VDH on the futility of appeasement

Victor Davis Hanson’s NRO column this week explores the futility of appeasement toward radical Islamic fascists. The entire column is excellent, and the following are several of his insightful observations:

The sad truth is that civilization itself is engaged in a worldwide struggle against the barbarism of Islamic fundamentalism. Just this past month the killers and their plots have been uncovered in London, Paris, Madrid, Pakistan, and North Africa ? the same tired rhetoric of their hatred echoing from Iraq to the West Bank. While Western elites quibble over exact ties between the various terrorist ganglia, the global viewer turns on the television to see the same suicide bombing, the same infantile threats, the same hatred of the West, the same chants, the same Koranic promises of death to the unbeliever, and the same street demonstrations across the world.
Looking for exact professed cooperation between an Islamic fascist and the rogue regime that finds such anti-Western violence useful is like proving that Mussolini, Tojo, and Hitler all coordinated their attacks and worked in some conspiratorial fashion ? when in fact Japan had no knowledge of the invasion of Russia, and Hitler had no warning of Pearl Harbor or Mussolini’s invasion of Greece.
In fact, it didn’t matter that they were united only by a loose and shared hatred of Western liberalism and emboldened by a decade of democratic appeasement. And our fathers, perhaps better men than we, didn’t care too much for beating their breasts about the exact nature of collective Axis strategy or blaming each other for past lapses, but instead went to pretty terrible places like Bastogne, Anzio, and Okinawa to put an end to their enemies all.
Now, in the middle of this terrible conflict, unlike the postbellum inquiry after Pearl Harbor, we are holding acrimonious hearings about culpability for September 11. And here the story gets even more depressing than just political opportunism and election-year timing. After eight years of appeasement that saw repeated attacks on Americans, Pakistani acquisition of nuclear weapons under Dr. Khan, and Osama’s 1998 declaration of war against every American, we are suddenly grilling, of all people, Condoleezza Rice ? one of the few key advisers most to be credited for insisting on using our military, rather than the local DA, to defeat these fanatics.
* * *
Everything that the world holds dear ? the free exchange of ideas, the security of congregating and traveling safely, the long struggle for tolerance of differing ideas and religions, the promise of equality between the sexes and ethnic groups, and the very trust that lies at the heart of all global economic relationships ? all this and more Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussein, and the adherents of fascism in the Middle East have sought to destroy: some as killers themselves, others providing the money, sanctuary, and spiritual support.
We did not ask for this war, but it came. In our time and according to our station, it is now our duty to end it. And that resolution will not come from recrimination in time of war, nor promises to let fundamentalists and their autocratic sponsors alone, but only through the military defeat and subsequent humiliation of their cause. So let us cease the hysterics, make the needed sacrifices, and allow our military the resources, money, and support with which it most surely will destroy the guilty and give hope at last to the innocent.

Reliant Energy Services indicted

Reliant Energy Services — a unit of Houston-based Reliant Resources — and four current and former Reliant employees were indicted on federal criminal charges today in connection with the shutting down of California power plants in 2000 allegedly to increase the price of electricity in that state. Here is a copy of the indictment.
The six-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury in San Francisco results from allegations that Reliant Energy illegally manipulated prices during June 2000 by shutting down four of its five power plants during a two-day period. Reliant Energy and the individuals were each charged with four counts of wire fraud, one count of commodities manipulation, and one count of conspiracy. Reliant Resources issued this statement in response to the indictment.
The four Texans indicted are Jackie Thomas, 49, a former vice president of Reliant Energy’s power-trading division; Reggie Howard, 37, a former director of the west power trading division; Lisa Flowers, 37, a term trader; and Kevin Frankeny, 42, manager of western operations.

Bruce Edwards dies

Bruce Edwards — professional golfer Tom Watson’s long-time caddie who redefined the job of being a professional caddie — died today after a year long battle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. That disease is better known as Lou Gehrig‘s Disease, after the former New York Yankee slugger who died of the same illness. Mr. Edwards was 49 at the time of his death.
Last night at the Masters Golf Tournament in Augusta, Ga., Mr. Edwards was awarded the Ben Hogan Award, given annually by the Golf Writers Association of America to an individual who continued to be active in golf despite a physical handicap or serious illness. Mr. Edwards is also the subject of author John Feinstein’s new book, “Caddie for Life: The Bruce Edwards Story.”
Mr. Edwards’s struggle over the past year inspired Mr. Watson to have the best year a 53-year-old golfer ever had — he won two senior majors (British Open and the Tradition) along with $1.8 million in prize money and was named the player of the year on the Champions Tour. Watson also earned a $1 million tax-deferred annuity that he donated to A.L.S.-related charities, notably the Driving4Life, A.L.S. Therapy Development Foundation in Cambridge, Mass. The 4 represents Mr. Gehrig’s Yankees’ uniform number.

Transcript of oral argument in Pledge of Allegiance Supreme Court case

Here is a copy of the transcript of the recent U.S. Supreme Court oral argument in the “under God”/Pledge of Allegiance case.

Mossberg on new Verizon wireless Internet access

Walter Mossberg writes a fine weekly technology column for the Wall Street Journal. In today’s column ($), Mr. Mossberg gives a favorable review of Verizon Wireless‘ new wireless broadband service, which, by the end of 2005, will allow users to connect a laptop, PDA, or celphone to the Internet at real broadband speeds from almost any location in every major U.S. metropolitan area. Mr. Mossberg has been testing the service, and reports as follows:

I’m not talking about the spread of more Wi-Fi “hot spots” in airports, coffee shops and similar places. I’m talking about wireless high-speed Internet service that you can use just about anywhere — even on the street or in a car.
This isn’t a pipe dream. I’ve been testing Verizon’s new service, called BroadBand Access, on a laptop around Washington, D.C., one of the first two cities where the company has rolled it out. I am very impressed. It is simple to set up and works just like any other broadband connection, with your normal Web browser and e-mail program.
Based on a new cellphone technology called EV-DO (short for Evolution-Data Optimized), the new Verizon service is as fast as most wired DSL lines, and it worked effortlessly almost everywhere I tried it in a wide swath of Washington and its suburbs.

This is the next logical step in allowing computer users to access the Internet from virtually anywhere within a city. With Verizon’s marketing muscle, this could be a huge money maker for the company if they can offer the service for a low enough price to attract users to supplement their existing Internet connection with this service.

Shell reassigns reserve finance executive

This Wall Street Journal ($) story reports on Royal Dutch/Shell Group‘s reassignment of Frank Coopman, the former top financial executive in its exploration-and-production business. Before a shakeup earlier this year, Mr. Coopman was the chief financial officer of Shell’s business units that were primarily responsible for booking Shell’s reserves. Disclosures earlier this year about its reserve accounting have prompted U.S. and European securities regulators to open investigations into Shell and led to industrywide constroversy over how energy companies estimate their oil and gas reserves.
Mr. Coopman’s reassignment is the latest in a reshuffling of senior Shell management since Chairman Philip Watts and Walter van de Vijver, former head of Shell’s upstream division, were fired last month. Shell’s board ousted Sir Philip and Mr. van de Vijver after Shell disclosed that it would reduce by 20% the oil and gas reserves it reports in filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Increasing good cholesterol

This NY Times article reports on a preliminary University of Pennsylvania and Tufts University study that found that an experimental drug can sharply increase levels of H.D.L. — the so-called “good” cholesterol — and, thus, potentially offer an entirely new way to help prevent heart attacks. The new drug — called torcetrapib — also reduced low density lipoprotein, or L.D.L. in the tests.
Doctors currently concentrate on lowering bad cholesterol by giving patients statin drugs, which are researchers believe have reduced heart attacks in Americans by about one-third. This new study is a part of an initiative to reduce heart disease further by increasing good cholesterol.
This related Wall Street Journal article relates how Pfizer Inc. is investing $800 million on human tests of torcetrapib, which is the most that any drug company has ever committed to spend on a clinical test in an effort to obtain regulatory approval of a drug.

Kerr-McGee to buy Westport

Oklahoma City-based Kerr-McGee Corp. announced plans Wednesday to buy Denver-based Westport Resources Corp. in a $2.5 billion stock deal that will significantly expand Kerr-McGee’s oil and natural gas holdings in Texas and the Rockies. The newly-acquired properties will increase Kerr-McGee’s daily production volume by more than a third, and will extend Kerr-McGee’s current Gulf Coast property portfolio into the Rocky Mountain area. The deal is expected to close in the third quarter of this year.