Commercial space, that is. I got a call a couple weeks ago from the author of this piece for the Jewish Journal. He was looking for Jews involved in NewSpace (and he guessed I was from my last name, though I’m not). I gave him a couple other names (notably Goldin’s, which he misspelled, though he’s not exactly NewSpace). But I see that he found some others. For instance, I wasn’t previously aware that Paul Allen was Jewish.
Stupid Ad Agency Tricks
Jeff Foust has found a story of some people who are clueless on multiple levels:
According to Net#work BBDO
What Is A “Moderate” Muslim?
An interesting discussion over at Winds of Change. Meanwhile, Andrew Bolt says that Australian Muslims have failed the test, and he’s fed up.
Oh, and the Dems will be happy to know that they have the Jihadi vote wrapped up. They could usefully ask themselves why that might be the case.
What Is A “Moderate” Muslim?
An interesting discussion over at Winds of Change. Meanwhile, Andrew Bolt says that Australian Muslims have failed the test, and he’s fed up.
Oh, and the Dems will be happy to know that they have the Jihadi vote wrapped up. They could usefully ask themselves why that might be the case.
What Is A “Moderate” Muslim?
An interesting discussion over at Winds of Change. Meanwhile, Andrew Bolt says that Australian Muslims have failed the test, and he’s fed up.
Oh, and the Dems will be happy to know that they have the Jihadi vote wrapped up. They could usefully ask themselves why that might be the case.
A Brief History
…of rocket cars. From Iowahawk. I missed this when he posted it in April.
Breakthrough
A liver grown from umbilical cord blood. Leon Kass can’t be happy about this.
Throwing In The Towel
Ralph Peters has given up on Iraq. For the sake of the Iraqis, and the larger war effort, I hope he’s wrong.
Is There A Lawyer In The House?
Model rocketeers need some pro bono help against an out-of-control government agency.
The Political Tone Deafness
…of John Kerry. It takes a Brit to point it out:
US servicemen are revered in a way that the British squaddie can only dream of. Soldiers travel in uniform and are routinely ushered to the front of queues and given upgrades to business class with no questions asked. On an American Airlines jet from Dallas last Sunday, a flight attendant made a spontaneous announcement about “the sacrifice our young men and women are making to keep us safe”. The whole plane applauded her.
This is not just rah-rah jingoism. The aching reality of war is also apparent. At Houston airport on Wednesday night I pulled up behind a white hearse with two soldiers in dress uniform inside it. “That’s one of our boys coming home from Iraq,” said a sombre Avis representative, waving me past.
As Kerry has found out, you try to exploit this sentiment for political gain at your peril. The military is the most integrated sector of American society. Poor youths with a bit of get up and go about them use it to get funding for college to pull themselves up a rung on the economic ladder.
I have sat in Humvees and Bradley fighting vehicles with black sergeants from Alabama, marines from Mexico and good ol’ boy snipers from Kentucky in places like Fallujah and Ramadi as they described their hopes with an affecting optimism that belied the mortal danger they were in. In many ways, they embody what is great about America.