It's Official! Sarah Palin Is VP Choice

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin is John McCain's VP choice. Palin is a non-nonsense conservative who has even stood up against waste and corruption in her own party. The 44-year-old governor and mother of five is strongly pro-life, a lifetime member of the NRA, and a fierce competitor. The negatives are a lack of experience (but more than Obama) and her pro-climate change ideas.

Overall, I think this was a very good choice. Palin is a tiger when it comes to corruption and that is something Washington desperately needs.

O' Hail the Messiah Lord Obama

Heard about this on the radio and HAD to pass it on!

Rumble on!

Santa Obamista Part II



OK, so the audacity of ego continues. The O Team are going to present their guy on a stage in Denver fashioned to look like a Greek temple...poor photo below:


I don't know about you, but my "Ick Meter" is really getting pegged. It's bad enough we have to do this thing in a stadium...oh, a regular conference hall isn't good enough for the Big O. But now this set. I love what the folks at Political Inquirer ginned up above to truly illustrate the bloated ego of the Big O...and the creepy people that apparently surround him, fawning up to him like Gollum to Frodo in "Lord of the Rings."

I can see his folks texting each other: "OMP (Oh my preeesciouus...for you LOTR fans), he's like a god u no...let's put him in a temple!" Keep it up Dems - this kind of sick adulation will backfire. America will watch the throngs of descamisados swoon in Denver while they barf their dinners up in Akron. Have you already forgotten the Berlin Bounce? Oh wait, there was no bounce. Compared to this clown show, Bill Clinton looks statesmanlike!

All of this for some reason reminds me of the last scene in Patton. Not that there is ANY semblance between the good general and Barry O...merely the following closing soliloquy:

"For over a thousand years, Roman conquerors returning from the wars enjoyed the honor of a triumph, a tumultuous parade. In the procession came trumpeters and musicians and strange animals from the conquered territories, together with carts, laden with treasure and captured armaments. The conqueror rode in a triumphal chariot, the dazed prisoners walking in chains before him. Sometimes, his children, robed in white, stood with him in the chariot or rode the trace horses. A slave stood behind the conqueror, holding a golden crown, and whispering in his ear a warning, that all glory is fleeting."


All glory IS fleeting and I suspicion that the date stamp on Barry O is approaching fast.

Rumble on!

Bill Clinton Endorses McCain?

Bill Clinton is a strange fellow. It's because he wants to say things but has to disguise them in vagueness so he can say he was misunderstood when the stuff hits the fan. Those of us who have known Bill Clinton for 30 years have learned to read between the lines.

So Bill goes off and gives a hypothetical situation about the choice between two candidates. It is really strange but it came across as a disguised endorsement of John McCain - or more like a rejection of Barack Obama. Here it is:
"Whether government can actually deliver becomes quite important. It becomes in a way, THE question. Suppose for example you're a voter. And you have Candidate X and Candidate Y. Candidate X agrees with you on everything, but you don't think that person can deliver on anything. Candidate Y disagrees with you on half the issues, but you believe that on the other half, the candidate will be able to deliver. For whom will you vote?"
Bill quickly said that doesn't have anything to do with today but that is how he semantically operates.

So who is Bill voting for in November?

2005 Tikal "PATRIOTA" (60% Bonarda, 40% Malbec) (Mendoza, Argentina)

This was a very interesting red. The nose promised great weight and ripeness, but in the mouth it was leaner and crisper than expected, although still quite flavorful. It would pair very well with very rich braised meat dishes such as oxtails, beef or lamb shanks, or tripe.

Eye: Saturated ruby purple color.

Nose: Rich, deeply fruity nose of sweet cassis and very ripe raspberries, with a prominent smoky, gravelly component.

Mouth: Ripe and full, yet somewhat lean, with good weight and broad flavors of dry, ripe, blackberry extract and crushed stones. Long, lean, crisp finish. Would have been amazing with just a tad less acidity and tad more flesh.

Score: 89.

Cellar or drink? This wine's concentration indicates that a few more years of ageing may improve this wine a bit, though I have found that wines with high (as opposed to moderate) acidity like this one really don't fare well with longer term ageing.

Price/store: Was $23.78 at Spec's on Westheimer.

2004 Felsina-Berardenga CHIANTI CLASSICO RISERVA "Rancia" (Tuscany, Italy)

This was a very classy, well-constructed red.

Eye: Dark black ruby with the barest hint of brick.

Nose: Medium-intense nose of minerally gravel, chokecherry liqueur, and wood.

Mouth: Medium full bodied, with very good concentration of minerally cherry pit and cherry liqueur. Not weighty, but with very good flavor concentration nonetheless. Good length and balance too, with some soft, unresolved tannin in the finish.

Score: 88.

Cellar or drink? Drinking well now, I think this could keep and soften for another 2-3 years. I'm concerned about ageing it beyond that, however, given its relatively advanced color and modest weight.

Price/store: Was $27 at Whole Foods on Bellaire.

2007 Pierre-Marie Chermette "Domaine du Vissoux" BEAUJOLAIS "Cuvee Vieilles Vignes" (France)

This was a very light, yet extraordinarily refreshing wine.

Eye: Dark crystalline ruby with magenta highlights.

Nose: Refreshing, ripe, crisp nose of freshly-crushed grapes, strawberries, and plums, with a background notes of stoney minerals and maple syrup.

Mouth: Ripe, crisp, and refreshing (sorry to repeat myself, but it is), with light body and crisp but unobtrusive acidity. Just want to keep quaffing this stuff down! Seems to whet and quench the thirst at the same time. Lots of fun.

Score: 88.

Cellar or drink? Drink before 2009 gets here for maximum fun.

Price/store: Was $17 at Spec's on Holcombe.

Bishop Pelosi Sticks Foot In Mouth

Nancy Pelosi attempted to explain Barack Obama's response to Rick Warren on the question of when life begins. Her explanation is hilarious because it is so obviously chock full of blatant lies.

Pelosi said she has studied this issue in depth because she is an "ardent practicing Catholic." (Looks like she needs more practice.) She basically said the Catholic Church doesn't know when life begins. Sorry Nancy. We have a nice parting gift for you.

The Catholic Church has been very clear on its position of life beginning at conception from its earliest days. Nancy, the Catholic Church is not conflicted on the issue of life and abortion.

If you truly studied this issue as you said, there is absolutely no way you could have made the statements you made.

Obama: The New Messiah?

Barack Obama has been called a "messiah". "The One". Well, it seems there is now proof that he is being worshipped as a messiah by the liberal left. But those of us who know the truth know he is a false messiah and will only bring death and destruction.

Reflections from the late '60's

I've been watching the antics of this group in Denver, "Recreate 1968." And it has welled up some memories from that era for me. We were overseas in 1968, the year of all the fun in Chicago, but spent the summer of 1969 stateside.

Friday, July 19, 1969 was a typical summer day in Washington D.C. - hot and sticky. Walking back from my grandfather's house to the hotel we were staying in off Dupont Circle, the hippies had taken to stripping naked and swimming in the fountain in the middle of the circle and mother told me and my sister to look the other way as we passed. The next day we would re-trace our steps late in the afternoon to watch Neil Armstrong step out of the Eagle lunar lander and utter his famous phrase. We watched in awe as a flickering black and white screen illuminated my grandfather's den. America at her peak, even though at home we were reeling.

We were home on one of our periodic "home-leaves" in the process of moving to Sapporo, Japan from Tokyo in our tri-annual shift of domicile dictated by the Department of State. We truly lived like gypsies, but loved it! For me, a Texan by birth, my hometowns became Washington DC and Marianna, Florida, two guaranteed stops on the home-leave circuit.

The summer of 1969 saw DC as a city on edge. Large sections of the city had been burned in the race riots of the previous April in the wake of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. As I recall, the National Guard was still visible at certain intersections. I remember how different the sirens of the American ambulances and police cars sounded to ears that had grown up listening to their Japanese counterparts.

Bobby Kennedy had been shot in June the year before too. My best buddy, Roddy Moore, and I had sat out on the porch of our apartment at the Grew House in the Embassy Compound in Tokyo listening to the Armed Forces Radio on my little Sony AM Radio. We had both developed the idea that the war in Vietnam should end and Bobby was going to end it, so we were crushed. My political views were poorly developed, but I remember from dinner table conversations the wisdom of my father. He was convinced that we didn't have the will to win the war - to do what needed to be done to win - and thus we should pull out. Don't get me wrong, he wanted us to win - felt that the consequences of not winning were dire, but the alternative of slow blood-letting was accomplishing nothing. I am confident he wasn't a Kennedy man, but he did understand military affairs. A lot of my friends' parents were Kennedy folks so it seemed OK with me. But Bobby was gone.

Humphrey, McCarthy and McGovern were the Democrat choices and Nixon was the Republican candidate. But the Democrat party was badly torn. Huge factions on the left and radical left wanted either McCarthy or McGovern - big anti-war candidates - to win. From what I have read, there were not a few on the Democratic side that wanted a weaker candidate put forward in the hopes that they would lose to Nixon setting up the dream match-up: Nixon vs. Kennedy II. Nixon did ultimately prevail so the die was cast.

Kennedy II? Yup, Teddy. He was only 36 in 1968, but he was already a Senator and was being groomed to assume the mantle of destiny that all Kennedys wore. And this brings me back to July 19, 1969. The night before, the future king, left a party with Mary Jo Kopechne (below), turned onto the Dike Road of Chappaquiddick Island, attempted to navigate onto the Dike Bridge and ended up in the water. The car sank, upside down. Teddy swam to the surface and walked away. Police were notified the following day. Mary Jo was left to drown. Compassion. How ironic that in introducing Teddy last night at the convention in Denver his voice over the film begins with "the sea is an allegory for life." Yes, senator, death too.

The night of July 19, my parents went to supper with high-school classmate Jack (those of you close to us, know who I am talking about, I choose to respect his anonymity here) and his wife. I remember drifting off to sleep and hearing those unusual sirens in the distance. Shortly after midnight, I was awakened by a commotion in the living room of our little embassy apartment. Jack was raising hell as news of what had happened in Massachussetts earlier that day was breaking. This was long before instant-24-hour-news. Jack was a believer. Like so many other Roman Catholics of the time, the Kennedys represented the long-overdue acceptance of Catholics in national politics. They were willing to side step the obvious, though well concealed flaws, of the Kennedy Clan in exchange for their moment in the sunshine. I don't know what Jack's involvement with the whole Kennedy business was, but I do know that he, like my father and me had attended Georgetown Prep, a Jesuit boys school that prepared young men to get into the best schools so they could eventually run things. Strands for the strings of power were woven there and the Kennedy mystique was writ large.

I don't know what we were thinking. Catholics were duped. We thought if one of ours was elected that somehow we would get something out of it. The Kennedys thumbed their noses at the Church and got away with it. And they continue to get away with it today. Ted went on to recover from the Chappaquiddick incident to remain in office as the senior Senator from Massachussetts and now sports a voting record that is antithetical to the most fundamental teachings of the Baltimore Catechism. I have sympathy for any man suffering from the affliction he now bears, but I have a hard time not imagining that his final resting place will be quite warm. I have a harder time watching adoring throngs getting misty eyed over a stumbling speech that endorses the new Kennedy - Barrack Obama. The blacks that are turning out in much higher numbers than previous contests are being duped like the Catholics of 1960. B.O. only wants them around as long as they are useful...God knows he doesn't want to live with them! Hello Hyde Park!

In 1968, the country was a mess. Although we were defeating the North Vietnamese in the field, we were not allowed to prosecute the war beyond the DMZ. The United States Military is very good at killing people and breaking things. Sitting still and waiting for the enemy to circle around behind you? Not so much. The social fabric of the country was tearing - college kids, the first fruits of the greatest generation were showing their gratitude by burning buildings, taking over administrative offices and doing about anything except studying. It seemed that the racial divide of the country would erupt into all out war. Leaders were being gunned down. The Soviets were on the move, rolling into Czechoslovakia uncontested. Freedom around the world was on the wane.

In 2008, the country is not a mess. We are winning the Iraqi War. Our college kids are drinking heavily and having more sex than we did in the late seventies, but still going to class. Overall, blacks and whites get along pretty well. The Russian bear has re-emerged in Georgia, but has also largely pulled out under international pressure. Freedom is the currency of the civilized world and where it flourishes, the people do well. If you took your clothes off to cool off in the fountain at Dupont Circle today, you would go to jail. Unfortunately, people are still being duped...they long for a new messiah, a new camelot, someone that will give them something. They long for enslavement - it's so much easier. The task at hand is to educate them and hopefully prevent their messianic vision from coming to pass.

What we are witnessing in Denver this week is the gathering of the masses of the duped and a spectacular power play writ large. Teddy, as I said, recovered from 1968 and over the course of the next two and half decades with his clan and cronies, became the center of gravity for the Democratic party. In pure liberal ideology, he railed against the likes of Bob Bork and Clarence Thomas. He attempted every form of liberal programmatic takeover of sections of our economy from education to health care. This last item seems to be his twilight song. He made the Democrat party his bitch and she answered. Out in Chicago, the Daley machine which had given Teddy's older brother the election in 1960, continued apace.

But then came the "man from Hope." Bill Clinton famously triangulated and beat a hapless George H.W. Bush for the Presidency in 1992 and an even more hapless Bob Dole in 1996. He lip-synched the leftist agenda when he was around the loons and made the moderates believe he wasn't a wild-eyed crazy. And, let's face it - he was eloquent and fun to have around! But he wrested the control of the Democrat party from the Kennedy clan. And despite all the public lovey-dovey between the two factions, a simmering war has been brewing for years.

It erupted into full view this year as the Daley machine, ever loyal to the Kennedys presented their young star to a dazed public. Behind a teleprompter, Barrack the Great can do no wrong. His wife, freshly minted last night, the daughter of a Daley ward boss, harbored the same resentment for America that many on the left bear...it's just not fair! Barry, I am convinced, is a pretty empty vessel, able to regurgitate in sing-song silky tones about anything that is poured in. But, he's black, different, telegenic and great behind the teleprompt.

But this was the year of Hillary! This was the return of the Clinton triangulation to power after eight years of the dreaded Bush! But who did Teddy endorse- and endorse early? Yup - the same guy he called "Osama" when Barry first went to the Senate. The Kennedys pushed all their chips into the middle of the table like James Bond in Casino Royale and said "call." B.O., returning the favor, selected none other than Caroline Kennedy to head his VP selection committee. The circle was complete. The Biden pick will have to wait for another post, but Caroline was in place to introduce her Uncle and draw comparisons of Barry O to her father. And the masses swooned. If there is Greek tragedy in this, it is that at the moment the Kennedys regain the helm of that rickety sailboat of a Democrat party he may be shedding these earthly coils.

But the battle is joined in Denver and although Barry will prevail and we will have another Riefenstahl moment there is a very good chance he will die the death of a thousand nail swipes as the Hillary! folks extract their due between now and the election. They don't want Obama to win and they probably want him to be defeated more than the most hard-core Republican! The stars, barring a huge gaff on McCain's part, are lining up in his favor.

On a trip to Washington a few years ago, I popped off the Metro at Dupont Circle and walked around. I sat on a park bench and admired the fountain. It was the work of Daniel Chester French and Henry Bacon, the same folks that carved the Lincoln Memorial. The fountain was placed there in 1921, replacing the statue of Admiral Dupont of Civil War fame. How nice to be able to just sit and listen to the fountain! The crazy left doesn't allow that kind of freedom...in fact, freedom in general is eschewed for orthodoxy. "Freedom," as Ronald Reagan said years ago, "is the natural condition of man." It is good and must be ferociously defended...and my sense is that in early November of this year, good common sensical Americans, tired of the rhetoric without substance will go behind the curtain and do the right thing.

Rumble on!

Why Does The GOP Have To Move Left?


Why is it that the Democrat party can present two of today's most liberal politicians as their presidential and vice-presidential candidates, but for the GOP to "have a chance of winning" they must move to the center? Why don't the Dems have to move to the center?

The GOP has let fear blind them to the truth. America is not liberal. America is not moderately liberal. Americans are being duped by liberal politicians who talk moderate and a mainstream media that filters out the liberal voting records of these politicians.

Rather than standing on rock-solid conservative principles, the GOP conceded to the Dems during their reign in Congress and were basically ineffective. Americans watched this happen and were angry. The result? A Democrat controlled Congress.

Wake up GOP!! The Dems are running from the left. If you want to win this race, you had better run from the right. The poll numbers following John McCain's conservative straight talk at the Showdown at Saddleback where he demolished Obama prove I am right.

UPDATE:

About 45 minutes after I posted this opinion I received an e-mail from Rush Limbaugh with a story about a Battleground Poll showing that the majority of Americans are conservative. Here's the text of the e-mail blurb:
A key question in the respected, bipartisan Battleground Poll finds 60% of Americans are "very" or "somewhat" conservative. Only 2% are moderates. If we ever get a candidate who articulates conservative values again, they'll win in a landslide.
In the same poll likely voters said the number one economic issue was rising oil and gas prices. If the GOP will pull its head out it could positively own that issue.

Higher taxes was tied for the #3 spot. Again, on taxes the GOP comes out on top.

87% of likely voters said their personal economic situation was from fair to excellent but 50% said the overall economy was poor. You can thank the mainstream media for that ambiguity.

35% of likely voters thought President Bush was doing a good job while only 19% approved of the job Congress is doing. Imagine that.

In the primary most voters said their first choice for the Dem candidate was Hillary Clinton. I smell trouble in Denver.

On presidential qualities, McCain came out ahead on "strong leadership", "shares your values", and "says what he believes". Obama lead on "middle class values", "fights for people like me", and "is an independent voice".

'Nuff said.

GWU Battleground 2008 (XXXV)

Physics Rap

OK, I admit it - my nerd side comes to the front on news that the CERN particle accelerator is nearing completion. What IS holding this stuff together? Dark matter? The mind of God? Anyhow, this caught my eye...nothing like some physicists getting down with some awful music (I hate rap...and I STILL hate Disco) but this is fun!

Perspective On Joe Biden

Erick Erickson at RedState.com has a great little piece about Obama's choice of Joe Biden for VP because "he is not of Washington". The implication is that McCain is 100% Washington politician.
  1. When Joe Biden entered the United States Senate, John McCain was in his fifth year of captivity at the Hanoi Hilton.

  2. Barry Obama was eight when Biden began his Senate career.

  3. Nixon was starting his second term as President.

Read the rest here at RedState.com.

Obama - A Better Class Of Black

Barack, I am very happy with your VP choice. Joe Biden is such a nice guy. And he likes you, too. Especially since you are a better class of black in Joe's mind. In case you don't remember what he said, here is the quote:

I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.

Talk about talking down to someone. Wonder what Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton think about that? Since Obama is the first, that means all African-American candidates who preceded him were, according to Joe Biden, unintelligible, stupid, dirty, and ugly.

Nice Joe. Real nice. You'll make a good Dem VP candidate. Just be sure to keep those racist skeletons way in the back of your closet. If you're not sure how to do that, get some advice from Bobby Byrd.

2005 Domaine Charles Joguet CHINON "Cuvee Terroir" (Loire Valley, France)

This was a TERRIFIC Cabernet Franc red from the Loire. Lots of character, flavor, and ageing potential.

Eye: Extremely saturated black mulberry color.

Nose: Ripe, complex nose of blackberry, smoky embers, baking spices, and intense, stony minerality.

Mouth: Concentrated, ripe, and tannic, with surprisingly full body (for a wine from this northerly, cool region) and unsurprisingly good acidity. Youthful flavors of ripe cassis and blackberry, with, again, lots of stony minerality.

Score: 90+

Cellar or drink? Although enjoyable now, this wine will clearly be better in 2-4 years.

Price/store: Was $22.99 at Houston Wine Merchant (on South Shepherd).

2006 Colterenzio PINOT GRIGIO (Alto Adige, Italy)

This Pinot Grigio from one of Italy's northernmost wine-growing regions was crisp and refreshing, but not much more.

Eye: Very light gold.

Nose: This was the best part of the wine -- fairly fragrant, with scents of pear, earthy stones, and milk.

Mouth: Light and lively, but with a fairly linear, austere flavor profile of minerals, acidity, and Granny Smith apples. Medium length finish.

Score: 83.

Cellar or drink? This style of Italian whites is for early drinking. Bottoms up before 2009.

Price/store: About $13 at Spec's on Holcombe.

Denver Protesters

Heard that the crowd from the '60's was planning on showing up in Denver. I had NO idea they already had a video up!

The Veteran Vs The Rookie

Did you watch the Smackdown At Saddleback? For the first time in my life, I was proud of my country. Wait. Wrong snippet. For the first time in my life, I was proud of John McCain. He waxed the floor and Obama was the mop.

Never in this campaign has there been such a clear difference between the two candidates. Obama was clearly struggling for answers, struggling to straddle the fence, and he looked very uncomfortable doing it. McCain shot straight arrows that hit their target. His stories painted a picture of a man with a great past of service to his country and his fellow man. Obama's rambling put a huge spotlight on his inexperience and lack of solutions.

If things don't change for Obama by November, he's in big trouble.

In Your Face, White Boy!!

Cris Collingsworth is an idiot. Did he go to liberal media school after his football career ended or is he just naturally stupid? Ah, I see. Wiki says he's a lawyer. Figures.

Kobe Bryant was awesome. I would say he made Collingsworth look like an idiot but Collingsworth did that himself. Is it "cool" to say you love your country???? WHAT???? Where's The Donald? You're fired!!!

Kobe didn't hesitate, didn't stutter, and didn't look away. He looked right at Collingsworth and schooled him in patriotism.

Three cheers for Kobe Bryant. Watch it here.

2002 Domaine Laleure-Piot PERNAND-VERGELESSES Blanc (Burgundy, France)

I bought this 6-year old white burgundy from the close-out bin at Richard's on South Shepherd, so it was a calculated risk. It paid off! This wine had lots of character, was balanced, and performing at its peak.

Eye: Ridiculously intense, bright gold, with a fain greenish glint (still!)

Nose: Mature white burgundy nose of earthy, salty minerals, stones, spiced pears, and artichokes.

Mouth: Concentrated in flavors and weighty, but with medium-full body, this wine had intensely minerally flavors together with very dry notes of buttered pear essence. Long, stony finish. Nice balance.

Score: 88.

Cellar or drink? Drink now. This is fully mature, and will only start to decline if cellared any longer.

Price/store: Was reduced from the mid-$20s to $19.99 at Richard's on South Shepherd.

Note about buying wines from the close-out bin: (1) Make sure it's a wine that should still theoretically be in its zone of maturity -- white burgundies can age better than most whites, and the 2002s had both great extract and acidity, a rare combination of two components required for graceful ageing; (2) look for a bottle that is filled as close to the cork as possible -- the more oxygen in a bottle, the quicker it will age; the less, the slower.

2004 Domaine Saint-Martin MARSANNAY "Les Finottes" (Burgundy, France)

This was a very soft, fragrant, enjoyable Pinot Noir that--amazingly for a Burgundy--was a pretty good value! I may try some more 2004s to see if this vintage is better than the critics would lead you to believe (they mostly criticized 2004s in Burgundy for being too light).

Eye: Darkish ruby with some amber highlights.

Nose: Exuberant nose of tangy rhubarb and sappy cherries, along with a pungent but pleasant earthy-vegetal component.

Mouth: Soft, broad, but light in the mouth, with flavors of crushed stones, cherries, and toasty oak in the background. Not particularly concentrated, but nicely-balanced, lively, and fun! Pretty good length too.

Score: 88.

Cellar or drink? The light color and weight, together with the lack of any discernible tannin indicate that this should be enjoyed over the next 12 months.

Price/store: Was only $19.33 at Spec's on Smith.

NOTE: Photo of label is for the 2005 vintage -- I couldn't find a picture of the 2004.

2005 Chateau de Valcombe COSTIÈRES DE NÎMES (60% Syrah, 40% Grenache) (Rhone, France)

This was a very nice, cheap, everyday wine with a lot of chunkiness and character.

Eye: Totally saturated black ruby-purple.

Nose: Intense nose, with raw meat and earthy scents in the lead, lots of powdered stones, and some blackberry/black cherry scents coming in last.

Mouth: Ripe, extracted, fairly concentrated flavors of stony minerals and blackberry, together with brambly notes. Long, simple, but pure-tasting finish, with plenty of tannin. Chunky and four-square, but satisfying.

Score: 87.

Cellar or drink? This will certainly keep, and maybe soften and improve, for another 1-2 years.

Price/store: $9.29 at Richard's on South Shepherd.

2005 Bruno Giacosa NEBBIOLO D'ALBA (Piemonte, Italy)

This Nebbiolo, from a highly-regarded producer, was a bit disappointing given the reputation of the producer and the quality of the 2005 vintage in northern Italy.

Eye: Medium ruby-garnet color.

Nose: Medium intensity nose of eucalyptus, chokecherries, and stony minerals.

Mouth: Medium-bodied and quite tannic in the mouth, with intense minerality but only moderate intensity of chokecherry fruit, with a touch of old wine barrels scent. Long, fairly peppery and somewhat astringent finish. Identifiably Nebbiolo, but kind of bony and spare.

Score: 84.

Cellar or drink? While the astringency and tannin would seem to require a bit of ageing, the advanced color and lack of fruit concentration seem to indicate that ageing won't help much, if at all. Drink up.

Price/store: Was $25 at Spec's on Smith.


Democrats' Arrogant Elitism

It is truly a shame when the government of a democracy punishes its people because of arrogant, elitist attitudes like those held by Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and most of the other Democrats in Congress. The environmental leftists have infiltrated and taken control of the Democratic party. They now have a stranglehold on our economy through the Environmental Protection Agency, Congress, and the courts.

Nothing other than an arrogant, elitist attitude would cause a politician to ignore polls showing that 70% of the American people support drilling on our own soil and offshore. They look down upon the "common people" and they intend to punish us with high fuel costs until we develop alternative energies. How arrogant and condescending.

Our government has becoming a ruling body instead of a representing body. They represent themselves and rule over us. If our democracy is to continue it is incumbent upon us to do whatever is necessary to regain our representative republic of the people, by the people, and for the people.



Cartoon ©2002 Jim Huber from www.conservativecartoons.com

Making A Deal With The Devil

The devil went down to Georgia (see previous post) but he wasn't looking to make a deal. Not with the Georgians and not with the UN. The UN (Useless Nations) is going to apply pressure to the Putin regime to pack up their fiddles and head back home. We will now have a front row seat to witness the powerlessness and ineffectiveness of the UN.

The Devil Went Down To Georgia

Make no mistake. I have voiced my concerns about Vladimir Putin since he came to prominence in Russian politics several years ago. I believe his ultimate goal is to resuscitate the socialist republic of Russia, a.k.a., the Soviet Union. Think about it. This guy was KGB. The KGB was not known for its love of democracy and freedom.

So now Putin rolls the mighty Russian military into Georgia, a former Soviet state. For what purpose is he doing this? Why is he bombing remote oil sites and pipelines, far away from the conflict? Never trust a KGB agent, nor a former KGB agent.

2005 Lolonis Redwood Valley ZINFANDEL (Mendocino County, California)

This organic winery consistently produces very good Zinfandels at very good prices, and the 2005 is yet another beauty. Ripe and vibrant, it's a beautifully balanced wine.

Eye: Nearly saturated, dark ruby with gem-like clarity.

Nose: Classic Zin -- ripe Zinfandel scents of wild, spicy berries, with brambly, maple-syrup undertones, and a hint of minerality.

Mouth: Ripe, yet lively and vibrant, with full body, good acidity, and a soft texture. Concentrated fruit in the mid-palate. Long, refreshing finish.

Score: 90.

Cellar or drink? Drink now and over the next year. I like my Zinfandels young. Don't listen to those wine guys who tell you it ages well. It doesn't improve with age. When they say it ages well, they mean that it maintains its fruit for a few years. But why tempt fate? Fruit is what a good Zin has when it's young, so drink it young!

Price/store: $17 at Spec's on Smith.

2005 Domaine Santa Duc CÔTES DU RHÔNE "Les Quatre Terres" (Southern France)

This was a pleasant enough, straightforward Rhône wine. Technically, it's fine; it just didn't light my fire.

Eye: Dark black ruby with faintly violet highlights.

Nose: Very straightforward, fruity scents of plum juice and berries, with some stony minerality in the background.

Mouth: Full-bodied, and with some soft tannins, it featured non-complex, low-toned berryish flavors and a decent dosage of stony minerality. Good, balanced finish.

Score: 83.

Cellar or drink? Drinkable now, this wine will keep for another year or two.

Price/store: Was $12 at Richard's on South Shepherd.

Unmasking Obama


Dan McLaughlin has written a fantastic post at RedState.com that uncovers the REAL Barack Obama, an ultra-liberal who is even to the left of this own party. Below are the opening paragraphs. I strongly encourage you to read the entire post here.

If you looked at Barack Obama's record, public statements and campaign platform as of any time before June 3, 2008 (the last day of the Democratic primaries), you could detect a trend: on issue after issue after issue, there was a conservative position, a moderate position, a liberal position...and then there was an Obama position.

Other liberals opposed the Iraq War; Obama called for complete withdrawal by March 2008. Other liberals opposed confrontation with Iran; Obama pledged to meet its leader unconditionally. Other liberals supported abortion on demand or even partial-birth abortion; Obama went beyond that to oppose any legal protection for a child born alive after a failed abortion. Other liberals supported amnesty to give illegal immigrants citizenship and "bring them out of the shadows"; Obama championed giving drivers licenses to illegal aliens even as they continued to live outside the law. Other liberals were concerned about surveillance outside of the FISA framework; Obama pledged to filibuster even a bill that brought surveillance into that framework unless it allowed civil lawsuits against phone companies that had complied with prior government requests. Other liberals voted against Justice Alito; Obama voted against Chief Justice Roberts, too, and for that matter voted to filibuster to prevent a vote on Alito. Other liberals courted liberal interest groups; Obama sought the nomination of a Marxist third party. Other liberals championed a "nuclear freeze" during the arms race of the early 1980s; Obama called for eliminating nuclear weapons and "slow[ing] our development of future combat systems" during a period of American nuclear and military predominance.

On issue after issue after issue - taxes, guns, energy, you name it - Obama not only stood outside the national political mainstream, but on the far left edge even of his own party, which is how he earned the National Journal's "most liberal Senator" rating for 2007 despite the presence of a self-described Socialist in his caucus.

If that doesn't scare you, you must be a liberal. Read the complete post here.

I'z dun studdyed histery in skool...

Your USPS at work:

Ummm, where waz du forteenth koloni?

Jeez!

Rumbbel ohn!

Godspeed Noble Zek

Aleksander Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008)
Rest in Peace

In the summer of 1971, I returned to the United States when my father was reassigned from being the Consul General for Northern Japan, based in Sapporo, to the State Department in Washington D.C. I was about to enter a stateside school for the first time in my life and the establishment that my parents managed to squeak me into was Mater Dei, where I was to matriculate for 8th Grade.

I received my summer reading list in the mail and it was quite formidable. I honestly don't remember all the books, but one stuck with me, "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," by Aleksandr Solzhenitisyn. The depictions of the biting cold of Siberia were actually comforting to me in that sweltering Washington heat - the climate we had just left was strikingly similar. The horror of imprisonment and deprivation were shocking. I was naive and even though I had been an avid student of history, devouring books on the Civil War and World War II, I could not imagine that one man could treat another with such unbridled cruelty. But Aleksandr knew. He wrote passionately about the zeks (prisoners) and how individuals developed their own way to cope with cruelty.

In "The Cancer Ward," he wrote: "A man dies from a tumour, so how can a country survive with growths like labour camps and exiles?" Solzhenitsyn suffered through the horrors of imprisonment in the Soviet labor camps and the indignities of constant surveillance and search by the wretched KGB throughout the 1960's until he was finally exiled in 1974. He moved to the United States and took up residence in Vermont. Along the way, he managed to publish the monumental "Gulag Archipelago," which brought the full nightmare of the Soviet system to light. I always found it ironic that the left hailed this great man of letters as one of the greatest writers of the epoch (he was) and ignored what he wrote about.

In 1970 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature, but could not leave the Soviet Union to accept it for fear he would not be allowed back in. A ceremony was planned at the Swedish Embassy in Moscow, but the appeasing Swedes backed out for fear of upsetting the Russians. When he did accept the award in 1974, after returning to the USSR was no longer an issue, he said the following (quoted in the Wall Street Journal this morning):

"The spirit of Munich has by no means retreated into the past; it was not merely a brief episode. I even venture to say that the spirit of Munich prevails in the 20th Century. The timid civilized world has found nothing with which to oppose the onslaught of a sudden revival of barefaced barbarity, other than concessions and smiles. The spirit of Munich is a sickness of the will of successful people, it is the daily condition of those who have given themselves up to the thirst after prosperity at any price, to material well-being as the chief goal of earthly existence. Such people-and there are many in today's world-elect passivity and retreat, just so as their accustomed life might drag on a bit longer, just so as not to step over the threshold of hardship today-and tomorrow, you'll see, it will all be all right. (But it will never be all right! The price of cowardice will only be evil; we shall reap courage and victory only when we dare to make sacrifices.)"

Re-read that paragraph...the bolding is mine. He wrote this in 1974 about the Soviet police state. But I am sure that Aleksandr understood that this is a human condition and barbarity can hide it's face in a Communist uniform or a Jihadi turban. Evil does not change, it just changes it's costume. Sadly, neither does cowardice. Cowardice can come dressed in the common clothes of a Soviet citizen struggling to survive under the watchful eyes of the state or in the voting masses of an election in the United States, where the fear of being called politically incorrect outweighs the common sense of calling Islamic fundamentalism what it is: evil.

Solzhenitsyn defeated the evil that imprisoned him. He did it by being human and by having the courage to speak the truth. He spoke truth to us when he called the American left out for our failure in Vietnam in a speech at Harvard in 1978: "But members of the U.S. antiwar movement wound up being involved in the betrayal of Far Eastern nations, in a genocide and in the suffering today imposed on 30 million people there. Do those convinced pacifists hear the moans coming from there?"

He calls to us still in a voice that is not Russian, or European or American. It is the cry of Western Civilization - the challenge for us to all be free with the understanding that it can only happen when we have the courage to stand up and erase our fear with the certainty of truth:

"Until I came to the West myself and spent two years looking around, I could never have imagined to what an extreme degree the West had actually become a world without a will, a world gradually petrifying in the face of the danger confronting it…All of us are standing on the brink of a great historical cataclysm, a flood that swallows up civilization and changes whole epochs."*

Godspeed, noble zek, Godspeed.

Rumble on!


*Speech to Congress in 1975

Republican Revolution!!

In case you've missed it, several Republican members of the House of Representatives have refused to break for recess and are remaining on Capitol Hill in protest of Speaker Nancy Pelosi refusing to bring offshore drilling up for debate. Congressman John Culberson of Texas has been transmitting live video from his cell phone at www.qik.com. You can also see it on www.c-span.org.

The Republicans are calling on Speaker Pelosi and President Bush to bring the Congress back for a special session to debate the offshore drilling issue. The GOP has also threatened to shutdown the federal government by not voting on the upcoming funding bill until the issue of offshore drilling is addressed.

Three cheers for Pete Hoekstra, John Culberson, Roy Blunt, Mike Pense, and the rest of the Repubs who have said enough is enough. America is for you and will support you and you stand against Democratic tyranny.

Celebobama!!!!

John McCain's recent "Celebrity" ad comparing Barack Obama to Britney Spears and Paris Hilton was decried by Obama as "juvenile". Well, it seems the Democratic presidential candidate made that same comparison just a few short years ago. Here is his comment:

"Andy Warhol said we all get our 15 minutes of fame. I've already had an hour and a half. I mean, I'm so overexposed, I'm making Paris Hilton look like a recluse."

So why are you so upset by the McCain camp repeating what you said, Mr. Obama?

O Force One?

OK, this is getting really sick...check out these shots from the interior of Obama's campaign plane:








Did you catch it? The middle shot..."Obama '08, President" - WTF? WTFF??

This guy is going to win the megalomania award of the century.

Rumble on!

Nobama in the Town Hall

So Obama backs up on his pledge to meet John McCain in a town hall setting. Jeepers, if he's afraid to meet with a fellow American, how's he gonna handle hisself in a big-time sitdown with that lovable Iranian kook, Imadinnerjacket? Only one thought comes to mind with this news:







Rumble on!

2005 Tablas Creek COTES DE TABLAS (43% Grenache, 24% Mourvedre, 18% Syrah, 15% Counoise) (Paso Robles, Cal.)

This nicely-rendered Rhone varietal blend showed why it is important, particularly in the heat of the summer, to make sure reds are served, NOT at ACTUAL room temperature (which is invariably too hot), but at a temperature in the low to mid 60s.*

Eye: Dark, sultry black ruby.

Nose: When I popped the cork after taking the wine out of my wine closet (which is about 71 degrees in July and August), the nose was overwhelmingly dominated by peppery alcoholic scents. I could hardly smell anything else. Alcohol vaporizes quite readily as temperature increases. So I popped the wine in the fridge for about 20 - 30 minutes, and upon cooling down to the mid-60s, the alcohol receded and deep-toned scents of smoky earth, dark black berries, and pungent yet sweet balsa wood emerged.

Mouth: Rich, dark flavors of smoky, mineral-laced blackberry syrup, with good density and length, and lots of fairly soft tannic structure.

Score: 88.

Cellar or drink? Drink over the next 2 years.

Price/store: I can't find my receipt, but I think this was about $21 at Spec's on Smith.



* The notion of reds being served at "room temperature" comes from a loose translation of the French word "chambre." But serving red wine "chambre" in the old days (when this truism was formed) referred to the temperature of a room in a typical French stone house, which were usually a lot cooler than modern American houses tend to be. So "room temperature" (chambre), as used in this rule, actually refers to temperatures between about 60 to 65 degrees Fahrenheit.

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