Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Cracks? Not So Much

I meant to post on this a while ago and forgot all about it. Perhaps that's because, from what I can tell, it never came up again. The PiPRess did a story earlier in the month suggesting - surprise, surprise, the stress cracks that critics excoriated MnDOT for may not have had anything to do with the I-35W bridge collapse:

...a closer look at the record throws into question the idea MnDOT could have prevented the collapse by reinforcing the Minneapolis bridge, as an outside consultant recommended. The record also casts doubt on the theory that fatigue cracks made the bridge fall.

Here's why:

-- The cracks were repaired in the 1990s. And they were never found in the main I-35W river span, which appeared to fall first on video of the collapsing bridge captured by a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers surveillance camera.

-- The cracks were on the approach spans, which were not "fracture critical." That designation signals a risk of total collapse if one key part of the bridge fails. The fracture critical area of the bridge was in the main span.

-- A proposal to strengthen the steel beams in the bridge's main span by adding steel plates dealt with a speculative problem - potential cracks. The reinforcement also would not have guaranteed against a total collapse.

As well, the story notes that stress cracks usually give out in cold, not hot, weather. It puts me in mind of this story, shortly after the collapse.

Time will tell what brought the bridge down, but contrary to unhinged lefty opinion, it's looking less and less like it had anything to do with a lack of taxes, or Iraq.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Sad News

The first time I met Bill Juneau I was working on a story about the Chisago County SWAT team, which he was integral in starting and training. In fact, one of my few regrets over the last couple of years was that I didn't take him up on his offer to "flash-bang" me in order to better understand what suspects experience when SWAT comes through the front door.

That opportunity in now gone, along with Bill, who was killed in Iraq yesterday morning.

Bill made protecting people his life's work, and gave his own in that effort. My deepest sympathies go out to the Juneau family, who are mourning the loss of a son and sibling.

More thoughts here.

UPDATE: It turns out Bill was a blogger.

Only in Canada

A blog-worthy brawl in the wasteland to the north:

Three players each from the Duffield Devils and Niagara Falls Thunder novice triple-A teams, and their respective coaches, were ejected from the Guelph Power Play Tournament on Friday after a brawl during a game.

Certainly not a rare occurrence in the nation where hockey fighting was invented, you say?

"These are eight-year-olds," said Staff Sgt. Neal Young of Guelph Police.

Parents will no doubt look back fondly at the day little Johnny learned to pull the jersey over the head.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Beautiful Scam

The San Francisco Chronicle and the Soros funded Think Progress have found a wonderful way to censor points of view and not have to deal with the fallout.

Deleted comments show up on the commenter's computer as though they had not been. On all other computers though, the comments show up as deleted. As Investigate the Media commenter siiras put it, "what refined censorship."

No sign of censorship by trickery under Think Progress's "What we're about" tab. What a shock.

The irony here is deep and rich though, don't you agree? The same group that denounces any disagreement with its views as an attempt to silence, actively silences people. And has even found a way to avoid any criticism for it.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Buy Butterball

Caught the HBO documentary "I Am An Animal," about bizarre PETA founder Ingrid Newkirk, the other night. The best part of the show was the parade of hinged animal rights advocates blasting PETA for becoming larger than the issue.

The strangest moment was Newkirk's treatment of a turkey rescued from the Butterball plant. It got its own room at PETA headquarters, complete with couch and soft music to relax by.

I was inspired by the film though, inspired to buy Butterball, that is. Won't you too?

Happy Thanksgiving.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Oops, Our Bad

U.N. scientists caught exaggerating? The hell you say:

The United Nations' top AIDS scientists plan to acknowledge this week that they have long overestimated both the size and the course of the epidemic, which they now believe has been slowing for nearly a decade, according to U.N. documents prepared for the announcement.

Meanwhile, overestimating the size and course of global climate warming change continues unabated:

The panel portrays the Earth hurtling toward a warmer climate at a quickening pace and warns of inevitable human suffering.

Except for the northeastern U.S., which is expected to experience a coldening.

Friday, November 16, 2007

All the Evidence You'll Ever Need

Mark Steyn writes:

The silliest argument is the anecdotal one: "You only have to look outside your window to see that climate change is happening."

Tim Blair is putting that theory to the test, photographically.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Harry's Reality

Quiz: Is this six months ago Harry Reid, or today Harry Reid?

"Every place you go you hear about no progress being made in Iraq," said Senate Democratic majority leader Harry Reid.

"The government is stalemated today, as it was six months ago, as it was two years ago," Reid told reporters, warning US soldiers were caught in the middle of a civil war.

"It is not getting better, it is getting worse," he said.

If by worse, Reid means that victory is looking more and more likely every day, then yes, things are definitely getting worse...for him.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Award season again

Last night, your humble correspondent was the recipient of a 2007 ECM Newspaper Award; first place in the "best investigating reporting" category for this story on local shenanigans.

But enough about me...