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THE FEDERALIST(r) DIGEST
The Conservative e-Journal of Record
* Veritas Vos Liberabit *

04 JANUARY 2002
Federalist Edition #02-01
Friday Digest

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CONTENTS:
The Foundation
Federalist Perspective


______----********O********----______
PUBLISHER'S NOTE OF THANKS

On behalf of The Federalist Editorial Board and staff, we are both
grateful and humbled by your encouragement and support in 2001. Though
we are still short of operating funds to get us through Independence
Day, we expect to meet our deadlines without interruption -- God
willing.

______----********O********----______
THE FOUNDATION

"The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man
living with power to endanger the public liberty."  --John Adams

______----********O********----______
FEDERALIST PERSPECTIVE

Top of the fold...

The new year began without a repeat of terror strikes, but with
ominous auguries.  The Afghanistan front in our war on Jihadistan is
still in the dangerous phase of stalking wily prey. Al Qaeda's Osama
bin Laden is still alive and well, based on information from
intelligence assets close to the terror chief -- and sources tell The
Federalist that he is believed still to be in the northeastern
mountains of Afghanistan.

In his last video release of vitriolic enmity, bin Laden again praised
the 9-11 attacks on the U.S., restating his goals: "Our terrorism is
against America. Our terrorism is a blessed terrorism to prevent the
unjust person from committing injustice." And one piece of recent
intel disclosed that al Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al Zawahiri was
counseling a guerrilla-style retreat and regrouping as airstrikes
shook the Tora Bora caves where these evildoers were hunkering and
hiding. "The movement must pull out as many personnel as possible to
the safety of a shelter." Zawahiri further noted the terror group's
urgent circumstances, saying if they did not live to fight another
day, the 9-11 attacks "will be nothing more than disturbing acts,
regardless of their magnitude, that could be absorbed and endured."
Indeed!

Deposed Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, near the town of Baghran
in southern Afghanistan, is surrounded by supporters endeavoring to
negotiate terms of his surrender. And our Afghan allies confirmed one
great success in such endeavors last week, when our warplanes bombed
an eastern Afghanistan house where former Taliban intelligence chief
Qari Ahmadulla was hiding with associates. Moreover, our forces by
Thursday had taken into custody 248 detainees, who should soon
experience just rewards for their misdeeds.

And the hunt has now gone worldwide. "The [al Qaeda] network is well
organized," said Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. "It's global. We
continue to get additional intelligence information which reinforces
our conviction as to the breadth and depth of that terrorist network."
But Mr. Rumsfeld also noted,  "Their ability to move freely around the
world was much easier three months ago than it is today."

Sources tell The Federalist that there are currently military urban
assault teams positioned to strike in at least seven nations, ready to
lower the boom on terrorist cells. Gen. Tommy Franks,
commander-in-chief of U.S. Central Command, advised: "It is too early
to suggest which countries, but it is not too early to remind
ourselves that September 11 put us on course to root out this
terrorist problem around the world. If you look within this region and
other places around the planet, you find a lot of states which we
categorize as sponsors of terrorism, ... [and military operations are]
going on in a great many places that are designed to do away with
these pockets of terrorism."

And lest anyone avert their focus too far from home, FBI sources
confirm that there are still al Qaeda cells imbedded in American
suburbs, though, as with their Jihadistan infidels around the world,
their ability to function has been greatly diminished and the threat
they pose is reduced with each passing day as the FBI tightens the
noose.

President George W. Bush, marking the year's end as
Commander-in-Chief, noted,
"We are determined to fight this evil and fight until we are rid of
it. We will not wait for more innocent deaths. We will not wait for
the authors of mass murder to gain the weapons of mass destruction. We
act now because we must lift this dark threat from our age and save
generations to come."

(Relatedly, the Bush administration rounded out the year by adding six
European groups to its terrorist target list -- five active in Britain
in the "Irish troubles," and the Spanish First of October Anti-Fascist
Resistance Group.)

On the home front, major courtroom anti-terror action stemming from
9-11 began this week, as Zacarias Moussaoui, the alleged missing 20th
hijacker from the terror attacks, continued being as uncooperative as
earlier reports suggested, saying Wednesday at his Alexandria,
Virginia, arraignment he has nothing to plead. "In the name of Allah,
I do not have anything to plea and enter no plea. Thank you very
much," Moussaoui told U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, so the
judge entered "not guilty" pleas on his behalf with his attorney's
concurrence, and set a mid-October trial date on charges he conspired
with al Qaeda terrorist head Osama bin Laden to murder the more than
3,300 people who perished in the 9-11 attacks in New York,
Pennsylvania and the Pentagon. Moussaoui was indicted on six
conspiracy counts, and could be sentenced to death if proven guilty.

Court TV has filed a motion to televise the Moussaoui trial, with
arguments heard as early as next week. Perhaps not coincidentally? Fox
News announced hiring of another Leftist commentator, Greta van
Susteren now at CNN as a legal analyst, for nearly $1 million a year
to host the 10 PM anchor slot.

On a related note, investigators were looking into whether Moussaoui
trained in the same al Qaeda camp as Richard Reid, the so-called
"Sneaker Bomber" who tried to ignite plastic explosives in his tennis
shoes on a December 22 flight from Paris to Miami.
Both attended the same London mosque, and may have joined bin Laden's
terror network there.

And the ever-helpful ACLU sent out letters to consulates of 10
countries with citizens now detained as suspected terrorists, "to
offer ... [their] assistance." What's more, the sibilant libertines
have been actively thwarting voluntary interviews of those who might
have information to prevent further terrorist attacks, and police
chiefs have heeded the ACLU requests to refuse cooperation with FBI
interviews in San Francisco, Detroit, Portland, Oregon, San Jose,
California and Austin, Texas. The Virginia ACLU executive director
complained, "[The interviews] really violate the spirit of the
American criminal justice system. It has some of the elements of
something like McCarthyism." But as commentators Robert Carleson and
Peter Ferrara observed in a more realistic assessment, "Indeed, the
Bush administration is getting more cooperation today in the war
against terrorism from the governments of Syria, Sudan, and Yemen than
from the so-called American Civil Liberties Union."

The year's beginning is a good time to take stock of some lingering
results of 9-11. Over at the Hart Senate Office Building, closed since
October 17th after the October 15th anthrax attack on Senate Demo
leader Tom Daschle's mail, a third attempt at poisonous gas infusion
appears to have worked in killing off remaining spores. And at the
Pentagon, the 400,000 square-foot hole in the building's west side now
looks like normal remodeling. Of the 4,600 Pentagon workers displaced
by the 9-11 attack's damage, 1,000 are back in their offices. Of 110
injured there, even the 8 severely burned were all out of the hospital
for Christmas. Reconstruction may cost $700 million and is expected to
be complete by spring 2003. (With the collapse of the WTC towers, the
Pentagon became once more the world's largest office building.)

Quote of the week...

"We look back on 2001 with sadness and with pride. We must look
forward with determination and with resolve." --President George W.
Bush

On cross-examination...

"Just exactly what is it about displaying national pride that could
possibly be offensive to foreigners who are among us as a matter of
privilege? Why would anyone be offended at our cause against
terrorism? And, if they are, should we defer to their misguided
thinking?" --David Limbaugh

Open Query...

"Politics is bloodsport, but what's so wrong with that?" --Joel
Mowbray

(We think this refers metaphorically to character assassinations, but
we aren't all that sure. This could refer to Afghanistan!)

The BIG lie...

"[President Bush] stands on the verge of winning a war with the
military that Bill Clinton bequeathed him. ...[Although] some might
wish to give the young Bush administration and its impressive
secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld, primary credit for the
performance of American forces in Afghanistan, it is still Bill
Clinton's military that has actually been winning this war."
--Brookings Institution's Michael O'Hanlon in the New York Times

O'Hanlon must have attended that recent "removing the stain" from the
Clinton legacy meeting! "Bill Clinton's military"? Don't ask, don't
tell!

News from the Swamp...

Congress is in holiday recess, but even though they are not currently
writing bad laws, there is still plenty to be concerned about.

Tom Daschle and his Sociocrats continue to hold the U.S. economy
hostage, hoping that extending the economic slump will boost their
election prospects this November. Meanwhile, President Bush is taking
his modest economic stimulus proposals to the people in the form of
town hall meetings -- particularly in Democrat strongholds on the Left
Coast. But the Sociocrats are reaching deep in to their political
black bags and pulling out their familiar class warfare themes --
appealing to the worst of human traits, like unmitigated greed, at a
time when President Bush continues to appeal to the best of American
traits -- generosity and patriotism.

Mr. Bush really ought to kiss his first-year crush on bipartisanship
goodbye and draw clear distinctions between conservatives and our
Sociocrat nemeses!  2002 is an election year, and the Democrats are
already at hammer and tongs to split the conservative base most
supportive of the president's party. First, they plan to blame Mr.
Bush's modest economic conservatism in the form of tax cuts for the
return of deficit spending.

Then, the Democrats, ostensibly in the name of "tolerance," are
planning an intolerance campaign demonizing Christian conservatives as
being "like the Taliban." As Newsweek's Howard Fineman comments, "The
theory goes like this. Our enemy in Afghanistan is religious extremism
and intolerance. It's therefore more important than ever to honor the
ideals of tolerance -- religious, sexual, racial, reproductive -- at
home. The GOP is out of the mainstream, some Democrats will argue
[this] year, because it's too dependent upon an intolerant 'religious
right'." Yes, this has been tried before -- quite unsuccessfully until
now, we note -- but the problem for Mr. Bush is that he has within his
administration a handful who actually believe and have spouted this
Leftist rot about Christian conservatives.  And quite a handful they
may prove, if he cannot curb their tongues when the Leftmedia press
them to denounce Mr. Bush's most reliable allies (and by extension
denouncing Bush himself)! Stay tuned, as this war of words should be
interesting.

Not surprisingly, the New York Times has already gotten its Democratic
Party marching orders, with a front-page reference last week to
Islamic radicals as "the religious right." Foreign correspondent
Douglas Jehl discussed the Saudi royals' dealings with radical Islam,
saying: "Choosing accommodation over confrontation, the government
shied away from a crackdown on militant clerics or their followers, a
move that would have inflamed the religious right, the disaffected
returnees from other wars [besides the one in Afghanistan] and a
growing number of the unemployed."

Even more worrisome in The Federalist's estimation, though, is that
Congress is champing at the bit to write more extraconstitutional
legislation. House Speaker Dennis Hastert warned, "We have a lot to do
when we get back. We are going to come back and focus on education
issues. We have a lot of work to do with Medicare. We want to do a
prescription drug bill. A lot of those plans were kind of sidetracked
since the September 11th business, but we will have a full plate as
soon as we get back." Expect them to also chew on campaign-finance
legislation, a patients' "bill of rights," Mr. Bush's faith-based
initiatives, a minimum wage increase, and hate-crimes legislation when
they return Jan. 23rd. Hang onto your wallet, and grab your copy of
the real Bill of Rights!

Judicial Benchmarks...

In the halls of justice on the right, Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist demonstrated why he's head Supreme, chiding the Senate Demos
for holding up Mr. Bush's nominees to judgeships in 23 courts of
appeal and 14 district courts: "During times such as these, the
role of the courts becomes even more important in order to enforce the
rule of law. To continue functioning effectively and efficiently,
however, the courts must be appropriately staffed. This means that
necessary judgeships must be created and judicial vacancies
must be timely filled with well-qualified candidates."

In the halls of injustice on the left, on Monday an Illinois appeals
court ruled that the families of a Chicago police officer and four
others killed by gang members can file public-nuisance lawsuits
against gunmakers and gun sellers of specific firearms used in those
crimes -- but not gunmakers or distributors generally. The Illinois
State Rifle Association termed the ruling a "sweetheart New Year's
gift" for Chicago Mayor and gun-confiscationist Richard Daley, noting
further that the same logic, applied to other industries, would also
render useful products illegal. "For example, manufacturers of
hypodermic syringes must know that their products will be used to
inject illegal drugs," ISRA said, suggesting this will help "jump
start ... Daley's stalled attempt to ban civilian firearm ownership."

And down Texas way, the state is appealing to the Supremes over a 5th
District Appeals Court decision that the trial of Calvin J. Burdine,
convicted of murder in 1984, was fundamentally unfair because his
court-appointed lawyer, Joe Frank Cannon, experienced "consistent
unconsciousness" in the courtroom. Cannon is now deceased, and medical
problems could have caused his frequent naps. This case may define
"competent lawyering," if this is at all possible!

On the Left...

More effluent from "Most Ethical Administration": Now a political
thumb-sucker, former toe-sucker Dick Morris is spilling the beans on
how his client Bill Clinton passed on the chance to take out Osama bin
Laden before he caused more damage to our country. Morris stated,
"Everything was more important than fighting terrorism. Political
correctness, civil liberties concerns, fear of offending the
administration's supporters, Janet Reno's objections, considerations
of cost, worries about racial profiling and, in the second term,
surviving impeachment, all came before fighting terrorism."

And former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was nearly incredulous at
reports Sudan had offered to hunt down bin Laden and turn him over to
the U.S., but Bill Clinton declined the offer for "legal reasons":
"Here we have a president who defended perjury, had the
meaning of the word 'is' changed to fit his own definition, yet he
couldn't find a lawyer to find a way to take out bin Laden? Instead,
we fire 66 missiles in one day with no follow-up campaign, which
weakened our prestige in the Middle East.  When I look at what the
Clinton administration said -- and did -- it was astounding."

The Commissars...

Remember the fight over water at the Klamath Basin, in which family
farmers promised the water were left high and dry once claims arose
that sucker fish and coho salmon were endangered?  The federal
government just installed a new security system there, to the tune of
$90,000 for a new fence, video cameras and motion detectors. And a
recently released report on the contentious battle, from authors at
Oregon State University and the University of California, argues --
almost laughably -- that a "quiet strain of racism" against local
Indian tribes runs "quietly beneath the surface" and is partly
responsible for the conflict over this western water. (Recent heavy
snowfalls may alleviate the farmers' drought by next growing season.
And we certainly hope so....)

>From the department of military readiness...

Been wondering about how our stocks of weapons are holding up, given
the levels of munitions dropped in Afghanistan? Well, according to
Central Command, our ordnance has been used but not used up. However,
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. John Jumper admitted, "We're doing OK
right now, but I am taking steps to increase the production rate, and
we are looking at another increment to increase the production rate
even more, so we don't have any shortages." Oops!

>From the department of military correctness...

Two quick items: Puerto Rico's anti-bombing lawsuit to stop use of
Vieques as a training range was dismissed this week, with U.S.
District Judge Gladys Kessler declaring that although the political
issues were complicated, "the legal issue [of use of the facility], in
contrast, is simple and straightforward."

And it now looks like Guantanamo in Cuba will be the detention
location for captured al Qaeda terrorists. If only Maximum Red Leader
Fidel Castro next door were next on the terrorist target list!  Well,
we can dream, can't we?

>From the states...

As usual, California lawmakers this year are leading the Left lemmings
over the westward cliffs! A sampler of outrageously bad laws now in
effect in the Gray State: Gay marriage "lite" is on the march, with
so-called "domestic partners" legally defined now as homosexual
cohabitants or unmarried heterosexual couples with one partner over
62, granted such benefits heretofore reserved for spouses as adoption,
medical decision making, and sick leave; Prenuptial agreements are now
regulated, requiring written records, attorney representation or
waiver and seven-day "cooling off" periods; "Threats" against abortion
clinic workers and clients are now crimes; Nearly all firearms must be
sold with state-approved trigger locks; Illegal immigrants who are
long-term residents will be exempt from higher out-of-state college
tuition fees charged U.S. citizens from other states; Employers are
prohibited from discriminating on the basis of illegal employee
conduct outside the workplace, and from requiring employees to speak
English only, unless for "business necessity"; Unemployment benefits
will rise. Minimum wage hourly rates rose 50 cents, an 8 percent
raise, to $6.75, $1.60 higher than the federal minimum wage rate.
Magnificent timing, with energy bills skyrocketing over the past year,
and hitting hardest at such location-dominant industry sectors as
restaurants...; And minimum wage and other workplace protections are
now guaranteed to sheepherders.

Memo to residents of other states: If your own representatives attempt
to emulate California's, please recall ... recall!


The "Dumb and Dumber" Department...

A week before the busy Christmas travel days, passenger Lolita
Austria, en route to Chicago from San Diego's Lindbergh Field Airport,
picked up the wrong carry-on bag from the X-ray screening area and
unwittingly boarded her flight with a hand grenade. As the plane
taxied from the gate, Austria opened the bag, the metallic object
rolled out, and according to passenger Torbert Rocheford, "It was
rolling around on the floor." The grenade turned out to be a fake,
labeled "FAA X-ray test object, contains no explosives," which
belonged to an airport security company that had been running a
security test at the time. The airliner's captain taxied the plane
back to the terminal, bomb-sniffing dogs inspected the cabin and cargo
hold, passengers went through security again, and the flight was
delayed two and a half hours. Another passenger, Fred Bode, commented,
"You didn't know whether it was a big joke or what." The airline
security company failed to notice disappearance of either the bag or
the dummy grenade. Some security test!

Culture comment...

The lifestyle diversity bug apparently bit Coke. Asked about an ad
redrawing cartoon characters Brutus and Popeye as homosexuals, the
aptly named Doug Daft blathered, "At Coca-Cola, we believe that
diversity is not merely about compliance ... it is about values; it is
about relationships. Taking advantage of diversity is a critical key
to who we are and to our business success. ... We all must, recognize,
respect, value and celebrate the uniqueness of all members of our
organizations as we embrace diversity as one of our fundamental
values. ... Realizing the full potential of diversity is essential to
our business...from the communities we serve, to the decisions we make
every day about our operations. Diversity has a direct impact on The
Coca-Cola Company. ... Respecting and benefiting from diversity in our
businesses and in our communities is not only a guiding principle but
also a core value of The Coca-Cola Company."

Hasn't Coke heard what the straight Popeye said? "I yam what I yam,
and that's all that I am...!"

Faith Matters...

A recent World Magazine article discusses fears that the 9-11 attacks
could catalyze efforts to coalesce a meaningless one-world religion,
citing statements by world leaders, including Mr. Bush, that favor
Islam and ignore contradictions between the Islamic view of Allah and
the Judeo-Christian God.

On the frontiers of science...

This week's issue of science journal Nature reports researchers at the
Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, discovered a new method of lie
detection involving sensitive measures of facial blushing. A
high-definition heat-sensing camera could spot increased blood flow
around lying eyes that matched or beat conventional lie detectors.
"The thermal imaging technology detects subtle changes in metabolism
in parts of the body. When an individual is exposed to the thermal
imaging camera and is being deceptive, the computer detects the
warming around the eyes," said lead researcher Dr. James Levine.
Applications of such technology, once refined, include airport
screening of potential terrorists. Not to mention prenuptial
agreements!

Around the world...

Freedom House released its year-end "freedom index" analysis of 192
nations around the world, based on civil liberties and political
rights guaranteed to citizens. Of the 48 countries assessed as "not
free," which included Communist bastions Cuba and North Korea, another
28 were Muslim nations. Now, remind us again -- what was that about
Christian conservatives, who founded "free" nations, being "like the
Taliban"!

Europe continued on its path toward bureaucratic integration,
stagnation, and looming tyranny, as the new continental currency the
euro debuted to transaction delays, ATM breakdowns and armed robberies
in its first big shopping day, Wednesday.

Red China vaulted in "economic power" to the world's sixth largest
economy this year past, assuming the position formerly held by Italy.
You will recall that China joined the WTO last month, and you may have
heard that President Bush at year-end quietly signed legislation
granting the Red Giant "permanent normal trade relations" with the
U.S. Congress had previously used the annual reauthorization of such
favored trade status to keep track of the Communist nation's
depredations against its citizens. This is the same Red China that
reportedly continued supplying arms to al Qaeda after 9-11, and is
improving the accuracy of its ballistic missiles! The ink was not dry
on Mr. Bush's signature, when the Chinese government sentenced to
death Gong Shengliang, lead pastor of the South China Church, an
underground Christian church the Reds branded "an evil cult." Memo to
Mr. Bush: How about an international "faith-based" initiative to
protect our Christian brothers and sisters from death and suffering
for serving Our Lord?

And last...

On Christmas Day in New York City, what morning television program was
most watched? Nielsen ratings declared it was "Yule Log" on WPIX
Channel 11, showing a yule log burning in a fireplace with Christmas
songs in the background -- which easily beat the next most watched
program, ABC's "Good Morning America." Hey, we think a smoldering log
is better TV than morning talkingheads any day of the year!

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