May 26, 2006

Senate Passes Immigration BIll

The story is here. National Review comments. VOTING FOR THE BILL Akaka (D); Baucus (D); Bayh (D); Bennett (R); Biden (D); Bingaman (D); Boxer (D); Brownback (R); Cantwell (D); Carper (D); Chafee (R); Clinton (D); Coleman (R); Collins (R); Conrad (D); Craig (R); Dayton (D); DeWine (R); Dodd (D); Domenici (R); Durbin (D); Feingold (D); Feinstein (D); Frist (R); Graham (R); Gregg (R); Hagel (R); Harkin (D); Inouye (D); Jeffords (I); Johnson (D); Kennedy (D); Kerry (D); Kohl (D); Landrieu (D); Lautenberg (D); Leahy (D); Levin (D); Lieberman (D); Lincoln (D); Lugar (R); Martinez (R); McCain (R); McConnell (R); Menendez (D); Mikulski (D); Murkowski (R); Murray (D); Nelson (D, Fla.); Obama (D); Pryor (D); Reed (D); Reid (D); Sarbanes (D); Schumer (D); Smith (R); Snowe (R); Specter (R); Stevens (R); Voinovich (R); Warner (R); Wyden (D) VOTING AGAINST THE BILL Alexander (R); Allard (R); Allen (R); Bond (R); Bunning (R); Burns (R); Burr (R); Byrd (D); Chambliss (R); Coburn (R); Cochran (R); Cornyn (R); Crapo (R); DeMint (R); Dole (R); Dorgan (D); Ensign (R); Enzi (R); Grassley (R); Hatch (R); Hutchison (R); Inhofe (R); Isakson (R); Kyl (R); Lott (R); Nelson (D, Neb.); Roberts (R); Santorum (R); Sessions (R); Shelby (R); Stabenow (D); Sununu (R); Talent (R); Thomas (R); Thune (R); Vitter (R)

May 23, 2006

Iran Tests a Long-Range Missile

I fear the situation is escalating as the days go by.. Here is the story from the Jerusalem Post.

May 18, 2006

Assaulted by MoveOn.org on Capitol Hill

The story from FreedomWorks is here. CNSNews.com has a good write-up on "net neutrality" here. Democratic Congressman Ed Markey joined forces with MoveOn.org and musician Moby to urge the federal government to take control of the internet through net neutrality. FreedomWorks and a fellow Protest Warrior crashed their little party on capitol hill today. The pictures are hillarious, and caused one MoveOn activist to hit me in the face with his sign. This effectively stopped the press conference as the MoveOn people swiftly pulled him away from the press conference. There are lots of pics on our website! And Human Events Online, Free Republic and Protest Warriors are talking about it! One nice gentlemen even suggested I should get a raise for my antics! Internet News reported on our efforts here. Here is CNET's erroneous report, where they said WE were blocking their signs. As you can see, I called them out on their lies. The best account of the incident is here in Beta News.

May 3, 2006

SMU Business School Official Labels Young Conservatives of Texas the “Junior League of the KKK”

[Human Events has printed the story.] Steve Denson, the Director of Diversity at Southern Methodist University’s Cox Business School, has called The Young Conservatives of Texas “the Junior League of the KKK” in an article in SMU’s The Daily Campus. When asked to comment on this accusation, Mr. Denson replied, “My comments are based on the history of the KKK, per their opposition to immigration after the Russian Revolution and WWI, when immigration to the US both radically changed the ethnic mix of the population and subsequently led to a boom in conservative backlash and the largest membership population that the KKK has ever held. You can read about this in the Encyclopedia Brittanica.” Perhaps to Mr. Denson’s chagrin, I refuse to dust off the Encyclopedia Britannica [the correct spelling] and would rather consult a book on this subject published by his colleagues, the intellectual elite. But based on the diction and tone of Denson’s ramblings, maybe I should not consult his academic peers. Denson continued, “However, my comments were more metaphoric in the sense of “Junior League,” which connotes a genteel, socially acceptable (maybe even socially worthwhile), presentable form of a more controversial elitist social institution. I was essentially asserting that bigotry in a very virulent, socially reprehensible form gets instantiated in an organization like the KKK.” In his article, Mr. Denson was ostensibly referring to YCT’s stance on illegal immigration and its opposition to race-based seats in the student senate. YCT-SMU member Reed Hanson responded to my inquiry thus, “Our recent disdain for Mr. Denson stems not from the fact that he is an avowed Leftist. Our argument against him is that he unfairly attacked us with a label that did not reflect the ideals of our organization. We think that he is especially culpable because he holds a significant position in the University and is expected to be one of the more open-minded people since he was given the title, Director of Diversity.” According to the student body constitution, the SMU senate “shall not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, veteran status, religion, age, disability, or sexual orientation." The YCT claimed that the senate was violating this constitution when it reserved race-based senate seats. YCT’s Hanson wrote in The Daily Campus, “I am pretty sure the University would never publicly or privately claim that it supports discrimination. Yet this policy continues to exist, and no one does anything about it.” As reasonable as this opposition to race-based preferences seems, Mr. Denson apparently disagrees: “Our [diversity] programs are needed, as was stated in the Michigan decision that was handed down by a conservative court. Diversity programs may help get students from a variety of ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds in the door, but you all have to make the same grades and have the same standards to pass, stay off of academic probation, etc. So our programs simply help current generations of formerly neglected and/or underrepresented groups gain access to an education that is fourth or fifth generation as far as opportunity for non-minority students.” Mr. Denson says he supports affirmative action to admit minority students into the University, but insists they will be held to the same standards as non-minority students. I guess the student senate is the exception to Denson’s rule. In that body, seats are reserved for members of certain minority groups, and when members of YCT who were not members of these protected groups tried to run for these seats, the administration refused to allow them to do so. Their reason was that the students did not meet the racial qualifications for the seats. In fact, the YCT appealed this decision, but were told that the senate seats process was not discriminatory toward them! Unfortunately, this double standard is nothing new among college administrators and professors, especially at SMU. A couple of years ago, I reported on an incident where the campus administrators shut down an “affirmative action bake sale” that parodied race-based admissions policies. The officials claimed that the bake sale was offensive and created a “hostile learning environment” for students. But the administration seems to believe that giving race-based senate seats away is not offensive. Such hypocrisy truly is comical. Perhaps Mr. Denson and his fellow travelers in the far-left academic establishment need to re-think whom the KKK label should be applied to. Should it be applied to those who seek race-neutral policies, or those who favor using race-preferences in admissions and the student government?