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Iraq is not Afghanistan

I’m with Sandy on the issue of Ted Rall’s cartoon about Pat Tillman, the football player-turned-Ranger who died in Afghanistan last month (which may surprise some people, since I’m a Democrat and an opponent of the war in Iraq since the idea was first floated, but there you have it).

Rall’s comic is so muddled that one hardly knows where to begin. The most egregious logic flaw in it, though, is mixing together the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan as if they were two fronts of the same operation. Our moral justification for going into Iraq was shaky from the beginning, but the argument for going into Afghanistan was much simpler and more solid — we went there because that’s where al Qaeda was! It’s hard to see how Rall can say that it is false to believe that the war in Afghanistan was connected to September 11. Iraq, not so hard — but Afghanistan?

Indeed, that was a big part of the reason why people like me were concerned about the invasion of Iraq from the beginning — because we worried that such a project would take critical resources away from the main objectives, those being running down the terrorist networks that were targeting us, and helping rebuild “failed states” like Afghanistan so that they stopped creating vacuums into which terrorist regimes like the Taliban could seize power. (And what do you know, it did end up distracting us. But that’s another story.)

Rall’s anger at the war in Iraq and hatred of Bush (both of which I’m sympathetic towards) have, I think, blinded him to the justifiable nature of the war in Afghanistan. To him, anything Bush touches is poisoned. And since Bush is, after all, the President of the United States, if Rall wants to throw bile at him in print, I’ve got no problem with that — getting some undeserved bile on you is part of the job description of being President. But Pat Tillman doesn’t deserve that treatment; he was a soldier who died in the line of duty, and even Rall points out that he turned down millions of dollars in football money to go serve (which Rall seems to think means he was some kind of idiot).

Rall’s cartoon scores a lot of points against the war in Iraq (“Museums? Let ’em burn! Get down to Basra and repair that pipeline!”), but Tillman wasn’t in Iraq, he was in Afghanistan. Maybe if the rest of the Army had been there, too (rather than bogged down in Iraq helping George Bush work out his Oedipal complex, or whatever his problem is), he could have come home alive. We’ll never know, of course. But for Rall to take out his anger at Bush on a dead soldier is a cheap shot. He should apologize.


Thunderbird 0.6 Released

Hot off the grill, Mozilla Thunderbird 0.6 is available today. New features include the slick new Thunderbird icons, a default theme for OS X (Pinstripe) that integrates much better with that OS, a nice installer for Windows users, improved junk mail filtering, IMAP IDLE support, and much, much more.


The Pentagon’s Procurement Mess

When we send our men and women in uniform into harm’s way, one thing all Americans probably agree on is that those men and women should be equipped with the best hardware we can provide. Whether you supported war in Iraq or opposed it makes no difference — once soldiers are taking fire, what matters is that they have the tools they need to get them through it in one piece.

Right? Too bad the Pentagon doesn’t agree.

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“Nightline” To Devote Show To Reading Names of Iraq War Dead

The ABC News program Nightline has announced that Friday night’s broadcast will consist entirely of anchor Ted Koppel reading the names of all the soldiers killed to date in Iraq. The soldiers’ pictures will be shown when their names are read.

While “Nightline” and other U.S. TV news broadcasts have reported regularly on those killed in Iraq, “Nightline” executive producer Leroy Sievers said: “We realized that the casualties were on their way to becoming just numbers.”

“‘The Fallen’ is our way of reminding our viewers — whether they agree with the war or not — that beyond the casualty numbers, these men and women are serving in Iraq in our names. and that those who have been killed have names and faces,” said Sievers.

Due to time constraints in the 30-minute program, “Nightline” will limit its reading to the approximately 523 U.S. troops killed in combat since the start of the war. Another 201 have died as a result of accidents, friendly fire or suicide.


The True Meaning of Life

Penny Arcade has called out the new site The True Meaning of Life as the spiritual successor to long-dormant and dearly missed snark kingdom Old Man Murray, and they are 100% correct. Check it out if you, like me, miss the good old days when Chet and Erik taught us all how to laugh… and love!… again, and see if it doesn’t feel like Happy Days Are Here Again to you too.


PalmOne Releases Zire 31, 72

PalmOne has released two new handhelds today that flesh out its Zire line of budget organizers:

  • The Zire 31 is their midrange budget device. For $149 (only $50 more than the no-frills monochrome Zire 21), it gives you a color screen.
  • The Zire 72 is the new high end of their budget line — $299 gets you a nicer transflective color screen, an integrated camera, Bluetooth, and bunches of other goodies.

WOXY Goes Web-Only

Radio station WOXY, one of the last good truly independent radio stations out there, has apparently decided to shut down its over-the-air broadcast and go online-only.

This is a sad moment for me. I’m glad that 97X (“BAM! The FUTURE of rock and roll!”) isn’t going away completely. It’s a terrific station, programmed by people who really love modern rock and alternative music and know it backwards and forwards. But I discovered it because I happened to live for a while in its local broadcast area (it broadcast out of Oxford, Ohio), and losing its over-the-air signal means that southern Ohio will be losing something special. (Not to mention the uncertain economics of it; a lot of good people at WOXY are going to be out of work, and the employment of the rest hinges on whether a Webcast-only model is economically viable; an uncertain proposition at best.)

If you haven’t heard of 97X before, check out their audio streams (you can choose from WMA, Real, and streaming MP3 formats) and see what you’ve been missing out on. And if you like what you hear, tell a friend — they’re going to need all the support they can get.

UPDATE: Web-only format canceled for lack of funds — 97X to dissolve completely. Read all about it.


Stereotypes Ahoy!

Did anyone else find the article “Living in a Red World: For a Conservative, Life Is Sweet in Sugar Land, Tex.” as offensive and condescending as I did?

The point of the article was to illustrate what lifestyles are like in the so-called “Red states” that are the strongholds of the Republican Party. (Random observation: It’s a measure of how historically illiterate we are today as a people that, when choosing colors to denote conservative and liberal states, we make the liberals blues and the conservatives Reds. But I digress.) But it ends up making its subjects sound like such redneck hicks you can practically watch the reporter’s contempt drip off the page.

This is the home of Britton Stein, who describes George W. Bush as “a man, a man’s man, a manly man,” and Al Gore as “a ranting and raving little whiny baby.”

Yeah! And Stein doesn’t stop there. He goes to church! He owns some guns! He drinks Bud Light! And don’t get them started on how he eats:

Stein’s breakfast is scrambled eggs over congealed grits fried in butter, and coffee that comes not in bean form but already ground and is brewed not through natural brown paper filters but unnatural white ones. ” ‘Melitta plants four trees for every one used in the production of our filter paper,’ ” he says, reading the side of the box of filters. He puts the box back in the cabinet. “I could care less.”

Underlying all this, of course, is the presumption that the Red states are full of Britton Steins, strange people with unfamiliar ways who are impervious to reason.

I don’t doubt that Britton Stein exists, or that he eats the diet ascribed to him. But is he really that different from the Blue State folk who grind their own coffee and eat imported muesli for breakfast? More importantly, does it contribute anything to our national life to treat him as a figure to be gawked at — as some kind of curiosity, the Brother From Another Planet?

I was born and raised a Midwesterner, and I know a lot of fine Americans who have a lot in common with Britton Stein. I don’t always agree with their politics, and they don’t always agree with mine, but as long as people play by the rules and live their lives in some kind of honorable way, I can live with their political differences, and I don’t care what they eat for breakfast. It’s too bad the Washington Post doesn’t feel the same way.

(Footnote: they ran a companion piece today following around a Blue State family in — wait for it — San Francisco. Not surprisingly, this article was about 1000% less condescending. Go figure.)


What’s Coming On The Road to Firefox 1.0

Firefox is about to get a whole lot smarter.


This Week’s Downtime

You may have experienced some difficulty connecting to this site over this past week. That’s because I was in the process of migrating it (and all my other sites) off of the host they used to be on (who, you might remember, I’ve had a few problems with) to a new home: DreamHost.

It took me a while to find a new host that I liked, but so far my experiences with DreamHost have been nothing but positive. They have a nice Web admin interface for customers, but you can still work through the shell if you prefer. Apps that I had to compile and install from scratch at my old host (like Squirrelmail for Webmail and Analog for log file analysis) get set up automatically on DreamHost with every domain you configure. Their support people are responsive and know what they’re talking about; and when they have downtime, they explain why in detail, even if it’s brief. And they offer a host of tech goodies (like the ability to set up any directory in your directory tree as a WebDAV share — nice!) to boot.

In short, these guys have given every indication thus far of being a class act. So I’m happy to give them my business.

There’s one other nice service they provide that I figured I should make mention of, in case you didn’t notice it in the right-hand menu:

Donate towards my web hosting bill!

If you enjoy Just Well Mixed, you can now make a contribution that will go directly towards defraying the cost of hosting the site. The money goes straight to DreamHost and gets credited to my account, so you don’t have to worry about me taking your $5 and blowing it on black tar heroin or whatever — every penny (except for a 5% processing fee) goes towards keeping this site up and running. So if you like JWM, it’s a way for you to say “thanks” by helping me out with the bill I get stuck with every month for bringing it to you 🙂

So, apologies for the downtime this week — consider it an investment in bringing you a better JWM from here on out. And check out DreamHost if you’re looking for Web hosting, you won’t regret it.


Crane Your Neck

Does it make me a bigger computer geek or airplane geek if my first reaction on seeing this dingus was that it looked pretty insanely neat?

(That’s a rhetorical question, you can keep your opinions to yourself.)


The Glorious Day Has Arrived

Fellow citizens, rejoice!

Today is the day Shaolin Soccer opens wide in the U.S.

The critics love it. I saw the Hong Kong DVD (thanks, Will!) and laughed my freaking ass off. You will love it too.


Iron Chef America: Battle of the Masters

So Food Network is running “Iron Chef America: Battle of the Masters” this weekend. It’s their attempt to bring the magic that is “Iron Chef” to American TV (after UPN tried and failed with the incredibly campy William Shatner-hosted version they slapped together a while back).

I figured that the odds of Food Network being successful at something like this were probably higher than they were for UPN. But then I read this interview with Food Network personality Alton Brown about what they’re doing with “Iron Chef”, and I realized something:

This thing might end up being the coolest thing in the history of the universe.

“UPN tried to do this [in 2001], but they forgot that it was about food,” says Brown, who hosts Food Network’s “Good Eats” and will serve as the announcer/commentator for “Iron Chef America.”…
“That doesn’t happen at Food Network,” Brown says. “… It wasn’t going to be a freak show; it wasn’t going to be pro wrestling. But I also knew that they were going to supply the back story, that there was going to be a story structure to support the handing over of this from Japan to America.”
The show has a new chairman, martial artist and actor Mark Dacascos, who will explain to viewers…

Wait! Stop the interview!

Did he say the Chairman is Mark Dacascos? As in, the Mark Dacascos who starred in the incredibly goofy 1993 martial-arts flick Only the Strong, in which a Green Beret returns from a tour in Brazil (?) and cleans up his ‘hood by giving the local street toughs lessons in capoeira, the Brazilian dancing martial art that looks a bit like a cross between a breakdance and an epileptic seizure? And then he and the suddenly-reformed street toughs (inspired to go straight by the magic of capoeira, natch) break up the local Evil Drug Gang by beating them all up in giant capoeira fights in which none of the Evil Drug Gang guys ever thinks to pull a gun?

Yes! That Mark Dascascos!

Holy crap — they may have found the one Westerner who could actually pull off the role of a reclusive billionaire who builds a “Kitchen Stadium” and lures the world’s greatest chefs into it to do battle. A much more inspired choice than Shatner, anyway.

Come to think of it, I may not want to watch this after all… it sounds like it might be so cool it will make my head explode.



Testify!

Robin Bloor has seen the light:

It took me a whole five minutes to decide to ditch Internet Explorer and switch to Firefox. Why? The learning curve is about 5 minutes – at most. FireFox is simpler to use. Configuring it is easy and would probably be easy for just about any PC user. You are not faced with the typical Microsoft feature-bloat.
Mozilla Firefox has a better layout and a larger web page area. It loads all your Internet Explorer ‘favorites’ when you install it on MS Windows and blocks pop-ups completely (there is an option to allow them on specific sites).
That’s it. Goodbye Internet Explorer, hello Firefox. The clincher was blocking pop-ups. My web surfing experience has now improved 200 percent. I had previously downloaded a plug-in for Internet Explorer that was supposed to stop pop-ups but some got through. Now none get through unless I let them.

And from there he went on to discover the beauty of Thunderbird:

I didn’t feel the need for a better browser, until I found myself using one. Now I even feel grateful. I can also tell the same story about Mozilla Thunderbird. I’ve converted. It is better than Outlook – for my purposes at least. It has all the features that matter, you can convert data (address book and mail) from Outlook in about 1 hour and it stops spam. (Not all of it so far, but most of it.)
With any luck someone will post a comment that draws my attention to some neat feature of Thunderbird that I’ve not yet used, but it doesn’t matter really. I’ve kicked the Outlook habit…
Now, I’ll happily load Firefox and Thunderbird onto Windows, but, if it were available, would I ever load Internet Explorer onto desktop Linux?

(note: emphasis mine)

An excellent question, and one I don’t know if Microsoft can answer. Having your eyes opened by truly excellent software can get you asking things like that…



Let Microsoft Foot the Bill for Securing Your PC

If you run any flavor of Windows, you know that one of the less pleasant facts of life on that platform is the constant flow of security patches you have to apply to your OS to keep it from being exploited. Each one seems small, but over time, they add up to a lot of code.

Let me give you an example. At home, I run Windows 2000, and my install CD is an original Win2K disc from before any Service Packs were released. The last time I reinstalled Windows, it took hours for me to download all the patches and Service Packs I needed to apply after doing a clean install — and that’s over a broadband connection! Lord knows what the people on dialup do.

Here’s something I bet you didn’t know, though — did you know that Microsoft will ship you a free set of CDs with every Windows security patch on them? Yup, it’s true — they’ll even pay for shipping. You just fill out the request and they ship the CDs, which have all the updates (up to February 2004) for Win 98/98SE, ME, 2000, and XP. I did it myself to see if there were any catches, and I sure can’t find any. The discs showed up promptly and they didn’t try to cross-sell me any junk I didn’t need.

If you’re someone who ever does installations of Windows from scratch — or if you have friends or family members stuck on dialup who you suspect aren’t running Windows Update as often as they should — this is something you shouldn’t pass up. (Though considering how much money they’ve made off their OS monopoly, they should probably at least send the CDs by express courier, or singing telegram!)


It’s (Finally) Live

The fruit of my not-inconsiderable labors has finally launched:

The Oceana Network

Enjoy 🙂


Technical Note

A brief tech note:

I’m going to be monkeying around with the back-end of this site a little today, so you may not be able to connect to it for a short period. If this occurs, DO NOT PANIC! Simply pour a glass of ice water over your head and repeat the phrase “Jimmy loves home cookin'” three times.

Then go find something better to do until I get finished 🙂

UPDATE: OK, that took longer than expected, but everything should be finished now. Sorry for any technical difficulties you may have experienced.


It’s Like You’re With the Band

This is neat… the Mozilla Foundation is running a nice promotion to celebrate the kickoff of their new line of Mozilla gear — contributors who donate $50 or more to the Foundation can, for a limited time, get a Mozilla or Firefox T-shirt that’s autographed by the developers and project founders. So you can support Mozilla and snag a collector’s item at the same time. Not a bad deal.

If that’s not your bag, though, be sure to check out their other merchandise; the polo shirts look nice, and the stuffed Firefox plush toy will make you say “awwww”. (Unless you’re a cold-hearted bastard. In that case, I make no guarantees.)


Finally, A Hero For Our Times

It’s a bird! It’s a plane!

No, wait. It’s only Geekman. Never mind.


Up is Down, Right is Left

Oscar Merida has a good deconstruction of the “logic” behind newspaper sites requiring you to cough up demographic data to read them.


Bluetooth: (Finally) Ready for Prime Time?

What’s it like when you get all your devices working together wirelessly via Bluetooth? “It’s like living in the goddamned future.

Pretty cool stuff. Maybe the Age of Wireless Everything isn’t that far away after all.


No Wonder They Don’t Do These Very Often

So I watched President Bush’s press conference tonight. Heck, it’s the first time he’s had a prime-time press conference in 13 months, so I figured, what the hey.

Wow. I mean, wow. He was seriously, seriously bad. I mean, scary bad. He rambled, stumbled over his words, failed to answer questions, and dwelled forever on seemingly minor details. At one point he referred to the Caucasus as “the Caucus”. (Seriously, check the transcript.) It was a pretty cringe-worthy performance.

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GMail: What’s Accessibility Again?

Google to the handicapped: fuck off, you.