Showing posts with label arabic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arabic. Show all posts
Saturday, August 30, 2025
IDF blunders and misplaced priorities
Israel is a tiny country with many enemies and has somehow managed to survive despite various wars. It's odd that the most devastating attack on them since 1973 came from an even smaller, dirt-poor enclave surrounded by security barrier and guard towers.
The pager attack on Hezbollah was clever but came too late against the wrong target. The same is true of the assassinations of Iranian generals and nuclear scientists. Since the most recent war began, the IDF has wasted all kinds of resources on ridiculous stunts.
Their information campaign has not been working very well either. MEMRI has amusing content but has done little to sway global opinion in Israel's favor.
Israel does not need a better Iron Dome, more F-35s, or more Mission Impossible type secret operations. None of those things and many other impressive and expensive gambits would have stopped the October 7th attacks. It could have been stopped if enough reservists had been called up to man the guard towers surrounding the Gaza Strip. Soldiers are the best sensors. They have eyes, ears, brains, and a strong incentive to pay attention.
The attack has been called an intelligence failure, but it would be more accurate to call it a commonsense failure.
Sunday, August 24, 2025
The not-so-secret NSA language school in Augusta, GA
The eight-foot-high steel fence around the place and the keycard activated, heavy-duty turnstiles are a clue. It's a soft target, hence its innocuous sounding name: Westgate Learning Center. Kerr Business College closed in 2009.
Defense Language Proficiency Testing is done here. The center is very crowded and busy on those days. The entrance and exit are the same. That's a handy chokepoint.
There is a Zen style garden and picnic area between the two parallel sections. That part was my favorite. It also has a splendid multilingual library.
Turning that place into a smoking hole in the ground would be easy for a madman with nothing to lose.
Labels:
arabic,
autobiography,
image hosting,
my ordeal,
places I've been
Friday, August 15, 2025
English and Icelandic are the only Germanic languages with both "th" sounds
I supposed that list could be expanded to Faroese, etc. My point is all those are (or were) island languages. Thus, their relative isolation insulated them (pun intended, insula means island in Latin) from the changes underwent by German, Dutch, Swedish, etc.
There is probably something similar at work with Polynesian vs. other Austronesian languages.
Not much of an insight but figured I'd share it. Arabic also has the same "th" sounds in the letters thaa ث and dhaal ذ, though those sounds are often substituted with daal د (d) and zayn ز (z) respectively. This makes sense as Arabia used to be fairly isolated from the rest of the world.
Friday, August 1, 2025
Flight 93 was shot down by the US military - here's the proof - الكذب الكبير من امريكا
Below is a picture of Paige Brown. We worked together as Arabic linguists in section FGX3B23 at NSA. Not long after I met her in the summer of 2019, she came to me with a pained expression and asked, "is it OK to talk about classified information here?" Since we were almost at our desks inside the Whitelaw NSA building, I said yes. Then she said that Flight 93 was shot down by the US military. I wasn't surprised, but I also understood why a false narrative was propagated and why being told the truth pained her. I see no reason why she would lie or why the USAF instructor at Goodfellow AFB who told her would lie about it either. 24 years of lies is enough, and it is standard practice to declassify things after 25 years.
There was no heroic last stand by the passengers. This is all the more obvious when I remember how cowardly Americans were during COVID.
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There was no heroic last stand by the passengers. This is all the more obvious when I remember how cowardly Americans were during COVID.
I have been reluctant to publicize this information. My rationale is explained here:
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arabic,
history,
military,
my ordeal,
places I've been
Sunday, July 27, 2025
presented without comment - Israeli soldier dresses up in dinosaur costume to launch bombs towards the Gaza strip
Israeli soldier dresses up in dinosaur costume to launch bombs towards the Gaza strip
***
1 Samuel 15
Easy-to-Read Version
Saul Destroys the Amalekites
15 One day Samuel said to Saul, “The Lord sent me to anoint you king over his people Israel. Now listen to his message. 2 The Lord All-Powerful says: ‘When the Israelites came out of Egypt, the Amalekites tried to stop them from going to Canaan. I saw what the Amalekites did. 3 Now go fight against the Amalekites. You must completely destroy the Amalekites and everything that belongs to them. Don’t let anything live; you must kill all the men and women and all of their children and little babies. You must kill all of their cattle and sheep and all of their camels and donkeys.’”
***
Tuesday, July 22, 2025
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Predictions for Israel and Palestine
Here are the important trends and facts:
-The population of Israel and Palestine will continue to increase
-The Palestinians will eventually outnumber the Israelis
-20% of Israeli residents/citizens are Arabs
-Israel continues to seize land for settlements
-Ultra-Orthodox Jews will become the largest subgroup in Israel
-The Ultra-Orthodox generally do not serve in the IDF
-The only reason why Israel has population growth is because of Ultra-Orthodox fertility
-Hamas has proven itself resilient to the IDF
-Hamas has various local allies (Iran, Houthis, Hezbollah) willing to fight Israel
-The US will continue to support Israel
-World opinion will continue to turn against Israel
-Hamas has proven it is a match for the IDF in conventional war despite Israeli air supremacy
Putting this all together, Israel will increasingly become a besieged state. It's shaping up to be another Siege of Ceuta on a grander scale.
If nothing changes, Israel is doomed. The only stable equilibrium might be "mowing the lawn", as Martin Van Creveld put it.
***
In a TV interview in 2002, he expressed doubts as to the ability of the Israeli army to defeat the Palestinians during the Second Intifada:
They [Israeli soldiers] are very brave people... they are idealists... they want to serve their country and they want to prove themselves. The problem is that you cannot prove yourself against someone who is much weaker than yourself. They are in a lose-lose situation. If you are strong and fighting the weak, then if you kill your opponent then you are a scoundrel... if you let him kill you, then you are an idiot. So here is a dilemma which others have suffered before us, and for which as far as I can see there is simply no escape. Now the Israeli army has not by any means been the worst of the lot. It has not done what for instance the Americans did in Vietnam... it did not use napalm, it did not kill millions of people. So everything is relative, but by definition, to return to what I said earlier if you are strong and you are fighting the weak, then anything you do is criminal.[14]
***
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
Monday, June 30, 2025
Recognizing different dialects of Arabic
The letter qaf, usually transliterated with a q, is often silent or pronounced as a hamza (glottal stop) in Lebanese Arabic.
A kind a common phrase sounds like habib elbi, meaning "love of my heart". The same phrase in Modern Standard Arabic is habib qalbi.
Qaf in Iraqi and Jordanian Arabic often sounds like the g in dog. Palestinian Arabic is similar.
Egyptians pronounce jeem, the equivalent to the letter j, like the g in dog. Hence the name Gamel instead of the usual Jamaal.
Iraqis often pronounce jeem like the ch in the word chin.
Sudanese often speak slower. It's the easiest dialect to understand.
Yemenis say hagga a lot. Everything's hagga this and hagga that.
Syrian is similar to Lebanese. Both sometimes mix in French words as is common in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia.
Memnouah! (Forbidden) is a good show for learning Levantine Arabic.
Greetings to my readers in Egypt
I had the pleasure of visiting your fine country in late 2009. Luxor was a feast for my eyes.
The secret recipe looks even more exotic in Arabic.
Labels:
arabic,
history,
image hosting,
places I've been
Saturday, June 28, 2025
My favorite jihad songs
I oppose militant Islam and joined the Army in part to fight it. Even so, they have some catchy tunes.
Oghzo ' Alayhim أغزوا عليهم : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
https://archive.org/details/OghzoAlayhim
Na’am Qatil / نعم قاتل (Yes, fight)
Nasheed Saleel Sawarim - Mojevideo
https://www.mojevideo.sk/video/21fd8/nasheed_saleel_sawarim.html
This song ruffled enough feathers to open a pillow factory:
For the sake of Allah | IS Nasheed | sk titulky - Mojevideo
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Spot the Not #89 - Osama bin Laden
All the following are real quotes from him except one. Can you Spot the Not?
1. Look at Vietnam, look at Lebanon. Whenever soldiers start coming home in body bags, Americans panic and retreat. Such a country needs only to be confronted with two or three sharp blows, then it will flee in panic, as it always has.
2. Every nation imposes its own system as far as its armies can reach, and America and Israel are the best examples of this.
3. The ruling to kill the Americans and their allies, civilians and military. is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do it, in order to liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque and the holy mosque [Mecca] from their grip, and in order for their armies to move out of all the lands of Islam, defeated and unable to threaten any Muslim.
4. I am one of the servants of Allah. We do our duty of fighting for the sake of the religion of Allah. It is also our duty to send a call to all the people of the world to enjoy this great light and to embrace Islam and experience the happiness in Islam. Our primary mission is nothing but the furthering of this religion.
5. The pieces of the bodies of infidels were flying like dust particles. If you would have seen it with your own eyes, you would have been very pleased, and your heart would have been filled with joy.
6. In today's wars, there are no morals. We believe the worst thieves in the world today and the worst terrorists are the Americans. We do not have to differentiate between military or civilian. As far as we are concerned, they are all targets.
7. And as I looked at those demolished towers in Lebanon, it entered my mind that we should punish the oppressor in kind and that we should destroy towers in America in order that they taste some of what we tasted and so that they be deterred from killing our women and children.
Labels:
arabic,
history,
military,
religion,
spot the not
Monday, June 16, 2025
Spot the Not #32 - jihad song lyrics
All the following except one are real lyrics from jihad songs. Can you Spot the Not?
1. The rattle of spearheads is the melody of men
2. The clashing of swords is the song of the proud and the path of fighting is the path of life
3. And in war there is might and a return of dignity
4. We are men who love death more than you love your life
5. The Islamic State has risen by the blood of the righteous
6. To die for Allah is a beautiful thing and to fight in his cause is the greatest honor
Thursday, April 18, 2024
A Fool's Poem - قصيدة أحمق - poem #7
العالم هو بيتي
والريح هو تنفسي
بامشي بدون الخوف
مين يقدر يكون عدوي
انا قوي متل دب
وشجاع متل اسد
حبيبي سمعوني يا رب
احياتنا رح تكون اسعد
رح نطاءر متل الصقور
الاماكن الافضل رح نزور
احللامنا متل منارة التي
تاشر الطريق الى قلبك وقلبي
في اكتر المخلوقات
بالحديقة الحيوانات
ولاكن بدي شوي لاكون سعيد
فقط قصيداتي وعمل بالمكتب البريد
***
The world is my home
And the wind is my breath
I walk without fear
Who can be my enemy
I am strong like a bear
And brave like a lion
My dear, listen to me, oh lord
Our lives will be the happiest
We will fly like falcons
The best places we will visit
Our dreams are like a lighthouse which
Points the way to your heart and mine
There are more creatures
In the zoo
But I need a few to be happy
Just my poems and a job at the post office.
Friday, October 24, 2014
The Lump in the Python: From School to Work
The lump in the python is me- slowly getting pushed through the long gut of life. Although I am comfortably poor, I am unhappy with the way my education and career have turned out so far. This essay explores the reasons why. I had initially planned on writing a more general essay full of facts and figures about the various flaws in the US public school system. Later, I decided it would more interesting to talk about the few ups and many downs I had with it. Plus it would be less work for me. My hope is that I prevent others from ending up in the same hole.
The mouth of the python was preschool, which I was in from about age 4 to 5. I don't remember learning anything, although I vaguely remember some lessons about colors and shapes. I have yet to figure out why exactly this needs to be taught. Plenty of people never went to preschool and learned that stuff just fine. It's not like it takes a lot of work, even for a 4 year old, to understand what "blue" means. But it was fun to play with the toys. Even at that young age, I disliked school. I caused a commotion one day when I managed to escape and walk all the way home without the teacher noticing. I can understand why my parents put me there. They both had to work, so someone had to watch me and my siblings. And as for the poor teacher, I hope I did not traumatize too badly with my disappearing act.
Next came kindergarten. I remember being taught about letters, numbers, and the calendar, but it wasn't new for me. I was mostly literate before kindergarten because my parents read to me. Thanks Mom and Dad! I am convinced that early reading is the foundation of successful learning.
And then 1st grade came. This is when it really became a grind- literally. My hand was cramped from practicing the letters and I wore out countless erasers. I had and still have bad handwriting. It used to be so bad that the teacher thought something was wrong with my brain. Others agree with that diagnosis for reasons unrelated to fine motor skills. But the teacher was very nice and saw that I had a good memory and vocabulary. This eventually got me put into the "gifted & talented" classes- more on that later.
2nd and 3rd grade were kind of a blur. This was when I began using computers regularly. It's good that schools do this, although the computers were basically just toys for us students. This was also about the time I started lugging around text books. Boring, heavy, text books. I am always amazed when I look into a typical textbook and see that it has dozens of co-authors. I would think one educated adult could write a book explaining arithmetic, which hasn't changed a whole lot in the past few hundred years. And yet, every few years there's a new edition written by a committee of teachers.
How many teachers does it take to change a light bulb?
I remember we spent 2 weeks or so learning about dinosaurs, which I was already an expert on. It's good that there are so many books about dinosaurs. They're a great way to get kids to read. I brought in a model of a dinosaur skeleton and the teacher used the the shadows of the pieces to make a much bigger version. That was really cool. The other kids helped paint and assemble it. We took a vote for the name. My suggestion was "Red Claw" and it won the vote.
I will take a brief detour to talk a little about the other school- Sunday School. From what I can gather, parents make their kids go in the hope they will acquire good morals. I cannot see what forced singing and weird stories have to do with morals. People learn how to act by watching the others around them. If you want your kids to have good morals, show by example. No amount of Sunday School will fix the damage from bad role models. I never liked it and was very happy when I no longer had to go.
Starting in 3rd grade, I got placed in the special enrichment class. I have complained about school being a one-size-fits-all straight jacket, but I must give credit to the teachers and administrators who tried tailor-fit something for me. It was way better than regular class. We did a lot of puzzles and games. I remember we read Homer's Odyssey and acted out some of the scenes. That was much more fun than long division. That lasted until the end of 6th grade about. I was placed because I got a high score on an IQ test. I don't know what it was nor do I care. I don't think IQ is very important. What is important is being good at something that you can make a job of. And if you enjoy too, that is the best of all.
My Achilles heel became apparent around 4th grade. I started having trouble with math. I think the problem was I got so used to giving quick answers from memory that I tried to do the same thing with math problems. It took me a few years to figure out that math is a process and that to get the right answer, you must break it into steps. I was lucky that my teachers didn't let me skate by with it. One teacher in particular rather bluntly told me that my math skills were awful and that I was smart enough to get better. That's the key to good coaching- point out a true weakness, then offer encouragement. I took his advice and greatly improved. I improved so much that I was later able to get a free ride to college and got my engineering degree in 4 years flat. More on that later.
I had 2 main after school activities: scouting & karate. I did scouting from age 7 to 18. I liked the camping trips and learning various practical things. Earning badges and such was fun at first, but later it just seemed like a distraction. Ditto for the uniforms. And always with the signatures- do these things, get a signature, get a badge. Gets a bit dull after 100 times. In retrospect, I would have preferred to just do stuff rather than try to track everything.
Karate was fun and good exercise. I don't think it's very good for actual defense. It's way easier and a lot smarter to avoid fights, and when they're unavoidable, it's better just to have a weapon. Also, injuries are common in karate- you risk hurting yourself while trying to learn how not to get hurt. I gave it up after a moderate injury. Nonetheless, I don't regret the time I spent on it.
In 5th grade, I started playing the trumpet. I got pretty good at it and kept it up for a few years. Unfortunately, it was one of the many, many things I learned that did nothing for my career. There is a philosophy that children should be exposed to many things in school so they can become "well-rounded". I disagree strongly with this. There is not much benefit in being mediocre at anything. It's fine to try many things, but the focus should always be on what you enjoy and have talent for. You have to try many things to find what you like. And once you find them, you need to drop the other stuff.
In 6th grade, I played Scrooge in theatrical version of "A Christmas Carol". That was fun and it was neat to see how the class worked together to make it happen. Some students made the sets, props, and costumes; others were actors or stage hands. I had the most lines to memorize and it was a lot of work to get it all down. In school, I took countless quizzes and tests and filled out forests of notebook paper and forgot it all. But things like being in a play are what I remember.
Speaking of useless things, I spent absurd amounts of time in school memorizing trivia. The most outrageous example was in 7th grade when we had to memorize the 57 prepositions in alphabetical order. What could possibly be the use in memorizing a list of words I already know? I've been on a dozen job interviews and there was never a single question about prepositions. In fact, in many of the places I've worked, people don't know how to use apostrophes. And don't even get my started about diagramming sentences. I had whole classes that were wastes of time. I remember my state history class consisted of little except memorizing the names of the counties, trivia about them, and their location on a map. I challenge the teachers the world to name a single activity in the life of a typical adult that bears the slightest resemblance to filling in a map from memory. School work is supposed to be preparation for life, not a contest to see who can dream up the most insane way to keep children busy. The only upshot was that I won a free trip to the state capital and some cool trinkets because of my talent for cramming trivia. I also received the title of Knight of the Golden Horseshoe. I have been sorely tempted to put that on my resume.
Another tangent: reading assignments. It is a sad fact that many people do not like to read and school is a big reason why. Teaching a child to hate reading by assigning boring books is nearly a form of child abuse. I cannot think of a single example of someone who became a man of letters as a result of being punished with lots of reading.
Grades 7 through 10 were pretty meh overall. I was part of an after school club about creative problem solving in 8th grade, I had some fun with that. The only parts of school I enjoyed were the projects that had some kind of product at the end- a big dinosaur skeleton, a play, etc. Everything else was read/memorize something, regurgitate it, get a paper back with a number on it, throw the paper in the garbage. Repeat 10,000 times. I am hard-pressed to think of a single example in my job history that resembles the typical cycle of school work.
Speaking of jobs, I got my first one in 11th grade. I was a bus boy. Fun fact: there are no good jobs whose titles contain the word "boy". Over the next 6 years, I also did odd jobs on a farm, did grunt work at Wal-Mart, more grunt work in a factory and a loading dock, and a work-study program with a professor. That one was the most interesting, although the subject matter was mostly over my head. After that, I decided I did not want to get a PhD.
I was not very excited about college. I went because I had a free ride and couldn't think of anything better to do. It was a practical move and it has kept a roof over my head, so I don't regret it too much.
I studied chemical engineering because I liked chemistry in high school and there will always be a need for engineers. Unfortunately, I have no particular passion for engineering and the engineering jobs I've managed to get have little to do with chemistry. And there it is in a nutshell. I spent all this time studying all these things, and I've only ever used a small fraction of it in my various jobs. For me, it was just far too much time to spend on something that hasn't been that important for me.
And as for the argument that children must go to school to be socialized, I say the social skills you learn in school are very similar to the ones people learn in prison. It is depressing to think of all the ways school and prison are alike: it is an involuntary confinement in a government building that lasts for many years. I remember being asked by a school psychiatrist in 7th grade what I would change about school. My answer was "mandatory attendance". If had been able to only go to school when I felt like it and do only the things I wanted, I would have loved school.
I made one pretty good move decision after college. That was joining the Peace Corps. I served as math teacher in Tanzania. I liked teaching and was pretty good at it. The downside was that Tanzanian schools are even more prison-like than US schools. I didn't like the authoritarian nature of it, but I was glad that I was able to help my students. I thought about teaching in the US, but there are so many hoops to jump through, I got discouraged. In between engineering jobs, I did manage to make a fair amount of money as a tutor. Unfortunately, it was not enough to live on.
I also tried stand-up comedy, which I did as a hobby for about 4 years. Much as in music, a lot of people try to make careers out of comedy, but very few succeed.
I also tried stand-up comedy, which I did as a hobby for about 4 years. Much as in music, a lot of people try to make careers out of comedy, but very few succeed.
I got my first engineering job about 10 months after returning from the Peace Corps. It was a manufacturing job for a company that made a special kind of glass. I took it because it was the first offer I got and I figured any job is better than no job.
I used to have a nice head of dark brown hair. After 2 years of working in manufacturing, it was streaked with white. All this before I turned 30. If you enjoy working with pushy, excitable people who freak out at the drop of a hat, manufacturing is the perfect place for you. I can barely stand such people: balding, overweight, middle-age men with their hands perched on their hips; constantly jabbering about the "verbage" of the "action items" and "red flags" and people being run over by buses at the end of the day. It's torture.
My laid back attitude doesn't help either. Every engineering boss I've had will remark within days of me being on the job that I look "tired and unhappy" or am "dragging" my feet. I think the problem is much as I try to be polite, I can't help but see them as annoying, nervous idiots. And they pick up on that. Even though I get good results, my bosses have always cared much more about my attitude.
And then the work itself is super boring. Make a few calls, send some emails, crunch some numbers, and that's about it. I doubt very much I spend much more than 2 hours actually working in a typical day. The rest is meetings, which are almost always a complete waste of time and waiting. Lots and lots of waiting. Waiting for parts to arrive. Waiting for a technician to show up. Waiting for a meeting to start. And the worst part is that while waiting, I have to pretend to be busy. I would rather chop fire wood all day.
The good news is I think I found something I enjoy and I have talent for: writing. I wrote a science book in the Peace Corps and got a lot of satisfaction out of that. Lately, I've been published many times in the letters to the editor section of my local paper. So the only piece that I still need to find is someone who will pay me to write.
I think I'll wrap up with some advice. First, try many things. Then stick only with the things you enjoy and are good at. Don't worry about the other stuff. As Shakespeare said, "study what you most affect". Listen to criticism to find out what you are good at. Let your heart be a compass and your head be a map. Your emotions will tell you the direction and your intelligence will show the path.
Good luck.
My laid back attitude doesn't help either. Every engineering boss I've had will remark within days of me being on the job that I look "tired and unhappy" or am "dragging" my feet. I think the problem is much as I try to be polite, I can't help but see them as annoying, nervous idiots. And they pick up on that. Even though I get good results, my bosses have always cared much more about my attitude.
And then the work itself is super boring. Make a few calls, send some emails, crunch some numbers, and that's about it. I doubt very much I spend much more than 2 hours actually working in a typical day. The rest is meetings, which are almost always a complete waste of time and waiting. Lots and lots of waiting. Waiting for parts to arrive. Waiting for a technician to show up. Waiting for a meeting to start. And the worst part is that while waiting, I have to pretend to be busy. I would rather chop fire wood all day.
The good news is I think I found something I enjoy and I have talent for: writing. I wrote a science book in the Peace Corps and got a lot of satisfaction out of that. Lately, I've been published many times in the letters to the editor section of my local paper. So the only piece that I still need to find is someone who will pay me to write.
I think I'll wrap up with some advice. First, try many things. Then stick only with the things you enjoy and are good at. Don't worry about the other stuff. As Shakespeare said, "study what you most affect". Listen to criticism to find out what you are good at. Let your heart be a compass and your head be a map. Your emotions will tell you the direction and your intelligence will show the path.
Good luck.
Labels:
arabic,
autobiography,
my ordeal,
opinion,
places I've been
Monday, October 6, 2014
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