Texas has its share of insect problems.
First, it was the invasion of the killer bees.
Then, it was the onslaught of those nasty fire ants.
Now, it’s the invasion of the Libytheana bachmanii larvata.
Or, as they put it in South Texas, “Looks like you ran into some snouts.”
Daily Archives: July 27, 2006
Islam’s real struggle
The current escalation of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah is currenly getting most of the attention on the world stage, but NYU Islamic Studies professor Bernard Haykel reminds us in this NY times op-ed that an even knottier problem than Islamic hatred of Israel is the conflict within Islam between Sunni and the Shiite ideologies.
Sunni ideology regards Shiites as heretics and Sunni groups such as Al Qaeda profoundly distrust Shiite groups such as Hezbollah (Al Qaeda reportedly gave the green light months ago to Sunni extremists in Iraq to attack Shiite civilians and holy sites). But if Hezbollah is successful in its current attack on Israel — and “success” may only necessitate survival — Haykel sees ominous signs for the West:
What will such a victory [by Hezbollah over Israel] mean? Perhaps Hezbollahís ascendancy among Sunnis will make it possible for Shiites and Sunnis to stop the bloodletting in Iraq ó and to focus instead on their ìrealî enemies, namely the United States and Israel. Rumblings against Israeli actions in Lebanon from both Shiites and Sunnis in Iraq already suggest such an outcome.
That may be good news for Iraqis, but it marks a dangerous turn for the West. And there are darker implications still. Al Qaeda, after all, is unlikely to take a loss of status lying down. Indeed, the rise of Hezbollah makes it all the more likely that Al Qaeda will soon seek to reassert itself through increased attacks on Shiites in Iraq and on Westerners all over the world ó whatever it needs to do in order to regain the title of true defender of Islam.
Read the entire piece. And don’t miss Dan Senor‘s Opinion Journal op-ed that explains how the militant Shiite forces in Iraq are shaping domestic and foreign policy there.
Lance Berkman is a funny guy
Amidst the Stros disappointing season, slugger Lance Berkman (42 RCAA/28 HR’s/.403 OBA/.617 SLG/1.020 OPS) is having another outstanding season, slugging his way to production that is second only to the Cardinals’ Albert Pujols in the National League.
In last night’s Stros win over the Reds, Berkman whacked another two yaks, one of which was a 452 foot bomb that landed in the restaurant that overlooks centerfield at Minute Maid Park. Berkman, a happy-go-lucky, life-long Texan who is a genuinely nice fellow, commented after the game on his mighty home run:
“I think the waiter made a nice play.”
Berkman’s career stats are below. In the history of the Stros franchise, only Jeff Bagwell (stats below, also) has had better hitting statistics than Berkman at the same stage of his career. Berkman, who is 30, currently has 331 RCAA for his career and is about ready to overtake Craig Biggio (currently at 352 RCAA for his career) for second place on the Stros career RCAA list. At the completion of the season (1998) that coincided with his 30th birthday, Bags’ RCAA was 431, and Bags tops the Stros career RCAA list at 680.
It’s sometimes easy to overlook, but we have been blessed to have been able to watch in Bidg, Bags and Berkman the three best non-pitcher players in the history of the Houston Astros Baseball Club.
The Yates verdict
It took awhile, but the Texas criminal justice finally got it right yesterday in the sad case of Andrea Yates, thanks to an honest and dispassionate jury.
Of course, as noted here earlier, this is a prosecution that never should have been tried once, much less twice. Yates and her attorneys were always willing to cut a deal in which the obviously insane Yates would spend the rest of her life in a tightly-controlled state mental hospital, yet the Harris County District Attorneys office stubbornly refused to provide any meaningful prosecutorial discretion in the case. The result has been a four year saga in which untold millions of dollars of has been spent so that the prosecutors could prove what? That this obviously insane woman just was lucid enough when she killed her children that she should spend the rest of her life in a maximum-security prison rather than a state mental institution?
Yates initially will be sent to a maximum-security hospital, probably North Texas State Hospital in Vernon, and then if doctors determine she is not a danger to herself or others, she later will probably be moved to a medium-security state mental health facility, such as the Rusk State Hospital where she lived for several months pending her retrial. Oh yeah, where she lived before prosecutors insisted that she be detained in the Harris County Jail during her retrial.
Although the Yates defense was successful this time around, there is no real victory here. Yates will spend the rest of her life in a heavily-guarded mental institution and any time she regains even a little bit of lucidity, she will descend back into a deep depression with psychotic features and schizophrenia when she realizes what she did to the children that no one involved in the case disputed that she adored.
One aspect of the case that I’ve not seen reported much in the media is that this trial only involved the deaths of three of the five children that Yates killed, so the Harris County District Attorneys office clearly hedged its bets that it could lose this case when it elected not to prosecute the deaths of the other two Yates children. Thus, it’s possible that the DA’s office could mount another murder case against Yates, although even their bad judgment in pursuing the first case against Yates through two trials does not seem to make that a likely scenario.
The bottom line on this case is that good people afflicted with terrible mental illness are capable of committing horrendous acts during a period of harrowing madness. That’s the reason why insanity is a defense to a murder charge under our criminal justice system, and there is simply no reason to have that defense at all if the state insists upon using its overwhelming prosecutorial power to place obviously insane people such as Andrea Yates in prison — rather than a more humane mental health facility — for the rest of their lives.