You are currently browsing the daily archive for August 3rd, 2007.

The Independent:

Rupert Murdoch’s spectacular $5bn takeover of America’s revered ‘Wall Street Journal’ is the crowning moment of half a century’s deal-making and empire-building. Is anything out of his reach?

One likely is:  The Independent.  Why?  No, not because he couldn’t buy it . . .

Guardian (daily average circulation, 28 May 07 - 01 Jul 07): 363,562

Daily Express: 770,403

Daily Telegraph: 891,768

Daily Mail: 2,303,438

The Independent: 238,291

. . . so much as why should he even bother buying it, given that so few people actually read it?

We continue to await Matt Wells’ BBC World Service piece as to why this is, and, more importantly, why it is allowed to continue? The Telegraph reports (via my wife):

Peter Phillips, the Queen’s eldest grandson, may have to give up his place in the line of succession to the throne after it emerged that his bride-to-be is a Roman Catholic…

Disgraceful, such overt and unapologetic official mixing of Christianity and the secular State.  In fact, it is truly shocking in our postmodern, no-religion-is important-(except maybe Islam)-world. 

Good friends and allies that we are, we Americans simply find it impossible to understand fully what motivates you peculiar people, what’s underlying your little Christian prejudices, why you have such a weird faith tradition, and how, in our enlightened age, you can possibly justify clinging to such an obviously backwards outlook?

Reuters:

A man who suffered severe burns when he allegedly mounted an al Qaeda attack on Glasgow airport in Scotland has died in hospital, police said on Friday…

…[Kafeel] Ahmed, who died late on Thursday, had been in hospital since June 30 with 90 percent burns. Police kept the engineer from India under armed guard at the hospital’s burns unit…

. . . although, it took a long, agonizing, horrifically painful month.

A Snapshot Of What To Expect

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(Old site, 2003-2006)

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In political U.S. terms, this blog is disgruntled Democrat turned Republican, slightly right of what is now deemed "center" -- but admits still to possessing moments of weakness for the rapidly vanishing Democratic party that helped win WWII and the Cold War. (Then again, finding oneself "right of center" is not difficult nowadays, given that according to what one sees of much U.S. political discourse, even a Castro -- and Hillary Clinton -- are apparently now rather rightist, and merely attending church weekly gets one labelled "Ker-ris-chan". Eeeeyou! Not one of those!)

In English terms, this blog loves this country, and it just wishes its politicians would somehow always remember that Britain is where our modern world truly began. Not Brussels. (Actually, to be more precise, just south of Brussels, where Wellington had thumped a certain well-known continental who was also in favor of "European union".)

Email and Comments Policy

Expatyank@aol.com.

This writer sure as heck doesn't know everything -- unlike the BBC's Jeremy Bowen, who obviously does -- so disagreement is expected. Well-expressed alternative views and interpretations are more than welcome, for that's how we all learn more in this life. Which means that vulgar and/or obscene comments will probably be deleted. So please phrase all abuse politely, and if in doubt refrain from any colorful metaphors and get thee to a thesaurus.

Some Things Never Really Totally Change

'I was asked the other day by a well dressed frenchman whether my province (for he took the United States to be a mere province) was not a great wine country and whether it was not in the neighborhood of Turkey or somewhere there about! Another time I was accosted by a French officer "vous etes Anglais monsieur" said he--"Pardonnez moi" replied I "Je suis des Etats Unis d'Amerique"--"Eh bien--c'est la même chose"!'

Washington Irving, 1804.

There's little more tiresome abroad, than those too full of themselves

"But we love the Old Travelers. We love to hear them prate and drivel and lie. We can tell them the moment we see them. They always throw out a few feelers; they never cast themselves adrift till they have sounded every individual and know that he has not traveled. Then they open their throttle valves, and how they do brag, and sneer, and swell, and soar, and blaspheme the sacred name of Truth! Their central idea, their grand aim, is to subjugate you, keep you down, make you feel insignificant and humble in the blaze of their cosmopolitan glory! They will not let you know anything. They sneer at your most inoffensive suggestions; they laugh unfeelingly at your treasured dreams of foreign lands; they brand the statements of your traveled aunts and uncles as the stupidest absurdities; they deride your most trusted authors and demolish the fair images they have set up for your willing worship with the pitiless ferocity of the fanatic iconoclast! But still I love the Old Travelers. I love them for their witless platitudes, for their supernatural ability to bore, for their delightful asinine vanity, for their luxuriant fertility of imagination, for their startling, their brilliant, their overwhelming mendacity!"

Mark Twain, in "The Innocents Abroad."

Why this blog supports him?

I like McCain Because the world's greatest power needs now, perhaps more than in decades, an experienced pair of hands at its helm, and not a state senator of a scant 4 years ago, with a messiah complex.

Indeed, this blog cannot support that former state senator not necessarily just because of questions over his views of the War on Terror or the economy. Surprisingly, given what we are told of the "post-racial" future he represents, publicly unaddressed somehow remains this little question: "Guilty? or Innocent?"

Nope, can't even jest. And that will be deemed dramatic free speech "progress," following the clear curtailment our free speech had endured during the administration of the last 8 years. Yet that same president was somehow blasted regularly and called (and, funnily enough, mostly by those now same "sensitive" supporters of the Illinois senator's messianic bid), well, just about every accursed name under the Sun, including another "Hi-ler! Hi-ler!"

Theodore Roosevelt's Nine Reasons a Man Should Go To Church

1 In this actual world, a churchless community, a community where men have abandoned and scoffed at or ignored their religious needs, is a community on the rapid down grade.

2 Church work and church attendance mean the cultivation of the habit of feeling responsibility for others.

3 There are enough holidays for most of us. Sundays differ from other holidays in the fact that there are fifty-two of them every year. Therefore, on Sundays go to church.

4 Yes, I know all the excuses. I know that one can worship the Creator in a grove of trees, or by a running brook, or in a man's own house as well as in church. But I also know, as a matter of cold fact, that the average man does not thus worship.

5 He may not hear a good sermon at church. He will hear a sermon by a good man who, whith his wife, is engaged all of the week in making hard lives a little easier.

6 He will listen to and take part in reading some beautiful passages from the Bible. And if he is not familiar with the Bible he has suffered a loss.

7 He will take part in the singing of some good hymns.

8 He will meet and nod or speak to good, quiet neighbors. He will come away feeling a little more charitable toward all the world, even toward those excessively foolish young men who regard churchgoing as a soft performance.

9 I advocate a man's joining in church work for the sake of showing his faith by his works.

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