OPINION

Nothing Changes

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President Bush, Oct. 9, 2006, 9:58 a.m.:

"Last night, the government of North Korea proclaimed to the world that it had conducted a nuclear test ... . The United States condemns this provocative act. Once again, North Korea has defied the will of the international community, and the international community will respond. This was confirmed this morning in conversations I had with leaders of China and South Korea, Russia and Japan ... and all of us agreed that the proclaimed actions taken by North Korea are unacceptable and deserve an immediate response by the United Nations Security Council."

President Obama, May 25, 2009, 6:22 a.m.:

"Today, North Korea said that it has conducted a nuclear test in violation of international law ... . These actions, while not a surprise given its statements and actions to date, are a matter of grave concern to all nations. North Korea's attempts to develop nuclear weapons, as well as its ballistic missile program, constitute a threat to international peace and security. By acting in blatant defiance of the United Nations Security Council, North Korea is directly and recklessly challenging the international community."

NEWT'S BACK

As the Republican Party continues its search for a leader, Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas sends out this invitation:

"Please join Republican leadership and me on June 8th in Washington, D.C., for the 2009 Senate-House Dinner with keynote speaker Newt Gingrich. If you've ever watched Newt on TV and thought 'I'd like to meet this guy,' this is your chance!"

'THE LADY'

Wow, was the Anchorage Daily News unkind to visiting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi over the Memorial Day weekend, or what?

Accompanied by a handful of members of the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming, Mrs. Pelosi dropped into Alaska en route to China. Here's how the state's largest newspaper - in the Alaska Ear column - summed up her visit, under the headline "Get over yourself":

"Who knew House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was more important than, say, a president? The lady was in Anchorage Friday, one of those Asia-bound stopover things. She went from Elmendorf to the Alaska Native Heritage Center a little after 3 p.m. to meet and greet those deemed worthy, which is fine. George and Laura Bush did the same thing once.

"The difference is, the Bushes were straightforward about it. No interviews, by invitation only, but take all the photos you want. By contrast, everyone denied any knowledge of a Pelosi visit, even when security flanked the center and asked each other if 'the speaker' had arrived yet ...

"Ear completely understands Pelosi not wanting to talk to any nosy reporters. Really, darlings, how many times should she be forced to tie herself in knots about the 'nuances' of her knowledge/approval of torture? But to pretend she wasn't here? And no news photos? Wonder if her official itinerary listed her as being at 'an undisclosed location.' "

AL GORE, 1984

What does the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) mean when it says congressionally proposed global-warming regulation, if passed, would lead to the next 1984?

The Washington-based public policy organization, dedicated to free enterprise and limited government, produced a 90-second video appearing on YouTube that follows in the steps of Apple Computer's memorable 1984 Super Bowl ad and its 2007 take-off - the anti-Hillary Rodham Clinton "Vote Different" spot, which become an election year viral hit.

"It is especially ironic that Al Gore serves on the Apple Computer's board of directors," CEI general counsel Sam Kazman notes. "Here's the company that 25 years ago warned us of the dangers of a '1984' Orwellian mentality regarding computers, and on its board is the man most likely to lead us in a new '1984' regarding energy use."

Popular belief, CEI points out, is that global warming is a rapidly growing threat getting worse each year, when in fact there "has been no global warming over the last decade. In fact, global average temperature was lower in 2008 than in 1998."

And as for those repeated warnings that oceans could rise by as much as 20 feet (Mr. Gore's prediction) in the coming years, the journal Science in recent weeks downgraded global sea-level rises by 10 feet, and only then if the West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapses. CEI says oceans rose about 8 inches in the 20th century, and the rate has yet to increase in the 21st century.

The video is titled "Al Gore 1984."