Hitler playing Unreal Tournament

February 7, 2007


Anastasia implacable: The more likely fate of Ven…

February 5, 2007

Anastasia implacable:

The more likely fate of Venezuela under Mr. Chávez is that of Cuba, once the third-richest country in Latin America and now so poor and backward that it would take a major economic upgrade to qualify it as a banana republic. Sadly, this is where Venezuela seems to be heading.


Desnutrición en Corea del Norte?

February 5, 2007

Es un mito de los comentaristas pro-occidente. Los norcoreanos viven la vida loca (o por lo menos algunos de ellos)


Más sobre lo que acá decían Louis y Carlos sobre …

February 2, 2007


Más sobre lo que acá decían Louis y Carlos sobre los comentarios del cada vez más ridículo Chirac:

Monsieur le president’s version of mutual assured nuclear destruction could also stand some parsing. He seems to think that Tehran would never launch an attack for fear it would be annihilated in return. But assuming Israel were destroyed first, what other country would risk a counterattack itself by nuking millions of Iranian civilians to avenge Israel? France? The same country that wouldn’t even let U.S. jets fly over its territory to drop a few conventional bombs on Libya? We doubt many Israelis will share Mr. Chirac’s faith in nuclear deterrence against Islamists who prize martyrdom.

Artículo completo aquí:


Arte Humano no convencional

February 1, 2007

Impresionante!


Paul Wolfowitz

January 31, 2007

Presidente del Banco Mundial

Onze Legere

January 21, 2007

Ta buena la mina, eh Carlos?


Una nueva Francia?

January 17, 2007

Enhorabuena, los franceses hace mucho tiempo que viven en una nube de gases.

The French presidential campaign started in earnest this week after the ruling center-right party tapped Nicolas Sarkozy to face off against Socialist Ségolène Royal. His nomination also brings closer the day that Charles de Gaulle will be laid to rest. Wait, you say, the man is dead and buried since 1970. True, but he’s gone in body, not in spirit. The general has shaped France’s view of the world and itself from the closing days of the last great war. Come May, with a new resident in the Elysée Palace, that looks bound to change.

In Sarko or Ségo, as they’re widely known, France would get its first head of state born after World War II. More than a change of the generational guard looms on the horizon. Neither of the presumptive successors to Jacques Chirac sounds beholden to a Gaullist creed characterized by the prickly defense of the Fifth Republic’s “grandeur” and a knee-jerk anti-Americanism. To judge by their rhetoric, the two leading candidates are willing apostates, particularly on foreign policy. The repercussions should not be minimized.

El resto aquí:


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.