Prime Ministers Shamir or Peres or even Begin. In many ways he is the uglier, ruder younger brother of Yitzhak Rabin.

We will be annointing a king, complete with a court of sycophants, jesters, fools and savvy gravy soppers. We will walk into the blades of his intended actions with eyes open and unseeing, just like Abraham's father's idols.

Putting Sharon in power, in this fashion, seals the doom of the Palestinian people. Sharon will carve, with a most sharp knife, the borders of the Palestinian fiefdoms, with the right cheering on, the religious upset they didn't get Iraq in the mix, the left quietly relieved there's a 'settlement,' and the Palestinians, yet again, victims of their own inability to act like even relative adults.

If this all sounds a bit harsh, let's consider what's happening now:
  1. Palestinian Prime Minister Abbas rules, but only so far as 'the street' lets him. Radical factions, responsible for suicide bombings, are making the political brownie points, while Abbas can't risk angering the armed terrorists by trying to make them disarm. And if Islamic Jihad wins, Israel won't let the new government exist. Oops!
  2. The 'fence,' a.k.a. 20-foot concrete walls, is a statistically successful way to reduce the homicidal terrorists looking to kill themselves to kil others.
  3. The day after Sharon declared his new party, the Likud was down to nine members, the rest having defected either to him or other parties. The left lost only their impotent totem pole: Shimon Peres.
Our trees are bearing their poison fruits, and each tree is dying from the produce of the others.