Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Mel Zelaya was attempting a soft coup of Honduran Constitution. Army stops him cold.



To maintain a credible constitutional democracy, it is necessary to have a slow and difficult procedure to change the constitution, otherwise you have a popular referendum, pack the ballot box and mob rule. The military in Honduras was right to have removed the Hugolito, Zelaya, and stop his Venezuelan mime. Of course our Acornated Master and Ruler objects. No shock there, as he is busy larding the electorate for his next election ascension.

Watch Obama go hard ass on this one to really make his lefty bona fides.

Dos amigos, Chavez y Zelaya. Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez (L) is embraced by his Honduran counterpart Manuel Zelaya upon his arrival at the Honduran Air Force base in south Tegucigalpa, 15 January, 2008. Chavez was in Honduras on an official visit to meet Honduran president Manuel Zelaya to sign a subsidized oil supply agreement between Honduras and Petrocaribe. No doubt they shared their thoughts and theories on constitutional democracy.



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92 comments:

  1. For anyone who missed it in the last couple threads:

    There is one small problem. Zelaya's removal from office was precipitated by his own illegal actions and attempts to undermine his nation's fragile democracy. Granted, any time a Latin American army takes a president into custody we hearken back to simpler times when generals hand picked presidents and if they got out of line, they lost their jobs, if not their lives. This situation is far more complex. And while Zelaya's ouster is an extreme reaction, the president's own moves are far more injurious to real democracy than those that the military, the Honduran attorney general, and supreme court took in trying to enforce the law.

    The Obama administration cannot hold itself back from jumping into the fray, with Secretary of State Clinton parroting Chavez, Daniel Ortega and the Castro regime in demanding that their ally be restored to power. We are truly judged by the company we keep
    ...

    American Thinker.

    Ash?

    ReplyDelete
  2. ...The facts of this situation point to a president who abused his power, sought to circumvent the nation's constitution, ignored the ruling of the courts and incited lawlessness. The country's fledgling democratic institutions provided checks and balances to the president's power and stood up for the rule of law. In a region with a long history of left and right coups and iron-fisted rule, the United States should applaud the functionality of Honduras's government.

    Sadly, the knee-jerk reaction in Washington has been to follow the lead of Chavez, Castro and Ortega, who will now, apparently call the tune in our Latin American policy
    .

    ReplyDelete
  3. He's NOT Meddling though, just like he does NOT meddle with Israel.
    er I mean he does not meddle with Iran, Venezuela, Honduras, Cuba, and etc.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Michael Jackson will not be cremated. Since he's mostly plastic he will instead be melted down and molded into Legos.

    This so that kids can play with him for a change...

    ReplyDelete
  5. You see, den nother, how easy it is to get inside and manipulate bobbie's brain.

    To become the center of his thoughts. It's Zorro Mastery.

    There are few Muslims in Honduras, so Obama's outreach to the Religion of Peace had little likely impact in Honduras. Unlike the electoral weight it carried had in Lebanon and Iran.

    But now, there are those that deny the US has an impact, in the whirled. Which may be the case, exemplified by the failure of the NPT to even slowdown the spread of rouge nuclear nations.

    ReplyDelete
  6. The WSJ, via Small Wars Journal

    Taliban Battle Stretches Pakistan's Forces - Zahid Hussain, Wall Street Journal.

    Pakistan's battle against the Taliban widened to the North Waziristan tribal region after fighters loyal to a local militant commander killed 23 soldiers in an ambush on an army convoy in apparent retaliation for recent US drone attacks. The latest clash ended a local peace deal with the government and opened a new front for an already-stretched Pakistani military in the region, which US officials say is the center of Taliban activities in Pakistan and of al Qaeda. Thousands of Pakistani troops already are battling Taliban militants in the Swat Valley near Islamabad, the capital, and in the South Waziristan tribal area. On Sunday evening, militants armed with rocket launchers and automatic weapons struck an army convoy a few miles from the Afghan border. At least four officers were among the 23 soldiers killed, according to security officials. Local civilian and military officials said as many as 35 soldiers were wounded, many of them critically, in one of the most devastating militant attacks on Pakistan's military in recent years.

    ReplyDelete
  7. One fellow understands the importance of declaring victory, but he is no longer in the employ of the US miltary.

    BYE-BYE, BABYLON
    EXITING IRAQ'S CITIES, VICTORIOUS
    !

    Ralph Peters.

    Another fella that thinks all we really needed was a parade.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Magic batteries are causing trouble, in cell phones. Just wait until they're in your auto.

    Iphone batteries might be causing overheating
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    WHILE APPLE FANBOYS struggle with the reality that the fruit themed toymaker's latest Iphone 3GS sometimes gets hot enough to discolour the plastic, Wired thinks that the problem might be due to the battery
    .

    ReplyDelete
  9. - Honduras Defends Its Democracy -
    The struggle against chavismo has never been about left-right politics. It is about defending the independence of institutions that keep presidents from becoming dictators. This crisis clearly delineates the problem. In failing to come to the aid of checks and balances, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Insulza expose their true colors.
    ---

    - The FARC's Ecuadorean Friends -
    It's time to reaffirm the U.S. commitment to Colombia

    ReplyDelete
  10. We had to do ...
    something!


    By Jeff Gerth and Brady Dennis
    ProPublica and Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, June 29, 2009
    .

    General Electric, the world's largest industrial company, has quietly become the biggest beneficiary of one of the government's key rescue programs for banks.

    At the same time, GE has avoided many of the restrictions facing other financial giants getting help from the government.

    The company did not initially qualify for the program, under which the government sought to unfreeze credit markets by guaranteeing debt sold by banking firms. But regulators soon loosened the eligibility requirements, in part because of behind-the-scenes appeals from GE.

    As a result, GE has joined major banks collectively saving billions of dollars by raising money for their operations at lower interest rates. Public records show that GE Capital, the company's massive financing arm, has issued nearly a quarter of the $340 billion in debt backed by the program, which is known as the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, or TLGP. The government's actions have been "powerful and helpful" to the company, GE chief executive Jeffrey Immelt acknowledged in December.

    GE's finance arm is not classified as a bank. Rather, it worked its way into the rescue program by owning two relatively small Utah banking institutions, illustrating how the loopholes in the U.S. regulatory system are manifest in the government's historic intervention in the financial crisis
    .

    See how effective the coverage of Team Obamamerica, at MSNBC, has been, for GE.

    ReplyDelete
  11. NBC is no longer a credible news source. It is an arm of the Democratic party in all but name and organization chart.

    ReplyDelete
  12. We've returned to the historic norm, duece. The Press has always been partisan, in the US.

    The imagery of 'balanced reporting', another post WWII myth that has been disproven by reality.

    ReplyDelete
  13. LAUSD Scores Again! [Updated:] Cortines steamed over 'Bruno' photo shoot

    The latest issue of GQ features a cover story about comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, in his new guise as gay Austrian fashionista "Bruno." What brought it to our attention was that GQ includes photos shot at L.A.'s Birmingham High School, featuring the barely clad Cohen cavorting with the Birmingham football team.

    An ONLINE SLIDE SHOW shows Cohen wearing shoulder pads, tight red shorts, an athletic cup and little else while engaging in "drills" with the team, in one case lying on top of a player he has evidently just "tackled."

    You have to slog thru the 13 or so pics to see all the LAUSD Action.

    ReplyDelete
  14. In WWII,
    The Press was not universally against the USA.
    The Press did not disclose secrets harmful to the USA.
    The Press did not hate everything the USA stands for, and did not root for our defeat.

    Mr. Moral Equivalency is wrong again.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Nor did JFK = Obama, no matter how many chicks he fucked, no matter how incompetent he might have been fighting for this country or as POTUS.

    He, like LBJ and HW Bush, loved this country.
    Obama does not.

    He, like Reagan, was a fiscal conservative, as compared to W, and esp as compared to the Marxist Tyrant in office.

    Mr. Moral Equivalency is wrong again.

    ReplyDelete
  16. A question for Mr. Moral Equivalency:

    I must have forgotten, but what is your response, 'Rat to the fact that Jews have been ethnically cleansed from all the states that refused to harbor the sainted Palis?

    Does that not count for something in the Moral Equation?

    ReplyDelete
  17. I know it has been asked before, but I either was not listening, or the answer was such BS that my Pure Mind Filter eliminated it.

    ReplyDelete
  18. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  19. JFK was a hawk.
    BHO roots for our enemies.
    BHO roots for tyrants.
    BHO hates freedom for anyone but BHO.

    ReplyDelete
  20. "Profiles in Courage"
    and
    BHO is a contradiction in terms.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Mel Zelaya should have been shot on site....

    Then the ONE could bring him back to life and prove he is the messiah

    ReplyDelete
  22. BHO MEDDLES in Israel's affairs, Honduras's affairs...

    North Korea? Iran? Cuba? Hamas? He respects...

    ReplyDelete
  23. Christ, bob, d'ya think maybe, just maybe, you could have left a little note on the Bar's sign-out board, informing the regulars of the nature of your departure and of your estimated return - so that they weren't consumed with worry or, on the other hand, wrongly but gleefully anticipating the related disappearance of Chuckie. (Ash having declined last year to serve the greater good by heading to the "Sunshine? You Don't Know What Sunshine Is, Friend" State, locating and bundling him into the trunk, and thusly driving around for a week or so. The local papers would report, "Notorious Asshole Goes Missing. More to Follow?" Not to say that you've disappointed, bob, by failing to undertake a noble but criminal act. Sometimes a straightforward road trip not involving kidnap and probable 2nd degree manslaughter is the best one can do to restore a little balance in the universe, letting the hungry soul feast on the endlessly varied beauty that is America outside its suburbs. Without having to listen to Chuckie kicking around furiously in the trunk.)

    ReplyDelete
  24. And speaking of restoring a little balance to the universe by feeding the hungry soul, I did just that this long weekend and so fortified myself for the actual work to follow.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Been tryin' to post all week, My Lady, damn motels got us shut down.

    Had a really good trip, and we're on the road tomorrow, again.

    I love driving along with my wife. We do have a great time.

    It's still is a beautiful country, most of it, Trish.

    Puts a smile on my face.

    And my wife, she always cracks a joke or two, as we go.

    It's fun.

    ReplyDelete
  26. It's fun.

    When we go, she puts her hair up a certain way, she has her glasses, and, her field bird watching glasses, her map, her notebook, her cell phone, now she's got her pistol and Concealed Carry Permit.

    Get to these motel rooms, her libido is up, too.

    She's a hell of a lot of fun to be around, truth to tell.

    Always optimistic, and, ready to go.

    Cracking jokes.

    Got her credit cards, and she's willing to swipe, and some cash in her purse too.

    I love my wife.

    ReplyDelete
  27. And, she has a sidelong pickeral smile, with a hint of the devil in it.

    Don't count that out.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Good for you, bob. Awfully glad to hear it.

    (Hotel/motel rooms. What is it about hotel/motel rooms? It's certainly not the often ugly bedspread and atrocious art. : ) )

    Our fantasy road trip, and we've made an awful lot of them, is the Alaska Hwy to Baja. There may be no slow boat home from the good nation of Colombia - seeing how we'll be cruising vicariously through our daughter - but that excellent drive remains a light at the end of our tunnel. Finding the time to do it may take a few more years still.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Mel Zelaya should have been shot on site....

    Then the ONE could bring him back to life and prove he is the messiah


    It's comments like this that I like the Jewish people.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Really, they should learn from other western governments that "exile" leftists and jihadists...

    they come back to do more crimes...

    he should have been shot by the Government of Hondurans PERIOD.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Last I checked treason & sedition were a capital offense....

    ReplyDelete
  32. just got the emails bob, don't need anything. enjoy your roadtrip. I will have to content myself with traveling via Google streetview. I too have been traveling around Idaho these past few days.

    ReplyDelete
  33. Op-Ed - The Winner in Honduras - Chávez - NYTimes.com

    This is not what Honduras’s establishment, horrified by Mr. Chávez’s increasing influence, intended when it got rid of Mr. Zelaya. It is also a pretty surreal turn of events for those who followed the career of the deposed president. A member of Honduras’s landed oligarchy, Mr. Zelaya came to power in 2006 as the leader of the Liberal Party, a center-right organization. He was a product of the establishment: an heir to the family fortune, he had devoted decades to his agriculture and forestry enterprises, supported the Central America Free Trade Agreement with the United States, and ran for president on a conservative platform, promising to be tough on crime and to cut the budget.

    Around halfway into his term, however, Mr. Zelaya had an apparent ideological epiphany and became an admirer of Mr. Chávez. He signed a deal for a generous oil subsidy from Venezuela; last year he incorporated Honduras into the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas. Soon enough, power went to his head.
    ---
    Only an Oblique reference to Our Messiah:

    "Across the Spanish-language news media, the recurring image of the last two days has been that of Mr. Chávez and his allies working furiously for Honduran democracy. The United States’ more measured response,"

    ReplyDelete
  34. The freighter being tailed by the USS John McCain is hightailing it back to North Korea. I imagine this was preceded by a little air bubble in the natural gas pipe from China to Pyongyong, just enough to make the needle twitch. And I imagine THAT was preceded by a State communique to China saying that the United States looks forward to negotiating with North Korea to make the entire Korean peninsula nuclear free just as soon as we put back the warheads that we unilaterally removed from South Korea in, as it turns out now, a clearly misguided act of good faith.

    ReplyDelete
  35. We stashed them everywhere.
    Brought a kind of seriousness to bear not matched by a Teleprompter.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Fred dead @ 54.
    A lot of lessons about bumps in the head lately.
    If I live to be 80, I won't know as much as he did in some areas.
    ---
    I like what "Tom" posted @ neo neo:

    "I cherished his righteous honesty, his inability to mince words, his clear and likely clairvoiant vision.
    May God bless and keep him."

    ReplyDelete
  37. I deplore those nations, doug, that do not provide equal rights for all their residents.

    I think that most all the governments of most all the countries in the whirled are deplorable.

    For one reason or another.

    In regards the US, you continue to talk about the men, while I speak of the institutions of power, which transcend the men that hold the office, of President.

    The President = The President
    Like it or not, so there is that equivalency, always will be.

    One could try to equate the Bay of Pigs to the demonstrations that followed the Iranian election, but the situation in Iran is more favorable to US, post protest, than after JFK's fiasco at the Bay of Pigs, in Cuba.

    The nuke tipped Cuban based Soviet missiles were still in the future, after the BoP.

    Even if the Iranians can develop a nuclear warhead, they'd be hard pressed to hit US.
    They did not start the nuclear arms race in the Middle East, in fact they lag far behind the others in the region that have already armed up all around them, to the north, west and east.

    There is an equivalency there, too.
    Lack of complying with IAEA standards, by any and all of the nuclear capable counties of the region is destabilizing to the whirled at large.

    ReplyDelete
  38. But there is little doubt that JFK would have supported the Honduran Supreme Court and Legislature in their actions, based upon Senor Zelaya's political leanings, at present.

    ReplyDelete
  39. The last Coup that the US publicly supported, was a disaster for US interests.

    Couldn't even keep Venezuela together.

    GW Bush being no JFK, either.

    ReplyDelete
  40. "In regards the US, you continue to talk about the men, while I speak of the institutions of power, which transcend the men that hold the office, of President."
    ---
    Hugo and Obama provide proof to the contrary, excercising powers beyond their offices.
    ---
    I think you skirt the issue of Jews being excluded throughout the region, as well as the overt calls for their elimination by their neigbors.
    Important variables in the equation imo.

    ReplyDelete
  41. I discount the words of the powerless, doug.

    Empty threats are just that, empty rhetoric. Scaring the good folk on both sides, of the boogieman, just across the fence.

    We and the Israeli call for "Regime Change", in Iran. Which to that regime is just another euphemism for "Wiping off the Map".

    Rhetoric that inflames the passions, on both sides.

    But not followed through on.

    ReplyDelete
  42. It's a question of where to start.

    ...you continue to talk about the men, while I speak of the institutions of power, which transcend the men...

    A respected boss once told me he'd never spoken to an agency or organization, he'd always spoken to men. Insert institution for agency. The institution of power. Controlled by a man. Put a face on the faceless, pull away the curtain and expose the man pulling the levers of power.

    ...One could try to equate the Bay of Pigs to the demonstrations that followed the Iranian election...

    Yes. One could. But not if he had any respect for his audience or himself. I'm inclined to think you're running on fumes with your narrative.

    ReplyDelete
  43. I think not, lineman, about the narrative.

    Those countries that do not support the NPT are outside the norm of civilized countries. The US, by allying with those rouges, endorses and supports the concept of nuclear proliferation.

    There is an equivalency amongst them, sure as shootin'.

    As for Iran, the US policy of sanctions leading to revolution and regime or even policy change, seems to have come up a crapper.

    Perhaps the long term the results of a continued moderate US foreign policy will bear fruit, maybe not.

    Depends, alot, on whether the center holds in Iraq.

    Do they still use the rial in Basra, to bribe members of the Iraqi government, or has the dinar become the currency of choice?

    ReplyDelete
  44. That is also the case, lineman, that Mr Bolton made concerning the Foreign Service. That the US diplomats represented their own interests, more than that of the United States.

    Maybe that is true, but Obama has no power, without the Presidency.
    No more than Mel Zelaya has, today.

    In that, Mel and George W. share an equivalency. They are powerless observers of the international scene.

    I'd venture that your respected boss would not have called on those men he spoke to, at the institution, agency or organization, if they were not at or connected with that institution, agency or organization.

    And it is also true that those men were bound by the rules, policies and cultural processes of their respective institution, agency or organization.

    No one calls on GWB to find out what the US going to do about Honduras and the regime change, there. Or Iran and its' evolution.

    ReplyDelete
  45. No. His point was it made no sense to rail against the institution when it was a human responsible. Just as it doesn't serve to fawn over an individual's policy just because it comes at you with the authority of his office behind it. Individuals can be wrong. That doesn't necessarily diminish the institutions they purport to represent. The bad actors will hopefully have short tenure, but not if all the unwashed bow and scrape before them just because of their lofty station, and because some cunning linguists can spin a good fable.

    To say he wouldn't have been dealing with "them," if they didn't have connection to the institution?

    What's that supposed to mean? Are you lost?

    ReplyDelete
  46. What it is supposed to mean, lineman, us that every President is accused of abusing the power of the office, by their political opponents.

    The power is in the institution, not in the men, or GHW Bush would still be in the loop, not jumping out of airplanes.

    If you want to address the abuses of power, you go to the source of the power, to create the reforms, not the current representative of the power.

    Or the truth becomes evident. It is not the power that you all think is need of reform, but the men that wield it.

    My position is that all men are flawed and the institutions need to be reformed to reflect that reality.

    Checks and Balances, that's what it was called in Civics class. That and the concept of limited and specified power and authority as well as responsibilty.

    We have left that concept, behind.

    No matter who is elected, next, both the abuse of power and the abdication of responsibilty will continue across the width and breadth of the Federal government.

    If the institutions are not reformed.

    ReplyDelete
  47. We have had many elections and the leviathan lumbers on, with little change in course or speed.

    The differences are in the rhetoric, not the behaviours.

    ReplyDelete
  48. California Polytechnic State University football team plane crash
    On October 29, 1960, a chartered C-46 plane carrying the California Polytechnic State University football team, hours after a 50-6 loss to Bowling Green State University, crashed on takeoff at the Toledo Express Airport in Toledo, Ohio after the left engine lost power. Twenty-two of the forty-eight people on board were killed, including sixteen players, the team’s student manager and a Cal Poly football booster.[1]

    Mercy Bowl
    On Thanksgiving Day, November 23, 1961, Los Angeles County Supervisor Warren Dorn and Bob Hope sponsored a "Mercy Bowl" in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum between Fresno State and Bowling Green State to raise a memorial fund for the survivors and bereaved families. The event raised about $200,000 from a crowd of 33,000.[7] As of 2006[update], memorial plaques for the crash can be found on campus at Mott Gym and the Mustang horse statue.

    A permanent memorial plaza opened with the new Alex G. Spanos Stadium. The memorial has 18 copper pillars, one for each of the Cal Poly-affiliated individuals who died in the crash. Each pillar rises to the height of the person honored and is adorned with a plaque about that individual's life.

    Alex is a legend.
    Got started catering meals for Braccero Farm Workers.
    Eventually made a fortune in real estate development, I think.
    Owned the San Diego Chargers
    Legendary Philanthropist.

    ReplyDelete
  49. "What's that supposed to mean? Are you lost?"
    ---
    No
    He's as FOS as a Christmas Turkey.

    ReplyDelete
  50. You've turned yourself into a joke here, 'Rat.

    ReplyDelete
  51. Maybe you should run for South Carolina Governor?

    ReplyDelete
  52. "If the institutions are not reformed."
    ---
    What reforms are needed, Sage?

    ReplyDelete
  53. Federalism and Localism is my prescription.

    ReplyDelete
  54. ...but big O's DC is much too powerfull to allow that.
    Not to mention the Supremes.

    ReplyDelete
  55. Sanford is the most pathetic POS politician in my lifetime.
    (so I retract my comparison, 'Rat)

    ReplyDelete
  56. In my Okie version of a Greek Tragedy,
    I'd have Sanford's four sons tear him limb from limb to avenge their mother.

    ReplyDelete
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