One Car Purchased, One to Go

Back in early November I mentioned that I was in the market to buy two cars—cheap and preferably with cash. One for me. One for FOU #2 who turned 16 back in August.

I finally got around to buying one the other day. When I first bought it, I thought it was for the child, but after driving it around for a week or so, I decided I liked it too much to give it to a mere teenager. So I’m still looking for something for her.

I found one of these, pretty darned cheap.

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Now to add one more to the fleet.

Justice Never Goes Out of Style

Even if nehru jackets do.

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The first season of The Mod Squad recently came out on DVD. This show debuted when I was nine and I love it. I had a major crush on Peggy Lipton. And I wanted to be “Pete Cochran,” the character played by Michael Cole.

See the silk neckerchief sported by Cole in the photo above? Had some! Wore ’em!

After the show ended, I never noticed any of these guys in anything in again until Clarence Williams III popped up as Prince’s abusive Dad in Purple Rain.

Although I see from IMDB that Peggy Lipton has stayed fairly busy and was a regular on the two seasons of Twin Peaks (a show I never bothered to watch though it generated tons of buzz. David Lynch gives me the creeps) and was in a few episodes of Alias.

I see Williams III makes a small uncredited appearance in Denzel Washington’s highly-praised new film, American Gangster.

About Last Night

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It seems to me (and a lot of the commentariat, apparently) that, if nothing else, last night’s results make a John McCain nomination more likely.

 The strong Huckabee showing is sort of good-news-bad-news in my view.

Just a few months ago, lots and lots of oh-so-smart politicos were saying “the Christian right is dead.”  Again.

Evangelicals as a political force have been relegated to the dustbin of history about 8 times in the last two decades. Yet evangelicals turned out in huge numbers and had a big impact last night.

In fact, Rich Lowry reports: 60% of voters showing up at the GOP caucuses were evangelicals. Huck beat Romney among them 45-19%. 40% weren’t evangelicals. Romney beat Huck among them 33-13%. So much for the demise of evangelicals as a political force.

It’s massively under-reported and under the radar of the pundits for obvious, cultural reasons, but Huckabee had, and has, a “megachurch” strategy. Check out this email from an Iowan to Jonah Goldberg:

You folks in the media keep missing the key to Huckabee’s victory (it was present already in Straw Poll).  It’s not that Central Iowa is home to key television stations.  It’s that Central Iowa is home to the large evangelical mega churches at which Huckabee has appeared and where he has been preaching for the past year. 

I was at a caucus on the borders.  Mitt didn’t win our county (Sioux)  In our caucus he came in third (behind Huckabee and McCain).   We don’t share a media market with Central Iowa.  In fact ours is heavily South Dakota dominated.  But what we share with Central Iowa is a “heavy” (understatement) concentration of evangelical Christians.   The Huckabee “Campaign” didn’t even have someone lined up to speak on his behalf at this caucus of about 600 people.   They didn’t need to.  Evangelicals turned out and voted simply because their informal networks of people that they trusted decided they trusted Huckabee. 

As a matter of fact, Governor Huckabee came and spoke at my home megachurch here in the Dallas area a few months ago. He wasn’t political. He just preached a regular sermon on the importance of marriage and family. And all 5,000 or so adults that heard him that weekend, me included, walked away thinking, “Hey that guys’ alright. He’s one of us. He loves Jesus and preaches the Word.”

So. . .The good news about the “Christian Right” (in Iowa, anyway) is that we’re still very Christian. The bad news is that we’re apparently not all that Right. We are either very “single issue” with an alarmingly strong attraction to a populist message OR we’re all “identity” politics and all we need to know is that someone is “one of us” and speaks our lingo.

One final thought about the Huckabee juggernaut.

Among Republican Iowa caucus goers under the age of 30, Huckabee was a big winner. They broke this way:

40 percent chose Mike Huckabee.

22 percent chose Mitt Romney.

21 percent chose Ron Paul.

Think about this. The oldest of those under-30 GOP voters was 10 years old when Ronald Reagan left office. Most weren’t even born at the end of the Carter nightmare. 

They’ve seen neither what a great, broad-spectrum conservative leader looks like nor what happens when a bunch of Baptists get excited about sending one of their own to the White House. And those who don’t learn from history. . .

The Most Reagan-y Candidate

Peter Robinson was a speech writer in the Reagan White House. He is also the author of the book How Ronald Reagan Changed My Life.

Thus his opinion on which candidate or candidates are true “Reagan Conservatives” should carry some weight.  He addressed that very question in a blog post today.

{btw… I don’t plan to turn this blog into non-stop promo for my favored candidate like, oh, say, Hugh Hewitt has done with his.)

Some Bold Predictions for 2008

Here are my top five prognostications for this brand new year.

  1. In the coming months, any unusually hot, cold, wet, dry, windy, calm, fragrant or smelly weather will be confidently attributed to “climate change” and cited as harbinger of impending doom unless we immediately transfer all individual autonomy to the government, all national sovereignty to the U.N., and control of the planet to Raelian overlords from the constellation Gamma Globulin.
  2. The percentage of Dallas-area radio stations broadcasting in Spanish (currently 42%) will grow to 50%. (Más gringos tendrán que suscribir a XM para oír la música que no ofrece el acordión.)
  3. The writers strike will drag on and millions, weary of reality television programs and compilations of “America’s wildest police chases” will turn off their television sets and rediscover that forgotten living room art our great grandparents enjoyed—Indian leg wrestling.
  4. Several Chinese exports of lead products will be recalled when they are found to contain dangerously high levels of plastic.
  5. Britney Spears will wage a costly court battle with Amy Winehouse over the rights to the internet url, “tragicdownwardspiral.com.”

The Other Hitchens

I linked to the wonderful Peter Hitchens below. The other day, my friend Fergus (who is married to the other Angel of the North), sent me a link to a deeply moving and typically well-written piece by Christopher Hitchens in Vanity Fair.

That Hitchens is, of course the militant atheist who has become the toast of the God-hating crowd with his book, God is Not Great. Nevertheless, Hitchens, in spite of (or perhaps because of) his Marxist/socialist leanings, has been one of Western Culture’s most articulate advocates for aggressively fighting militant Islam.

This Vanity Fair essay was flagged by New York Times’ token conservative, David Brooks, as one of the best of 2007. It is stout stuff.

I recommend it. Here.

Slow Motion Surrender to Islam

As in Canada, it accelerates in England. Here’s Peter Hitchens in the British paper, The Mail:

The deeply English, deeply Christian city of Oxford, one of the homes of free thought, is now being asked to accept the Islamic call to prayer wafting from mosque loudspeakers over its spires and domes.

If that is not a threat to our “way of life”, then I don’t know what is. Allowing the regular electronic proclamation of Allah’s supremacy in a British city is not tolerance, but a surrender of the sky to a wholly different culture. Just you wait and see what opponents of this scheme are accused of.

This is where the multiculturalism fetish takes you.