Louisville, you’ve made a mistake

Fox News reports that Louisville and Jefferson County are consolidating.
In Indianapolis we consolidated city and county government back in 1970. It sucks.
Services we used to take for granted out in the county are only beginning to reappear. Snow removal in the “county” used to be a joke, for instance, while “city” streets were clear and dry. The police and fire departments weren’t consolidated; the schools weren’t consolidated; and there are still four honest-to-God independent cities within the current Indianapolis city limits: Lawrence, Speedway, Beech Grove, and Southport.
And it was done for one reason and one reason only: To counter flagging Republican-voting populations in the inner city as all the whites fled the ‘hood (after consolidation county residents could vote for mayor and city-county council). That strategy worked for thirty years and is now on its last legs; we’ve got a Democrat mayor (with whom my wife went to high school, incidentally) and a one-vote Republican majority on the City-County Council. And all the Republicans have moved out of Marion County into the nine surrounding counties to continue their white flight.
I wish Louisvillians well (they do put on a kick-ass fireworks display every year at Thunder Over Louisville) but I suspect they’ve just done more to hurt themselves than they have to help themselves.

Taking a day off from bloggage

It’s my birthday. Let’s just say that I’m considerably older than Rachel. Unfortunately I still have to work at my job and put up with FUCKING MORON STUPID SHITHEAD ASSHOLE JERKOFF computing services people at various universities and companies around the world. In particular I have in mind a special moron at a famous university in Florida at the moment. He’s seriously lucky his computing center is nowhere near Naples, because I hold grudges for a VERY long time.
Bloggage is probably going to be light if not non-existent until next week anyway. We’re going out of town to visit the in-laws.
Have a nice turkey day.

Ooh, more gems at NRO today

Mackubin Thomas Owens writes, among other things:

The Founders did not fear an armed citizenry. Indeed, they saw the Second Amendment and the militia as a means not only to enable citizens to protect themselves against their fellows, but also to protect themselves from oppression by the federal government. “The militia is our ultimate safety,” said Patrick Henry during the Virginia ratifying convention. “We can have no security without it. The great object is that every man be armed. . . . Every one who is able may have a gun.”

The article is primarily about an Arizona newspaper’s editorial advocating the use of the posse comitatus to police the border, given that the Border Patrol won’t. What a fine idea.

TIA won’t bother law-abiding citizens

pretty much for the reasons I suggested myself last week. Michael Scardaville writes in NRO:

Even if they wanted to, TIA employees simply won’t have time to monitor who plays football pools, who has asthma, who surfs what websites, or even who deals cocaine or steals cars. They’ll begin with intelligence reports about people already suspected of terrorism, according to Ted Senator, project director of a component of TIA.

Read the whole thing.
My biggest question is about denying access to the database for unscrupulous purposes, and frankly I hope Oracle — IMHO one of the most unscrupulous companies around — has absolutely nothing to do with this project.

It’s time to help

More specifically, it’s time to start dropping planeloads of M-16s and millions of rounds of ammo for them into Iran. At least that’s my opinion after reading Michael Ledeen today.
Take Iran now. Then take Iraq with Iranian allies. Iran is ready for democracy if any country in the region is.
Faster, God damn it!

Speaking of universities…

…the Doctrinaire One has posted her schedule for the next semester.
I heartily approve. Especially the American Diplomatic History (always one of my favorites). And I’d like to take the Western Thought class myself, even though I’m long past the college scene. But Rachel, dear, don’t bother trying to double in history and polisci. The political scientists don’t want conservatives in their midst. Just take the history major and run.

In the category of “get over it”…

…we present for your approval my alma mater, Indiana University.
There’s really not a whole lot to be said about this other than, “Fer criminy sakes, morons, get over it; it happened, it’s over, it’s done, get back to education.” You’re a public university, anyone can walk onto your campus (in fact you’ve got non-students in Dunn Meadow protesting the war on terrorism in violation of your own rules that the Meadow can only be used by students and nobody is allowed to camp there overnight), and the film crew was invited into the dorm by a resident. Quitcherbitchin’.

Colonialism doesn’t look so bad in retrospect

Look. The colonial powers went in, created a certain amount of infrastructure, and made at least some attempt to uplift native populations to a civilized level. In essence, they were foster parents to a bunch of native children, and Mom and Dad did their best to teach the kids to be adults.
Fifty years later, after colonialism is deemed a dead policy and the Western powers have all pulled out, it looks like the natives have lapsed back into childhood.
Exactly what was so bad about colonialism, again?
And another thought…the newspaper that started all this with the stupid Muhammad reference was a Muslim newspaper, so naturally the combatants are…Muslims and Christians? How did the Christians get dragged in?
Children indeed. Feral children who need a knee or two to be put over and spanked.