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Finger
Pointing (05/25/02)
By Linda Chavez in The Washington Post
So what should the president have done in August 2001 after he was
warned that intelligence sources thought an attack against American interests
was likely in the not-too-distant future? If the president had gone public
with the information, he probably would have been rebuked by the very
same people who are raising a fuss now because he didnt speak out
sooner.
What
Clinton Knew (05/21/02)
By Dick Morris in The New York Post
If Bush did not know much about al Qaeda intentions before 9/11,
why didnt he? The blame rests not on his incumbency, then only months
old, but on that of his predecessor.... So, even had Bush received notification
of the nature of al Qaedas plans, there was little he could have
done, in the weeks before 9/11, to stymie them. Clinton and Gore had simply
not left behind them the tools to permit an increase in airport security.
FBI
Memo Author Did Not Envision Sept. 11 (05/23/02)
In The Washington Post by Bill Miller and Dan Eggen
The Phoenix FBI agent who wrote a memo last summer warning about
possible terrorists at U.S. flight schools told lawmakers yesterday that
he never expected officials at FBI headquarters to respond immediately
to his suggestion for an investigation and that he never envisioned the
kinds of attacks that took place Sept. 11. Although his memo cautioned
that al Qaeda members might be training at U.S. aviation schools, FBI
agent Kenneth Williams told congressional panels in secret hearings yesterday
and Tuesday that none of the information in the document could have led
investigators to prevent the Sept. 11 attacks, according to officials
familiar with his testimony.
Low
Profile: The real scandal of the Phoenix memo isnt that it was ignored
its why it was ignored. (05/24/02)
By Christopher Caldwell in The Weekly Standard
The real scandal of the FBI memo is that it wasnt passed up
the line. And we can make a pretty good guess why it wasnt. In May
8 hearings held by the Senate Judiciary Committee, Dianne Feinstein asked
FBI director Robert Mueller what had happened. Mueller replied, There
are more than 2,000 aviation academies in the United States. The latest
figure I think I heard is something like 20,000 students attending them.
And it was perceived that this would be a monumental undertaking without
any specificity as to particular persons; the individuals who were being
investigated by that agent in Phoenix were not the individuals that were
involved in the September 11 attack. What a load of nonsense. Any
small-town newspaper reporter could have narrowed down that 20,000 to
under a hundred in an afternoon, just by focusing on names like... oh,
I dont know... try Mohamed, Walid, Marwan, and Hamza. Couldnt
the entire FBI have done the same?
Letter
contends FBI unit had dots to connect (05/25/02)
In The Chicago Tribune by Stephen J. Hedges and Cam Simpson
A letter to Congress from an FBI lawyer suggests that at least a
week before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, FBI officials in Washington
had a broader knowledge of flight training activities by men with terrorist
connections than has been previously disclosed.... Rowleys letter,
which expresses her frustration that it took three weeks from Moussaouis
arrest before her office was told of the Phoenix investigation, is the
strongest suggestion yet that someone within FBI headquarters had a working
knowledge of both cases, and had acted on them together.
Social
Security memo gives GOP smoking gun (05/24/02)
In The Washington Times by Stephen Dinan
Republicans have obtained a congressional staff memo they say proves
that Democrats want to use Social Security for scare tactics, not serious
debate. The memo, mistakenly sent by e-mail to a Republican staff member
on Capitol Hill, contains an apparent draft opinion piece on Social Security
and reaction from staffers in the office of Rep. Marcy Kaptur, Ohio Democrat....
But another Kaptur staff member responded that the information in the
opinion piece was not entirely factually accurate, adding:
Talk about scaring seniors this may be a little over the
top. But it is sooo fun to bash Republicans. She included an e-mail
smiley face :) after her comment.
Ammunition
in a Battle for Souls (05/22/02)
In The New York Times by Daniel J. Wakin
Over the past four months, while Catholics have publicly debated
and suffered over their churchs scandals, most other Christian denominations
have stayed aloof, perhaps aware of a certain aphorism about stones and
glass houses, and also sympathetic. Most evangelical Christians would
say they have no interest in capitalizing on Catholicisms woe. But
when asked, they do not hesitate to find the scandals roots in Catholic
dogma, and some go even further. In a few cases, priests say, the scandal
is being thrown in Catholic faces by proselytizing neighbors. And others
who study the evangelical world suggest that the scandal will be used
as a wedge in the long struggle between Catholics and evangelicals for
Latino souls.
Report:
Weakland sexually abused former student, paid for silence (05/23/02)
By The Associated Press in The Journal-Sentinel
Roman Catholic Archbishop Rembert Weakland of Milwaukee agreed in
1998 to pay $450,000 to a man who accused him of sexual assault, according
to documents cited Thursday by ABC News. ABC said the agreement had required
Paul J. Marcoux, 53, to keep silent. I was involved in a cover-up.
I accepted money to be silent about it, not to speak out against what
was going on, Marcoux said in an interview broadcast on Good
Morning America.
Pope
accepts Weaklands resignation (05/25/02)
In The Journal-Sentinel by Tom Heinen
Pope John Paul II has quickly granted Archbishop Rembert G. Weaklands
request to speed up his retirement, with the Vatican announcing on Friday
that Weaklands resignation had been accepted. The moment that action
was communicated to Weakland, he was officially retired and Auxiliary
Bishop Richard J. Sklba assumed Weaklands duties.
Weaklands
views take on new meaning after scandal (05/25/02)
In The Journal-Sentinel by Dave Umhoefer
How much, the faithful are left to wonder, did Weaklands struggles
with sexual questions and the until-now private accusations of abuse against
him color his actions in defending and dealing with priests in similar
situations over the years? How did they affect his controversial views
about teenage victims in such cases?
Catholic
Bishops Refuse Communion To Homosexual Activists (05/20/02)
At Cybercast News Service by Patrick Goodenough
Homosexual acts are contrary to the natural law, they close
the sexual act to the gift of life, Archbishop George Pell told
Catholics gathered for Pentecost Sunday Mass at St. Marys Cathedral
in Sydney. In an orchestrated move, 20 members of a group campaigning
for the church to give full recognition to homosexual Catholics had earlier
gone forward for communion, while another 12 did the same St. Patricks
Cathedral in another major city, Melbourne. Each member of the Rainbow
Sash Movement (RSM) wore a rainbow-colored sash over their clothing. In
both churches they were denied communion, although in Melbourne, Archbishop
Denis Hart did offer the sash-wearers a blessing.
The
Bishop Is Back (05/22/02)
On ABC7 News by The I-Team
Patrick Ziemann was the first bishop ever to be sued by a priest
for sexual assault. He resigned from the Santa Rosa diocese, and the church
paid more than half a million dollars to settle the case. In light of
the recent sex scandals across the country, we wondered what is Ziemann
doing now. The answer has some North Bay Catholics shocked and dismayed.
When we found him in Arizona three weeks ago, Bishop Patrick Ziemann didnt
want to discuss the mess he left behind in Santa Rosa his sexual
misconduct and severe financial mismanagement.... A church spokesman says
Ziemanns past prohibits him from acting as a priest in the Tucson
Diocese. But, he is allowed to work inside the monastery with young men
who want to become priests and with people who are going through some
crisis in their lives, who go there for guidance.
Cardinal
Coverup (05/02/02)
In New Times LA by Ron Russell
Yet in his pell-mell rush to be seen as the cardinal with a plan,
all the while playing a gullible local mainstream press like a harp in
diverting attention from his own dismal record of protecting pedo-priests,
Mahonys actions amounted to little more than a public-relations
snow job.... In fact, most of his publicly announced ideas for dealing
with the sex-abuse crisis, including those he unveiled amid much fanfare
before jetting off to Rome along with other American cardinals to meet
with the pope this month, werent Mahonys at all. They had
been forced on him, kicking and screaming, as it were, last August as
conditions for settling a potentially explosive sex-abuse case involving
the former principal of a prominent Catholic high school in Orange County,
Monsignor Michael Harris.
Four
Sue Cardinal Over Sexual Abuse (05/21/02)
At Yahoo! News by Paul Wilborn of Associated Press
Four men filed a racketeering lawsuit against Cardinal Roger Mahony
that accuses him of protecting a priest who allegedly molested several
children in the nations largest archdiocese. The suit, which seeks
unspecified damages, cites federal laws involving conspiracy in a criminal
enterprise. It was filed Monday in a state court.
A
cardinal who gets it (05/23/02)
By Adrian Walker in The Boston Globe
He believes it is time for clergy to set an example by living more
simply. He further believes the mansion he lives in, which has been the
scene of overnight stays by a pope and a president, is unnecessarily lavish.
And his archdiocese may face the prospect of paying damages to victims
of sexual abuse. Therefore, the cardinal Francis E. George of Chicago
announced this week that he will seek permission to sell his residence,
one of the more lavish in the city.
Battling
poison with ink and holy water (05/12/02)
By David House in The Star-Telegram
Ive read many U.S. news reports about this issue. I agree
with Christine Chinlund the reader advocate at The Boston Globe,
where the pedophilia story broke last January that coverage has
been factual, well-documented, even-handed, and the product of commendably
aggressive but fair and persistent inquiry. The news media will follow
developments in this scandal, and not because they have found a delightfully
marvelous mountain of muck to rake. You may hear otherwise. Think twice
about believing it. The truth is that the media are confronting an evil
on behalf of millions of people, including the many selfless priests who
have been unjustly smeared.
When
in Dallas (05/17/02)
By Editorial Staff of Commonweal
The toxicity of this scandal lies not only in pernicious decisions
over the years, but also in the manner that senior church officials have
handled the current crisis. There has been a failure of episcopal leadership
in kowtowing to cardinals and in remaining silent. Just as many priests
have been affected by the sins of the few, so too have many bishops. Their
June meeting gives them a singular opportunity to begin bailing out a
ship that is in grave danger of sinking.
Seriously
ill historians book-in-progress tells of his changed views
(05/24/02)
In The Miami Herald by Brett Martel of Associated
Press
In what he fears may be his dying days, cancer-stricken historian
Stephen E. Ambrose spends much of his time at his word processor, trying
to set the record straight about some of the views he espoused as a young
professor. Perhaps best known for his 1994 best seller D-Day, Ambrose,
66, has put a World War II project about the Pacific on hold in favor
of a new book depicting his own transformation from a left-wing demonstrator
to a super patriot.
Now
girls have the advantage in school (05/22/02)
By Katherine Kersten in The Star Tribune
Is there gender bias in American schools? Evidence is growing that
the answer is yes. But if you think its girls who are suffering,
youre wrong. Today, boys are on the short end of the academic stick,
and their performance gap with girls is both startling and alarming. Thus
far, few educators have acknowledged or addressed the problem of widespread
male academic underachievement.
Why
are U.S. universities moral wastelands? (05/21/02)
By Dennis Prager at WorldNetDaily
The vast majority of Americans believe that Americas war against
Islamic terror is a moral one, that the Iraqi, Iranian and North Korean
regimes are evil, and that Israels war for survival is a just war.
They also believe that colleges should not have dormitories or graduation
ceremonies segregated by race or ethnicity.... In sum, if the universities
are morally right, Americans are, by and large, morally wrong, and America
is indeed the malevolent force in the world that so many colleges depict
it as. On the other hand, if Americans are by and large right about the
greatest moral issues of the day, and America, with all its flaws, really
is the greatest force for good in the world, our universities are, with
a few exceptions, moral wastelands.
College
recruiters look to gays: But schools see problem in identifying students
(05/21/02)
In The Boston Globe by Patrick Healy
Last Saturday, Harvard, Yale, Brown, and about 40 other New England
colleges as well as top private institutions outside the region,
like Stanford and Grinnell sent representatives to Boston for the
nations first college fair for gay high school students. Colleges
were invited for the first time to the annual Youth Pride celebration
for gay teenagers as a way to broaden the event. Several admissions officials
had also asked regional gay organizations about ways to recruit these
students, said chief organizer Mark Taggart of the Massachusetts Governors
Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth.
College
Commencements Still Dominated By Liberals (05/21/02)
At Cybercast News Service by Matt Pyeatt
Young Americas Foundation (YAF) released its study Monday
and found that the list of the nations commencement speakers leans
heavily to the left. The report also shows that schools not listed in
the top 50 colleges and universities also lack representation from conservatives
at commencement. For the ninth consecutive year, our most prestigious
schools excluded scholars such as Milton Friedman, Clarence Thomas, Antonin
Scalia and Thomas Sowell for the likes of left-wing activists Morris Dees,
Lani Guinier, Madeline Albright and Whoopi Goldberg, Ron Robinson,
president of YAF, said. College administrators are using commencement
ceremonies to send their students off with one more predictable leftist
lecture.
Principals
should stop preaching, start teaching (05/22/02)
By Bruce Ramsey in The Seattle Times
Dear principals: Stop saving the world. A dream of racial brotherhood
does not justify labeling Seattles kids White and Colored
(or whatever your labels are) and shuffling them around to Do Good. Brotherhood
will not result. Anyway, the people of Washington had a vote, and
you lost. If you would prepare students for success in the world, hammer
on academics, academics, academics. That was John Stanfords message.
Academics! If certain schools are weak, make them strong. That is your
job.
Harvard
to award more Bs, raise honors standards (05/22/02)
In The Boston Globe by Patrick Healy
Concerned that grade inflation has become pervasive at Harvard University,
the schools faculty yesterday committed itself to awarding more
Bs to students and voted to sharply raise academic requirements
for honors, which went to a record 91 percent of graduating seniors last
June. For the first time, Harvard will cap the number of students receiving
summa, magna, and cum laude, starting with the current freshman class.
No more than 60 percent of seniors will be eligible, and cut-off scores
will be raised to make honors harder to achieve.
Anti-Semitic
Pogrom at San Francisco State (05/09/02)
By Laurie Zoloth at FrontPage Magazine
I cannot fully express what it feels like to walk across campus
daily, past maps of the Middle East that do not include Israel, past posters
of cans of soup with labels on them of drops of blood and dead babies,
labeled canned Palestinian children meat, slaughtered according
to Jewish rites under American license, past poster after poster
calling out Zionism = racism, and Jews = Nazis. This is not
civic discourse, this is not free speech, and this is the Weimar Republic
with brown shirts it cannot control. This is the casual introduction of
the medieval blood libel and virulent hatred smeared around our campus
in a manner so ordinary that it hardly excites concern except if
you are a Jew, and you understand that hateful words have always led to
hateful deeds.
Jewish
Blood Libel Poster at SFSU (April 2002)
By Scott Armel-Funkhouser of University of California
at Berkeley
This poster, funded by the Associated Students of San Francisco
State University, was posted on campus in April 2002. This is perhaps
the most grotesque and explicit incarnation of the blood libel
observed in the free world since the Nazi Holocaust. It was generated
on the campus of a public university by students, using public money.
The poster included the names of the following organizations: Associated
Students, GUPS (General Union of Palestinian Students), MSA (Muslim Student
Association) and WIA (unidentified). The poster incorporates the two
most common elements to this medieval racist slur. It suggests (1) that
Jews ingest the flesh and/or blood of children, and (2) that there are
rites associated with the Jewish religion which detail how to perform
this cannibalism. Note that this vicious racism is not directed specifically
at Israel but at Jews, for it reads, slaughtered according to
Jewish rites.
Anti-Semitic
riot at San Francisco State University (05/16/02)
By Melissa Radler in The Jerusalem Post
After being surrounded by a mob of students shouting, Hitler
didnt finish the job, and Get out or well kill
you, pro-Israel students at San Francisco State University are finally
finding an ally against hate. The university president is so fed-up with
the hate-filled atmosphere on the Bay Area campus that he has asked the
local district attorneys office to help bring pro-Palestinian hate-mongers
to justice.
Colleges
Only Protect PC Speech, Groups (05/16/02)
By Glenn Harlan Reynolds at FoxNews
But so far this event, and the university’s tepid response, is simply
the latest stage in a long-standing and widespread trend of giving some
student groups the permission to engage in behavior that the university
would not permit for a moment if it came from groups not favored as politically
correct. The result of impunity, of course, is escalation. Just as the
toleration of broken windows and other petty acts of lawbreaking
leads to more serious crime, so a policy of tolerating acts of lawlessness
by overpoliticized students leads to more serious problems.
University
of South Carolina Mandates Political Indoctrination and Orthodoxy
(05/13/02)
At Foundation for Individual Rights in Education
The University of South Carolina (USC), in a required course for
a degree-granting program, has adopted Guidelines for Classroom
Discussion that demand adherence to a narrow set of partisan political
assumptions on pain of being graded poorly for honest disagreement.
Although USC is a public institution, bound by the First Amendment, it
has created an ideological loyalty oath that constitutes a
profound threat to both freedom of speech and freedom of conscience in
South Carolina and across the country.
Womens
studies mandates seen as threats to free speech (05/16/02)
By Ellen Sorokin in The Washington Times
The course syllabus, distributed in January, specifically outlines
eight prerequisites during class discussion, which counts for 20 percent
of the students overall grade. The course Womens
Studies 797: Seminar in Womens Studies — is listed on the
programs Web site as required for a certificate of graduate
study in womens studies. One of the prerequisites is that students
acknowledge that racism, classism, sexism, heterosexism and other
institutionalized forms of oppression exist.
Berkeley
Course on Mideast Raises Concerns (05/16/02)
In The New York Times by Chris Gaither
The political tensions in the Middle East have once again roiled
the University of California, with the most recent incident focused on
a catalog course description.... The listing for the course, The
Politics and Poetics of Palestinian Resistance, one of the choices
for a required course in reading and composition, was pulled for review
last week by university officials after protests by civil liberties and
pro-Israeli groups.... The last line of his course description drew the
most ire, especially among civil libertarians: Conservative thinkers
are encouraged to seek other sections.
Replacing
Airport Screeners Proves Tough (05/15/02)
In Washington Post by Sara Kehaulani Goo
After 4,800 people applied for 600 federal airport screening jobs
at Baltimore-Washington International, the Transportation Security Administration
confidently removed the job application from its Web site. Then the problems
started. Hundreds of applicants either failed the governments tests
for prospective screeners or they didnt even show up for the exam,
according to a TSA official. Surprisingly, the numbers of the latter
were higher than we expected, he said.
Global
Warming Models Labeled Fairy Tale By Team of Scientists
(05/14/02)
At Cybercast News Service by Marc Morano
A team of international scientists Monday said climate models showing
global warming are based on a fairy tale of computer projections.
The scientists met on Capitol Hill to expose what they see as a dearth
of scientific evidence about global warming. Hartwig Volz, a geophysicist
with the RWE Research Lab in Germany questioned the merit of the climate
projections coming from the United Nations sponsored Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC.) The IPCC climate projections have fueled
worldwide support for the Kyoto Protocol, which aims to restrict the greenhouse
gases thought to cause global warming.
Climate
change faults and fears (05/12/02)
By Pete du Pont in The Washington Times
While climate models cannot be expected to simulate future weather,
they should be able to accurately depict the Earths present climate
and to simulate changes in the frequency and type of the weather events
that make up climate. Since they cannot, GCM predictions of
climate change are statistical exercises with little bearing on reality
and certainly should not serve as the basis for government policy.
Jimmy
Carter: America basher (05/15/02)
By Jonah Goldberg at TownHall
Its an unusual thing for a former president to more or less
choose sides against the United States and with a hostile nation ruled
by a ruthless dictator. Unusual, that is, in the sense that most U.S.
presidents current or former dont do this sort of
thing. Unfortunately, Carter is the exception that proves the rule.
Death
rattle? (05/13/02)
By Laura Miller at Salon
Beyond the familiar schism between the Sunnis and the Shiites, the
faith is spectacularly diverse, from the mystical brotherhoods of the
Sufis, to the puritanical Wahabbites, to (what remains of) the relatively
secularized cosmopolitan elites of more developed countries like Egypt.
It makes as much sense to draw conclusions about all Muslims on the basis
of the beliefs of the Taliban or bin Laden as it does to expect a Quaker
to light candles to Santa Barbara or a Unitarian minister to plant bombs
in abortion clinics simply because other people who call themselves Christians
do so.
Beyond
the Numbers: A hopeless state (05/15/02)
By Ron Dermer in The Jerusalem Post
In fact, the recipe for making a suicide bomber is one part fanaticism
and one part hope. The fanaticism is bred in a culture of death, where
terrorist recruits are meticulously brainwashed to believe that their
noble ends justify any means. Still, a fanatical mindset only sets the
fuse. Hope is the spark that lights it. Suicide bombers would not be so
quick to die if they didnt believe that the cause they so fanatically
pursue will be advanced by their sacrifice.
Gazas
Children Worship Martyrdom (05/14/02)
In The Washington Post by Hamza Hendawi
In Gazas funerals for shaheeds, or martyrs, and
in rallies by Palestinian factions such as Arafats Fatah or the
militant Islamic group Hamas, children as young as three or four are outfitted
with combat fatigues, masks and toy guns. Such occasions routinely attract
hundreds of children, all accustomed by now to the deafening noise made
by gunmen firing in the air.
Exploding
Myths: Why Israels war on terrorism is working. (05/13/02)
By Jonathan Chait at Slate
Palestinian terrorism does not result from Israels occupation
of the West Bank and Gaza, but from Israels existence. Palestinian
terrorism long predates the 1967 occupation; the Palestine Liberation
Organization was formed in 1964, three years earlier. But hasnt
the more recent phenomenon of suicide bombing come about because of long-simmering
Palestinian despair? Not really. Suicide bombings started only after the
1993 Oslo Accords, which provided Palestinians with their best opportunity
for a state.
Columnist
Andrew Sullivan Bites Paper; Paper Bites Back (05/14/02)
In The Washington Post by Howard Kurtz
Andrew Sullivan, the confrontational conservative columnist, has
been attempting the high-wire act of writing for the New York Times while
frequently whacking the Times for liberal bias on his Web site. Now the
tightrope has snapped. Sullivan, who once wrote a biweekly column for
the New York Times Magazine, says he has been barred indefinitely
from writing any more for the magazine. The popular Weblog writer
says the directive came from Executive Editor Howell Raines.
New
York Times v. Sullivan (05/14/02)
By Nick Schulz at Tech Central Station
There is already chatter among the chattering asses dissecting Sullivans
banishment. Slates Mickey Kaus and John Ellis of Fast Company fame
suggest it is because of Raines need for control. Meanwhile the
folks at The American Prospect the terrific lefty publication edited
by Robert Kuttner say that explanation is way off base. Actually,
they call it paranoid. They say Sullivan was dropped because
he has taken shots at the Times for its biased coverage and shoddy reporting.
The
Cultures of Newsrooms: A Book Unfit for The New York Times
(05/15/02)
By Nat Hentoff in The Village Voice
Unlike Bernard Goldbergs bestselling Bias, McGowans
Coloring the News has received generally favorable reviews, even
in such papers as The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times,
which are sharply criticized in his book. But the influential New York
Times Book Review has so far ignored McGowans indictment of much
of the press an analysis that, as Peter Schrag, no right-winger,
says in the Columbia Journalism Review, has focused attention
on important and troubling issues.
The
news we heard from a guy at Handgun Control (05/16/02)
By Ann Coulter at Town Hall
But for bald-faced lies, nothing beats the [New York] Times
preposterous characterization of Supreme Court precedent. The most recent
case directly raising the Second Amendment was United States vs. Miller,
decided in 1939.... The Miller case simply defined the types of guns protected
by the Second Amendment. Reviewing the case of two bootleggers charged
with failing to pay federal taxes on a sawed-off shotgun, the court concluded
that the instrument was not covered by the Second Amendment.
Guns
are bad. The New York Times says so. (05/08/02)
By David Nieporent at Jumping to Conclusions
The Justice Department submitted briefs to the Supreme Court on
Monday that said that the Second Amendment protected an individual right,
not just a collective right, to bear arms.... And then the [New York]
Times had to try to prove that this is a novel theory, that John Ashcroft
was going against established law. Unfortunately, since he wasnt,
the Times had to make something up: The Supreme Courts view
has been that the the Second Amendment protected only those rights that
have some reasonable relationship to the preservation of efficiency
of a well regulated militia, as the court put it in United States
v. Miller, a 1939 decision that remains the courts latest word on
the subject. Actually, this cleverly clips the Supreme Court quote
in just the right part so that she can paraphrase it incorrectly.
Lawyer
says animals have rights too (05/17/02)
In Contra Costa Times from Reuters
Basing his arguments on well-documented studies of their mental
powers, emotional bonds, social skills, language and self-awareness, Wise
says there is also increasing evidence to suggest that African elephants,
African Gray parrots, honeybees and dogs may merit such legal rights.
In an age when it would be unthinkable to use newborn human babies, the
profoundly senile, or the insane for biomedical research or display them
for public entertainment, Wise asks why dolphins, chimps or elephants
some of whom |