Landing a queen
We've learned that Her Majesty Queen Noor of Jordan will be the featured
speaker at Virginia Rep. James P. Moran's 16th annual Women's Issues Conference
on Sept. 15.
We often write about Mr. Moran's women's conferences, because they tend to
generate newsworthy items. Like in the fall of 2004, when keynote speaker
Helen Thomas, of White House press corps fame, turned the proceedings into a
one-sided forum on the Iraq War.
Miss Thomas blasted President Bush for marching on Baghdad in the first
place, and received a standing ovation in the process. The ladies understood when
Miss Thomas added: "George Bush doesn't send me flowers anymore."
As for Queen Noor, the widow of Jordan's King Hussein, she lived almost 30
years next door to Iraq. Four weeks after the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003,
she went on national television to warn about its aftermath, fearing a
"breakdown of law and order."
She told CNN's Larry King that the military operation had to be "matched" by
security resources, or a resulting "security vacuum" could lead to internal
turmoil. Hmmm.
Unified links
Our friends at Mandarin Media alert us to the newly launched "Ho Chi Minh
Golf Trail" in Vietnam, a network of world-class golf courses named in honor of
the late North Vietnamese communist president who fought hard against the
United States.
Which makes us wonder when and if peace ever returns to Iraq whether
Americans will find themselves teeing off at something akin to the Saddam Hussein
Golf and Country Club. Like "Uncle Ho," as the late North Vietnamese
revolutionary is fondly remembered today in Vietnam, Saddam - who was hanged in late
December - is similarly being embraced by many of his surviving Iraqi
countrymen.
Decorated disaster
No more flowers, no more bike paths, no more highway-beautification projects
will be paid for with federally earmarked transportation funds until those
states with structurally deficient bridges make needed repairs.
Such is the language of legislation Rep. Jeff Flake, Arizona Republican,
says he will introduce when Congress reconvenes in early September. He says
"many" of the more than 6,000 recent transportation earmarks went to such
beautification projects.
Attention grabber
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