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Bryan Strawser

New Bedford Buries Five Fishermen

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 2, 2005

New Bedford, Massachusetts, just twenty miles from my home, buried five of their own last week in the worst loss of a fishing vessel in nearly fifteen years:

Five fishermen lost at sea when their boat capsized in a storm were remembered as heroes Sunday in a memorial service that also touched on the question of whether fishing regulations may have unduly put them at risk.

About 300 friends, family and politicians including U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy filled the 173-year-old Seamen’s Bethel to honor the sacrifices of men who accepted the risks of the sea to make a living and feed others.

”Five more men of courage and determination have gone from our midst and will not return to shore,” the Rev. Kenneth Garrett, the church’s chaplain, said from a wooden pulpit carved in the shape of a ship prow.

”I often wonder what is the true price of a pound of scallops,” said Christopher Gaudiello, a fisherman who was a friend of one of the victims.

The Dec. 20 loss of the boat Northern Edge was the worst loss of life aboard a single vessel at sea in New England since six crew members of the Gloucester-based Andrea Gail died in the ”Perfect Storm” in 1991.

Swells reaching 15 feet high rolled the Northern Edge onto its side, spilling the scalloper’s crew into the ocean about 45 miles southeast of Nantucket. Lost were Capt. Carlos Lopes; Ray Richards; Glen Crowley; Juan Flores; and Eric Guillen.

Senator Kennedy was also on hand and spoke of the call of the sea:

Kennedy spoke of the passion his brother, former President John F. Kennedy, felt for the sea a passion he said the crew of the Northern Edge shared.

”The call of the sea is strong and irresistible, even with the knowledge of that danger,” Kennedy said.

For whatever reason, I have spent the last few days re-reading Sebastian Junger’s incredible novel The Perfect Storm. If you’ve not read it, you should – it’s a fascinating look at the lives that modern day fisherman lead – and the incredibly dangerous world that they work in.

Filed Under: New England

2005 Mobile Technology Wishlist

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 2, 2005

At jkOnTheRun, James writes of his wishlist for Mobile Technology in 2005. My favorite wishlist item of his:

Apple iTablet.

I would love to see Apple come out with a Tablet PC based on OS X. My reasoning is somewhat devious- in addition to being curious what sort of Tablet Apple would release (and it would be innovative no doubt), it would also be the perfect vehicle to bring the Tablet PC concept to the masses. Apple knows how to market and I am confident they would show a lot of consumers how a Tablet can benefit them, something MS and the Tablet PC OEMs don’t seem to know how to do. It would create huge excitement in a genre that needs it desperately.

I can only hope this comes true!

JK, by the way, is hands down the best mobile technology weblog on the web today.

Filed Under: Technology

Socialist Alliance: “The US is incapable of feeling remorse, sympathy…”

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 2, 2005

Over at the Tsunami Tragedy Blog, sponsored by the Socialist Alliance of Queensland, comes another wonderful and helpful post:

Like any bully the United States takes pleasure out of destroying other people’s things. Like any true sociopath the US is incapable of feeling remorse, sympathy, or of learning from it’s mistakes. Like any true psychopath the US cannot grieve for the people of South Asia. The United States can only see bottom lines and profit margins.

Is Coca-Cola donating free Coke to the survivors? Are Reebok and Nike donating free shoes? Is Wal-Mart pitching in? Well, no. But, the United States is forming a Relief Coalition.

This is sick.

Oh, the bully must be in charge. The sociopath must have things his way. The psychopath will crush all opposition. And if you don’t want to play with him, then he’ll take his ball and go home.

News reports state that American troops will be sent into Thailand. Oh, that’s great. Another front on the war on terror? Time to clean up against the rebel Muslims in the South of the country?

I guess it’s damned if we do – damned if we don’t. A few days ago, this blog wrote, quite strongly, that we weren’t doing enough – now they’re criticizing us for sending Marines and others over there to help. A no win situation?

Hypocritical, I call them.

Filed Under: Moonbats

Moonbat News

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 1, 2005

I note that the domain moonbatnews.com is available.

Anyone interested in helping with a group blog to showcase nothing but their own comments, news, and photographs?

Could be alot of fun. Leave a comment if you’re interested.

Filed Under: Blogging, Moonbats

Wading with the Left

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 1, 2005

Over at Chapomatic, Chap has gone wading with the Left over at left2right.

I particularly liked this broadside:

Okay, Frankly0, how do you arrange for such purchases? Where does the money go? How does it get funneled? Since Congress hasn’t made a separate appropriation, who gets money taken from them to make it work? What needs to be bought and how do we get it there? Since the strike group is racing at top speed, their logistic capability will be limited to equipment on hand until they get boots on the ground. Who writes the contract to lease the ships for the heavy lift?

Wouldn’t it make sense that these types of questions take more than thirty seconds to answer?

Even if you were correct about the reason for the money going to a larger number, I get a similar answer timewise using anecdotal experience and rules of thumb. Would it not make good fiducial sense to figure out where to spend the money so that the people who have that money taken from them (me, for instance) get that money used effectively? I haven’t checked with more than two of my NGO friends, but they also have a finite time frame to get into gear as well–unless they’re already on the ground it takes time to start rolling and flowing logistics.

[…]

Is that going to be automagically all better now that some hubris-laden arrogant functionary at the UN decided to publicly complain that he didn’t get everything he wanted?

Has your heart become so hard that you are unable to see any competence or good in others?

I’m glad he’s on our side.

Filed Under: Moonbats

The Imperial War Wizard George II

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 1, 2005

Over at that Home of the Moonbats, ZNet Blogs, comes this gem from the comments:

The obscene corination [sic — bryan] of the messianic Imperial War Wizard George II, and the sick spectale of some military “ball” surrounding him that costs more than the “aid” they were shamed into grudgingly giving, is the equivalent of having the slaves in the old/new/same South having to do soft shoe for massa, while death and destruction abound. Again, I am ashamed to be an American, and are doomed to be so for the forseeable future.

“Imperial War Wizard George II”?!

And that, my friends, is the platform behind which the left believes they will conquer in the 2006 midterm elections.

Anyone want to make a bet?

Filed Under: Moonbats

The Dissident Frogman

by Bryan Strawser · Jan 1, 2005

Over at Trying to Grok, Sarah, in the following post, linked to the Dissident Frogman:

In September, my mother came to visit. We went to France, Italy, and Flossenburg. In France, my relatives asked what I wanted to do there. I said I wanted to see the American soldiers at St. Avold. They said, “Oh, do Americans work there?” To which I solemnly replied, “No, I’d like to see the soldiers who died for us.” I wanted to see Joe and Tommy.

I had never read the Dissident Frogman before this morning — in the post linked by Sarah above he has a few words about “Joe and Tommy”:

There’s nothing really spectacular on “Utah”, “Omaha”, “Gold”, “Juno” and “Sword”. Just a few, discreet monuments in the dunes.

With names. Lots of names.

However, once you’ve been told – by those who survived – what happened here, it changes everything. On Charlie, Dog, Easy and Fox sectors at “Bloody Omaha” for instance, took place one of the most outstanding exploit of the liberation of Europe, carried out by 34,000 young – so young – heroes. They won, but many were wounded and many died.

To the eye, Bloody Omaha is just a sandy beach.

No white crosses, no huge memorial, no visible signs of those who sacrificed themselves and fought for freedom. No sign of those who fell for it.

Yet I remember “Joe” and “Tommy”, heroes with no names but so many faces, who came here one day, fighters for a just cause, in a liberation army.

I was told about them, I read books about them, I saw pictures of them, and I watched interviews and movies. I heard their stories. The Joe and Tommy who got through this, told me about their brothers who didn’t.

And they show me why they didn’t fall in vain.

[…]

The kid I was that day on Omaha beach wanted to thank Joe and Tommy, but couldn’t.

More than 30 years later, having reach adulthood with their memory still fresh in my mind and not besmirched by their progeny, I understand I can.

And I hope I did.

I am Joe, I am Tommy.

Of all of the places in Europe I would like to see on my first vacation there – the only one I could not stand to miss is Normandy.

Filed Under: Military

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