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A New Name for the Blog
A Prescient Moment
A Review of "Stealth"
Adams versus Hydra
An Exercise in Rhetoric
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Do You Suffer from Quixot
Enter the Martial Matrix
Finest of all Wargames
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Happy Thanksgiving 2005
I Shot Down a Mig Again!
Illuminating Words
Islamic Intolerance
Join the Ranks!
Karl Rove Hits Back
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LotR, 40K and Politics
Mark of Chaos Review
Michael Jackson and Satan
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Sumter and States' Rights
Terri and America
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The Anti-American IFC
The Bigotry of Da Vinci
The City Dies
The Death of Saruman
The Glory of Shoveling
The Return of "V"
The Return of Copperheads
These Things I Believe
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Two Boxers in a China Sho
Two Views of Chess
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War of the Worlds (2005)
Wargaming, WWII, and Evil
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The F.E.B.A.
Monday, 27 June 2005
The Metal Monster that Ate London!
Mood:  down
Now Playing: The Mark Levin Show
Topic: Adams versus Hydra
The Metal Monster that Ate London!

Take these pieces, set them in their rank and file upon an 8 x 8 magic square and you have the recipe for endless centuries of romance and intrigue. – Donald McLean

Back in 1997, Garry Kasparov, perhaps the world’s finest chess player ever, matched wits with a metal monstrosity by the name of Deep Blue. In a previous 1996 match, Kasparov had handily defeated the chess-playing machine. But in the 1997 New York rematch, Deep Blue, now supercharged with the latest technology and new chess programming, defeated humanity’s reigning chess champion. It was a stunning blow. But man was not crestfallen; a glimmer of hope could be seen. After all, Deep Blue could only obtain victory after playing six games against Garry, winning by a mere point! All in all, not a bad showing for a man who was mentally-dueling a machine that could “see” 200 million chess positions per second!

Now, in 2005, a similar contest has taken place in London. The contestants were a grandmaster by the name of Michael Adams, ranked seventh strongest player in the world (with a rating of 2737), and Hydra Scylla, a chess playing 64-way cluster computer that never suffered a defeat at the hands of a human being! There were high hopes that Adams, fully aware of the awesome capabilities of these contemporary HAL 9000s, would prepare carefully, fight hard, and ultimately dispatch the checkmating Terminator to the computer trash bin.

Alas, no such good news can be reported.

Not only did Hydra defeat Adams, he defeated him with maximum cruelty by only allowing the human grandmaster a single draw over the course of six games! It was a crushing defeat that has all but extinguished the flickering flame of hope for the eventual triumph of man’s rational supremacy.

The Berserkers have won the day….

[Event "Man-Machine"]
[Site "London ENG"]
[Date "2005.06.21"]
[Round "1"]
[White "HYDRA"]
[Black "Adams,Mi"]
[Result "1-0"]
[BlackElo "2737"]
[EventDate "2005.06.21"]
[ECO "C42"]

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. Nxe5 d6 4. Nf3 Nxe4 5. d4 d5 6. Bd3 Nc6 7. O-O Be7
8. Re1 Bg4 9. c3 f5 10. Qb3 O-O 11. Nbd2 Na5 12. Qc2 Nc6 13. b4 a6 14. Rb1
Bd6 15. h3 Bh5 16. b5 Na5 17. c4 dxc4 18. Nxc4 Nxc4 19. Bxc4+ Kh8 20. bxa6
bxa6 21. Ne5 c5 22. Bd5 Rc8 23. Be6 Rc7 24. Bxf5 Bxe5 25. dxe5 Rxf5 26.
Qxe4 Bg6 27. Rb6 Rf8 28. Qe3 Rcf7 29. Rd6 Qa5 30. e6 Re7 31. Ba3 Rfe8 32.
Bxc5 Qxa2 33. Rd2 1-0

[Event "Man-Machine"]
[Site "London ENG"]
[Date "2005.06.22"]
[Round "2"]
[White "Adams,Mi"]
[Black "HYDRA"]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[WhiteElo "2737"]
[EventDate "2005.06.21"]
[ECO "B47"]

1. e4 c5 2. Nc3 e6 3. Nf3 Nc6 4. d4 cxd4 5. Nxd4 Qc7 6. g3 a6 7. Bg2 d6 8.
Nxc6 bxc6 9. O-O Nf6 10. Na4 e5 11. c4 Be7 12. Be3 Be6 13. Rc1 O-O 14. b3
Qb7 15. Qe2 Rfe8 16. h3 Rab8 17. Rfd1 Bf8 18. Kh2 h6 19. Rc2 Be7 20. Bc1
Qc7 21. Bb2 Nd7 22. Bc3 Nf8 23. Qe3 c5 24. Bb2 Bd7 25. Nc3 Ne6 26. Nd5 Qd8
27. f4 Nd4 28. Rf2 Bc6 29. fxe5 dxe5 30. Bxd4 cxd4 31. Qf3 Rf8 32. Qh5 f6
33. h4 Be8 34. Qf3 Bf7 35. Bh3 Rb7 36. h5 a5 37. Kg2 Qe8 38. Bg4 Bc5 39.
Rh1 Qc6 40. Rb2 Rfb8 41. Bf5 Kh8 42. Rhb1 Qe8 43. g4 Qc6 44. Qd3 Bg8 45.
Qd1 Qa6 46. Rd2 a4 47. Rdb2 Qa8 48. Kh2 Bf7 49. Kg2 Bf8 50. Kh2 Be8 51. b4
a3 52. Rb3 Ba4 53. b5 Qa7 54. Kg2 Qc5 55. Qd3 Bxb3 56. Qxb3 Ra8 57. Rd1 Qd6
58. Rc1 Qb8 59. Kf3 Bd6 60. Ke2 Bc5 61. Kd3 Qa7 62. Rb1 Qa5 63. Qc2 Qd8 64.
Rh1 Qd6 65. Qb3 Re8 1/2-1/2

[Event "Man-Machine"]
[Site "London ENG"]
[Date "2005.06.23"]
[Round "3"]
[White "HYDRA"]
[Black "Adams,Mi"]
[Result "1-0"]
[BlackElo "2737"]
[EventDate "2005.06.21"]
[ECO "C91"]

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 d6 8.
c3 O-O 9. d4 Bg4 10. d5 Na5 11. Bc2 c6 12. h3 Bc8 13. dxc6 Qc7 14. Nbd2
Qxc6 15. Nf1 Be6 16. Ng5 Bd8 17. Ne3 Bd7 18. a4 h6 19. Nf3 Rc8 20. axb5
axb5 21. Nh4 Nc4 22. Nxc4 bxc4 23. Ba4 Qc7 24. Bxd7 Qxd7 25. Nf5 d5 26. Ra6
Qb7 27. Rd6 Be7 28. Bxh6 1-0

[Event "Man-Machine"]
[Site "London ENG"]
[Date "2005.06.25"]
[Round "4"]
[White "Adams,Mi"]
[Black "HYDRA"]
[Result "0-1"]
[WhiteElo "2737"]
[EventDate "2005.06.21"]
[ECO "B23"]

1. e4 c5 2. Nc3 d6 3. Nge2 Nf6 4. g3 g6 5. Bg2 Nc6 6. d4 cxd4 7. Nxd4 Nxd4
8. Qxd4 Bg7 9. O-O O-O 10. a4 Qa5 11. Qd3 Bd7 12. Nd5 Nxd5 13. Qxd5 Qxd5
14. exd5 Bf6 15. c3 a5 16. Re1 Rfb8 17. Bf1 b5 18. axb5 Bxb5 19. Bxb5 Rxb5
20. Rd1 Rc8 21. Ra4 Rcc5 22. c4 Rb3 23. Be3 Rc8 24. Bd4 Kg7 25. Kf1 Bxd4
26. Rxd4 Rxb2 27. Rxa5 f5 28. Ra7 Kf6 29. g4 Rb4 30. g5+ Kxg5 31. Rxe7
Rcxc4 32. Rxc4 Rxc4 33. Rxh7 Kf6 34. Rd7 Ke5 35. Rg7 Rg4 36. f3 Rg5 37. Kf2
Kxd5 38. h4 Rh5 39. Kg3 Rh6 40. Re7 Kd4 41. Re1 d5 42. Rd1+ Ke5 43. Re1+
Kd6 44. Rd1 Rh5 45. Ra1 Kc5 46. Rc1+ Kb4 47. Rd1 Kc4 48. Rc1+ Kd3 49. Rc6
Rh6 50. h5 f4+ 0-1

[Event "Man-Machine"]
[Site "London ENG"]
[Date "2005.06.26"]
[Round "5"]
[White "HYDRA"]
[Black "Adams,Mi"]
[Result "1-0"]
[BlackElo "2737"]
[EventDate "2005.06.21"]
[ECO "C87"]

1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 d6 7. c3 Bg4 8.
d3 Nd7 9. Be3 Bxf3 10. Qxf3 Bg5 11. Bxc6 bxc6 12. Nd2 O-O 13. Qg4 Bxe3 14.
Rxe3 Rb8 15. b3 Nc5 16. f4 exf4 17. Qxf4 Ne6 18. Qf2 Rb5 19. Rf1 Rg5 20. d4
Rg6 21. a4 Rf6 22. Rf3 Rxf3 23. Qxf3 Qg5 24. Nc4 Qg6 25. h4 f6 26. Ne3 Re8
27. Nf5 h5 28. b4 Kh7 29. Ng3 c5 30. d5 Nd8 31. Rb1 Nf7 32. bxc5 dxc5 33.
Rb7 Rc8 34. Ra7 Nd6 35. Rxa6 Re8 36. Rc6 Nxe4 37. Qxh5+ Qxh5 38. Nxh5 Kh6
39. Re6 Rd8 40. Rxe4 Kxh5 41. a5 1-0

[Event "Man-Machine"]
[Site "London ENG"]
[Date "2005.06.07"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Adams,Mi"]
[Black "HYDRA"]
[Result "0-1"]
[WhiteElo "2737"]
[EventDate "2005.06.21"]
[ECO "B42"]

1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 a6 5. Bd3 Bc5 6. Nb3 Ba7 7. O-O Ne7
8. c4 d6 9. Nc3 Nbc6 10. Qe2 O-O 11. Be3 e5 12. Rad1 Nd4 13. Bxd4 exd4 14.
Nd5 Nc6 15. f4 Qh4 16. Nd2 Be6 17. Nc7 Rac8 18. Nxe6 fxe6 19. g3 Qe7 20. a3
e5 21. f5 Nb8 22. Kg2 Nd7 23. b4 Kh8 24. Bc2 Nf6 25. Rc1 Rc7 26. Bb3 Rfc8
27. Rc2 a5 28. Rfc1 Qe8 29. h3 a4 30. Ba2 Re7 31. c5 dxc5 32. bxc5 Rec7 33.
Be6 Rd8 34. Qd3 g6 35. Kh2 Qc6 36. Qf3 Rf8 37. g4 Qb5 38. Qg3 Qe2+ 39. Qg2
Qe3 40. Qg3 Rxc5 41. Qxe3 dxe3 42. Nf3 Nxe4 43. Kg2 Kg7 0-1

Final Score:
Hydra 5 1/2
Adams 1/2

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 7:52 PM EDT
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Monday, 13 June 2005
The Obligatory Michael Jackson Post
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: WABC--Laura Ingram Show
Topic: Michael Jackson and Satan
The Obligatory Michael Jackson Post

The long wait is over and now we know. Michael Jackson has been ruled “not guilty” on ten separate criminal charges. The magnitude of error this blanket acquittal represents is staggering. How twelve adults could reasonably conclude that the mountain of evidence presented against Jackson was of no account what-so-ever is simply beyond understanding. Like O.J. Simpson and Robert Blake, a celebrity criminal has been set free to haunt the Golden State once again. Regrettably, America will be forced to accept this judgment as yet another example of California justice.

Let’s get one thing straight: Michael Jackson is not innocent, just “not guilty”. He is still clearly a man in the grip of evil, a slave, unwillingly or not, of Satan. Some of you might conclude that this statement is nothing more than hyperbole. It is not. I truly believe this to be the case. Why? Consider the following.

It is well know that Satan, the father of all evil, delights in mocking and perverting the goodness of God. From tempting Adam and Eve, God’s special and beloved creation, into Original Sin, to his foiled attempts to do the same with Christ, he exists only to ruin all that God does for the benefit of mankind. It is his jealousy and self-idolization that motivates him; his desire to be God rather than to serve Him.

Michael Jackson is no different. He, too, mocks God. I find it quite interesting that Jackson chose to use the terms “Jesus juice” for white wine and “Jesus blood” for red wine. Of all the possible code-names that one could create to disguise the proffering of alcohol to a child, it is curious that he would deliberately tie the name of Jesus to his crime and sin against the innocence of childhood. What could be more deliberately insulting to the sacrifice offered by Christ?

Likewise, one must consider Jackson’s appearance. Some call it “weird.” I call it a deliberate affront to God. To paraphrase Shakespeare, God gave him one face, and he made himself another. His very image is a rebellion against the wisdom of God in his creation. Satan cannot create life, he can only pervert it. Michael Jackson’s image is testimony to that fact.

Likewise, the nature of his alleged crimes is more testimony to the evil that might grip Jackson. Child predation is one of the worst of all possible human offenses. Christ himself spoke to the special place children occupied in his Sacred Heart:

“Whosoever shall receive one such child as this in my name, receiveth me. And whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but him that sent me…. And whosoever shall scandalize one of these little ones that believe in me; it were better for him that a millstone were hanged around his neck, and he were cast into the sea.” ---Mark 9: 36, 41

If the allegations against Jackson are true in fact, if not in law, and I still believe they are, he is guilty of doing far worse than just scandalizing children---he robs them of their innocence through alcohol, homosexual pornography, and worse. He is preying upon the beloved of Christ. He is elevating his own perverted pleasure above the well-being of others, in effect, elevating himself above the law of God as expressed by the Ninth Commandment.

It is for these reasons that I believe Michael Jackson to be guilty of the charges that were formerly levied against him. Of course, I fully recognize that I may be wrong, that the charges were in error and he was justly acquitted. Only God knows for sure and he will judge accordingly when the time comes. As an old-fashioned Roman Catholic, I believe in the ancient tradition of the Church Militant. This idea expresses the fundamental truth that this world is the chessboard upon which a war of good versus evil is continually waged. I believe evil has won this battle and has protected a tool of world-wide perversion. But it has not won the war. Christ will ultimately prevail. Perhaps this traumatic experience will compel Jackson to change his ways, confess his sins, and return to the Lord. Remember, even when it appeared that evil had triumphed at Calvary, with the crucifixion of Christ, it had actually lost for all time. Satan had won the battle, but lost the war by the saving sacrifice of Jesus. Let us pray that this spectacle of the Jackson trial proves the same. It’s in God’s hands now---and always was.

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 9:09 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 19 June 2005 10:58 PM EDT
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Saturday, 11 June 2005
The America-haters are at it again!
Mood:  incredulous
Now Playing: Notorius---Duran Duran
Topic: The Anti-American IFC

The Anti-Americans Are At It Again


9-11 was the Pearl Harbor of the 21st Century. Approximately 3000 innocent men, women, and children were murdered by a pack of Islama-fascists who had been fueled by a lifetime of heresy-inspired hatred for the United States of America. But instead of achieving success, these terrorists ultimately failed. Similar to December 7th, 1941, the attacks on September 11th signaled not the doom of a strong America, but the waking of a sleeping giant whose beneficent leadership had been missing from the world stage for far too long. Because of the subsequent determined leadership of President George W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, terrorist thugs, and the regimes that provide support to them, have been captured, killed, or toppled around the globe. The results have been immediate and impressive. The Middle East, now liberated from tyrannical regimes like the Taliban in Afghanistan, and Saddam Hussein in Iraq, is changing for the better. True democratic reforms are taking place, as in Iraq, weapons are being laid down, as in Libya, and even the ever turbulent relationship between Israel and the PLO has calmed greatly as regional terrorist networks are disrupted by our efforts.

This is the true legacy of 9-11. Not one of Islamic tyranny, but American liberty.

But will you hear about any of this at the proposed World Trade Center Memorial Cultural Complex, as designed by the International Freedom Center (IFC), that is to be built upon Ground Zero?

I am afraid not.

You see, a handful of America-hating Leftists have seized ideological control of IFC planning, and is proposing to build a 300,000 square foot center that does not honor the heroes and victims of 9-11, but rather seeks to ?blame America first?. As detailed in an excellent Wall Street Journal Op-Ed piece by Debra Burlingame (http://takebackthememorial.org/?p=6), the likes of prominent America-haters, such as George Soros and Eric Foner, are planning on constructing a monument that will focus upon ?man?s inhumanity to man, from Native American genocide to the lynchings and cross-burnings of the Jim Crow South, from the Third Reich?s Final Solution to the Soviet gulags and beyond.? What, exactly, does any of this have to do with 9-11? The answer, of course, is nothing. The radical anti-patriots are clearly using their favorite rhetorical tactic of ?bait and switch?, a ploy that is all too necessary for the Left when the majority of Americans don?t want to buy what they are selling. In this case, they pretend to honor the American victims of 9-11, but instead switch the discussion to their favorite hobbyhorses: alleged American failings and the trumpeting of globalism.

Needless to say, Ground Zero is not the place for such discussions. It has been consecrated by the blood of the heroes and victims of 9-11. As such, any memorial must be exclusively focused upon these patriots and the great, liberty-loving nation for which they died.

Fortunately, it is not too late to act. Visit http://takebackthememorial.com/ for how you can make a difference and prevent the enemies of America from marring what will be a hallowed site for generations to come.

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 10:46 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 19 June 2005 10:59 PM EDT
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Tuesday, 7 June 2005
A New Name for the Blog!
Mood:  bright
Now Playing: Duran Duran
Topic: Archive 1
The Forum is now The F.E.B.A.!


I have decided to rename my blog from The Forum to The F.E.B.A. What is a F.E.B.A., you ask? It is a military acronym that is short for the Forward Edge of the Battle Area. Considering the contentious nature of my posts, I thought this moniker was both more colorful and more accurate!

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 9:32 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 9 June 2010 9:03 PM EDT
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Monday, 6 June 2005
Is it News or is it Science Fiction?
Mood:  chatty
Now Playing: Duran Duran
Topic: Sci-Fi News
Is it News or is it Science Fiction?


While reading a recent issue of the always excellent Federalist Patriot, two topics caught my attention that really brought home how the modern world is on the verge of bringing ideas, formerly found in countless science fiction novels, to reality. Read the following from the FP:

"On the National Security front...

As mentioned recently in The Patriot, the U.S. Air Force has been preparing for an expected presidential directive authorizing the development and deployment of space weapons -- and eventually space forces. While the usual suspects on the Left will howl (indeed, have been howling since 1968) about the "weaponization" of space, the arguments behind the use of force in space are irresistible.

Much like the oceans, space cannot yet be permanently occupied, nor can any nation claim ownership of space. Space itself has no inherent value, except as it provides advantage on earth to those who can utilize it for economic or military reasons. The United States supports the free use of space by all, just as we support and defend freedom of the seas for all. However, the U.S. Navy exists expressly for one reason -- to take control in wartime of any portion of the seas necessary to protect our interests, and to deny enemies the use of the seas. Applying force at or from the sea to influence events on land has proven a lifesaving capability for the nation in the past.

So it must be in space. Today, more than ever, space holds strategic commercial and military importance. Even while championing freedom of space, the United States must have the ability to take control of space in wartime, to protect our interests in space, and deny it to others who would use space against us. Just as the Navy is required to apply force on the seas, space weapons and forces are needed to carry out this mission in space."


and

"In the Leftmedia's view, nothing can save us from the health insurer bogeyman except for government-provided healthcare. Apparently unbeknownst to the Times is that many states already prohibit genetic discrimination or severely restrict its uses (Congress is also debating the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act). Other laws overlooked by the Times are state laws protecting the confidentiality of genetic information; state laws restricting health insurers to using only certain underwriting criteria; and "guaranteed-issue" requirements in most states which are pursuant to federal law, but which raise premium rates. All of these effectively preclude genetic testing for health insurance in addition to the impractical cost of genetic testing."

Think of it: two hot issues of the day revolve around space warfare and genetic discrimination! Just a mere few years ago, such topics were strictly to be found between the covers of Asimov's or Locus. Now, these topics are at the center of contentious policy debates and legal battles.

I shudder to think about what we will be discussing in the not-so-distant future. Could a future headline read: Spielberg's War of the Worlds: What did he know and When did he know it? Don't laugh, it could happen....

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 11:44 PM EDT
Updated: Tuesday, 7 June 2005 8:45 PM EDT
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Monday, 16 May 2005
Wargaming, World War Two, and Evil
Mood:  incredulous
Now Playing: WBAB
Topic: Wargaming, WWII, and Evil
Wargaming, World War Two, and Evil


What is it with some people? Why is it that the concept of “evil” just does not exist in their world? How did morality become such a gray area for them? Questions such these began unexpectedly popping into my head after reading about a new World War Two simulation from Relic, a producer of many popular PC real-time strategy titles. Usually war, especially World War Two, has a way of putting morality into focus. But such does not seem to be the case over at Relic where their new game project seems to be muddled in moral relativism.

Let me explain.

In a recent Gamespot.com interview (http://www.gamespot.com/pc/strategy/companyofheroes/preview_6124417.html), Relic producer John Johnson described Company of Heroes, a real-time strategy (RTS) game that looks to be visually spectacular. The game’s engine plans to make use of cutting-edge graphics technology that will serve to raise the bar of visual realism to lofty heights. In addition to visual FX trailblazing, the game will also incorporate a set of novel RTS features, such as semi-autonomous soldiers, that Mr. Johnson hopes will revolutionize the tired RTS genre.

In all honesty, the game sounds good. Unfortunately, the game is not the problem---the Gamespot preview is the problem.

As a wargamer, I take issue with the following statement made by the writer of the Gamespot preview:

“But why World War II? Isn't ‘World War II strategy game’ a synonym for ‘slow-paced, overly complicated game where you fight drawn-out battles by crunching numbers and moving tiny chits on an abstract-looking board’?”

Um, no. In fact, after reading this statement, one is hard pressed to discern whether the article is referring to paper wargames or antiquated PC wargames. Regardless of which mode of wargaming is actually being referred to, the statement is still simply wrong. Many exciting and easy to learn WWII strategy games, on the PC and off, have been released in recent years. From the much-lauded board wargame Ardennes '44, to the devilishly addictive PC title Panzer General of 1995, World War Two wargaming has long since removed itself from the realm of “slow-paced, overly complicated” gaming. The truth of the matter is that a straw-man argument is being made here. Relic has decided to release yet another World War Two RTS game into an already dangerously bloated market. So, I suspect, in seeking justification for their efforts, an argument is put forth whereby Company of Heroes is contrasted against imaginary opponents of inferior quality. The truth of the matter is that, based upon information so far released, Company of Heroes seems little more than Battlefront’s Combat Mission series with wickedly enhanced graphics set in a RTS environment. There is nothing wrong with this, but do not try to make the game into something it clearly is not.

I do question the wisdom of adding another World War Two title to the market. Since the release of Saving Private Ryan, it would seem that every game producer who has seen the movie is hell-bent on releasing his own game version. As a result, there have been a veritable flood of titles that run the gamut of every conceivable style of gaming, from RTS to FPS. Now, as a wargamer and military history enthusiast, I enjoy World War Two as much as the next guy, after all, it was the largest, most destructive conflict in human history. But enough already!!! You know, there are other wars to explore!

But my purpose here is not to attack a game that, in all fairness, is only in a pre-alpha release stage. Nor is my purpose to disparage a period of history that has offered much fodder for compelling gaming experiences. I needed to speak out because the aforementioned example of corporate bombast rankled my sensibilities as a grognard. However, the following statements rankled my sensibilities as an American.

During the interview, John Johnson stated that "World War II is modern mythology". World War Two as “modern mythology”? This is a questionable observation. Perhaps World War Two as legend would be a more accurate comment as the deeds of the Greatest Generation have been welcomed with worldwide fame and recognition. World War Two as mythology would suggest that Mr. Johnson questions the reality of those larger-than-life heroes and epic battles against malevolence that shaped the world in which we live. Surely he doesn’t believe that?

But perhaps he does. Read on:

"Unlike something like Star Wars, the war doesn't have clear-cut good and evil sides. This is what makes the war interesting."

I had to read that twice the first time I came across it. “The war doesn't have clear-cut good and evil sides”? Could he possibly be suggesting that the Nazis occupied a moral gray area? That the Imperial Japanese were misunderstood? That Hitler did not butcher over six million Jews, and countless millions of Russians? That the Rape of Nanking never occurred? How can anyone believe that World War Two lacked clear-cut heroes and villains, that there was a moral equivalence between the Axis and Allies? I would expect such a statement from a public school student who has had his mind muddled by years of a politically correct curriculum, not by an adult who is presumably well-educated and, based upon the nature of his latest project, well-versed in World War Two history.

World War Two was the last “good war” whereby everyone knew, at least then if not now, why the war was necessary. England and America were fighting to put an end to specific forces of tyranny that, for all intents and purposes, was the closest this world has ever seen to the massed forces of Hell being unleashed upon the globe. Our foes sought to conquer, we sought to liberate. Our foes gleefully bathed in the blood of their victims, we sought to heal their wounds. Our foes fought for plunder and pillage; we fought for a better world.

Now, now, I can hear many of you protesting that not every German or Japanese soldier was evil, that not every Allied soldier was virtuous. Of course, such a point is obvious. But when examining the nature and motivations of our Axis enemies vis-a-vis those of the Allies, a clear distinction can be made (with the exception of the pitiful Russian people who suffered evil from within and without): the Allies sought peace and self-determination, the Axis sought war and subjugation.

Statements of moral ambiguity greatly concern me, especially when the ambiguity concerns an issue of manifest clarity. If we are not able to say with confidence that something is “good” or something “bad”, that something is “right” and something else “wrong”, then we are truly lost souls, forever inhabiting a shadow-realm of moral relativism where the meaning of “virtue” shifts like sand, and “right reason” becomes a meaningless contradiction of terms. Evil beckons to all of us from the dark corners of our world and when we are unable to use God-given Reason and Natural Law, when we become morally vacuous, then Evil fills that void and a Hitler or a Tojo rise to power, a Buchenwald is built, or a Nanking is destroyed. And that must never be allowed to happen again otherwise the massive sacrifices of the Greatest Generation were truly in vain, a thought too disturbing to even contemplate. No clear-cut good and evil sides, Mr. Johnson? Nothing could be further from the truth, and as wargamers, we are honor-bound to remember that. So continue to push your Tigers and your Shermans on the simulated battlefield, but remember: which side you’re on in real life makes for all the difference in the world.

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 1:19 AM EDT
Updated: Monday, 16 May 2005 1:21 AM EDT
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Tuesday, 10 May 2005
They Still Don't Get It!
Mood:  incredulous
Now Playing: Mostly Autumn---Catch the Spirit
Topic: Vox Populi
092029 MAY 05

They Still Don’t Get It!

The other day, while watching FOX News Watch, an interesting topic came up for debate. Recently, CBS News posted some of its lowest Nielsen ratings in its history! Likewise, NBC News also saw its viewership decline, with ABC receiving the best news: stagnant viewership with no appreciable change. Print media has also suffered similar declines in readership. A spirited argument promptly resulted amongst the assembled media experts with each offering a reason why the mainstream media (henceforth MSM) were doing so poorly among contemporary audiences. Some offered that hard news was losing out to softer entertainment news. One suggested that the medium was to blame---print and TV was just unable to compete with the instant delivery that wireless devices and the internet could offer. That was the best answer, but still short of the truth.

The reality of the matter is that Generation X’ers just do not trust the MSM!

Once upon a time, people were content for heavyweight reporters to prepare and package the news for them. Murrow, Cronkite, and Rather were considered inerrable. Likewise, CBS, NBC, and ABC, or, for that matter, the New York Times, Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times, were considered to be the paragon of veracity and analysis. The American people were content to have others do the hard work of gathering the facts and presenting the core issues that were so crucial to understanding the events of the day. After all, what else could they do? Unless they were prepared to go out and gather the facts themselves, their hands were pretty much tied. The professional news outlets had presented a fait accompli.

This is no longer the case.

Gen X has resources available to it that those of the Baby Boomer Generation could scarcely dream. With an ordinary PC and an internet connection, or even an AM radio, one is now capable of ferreting out the core facts for himself by way of Alternative Media. No longer is he forced to be satisfied with the selective reporting of a particular name-brand journalist. Now, an individual is free to research a topic to his heart’s content with the massive resources available via the internet. Want to know what is happening in Iraq? Do not take Koeppel’s word for it, check it out yourself. With websites such as GlobalSecurity.org, one is able to get a detailed review of the military situation that provides far greater detail than anything ABC is willing to offer on their night newscast. Want to know what really is behind the ethics investigation into Congressman Delay? Check out FederalistPatriot.us or www.DrudgeReport.com for some snappy investigative work into the issue.

The point is this: the mainstream media is redundant at best, obsolete at worst. Gen X’ers can get to the heart of a matter quicker, and with greater depth, via alternative media than an entire newsroom of reporters could do with an unlimited budget.

As a bonus, via the interactivity of the internet, we can now have the news custom-tailored to our liking too. Superficially, this includes the obvious tailoring to fit an ideological perspective. With the recent meltdown of the MSM, whereby major news networks openly attempted to skew the coverage of the recent presidential elections to the Left, most net-savvy news junkies now know that the major media outlets are no more objective, or biased for that matter, than any other source available to them via the World Wide Web. If your news is going to be spun, you might as well as have it spun in your direction.

However, this tailoring also extends beyond the ideological. With the increasing capabilities of smart search agents, a person can now specify exactly what type of news he find relevant and wishes to read. Politics, entertainment, international news, even the much neglected black sheep of the family, science news, can now be culled and emailed to a specific user on a daily, if not hourly, basis. Needless to say, this is an ability that the MSM will never be able to match. With the less flexible nature of print and TV, the rule of the day is “one size fits all”. This is a deficit that may well prove fatal as interactive news becomes more powerful with every passing news cycle.

But there is another aspect to alternative media that the MSM will find increasing difficult to match as well. This ace-up-the-sleeve of alternative media is interactivity. That is, with talk radio and the internet, one is able not only to read about the news, but also contribute his own point-of-view for others to consider. Whether he calls into a talk radio program, posts a message at a news website, or adds his own thoughts to a blog, he can directly participate in the news process. Need I remind anyone that it was a blogger who broke Rather-gate? THAT is the power of alternative media. The news is no longer a passive experience; quite the opposite, it has become an active, give-and-take, process where every man can be his own Thomas Paine.

These are the reasons why the MSM is losing disciples like never before. In a turn of events quite the opposite of anything George Orwell might have envisioned, the power of the people has come to eclipse the might once wielded by the so-called Fourth Estate. Not content to be told the news, the American people are making the news---yet another example of what it so right about the American experience. This great nation has shown the world the true power of the Vox Populi! And that, dear readers, is something the mainstream media may never be able to contend with….

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 12:36 AM EDT
Updated: Monday, 16 May 2005 1:24 AM EDT
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Sunday, 24 April 2005
Return of the King
Mood:  celebratory
Now Playing: Holst---The Planets
Topic: Hamemus Papam





The Return of the King!


We are very happy in seeing Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger become our new Pope Benedict XVI. It is the dawn of a new day for the eternal and universal Church, one that will offer many opportunities and be fraught with challenges. I believe Pope Benedict will prove more than equal to the task that is before him. May his pontificate be fruitful and blessed for many, many years!

"And I say to thee: That thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." ---Matthew 16:18

Please say a rosary for his successful pontificate. Not sure how? Visit: Virtual Rosary



Posted by Wargamer Scott at 10:36 PM EDT
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Tuesday, 19 April 2005
On a clear night....
Mood:  spacey
Now Playing: Holst---The Planets
Topic: First Astro-photos
The following are my first-ever astronomy photographs. I took them using a Meade 8" SCT and a Nikon Coolpix 4500 digital camera. The first two shots of the moon came out fine, albeit there is room for improvement:









Unfortunately, my shot of Jupiter was a disaster:





Clearly, I have a lot to learn. But one thing is clear: JUPITER WILL YET BE MINE!!!!!


Posted by Wargamer Scott at 1:10 AM EDT
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Tuesday, 12 April 2005
Fort Sumter and the Doctrine of States' Rights
Mood:  on fire
Now Playing: Eddie Condon's Dixieland All-Stars
Topic: Sumter and States' Rights





Fort Sumter and the Doctrine of States? Rights

April 12, 2005, will mark the 144th anniversary of the start of the American Civil War (henceforth ACW), also know as the War Between the States, and the War of Southern Secession. When it was all over, over 600,000 Americans would be dead. Ironically, many of the issues that sparked the blaze were not resolved at the end of the war, but continue to linger with us to this very day---such as the issue of States? Rights.

But first, some history.

One could argue that the ACW actually started on December 20, 1860 when South Carolina, distraught over the election of Abraham Lincoln, formerly passed an Order of Secession, a document remarkable for its lengthy legalistic rationale; in many ways, it is a strictly Southern Declaration of Independence. Contained within it are the justifications for the state?s drastic steps:

?The ends for which the Constitution was framed are declared by itself to be to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.

These ends it endeavored to accomplish by a Federal Government, in which each State was recognized as an equal, and had separate control over its own institutions?.

We affirm that these ends for which this Government was instituted have been defeated, and the Government itself has been made destructive of them by the action of the non-slaveholding States. Those States have assume the right of deciding upon the propriety of our domestic institutions; and have denied the rights of property established in fifteen of the States and recognized by the Constitution?.?


Slavery, the blight that has plagued our fair land since its earliest days, reared its ugly head to ignite a war unlike any other this nation had witnessed. South Carolina, not willing to be consoled with an electoral loss that signaled a shift of power from South to North, felt itself obliged to do the unthinkable and leave the Union:

?We, therefore, the People of South Carolina, by our delegates in Convention assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, have solemnly declared that the Union heretofore existing between this State and the other States of North America, is dissolved, and that the State of South Carolina has resumed her position among the nations of the world, as a separate and independent State; with full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent States may of right do.?

Whether or not South Carolina?s decision to secede was rash, and I believe it was, the time for calm discourse had passed.

Events would now move quickly.

On December 26, Major Robert Anderson, seeing storm clouds on the horizon, prudently moved his small force from Fort Moultrie to the more easily defended Fort Sumter. The first shots would ring out approximately two weeks later on January 7, 1861, after Anderson had refused the demand of South Carolina?s governor, Francis Pickens, that the garrison surrender. Star of the West, a vessel laden with provisions, was fired upon as to prevent the victualing of Fort Sumter. Fortunately, the shots caused only minor damage to the vessel, but did force its withdrawal.

In a most remarkable show of restraint, President James Buchanan did not retaliate. However, his show of magnanimity would do nothing the stop the deepening crisis. More states soon followed South Carolina?s example. Mississippi on January 9, 1861; Florida on January 10; Alabama on January 11; Georgia on January 19; and Louisiana on January 26. On February 4, the Confederate States of American (CSA) became a political reality.

By March 4, when Abraham Lincoln took formal possession of the White House, six more states has seceded and only two forts, including Sumter, remained in federal control in all of the newly-created CSA. Lincoln, like his predecessor Buchanan, was determined not to provoke a war that he knew would tear the nation apart, perhaps for all time. As such, on April 8, with Fort Sumter running dangerously low on supplies, he notified Pickens that he would be sending a fleet of supply vessels, guaranteeing a cargo strictly limited to foodstuffs, with the intention of buying time for further negotiations.

On April 11, CSA President Jefferson Davis ordered General Pierre G. T. Beauregard to demand the fort?s evacuation before another attempt at provisioning was made. The unfortunate Anderson and his isolated men had their backs to the wall. His reply to Beauregard was that if he had not received victuals nor instructions from Washington by April 15, he would be forced to capitulate.

The CSA was not willing to wait.

On April 12, 1861, at 4:30am, like the first thunderclap of a long-expected summer storm, the war that all dreaded but none could stop arrived when Fort Johnson fired the initial volley in a bombardment that would last 34 hours. Ironically, Lincoln?s provisioning fleet arrived the very same day, but due to the intensity of the bombardment, was powerless to complete its mission. On April 14, Anderson surrendered the fort without the loss of a single man.

On April 15, a state of war was declared by the Lincoln administration, but no real fighting would take place until First Manassas, on July 21. But that is a story for another time?.

There are many tragedies to be found in the ACW. But perhaps the greatest is that the war would serve to undermine the cherished American principle of States? Rights, a doctrine that finds expression in the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution:

The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

This idea was not some novelty snuck into the blueprint for our government, but a long-held belief dating back to the earliest days of the Republic. As Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence:

?We do assert and declare these colonies to be free and independent states, and that as free and independent states they shall hereafter have the power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do.?

Likewise, the Articles of Confederation states:

"Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated to the United States."

Clearly, the first two forms of government that this nation created distinctly mentioned the fact that state government was held to be the primary form of government, and a national authority could only exist with the consent of the states. Furthermore, these states retained their right to reassume complete sovereignty at any time they deemed it necessary for the welfare of their people. A number of states even included explicit statements of state sovereignty in their constitutional ratification documents. New York State is a perfect example (emphasis mine):

?We, the delegates of the people of the state of New York...Do declare and make known,-

That all power is originally vested in, and consequently derived from, the people, and that government is instituted by them for their common interest, protection, and security.

That the enjoyment of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, are essential rights, which every government ought to respect and preserve.

That the powers of government may be reassumed by the people whensoever it shall become necessary to their happiness; that every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by the said Constitution clearly delegated to the Congress of the United States, or the departments of the government thereof, remains to the people of the several states, or to their respective state governments, to whom they may have granted the same?.?


It strain?s credulity to argue that states, which have traditionally maintained themselves to be the principle form of government among the American people, would suddenly enter into a compact which demanded a complete and perpetual surrender of power to a distant federal authority.

I think it was the great John C. Calhoun, having served as both senator and vice president during his political career, who best got to the heart of the issue during the famous Calhoun-Webster Debates of 1850 (Calhoun was so gravely ill at the time, that he had to be carried into the Senate Chamber on a stretcher):

?That the Government claims, and practically maintains the right to decide in the last resort, as to the extent of its powers, will scarcely be denied by any one conversant with the political history of the country. That it also claims
the right to resort to force to maintain whatever power it claims, against all opposition, is equally certain?Now, I ask, what limitation can possibly be placed upon the powers of a government claiming and
exercising such rights? And, if none can be, how can the separate governments of the States maintain and protect the powers reserved to them by the constitution?or the people of the several States maintain those which are reserved to them, and among others, the sovereign powers by
which they ordained and established, not only their separate State Constitutions and Governments, but also the Constitution and Government of the United States? But, if they have no constitutional means of maintaining them against the right claimed by this Government, it necessarily follows, that they hold them at its pleasure and discretion,
and that all the powers of the system are in reality
concentrated in it. It also follows, that the character of the Government has been changed in consequence, from a federal republic, as it originally came from the hands of its
framers, into a great national consolidated democracy.?


Calhoun was correct in his logical assertion: power that is held only at the behest of a higher authority signifies no power at all. To acknowledge a political system whereby the federal government supercedes all state authority is to relegate the states a status as little more than adjuncts to federal authority, a proposition the framers of the Constitution would have found ludicrous.

Furthermore, it is interesting to note that the idea of secession was not something first advocated by the CSA, in fact, it was contemplated on more than one occasion by various regions of the nation. For example, New England twice considered secession, first in 1814 when New England threatened to leave the Union due to economic fallout from the War of 1812, and again later when John Quincy Adams argued for the secession of New England in opposition to admitting Texas to the Union. This demonstrates that state sovereignty was not a crutch for Southern aspirations, but a form of legitimate political redress recognized by the entire nation.

Unfortunately, the de facto, if not de jure, end to States? Rights would come from the very war that the doctrine was used to justify. States? Rights had become synonymous with Southern slavery and secession, and, as such, was quickly cast to the wayside by a victorious North. After the end of the Civil War, the United States Supreme Court, along with an expanding federal government, had begun chipping away at the Tenth Amendment, rendering it little more a political lame duck all but put out of its misery. Unfortunately, the process continues to this very day (the most recent example being Roper v. Simmons whereby the court has now decreed that states are incapable of even establishing their own criteria for a capital offense). The very fears that so many statesmen had articulated so passionately over the course of this nation?s history have finally come to pass.

Fortunately, this nation has often proved itself to be most resilient. There is hope, and, yes, even a few signs, that States? Rights will be restored to their proper place of reverence in American political thought and jurisprudence. But for this to happen, federal authority will need to be significantly rolled-back, a process not easily accomplished as those who have power usually resist parting with it. Our hope lies, as it always has, with the American people. Once again, I defer to the comments of John C. Calhoun:

?Besides this cry of Union comes commonly from those
whom we cannot believe to be sincere. It usually comes from our assailants. But we cannot believe them to be sincere; for, if they loved the Union, they would necessarily be devoted to the constitution. It made the Union,?and to destroy the constitution would be to destroy the Union.
But the only reliable and certain evidence of devotion to the constitution is, to abstain, on the one hand, from violating It, and to repel, on the other, all attempts to violate it. It is only by faithfully performing these high duties that the constitution can be preserved, and with it the Union.?


One can hope that such incisive words as these will one day ring again across the American landscape.





Please support the Civil War Preservation Trust, an organization dedicated to preserving Civil War battlefields around the nation:

CWPT


Posted by Wargamer Scott at 12:41 AM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 13 April 2005 12:52 AM EDT
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Thursday, 7 April 2005
Remember the dead of the Yamassee Massacre
Mood:  irritated
Topic: Yamassee Massacre
The Yamassee Massacre


On April 15th, 1715, hundreds of men, women, and children, all settlers in South Carolina, were massacred by the Yamassee Indian tribe. Please remember the dead of this brutal attack as we mark the 290th anniversary of what has come to be known as the Yamassee Massacre.

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 10:19 PM EDT
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Tuesday, 5 April 2005
The Death of Pope John Paul II
Mood:  blue
Now Playing: Ken Burns Jazz Collection
Topic: Death of the Pope




042221APR05


The King Passes



On Friday, April 1, 2005, Pope John Paul II passed away after serving 24 years as the Vicar of Christ, marking his as the second longest pontificate in history. He will be missed. May a flight of angels sing him to his well-deserved glory at the right hand of Christ.

Born Karol Jozef Wojtyla, Pope John Paul II was a truly remarkable man. Not only did he ably serve as shepherd to the Catholic Church?s estimated 1.6 billion faithful, a number unmatched by any other religious denomination in the world, but he also served a pivotal role, along with Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher (the so-called ?Holy Trinity? of the Cold War) in bringing down the Soviet Union (a.k.a., the Evil Empire). In fact, I would argue that it is proof of the efficacious intersession of the Holy Spirit that the College of Cardinals broke with an hundred-plus year old tradition of appointing Italian popes and instead appointed a little-known Polish bishop who would literally change the history of the world.

That is the power of Christ in our world.

I will greatly miss this pope partly because I have no recollection of any other, a plight common for Gen Xers. However, I will also greatly miss his concerted effort to speak to the youths of the world, to encourage them to pursue a Holy Orders vocation, a message completely non-existent from any other source. Finally, he will be grieved because of his firm defense of traditional Catholic values. He was and is a bedrock of morality that all the principalities of this world could never shake. In short, he was the living embodiment of 2000 years of little-changing Roman Catholic Tradition.

Pope John Paul II: proof of the power of God at work in the world.

Please pray a Rosary for the quick ascent of his soul. Not sure how? Check out:

Virtual Rosary

Also, pray thusly:

Father, eternal shepherd, hear the prayers of your people for your servant John Paul II, who governed your Church with love. In your mercy bring him with the flock entrusted to his care to the reward you have promised your faithful servants. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen

Source: Roman Missal

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 10:25 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 7 April 2005 10:21 PM EDT
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Something to ponder
Mood:  chatty
Now Playing: Ken Burn's Jazz
Topic: Something to ponder
Any thoughts on this paragraph? There is a lot here to digest and debate.

--------------------------------------------

"These things I believe: That government should butt out. That freedom is our most precious commodity and if we are not eternally vigilant, government will take it all away. That individual freedom demands individual responsibility. That government is not a necessary good but an unavoidable evil. That the executive branch has grown too strong, the judicial branch too arrogant and the legislative branch too stupid. That political parties have become close to meaningless. That government should work to insure the rights of the individual, not plot to take them away. That government should provide for the national defense and work to insure domestic tranquility. That foreign trade should be fair rather than free. That America should be wary of foreign entanglements. That the tree of liberty needs to be watered from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. That guns do more than protect us from criminals; more importantly, they protect us from the ongoing threat of government. That states are the bulwark of our freedom. That states should have the right to secede from the Union. That once a year we should hang someone in government as an example to his fellows." --Lyn Nofziger


Posted by Wargamer Scott at 10:09 PM EDT
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Friday, 1 April 2005
The Das Boot newsletter
Mood:  party time!
Now Playing: Jimmy Buffet's Greatest Hits
Topic: Silent Hunter 3





Have you purchased your U-Boat yet?!?

Silent Hunter 3 is yet another awesome and groundbreaking game to be released in the past six months. This simulation, of World War Two U-boat warfare, is so realistic you can almost feel the salt spray upon your face!

Unfortunately, the "game" (and I use that term lightly) comes with a ridiculously uninformative manual. Therefore, in the interests of helping out fellow kapitans, I have put together a brief 5-page newsletter called Das Boot. It is a free 1.5mb ZIP file located on my War and Chess page.

I hope it proves helpful!

For more information, visit the Silent Hunter 3 website at: Silent Hunter 3



Posted by Wargamer Scott at 3:12 AM EST
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It was the best of times, it was the worst of times
Mood:  blue
Now Playing: Haydn---The Seven Last Words
Topic: Terri and America
010102APRIL05

It was the Best of Times, It was the Worst of Times



Terri Schindler-Schiavo is now at rest. May her soul find repose in the eternal glory of Christ the Lord. For us, however, there is no rest. We must soldier on with the Church Militant, and try to make the best of this imperfect nation. To do that, we must carefully examine what has transpired these last few weeks.

Much of what happened represents the worst of contemporary America. To begin with we have Michael Schiavo, a husband who, despite a continued state of matrimony with Terri, has lived with and had children by another woman. Also, despite being awarded a large sum of money for Terri’s care, he has refused therapy and diagnostic tests for his wife over the last few years, denying her any opportunity for improvement. Finally, in spite of Terri’s loving parents who desired to continue caring for their daughter, paying all expenses out of pocket if necessary, Michael has arbitrarily concluded that it would be more merciful (for him, no doubt) to starve his “wife” to death. Thus we have every possible flaw in Michael: he is selfish, inconsiderate, and unable to maintain a vow---flaws all too common in the “self-actuated” individual of modern America.

The courts are also the villains in this story. At a minimum, judges, at both the state and federal levels, have shown a slavish devotion not to the welfare of the people, but to bureaucratic mindlessness. These (appropriately) black-roped civil servants, who in the past have had no qualms about over-riding existing laws and procedures, have suddenly refused to reconsider the legalities that were very literally a matter of life or death for a citizen. Hallowed declarations, such as the inalienable rights of life, liberty, and happiness, were conveniently forgotten. Likewise, procedural and substantive due process were cast to the wayside. And, of course, none of these criticisms even consider the outlandish notion of appointing an estranged husband with a decided conflict of interest as a legal guardian, or accepting hearsay as the legally-binding death wish of an uncommunicative woman, despite testimony to the contrary.

Yes, there is much to be ashamed of here.

But there is also much room for hope.

Only in America could the plight of an “ordinary” woman, with no political power, no Hollywood glitz, gather so much support from all across the land. Men and women who never met Terri rallied to her cause, determined to do everything in their power to save her life. Likewise, politicians, from state legislators to the President of the United States himself, used the machinery of government in an attempt to protect a woman who could project neither political power nor hire a single lobbyist. And while some may question if everything that could be done was done, what matters is that the name Terri Schindler-Schivano rang in the corridors of power. In a world that seems to embrace death with wanton abandon, America, at least, still values life and fights to protect it. It is comforting to know that one of the elements that made this nation a beacon to the world still burns within us.

Likewise, there is even hope for the courts. Clearly, the judicial system has been slowly sliding into a legal tradition that is openly inimical to the values of the American people as expressed by the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Rulings like Roe v. Wade, which fabricate political theory to embrace murder, and Roper v Simmons, which has openly declared that European law trumps constitutional law, demonstrates that the American judicial system is in a state of chaos. Calls for judicial reform have been made, but little action has taken place, either through timidity or due to Democrat stonewalling of strict constructionist nominees by President Bush. I predict that the inept handling of Terri’s legal plight will be the spark that finally lights the fuse of judicial reform. She will put a very real human face on an issue that, until now, was more philosophical than practical to the majority of Americans.

She will also serve as yet another pillar for the Pro-Life movement. The spectacle of national outrage at the complacent acceptance of death by starvation had to be quite a shock to modern Cathars who worship at the black altar of convenient death. For far too long have these latter-day Albigenses moved in the shadows, promoting death via legislation and judicial fiat. Now they have been thrust into the spotlight, a situation that must be most uncomfortable for them. They are exposed, black hood and all. Now they and their specious arguments can be defeated.

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” wrote Charles Dickens. His famous statement clearly applies to our time as much as it did to the French Revolution. There is much to fear in this world, but there is also much hope. And I find it supremely appropriate that this lesson was taught unexpectedly from a nondescript hospital bed in Florida by a woman who had no voice of her own.

Posted by Wargamer Scott at 2:40 AM EST
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