President Bush speaks. Often, actually.

We repeatedly hear people say that the President hasn’t spent enough time "selling" the war. I have said it fairly often myself. I had the opportunity to speak with a high level administration official recently and mentioned precisely that point. "Why doesn’t the President speak to the people? You know, explain the situation so that they’ll understand it." I said. His answer reminded me that the President, in fact, does- every week in his "Weekly Radio Address". Like Roosevelt’s famous "Fireside Chats", President Bush has taken time every Saturday to speak to the nation. You probably missed them because other than the occasional mention as part of some news blurb, the MSM virtually ignores them. He suggested I make it a point to either listen to it or read it every week.
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This is what the President said this past Saturday, September 2nd:
Good morning. This week, I spoke to the American Legion in Salt Lake City. I thanked the military veterans for their lifetime of service to our country. And I gave them an update on the war that America is now fighting in defense of freedom in our time.
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We’re approaching the fifth anniversary of the September the 11th attacks — and since that day, we have taken the fight to the enemy. Yet this war is more than a military conflict; it is the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century. On one side are those who believe in freedom and moderation — the right of all people to speak, worship, and live in liberty. On the other side are those driven by tyranny and extremism — the right of a self-appointed few to impose their fanatical views on all the rest. We did not ask for this war, but we’re answering history’s call with confidence — and we will prevail.
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We are using every element of national power to defeat the terrorists. First, we’re staying on the offense against the terrorists, fighting them overseas so we do not have to face them here at home. Second, we made it clear to all nations, if you harbor terrorists, you’re as guilty as the terrorists, you’re an enemy of the United States, and you will be held to account. And third, we have launched a bold new agenda to defeat the ideology of the enemy by supporting the forces of freedom and moderation in the Middle East and beyond.

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Students not ready for prime time…

A college professor friend of mine (not a member of the whackjob nutty professors’ club) has long been telling me of the lack of basic core subject skills possessed by incoming first-year college students. He maintains that this is where the lousy education these high school graduates have received manifests itself. . My professor friend is not alone … Read more

Notable Quotes: George P. Shultz on preemptive action

Former Secretary of State George P. Shultz wrote the following back in 1986 in an essay included in the book, Terrorism- How the West Can Win. Twenty years ago… Can we as a country, can the community of free nations, stand in a purely defensive posture and absorb the blows dealt by terrorists? . I … Read more

Terrorism solved. It’s the stereotyping, stupid!

In this prior posting , I reported on an assistant professor here in a NH college who believes that terrorism can be solved if only we would move away from our stereotypes and start seeing each other as human beings, and learn to empathize. It appears this silliness is not confined to some nutty professor at … Read more

Is there something in our water?

As Skip reported in this previous post, it has been revealed that our state’s taxpayer-subsidized university system has its very own version of Ward Churchill (9/11 victims = "little Eichmans")- UNH psychology professor William Woodward. The tenured professor  believes a secret group within the highest levels of the US government organized and perpetrated the September 11 attacks through the use of "steering pods" attached to the jetliners and explosives planted in the buildings.
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Today’s Union Leader provides some further details about the professor’s courses and his classroom "teachings":
Woodward is teaching two courses this fall. PSYC 571 is described as an "historical introduction to some of the great psychologists and their classic works." The other course, PSYC 791, is a course that Woodward says he conceived a decade ago called "Psychology and Race."
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In that course, he says, he introduces his 9/11 theory during a particular class session devoted to the subject of "state terrorism vs. individual terrorism."
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Woodward said he shows a clip, roughly 10 minutes in length, from a film called "The Great Conspiracy: The 9/11 News Special You Never Saw." The film, produced and narrated by Canadian journalist Barrie Zwicker, contends the U.S. government’s account of the 9/11 attacks is "the overarching fiction and crime and coverup of our time."
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In the film, Zwicker claims the Mexican-American War, the Spanish-American War and the attack on Pearl Harbor "all involved secretly contrived attacks on Americans planned or encouraged by American Presidents."
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"Many spectacular acts of terrorism are fearsome fakeries carried out by cabals within governments," Zwicker says. "And I mean our own governments."
While our enemies are indoctrinating their children with an automaton-like desire to murder each and every one of us, this is the garbage some of our children are being taught (at taxpayer expense) in schools of "higher learning."
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Guess what? Professor Woodward isn’t alone in having a platform here in NH to fill young minds with foolishness…

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“Big Dig” lawsuit filed. Could this spell trouble for Mitt?

The family of the woman killed in the "Big Dig" tunnel ceiling failure has filed the inevitable lawsuit that quite naturally follows an accident of this nature. . Today is the one year  anniversary of the post-hurricane Katrina flooding of New Orleans. People can still be heard blaming President Bush for the complete failure of the … Read more

I can’t believe I agree with US Rep Tom Lantos!

I cannot believe the day has come that I actually agree with Democratic US Rep Tom Lantos. Not only do I agree, but I applaud him! Fox News carries the AP report: WASHINGTON — A congressman said Sunday he would ask the U.S. administration to freeze the $230 million aid package to Lebanon proposed by … Read more

Notable Quote: Brit Hume on radical Islam

Michelle Malkin reports on observations put forth by Brit Hume during this week’s panel discussion (about the Fox News employees’ release from captivity) on Fox News Sunday that really sums up radical Islam and the Israeli/Palestinian problems in a nutshell: Hume: Yes, and what an appealing faith these thugs must believe Islam is, that conversions have to be effected … Read more

Don’t they know war is illegal?

On this date, August 28th, in 1928, the treaty making war "illegal" was signed: The Kellogg-Briand Pact. That’s right, that treaty, still considered to be in effect on this very day, officially outlaws war.
The website www.u-s-history.com tells us

Relations between the United States and France had cooled in the aftermath of World War I. A number of issues had driven the former allies apart, including:

  • residual tensions from hard bargaining and perceived double-dealing at Versailles;
  • the continuing effort of the U.S. to collect the full amount of war debts incurred by hard-pressed France;
  • the embarrassment felt by France because of being assigned a lesser naval role at the Washington Conference (1921);
  • the recent failure, regretted by both nations, of the Geneva Conference (1927).
An effort was made by French foreign minister Aristide Briand to warm-up relations between the two former allies. Columbia University professor James T. Shotwell met with Briand in France and suggested that a bilateral treaty be negotiated that would outlaw war between the two nations. Briand seized this idea and presented it in an open letter to the American people.

The Coolidge government, at least initially, was not interested in having its hand forced in diplomatic matters and offered no response. A few weeks later, Columbia President Nicholas Murray Butler sounded the same theme in a letter published in The New York Times. The press in New York and elsewhere began a drumbeat calling for the “outlawry of war.”

Even back then, the news media and their ideological comrades in acedemia espoused silly, utopian notions that failed in the face of reality.

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Remember what THEY do as you do what you do…

Friend Alan S. sent the following via email. Today seems like a good day to pause and remember that as we wind down the summer fun, American soldiers are still working hard and getting killed defending the rest of us… Your alarm goes off, you hit the snooze and sleep for another 10 minutes. He stays … Read more

GraniteGrok contributor discusses upcoming book project

Regular visitors to this blog should be familiar with the "And that’s the way it was" series of posts by our fellow contributer to the Grok, Ken G. Ken’s distant cousin, Henry Tilton Gorrell, a United Press International "war correspondent" who served in Europe from 1936 – 1945, wrote a series of memoirs from this experience. … Read more

A Real Stink Here in Central NH: “Corpse” Flower Blooms!

-UPDATED—SCROLL DOWN-The Blooming has run its course-

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While not the normal type of story for this blog, the blooming of a "corpse" flower is a pretty big deal to those who find such things interesting. After the town I live in (Gilford,NH) refused (due to the expected large crowds) to allow the public viewing (fundraiser) of the famous flower known for the stench of rotting flesh when in bloom, the neighboring city of Laconia was able to offer a suitable location.
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The flower is now in bloom and will last for 2-5 days.

The blooming ended Wednesday.

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The "corpse" flower, with the real scientific name  of Amorphophallus titanum, is native to Sumatra and has only bloomed a total of 14 previous times here in the US.
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Click here to read the latest from the Citizen newspaper. A hole was cut in the flower to photograph the pollen. Click here to read  an earlier Citizen newspaper story (with pictures) about this unique happening. Click here for information about the event and how and where to come to view (and smell) this unusual and rare botanical occurrence. 
UPDATE 8/24: Michael Kitch reports in the Laconia Daily Sun (unavailable online):
The curtain fell on "Tilly the Titan yesterday, but not before drawing several thousand people, many of whom returned time and again.
The article further informs us that the local "corpse" flower blooming is only one of 6 or so expected to bloom worldwide. This particular event is the first ever cultivated by a private individual. The Citizen reports on the end here.

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A terrorist linked to a mosque? No way! Really?

In several prior postings, I wrote that I am generally opposed to the construction of mosques here in my backyard (NH) given the nature of the new world war in which we find ourselves and the M/O of our enemy. As I’ve repeated over and over: there’s always a mosque. That’s where the radical ideology gets … Read more

Romney: For renewable energy before he was against it…

The State House News Service (MA) reports on Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney’s energy policies for that state as detailed in a recent press conference: STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, AUG. 11, 2006….By investing in renewable energy and encouraging conservation, the state can rein in its appetite for fossil fuel consumption, Gov. Mitt Romney said Friday, rolling out … Read more

Build a mosque? Not in my backyard…

This week’s New Hampshire Sunday News (Sunday version of the Union Leader) carried several articles of a special series featuring an in-depth look at Muslims living among us here in NH and their attempts at constructing a Mosque in Manchester, the state’s largest city.
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Back in June, I submitted an opinion piece to Union Leader for publication on its editorial page regarding a news story they had run about the financial difficulties faced as NH Muslims attempt to construct their  mosque/community center and who offered to pitch in and help. While it was not published in that paper, they subsequently contacted me for an interview for their two-part series: Muslims among us: faith vs. fears. This is what I wrote on June 19th:
Upon reading the article entitled, “A call to build” in Sunday’s paper, I found myself both angry and perplexed. When reading that “Members of the Greater Manchester Interfaith Council are hoping that area churchgoers will pitch in to help build New Hampshire’s first mosque,” I nearly fell off my chair. Why would they do such a thing? Time after time, each occurrence of successful or thwarted terror strikes have a common ingredient: a mosque with radicalized members and “imams”- so-called “holy” men. Knowing this, why would we want something like this here in NH? How many mosques have been used throughout the Moslem world as ammo dumps and hideouts for murderous thugs?
The new world war that we find ourselves fighting is against a radical fascist ideology, much like Nazism- only worse. The Germans found their wellspring of support generated from hyper-nationalism and racism, fueled by a charismatic leader. Today’s enemy, the so-called “Islamo- fascists,” have added a final and nearly unstoppable feature to the totalitarian mix: religious fervor. Can you imagine the thought of a Hitler Youth Summer camp somewhere in Manchester circa 1943-44? Such a notion sounds utterly ridiculous, right?
 

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McCain & Rice win Bow Republican picnic straw poll

Granitegrok.com, being headquartered in the "almost first in the nation" presidential nominating state of NH, will continue to feature postings about events and issues relevant to the 2008 presidential campaign.
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As we get closer to that election, many political events feature "straw polls" where those in attendance get to submit some form of "ballot" indicating preference for particular candidates. While not very scientific, they are great fun, and provide a small snapshot about how those gathered in the name of politics on a particular day and place view some of the major declared and potential candidates. The Bow Republican Committee held their picnic and straw poll Saturday, August 19th with the following tally:

Results
Bow Republican Committee Straw Poll 8/19/06

US Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) 26%
US Secretary of State Condoleezza "Condi" Rice (R-Cal.) 26%
Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (R-NY) 14 %
Governor George Pataki (R-New York) 12%
US Senator George Allen (R-Virginia)  10%
Governor Mitt Romney (R-Massachusetts) 10%
Former US House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Georgia) 2%
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I’m not sure what the results mean, if anything. One could surmise that McCain, having won the 2000 primary, still enjoys the support of a fair number of NH-erites. No real surprise there. What is interesting to me is the relatively weak showing of Mitt Romney. Perhaps it’s the somewhat traditional apprehension the NH primary has shown to local candidates? Maybe the grassroots activists perceive him as too "establishment?" Giuliani places about where I would expect at this juncture. Newt has been energizing cable TV news watchers as of late with his well spoken ideas and thoughts, but obviously continues to represent damaged goods to those who think about this stuff. I have no explanation for Pataki, other than there must have been a few RINO (Republican In Name Only) types in attendance. Allen undoubtably got the support of the Reaganesque "hardcore" conservatives in attendance (my contact for these results being one confirming a vote for Allen- and I know he’s a true conservative…).
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The bottom line: It’s still early, and I predict (hope?) some as of yet unknown potential candidates will appear on the scene. For more on possible presidential contenders from all parties, visit politics1.com for the current list
UPDATE: Click "continue" below to see the listing of who was on the ballots provided. Anyone not listed above that appears in the list received no votes. Approx 100 people attended.

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Wasting money on public transit in the “sticks”

One of my long time pet peeves has been the gobs of gas-tax and other tax-funded monies wasted on certain public transportation systems. I certainly support and appreciate public transportation systems in urban areas- where they are cost-effective (for the most part) and heavily used. It is when attempts are made to bring widespread service to rural areas that it becomes a costly, underutilized proposition- which I have a problem with.
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In this earlier posting (on our sister-blog) on the latest attempt to launch public transportation here in the Lakes Region of NH- certainly not a densly populated urban area- I wrote
They’re Baaaaack! That’s right- the area, relatively unchanged since the last public transit authority went belly-up due to lack of money and interest, now finds itself with a new public transportation company- (a jobs program for well-connected bus drivers?) but already saddled with the same problems that plagued its predecessor: money- or the lack thereof.
With rider fares around a few bucks or so, the bulk of the money needed to run a bus transportation company through the mountains and back roads of central NH comes from someone else: you and me.

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It’s Only Grok ‘n Roll- Grokin’ to the “Oldies”

Diana West, sitting in for the vacationing Michelle Malkin, posts a piece about the current reigning kings of the geriatric rock ‘n roll circuit- The Rolling Stones. While I enjoy seeing the old greats probably more than most, she points out the realities of life: If the Rolling Stones (and other aged rock stars) have … Read more

Is competition really that bad? Apparently some think so.

We’ve all heard the stories of children’s sports leagues where there are no winners and losers- a perfect, utopian world where everybody is a winner and everyone gets a trophy. There’s even places, we’re told, where scores are not kept, because determining a "winner" is not as important as everybody having fun. Usually this stuff happens … Read more

Dope of the Week: Jimmah Cahtah

You knew it would only be a matter of time before the officials here at GraniteGrok would find reason to bestow the prestigious Dope of the Week award to former president Jimmy Carter. Pretty much any time he speaks, he qualifies. Additionally, he fits in rather well with past recipients. . This week, we find the … Read more

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