Tuesday, May 31, 2005

I'm Famous!

I was interviewed by Mister Ghost at Iraqi blogger's Central. Clearing house for blogs that post from or about Iraq.

You can catch it Here.

A small taste:

MG: Speaking of Sam, he reported that one of the Terrorists they had captured in Iraq, had confessed to torturing people by pulling out their eyeballs before he killed them. Do you think the Mainstream Media in this country would devote more attention to this story, if the terrorist made his victims wear panties on their heads and flushed down a couple of Korans?

Kat: No. The only way it would get more coverage is if he suddenly came out with a confession that he was a born again Christian that attended Bob Jones University, was a faithful follower of Falwell, slept in the Lincoln bedroom during the First Bush administration, had secret documents showing that President Bush hadn't completed his National Guard Service and had once snorted a line of coke with the President in Kennebunkport while Barbara Bush made them cookies in case they got the munchies and Laura Bush danced naked on the coffee table with a lampshade on her head.

Read More...

Sunday, May 29, 2005

I Parted Then With Valiant Men

'Twas down the glen one Easter morn
To a city fair rode I.
When armed line of marching men
In squadrons passed me by.
No pipes did hum, no battle drum
Did sound its loud tattoo
But the Angelus bell o'er the Liffey's swell
Rang out in the foggy dew....

The bravest fell, and the solemn bell
Rang mournfully and clear
For those who died that Watertide
In the springing of the year.
And the world did gaze with deep amaze
At those fearless men, but few
Who bore the fight that freedom's light
Might shine through the foggy dew.

Ah, back through the glen I rode again
and my heart with grief was sore
For I parted then with valiant men
whom I never shall see more.
But to and fro in my dreams I go and
I'd kneel and pray for you,
For slavery fled, O glorious dead, when
you fell in the foggy dew.



May 30, 2005 is Memorial Day. The day we remember those who served and those that died.

In, Afghanistan, the Iraq War and the War on Terrorism, men from Missouri and Kansas, from small towns and big cities, have given their all so that we might be safe and that others might be free.

Roll Call:

Missouri

Spc. Barnes, Jonathan P. Anderson, Mo
Spc. Bertoldie, Joel L. Independence, Mo
CWO. Blaise, Michael T. Macon, Mo
Sgt. Burkhardt, Travis Lee Edina, Mo
Spc. Campbell, Michael C. Marshfield, Mo
Sgt. Campbell, Ryan M. Kirksville, Mo
Spc. Carter, Justin B. Mansfield, Mo
Spc. Crane, Richard M. Independence, Mo
1st Lt. Edens, William A. Columbia, Mo
Pfc. Farnan, Colby M. Weston, Mo
Cpl. Fleischer, Jacob R. St. Louis, Mo
Sgt First Class Gottfried, Richard S. Lake Ozarks, Mo
Sgt. Hodson, Nicholas M. Smithville, Mo
Staff Sgt. Huggins, Jamie L. Hume, Mo
Sgt. James, Lindsey T. Urbana, Mo
Capt. Johnson, Christopher B. Excelsior Springs, Mo
Cpl. Kerns, Dallas L. Mountain Grove, Mo
Master Sgt. Kerwood, William J. Houston, Mo
Staff Sgt. Kisling Jr., Daniel Leon Neosha, Mo
Sgt. Mora, Melvin Y. Columbia, Mo
Sgt. Mowris, James D. Aurora, Mo
Spc. Neusche, Joshua M. Montreal, Mo
Staff Sgt. Sanders, Charles R. Charleston, Mo
Capt. Smith, Benedict J. Monroe City, Mo
Pfc. Smith, Jeremiah D. Odessa, Mo
Staff Sgt. Spink, Trevor Farmington, Mo
Sgt. Svitak, Phillip J. Neosho, Mo
Sgt. Walters, Donald R. Kansas City, Mo (1st MO casualty, Iraq. Ambushed Nasariyah)
Sgt. Wilkerson, William T. Kansas City, Mo

Kansas

Sgt. Barry, Michael C. Overland Park, Ks
Sgt. Butler, Jacob L. Wellesville, Ks
Cpl. Cabral, Juan C. Cabral Banuelos Emporia, Ks
Sgt. Clary, Don A. Troy, Ks
Pfc. Cox, Ryan R. Derby, Ks
Pvt. Drexler, Jeremy L. Topeka, Ks
2nd Lt. Goins, James Michael Bonner Springs, Ks
Spc. Hall, David E. Uniontown, Ks
Spc. Herndon, Joseph F. Derby, Ks
Pvt. Kreider, Dustin L. Riverton, Ks
Spc. Lister, Joseph L. Pleasanton, Ks
Sgt. Maugins, Jamie O. Derby, Ks
Spc. McGaugh, Dustin K. Derby, Ks
1st Sgt. Millsap, Timmy J. Wichita, Ks
Sgt. Morton, Benjamin C. Wright, Ks
Sgt. Perez, Christopher S. Hutchinson, Ks
Staff Sgt. Peters, Dustin W. El Dorado, Ks
Spc. Thomas, Kyle G. Topeka, Ks
Lance Cpl. Wasser, Christopher B. Ottowa, Ks
Sgt 1st Class Wisdom, Clinton L. Atchison, Ks

[Legacy: In Rememberance via Castle Argghhh!

Men of Harlech stop your dreaming;
Can't you see their spearpoints gleaming?
See their warriors' pennants streaming
To this battlefield.
Men of Harlech stand ye steady;
It cannot be ever said ye
for the battle were not ready;
Stand and never yield!


I did not know these men, but I know men like them. I read everyone of their profiles, young men, men in their 20's and 30's. They were pranksters, dreamers, football players, fathers, sons and friends. They each had a reason to join the military. Some volunteered two and three times to go back so that they could be with their men or because they believed they were doing something important. Some had been boy scouts and volunteered to help disadvantaged children or coach children's soccer. Others were sons of military men, created in their fathers' image. There were men who joined directly from high school, the ones that joined after September 11, the ones that had served for many years. They were all colors, ethnicity and backgrounds.

They were loved and they will be remembered as have been all those that came before.

I know the places that they come from, places that most people have never heard of: Bonner Springs, Kansas with it's town square where a gazebo has stood for years and every Saturday and holiday during the summer, a band plays the old songs and patriotic songs. Sometimes the people sing along.

Troy, Derby, Wright and Wellesville; just little towns on the map with little populations, a small grocer store, the local gas station and, if they're lucky, a bank. A place where people know your name and remember. A place where a small patch of land in the town square, in front of the court house or on the corner of Main Street, memorials to men fallen in the wars, sometimes clear back to the civil war, stand in granite and are always well maintained.

Mountain Grove, Urbana, Neosho, Weston; in every town a small diner where the older men sit around and drink coffee in the mornings talking about the weather, debating politics and whether they should pay to connect to the water rural water system or just keep their wells. The high schools where the football and basketball team are the pride of the town, regardless of how well they do in their districts.

Independence, Witchita, Topeka, Overland Park, Kansas City; the suburbs and the cities where these men might have been just another guy on the street, but, when they fell, their names were called out and the whole city felt the sadness and the pride. A place where the flags are lowered at half mast for a day when the news comes.

These are all places that sent boys to join the military, who then became men. Men who you would want your sons to grow up to be. Places where we don't forget what it means to serve and sacrifice.

Psalm 87

His foundation is in the holy mountains
The Lord loveth the gates of Zion more than all the dwellings of Jacob
Glorious things are spoken of thee, O city of God. Selah.
I will make mention of Rahab and Babylon to them that know me: behold Philistia, and Tyre, with Ehtiopia; this man was born there
And of Zion it shall be said, This and that man was born in her: and the highest himself shall establish her.
The Lord shall count, when he writeth up the people, that this man was born there. Selah.
As well the singers as the players on instruments shall be there: all my springs are in thee.



My family has served our country in every conflict over 100 years in the military, not including those that have served as peace officers since they first settled in the Kansas and Missouri area.

In the Spanish American War, "Remember the Maine", brought my grandfather's great uncle from his farm to join the army.

In World War I, "Babe" Howard (deceased-non-military) served in the Marines, infantry. Much of his story is lost over the time and dispersal of our family, but we know that he was decorated for bravery.

In World War II, my grandfather Leroy Henry (deceased-non-military) and his cousin (deceased-non-military) served in the Navy. I wrote about my grandfather's service and what he meant to us last year in "The Flag on My Wall".

My mother's brother, Donald Kuehl (disabled-non military), served in both the Army, occupying Germany in 1948 and the Air Force during the Korean conflict. My grandfather's younger brother, Leon Henry (deceased-non-military) and my grandmother's youngest brother, Lonnie Howard (deceased-non-military), both served in the Navy.

My uncle, Louis Henry (disabled-military related), served in the Army during Vietnam. He was a helicopter crew chief. He was shot down twice and managed to escape capture both times. Part of his story is here. He enlisted so that my dad, who was newly married and me on the way, could get his status changed. On one occasion, when he was shot down, both of the M-60s were disabled, but he set them up in a perimeter to make the enemy think they had more fire power. The pilot was injured, the co-pilot was dead. He and another crewman took turns going from each spot with their M16s, talking loudly to each other and calling out the names of other non-existant crewman, answering each other and firing from those positions, to make the enemy believe that there were more men on the ground. They were surrounded by enemy on all sides, hiding in the tall grass around the field they had landed in. Finally, the helicopters came to rescue them.

The pilot credited my uncle and the other crewman with saving his life and keeping them from being captured. He received the bronze star. He also received a purple heart and still carries with him a bullet and a mangled piece of M60 which he credits with saving his life. He received many other medals, but they are all in a box.
.
My brother served in the Air Force Active Duty during Gulf War I, Somalia, Bosnia and Kosovo. His main duty station was Korea near the DMZ. Today he is a reservist and National Guard.

My third cousin Scott is Army infantry. He served a tour in Iraq, 2003.

There are some I know I'm missing. These are the men whose stories, at least some, I know.

Every year, we have a family reunion about this time. When I was younger, the old men would set around and tell stories. I was always too busy running and playing to listen long and now many of them are gone. Stories lost, but to a few.

Still, today I remember and salute them and all those known and unknown who have served and made the ultimate sacrifice.

Arlington National Cemetary: Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

"Here Rests
In Honored Glory
An American Soldier
Known But To God


Previous thoughts on The Boys in Blue and Khaki and Heroes

Swift Wind and Gentle Breeze


I dreamed a dream so sweet and true
Of skies the color of fearless blue
I soared with eagles on swift wind and gentle breeze
But one by one they took their leave

I flew for miles, searching far and wide
I missed them soaring by my side
With them near I felt secure and free
Without them I had lost part of me

Then came a dove that did sing
Of peace and love everlasting
Feel no sorrow nor shed a tear, it cried
On swift winds and gentle breeze they reside

It took to wing and left me there
Contemplating all my cares
It was for me they had taken leave
So that I might enjoy swift wind and gentle breeze

Suddenly, it little mattered
That sometimes my wings felt torn and tattered
I soared with eagles in skies of fearless blue
A privilege given to just a few

Finally, I had to go
Return to earth far below
As I touched down and closed my eyes
I felt them still by my side

I woke to skies of fearless blue
I heard the taps sound out the news
Another eagle had taken its leave
Soaring forever on swift wind and gentle breeze
-K. Henry



I parted then, with valiant men who I never shall see more


Read More...

Zarqawi About To Be Captured?

According to the Arab Times Online, some folks at the Ministry of Interior (responsible for internal secuirty) are stating that Zarqawi might be holed up and surrounded. [via: Winds of Change]

BAGHDAD (Agencies): A force of Iraqi commandoes, supported by US forces, have surrounded the village of Abu Shallal, north of here, after reports indicated that Abu Musab Zarqawi might have taken refuge there, Interior Ministry sources told KUNA on Friday. The sources have indicated that Zarqawi has been spotted by eyewitnesses driven in a red Opel in the village of Abu Shallal, near an area called al-Tarmia. He was said to have taken refuge in the home of an individual named Sheikh Hatem al-Amir. The Iraqi commandos and US forces are said to be ready to start an operation aimed at capturing him in that village, said the sources. Interior Ministry forces last week surrounded an area named al-Etaifiya, in the middle section of Baghdad, where the Karkh hospital there was inspected for a possible sighting of Zarqawi.


As with all sightings and rumors of deposed, injured or dead despots and lunatics, please stand by for DNA testing and other validations from US military sources.

If you can get past the "scape goat" comment, you can find a decent account of Zarqawi's injury and subsequent fleeing for his life here.

Actually, I kind of found it amusing how much they were talking about Zarqawi being a "mastermind" and then claiming that the US was using him for a "scape goat". So typical. Which is he? A "mastermind" or a "scape goat".

Aiy! These people.

Read More...

Saturday, May 28, 2005

State of the "Insurgency" Part II

Deciphering Media Reports

With limited space and limited information, the media has resorted to limp reporting of body counts and "incidents" without any real analysis of the situation. Whether it is in two minute sound bites on network or cable news or five sentences in a paragraph trying to squeeze in all the daily happenings in one report either in print or on websites, true analysis of the situation is lacking. Without the analysis and context, one would be hard pressed to understand the situation in Iraq.

By standard methods, most of these reports attempt to be "objective" (ie, we report you decide) but by the very lack of information puts a spin (unintended or otherwise) on the information for the basic viewer and provides an almost simplistic, yet effective, propaganda for certain elements inside Iraq.

Objects in the mirror may seem larger than they are in real life.

For months, I've been reviewing media reports of the violence in Iraq. I have been slowly trying to decipher the situation. Using the blogs of Iraqis and soldiers to decipher the news has been helpful. Obviously, not everyone has the time or desire to read through stacks of media reports and blogs to come up with a clear picture of the situation. Even for me, the picture is still a little foggy.

Before we delve into the recent reports, I think it is helpful to understand how these reports are generated. Michael Yon, a free lance reporter in Iraq had an interesting piece on his website called An Now, for the rest of the story.... Here he explains how and why these reports are generated and the basic concepts of modern day journalism.

The media is an industry; but their business is not to report news. The industry needs a captive audience to beat the bottom line. The product is advertisement.

This is not a right or wrong. It's just a business concept for moving merchandise, and every profession or industry has one.


This has been said before, but for common folks who are still looking at the media to get their daily dose of local and world happenings, it should be a reminder that its not everything and somethings you don't know are because of the industry not seeing it as a story that will attract attention, increase ratings and develop advertisement dollars. Advertisement during news programs are placed for best effect during specific segments or time slots based on ratings, estimated viewers and their demographics. The best slots cost an arm and two legs while the lesser slots cost only an arm and one leg. The advertiser with the most money wins the prime slots. In order to obtain the most amount of money from advertisement, it is the media's job to generate as many "prime" slots as possible.

Finding or generating news can be costly. A good businessperson buys cheap, sells high. These points are obvious, but less conspicuous is how the media squeezes news cheaply from Iraq.


Michael goes on to explain how most news from Iraq is generated:

Western media cannot free-range Iraq, asking questions and jotting answers on notepads, particularly where insurgents cut off the heads of anyone they do not agree with, later posting "news" videos of their own. Here in Iraq, where bullets are often the background noise, most news agencies get their daily facts spoon-fed straight from the military. The basic building block for just about any news item reported in mainstream press is something called a SIGACT.

SIGACTs are Significant Actions; anything that significantly affects friendly or enemy forces, from sandstorms to IEDs. SIGACTs originate at the smaller units and feed to higher units quickly; sometimes in seconds.[snip]

Public Affairs Offices (PAO) are like news bureaus for the military, constantly taking SIGACTs and translating them into unclassified press bulletins called "media releases." [snip]

...journalists settled in places like Tikrit or Baghdad rely on the PAO for printed media releases. Once in hand, the "news" can be broadcast or posted on the internet in minutes.


Something we already should be aware of. Most news agencies really don't have reporters "embedded" with units anymore and they cannot "free range" as Michael puts it because they could be kidnapped and become "news" themselves. Security is costly and not always effective for reporters. Most media organizations have opted for keeping their costs down, limiting their "reporters" to "safe areas" inside the green zone or other AOs (area of operatioins) that are largely secure. Any reporting that does come from outside these areas or military reports is largely gleaned from Iraqi government press releases, Iraq newspapers, radio and television broadcasts or Iraqi "stringers" that don't require or buy their own security and get paid much less than their western counterparts (ie, expendable).

When you hear the press complaining about the number of journalists killed in Iraq, particularly foreign or local, the first thing that comes to mind is that these are a direct result of either coalition action or their inability to secure these journalists. The truth is, these journalists are putting it on the line, going outside the wire to report while most of their western counterparts stay safe near their air conditioned hotels, computers and bar. With but a few exceptions. Michael Yon is one of them.

For those that go outside the wire, everyday is a test of diplomacy and skill. Knowing who to talk to, when a situation might turn from being friendly to angry if the wrong questions are asked. Even here, as brave as some of these folks are, the reporting is necessarily less than satisfactory for those of us trying to get a full picture. In most cases, what we need to look for is what is not being said as well as what is. Worse yet, once all the reports are in, the editors go to work to look for the most "effective" and immediate information to develop quick soundbites and columns with headings that will grab the viewer/reader's attention. Thus, context and analysis are judiously clipped from the reports and we get what is left over while the news agencies create more advertising space.

For your average reader and viewer, searching and analyzing for themselves can be too much of an effort, thus, views on the situation are by defult skewed, foggy and downright unclear.

Michael continues to explain how SIGACT goes from the military to a media report we see:

If it bleeds, it leads...

If US forces are killed or wounded, the SIGACT might start like this:


Blam, Blam, Blam!...explosions…followed by a roar of small arms. So many weapons firing from so many directions, tracers bouncing off roads, zinging off buildings, rooms exploding, dust and smoke, a soldier cries out, "I'm hit!" and his buddies run across a road to help him and another is shot, "I'm hit!"


Then someone makes the radio call:

"Deuce-Main, Apache-Six, Contact, over." [Deuce-Four headquarters, this is the Alpha Company Commander]
"Apache-Six, Deuce-Main, send it."
"This is Apache-Six. Heavy small-arms and RPGs vicinity 4-West. Three friendly casualties, one is litter-urgent. Still in contact. We are in pursuit trying not to lose contact. Estimate 25 AIF [insurgents], all dismounted. Request QRF, over."
"Apache-Six, Deuce-Main, QRF spinning up. Warmonger is en route and fast movers in vicinity. Bulldog Company has a platoon two kilometers west en route to you. They are under your control time now. Don’t let the AIF break contact. Over."
"Roger, at least four enemy KIA. All Apache elements remain in contact and we have them isolated in a four-block area, over."
"Apache-Six, Deuce-Main, keep up the good work, don't let them get away. More combat power is on the way to assist in isolation."
"Deuce-Main, Apache-Six, roger, out."


Within seconds, someone will be typing up a SIGACT that might look like this:

SECRET
TACREP: XXXX
Subject: Smalls Arms Engagement
Time/Date: 2120 L 24 May 05
Narrative: Alpha Company 1-24 INF reports small arms and RPG, vicinity…. Reports 3 friendly WIA (1 litter-urgent, 2 routine). 4 Enemy KIA...



When this SIGACT is translated by a PAO, this might come out: "3 US soldiers were wounded by small arms in Mosul, Iraq. The soldiers were assigned to Task Force Freedom." News agencies that call or request information will get some variation of this report.

Such reports flow from all over Iraq to a place in Baghdad called the CPIC (Combined Press Information Center). The CPIC is like the Uber-PAO for Iraq, serving all branches of the military, and other nations in the Coalition. The CPIC collects those reports and makes a release that might go like this:


"3 US soldiers were wounded in a small arms engagement in Mosul. 3 US soldiers from Task Force Baghdad were wounded by a car bomb in Baquba while conducting convoy operations in Diyala Province. 1 US soldier was slightly wounded by an IED while conducting combat operations in Baghdad. 2 US Marines were killed in a Humvee accident in Anbar Province. A Blackhawk helicopter made an emergency landing near Ramadi. No injuries were reported."


This will hit pages all over the world, but in a newsier voice:


"A US helicopter made an emergency landing near Ramadi under unknown circumstances. An insurgent website claiming affiliation to Al Qaeda in Iraq says they shot down the helicopter with a surface-to-air missile. A US military spokesman would not comment. Elsewhere, one US soldier and two Marines were killed and seven other service members were wounded in Iraq, along with at least 18 deaths from a suicide car-bomber near the Syrian border. This brings total Coalition deaths in Iraq to 1,800. In other news, photos of the former dictator of Iraq in his underwear have infuriated the Arab world and angered the Pentagon, which promised a full investigation…"


Thus you are left with the impression that somebody asked someone in the military whether the helicopter was shot down and they said, "no comment" and there is a possibility that Al Qaida in Iraq did shoot it down. Body counts are reported without context to the fight or the outcome, leaving you with the impression that the attackers were able to hit and run witout taking casualties, thus making them appear "larger in the mirror" than they really are. Before you can take that in, the story is switched to a story that they can get their hands around, photos of Saddam in his underwear.

Please be sure to read the rest of Michael Yon's interesting post on all the news that's not fit to print (or simply gets missed).

His parting paragraphs are good points for both the military and the media:

Cynicism aside, the media really is important to this war. Not only is this a war for public opinion, at home and abroad, but also, people's lives are won and lost every day in Iraq as a direct result of how the media uses its cameras and keyboards. Iraq is extremely dangerous. There are relatively few reporters here, and those here cannot operate as if it were "business as usual." The military makes it easy for journalists to nibble at facts and then dash back to their desks. Nobody is well-served by this arrangement; the media could still sell advertisement without stirring and blowing new life onto dimming brimstone.

Yet, finally, the ultimate decision-maker is the person reading or watching the news. We cannot expect mainstream media to give quality reporting if we accept drive-through service every night.


Now, on with the rest of the story: the state of the insurgency by deciphering media reports.

With Michael's helpful hints, it should be easier to review today's Associated Press reports, at least in regards to military casualties. Unfortunately, we don't have a similar idea on how to deal with reports of Iraqi casualties. Much of what is reported is jumbled together and appears to be the work of this giant, all encompassing "insurgency" that has its tentacles everywhere in Iraq, able to reach out and touch people whenever it wants.

By the method of reporting currently being used, this is free and fantastic propaganda; building up their image for the "folks back home" in their native countries and making them appear to be invincible and unstoppable. Excellent recruiting material, particularly when their audience is even less deciphering than a western one that at least has some built in cynicism for reports of "perfection" and other resources not blocked or controlled by our government.

The "jihadist" elements can lay claim to every act of violence on their websites or through Arab media without being challenged on the truth. It is then reported to us as if it were fact and without context or understanding of the Iraq populace or history, we and our middle eastern counterparts suck it up with little ability to no the difference. Even the things they don't claim directly are attributed to them by the sheer lack of information.

What one first needs to know has been put out by many sources on the internet, specifically Iraqi bloggers, who have taken the time in the past to explain how Iraqi society has and is operating. Zeyad at Healing Iraq explained this very well in a four part series:

Iraqi Tribal Society Part I
Iraqi Tribal Society Part II
Iraqi Tribal Society Part III
Iraqi Tribal Society Part IV

Also of interest have been comments by The Messopotamian who explains the situation as largely attributable to the Iraqi "peasants". Which he later translated to mean the rural tribes that still operate on long standing traditions of reprisals and superstition:

Seldom did we see somebody from decent middle class background involved with these atrocities, at least not amongst those who appeared on T.V.; [snip]

Also, 99 % of those men belong to particular clans, tribes and a certain sect, that I am sure you will not have much difficulty at guessing which. [snip]

However, most of these men actually are seen to be of provincial origin.[ed...rural tribes][snip]

The whole thing can be traced back to our history, and particularly the Revolution of 1958 that deposed the Monarchy that essentially consisted of a social system based on the hegemony of the cities allied with feudal Lords or Shiekhs ( as they were called here).


To understand the current situation, based on this information, you would also need to understand how it worked under Saddam. First, his base was largely the minority Sunni. Whether they were directly involved with the Ba'ath government or simply bystanders, made no difference. Saddam gave precedence to Sunni and particularly Ba'athist members in regards to university placement, jobs and assistance. Even the rural tribal elements had their parts to play. They were able to send their sons to the city to obtain education and work. Unfortunately, most of them did not return to the tribal rural areas when they left, thus "civilized" urban ideas not related to tribal culture didn't filter back. There was also a distinct lack of radio, television and other media in the areas, so there was nothing to really challenge how they lived or perceived the situation.

Crime Families and Petty Gangs

Further, while there was definitely "ba'athi" [ed...Saddam] presence in regards to party leaders and basic government, these tribes by either agreement or lack of desire on the part of the central Baghdad government, were left to their own devices and governance, continuing the tribal ways of justice (basically an eye for an eye) and means of making money, which wasn't all related to shepharding cattle. Many of these tribes were and still are basically "organized crime" families. Some were more capable and prosperous than others at smuggling in blackmarket goods and smuggling in or out people. Tribute was (and is) exacted in terms of ransoms or tolls.

Putting them in context to what your average American viewer can relate to, imagine them in a heirarchy such as our own criminal elements. There are those that are highly organized and at the top of the food chain like the Gotti organized crime family in its hay-day. Most of these groups make their money through good connections in and outside of Iraq. They have staked out territory and a heirarchy that vets out jobs to the lesser or lower clans while the top guys direct and rake in the main part of the profit. This, by necessity requires them to protect routes and territories as well as the "outlets" for the goods and people. They have no compunction against killing rivals or their own that cheat them or are disloyal. Rival killings and kidnappings are farmed out to the lower elements, while internal disputes are handled within the clan or tribe itself.

Then there are those elements that are similar to gangs like the Bloods and the Crips, doing jobs like stealing or hijacking cars, breaking into shops and homes, and are often the first level for "kidnapping" a victim who is then passed on to other, more connected tribes who have contacts with groups like "The Association of Muslim Scholars", which is a Sunni cleric organization, that then makes arrangements to ransom the victims. Make no mistake, the largest part of the "kidnapped" population is affluent Iraqis who are asked to provide exhorbitant ransoms to get their fathers, mothers and children back. These are also the people who most likely perform the first step in kidnapping western journalist, businessmen and aid workers.

If the kidnap victim is valuable enough, they may be "sold" or moved up the chain to the main clan groups who make contact with the Islamist groups like AQ and are sold for money or assurances that the tribe will continue to provide as long as these elements do not target them directly. Lesser victims are probably maintained and ransomed by the local gang elements. Many victims of kidnappings end up dead and floating in the river (usually shot) because their families cannot pay the ransom. The women and children may be smuggled out of Iraq and sold into prostitution or virtual slavery. This includes Saudi Arabia where many of the "foreign" workers are picked up around the middle east and Asia then their "employers" hold their visas or passports to insure they don't leave before "fulfilling their contract".

The lower elements are much more prone to do violence and less concerned about covering their tracks or whom they kill in order to protect themselves and their operations. For a price, they will do a job, whether robbery, assassination, kidnapping, laying IEDs, smuggling people and product, you name it, they will do it.


Inter Tribal/Non-Sectarian Violence: Rural

Other tribal violence is not necessarily "criminal" related in regards to crime families and gang members. In the tribal areas, land is power. Grazing land, water rights and roads in and out of areas dominate the tribal power structure. Infringment by other tribes without prior arrangement or in direct hostility towards the managing tribe can result in retaliation through kidnapping or killings. It may be easier to understand if you view this as tribal warfare as seen in American Native Indian culture or even through medieval feudal systems as Alaa and the Mesopotamian demonstrates.

Land, water and control of roads means the survival of the clan and it's worth fighting for in these turbulent times when there is a definite power vaccuum. Local police are less concerned about maintaining the peace and enforcing uniform, equal law, but are more likely to work based on their tribal/clan affiliation, sometimes doing the dirty work of their clan.

From these tribes, young men are also tempted to join the gang elements in either urban or rural settings or the Islamist movements. Where ever they may be able to improve their situation and send back some remittance to their tribes or if they have been overtly schooled in religious dogma, considering it their duty to protect Islam. Usually, they don't really know or understand what the greater Islamist cause is beyond their simple understanding that a non-muslim country has invaded their land and attacked other Muslims. These have been filled with the rhetoric that it is their duty to defend Muslims and kill infidels (whoever doesn't believe as they do). This was also seen during round up and interviews of "Taliban" fighters in Afghanistan. Many of the conscripts from the rural tribal areas did not know or care who Al Qaida was or what had happened on September 11 before the bombs began to fall. They simply saw it as their duty to fight non-muslims attacking them.

These young men are what we normally call "cannon fodder" for the criminal, sectarian and Islamist elements.

For another view of the tribal effect on Iraqi life, read Iraqi Bloggers Central: Hope In the Middle East for a basic review of how tribal and sectarian violence has been common and predominant over the ages.

Sectarian Violence Urban, Suburban and Rural

Whenever we hear or read the words "sectarian", this is to indicate violence between the different ethnic and religious groups within Iraq. Unfortunately, this term is used with too wide a brush and any deaths that cannot be directly related to Islamist or "Ba'athi" insurgents (the only real "insurgents" are "ba'athi" and home grown Islamists as described in the previous section) are immediately ascribed to "sectarian" violence, particularly if the dead person or persons can be identified by their names as belonging to one tribe or another that is largely one sect (Sunni, Shi'a, Kurd, etc) or another.

It is important to remember that many tribes, particularly in more suburban or urban settings, are inter-ethnic/sectarian. Marriages and other affiliations means that they have elements of Sunni, Shi'a, Christian, etc in their ranks as noted by both Alaa the Mesopotamian and Iraq the Model:

I woke up this morning and headed to my clinic and as usual I need first to walk to the garage where buses stop but today while walking my way at the same time I was curiously inspecting people's faces; I passed by tens, maybe hundreds of them during that 15 minute walk. The same questions jumps in my mind with every new face I pass by "is this one Sunni or She'at?" maybe he or she is Kurdish, Turkmen or Assyrian.

I failed to reach a satisfying guess in any case.[snip]

Back at home, at the end of the day I turned the TV on and sat to watch. There was a show where an Iraqi family was interviewed and my nagging question didn't bother me this time but then came the news hour and I started looking at the faces again and this time I was able to find answers, I was so able to recognize who those people were; this one is Sunni and that one is She'at and this and this and….

I couldn't get these answers back in the streets or at the hospital but they were so clear to me on the news.

Do I see the shadows of a civil war? Yes but this war will not extend beyond the HQs of parties and the 21 inches of the screen while the street, the bazaar, the clinic and my city Baghdad (which is a smaller version of Iraq) tell me a different story than that of corrupt politicians and fake clerics.

My proof to that is that I couldn't find anything on the faces I see everyday but features that I can't have doubts about; Iraqi features only that indicate nothing except that who carries them is a son or daughter of this country.

Of course I'm wrong. Who am I to disagree with all the big names and brains of strategy sitting in big offices and surrounded by lights and guards?


The death of a person or persons identified by their "sect", may or may not be related to this "sectarian" in-fighting.

However, sectarian "in-fighting" does exist on many levels. The highest levels are the political/religious groups. There is Dawa and SCIRI (Supreme Council Islamic Revolution in Iraq) which are both Shi'ite political/religious groups. Dawa is loosely associated with Iranian groups, but can be largely traced back to Al-Sistani, the Shi'ite moderate cleric. However, the Badr corps, once a rebelious militia, is now the "security" apparatus for this group. SCIRI is more directly connected with Iran and is the more vocal about creating a Shia dominated Theocracy. The Association of Muslim Scholars, is Sunni. These groups and many smaller ones do have influence in all three areas (rural, suburban and urban). These groups have resorted to retaliatory strikes on their rivals though, not always across "sectarian" lines. Some Shia groups are killing people from other Shia groups that do not work with or seem to oppose the group they belong to. Same can be said for the Sunni.

Whenever you hear words like "a moderate Sunni Cleric was shot", this doesn't mean that it was a Shia that did it. It could be people from within their own groups that think he was selling them out or opposing their position or it could be Islamists who have decided that this "moderate" was an apostate. Most likely, if they were shot in a drive by, it's either internal, sectarian or political strife, not necessarily "insurgents" or "Islamists".

Another known "sectarian" group, most likely involved in "sectarian" violence, is headed by Mugtada al-Sadr, the leader of the failed Najaf rebelion in 2004. His sect is made up of largely poor Shia living in the Sadr City suburb of Baghdad. Some estimates have his following as large as 6,000 people. He is nominally held in check by the power of Al-Sistani, but that does not stop him and other Sunni sects from retaliating against one another.

In the suburban areas and outlying towns, sectarian strife can be seen a little more clearly, though it also bleeds over into "tribal" violence. In smaller towns across Iraq and even the large city of Mosul, where the population is mixed Shia and Sunni, the effects of Sunni "Ba'athist" and "Islamist" violence against the towns have resulted in some Shia populations attacking the Sunni citizens often without knowledge of whether they are really and directly involved. If a Sunni that is known to be from a specific tribe is caught or killed during and Islamist, ba'athist or sectarian operation, it is largely assumed that the entire tribe is involved in the perpetrating groups. Thus, what is first "insurgent" or "criminal" activity will quickly melt down to tribal warfare as each group begins to retaliate.

The 19 dead Iraqis in the soccer stadium (most identified as "shia"), may have been Islamist or insurgent activity, but may have been sectarian, criminal or inter-tribal related retaliation.

In short, one cannot assume that all deaths are "sectarian" or "insurgency" related. Being able to tell the difference from this distance or even close up in Iraq is very difficult, but the few details eeked out from the press can assist us.

Insurgents/Ba'athi

The real "insurgents" can be described as a conglomeration of groups that opposed the overthrow of Saddam and want to stop the democratic process. In hopes of the ensuing chaos, their violent and unmerciful killing of anyone and everyone that does not support their cause is a direct off shoot of how they used to rule the land: terrorize the people and then give them "order" at the end of an AK-47. In reality, there isn't much hope of them coming back into power. What gives them hope is that there are still members that are in power in ministries, police and the military. They obtain information form these people and hope that, if the time is right, these groups will be able to subordinate their underlings and use them to take power again.

This group is not strictly "Iraqi Sunni Arabs", but include Palestinians, Syrians and other nationals that were given power, positions and wealth under Saddam. These also have ties with political/sectarian/tribal groups either through blood relationships, criminal activities or a simple desire for groups to play both ends of the game in case the ba'athi are able to pull it off and come into direct power or in case the remaining elements still in power come to have control over their area or they can get something from that government office in regards to economic or material assistance.

This element also includes other groups that are not directly allied with either the sectarian outfits or the Islamists, but think they have a beef with the coalition or new government. They are assisted by the Syrian intelligence, military, and Ba'ath party along with remaining elements of Saddam's regime currently stationed in Syria.

They use tribal and criminal organization relations to move men and material in and out of Iraq. These groups will also fight between their organizations for power and position, though these efforts are probably more like "assassinations" then large attacks against each other.

Their tactics can be related to stationary VBIED; IEDs; frontal attacks with mortars, RPGs and AK-47s on coalition and Iraqi military/police patrols and bases; assassinations of government officials, police officers, military commanders or other "collaborators". These are less likely to be suicide bombers since the point of the movement is to come back into power and people want to be around for that opportunity. It is possible that they have recruited their own "cannon fodder" for suicide missions, but less likely as a major tactic.

Mass executions of police officers returning from Jordan over the past two years are probably largely associated with this group. Most of them had the tell-tale signs of blind foling their victims, tying their hands behind their backs and shooting them execution style, in the same manner that the old regime would get rid of its enemies.

Islamist/Jihad/Mujihadeen

There are many groups and elements that make up this section. Some existed in Iraq and had recruits and leaders well before the invasion. Others are new arrivals, basically creating their own corps and operational fronts. All of which is loosely affiliated with or coordinates with each other. They aren't all related to Al Qaida and they don't all take their orders directly from Zarqawi and Osama bin Laden.

Ansar al-Islam (Army of Islam) was in Iraq for years prior to the war and had loose relations with both Saddam and Al Qaida. Ansar al-Sunnah (Army of the Sunnah - sunnah are directives from Mohammed the Prophet on how to live a moralistic life as a Muslim) and Taweed and Jihad (Unity and Jihad) now currently known as Al Qaida in Iraq, were created durin the build up of the war and took off in late 2003. These are the main groups, but certainly not the only groups.

These are made up of hardened fighters and commanders trained by Al Qaida or other Islamist groups in Afghanistan, Yemen, Sudan, Saudi Arabian, Palestinian and other countries around the Middle East and North Africa. These reside at the top planning and leadership positions along with a few Iraqis that have been promoted for their efforts.

Below them are the "cannon fodder" or untrained fighters that are also filtering in from countries around the ME and North Africa through Saudi Arabia, Jordan or largely Damascus, Syria. The "cannon fodder" elements also contain rural and urban Iraqis convinced by the local Imams or recruiters sent out to the mosques, via websites or of their own volition after seeing reports in the Arabic news, to join the operations.

These are further sorted out based on planned operations and skill sets of the recruited. Uneducated without practical skills in explosives, weapons, electronics or computers, will most likely end up as drivers for VBIED (vehicle bound improvised explosive devices usually mobile) or suicidal foot soldiers in direct frontal attacks as we saw at Qaim and Abu Graihb or the last stand of Fallujah.

  • During April and the first part of May, based on the story provided by Al Hayat in the previous post on this subject, new arrivals were all being pressed into action as homicidal car bombers.

  • Those with practical skills in electronics, explosives and computers are pressed into service for building VBIEDs, IEDs and other explosives or the propaganda apparatus that creates DVDs, websites, posters and press releases.

  • Anyone with the aptitude or previous military experience is pressed into service with an AK-47, mortars and rockets.

  • Speak English as a second language:, interpreter or analyst.

  • Religious training as an Imam or other level higher than a basic student or an aptitude for charisma and leadership: recruitment (this may also be based on who you know and how you got there).

  • Other support, courier and logistic positions exist, but these are usually proven people and extremely trustworthy.

    Depending on how the person arrived in Syria or Iraq and with whom they make first contact, determines which of the multiple groups they end up with and what possible positions they can fill within that group. Not all of the educated people with degrees end up in support positions.

    Centralized leadership is really a cooperative activity with leaders of each group. Last year, a message went out from Osama bin Laden pro-claiming Zarqawi as the leader of al Qaida in Iraq. This was done for several reasons. One of which was to provide propaganda that Al Qaida is in Iraq in a big way. Association with these deeds gives more prestige to Al Qaida and bin Laden since they were run out of Aghanistan. Secondly, Zarqawi must have been complaining about his abilities to coordinate people, materials and attacks. Bin Ladens announcement gave Zarqawi prestige and the leverage he needed to bring some of the multitude of elements together.

    Men and materials are moved through corresponding arrangements with the smuggling and criminal organizations as well as their own built in logistical support teams. Money and messages probably come solely through their own logistics.

    Several types of operations appear to be largely carried out by this group:

  • Homicide car bombs (VBIED) against coalition forces, Iraq police, military and government installations particularly where a high volume of casualties can be obtained with one or more coordinated attacks. Multiple bombings at coordinated times can be directly linked to the larger, organized groups with closer relations to AQ and Zarqawi. They know that "if it bleeds, it leads" and they use this for free propaganda.

  • Single VBIED events may be from the larger groups as well to keep the press attention that they seek, but could be smaller off shoot organizations with only loose coordination.

  • Large scale frontal attacks with VBIED, RPG, mortars and foot soldiers against coalition bases and patrols.

  • Large scale attacks with VBIED, RPG, mortars and foot soldiers against Iraqi military and police bases and patrols.

  • Assassinations of high ranking civilian, military and police officials.

  • Assassinations of educators, physicians and news people.

  • Mass murders inside Sunni towns that they attempt to take over (and often succeed).

  • Beheadings of kidnap victims, Iraqi military or police, town officials or citizens that do not cooperate with their take over and any Shia or Kurds they catch within their area of operations.

  • Video taped incidents are most likely from this group since they routinely use this tool as a recruiting method and home grown media releases.


  • What Do We Know?

    From this we can determine that media reports with body counts and words like "insurgents" and/or "sectarian" strife hardly cover the gamut of the activities in Iraq and should not be used in anyway to determine the status of the war or the effectiveness of our efforts.

    Sectarian and tribal infighting was occuring under Saddam, though at lower levels. Certainly, the Ba'athi were killing people before the war in either masses or in individual efforts. The only difference was that these actions were given a patina of "legal" since they were the ones in control.

    Criminal endeavors, including kidnappings, blackmail and blackmarket smuggling, were occuring before the war as well, but usually with the complicity of the governing apparatus. Even Islamists were in Iraq before the war, though their efforts were not directed against the Iraqi people.

    What's different now is that there is open media to report it. Activities once the domain of the governing body and thus kept away from outside eyes are now out in the open and reported around the globe. Sectarian and tribal infighting is less restrained and more volatile since there is a power vaccuum in the provinces. Islamists from all over the country are filtering in to Iraq or sending money or operating propaganda websites. Every activity, small or large, is simply and quickly diced up by the media as "insurgent" or "sectarian" and fed to the public who consumes it and what comes out after digestion is "terrorists", thus giving the Islamists more power and prestige than they rightfully deserve.

    Certainly, the Islamists commit some of the most heinous acts, but they don't commit all of them. Neither are the other killings, carelessly labeled "sectarian" necessarily indications of a coming civil war.

    Deciphering Today's Reports

    Using this information, I will now look at today's news and attempt to decipher Islamist, Insurgent, sectarian, tribal and criminal activities.

    Associated Press

    The new effort to make peace came as attacks killed a U.S. soldier and at least


    No information on how and when he or she was killed. This could be Islamists or Insurgents. No report of the action or enemy killed. Judiciously left out so we get the idea: dead soldier, nothing more to see here, move along.

    However, Centcom casualty report for May 28th indicates the soldier was actually wounded in actions on May 26th and died of his wounds today.

    45 Iraqis over the past two days — including 10 people returning from a religious pilgrimage in Syria whose bodies were left in the border city of Qaim,


    While Qaim has been the seen of fighting between between coalition forces and "insurgents", it is also the town that straddles the main road into Syria and is used by the "arhabi" or "ali baba" (thieves) to smuggle in goods and people as well as kidnapping, robbing and holding hostage businessmen and others returning from Syria.

    However, BBC adds additional information:

    The murdered pilgrims had apparently been blindfolded, tied up and shot in the head, police said. The corpses bore marks of torture.


    "Marks of torture" could be anything at this point. Beatings, cuttings, whippings, etc, all make a difference in what group killed them. Still, not necessarily related to "insurgents" or "islamists".

    as well as three suicide bombers


    Islamists

    and three men killed when a roadside bomb they planted exploded prematurely.


    Islamist, ba'athist or criminals in the pay of either. Either way, they were inept and probably less well trained. We will probably hear of more of these accidents as VBIED/IED building stations and their makers continue to be swept up.

    The group purportedly claimed responsibility for twin suicide car bombings in Sinjar. The attacks, 75 miles northwest of Mosul city, killed seven Iraqis and injured another 38 at the entrance to an Iraqi military base, according to hospital officials.


    Al Qaida-Zarqawi

    Another al-Qaida affiliate in Iraq, the Ansar al-Sunnah Army, announced the death of a Japanese contractor it abducted earlier this month.


    Al Sunnah Islamist loosely affliated with Al Qaida. As previously noted, beheaded hostages are Islamists.

    The Australian is still alive and not reported dead. If his release is negotiated, count his kidnappers as organized criminals or ba'athists looking for ransom. IF he's shot, it's criminals or ba'athists. If he's beheaded, it's Islamists.

    New York Times

    They do a slightly more credible job at providing information. Still, it needs a little more deciphering:

    [snip]with at least 30 new deaths reported across the country, some of them in what appeared to be sectarian killings.

    The latest attacks raised the total number of Iraqis killed this month to about 650,


    In other words, the latest deaths have not been as big a number in the last day or two so, to garner your continuing attention, you need to be reminded how many total have died in a specific period. However, the "month" that they are speaking of is actually from mid April to today.

    [snip] in addition to at least 63 American troops who have been killed, the highest American toll since January.


    This means that the number of American Casualties have been going down in in the last four months, with January as the high point for 2005 by which to judge. In review of the past two years casualty count, January had 107 KIA while November had 135 KIA. In every period where American and coalition forces take the offensive, there are higher casualties among them. May is no exception with 63 to date. US forces swept through western Iraq in the al Anbar province, Haditha and other hotspots. Still, every month continues to be less casualties than before, even with offensive operations.

    In two of the worst incidents reported Saturday, three suicide bombers tried to blast into a base shared by American and Iraqi troops at Sinjar, 40 miles from the northwestern border with Syria, killing at least one Iraqi border policeman and wounding at least 18 others, including 15 civilians.


    Islamists

    Farther south along the Syrian border, in the Sunni Arab city of Qaim, a police commander confirmed the killing in recent days of 10 Shiite pilgrims returning from a shrine in Syria, The Associated Press reported


    This leaves the impression that they weren't all killed at once, as opposed to the previous report. Still most like criminal activity.

    In other attacks, two Sunni Arab tribal leaders, one in Baghdad and the other in the northern city of Kirkuk, were killed Friday, according to police reports. In the Kirkuk killing, local officials suggested that the victim, Sheik Sabhan Khalaf al-Jibouri, might have been a target because of his attempt to have friendly relations with Kurdish leaders.


    These are designated as "sectarian" killings, but the other information provided indicates that Sheik al-Jibouri was assassinated from within his own group. The second "Sunni Arab tribal leader" in Baghdad could have been tribal or criminal rivalry. Just because he's a Sunni, doesn't make his death related to "sectarian" violence or the "insurgency" or the "Islamists".

    Now, we see Reuters making this mistake:

    Al Qaeda's leader in Iraq Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had fled the country after being seriously injured in a U.S. missile attack, a British newspaper reported on Sunday, quoting a senior commander of the Iraqi insurgency.


    Zarqawi and the Islamists are not insurgents, they are Islamist terrorists.

    That concludes our review for today. Stand by for tomorrow's "Status of the "Insurgency" - Deciphering Media Reports,

    Update: Read Athena at Terrorism Unveiled for additional views

    Who's In Charge?

    Read More...

    Friday, May 27, 2005

    The State of the Insurgency

    As I pointed out in Analyzing Zarqawi Statement, I believe that the insurgency is now having a rough time recruiting replacements for all of the lives they wasted in suicide VBIEDs in the last 45 days.

    Pretty difficult organizing and planning attacks when all the little indians are dead and the the big chiefs are sitting around scratching their asses. Worse yet, it's very difficult to convince people to come join your cause when the romance of fighting the "big Satan" turns into "how many innocent bystanders [read "Muslims"] can you take out with a car and a trunk load of explosives." I think the worst PR they could have gotten was the failed frontal attacks on Abu Graihb and Qaim along with a few other hotspots. The US military learned their lesson a long time ago in Beirut about how to properly barricade a base and what to do if crazy people in cars/trucks start driving towards you at high rates of speed and even Sgrena the Italian learned that they do mean to pull the trigger if you even wink suspiciously.

    In my previous post, I commented that there was a story in the Arab News about two would be jihadists having their illusions of the grand mujihadeen efforts smashed when they got to Iraq and found out all they wanted was volunteers to drive booby trapped cars and kill themselves. I found the link via Arab World Analysis:

    The sources added: 'At that point the leader of the group suddenly showed them the truth regarding which the young men felt the strongest bitterness. So then he said: We have a group of automobiles ready to perform suicide operations. The young men almost lost consciousness from the terror of the shock. And they said to him: how our coming to Iraq has come to this end in a suicide operation with such ease! He answered them indifferently: this is what we have now, and if you want you may look elsewhere! At that moment they decided to return to their country, and completely changed their minds about participating in what they thought was resistance in Iraq.'


    Add in a few "religious rulings" by the Saudi Mufti and Islamic Scholars:

    Now, Saudi religious scholars have come to a consensus that going to Iraq with the goal of killing in the current circumstances is not legal. Likewise the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia in an open meeting refuted the claims that what is happening now in Iraq is really jihad. He has said: 'Indeed, jihad in the cause of God is a great thing, no one doubts in its bounty or in its greatness, but the situation in Iraq differs. For our brothers in Iraq know the condition of their country and its circumstances and overall environment, and they work with their reality as they see fit.


    I imagine some complaints regarding religioius sermons have been lodged, not only by "outside forces", but by some unsuspecting parents who find out their boys aren't in Damascus going to university, but have their names posted on a jihad website as "martyrs". Not all Saudi parents are happy to have their kids' brains splattered on the pavement. Since the Saudi government controls the mosques and universities, it is obvious they are putting pressure on folks to stop convincing their 20 something young men to sneak across the border and cause the house of Saud a royal pain in the public relations.

    Continuing analyzing the insurgency, toss in things like using cows and dogs to carry explosives; some Iraqis meeting out immediate justice; operation clean sweep; operation Matador on the Iraq-Syrian border; recent news that the US and other countries have recently tied up another loop hole in transfering money to potential terrorists or their organizations through hawala by cracking down on unlicensed and unregulated organizations and, last but not least, rumors or fact of zarqawi being injured coupled with some internet confusion about who is in charge, pretty much point to a period of time when the "insurgency" is all screwed up.

    One thing is sure, whether he's wounded, dead or just doing a "strategic retreat" after pissing off so many people, replacing Zarqawi as the leader, isn't all that easy.

    Recall that these groups are small, insular cells. Working relations are built on absolute trust and not easily won. As much as some might believe otherwise, money is not handed over like candy at a barmitvah. Particularly, in today's atmosphere of slowly closing financial resources and other issues making it difficult just to "send money, will write". Requests are made and approved through regular, nearly beaurocratic processes and approved further up the food chain (see AQ manifest and other stories regarding operations, including September 11).

    Whether Zarqawi died, is wounded or just took the low road out of Dodge to save his ass, operations will be extremely slowed down for a bit. Certainly nothing like we've seen the last two months. What we will continue to see is the occasional car bomb and some drive by shootings probably committed by sectarian partisans, not necessarily Zarqawi/AQ terrorists.

    This will be further disrupted as continued sweeps and cordons of Baghdad net a few more low, medium and high value targets. With confusion in the ranks, leadership is reorganized and once long established trusting relationship between couriers and different cell leaders have to get re-established under the new guy, it is likely that some of these targets will yield up some decent intel to save their own asses.

    I expect any attacks (as seen today) to be less well coordinated and performed by amateurs who will try to get their names put forward with the new guy.

    I am not predicting them down and out for the count, but I would say, "seriously wounded".

    Read More...

    Thursday, May 26, 2005

    Prayers For Zarqawi

    According to Chrenchoff, immediately after the announcement of Zarqawis injury, several jihadist websites went up with forums to leave prayers for his recovery.

    In response, Chrenchoff has launched his own One Million Prayers for Capture campaign. Of course, he leaves the "capture or die" decision to the readers. Go over there and leave your own prayer or comment.

    This was my response:

    Dear Mr. al-Zarqawi,

    The Kevorkian Society has received information that you are serioulsy wounded and possibly dying a slow and painful death.

    As a charter member of our society and the top producer in assisted suicides, we'd like to offer you our platinum membership services. This membership includes:

    1) A DVD or Video taped recording of your death, artfully packaged and provided free to all of your loved ones and associates via live feed on all cable and network stations around the world.

    2) A 3ft by 5ft poster of you lying in repose and surrounded by a military escort. As we understand your religious beliefs we will try to insure they are virgins, but short notice may require some adjustments to this plan. The poster/picture of you lying in repose will be presented at a conference and also beamed around the world via cable and network news. It will then be reprinted in every newspaper from singapore to Mecca, New York and Los Angeles.

    3) Per our records, your wish is to go out in a blaze of glory. With our platinum membership, this can be easily arranged and you have a choice of procedures:

    a) AK-47s wielded by the Wolf Commando Brigade of the Iraqi army (per our agreement with them, they assure us that they will shoot you many times to insure that your final wish to die is fulfilled). This is free of charge.

    b) M16 rounds provided by the United States military, also free of charge. (they indicate that this can be done any time, night or day)

    c) A JDAM sent directly into your bedroom window with a video device that will record the spectacular moment for posterity and a second video that will record your passing from 30,000 ft or closer if you prefer. (Of course, if you prefer this method, we may not be able to provide the poster of you lying in repose with a military escort)

    If you are not sure which of these methods you wish to use to accomplish the deed, our associates in the field will be happy to assist you in making the decision.

    We understand at your final moment that you may wish to have friends and associates by your side and we will be happy to accomodate you. If any of them are feeling particularly depressed at your passing, we can arrange, also free of charge, for mass suicide by any of the selected methods above. (We also have the "surprise" package available if you wish to give them this gift without warning).

    As you may be aware, our founding member is unable to travel at this moment, but we did request volunteers for the honor of providing this service. You will be pleased to know that we received over 138,000 letters in English and several million in other assorted languages, all asking for the privilege of giving you your final wish.

    To obtain this platinum service, all you have to do is call our toll free international number 1-800-sui-cide and give us the location, date and time you wish this procedure to take place. To insure that all parts of your request are met in a timely fashion, you may need to provide a map to the location and mark it with a giant "X" on the roof. You will also need to provide us with a work and home phone number of a reliable contact person, in case of emergencies.

    As soon as we receive this information, we will dispatch the nearest team of qualified personnel to quickly and efficiently carry out the mission.

    We at the Kevorkian Society are pleased to have you as a member and hope that you are satisfied with our services. If you are, we hope that you will recommend them to your friends and family. We believe that everyone has a right to die in the manner they choose.

    If you have any questions, please feel free to call our customer service number 1-800-USA-TIPS or go to our website:

    Suicide Hotline

    Good luck and speedy death. Don't forget our motto: "keep smiling to the end".

    Regards,
    Dan Gerousmind

    Read More...

    My Opinions

    Issues of the Day Part II

    Well, yesterday's post seemed to spark some conversation and strangely some of us are not as far apart as we seem. So I thought I would try another day and see if we can't spark some controversy or conversation.

    Parental/Guardian Consent for Abortion

    I believe that children under the age of consent should have parental consent whenever medical procedures are performed and whenever medical circumstances allow. As a person that works in the medical field, we cannot provide medical equipment, medicine, much less an invasive procedure, including an IV, on anyone under the age of 18 or legal consent per state laws. The only circumstances that allow it is in medical emergencies where life and death are at issue.

    We cannot even have a child under the age of legal consent sign documents accepting delivery of relatively benign medical equipment like oxygen because it is a "legend" item (ie, prescribed by a physician). We certainly cannot have them sign legal or financial documents on behalf of themselves or even on behalf of their parent who may be receiving the services.

    As one friend recently said to me, "the school nurse can't even administer an asprin without parental consent". So, why would we allow an under aged person receive an abortion without consent?

    This is not solely an issue of government power deciding via a federal or state law. As you must know, in the court of law, an under aged person cannot consent to a number of things, including sex (ie, statutory rape if the other participant is above the age of consent). In lawsuits regarding medical mal-practice, even if the doctor had the child's name signed in blood on documents consenting to treatment, it would be thrown out in every other case.

    Except this one.

    The only exceptions I can think of denying a parent parental consent is in the case of incest or other abuse. In which case, I believe that it is a legal/criminal matter and even then, the mother or uninvolved parent (assuming it is usually the mother) could still give consent. Or, where the parents may be deemed unsuitable as guardians. In which case, I believe the state should and would be involved in determining a suitable guardian who would then have the ability to consent to treatment.

    If there is a case where no suitable guardian can be found in a near relative, I believe that outside sources could be brought in and ask the courts for an emergency hearing to determine the necessity of guardianship and the medical imperative.

    I do recall the recent incident of a 13 year old who ran away from foster care and came back pregnant. Technically, she was in state custody and the state would not consent to the abortion.

    I'm not sure which is worse, having a 13 year old with a baby or having one get an abortion.

    Yes, I know that it happens today (and at some fairly alarming rates), but I have to say that an abortion has not only medical effects but emotional as well. I do have a friend who had an abortion between her two children's birth. It's been almost ten years since then, but I recall several times over the years where she wondered what her other child would have been like had she not done so. So, I can imagine the trauma of being 13 or 15 and having these questions and issues and not having support. I've seen the "offered" counciling from planned parenthood. If it's asked for , it can be had, but does anyone think a 13 or 15 year old who can't or won't seek parental consent will actually come back for this counciling?

    My friend was an adult and didn't. I could see how it bothered her. Maybe some could be blase enough to simply treat it as the removal of cells, but I have to say that pregnancy and the idea of a living being growing inside of a woman by far usually creates a kind of bond or idea about motherhood and decisions to terminate can be tough and play on the person's mind for years. It would seem that parental consent has three important parts to play:

    1) Legal as all medical procedures are guided by this principal and protects both the patient and the physician.

    2) Support because it is a tough decision and a pregnant child already has many worries on their mind.

    3) Doesn't the parent have the right to know and to intercede if their child is having unsafe and unprotected sex?

    I know the last two are subjective and dependent on the child's home, but I believe that, while there may be some recriminations, by far, familial support plays a role in child development and certainly, if we should not be interfering in other issues of parental rights, we should not be interfering with this one. I might also mention that pregnant 13 and 15 year olds (just using those ages as examples) don't all come from disadvantaged or troubled homes.

    I also believe that pre and post counciling should be mandatory for underaged children who have this procedure. That, I wouldn't demand, but think it's a good idea.

    But the first issue, coming from a health compliance background, is a matter of previously set legal precedent and has a puprose that does not include embarassing or traumatizing a pregnant teen, but is there to protect everyone involved, medically, legally and financially.

    Read More...

    Wednesday, May 25, 2005

    Linked By a Snarky Lefty

    My Opinions

    Cruising the referrals, I caught site of this gentleman's blog, Alicublog, who had the graciousness to link to my commentary on Al Sadr = Jesse Jackson.

    From his snarky (though humorous) commentary, I take it he didn't appreciate the comaprison nor does he appreciate any one claiming to be a previous "liberal" and converting to conservatism, nor claims of being ostrasized by once close friends. Such as Cinnamon Stillwell and Keith Thomson.

    Well, if any bothered to read my history, they'd know that I probably never was a "liberal" in the class of anything goes (libertine), but more like a conservative Democrat that had no quarrels with most folks.

    However, it is a fact that my friend Roy would like to claim doesn't exist, but it is my life after all, that in January of 2003, prior to the Iraq war, I did have a friend, a close friend, who declared their inability to speak to me on the grounds that I was brainwashed or some such thing. And, it is a fact that a second friend, also a close friend, who, upon discovering that I did not support Sen. Kerry for President, also declared their inability to speak to me and did not for eight months.

    As a matter of fact, she finally sent me an email in March for my birthday asking me how I was after I had left several messages over the convening months asking her how she was, why didn't she give me a call on such and such day and here's my home and cell phone # just in case she had misplaced it.

    It isn't a lie nor a whine. It just happened.

    It's the truth that the last elections were full of vitriol and angst. And, it did bleed over into relationships.

    The one thing I can say is that it never had any impact at my work, mainly because the only politics that came up were discussions on the newest policies enacted that would effect our business from healthcare legislation, patient rights to taxes. Other than than, none. Not because I was afraid of talking to people about in case of being shunned, but because, in the course of business and even friendly discussions about personal life, no one brought it up. I felt no need to either since it had no place in my work.

    However, I'd say that, if I was a writer for a newspaper or a professor at a school where politics were regularly discussed and disected, I imagine that there would be some issues in the work place.

    My snarky lefty friend does make the common mistake that all who call themselves "liberal" do and that is to imagine that we are all waiting over here on the right to strip away civil liberties and stomp on the poor person while at the same time decrying what he perceives as the right's stereotyping folks from the left as commies, all homosexuals as potential pedophiles, etc, etc

    Tsk. Tsk.

    Pot. Kettle. Black.

    But, he does do it with a sense of humor.

    Almost sounded like Scott for a minute. *wink*

    For the record, as I once told some conservative friends, I'm not conservative by any means. Rather, I like when somebody shakes up the norm once in awhile, challenges dogma and ideas supposedly set in stone. I like radical change and hate status quo.

    Frankly, it seemed pretty apparent after 9/11 that, in the realm of geo-politics, the status quo couldn't stand. Something had to give and it seemed like the US was one of the few countries that could or would do it. Certianly, the whole situation seems to be like walking through an alligator infested swamp filled with quick sand and a whole chicken tied to our leg. The area of world politics had barely ever crossed my mind until the last few years and now I pay attention.

    Stem Cell Research.

    I think we should do it, but I think it should be strictly controlled. It can hold the key to developing cures for diseases that I am all to familiar with from a professional and personal stand point. However, I do think that there is a risk that developing embryos for profit can occur and this is a danger. It is the same risk that forced the creation of the national organ donors data base to insure that, as much as humanly possible, the concept of illegal harvesting of organs to sell does not come to pass since this then creates the motives for criminal endeavors including theft and murder.

    Therefore, I am not opposed to it, but do believe that it should be strictly monitored and regulated. If there are other areas of stem cell research that can be advanced and has better results, I believe this should be pursued.

    Abortion.

    I don't like it. I do believe that it is a net negative approach to shirking responsibility for practicing safe and protected sex in many, if not most, cases. I don't think the federal courts should have set in precedent that guaranteed it and I do believe it is the state's right and responsibility to allow or disallow it as an elective procedure to end pregnancy. Medically necessary abortions are without question appropriate. The question of partial birth abortions as an elective procedure, even to end a pregancy where the child may have physical defects, seems very barbaric and unnecessary. Further, it seems abortion has become about the money. Mainly, those who do not want to have a child so that their economic status is not hindered, whether from a healthy or disabled child, also seems cold and calculating.

    But, what I've said bothers me the most about it is that birth control is readily available in all forms, cheap or for free. Basic forms of birth control are available on store shelves, from condoms, to foam, to little spermicidal suppositories. It's on television. Not that I object to that, it was just embarrassing the night we were watching a scary movie with my nephews and the Trojan Man came on during commercial break. My 10 year old nephew told me he wanted to see at cartoon. I told him he probably would next year at school. Sex education is in every school starting as young as grade school.

    So, yes, I have a problem with abortion. Particularly, as a birth control method when less harmful (both physically and psychologically) and invasive methods are available, cheaper and certainly provides safety from the spread of disease, which I've discussed before as being on the upswing in teenagers, young adults and women.

    Gay Marriage.

    Do I care if someone is gay? No. Do I care if they live with someone who is gay? No. Do I care if they make a legal bond with each other? No. Do I have concerns about making same sex marriage legal? Yes. Not on moral grounds, but because it has certain legal and financial connotations for the future. Not in defining family, because family, though relatively similar through out the ages, has changed, regardless of whether we like to acknowledge it or not. Families are no longer simply a man and a woman and children. They are a man and his current wife and their children from previous marriages and the ex-spouses of those two and the children of the ex-spouses new mates.

    The legal and financial connotations of the future, as I have previously written, would be legalized same sex marriages that allowed people to basically create a symbolic marriage, between to men or two women, without romantic or physical relations, in order to take advantage of legal protections offered to spouses, insurance benefits, financial credit or assistance, custody of children or property, a whole gamut of issues that our legal and financial systems are not ready to handle these situations.

    I prefer, before we jump into this with both feet, that these issues be recognized and addressed by our body politic and not subborned under rhetoric from either side about morality or simple "civil rights". If it was that simple, the libertarian in me would support it. The "liberal" in me remembers things like "separate but equal" and the Mann Act used to persecute inter-racial marriages.

    Still, the conservative in me does hint around once in awhile about whether this was the intent of nature. I'd be able to suppress that and swallow the civil rights issues if I wasn't concerned about the other ramifications.

    Gay Tolerance Education In Schools.

    While I abhor mindless intolerance, I do question whether this is necessary. I don't mean simple things like Gay Straight Alliance clubs in schools. I do mean having specific reading for children as young as kindergarten. By far, schools have left their original intent and purpose of education and taken on aspects of social engineering. Some might claim that schools have long been studies in "social engineering" since the first desegragation act or even long before, when public schools brought children of all social backgrounds together.

    Still, I wonder how prevalent any real activities of intolerance kindergarteners could possibly be involved in. Secondly, if regular social behavior is taught and children are exposed to people of different race, creed or sexual orientation, there is the overall effect of "socialization" that takes place. I am at a loss why, above all other issues of tolerance, there is a special push and outcry for such "tolerance" education in schools. I know there are some that want to remind me of all the redneck racist bigots who allegedly populate this world and teach their children to be mean and intolerant, but I disagree that there are so many in this country raising little redneck children to bash gays.

    One thing that I am sure of is that sex education and any such "tolerance" education should be announced to parents and allow them to decide if their children can attend. I believe this because, as my civil liberties friends should believe, not doing so infringes on parental rights and smacks of "abuse of state power". But, I don't want to forget that my civil liberty friends only believe in certain civil liberties and believe that the power of the state should be used to infringe or smash others.

    Beyond insuring a safe place to learn and punishing those that do persecute or harm those of different sects of society, I don't believe that grade school is an appropriate venue to discuss homosexuality.

    I am also sure that there is no possible way to legislate, educate or otherwise create some utopia where everyone believes as the other and loves everyone. It just does not happen. However, what has happened over the years is that there has been an acceptance that persecution of people due to their gender, race, ethnicity or sexual orientation is not acceptable to society and certainly not acts of violence against any such people.

    That is the basis of good society, not tolerance education forced on kindergartners.

    Gay Adoption.

    In my mind, neither side has presented enough statistical data to support the concept that children are or are not influenced by their parents' sexuality. Both sides have certainly provided their own studies, but, to date, I have not found one that I would consider "unbiased".

    What I do know is that children can become aware of their sexuality at early ages, want to explore the difference, even in relatively innocent ways and, by nature, are relatively ambiguous about their sexuality until they are between 8 and 12 (by some studies; others have it younger, but I believe the picture is clear). They also have a tendency to form closer relationships with children of their own sex before becoming aware of the opposite sex. It seems to me that during this ambiguous stage, a childs preferences can be influenced by a number of things, not the least of which is what has been presented to them as the "norm".

    Further, it is confusing to me in this day and age when there is much discussion about the importance of nurturing and its influence on children, how the idea that sexual orientation of the parents and its influence on children can simultaneously be denied by the supporters of such an endeavor.

    So, until I read and decipher for myself a full, long term, unbiased study on its affects, I have to side with caution and say I disagree with this concept.

    And, yes, to my liberal friends, I'm quite aware of the number of children in foster care or in need of adoption. In reality, the number has been pretty big long before the idea of adopting children to gay couples or singles came about. Further, I question whether this is really effective as a means of increasing adoptions and foster care since the gay population is estimated at 3 to 4% of our own and certainly, as in other demographics, the actual number of gay couples or singles who are willing to adopt or do foster care barely puts a dent in the number of available children.

    I know it may seem painful to admit, but my conservative friends may be correct and this growing and painful phenomenom is a direct result of the breakdown of the family unit in the first place. I have yet to hear a liberal friend give me a better explanation, but I have heard ideas on treating the symptoms: parenting classes; welfare; therapy; etc.

    None of these seems like a cure as opposed to some good, old fashion doses of responsibility thrown in with some peer pressure from society.

    Oops. I said "old fashioned" and "responsbility".

    I know when I've said this to some of my liberal friends before, it's been brushed aside as if I was talking about alien concepts or as if I was not compassionate or understanding to the problems of modern family and child rearing in this cold and heartless world. Or worse yet, I was trying to strip away individuality by suggesting that maybe conformity to some ideas had a purpose that has served humanity for eons and is still servicable.

    Funny, though, those that I've had this conversation with are people who take their own responsibilities very seriously when it comes to family and children. It's always those "others" we are talking about that are incapable of doing the same.

    I just wonder who those "others" are?

    Welfare.

    A good idea gone horribly wrong. What can I say? I've seen the best and the worst of this system, including those that are in a precarious state and could use some assistance to come about and would come about being turned away because they make $150 to much to qualify. I've seen sick people on fixed incomes turned away for the same reason or forced to use "spin down" or "share of cost" (ie, pay bills to a certain amount before it will kick in) and basically make themselves destitute to the point where they have to sell everything (including home, cars, etc) and empty their checking and savings to get assistance. I've known people who are on housing assistance, Medicaid and food stamps who are perfectly healthy and capable of working, doing only the minimum necessary to show they are doing something. At the same time, these people were partying three or four times a week, selling their food stamps for money to get booze, cigarettes and even drugs.

    This is not anecdotal from somebody who knew somebody who knew somebody. This is straight up personal experience.

    I have family members that actually needed it to keep from going under (I mean way under) and I have had a distant family member call and ask to borrow money to pay their electric bill because it was shut off after the same person had just shown me three days prior a two hundred dollar phone they had purchased with speaker, answering machine and a number of other nifty features that left me wondering why they needed it. Since they had two small children, I felt compelled to assist, but I also felt it necessary to hand the money over with a lecture about responsibility. Needless to say, they didn't call me again.

    Part of me felt guilty about it at the same time righteously indignant that this person held so little understanding of responsibility and would put themselves and their children at risk for lack of it.

    By the way, this person attended no less than three different parenting and budget courses, to no avail. Responsibility and work ethic. I'm thinking even my liberal friends would not feel comfortable with this kind of behavior.

    Needless to say, I think our current welfare system is a beauracratic heap of crap that has an incredible amount of paperwork, regulations and ineffective hodgepodge of programs that are not streamlined nor organized in any manner to really have the type of impact it should in helping people stand on their feet or support those who are really in need.

    I've definitely seen private organizations and programs that were more successful.

    I'll be adding to "My Opinions" in the next few days.

    Read More...

    Monday, May 23, 2005

    What's Missing In Saudi Arabia

    Torture Victims Update III

    There can be no doubt that one of the concepts missing in Saudi Arabia (and many countries around the world) is the idea that every person deserves to be innocent until proven guilty and that each person deserves to have their individual rights protected under the law lest the lack of these rights for some become the lack of rights for all.

    It is without a doubt that Saudi Arabia operates on a system of "who you know" as to whether one could expect to be treated "humanely" while incarcerated or investigated. Even further, if someone connected royally, monetarily or politically within Saudi Arabia, it is very likely that they will not receive the punishment that any poor citizen, second class Shia, or worse yet, third class foreign workers have received at the hands of the Saudi Arabian security and judicial system.

    Point in fact, when Osama bin Laden threatened the Saudi government, he was not incarcerated nor killed. His brother was able to negotiate a deal with Prince Naif in order to allow him to be stripped of his Saudi citizenship and leave the country. To my knowledge, if Osama bin Laden was in Saudi Arabia today, it is very likely that he would be put under "house arrest" and probably summarily pardoned after giving his "mea culpa" for creating such havoc within the country and around the world. His family is no slacker when it comes to loaning money or contributing funds to selected royal members and "foundations".

    It is certainly what has happened with other sons of wealthy and politically connected families or religious structure within Saudi Arabia. As recently as last year "amnesty" was issued for those terrorists that would turn themselves in even after being responsible for killing both Saudi citizens and other nationals living within Saudi Arabia.

    Even the concept of liquor and drugs, anathema to the Islamic way of life, is certainly treated differently among all the parts of Saudi Society. The wealthy and or connected are not charged with anything as long as they apologize, beg forgiveness and are quietly ushered away to one of three government funded programs/rehab facilities.

    If you're poor or other country national, you will not be so lucky. Imprisonment and death await you as charges of conspiracies to sell or smuggle drugs and alcohol ino the state can be perpetuated for as little as having a joint in your possession, a bottle of scotch in your cabinet or even the idea that you are not Muslim and therefore probably a drunk and drug abuser because only the Saudi/Muslim citizen is pure of these thoughts.

    In Saudi Arabia, if you openly show your religion to not be Muslim, much less openly or secretely practice worship, you can be killed for prosletyzing. Bibles are routinely destroyed and people are rounded up, particularly third world nationals whose countries have no political power and rely on remittance from Saudi Arabia to supplement their economy. They take the idea of "defenders of the faith" to mean that their idea of worship cannot really compete with any other religion therefore, it must be destroyed and kept from ideas of their people unless it is in villifying that religion or its adherents as something inhuman as they have done against the Jews for years.

    Without a doubt, the Saudi government is not only two faced in it's dealings with education and fanatical religion supported by the government, it is also one of the biggest liars in order to protect its "sovreignty" and "righteous" rule. While the Muslim world seeths about alleged abuse within Guantanamo Bay or Abu Ghraib or Afghantistan, none of which is institutionalized nor policy, torture and abuse are both within the Arabic world and in particular within Saudi Arabia.

    In my previous updates, I told you about Dr. William Sampson and Sandy Mitchell. Today I will point to two other victims of this institutionalized, policy driven, and, in this case, political CYA arrest and torture of non-Saudi citizens.

    Ron Jones, along with the other victims of this incident, has been seeking to sue the Saudi government for compensation.

    His own story is similar to the others:

    He had been in Saudi Arabia for four months working for a petro-chemical company when he was injured by shrapnel in a bomb blast and taken to hospital where security forces dragged him from his bed and arrested him on suspicion of causing the explosion.

    He said: "They ruined my life. I think about what they did every single day. My hands are painful, my hip is bad and I can't walk very far. I can't work and I feel like I'm sinking fast."


    The laws of Britain give other countries immunity against prosecution or suit within its legal system, but individuals from other countries can be sued:

    "This intervention is not about the attitude of HM Government to torture which is an abhorrent practice. It is about the entitlement in international law of foreign states to immunity from proceedings before the courts of other states."[snip]

    "I have made it perfectly clear that there is no way I am going to let them get away with torturing me."

    The case has already been heard in the Court of Appeal, where Mr Jones was given the right to sue the individual torturer, whom he has identified as Lt Col Abdul Aziz.

    But he was denied the right to seek compensation from the Saudi state and, since Mr Aziz has no assets here, the victory was hollow.


    The other issue here is that the government has not demanded any apology nor compensation for its citizens from the Saudi government which insisted that they did not torture these men even though the proof existed on their bodies, particularly, Mr. Jones:

    His torture claims were bolstered by physical evidence found by doctors after his release following two months captivity in Saudi Arabia.


    In particular, Mr. Jones and his compatriots are highly dissatisfied, if not angry over their own governments inability or lack of desire to pursue the matter with the Saudi government. Mr. Jones released this statement to the press:

    I had a meeting with Baroness Symons the FCO Minister on 10th February 2005. At that meeting I was assured that HM Government was doing everything possible to resolve the issue of redress for torture that I had suffered at the hands of Saudi Arabian officials. Baroness Symons raised the matter with Prince Saud the foreign minister at the “Two Kingdoms” UK- Saudi conference in London on 23rd February. She raised the matter again when she was in Riyadh on 15th March . Prince Saud made clear his firm belief that the issue was for the lawyers to discuss and resolve. My solicitors have been told that the Saudis’ solicitors have no instructions from their client in this regard. What firm beliefs did HM Government give to the Saudi Arabian Government? I wonder! "Yes Minister" springs to mind.

    On 17th March, two days after Baroness Symon’s meeting in Riyadh, I was advised by the Treasury solicitor that the Department of Constitution Affairs was intervening in my case in the House of Lords. Surprise Surprise! HM Government must have done everything in their power to resolve this matter they are now intervening in the House of Lords. Guess what? HM Government are standing side by side with the Saudi Arabian Government. The British Government together with the Saudi Government do not want torturers brought to justice in an English Court.

    Rule Britannia or should it be Rule Saudiya.


    I received this via a personal email from Mr. Ron Jones.

    Another personal email was received from Mary Martini, the ex wife of Jim Cottle who was also a victim of cover up and torture in Saudi Arabia. In it she tells me how Mr. Cottle was arrested:

    when James Cottle my ex husband was arrested, he was actualy living in UK, he was lured back to the Middle east, for a lucrative job offer, he was then kidnapped at Bahrain airport, he was driven across to riyahd, James was the last to be arrested in 2001, he then was made to make a televised confession, this was after he spent 66 days and nights suffering hideous torture.

    Why Jim was tortured that long shows they were determined, his kids on his mind all the time, wondering what they thought at his confession, after the 66 days he was moved to Al-Haer jail, once out of the interrigation center the torture stops, although the mental torture begins with full force, James was 18 stones when arrested, he came back 11 stones, he was weak and nervous, not the Dad my kids had known, his skin was hanging from his bones, he was suffering from severe depression and PST.


    That would be post traumatic stress disorder to those outside the medical field, also known as PTSD.

    This man was kidnapped and then beaten to give a confession, then incarcerated for two years, induring continual beatings and other tortures until he was finally released into British officials hands.

    It is very likely that a deal was struck with the governments that the British government would not pursue any activities against Saudi Arabia if they were released and the issue dropped.

    The worst part is that the devestation is not limited to the victims themselves, but certainly affected the the families.

    Ms. Martini goes on to tell how it affected her family:

    Jim was like this for a while and things were difficult, the last thing on his mind was talking to press, he still has councelling and suffers nightmmares, he also was sent to the parker institute for examination, it was proved he has been tortured, yet our Government will not say publicily that these men are innocent, this is how it gives saudi the right to say what they like in the arab news, the impact on the families was underestimated, we were only told of the sentences in April 2002, up until then were were under the impressin that Jim coild get beheaded, the trauma my Daughter suffered was so bad she tried to take her own life, To get a phone call from a hospital knowing she wanted to die because of this broke my heart, how could this happen.


    Mr. Jones has similar issues:

    Mr Jones, who worked in Hong Kong for eight years followed by a 15-year spell in the City, now has to survive on £170 a week in income support, incapacity benefit and child benefit for his 15-year-old son, Grant, and wife, Sandra, 56.


    As I pointed out in the earlier posts, the Arab News is still portraying the government line that these men were involved in smuggling or destilling alcohol and the explosions were "gang related" retaliation. None of these men had jobs, backgrounds or reason to have been involved in such an activity. They were all making lucrative salaries in Saudi Arabia. Further, shortly after these events, additional bombings and attacks, clearly and fully attributable to terrorist extremists within Saudi Arabia, occured against westerners.

    Yet the Saudi government still maintains the lie about these men because, if they don't, they will not be able to justify their actions in any manner.

    One must wonder at the British government not demanding an accounting of the treatment of these men and wonder where, if anywhere, in England, there is a cry of outrage to the government to take some action in at least censuring or dressing down the Saudi representative, if not demanding that their citizens be compensated.

    All of the correspondents in this suit have expressed similar outrage at their government for failing to do their duty by their citizens:

    In particular, Jim cannot forget, the day he was trying to walk back to his cell, his feet were lumpy and bleeding, they had just beaten him, drops of blood marked the floor, he was devastated that the torturers were sniggering at the blood drops, this is humiliation at its extreme, all this time my Government were telling lies and more worried about covering it up, because I spoke with the press early on a personal attack was launched against me to the other relatives, this was to make sure we didnt join up and go out full force, this was a diplomatic headache and our Government did not have the backbone to haul the saudi ambassador on the carpet, they were just content to let these men rot.

    The sheer anger and frustration I went through listening to lies, and for them to be so flipant, they had at one point given up hope of ever getting these men free, I put the blame on My Government for almost destroying my family, Jim swallowed a fish backbone while he was incarcerated, so he also wanted to die, as he didnt think he was getting out any time soon, I suffered a heart attack and the blame goes to the incompetatnt UK government.


    Rule Britannnia.

    Government wimps of the first order.

    There is not doubt that the majority of the blame lies with Saudi Arabia.

    What's missing here and in many other states of the ME, is the idea that individuals have rights and deserve to be secure in their persons, given fair treatment and representation before the law, innocent until proven guilty and not subject to punishment without due process of the law, real and equitable law, not the trumped up courts and cronyism that exists today.

    It must be beyond abhorrent to have such a system in place that will regularly pardon terrorist murderers and yet would imprison, torture and behead people for alleged association in smuggling or distilling alcohol or prosletyzing. It is abhorrent that they would give pardon to such terrorists, knowing that they perpetuated these crimes on the Saudi people and yet continue to insist that westerners were responsible for planting bombs to blow themselves up.

    The idea is preposterous and should not go unnoticed nor unchallenged.

    Read More...

    Muqtada al-Sadr = Jesse Jackson? or Al Sharpton?

    Catching the news this weekend, I noted that Muqty has decided to try and grab some more political power, similar to certain American political figures:

    Meanwhile, aides to radical anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr sought to defuse tension between Sunnis and the majority Shiites after a recent series of sectarian killings. Sunnis are believed to make up the bulk of Iraq's deadly insurgency.

    The senior aides met Sunday with the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, a key Sunni group, in a bid to soothe tensions that have flared and resulted in the deaths of 10 Shiite and Sunni clerics in the past two weeks.


    There are only two prospects here:

    1) He (Muqty) is responsible for the tit for tat killing that's been going on from the Shia perspective.

    2) Or, he really has no control of the situation at all and is inserting himself into it in order to gain the appearance of having more political cache than his few thousand followers in Sadr city actually give him.

    Actually, there's a third option, though I'm not sure Muqty the Moron is capable of such Machevillian planning and that is that he started the sectarian violence in order to be the one to appear to stop it and gain political cache with other Iraqis as some sort of savior (he's been going for the whole "mahdi" thing for awhile now).

    In either case, I doubt seriously that he is going to have the kind of impact he desires. He doesn't have the power to stop it.

    Kind of like Jesse Jackson in a turban.

    Or worse, Al Sharpton in a turban and flowing robes.

    Just, please, don't make me think about what might or might not be beneath those robes. I'll lose my appetite forever.

    Read More...

    Saturday, May 21, 2005

    Freedom, the Fire Burning in the Minds of Men

    Cuba Libre!

    From tiadaily.com and the New York Sun we get the news that the idea of Democracy is not dead in Cuba:

    Friday [May 20} marks the opening of the General Meeting of the Assembly to Promote Civil Society in Cuba, a nonviolent convention of 365 independent Cuban groups to discuss and plan for the nation's transition to a democracy from a communist dictatorship.


    In a land, not far away, a dictator still holds power. Right off the shores of the United States. Since the fall of Communist Russia, the idea that this nation still lives under a psuedo-communist leader, must be abhorrent to our nation, to our people. There, 160km off the coast of America, sits a regime that still systematically incarcerates and kills any opposition. It's people live in abject poverty, far below those even of the poorest in the United States.

    For fifty years, we have been playing a waiting game, hoping that sanctions and time would depose the Castro regime, yet, he seems to hold onto power, assisted by those who have learned to live and prosper within the regime at the expense of their fellow Cubanos.

    Yet, it has been said through out history, that a leader can only lead if his people allow him to and it seems that finally, the rhetoric and repression has worn thin in Cuba and prospects of a better tomorrow continue to become a brighter light at the end of a long dark tunnel.

    As of yesterday, more than 125 delegates had arrived in Havana and checked in with the Assembly, coordinators in Miami said. Earlier this week Mr. Gomez told The New York Sun, in Spanish, that it appeared more likely than not that Mr. Castro would allow the Assembly to take place.

    Miami organizers said the Assembly's leaders had been so thorough in gaining foreign recognition of the event in the preceding months that it would be impossible at this point for Mr. Castro to prevent its taking place - as he did with the last similar attempt to stage a prodemocracy meeting, a planned gathering of the human-rights organization Concilio Cubano, in 1996 - without a significant international outcry.


    As with many of the current "freedom" movements around the world, the eye of America and other free countries is having far reaching effects. We have let it be known that we support freedom and democracy movements around the world and we will not stand by and allow them to be crushed. Since Afghanistan, Iraq, Ukraine and Lebanon, the cry of freedom has become louder and more visible. The idea that people were alone in their struggles against their corrupt and oppressive regimes is being blown away in a new wind.

    President Bush's Inaugural Speech 2005

    We will persistently clarify the choice before every ruler and every nation: The moral choice between oppression, which is always wrong, and freedom, which is eternally right. America will not pretend that jailed dissidents prefer their chains, or that women welcome humiliation and servitude, or that any human being aspires to live at the mercy of bullies. [snip]

    Today, America speaks anew to the peoples of the world:

    All who live in tyranny and hopelessness can know: the United States will not ignore your oppression, or excuse your oppressors. When you stand for your liberty, we will stand with you.


    When I look out on the world, I don't see just people of other nations, different from me in culture, color or religion, I seem MY people. I see "Me", but for the grace of God and accident of birth in this free country, I could be a woman struggling to feed my children, trying to survive, learn to read, yearning to be free.

    The idea of multi-culturalism in this country was to learn about and find similarities in each other, admire and appreciate our differences. Through open information and the assimilation of peoples and cultures into this nation, we have grown in leaps and bounds. Yet, the one thing that many of us have learned from this great experiment is not that their is moral equivolancy in every idea and form of government, but that we do all have one thing in common:

    We want to be free.

    Free to live as we want without a government telling us that we can or cannot own something. Free to become who we will without a government telling us what job we will have, what God to worship and how. Free to own something, to create wealth and stability for our family without a government telling us that we cannot or that it is owned by the government. Free to think, to create, to believe.

    That is the commonality of man. That is what multi-culturalism has taught me.

    In countries near and far, there is a fire burning in the minds of men:

    Freedom!

    Cuba Libre!

    Viva la revolucion!

    Checkout Babalublog, Cuban American who still calls Fidel Castro, "that son of a bitch in Havana".

    Update:

    The President's Message to Cubanos (en espanol).

    Short translation (forgive my hackney translation):

    Happy Independence day from Spain 103 years ago. America honors the contributions of Cubans to industry and art.

    Celebramos a los cubanos desinteresados, como Oscar Elías Biscet y Marta Beatriz Roque, que buscan la libertad de su patria.


    We celebrate the dissident Cubans, Oscar Elias Biscet and Marta Beatriz Roque, that have embraced the liberty of your fathers (founders?).

    "Ayudamos a las organizaciones a proteger a los disidentes y promover los derechos humanos.


    We will work with(help) these organizations to support the dissidents and promote human rights.

    Y estamos trabajando para evitar que el régimen represivo se aproveche de las divisas de los turistas y los envíos a cubanos. No aguardamos por el día de la libertad de Cuba; trabajamos para el día de la libertad de Cuba.


    And we will work for the eventual (demise?) of the repressive regime to return tourism and the land (environement?) to Cubans. We cannot wait for the day of Cuba's liberty; We will work for the day of Cuba's liberty.

    "La ola de libertad se extiende por el mundo y algún día cercano alcanzará las orillas de Cuba. Ningún tirano puede permanecer firme para siempre ante el poder de la libertad, porque la esperanza de ser libre radica en cada corazón. Entonces, hoy estamos seguros de que Cuba será libre pronto.


    The idea of liberty is extending around the world and the day is coming when it will be heard (spoken?) of (in) Cuba. No tyranny can hold power forever against the march of freedom, when the hope of freedom resides in every heart. To that end, we believe that Cuba will be free soon.

    "Gracias y que Dios los bendiga."


    Thank you and may God bless you.

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    My World View-Quiz

    As you know, I don't often put quizzes on this site, but I found this one very interesting from my friend Alix at Alix in Wonderland.

    The quiz asks a series of questions to determine "your world view" and, interestingly, it was able to nail my own world view pretty accurately.

    You scored as Cultural Creative. Cultural Creatives are probably the newest group to enter this realm. You are a modern thinker who tends to shy away from organized religion but still feels as if there is something greater than ourselves. You are very spiritual, even if you are not religious. Life has a meaning outside of the rational

    Existentialist 88%
    Cultural Creative 88%
    Idealist 56%
    Postmodernist 50%
    Romanticist 44%
    Materialist 38%
    Fundamentalist 25%
    Modernist 19%

    What is Your World View? (corrected...again)
    created with QuizFarm.com

    Life has a meaning outside of the rational.

    Yes, I do believe that. Mainly because I, as I've noted previously, the world, in all it's chaos, but through it's natural order is orderly with each activity or condition of physical things working together with another to create the next action or thing.

    It always seems to me to beg the question: What is the meaning of life?

    I don't belong to an organized church though I prescribe to the teachings of Christianity. I have read and studied, even if superficially, other religions from ancient times to modern and found many interesting similarities, not the least of which is man trying to answer the questions:

    Why do I exist?
    Who or what created the universe?
    Why do things happen as they do?
    Am I in control or is there something greater?

    Even as I look at nature and it's organized interaction, flowers and bees, moon and tides; even as I study the scientific explanation of how each of these work together, it never ceases to amaze me that it does work, it does have structure. While there may seem to be randomness in some activities, such as no specific flower that a bee is always attracted to or no specific animal that a lion or wolves may drag down for lunch, there is still order and meaning.

    A bee still flies to a flower and, while collecting honey, picks up pollen which it will take to another flower, thus creating more. Lions and wolves instinctively know which animal is the weakest and bring it down, thus causing the heard to be culled and only the strongest to survive and procreate.

    Even man in his seeming randomness and chaos instinctively searches for order in things he does and creates. Roads are built and drivers go where they will, but roads go to distinctive places and the traffic is organized, flowing north and south, east and west. Laws are created and many are universal concepts. Murder of another human being is against the law. Stealing as it will harm society. The concept of contractual relations to create and insure the care of family.

    Man has always sought to reflect what he sees in nature, in the universe: organized chaos; creating and destroying.

    Is it an instinct of nature, finally tuned through millenia of living and surviving? Or, is it the divine spark, and we have evolved and refined it for millenia?

    That seems to be the question of all ages.

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    Friday, May 20, 2005

    Update on Saudi Torture Victims

    In my post, Saudi Arabia Rejects Torture, I talked about William Sampson and his ordeal.

    The Telegraph has a report on Sandy Mitchell another victim of the ordeal.

    Prince Naif, the Saudi Arabian government's intelligence chief, was determined to blame Westerners for the bomb: he simply refused to accept that Islamic militants were responsible. That Mr Mitchell and Dr Sampson were chosen as culprits may have been just bad luck.

    "It was odd," says Mr Mitchell, "because I had assisted anaesthetists twice when Prince Naif was being operated on. I had had him prone on the operating table twice. He had even given me a gold watch as a present for my work. But I was tortured because of the orders of that man."


    If you're not exactly familiar with Prince Naif, he would be the more stringently Wahhabist of the royal family (if one could say any such thing) and was basically given the security apparatus as a deal sometime back to balance the power between the Saud and the al Wahhab. Naif got the security, vice (ie, religious police) and charities and the Saud's kept the administrative, business and oil ministries.

    In 2003, Senator Schumer charged Prince Naif of being at least an obstructionist if not an outright supporter of terrorism in Saudi Arabia.

    The lack of cooperation we have received from Saudi Arabia on this issue is not surprising. As we have heard in other Congressional hearings, several prominent members of the Saudi Royal family, including Prince Naif, Saudi Arabia’s anti-terror czar, have supported and even administrated these supposed charitable donations.

    Naif in particular seems to enjoy thumbing his nose at the United States at every turn. He single-handedly blocked the trial of 13 Saudis indicted in American courts for killing 19 Americans in the bombing of Khobar Towers in 1998.

    He insisted that Zionists were responsible for 9-11 and claimed that Saudis citizens could not have been involved in the attack, even after the Saudi government admitted that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi.


    Let's not forget that. For all the things to be said about resources and their impact on world politics, there are definitely some serious problems in the land of Saud that are far from being resolved.

    On an interesting note that nearly shocked me out of my chair, the Saudi Ministry of Education is taking some blame for their part in creating the current fanatical group of young men joining the "jihad":

    The Deputy Saudi Minister of Education, Dr. Saad Al-Mulais, admitted his ministry has to bear partial responsibility for the terrorist incidents witnessed by the Kingdom over the past years. He was quoted as saying the education establishment should be considered a party to what has happened in the past, either for turning a blind eye or other reasons.


    Ya' think?

    However, the writer of the piece reminds us:

    I remember the outgoing minister, Dr. Muhammad Al-Rasheed, making the same demand of teachers and educators. The problem is obvious for everyone to see. Some education supervisors — both teachers and administrators — seem to have forgotten their primary role and have over time turned into preachers. The students listen to sermons and take lessons in what is haram (unlawful) and what is halal (lawful) more than they learn from the prescribed curriculum.


    In other words, lock your left foot in place and take tiny baby steps forward with only your right foot so that you go in circles and end up right back where you started from.

    The problem, of course, is not just educational systems, though that's a start. It's religious laws, limited press, limited freedom, limited flow of information, you name it, it's a problem.

    But, back to my main point, it's obvious to everyone that lives outside of the kingdom that this whole incident in 2000 was a massively inept cover up with attempts to re-enforce "bad western influence". These folks thought that the British would just cave in (they knew the Canadians had) and let them execute these prisoners or thought that the Brits would be embarrassed by the incident and play ball.

    No one bought it then and no one is buying it now, particularly with the amount of terrorism internally and exported from Saudi Arabia. Since then, Naif has been very circumspect and only arrests non-western "foreigners" to use as cover for their stupdity. No one cares about some poor folks from Indonesia getting arrested for having a private religious meeting in their house and it happened to be Christian.

    Long, long way to go in Saudi Arabia.

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    Iraq War In Contrast

    Reading around the blog-o-sphere, I found some interesting contrasting views of the war.

    For instance, if you haven't heard about Fallujah in the news lately, it's because of these marines and men like them:

    Today was a perfect example of how far we have come on the backs of the incredible young Marines, Soldiers and Sailors who have been a part of the Regiment since we arrived in February 2004.

    By mid-morning, we were sitting in a meeting with the local imams. The senior imam or "mufti" brings other important imams in a few times a month and we discuss ongoing issues inside the city. The imam meeting is in addition to various reconstruction meetings with contractors and bureaucrats as well as the perpetual development of the Iraqi security forces. What is unique about the imam meeting is that like so many other things happening now, the meeting itself would have been beyond impossible as recently as October. Now the imams request the meeting and sit down with us in order to reduce friction and work toward improving the quality of life of the Fallujahns.

    As recently as October, we sat outside the city in day long battles. Over the inevitable din, you could hear cries for jihad and resistance resonating through the loudspeakers of the city's 60+ mosques. Certainly from the Marine point of view, the mosques were thought of as facilitators of the terrorists and a key ingredient in stoking the spiral of violence that consumed the city for much of the past thirteen months and beyond. Today we sat with some of the same men who controlled the speakers and discussed ways to get ambulances into the city faster and enhancing understanding among the variety of cultures that now make up the daily life in the city.


    Make sure you read the rest.

    Ibn al-Rafidian in Iraq posts about Cultural Contrast:

    Try to imagine the disorder & your car is in a complete traffic jam. Suddenly, a soldier appears, starts to kick your car pointing his gun at you, and yelling at you to get your car out of his way as if you could carry the car with your hands or put it in your pocket. Even when you manage to pull the car aside, you can't guarantee not being annoyed. I had referred to many incidents in previous posts & I'm quoting one here:


    … my same brother was in a traffic jam when he noticed in the car mirror a bunch of Humvee cars. So he managed to step aside near the sidewalk to avoid annoyance usually caused by the Americans when they pass through streets. What astonished him is that the Humvees' drivers chose to force their cars through a very narrow space beside his car scratching his car and breaking the radio aerial. My
    brother says that the soldiers in the Humvee looked at him in the same way of
    Saddam's henchmen and bodyguards.


    From This Is Your War, a story about being attacked with an IED:

    [snip]In a rush things came back into focus for me, like I had been dropped back into my body. Suddenly the world was moving to fast for my mind.
    junior was shouting about seeing the IED tossed from a car heading in to opposite direction. It bounced twice on the asphalt and exploded a foot from our left rear bumper.

    "I saw it! It was shaped like a tall can of beer! It bounced and rolled toward us before it it exploded! I saw it explode!" Somebody had just tried to kill us. Had targeted us. My vehicle. My crew. My men. Me. [snip]

    I finally got the message across, the IED had been thrown at us from a car. We could still, maybe catch it the the fuckers before they got away. I [went] from fear, from being afraid for the lives of my men and myself, cut through the shock of the event and was consumed by white hot rage.[snip]

    I jumped out of the truck and stepped onto the highway in front of traffic, daring anyone to confront me. Please, I thought, give me an excuse to start shooting. Let just one of you act stupid right now. My M-4 was on BURST, finger on the trigger as I sighted on cars and trucks facing me. Walking into to face of the traffic, pushing them back. Cars were backing away from me as I advanced on them.
    I became dimly aware of Agie beside me. [snip]

    A charcoal colored BMW caught my attention on the frontage road to my left.
    "Get the FUCK back!" I pointed my rifle at the driver. He slammed on the breaks and jammed the car in reverse. This section of road was mine. I owned it and I wasn't going to let anyone on it.[snip]

    I took a deep breath of Iraqi air and looked at the sky, hearing the explosion again. Sam, the terp came up to me.
    "Was close, yes"
    "Yes. Hey, you got a smoke I can borrow? Borrow..."
    I laughed at my choice of words as he dug into his pocket for a pack.
    "These fuckers, cowards," he said as he handed my the smoke and a light. " They throw things and run away. No..." He searched for the words and cupped his hand near his [groin].
    "No balls..."
    "Yes!" His face light up and he gripped my shoulder. "Yes, no balls!"


    Then he talks about the next day, going on patrol, passing the same area and having a can fall out of the lead vehicle.

    Going back to the original post, he talks about going to a firefight:

    We circled the same block twice, coming out near a block of apartment buildings Saddam built for the families of Palestinian suicide bombers. One of the areas where we were less than popular. [snip]

    The two platoons waited for something to happen. Random shots and bursts of fire echoed off the concrete walls and asphalt. A truck load of IA commandos, drinking beer from 24oz cans, drove by with a prisoner. They cheered and slapped the bound EPW in the back of the head until one IA fell out of the truck bed and landed on his face only after being drug a few feet, his boot caught on the tailgate. The IAs laughed as they picked their buddy up, threw him on top of the EPW and sped off. I wanted to ask them where they got the beer.


    Interestingly, Sam at Hammorabi points to a story about four Palestinians arrested in Baghdad, somewhere around the time that "This is your war" talks about going to a fire fight at apartments built for families of Palestinian suicide bombers.

    Sam says of the four:

    The Iraqi Fox Brigade arrested 4 Palestinian terrorists who carried out the explosion of the market in East Baghdad few days ago, which resulted in the death of many Iraqi civilians and damaged the shops and markets there.[snip]

    They stated in their confession that they lived for many years in Iraq. Some of them worked as security agents for Saddam regime. They stated that they receive the order from other Palestinians who are linked with Syria.


    I don't know if these incidents are connected, but it did seem an interesting coincidence.

    Then there is Major K at Strength and Honor, an intelligence officer in Iraq. His posts also show, from one day to the next, the contrast in the daily activities of the war effort.

    Here he talks about meeting with the Presidential security detail:

    Almost every week, LT C. and I meet with Col K. and his men from the Presidential Security Detail. I look forward to this meeting every time. They are charged with protecting the Iraqi President, Mr. Talabani. We meet to exchange information, see if we can help each other, and discuss the latest threats against our areas of responsibility. They are the nicest people that you could ever meet. Every time we come, they serve us lunch, and it always an impressive spread. Other than security issues, We talk about our families, life back home, plans for the future, our shared values despite religious differences and how beautiful Sulimaniyah is.


    An earlier post talks about needing supplies for his Iraqi counterparts and informants:

    Body Armor. Not the big bulky stuff that we wear, but the level IIIA, concealable stuff that cops wear, to outfit my informants, so that no one knows that they are wearing it. We have plenty of our own, but none of this type. We could use about 5-6 sets, preferably size medium.[snip]

    - MP3 recorders with at least 64MB of memory - for documenting bad guys behaving badly


    Obviously, Major K is seeing the inside, grinding work of tracking down the bad guys. His older posts deal with some of the things he has to do to get this going. One thing he mentioned was that he was never an intelligence officer before and that he basically had to start from scratch deciding what he needed to do, how to obtain and coordinate information, cultivate informants, etc.

    I wonder if any military folks read his site and think about the kind of training they need to do in the units regarding this aspect of the war?

    There is Neurotic Iraqi Wife whose husband has been working as a contractor for the Coalition while she lives outside of Iraq. They have been separated for much of their short marriage (just like many newly weds in the Coalition forces) and is now cleared to return to Iraq and live with her husband in the Green zone.

    There are so many things on my mind and I have to admit that Im scared. Yes, scared. Really scared. Not scared for my life cuz that has already been planned out for me, but scared for my marriage. As much as I love my husband I keep begging God, praying that he's worth all this. Im ashamed, real ashamed admitting this but its the truth. This will either break us or make us and Im praying its the latter.

    I sound like the most ungrateful wife alive,no??? I dunno, I dunno if what Im feeling is natural, I dunno anymore. I cant believe am going to Baghdad after all this time, I really cant but most importantly I cant believe that I will finally be with HUBBY...And just thinking about that makes me anxious, real anxious.


    I wished her luck, but we may not hear from her for awhile as she gets in country and gets situated. I loved reading her blog because it was a personal account about being separated from her husband and worrying about all the things that one must worry about when newly married and having this thing between you and your loved one.

    In the meantime, my first and favorite bloggers at Iraq the Model are talking about the new government and the process of writing the constitution:

    In what appears like an attempt to override the disputes created by the low number of Sunni law makers included in the "constitution writing committee"; a number of new initiatives to allow more influence for the Sunni in writing the constitution are on the horizon.

    What seems to be the most acceptable initiative is one I read about in the morning papers of today; it suggests the establishment of an additional constitutional committee from Sunni Arabs. Abbas Al-Bayati, a member of the Assembly form Jafari's block said that "when we reach an agreement on adopting this plan as a solution, then we will move to the other step of choosing the members of this committee".


    While at the same time, Saleem at Iraq Rising reports his issues with Jafaari and al-Sistani:

    Ja3fary is becoming a joke in Baghdad, every time there is a crises or an important decision to be made he runs to Najef to consult and get his orders from Sistani and his Iranian puppet masters.

    Today, and only one day after C. Rice’s visited us, he keeps to form and heads down to see his boss Sistani. This begs the question about who is really in charge here in Iraq; Ja3fary or Sistani. I certainly don’t remember voting for Sistani on the 30th of January.[snip]

    How can they expect the ordinary Iraqi citizen to stand up to the terrorists if he does not believe that the government that represents him is working for his benefit and self-interest. Alienating the population by this weak and shortsighted leadership sends the wrong message and makes the average citizen want to shut his doors or worst run away from the country.


    But the brothers at Iraq the Model point to Jaafari and Sistani talks in a positive light:

    Meanwhile, Sistani urged PM Jafari to work on including more Sunni members in the "constitution drafting committee". This committee is comprised of 55 members; 28 of who are from the She'at dominated block of the "United Coalition" while there are only 2 Sunni members in it so far.


    Sistani may be the moderating voice. I'm torn about whether this is a good sign or not. In the same post and elsewhere in the blog-o-sphere, there are disussions about Jafaari's "deba'athification" of the government:

    Jafari also rejected the idea of starting negotiations with the militant


    The brothers wrote, but Iraq Rising has a different opinion on the matter:

    Firstly - It seems that the issue of De-Ba’athification, that the PM is insisting on, is causing much hardship and consternation amongst the lives of many Iraqis who (rightly) feel that this ‘witch hunt’ is unfair and tinged with a certain hint of revenge about it.

    (The majority of civil service employees under Saddam were members of the Ba’ath party. Just as it were in Russia under Communism, you had no choice about it. For Ja3fary to turn around and sack everyone who had anything to do with the Ba’ath is a wrong policy and smacks of a witch hunt to me).


    Of course, if you don't read Chrenkoff you wouldn't know that anything else was going on in Iraq except bombs and political wrangling. He always has his round up of Good News From Iraq. This posting talks about a number of important Sunni leaders deciding to play ball with the new government and begin distancing themselves from the Zarqawi folks:

    As the report notes, "the significance of the conference was underscored by its attendees. Participants included members of the Muslim Scholars Association, a group of Sunni religious leaders, among them some of the most extreme figures who have influence with the insurgency. Also present were leaders from cities in the 'Sunni Triangle,' including Mosul, Haditha, and Salam Pak, which is bubbling with insurgent activity. Representatives of Waqaf Sunna, the powerful administrating body of Sunni religious affairs, attended as well." It is an important development, if only because it will allow Shias and Kurds to formally negotiate with the Sunni community about the future of Iraq.


    Speaking of the Kurds, our friends in the north are still concerned about Kurdistan's autonomy and guarantee of a federal Iraqi state:

    Has this story made the news rounds yet:

    Iraqi Government removes the word federal from oath


    Obviously, when Jafaari talks about "deba'athification" and Talabani, Kurdish Iraqi President goes along with it, it's because a strong part of their constituency feels that this is important to insure their security:

    Anyway back to the main point, you'd honestly think this government is more obsessed with screwing us than protecting their own people
    In just 2 days, they've discovered shallow graves of executed Iraqis civilians, market explosions ripping apart shoppers, more bombings outside police recruitment stations and this without all the other unmentioned everyday bombings kidnappings and beheadings of Iraqi civilians and what are their ministers doing? Just sitting there playing X and O with their constitution

    What have we done against them anyway, on the other hand look how willing they are in appeasing baathists and even giving them ministries in the govt without being elected.[snip]

    Isn't about time they start taking away the baby gloves just cos' they happen to be sunni, its about time someone stands up and says "TOUGH u didn't participate, no seats. Next election is in 9 months time, hope u learned your lesson.[snip]

    So yes how about seeing some yezidis, chrisitians and on a gender level, women for these roles, and what is it with ex-baathist monopolizing the sunni roles in everything anyway do they not come in other flavors, oh wait they probably do but just happen to get gunned down. They're great in terrorizing and holding hostage their own people aren't they.

    So much for a new Iraq, it still looks like a society who are still ruled by people who love their crime and injustice.


    Another member of the blog was unhappy with the language used by Rice and the media during her visit:

    Ladies and Gentelmen:
    after the renaming Kurdistan to Northern Iraq ,"Kudistan Democratic Party" is renamed to "Kurdish(!?) Democratic Party" by United States of America and Ameican offical news agencies, Happy new name to Kak Massod Barzani.[snip]

    Our lands name is Kurdistan and it will be kurdistan fo[r]ever and nobody can change it.


    In a recent article from theBaltimore City Paper, the reporter talks about the endeavors of an American unit stationed in Kurdistan and their interactions with the locals while exploring the American policies on Iraq and Kurdistan:

    Since the Shi’ah-dominated Iraqi government in Baghdad has a monopoly on the state’s oil production and is using oil revenue to fund reconstruction, “nothing comes back into Kirkuk,” 116th Maj. Darren Blagburn, 36, says.

    All that would change if Kurds had their way. [snip]

    But any Kurd attempt at taking Kirkuk from Iraq could instigate large-scale violence due to what Blagburn calls the city’s “competing social demographics.”

    “In order to keep a unified, peaceful Iraq,” Blagburn adds, “Talabani must keep the Kurds back.” [snip]

    Col. Kamal, in a moment of candor after the emotional visit to the Halabja shrine, is more direct. “Arabs were troublemakers from the beginning,” he says. “This is our land, but no one will call it our land. It’s the 21st century, and we don’t even have a country.”

    And the U.S. government hopes it stays that way. In the meantime, American diplomats tread a fine line between their tacit recognition of and open respect for Kurdish accomplishments and their demand for a unified Iraq. And they wait as Talabani and his landless people plan their next move.

    While they do, the National Guard will be here, dancing, eating kebabs, and sharing tables with overweight Kurdish generals. And watching.


    Else where in Iraq, the war continues and Michael Yon is there to record it:

    Sometime that night, Sergeant Anthony Davis, one of the men who had been trapped in the Stryker, died from his injuries. He was 22.

    The news brought a fog of sadness to the men that rolled with them on their missions back into Mosul that night. And the next day, when Kurilla was back with his men, they rolled out again, this time talking with shop owners and others who might have information about attacks, past or pending.

    A mission or two later, riding along with B Company on a raid, we picked up a couple of prisoners at the first target location. One of the prisoners started spilling information, so they took him along to ID another target house when, Blam! A Stryker in front of us hit an IED. It was a large explosion, but only one of the eight tires blew out, so we drove on, hitting another house, getting another prisoner, and coming back home to FOB Marez.

    Since that day, six days ago, four more Americans and an interpreter have died from suicide strikes in the AO. Yesterday there were multiple large IED attacks here, two SVBIEDs downtown, and the men of Deuce Four keep soldiering on.


    For some, the war is over, but will probably never be forgotten. As are most soldiers, Smink at 365 Days in Iraq feels profoundly changed:

    But most days, I go through the motions, trying to joke around and saying all the right things. Most people would look at me and think everything is OK. But those who know me see it. They see the difficulties I have remembering things and how I don’t have the same desires to set the world on fire. In counseling, I find myself embarrassed to share my problems and the dreams. And then when I do, I start sobbing like a little girl and I feel worse. My counselor says I’ll never be my old self; that I am forever changed.[snip]

    I certainly do not write this for attention or to get it off my chest. Rather, I write it to inform you. To let you know that if you have a soldier or you know a soldier who just returned, that there are days he or she would probably want to lay in bed and do absolutely nothing. I wish it were different, but it’s not. Soldiers are strong, determined people, but also very human.


    Returning to Michael Yon, he is the photographer/journalist that took the picture of the little girl dying in the arms of a soldier after a VBIED struck their unit.

    Another post is of pictures of many other children and their parents mugging it up for the camera. At the bottom of the post, he wrote:

    The teachers make these kids study. The classrooms are always clean and the students well behaved. I have come into classrooms where the kids are studying English. Hard to get out of those rooms; they all want to say "hello!"

    Some day this war will end.


    Amen.

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    I Am Being Read in Korean

    Looking at referrers late this evening, I noted that the entire website was being translated to Korean.

    Score one Chinese translation and one Korean.

    Pretty cool for a chic in Missouri.

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    Thursday, May 19, 2005

    Sanctuary

    I highly suggest that you read Bill Whittle's Sanctuary.

    These religious fanatics, who will form a mob and tear a person limb from limb if he (or especially she) so much as looks askance at a copy of the Quran, routinely and methodically have used mosques – even their most sacred mosques – as ammunition dumps, staging areas and firing positions, viewing our decency and restraint as foolishness and weakness.

    These acts have been recorded so many times that it has become banal. It’s just a fact. It’s what they do.

    If they had genuine respect for their own religions and holy places they would give them the widest berth available, not turn them into command bunkers, ambush sites and staging areas.

    Here is a violation of Sanctuary written as plainly as the eye can see. They use safe havens -- hospitals, hotels and places of worship -- as military fortresses because they are counting on our decency and honor to spare them from retaliation.

    Actually, it is deeper than that. I suspect what they are really counting on is that sooner or later, such provocations have to be answered. And then there will be armies of useful idiots with television cameras and microphones and Expensive Hair, who will rally the full weight of recrimination and guilt and defeatism and accomplish for a few bearded lunatics what entire armored divisions could not achieve for them on the battlefield: Victory over the Americans.


    Read it all please. Best rant about idiocy I've read in some time.

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    Saudi Arabia Rejects Torture Claims

    JEDDAH, 19 May 2005 — Deputy Interior Minister Prince Ahmed yesterday rejected allegations made by three Britons that they had been tortured at a Riyadh jail and said they should have been thankful for receiving pardon for the crimes they had committed.

    “They have never been tortured. They had lawyers and the representatives of their embassies used to visit them and their families. If there were anything of that sort, their countries would have protested and it never happened,” the prince said when asked about the torture allegation.

    “The Shariah court had issued a strong verdict against them as they deserved it for their crimes,” he pointed out.

    Prince Ahmed said the Kingdom was not officially informed about the move by Bindman and Partners, a London-based law firm, which represents Britons Sandy Mitchell, Les Walker and William Sampson, to seize the Kingdom’s assets in Britain to pay for overdue legal costs.


    For the record, I've had several email conversations with William Sampson, one of the victims. It was only by sheer dent of diplomatic power that these men were freed. They were tortured and it came out in their trial. I do mean in the sense of being tortured as most normal people understand it: hung by their wrists or ankles, beaten and a number of ther details found here.

    Arab News did get one detail wrong, Sampson has dual citizenship with Britain and Canada.

    You may wonder what he was charged with:

    The men were held in Saudi jails for more than two years and confessed, allegedly after torture, to plotting a series of bomb attacks in Riyadh in 2000 and 2001. Saudi authorities described the bombings, in which one Briton was killed, as part of a turf war between Western gangs supplying illegal liquor to expatriates.


    Saudi Arabia has very strict laws about liquor and drugs. The crime of smuggling or making what amounts to "moonshine" Saudi style can get you beheaded if you're a non-citizen and some very serious prison time and physical punishment if you are a citizen.

    And what was he doing there:

    Sampson had been working as an employee of a Saudi agency that provides loans to industrial ventures.


    Now, does this sound like someone who was engaging in "gang turf wars" to you?

    If you are vaguely familiar with the time line of these charges, the dates and places of the attacks, you might find them to be oddly familiar as they are the same places that were attacked by terrorists in the intravening years, killing many westerners and prompting the US to withdraw family members of diplomats and encouraged Americans living in western compounds to leave.

    In short, this was an early attempt by the Saudi government to cover up to the citizens of KSA and the world that they had just had the whirl wind they had created return to them.

    Of course, in a country that barely admits they have some "issues" with extremists, it is not unusual to find they are not owning up to the torture of these men.

    The Canadian government continues to be complicit in this situation, insisting that they never saw signs of torture and was not told by Sampson that he was tortured or beaten, even when expressly and pointedly asked.

    It reminds me of the stories of Viet Nam veterans being interviewed by French and other press, or, more notoriously, Hanoi Jane and, despite their condition, telling them that they were fine and treated well because they knew if they didn't they would just get more beatings and worse torture.

    Heads in the sand and quite possibly willfully complict in the treatment of their own citizen.

    For the story of William Sampson in his own words, go here.

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    Analyzing Zarqawi Statement:

    Killing Muslims OK In the Name of Jihad

    "God ordered us to attack the infidels by all means ... even if armed infidels and unintended victims — women and children — are killed together," the speaker said. "The priority is for jihad so anything that slows down jihad should be overcome."

    The defense of the deadly attacks could be a recruiting tactic aimed at Sunni Arabs who initially didn't sympathize with the insurgency because of the deaths of innocents.


    I think it's pretty obvious why he had to put this statement out. It certainly wasn't for western consumption. This is totally aimed at the ME Muslim population that is becoming slightly weary of the continued body counts that are by far largely made up of Iraqis; Muslims to be exact.

    Via Iraqi Bloggers Central:

    Since April 1, 2005, the insurgents/terrorists/resistance have killed:

    689 Iraqi Civilians

    370 Iraqi Military / Police


    Number of US forces killed or wounded in Iraq including men from the Matador offensive near the Syrian Border and non-combat related incidents:

    April: 58 Killed 306 wounded
    May: 35 killed wounded not tallied yet


    Thus, 93 US forces to 1059 Iraqi/Muslim civilians. Obviously, Zarqawi is aware that even his base supporters haven't been so vocally supportive lately and, without a doubt, it is very likely that there is dissension within the ranks about such operations.

    Pictures like these from Michael Yon along with stories of suicide bombers crashing their cars into "military" targets while 20-40 children are standing around probably don't sit very well with even your tightest Islamist friends who still have, some where in the deepest darkest corners of their hearts, a modicum of compassion, if not actually have children themselves.

    Hard to recruit young men who have children to come and blow up someone else's children you would think. Except, as I've pointed out the problem in the Magical Kingdom of Saudi Arabia are the "scholars" and other such alleged Islamic intellegensia:

    The speaker claimed that top religious scholars have repeatedly sanctioned homicide bombings.


    "Top religious scholars" refers to a number people. One of which is outlined in this Jerusalem Post article from July 2004:

    A lengthy audiotape purportedly by the spiritual adviser to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al-Qaida-linked group justifies killing Muslims when their presence protects infidels and threatens revenge on Shiite Muslims.

    The 74-minute tape, posted Wednesday on an Internet site that often carries statements from Islamic terrorists, identifies the speaker as Sheik Abu Anas al-Shami, spiritual leader for Tawhid and Jihad.[ed...Al Qaida in Iraq] His name often is cited in Islamic forums as a religious authority, but he was not known to have released such audiotapes.

    "If infidels take Muslims as protectors and Muslims do not fight them, it is allowed to kill the Muslims," the speaker said, then gave an example.

    "If there is an interest in killing a Turk, and if it is necessary - meaning that if targeting the infidels is impossible as long as the Turk exists - then killing the Turk serves an interest to all Muslims and his killing is allowed," he said.
    Turks, Jordanians, Egyptians and other Muslims have been abducted, but thus far no Muslims are known to have been decapitated.


    Note that last sentence. This was written last July. We know now that Muslim prisoners have been beheaded, particularly if they are Shi'ite or considered "collaborators" with the US forces. "Collaboration" has been as little as being seen waving to the forces or selling them a soda.

    Another story from military intelligence, indicates Zarqawi is shifting tactics and probably losing some of his faithful as the strategies seem more and more desperate:

    "He (al-Zarqawi) allegedly was not happy with how the insurgency was going, the government was getting stronger and coalition forces not being defeated," the official said. "Some intelligence reports from captives showed that al-Zarqawi directed people to start using more vehicle-borne devices and (to) use them in everyday operations."


    This has certainly led to an upswing in violence since mid April when this meeting was alleged to take place:

    In response to al-Zarqawi's call, there had been 21 car bombings, mostly suicide attacks, in Baghdad during May, compared with 25 such attacks in all of 2004, the official said. Nearly 130 car bombs have exploded or been defused since late February, he said.


    Important to note the hidden sentence there "been defused". A recent statistic indicates that almost half of all of these would be bombs are being identified and removed before they do damage.

    And an indication that Zarqawi's own "all volunteer force" may not be so voluntary:

    In one of the latest bombings, all that was found of the attacker was his foot taped to the car's accelerator, the official said, indicating he'd been forced to carry out the suicide mission.


    Recently read, but could not relocate the link, several young men returning from Syria back to Saudi Arabia because they thought they were going to "fight" US forces, but discovered that they were being asked to immediately become suicide bombers in cars and this did not fit in with their romantacized vision of "jihad".

    One item that shouldn't be missed is Zarqawi's continuing rant about the Shia:

    A chilling, rambling Internet audiotape purportedly by al-Zarqawi and posted Wednesday denounced Iraq's Shiites as U.S. collaborators and called this country's leaders traitors to Islam.

    "What Sunnis have suffered and are still suffering from the Shiites is far worse than what they saw from the Americans," said the speaker purported to be al-Zarqawi.


    If you missed it back in February of 2004, Zarqawi, in a letter to bin Laden, talks extensively about the Shia's:

    These [have been] a sect of treachery and betrayal throughout history and throughout the ages. It is a creed that aims to combat the Sunnis.


    Iraqi government officials continue to point to apparent sectarian violence as being committed by Zarqawi's group and their ilk while the different sects in Iraq continue to blame each other:

    Harith al-Dhari, head of Iraq's influential Sunni Muslim Association of Muslim Scholars, blamed the recent killings of Sunni clerics on the Badr Brigades, the militia of Iraq's leading Shiite group, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.

    Brigade general secretary Hadi al-Amri denied the charge and said the Sunni association wanted to "push Iraq into a sectarian conflict."


    As is indicated by this report without coming right out and saying it, it is very likely that the violence was started by Zarqawi, that Sunni groups participating with Zarqawi targeted Shia and now the Shia are responding. What you haven't heard in recent months is Al-Sistani, grand ayatollah of the Shia, attempting to diffuse the situation and calling on his followers not to respond.

    This is quickly becoming a situation of "tit for tat".

    One thing I have found unendingly interesting is that people in the area define themselves by their tribe first, their religion second (a close second) and their nationality (Iraq) third, if at all. If you read the tribal series from Zeyad, you can get the distinct understanding that Iraq as a state has continued to be destroyed and remade/re-united, over and over again through out history because of this very issue.

    Rather chilling, but quite remarkable as it shows the actions of the Coalition and Iraqi forces have been having an effect on the "insurgency":

    Despite marked increases in car and roadside bombings, the official said other forms of violence have declined in recent months. "They (the insurgents) are trying to get ready to build up again," he warned.


    In short, they are having difficulty recruiting people as the war waxes and wanes, with each stronghold they are driven from, they lose some face, they lose operations ability, they lose caches and they lose recruits who don't see car bombing other muslims as honorable nor a worthwhile strategy. The attack at Qaim showed that they are equally unable to mount successful frontal attacks on the Coalition and Iraqi forces.

    Zarqawi is constantly calling on God to guide them and give them victory. In his February 2004 letter he states:

    As you know, God favored the [Islamic] nation with jihad on His behalf in the land of Mesopotamia.


    After Fallujah, Mosul and Qaim, the killing of so many Muslims by this group for little effect and the exhortation for them to become suicide car bombers instead of "knights under the Prophets banner" bravely facing down an enemy tank with an AK-47, some of these would be recruits must be wondering if they are doing the right thing or if Allah is really on Zarqawi's side.

    On another note, Iraq now says it is illegal to aid and abet terrorists.

    And, Zarqawi issues a death threat to Dr. Rice:

    The old hag wants the participation of the Sunni impostors," it said, referring to Rice. "You ought to know that our doctrine is killing you. Our path is fighting you."


    Of course, she flew in and flew out of Iraq without the great Zarqawi knowing or being able to do anything about it.

    Must be very frustrating to be him about now.

    Also read The Radicals Are Desperate from March 2005.

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    Wednesday, May 18, 2005

    Kuwaiti Women Get the Vote

    You've Come A Long Way, Baby!

    While we're distracted with riots and George "the Saddamist" Galloway at the Senate, a barely heard shout for democracy starts in Kuwait and slowly makes its way to the western word:

    Kuwaiti Women Get the Vote

    I also wanted to point out the picture that went with the story. The women in the parliamentary gallery are largely dressed in western clothes and without the hijab, naqib or any other encompassing clothing. Some are even wearing matching t-shirts with an obvious slogan on the front.

    I point this out because I think it is important for people to get over the concept that all women in the Arabic world are walking around with burqas, veils (naqib?), chador or hijab covering them from head to toe.

    But, I digress.


    Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah told reporters in Parliament that he planned to name a woman minister. “God willing, it will be soon. Now we have the right to appoint women in the government,” he said. “Thank God... that women got their political rights,” the premier said. “I congratulate the women of Kuwait for having achieved their political rights.”


    Me, too.

    Congratulations, ladies!

    I know it's not perfect, but I know you won't back down after this.

    Less than perfect:

    But they [ed...anti-women MPs] succeeded in passing an addition to the amendment requiring Kuwaiti women who take part in the elections “to comply with regulations dictated by Islamic Shariah law”, without explaining the nature of those guidelines.



    What did the women have to say about this?

    Dashti said she was not concerned by the reference to Shariah law, saying it probably just meant separate polling stations and not an Islamic dress code. “They can’t impose veils on voters,” she said.



    Exactly. What is more interesting is that women voters will out number the men:

    The amendment will increase the number of eligible voters in Kuwait from the current 145,000 males to more than 350,000 people, or 37 percent of Kuwait’s native population of 956,000.



    These ladies join a growing number of women in the ME given their right to participate in their government:

    Kuwaiti women now join their counterparts from Gulf neighbors Qatar, Oman and Bahrain in having the vote.



    Not including Iraq? Of course, women had the right to vote there, you just had to make darn certain it was for the guy that already had the big red "x" on the ballot next to his name.

    Either way...

    You've come a long way, Baby!

    Nadz points to some influential Muslim ladies.

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    Allahu Akbar, the Ghost Dance and Magic Bullets Part V

    From my friend, Tonecluster, he points out an excellent read by Andrew C. McCarthy at NRO, A Smug Delusion of Base Expectations:

    The outpouring of righteous indignation against Newsweek glides past a far more important point. Yes, we're all sick of media bias.[snip]

    What are we saying here? That the problem lies in the falsity of Newsweek's reporting? What if the report had been true? And, if you're being honest with yourself, you cannot say — based on common sense and even ignoring what we know happened at Abu Ghraib — that you didn't think it was conceivably possible the report could have been true.


    I'll pause for a moment and say, based on my earlier analysis of the info, I don't think it's true that a US military person flushed a Koran down the toilet to get a rise out of a prisoner. But, he adds an important perspective:

    Flushing the Koran down a toilet (assuming for argument's sake that our environmentally correct, 3.6-liters-per-flush toilets are capable of such a feat) is a bad thing. But rioting? Seventeen people killed? That's a rational response?


    Aye, there's the rub. Yes, I'm irritated about our media continuing to act like a propaganda machine for the enemy, inadvertantly or otherwise, but his point is the most valid. If I had to list, in order, the people I would blame for this whole fiasco, it would definitely be:

    1) Exremist Islamists. This was an over the top response, so yeah, I think that it was waiting to happen and it didn't matter what it was. I mean, they threaten people for not giving Mohammed "due deference", want to kill people who want to leave their religion and stone women for alleged "adultery". They certainly haven't given up on recruiting young men for suicide missions in order to go to paradise and have 72 virgins.

    2) The nitwit (for lack of a better word that isn't spelled with four letters) who think they should wage their ideological political wars from within the American government in the middle of a war by "leaking" information that they can't recall all the details of and cannot be substantiated but by wishful thinking. Who are these punks anyway?

    3) Newsweek still. I agree with Mr. McCarthy that the rioters are responsible for their own behavior and causing the deaths of fellow citizens. I am a "personal responsibility" person, after all. But that means that I believe each person should take responsibility for their part in the situation. Newsweek failed to meet it's own purported journalistic standards and did not apply critical thinking and analysis to the story, creating propaganda for the enemy. For that, they must take responsibility.

    None of these folks get off in my book.

    Speaking of people that have been getting off the hook for things that are their responsibility, I think it is time once again to look at our alleged allies in the ME, Saudi Arabia. I must say that I am pretty tired of hearing their platitudes and double speak, trying to present a modern and moderate face to the world while their educational system and state religion continue to exhort young men to go to Iraq or attack westerners via "jihad".

    I know I've been one of those folks that says, "we can't just go to war with KSA because they are the lynchpin of oil producers in the ME and would create great problems with WORLD access to resources and possibly instigate the next world war". I still believe it, but I think I'm getting heartily sick the baloney that passes for their internal "vigilance" against this kind of behavior when they CONDONE it in their very institutions.

    According to this article in the Washington Post, "Martyrs" in Iraq Mostly Saudi:

    [snip]On April 11, he died as a suicide bomber, part of a coordinated insurgent attack on a U.S. Marine base in the western Iraq city of Qaim. Just two days later, "the Martyrdom" of Hadi bin Mubarak Qahtani was announced on the Internet, the latest requiem for a young Saudi man who had clamored to follow "those 19 heroes" of Sept. 11 and had found in Iraq an accessible way to die.

    Hundreds of similar accounts of suicide bombers are featured on the rapidly proliferating array of Web sites run by radical Islamists, online celebrations of death that offer a wealth of information about an otherwise shadowy foe at a time when U.S. military officials say that foreign fighters constitute a growing and particularly deadly percentage of the Iraqi insurgency.[snip]

    Who are the suicide bombers of Iraq? By the radicals' account, they are an internationalist brigade of Arabs, with the largest share in the online lists from Saudi Arabia and a significant minority from other countries on Iraq's borders, such as Syria and Kuwait. [snip]

    Some counterterrorism officials are skeptical about relying on information from publicly available Web sites, which they say may be used for disinformation. But other observers of the jihadist Web sites view the lists of the dead "for internal purposes" more than for propaganda, as British researcher Paul Eedle put it. "These are efforts on the part of jihadis to collate deaths.[snip]

    Or, as Col. Thomas X. Hammes, an expert on insurgency with the National Defense University, said, "they are targeted marketing. They are not aimed at the West."[snip]


    Frankly, there are some websites that are ludicrous and nearly satirical in their outrageous claims (I mean, purely Baghdad Bob bull) and some that take a more serioius note and are actively, emphatically the jihadists communications to the outside world and would be recruits. Considering they glorify death and destruction, why would they hide what they believe is their crowning glory?

    A lot of folks are keeping track of this phenomenon:

    In a paper published in March, Reuven Paz, an Israeli expert on terrorism, analyzed the lists of jihadi dead. He found 154 Arabs killed over the previous six months in Iraq, 61 percent of them from Saudi Arabia, with Syrians, Iraqis and Kuwaitis together accounting for another 25 percent. He also found that 70 percent of the suicide bombers named by the Web sites were Saudi. In three cases, Paz found two brothers who carried out suicide attacks. Many of the bombers were married, well educated and in their late twenties, according to postings.


    Well educated were the key words for me. As I point out here and several other posts, education in these countries often include large doses of religious classes. Even friendly bloggers like Nadz talks about having to take religious "school" on weekends. This points to an inherent problem in the Saudi system, one they have not fixed by any means.

    The apparent predominance of Saudi fighters on the Internet lists has caused an alarmed reaction by Saudi officials, who fear a backlash from the Americans at the same time they are trying to convince the United States that they are working as allies against terrorism.[snip]

    The Internet sites try to recruit people -- it's the best recruitment tool," said Saudi security analyst Nawaf Obaid. Obaid, who has worked closely with the government, said he found 47 cases of Saudis who were dead or injured reported in the kingdom's newspapers, far lower than Internet totals, and had concluded the overall number of Saudi jihadis in Iraq was in the hundreds. "But young guys, they read [on the Internet] we have thousands of Saudis there and think, 'I have to go, too.' "


    Well, while I've gone on about the "free" press of the US continuing to badger and inflate stories on the US government, I really think that the Saudi press has the opposite concept, considering they could go to jail for impugning Saudi honor, so, I tend to take this little report with a grain or two or three of salt.

    The report also quotes someone that I've read recently:

    Evan F. Kohlmann, a researcher who monitors Islamic extremist Web sites, has compiled a list of more than 235 names of Iraqi dead gleaned from the Internet since last summer, with more than 50 percent on his tally from Saudi Arabia as well. In some cases, he found photos or videos of dead foreign fighters posted online.


    You can see his report and findings from earlier this year in PDF format here. Very interesting reading.

    Kohlman discusses confirmation of his numbers via real sources, not just the websites:

    Some of the Web postings also include phone numbers so fellow Islamists can call a dead fighter's family and congratulate them. Kohlmann called several of the numbers. "I have lists and lists of foreign fighters, and it's no joke. Their sons went and blew themselves up in Iraq," he said.


    A last interesting note about "Qahtani" who blew himself up at the Marine base in Qaim:

    It gives no more identifying details than his name -- indicating he was part of a well-known Saudi tribe that also produced the al Qaeda member known as the so-called 20th hijacker, Mohamed Qahtani, who was turned away from entering the country by suspicious U.S. airport officials in August 2001.


    This would be the notorious Al-Ghamdi tribe from whence many of the 19 hijackers came and who have been at odds with the Saudi government since probably the advent of Saudi Arabia itself. They never did take too kindly to being subjegated by Al-Saud and have been on the fore-front of smuggling people and weapons between Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Further, it is a poor area of the country with little industry that also sees very little in the way of money or other infrastructural support from oil revenue and other funds of the KSA.

    This may be where many of the Saudi "terrorists" come from. However, it is important to note that these folks get a free education from KSA and that includes University at places like King Fahd University, where career paths are limited to technical or religious and every student has to take a certain amount of "Islamic" classes to get their degree. This is true for all students and seems to be able to instill religious fervor in the minds of young men.

    Interestingly, an article from Ain-Al-Yaqeen has this ironic information talking about terrorists in Saudi:

    Addressing the audience, representatives of the groups denounced the acts perpetrated by the deviating group in the country. On his part, Crown Prince Abdullah thanked them for their noble feelings and support and stressed that this deviant group has harmed Islam and the Muslim faith. [snip]

    On behalf of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Fahd Ibn Abdul Aziz, Prince Abdel Majeed Ibn Abdul Aziz, the Governor of Makkah region, patronized the final ceremony of King Abdul Aziz International Contest for the Holy Quran Memorization, Recitation and Interpretation, organized by the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Endowments, Call and Guidance


    Of course, it's not long before we find out why he is so concerned about "deviants":

    the Minister of Islamic Affairs, Endowments, Call and Guidance, reiterated the adherence of the Kingdom to the Holy Quran and to its teachings, and said the Holy Quran is the constitution of the Kingdom.

    'Those who attack the Kingdom and launch vicious campaigns against it, engage in such kind of slurs because the Kingdom adheres to the Holy Quran," he said. "However, the Kingdom is determined to go ahead on the path of the Holy Quran and the Sunnah (the Prophet's teachings)," he noted.


    It is so ironic because it reminds me of the original Al-Saud having to go stomp out the muwahhidin (or ikhwan) after using them in the 1920's to establish the kingdom because, after everything, they decided that he, Al Saud, was not Islamic enough. Ironic.

    Al Al-Sheikh made it clear that the people of the Holy Quran are moderates who keep away from all forms of extremism which have paved the way for terrorism.

    "The terrorists are actually violating teachings of the Holy Quran and the Sunnah," he added.


    Really? How about the Saudi government looking into what their state funded universities and mosques are preaching? How about disbanding the "vice and morality" squad?

    I really do appreciate these comments by these nice Arabic gentleman and understand that, even under a comfortable despotic rule, you can't control all the people all the time, but something tells me the government has the power to insure they themselves are not contributing to the disease.

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    Tuesday, May 17, 2005

    Al Jazeera = Saddam

    Several sites are reporting that 55% of Al Jazeera stock was purchased by...

    *drum roll please*

    "Sajeeda", Saddam's wife and their daughters.

    Check out Ladybird at Baghdad Dweller. The two sites she points to are in Arabic so I cannot confirm the information. Of course, even though I respect Ladybird and other fellow Iraqi bloggers, it's not being reported by any major news sites, so take it with a grain of salt.

    Also read Iraqi Expat.

    Neither Iraqi is acting amazed. Both are of the opinion that AJ was "Saddam's mouthpiece anyway".

    Big Update:

    From comments, Twosret points out that it's not purchased yet, just that Sajid Hussein is making inquiries through an off shore company.

    Keep your eyes peeled.

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    Monday, May 16, 2005

    Newsweek: Flushing Credibility Down the Toilet

    Prison Life and the War Effort

    Well, it's all over the news and the internet. Another news source has proven to be unreliable and quite possibly complicit in creating propaganda for the enemies of the United States. As the story goes, a Quran (Koran) was allegedly torn up and flushed down the toilet by prison guards or interrogators to "humiliate" or otherwise "unsettle" the detainee they were questioning. Newsweek retracts the story saying they now believe that they cannot confirm the story after many riots, death and threats against America.

    I'm late to the party, but thought I'd get in a few other licks that I don't see anyone talking about.

    General Richard Myers, of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters last week that there were no reports of this technique being used or any desecration except for a log book which indicated that a prisoner had flushed pages of the Koran down the toilet in his cell to stage a protest.

    Now, there are many out there that are still skeptical, particularly the loon birds over at Kos and the DU. Of course, we are not expecting people in countries where the press is not free to believe that Newsweek did this of their own accord because they are wrong. But, for those of us with half a brain and a free press, it is important that we use common sense and be able to confront the skeptics in our own country and other "free" states.

    Therefore, I intend to elaborate on the information provided by General Richard Myers regarding the "prisoner protest". Not because I have anonymous sources at the prison feeding me information, but because, as I have alluded to many times, my family is in law enforcement and this story is not unusual by any means, in any prison or jail around the United States or any country that provides sinks, toilets and other amenities to their prisoners.

    As a matter of fact, if anyone had used a modicum of common sense or read or watched any other investigative reporting on prison systems (and there have been so many), they would have recognized the realty immediately and questioned it, as I did. I did not even need Gen. Myers' comments on the subject.

    Prisoners routinely stop up the toilets in their cells. Not just "in protest" though that is fairly common as well. They are locked up and have little other means of getting back at the guards or the system, particularly in the Guantanamo setting or in other maximum security facilities where a prisoner maybe locked up for long hours in their cell.

    These "protests" are staged when a prisoner is angry over loss of privileges, like canteen or commisary, taking away their exercise or "yard" privileges or even being confined to their cell for long periods because of some other inappropriate behavior.

    Stopping up of toilets is also used to force the guards to extract or remove the prisoner from his cell for various other reasons which include:

  • A prisoner may have been threatened by other prisoners with bodily harm for something that occured between them which might include not paying back "debts", informing on other prisoners, seeming to be too close to the prison guards (ie, risk of informing), etc. This may even inlcude the threat of rape or other sexual misconduct. Prisoners will stop up the toilet with bedding or anything available to them and make it over run so that the guards will be forced to remove them from that cell block. Usually, this behavior also results in the prisoner being placed "in the hole" or "solitary confinement" as punishment. For a prisoner that has no other way to escape the situation, being placed in solitary confinement is a form of protective custody.

  • A prisoner may wish to confront the guards physically and overflowing the toilet and then refusing to come out peacefully, even barricading themselves in with mattresses and anything else they can get their hands on, so that the guards are forced to come into the cell and extract them. As I wrote back in February on the same subject when an AP writer, Paisley Dodd, tried to use a "leaked" report regarding DoD videos of extractions as an indication of something horrible going on at Guantanamo. I pointed out the commonality of the situations to normal prison life then and the problem of extractions:

    Now, the other thing that prisoners do, besides generally refusing to leave their cells, they will barricade themselves inside using their mattresses, blankets (prayer rugs) anything that is handy to create an obstacle or shield. They may also take the most innocuous things and create a "shiv". My cousin, who worked at the county jail before becoming a patrolman, indicates that prisoners will take toothbrushes and heat them, using matches or other heating source, until they are maleable and can be made into a point. [snip]

    Prisoners can and will barricade themselves in their rooms to lure the officers in and then use such devices to stab them.


    Which is sometimes the purpose of overflowing the toilet and flooding the cell.

    If there are electrical outlets, lights or other means of electricity entering the cell, prisoners have improvised metal objects or stripped wires from electrical devices (like lights, radios, TVs, etc), get up on an object that is not touching the water (like a bunk or the sink) and wait for the guards to come to the door where the water is leaking out of before dropping the other end of the device into the water and electrocuting the guard(s).

    Make no mistake, men in this prison are not some shephard who was caught in the middle of something. They are trained fighters who have spent many months, if not years, improvising methods to kill their enemy. To assume that they are any less likely than any prisoner in a civilian setting to make these attempts would be foolish to say the least.

  • Prisoners will flood their cell by overflowing the toilet in order to be removed to protective custody because they do want to inform on other prisoners, pass information, etc. By flooding the toilet, they can force their removal to "the hole" or "solitary confinement" where, in privacy, they can divulge information to the guards without appearing to have cooperated. Thus saving them in the population from retaliation and even keeping them as a viable informant for the officers.

    In a discussion with Don Imus this morning Jonathan Alter of Newsweek said:

    I understand why people are very upset about this, we're upset about it as well, but I think the larger question that people have to ask is, do they want news organizations out there trying to dig or do they want to take all their information from the government?


    I find that utterly ironic, considering that is exactly what Newsweek did. They got some information from an anonymous government official/employee and ran with it. Then he has the guts to say:

    And, we are still you know, pretty determined, very determined, to be out there digging."


    Some advice for Newsweek: If I were you, I'd start digging in my back issues of Newsweek for stories you've done on prison systems and prison life so that you could put your information in context. Something that so many journalists are incapable of doing these days.

    As I wrote about the previous journalist propagating this kind of baloney:

    [snip] you have become the willing transcriber of a propaganda hit piece that is attempting to "inflame" the "Arab street" once again and recruit wannabe jihadists from all over the world in order to kill American Soldiers and Iraqi [ed...Afghani] citizens in the name of avenging some non-existent abuse and humiliation on their Muslim "brothers".


    As Austin Bay points out on Sunday, May 15, 2005:

    The sin of greed always seems to creep into every scandal and it’s certainly lurking in this tragic incident. Newsweek wants market share, and a scoop grabs readers. But profit generated by a frantic “me first” quest isn’t the only motive. The “Vietnam-Watergate” motive’s also in play. That’s a tired and dirty game but for three decades it’s been a successful ploy for the New York-Washington-LA media axis. It’s rules are simple. Presume the government is lying– always make that presumption, particularly when the president is a Republican. Presume the worst about the US military– always make that presumption, even when the president is a Democrat. Add multi-cultural icing– the complaints and allegations of “Third World victims” are given revered status, the statements of US and US-allied nations met with cynical doubt and arrogant contempt. (Yes, the myth of the Noble Savage re-cast.)[snip]

    To a degree Newsweek is operating on a “paper template” where the editors and reporters believe the story they “print” shows up in mailboxes or on a magazine rack. In this “template” a phony press allegation remains “local” or US-bound. But there is no “over there” in our world, not anymore. We live in a world where everyone is – in terms of information– next door. Technological compression is the term I coined to describe the situation. Some slip-ups merely damage reputations– Dan Rather and Eason Jordan come to mind. World War Two vets know “loose lips sink ships.” Today, loose (computer) disks can sink ships, but loosey-goosey allegations can lead to riot and death. [snip]

    What may evolve from this is an awareness on Mr. Isikoff’s part that he, too, is part of a huge global war. That’s a complicated assertion on my part. Of course he’s aware of the war, but this particular story operates as if Newsweek were a “neutral observer” and Al Qaeda and the US are moral equivalents.


    I don't need to add anything after that except that I think I am becoming weary and leary of our news organizations looking for something to discredit us in the middle of a war with our men and women fighting everyday to change the world, to conquer the enemy and stay alive.

    There is a time and place for everything. Right now we should be concentrating on winning the war. Unless I see a report that actually shows someone being electrocuted, beaten, cut, drowned, hung by their hands, thumbs, toes, ankles, thrown to the dogs, experimented on with drugs, dissected alive, gassed in chambers or lined up and shot in a ditch, I would prefer not to hear or read another word about alleged "abuses", particularly of someone's "religious or cultural" beliefs as if we were running a summer camp or day spa and "multi-culturalism" and "sensitivity" should be our first concerns. The fact that the Pentagon now has to spend hundreds of hours of man hours to investigate these "allegations" of "desecration of the Koran" in the middle of the war, is simply ridiculous.

    Apparently, these folks don't get it.

    I'll help them out:

    We're at war.

    We're at war with an enemy who uses Islam and mosques as their motive and modis operendi for attracting recruits. They tell their would be recruits that America wants to destroy Islam and their way of life.

    Every time that you write something which supports their idea, however ludicrous and barely applicable, they use it as propaganda to recruit more people, thus, kill more people.

    Specificaly, our people.

    Journalists like this have blood on their hands and they shouldn't forget it.

    But, I don't reserve my ire for them alone.

    Who are these "anonymous" sources in our government that leak this information? What is their motive? I think we know, but it is almost beyond comprehension that these people would use the blood of our men and women, the blood of innocents in other countries, to get ahead or to try and win their political battles.

    For these "leakers" of confidential information I reserve my utter contempt and deepest anger. They all want to be "deep throat" and none of them even comes close. At the least, they are nobody beaurocrats trying to make a quick buck and gain favors. Or, we've been infiltrated by jihadist sympathizers and somebody should take this very seriously.

    Either way, the war effort continues to be compromised.

    Read More...

  • Saturday, May 14, 2005

    Sunday: Lite Blogging, Deep Thoughts

    Just a quick note that I will be gone until late Sunday night visiting my folks so tomorrow will not see a post until late Sunday night or Monday morning.

    I have been looking at multiple situations for blogging.

    So many topics, so little time.

    So I thought I'd leave some lines to the review of Traditional Values in America or a review of the Real ID Act recently passed or a review of the Judicial Nominees.

    Interestingly, except on NRO and the brief biographies on the DOJ website, I couldn't find one newspaper or major media outlet that had anything good to say about them. Not one. Most of the articles had language like "Democrats say" without any other facts or refutions of charges. Words like "extremist", "right-wing", "religious" and a few other "scary" words as I noted in my post of "what's in a word" are flung around like so much monkey feces at the zoo.

    Of course, Reid's recent attempt at defamation of Henry Saad, a Chaldean Arab that would be the first on an Appellate court, by intimating there is something "scary" in his "FBI file" without information to back it up, is right up there with the rest of the "charges" brought against the seven nominees pending: scare tactics.

    What I don't see, anywhere, is more information about the "acceptable" rulings of these judges nor deep analysis of their activities accept by "committees" that are obviously dead set against these nominees. No effective "selling" of the candidates have been made by the Republicans or the president. At least, none that I could readily find on the internet.

    From what I could read on Henry Saad, the real complaints are:

    1) He has effectively ruled in favor of businesses, at least in half of his cases, in worker's cases regarding worker's compensation, unemployment, harrassment and unfair dismissal. Some of his rulings have been overturned. However, I could not find any statistics about how many times he was overturned compared to number of cases that he has heard. The Alliance for Justice under the Independent Judiciary Organization sites six examples of cases that they find "detrimental". Of course, this is not a non-partisan group by any means so you have to read it with a grain of salt. I lost the link, but the a list of cases for October 2004 heard by the panel that Saad sits on were approximately 70. I can only imagine how many cases this judge has heard.

    2) Saad belongs to the Federalists Society along with several of the other nominees. The Federalist Society is based on:

    In its Statement of Principles, the Society states that it is founded on the principles that the state exists to preserve freedom, that the separation of powers is central to the United States' constitutional form of government, and that the role of the judicial branch is to say what the law is, not what the law should be.


    3) Probably the most important issue is a seriously unconstitutional block of a nominee for clearly partisan reasons. "Democratic Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan have said they would not approve new nominations to this appeals court because President Clinton's nominees to the court were never given a confirmation hearing by the Republican-controlled Senate. Levin and Stabenow want Bush to renominate Clinton's nominees to the court." (source)

    Anyone that knows anything about how these judges are appointed and the fact that it is the President's sole discretion as to who is nominated knows that this demand for Bush to renominate nominees from the Clinton administration and hold the process hostage in order to attempt to force the President to do so is on the borderline of trying to take away the President's legal and constitutional right to do so. This is why the Republican party is standing firm on this issue and refusing to negotiate. To do so would set a whole new precedent on selecting judicial nominees and effectively cut off this president's and the next president's ability to select judicial nominees as they see fit.

    This is obviously why the Republicans see fit to force the issue. While we're destracted with baloney about changing Senate rules being "unconstitutional" (when the constitution clearly states that the senate can make and change procedural rules as it sees fit - Article I), the real question of whether the President keeps his constitutionally affirmed right to independently select judicial nominees (Article III) is in the balance. For far reaching precedents, I'd say that this one is much more important and factual rather than the questionable "unconstitutioinal" changing of the cloture rules (previously noted here as having already been changed seven times since the establishment of the Senate).

    I wonder that no Democrats and renegade Republicans have thought about what happens if the Republicans give in to this blackmail and the next Democrat president is elected over a Republican majority congress? Doesn't look good for a future of affirmations.

    As for the rest of the nominees, the objections seem to be item #3 above for two of the nominees without any noted issues with their rulings from the senate committee although the Independent Judiciary and a few other groups had something to say about them:

    _Richard Griffin for the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Opposed by Levin and Stabenow because Clinton's nominees to that court were never given a confirmation hearing by Republicans.

    _David McKeague for the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Opposed by Levin and Stabenow because Clinton's nominees to that court were never given a confirmation hearing by Republicans



    The two women, Owens and Brown, appear to both believe that minors should have to obtain parental consent in order to obtain abortions. Myers apparently has not ruled favorably enough for environmentalists.

    More indepth review of the nominees will be forthcoming this week.

    The Real ID Act

    Honestly, if you read the act, its full intent is to:

    1) Stop states from issuing driver's licenses to illegals. Obviously, the federal government cannot tell the states who they can issue licenses to so they have set rules under the idea of fighting terrorism, that requires the state to be able to verify the status of immigrants against the federal database.

    2)Coordinating efforts of tracking down people whose visa's etc have expired. These licenses and IDs for people visiting on visa's or worker permits, etc must be temporary, obviously hoping to prompt people to return and give updated information their current address.

    3)Information must be transferrable and trackable via magnetic strip on the back of the license and must contain a picture ID. What will happen is that, because this is a federal mandated ruling on information and with the HIPPA regulations on ability to coordinate and secure information, anyone that does businesss with the federal government or has other rules that force them to obtain and validate information (ie, banks, credit card companies, mortgage companies, etc) will begin requiring the same information and will force everyone to have a legal and acceptable form of identification to do business. Thus either flushing out would be terrorists or marginalizing them even more within legal boundaries to keep them from being able to transfer money or other assets to foreign entities or questionable goups without passing through a screening/identification process.

    Now, for most of us libertarian/conservatives, the very thought of having our identification go through some federal, centralized beauracracy gives us the shivers. Further, that our information and privacy, which is guaranteed under the fourth amendentment:

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated


    The question is if this makes us less secure in our "persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures". It does give the federal government a lot of power to know who we are, where we are, what we own or do.

    What I must say, though, is that, since the advent of the social security number and the requirement of companies to report them for "social security" and income tax, we've been on this downward spiral. With every advent of new technology that makes it easier and quicker for beaucratic offices to perform their jobs, our information has become more available and more centralized. This is, of course, the thing that Orwell warned against in his novel "Big Brother" which was written in 1950.

    But, with every purchase of property, every credit card, every bank transaction, every car loan, every registration and licensing, etc, we have moved towards this concept. The only way we will leave it or avoid it will be the next dark age, when all technology is made uselss or destroyed by the use of other technology and man, if he survives, will have to start over again.

    Leaving off any thoughts of future doom, one must realize that this will not stop so long as we demand things from our government and that demand and growth of population and need to function requires that government offices be able to access and process information within the blink of an eye.

    And, for those that wonder how this could go through both houses, through many legal reviews and not be overturned by the Supreme court as not constitutional, you should read the words of the act. In short, it has, at this time, a very narrow focus which is, for all intents and purposes, aimed at reviewing and controlling "non-citizens" of the United States entering and leaving or residing without government knowledge as best as it can see fit to do so.

    This will be deemed as constitutional because, when you read the constitution, the words "citizen of the United States" continues to be the reference point, from which all laws abide. It is this argument that many see as pivotal and questionable point in many ACLU and other illegal immgration advocates principles. Non-citizens of the US do not have the same protection under the constitution based on this language.

    The point of the ACLU, which may or may not be correct, is that, once you advocate something against non-citizens, it can be turned against citizens very easily. In reality, I can see some merit in this argument with this new act.

    Obviously, those that will not attempt to get a driver's license and continue to live on the fringe of society, dealing in cash only, will not be trackable in this system. There are citizens of the US that also practice this in order to maintain their idea of the original "freedom" as they interpreted it.

    So, while this act has some merit, it has dangers as well and, from my perspective and based on the completion date of 2008, seems to be "closing the barn door after the horse got out". Couple this with inability (refusal?) to control the borders and we have at least another decade of living in fear of terrorist attacks internally.

    I don't consider myself paranoid by any means, but I do believe that we must be extremely careful and watchful as we go forward into the new century and with the new technology, to insure that these new laws, that have been enacted or will be enacted, do not become the states aparatus to control it's citizenry beyond what we are allowing it to do today. With each new advent, we come closer to the day when "Big Brother" knows all and it will be our responsibility to insure that "Big Brother" does not use this ability against us. One must also remember that, with globalization of communications, it may not be just our own government that we must fear using this information, but any government or entity that may seek to control us and can take over this information to use for their own.

    In any event, as I watch each click of the the minute hand on the clock, I see that we come closer and closer to that day. Maybe not in my lifetime, or maybe when I am old and gray, yet I am concerned about the place and the freedom that we might leave to our children. It is the reason why I oppose certain legislation and any attempts to stultify the second amendment.

    It is not freedom of speech alone, nor voting rights that will protect us in the future.

    Freedom requires eternal vigilance.

    Never forget.

    Read More...

    Real Gun Safety: Respect the Power and Fear the Consequences

    If you've read here before, you might know that my father was a police officer for twenty one years. When we were growing up, my father always had at least one gun around the house if not two or more. Usually consisting of his department approved side arm, his concealed extra weapon and a rifle, shotgun or other weapon of choice (at one time, my dad owned a Tec-9).

    Every night, when he came home from his shift, he would take off his gun belt and hang it on the back of the wooden chair by the door or sometimes he would hang it on the back of one of the dining room chairs. He didn't always immediately take the gun out of the holster. When he was carrying his concealed extra weapon, he would unstrap it from the ankle holster and place it on the table with his whistle, keys, badge, pens and other assorted things he would take out of his pockets. Next would come his wrist watch and his wallet.

    These things would remain there untouched until it was dinner time or until the next day when he got ready for his shift. Except the pistols. At night, when he was going to bed, he would take the pistols into the bedroom with him and put them in the drawer beside the bed. He did not keep his pistols or other weapons in a locked gun cabinet. Except the Tec-9. That had its own special container that was always locked unless dad took it with him in his patrol car.

    What I remember is that I can't remember a time when he did not do this nor can I remember a time when my brothers or I ever thought of these objects as something to play with.

    Never.

    Some folks who chant about gun control or fear purchasing a gun, site the instances of children shooting themselves or others while "playing" with a gun. This is a legitimate fear as it does happen.

    The problem that I see is that children were not taught to respect the power of the weapon nor fear the consequences of what could happen if they did "play" with it. From many of the media reports of these incidents, it seems that most of the households that this occured in were homes where the pistol was kept for "home protection", but the owners did not use it on a regular basis and did not spend any time with the children showing them the gun, what it could do and did not re-enforce the consequences of using that power or what would happen if the child touched the weapon. Most of these weapons seemed to have been put away: out of site, out of mind. In many cases, it seemed the owner feared the weapon themselves and did not actually feel comfortable with it, but thought it was something they should "have".

    The problem with the theory of "protecting" children from the knowledge of a weapon in the house or hiding it away is that it makes the gun a "mystery". If anyone has ever raised, worked with/around or been close with children of any age, they should know that making things a "mystery" is a sure fire way of making it something that children want to know about. And, they will find out with you or without you.

    For many, this is a reason not to have a weapon in the home. It is a free country so this is a personal decision for each person.

    For some in the gun control lobby and others who advocate responsibile gun ownership, the idea of trigger locks became the panacea for this problem. Honestly, it only upgrades the mystery to children. It may or may not have saved a child's life. One thing is for sure, if you lock the gun, but the children know where the key is, the lock is negated.

    In either case, whether using a trigger lock or gun cabinet or none, the best way to insure that a child does not "play" with the weapon is to teach them to respect the power and fear the consequences.

    By the time I was eight, my father had taught us how to pick up the gun by the handle and not touch the trigger. He would set out all of his cleaning things at the table and tell me to get his pistol from the holster. To some, the very thought of this probably strikes fear into the heart, but it had two purposes. One, my dad would re-enforce safety: don't put your finger(s) on the trigger; keep the gun pointed down; don't run; hand him the pistol by the butt. He would remind us every time we went to get the pistol as instructed. By this we learned by wrote proper gun safety. Second, it re-enforced trust. He trusted me to do as he instructed and I did not want to disappoint him. I knew that I was doing something important and did not want to jeapordize that trust.

    Of course, when I was five, we weren't allowed to touch the pistol at all. At that point, I vaguely recall being told many times that it was not a toy, I wasn't to touch it and if I did I would get my hand slapped or a spanking. Even then we learned there were consequences.

    My dad also took us to the range when we were older and we learned what the pistol could do. He told us that it could hurt or even kill one of us and other people. By this we learned to respect the power. He told us this was his "tool" for work and that we could not touch his "work" things, including the gun, without his permission. He did give us permission to touch the weapons, but only in his presence and under strict control.

    In short order, the guns that were around the house began to lose their mystery. We knew what they were, what they could and where they were, but we did not feel compelled to search it out and check for ourselves. We already knew.

    When I was ten, my dad taught me how to unload the gun, take it apart and clean it. I remember setting at our dining room table and watching him clean the barrel with the chamber sticking out of the side. This gun was a .357 Magnum Snub Nose that my dad kept as his "concealed" weapon. He would let me help him polish the pistol. I remember being told to be careful and hold the pistol by the butt/grip and not get my finger prints on the newly polished surface.

    By this time, the guns had lost all mystery for me. I knew what they were, what they could do and how they worked.

    When I was twelve, my dad took us out in the back of my grandparents' farm and let us shoot a ten gage shot gun. Not the most powerful shotgun on the planet, but it still had a kick, made a big noise and showed me the power of the weapon.

    Personally, from my experience, if you fear the weapon so much that you cannot even bring yourself to to show and educate your children, then you will never really have effective gun safety in your home and you probably should not keep one.

    Gun locks and other devices are simply buying time. Further, if you have these weapons for "home defense", by the time you get the weapon out of the gun safe or unlock the locking trigger device, your ability to confront an attacker or intruder is down to about nil.

    For real Gun Safety, one should teach their children to respect the power and fear the consequences.

    Read More...

    Friday, May 13, 2005

    Letter From Senator McCain

    Campaign Reform and Blogs

    I received a letter in the mail yesterday from Senator McCain (R) Arizona after writing him almost two months ago about questions on the effect of the BCRA (Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act 2003) on bloggers.

    Some of you might remember the hoopla that was raised when it was implied that internet sites that support a particular candidate or link directly to campaign sites or direct traffic there in anyway might come under scrutiny as developing "soft money" donations under the guise of "coordinated efforts" outside of the normal and supposedly "transparent" accounting practices of candidates and parties. Most of the blog world was up in arms considering that many of us post about political topics and supported a candidate in the last elections and in local elections.

    There was a real question about whether somebody like me would be considered "coordinating efforts" if I mentioned a campaign or party site or discussed raising money or even gave "free" support to the candidate. The question of "free speech" and "open political debate" was on the rampage through the blog world.

    My letter from Senator McCain's office is basically a form letter and did not address my question directly. However, it did include some interesting information, so I thought I'd put it out here for discussion.

    Since it is a paper letter and not electronic, I will reproduce it here without changes except to only impart the areas I think were interesting and pertinent:

    President Bush signed the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA) into law on March 27, 2002. On December 10, 2003, the Supreme Court, in McConnell v. FEC, upheld the constitutionality of key provisions of BCRA.


    From the Supreme Court:

    The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), which amended
    the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA), the Communications Act of 1934, and other portions of the United States Code, is the most recent of nearly a century of federal enactments designed to purge national politics of what [is] conceived to be the pernicious influence of big money campaign contributions. United States v. Automobile Workers, 352 U. S. 567, 572. In enacting BCRA, Congress
    sought to address three important developments in the years since this Court’s landmark decision in Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1 (per curiam): the increased importance of soft money, the proliferation of “issue ads” and the disturbing findings of a Senate investigation into campaign practices related to the 1996 federal elections.


    On page one of this document is a long list of challenges from every side of the discussion and political structure, including the NRA, DNC, RNC, ACLU, etc. I must say that there is a common sense cliche that says, "if you pissed everyone off, you're probably doing the right thing". This seems to have done the job and then some.

    Continuing on with the Supreme Court findings:

    With regard to the first development, prior to BCRA, FECA’s dis-
    closure requirements and source and amount limitations extended only to so-called “hard money” contributions made for the purpose of influencing an election for federal office. Political parties and candidates were able to circumvent FECA’s limitations by contributing “soft money”—money as yet unregulated under FECA—to be used for activities intended to influence state or local elections; for mixed-purpose activities such as get-out-the-vote (GOTV) drives and generic
    party advertising; and for legislative advocacy advertisements, even if they mentioned a federal candidate’s name, so long as the ads did not expressly advocate the candidate’s election or defeat. With regard to the second development, parties and candidates circumvented FECA by using “issue ads” that were specifically intended to affect election results, but did not contain “magic words,” such as “Vote Against Jane Doe,” which would have subjected the ads to FECA’s restrictions. Those developments were detailed in a 1998 Senate Committee Report summarizing an investigation into the 1996 federal elections, which concluded that the soft-money loophole had led to a meltdown of the campaign finance system; and discussed potential reforms, including a soft-money ban and restrictions on sham issue advocacy by nonparty groups.


    In other words, if there is a law, someone will figure out how to get around it. I think that we are all aware of what kinds of ads and groups this discussion is talking about. Mainly folks like "Moveon.org" and some "conservative" advocacy groups who claim to be separate entities, but probably share board members and other active members with the political parties. We're talking about unregulated donations like the milllions poured into these "advocacy" groups by George Soros types who don't have to claim they were giving it to support a candidate and the FEC could not touch it because it was not directly given to a candidates campaign or party.

    McCain makes this clear in his letter:

    BCRA's overriding goal was to reduce the corrupting influence of unlimited soft money contributions to political parties, usually solicited by federal condidates and office holders.

    [snip]

    While BCRA has proven successful, the recent growth of political committees commonly known as "527" groups, referring to their tax-exempt status under Section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code, have emerged as a new vehicle for raising and spending illegal soft money.


    Here is where the "wicket" gets sticky. The letter is already painting all of these groups with a very wide brush and indicating that the donations they receive are "illegal". The letter makes this clear again in this sentence:

    527 groups supporting both presidential candidates illegally raised and spent tens of millions of dollars in soft money on ads and partisan voter mobilization efforts to influence the presidential election.
    [snip]

    Four individuals alone gave a combined total of $78 million to these groups!


    So, the question remains, how is it illegal and under what law? McCain explains here:

    The Federal Elections Commission (FEC) has shamefully failed to do it's job to require these obviously political groups to register as political committees, which would obligate them to comply with the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974.


    Here is a simplified explanation of the FECA with contribution tables. Based on this explanation, a group like "Moveon.org" or "Swiftboat Veterans For Truth" would have to be considered "PACs" or Political Action Committees. This would have limited George Soros as an individual from donating more than $5000 per year to Moveon.org. He could have given $5000 to another group and another, but he could not have given $2million as is the purported amounts.

    In regards to bloggers, the question then revolves around the amount of money donated to a campaign or candidate in a federal election (because that is the only election that the national congress can make rules about) and whether one would be considered an individual or a PAC since the limits for these donations very depending on the this concept.

    Where the sticky comes in for bloggers would be whether you have a donation button on your blog, how much you bring in through donations and how much each individual contributes. The other sticky would be how much a blogger "coordinates" with a candidate or campaign party. These two issues would have to come together in order to even make the question arise.

    I'm not sure about all the blogs out there, but it seems to me that someone like me would not be affected and that most of the blogs I've frequented, including (during the campaign): Blogs For Bush, The Kerry Corner, etc would not be affected either. To my knowledge, none of these blogs received these kinds of donations. Although, after a disclosure that KOS received a hefty amount of money from the Kerry campaign to blog for him, this blog could be affected as he would have then been acting as a PAC. Although, KOS denied this saying that he did not coordinate with the campaign, blogged about what he wanted to blog about, etc. In which case, he would have been acting as a media outlet and not as a PAC.

    I believe that the real issue here is the limitations of the FEC. Clearly, this organization is unable to police everyone and every group. In the land of political advocacy and fundraising dinosaurs, blogs are way down the list of entities that the FEC would or could possibly try to control. It is more likely that nationally acknowledged groups, like Moveon.org or Swift Boat Veterans for Truth would come under scrutiny, particularly with the amounts of money flowing in to their coffers.

    Senator McCain makes this clear in his letter:

    Because the FEC has failed to properly enforce federal law and require the 527 grouops to register as political committes, I [ed..McCain] have introduced legislation along with Senator Feingold that would require all 527s to register as political committees unless they rais and spend money solely in connection with non-Federal candidate elections.


    It is very likely that this legislation will not only pass, but be held up by the Supreme Court as constitutional based on the rulings in challenges to the recent BRCA:

    Such limits are subject only to “closely
    drawn” scrutiny, see 424 U. S., at 25, rather than to strict scrutiny,
    because, unlike restrictions on campaign expenditures, contribution
    limits “entai[l] only a marginal restriction upon the contributor’s ability to engage in free communication,”
    e.g., id., at 20–21. Morever, contribution limits are grounded in the important governmental interests in preventing “both the actual corruption threatened by large financial contributions and the eroding of public confidence in the electoral process through the appearance of corruption.” E.g., Federal Election Comm’n v. National Right to Work Comm., 459 U. S. 197, 208. The less rigorous review standard shows proper deference to Congress’ ability to weigh competing constitutional interests in an area in which it enjoys particular expertise, and provides it with sufficient room to anticipate and respond to concerns about circumvention of regulations designed to protect the political process’ integrity. Finally, because Congress, in its lengthy deliberations leading to BCRA’s enactment, properly relied on Buckley and its progeny, stare decisis considerations, buttressed by the respect that the Legislative and Judicial Branches owe one another, provide additional powerful reasons for adhering to the analysis of contribution limits the Court has consistently followed since Buckley. The Court rejects plaintiffs’ argument that the type of speech and associational burdens that §323 imposes are fundamentally different from the burdens that accompanied Buckley’s contribution limits. Pp. 24–32.


    The basis of Buckley v. Valeo:

    In a lengthy per curiam decision, the court sustained the Act's limits on individual contributions, as well as the disclosure and reporting provisions and the public financing scheme. However, the limitations on campaign expenditures, on independent expenditures by individuals and groups, and on expenditures by a candidate from his personal funds were found to be constitutionally infirm in that they placed severe restrictions on protected expression and association, yet lacked any compelling countervailing government interest necessary to sustain them.


    So, I could sit here an blog all day about any federal candidate, for or against, for free, spend as much money as I like making the site "eye catching" or advertising the site, but, if I coordinate with a campaign or candidate AND receive very large donations (instead of doing it for free) from campaigns, candidates, PACs and even individuals AND I come to the attention of the overburdened FEC or register the site as a 527, I might have a problem.

    So, the question of whether the blogosphere could come under the scrutiny of the FEC is still open, but many things would have to come together to make it happen.

    I'm no legal expert, but it does seem to me that the blog world has very little to worry about here.

    The fight maybe whether any other "speech" falls under these rules and whether it portends a "slippery slope". Did I mention that the FEC is overburdened and under staffed?



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    Thursday, May 12, 2005

    "Progressive"? "Reality Based"?

    You know, every time I hear someone claiming to be "progressive" and "reality based", I have this immediate and almost Pavlovian desire to roll my eyes. I have yet to meet, listen to or read anyone who claims to be "reality based" and that actually says anything that is based on reality, much less this planet or this galaxy for that matter.

    Unfortunately, most of these folks talk about things they haven't even done a modicum of research on and are usually half assed quoting (from a seriously depleted memory) something that they half assed heard or read. I believe it's called "regurgitating" in most circles, but much of what you hear isn't even "regurgitation" as this implies actually memorizing something completely and repeating it verbatim or within a very close proximity of the original. It's more like a case of "Chinese whispers" where the original idea gets repeated over and over with parts excluded or added until it doesn't even resemble the original.

    Take this character for instance. My friend Tonecluster sent me an email that simply said, "read this". As soon as I saw the title of the blog, "The Voice of the Progressive Voice", I knew what I would be reading. My immediate judgement was further enforced by the guy (I think it's a guy), claiming that he was from the "reality based" community.

    Of course, never a person to allow my first prejudices to make the decision for me, I proceeded to read his few posts. All of them put up today, obviously in a fit of needing to get somethings off his chest. It's a new blog, so if you go over and check it out, make sure you welcome him to the community and encourage him to keep blogging, even if you're laughing your ass off while you're doing it. Maybe, just maybe, he'll actually get some hits from people that will be happy to help it actually join the "reality based" community. If not, at least you'll get some laughs.

    Honestly, that's exactly what I was doing while I was reading. Laughing. I mean, if you can't find amusment in these things you'll suffer perpetual high blood pressure which is never good.

    Let's start with this post, Hello where he introduces himself and his general ideas:

    Welcome. Here, in our America, the America based in reality, we have some things to say. And we can't be stopped from saying them. No amount of oppressive right-wing pressure can make us shut up, and we shall not just go away.


    Now there's an ugly threat if I ever heard one. They won't go away. Once you read this site, you'll be scared, too. You'll be really scared if you have to contemplate that this guy is part of the "reality based America". If so, we're eminently screwed.

    Let us continue:

    I walk, which is what more of you should do out there. It made me think: how about a tax on everyone who doesn't walk to work? Give the walkers, those of us actually taking an everyday, reality-based role in preserving this beautiful blue globe on which we eat sleep and dream, a break in our society.


    Obviously, either this guy has never owned a car before or he is purposefully oblivious to a few things like personal property tax, sales tax, sales tax on gas, "road" taxes, school taxes and a few other taxes on gasoline used to pay for everything from school to healthcare to parks to clean air projects, etc.

    Hellloooooo???? Reality knocking at your door, Batman. But, be sure to read the rest where he denigrates all those that choose not to live in the urban hell hole he obviously occupies and walks the few blocks from his apartment to his job (at a retro record store maybe?). I don't know about the rest of you, but I live about 35 miles from my job and "public transportation" does not cross the state lines that I must cross to get there. There's some reality for you.

    But, I digress, continuing:

    I realized how sick of it all I am: the hatred, the fascist conservative nutjobs telling us what to do and how to live our lives. You, me, all of us. They want little suited robots, a throwback to the 1950s when everyone was a shiny happy cog in a shiny happy wheel.


    I stop here to point out the word "fascist". Not because it's a new thought being thrown around or because this guy obviously doesn't know what it means, but because later in his "hello" post, he says this little gem:

    Lets talk about hatred. I hate hatred. Who doesn't? I don't hate people, I hate people who hate. Hate is not a bad thing, if directed toward people who hate. I know this sounds odd, but hear me out. If we were to legislate anti-hate laws, much more seriously than we do now, to include a loss of citizenship and serious jail time for offenders, we'd be in a much better place in our society. Eventually, the sanctions would teach people to just play nice.


    Hmmm...I don't know about you, but legislating thought control by the state seems...oh, I don't know...what's the word I'm looking for...FASCIST maybe?

    Yeah, the rest of this post is similar tripe so I won't fisk it to death, but you see what I mean? Reality based? Puh-lease.

    Let's look at a few other "reality based" gems.

    Foreign Fighters?

    So, the Marines are out in force, killing Iraqis, and all the media can do is fawn all over them about how they're killing "foreign fighters". Disgusting. More lies from the White House. What "foreign fighters"? We're supposed to believe that the Iraqi's aren't in a massive popular uprising against our invasion? That the innocenst being killed are "foreign fighters" from other countries? Who'd want to come into Iraq and fight for Iraqis? The Iranians hate them, the Saudis hate them, and the entire Syrian army is on the edge of Israel waiting for the inevitable U.S./Israeli invasion.


    I kept thinking as I was reading this that this guy must really be about twelve or maybe nineteen and the oldest, but one of his posts talks about going on a camping trip with this "girl" who is an attorney, which means he has to be at least in his mid to late twenties right?

    Continuing...

    Noisy Chickens

    Kos has a great idea: you support the war, you should go and enlist. If you think the war in Iraq is such a good idea, either join up or shut up. You have absolutely no right to support a conflict you aren't willing to take part in yourself.

    I think we should take this one step farther: anyone who writes anything in support of the war should get sent to Guantanamo, or to Abu Ghraib


    My suggestion, of course, is that maybe these guys should spend some time down at Guantanamo Bay explaining to our "guests" about liberalism, tolerance, women's rights, gay rights, same sex marriage and the non-existence of God. Bet you one hundred dollars we'd either: a) get a ton of information out of these guys just so they wouldn't have to listen to this "torture" anymore; or b) the reality based community would suddenly find out the reality about our guests, mainly that they would be happy to cut their heads off with a sharpened tooth brush. Either way, it would be both entertaining and fruitful (no pun intended).

    Of course, he did say "Kos" which helps you understand where he gets these kooky ideas from, so maybe we can give him a pass since the kool-aid over there is notoriously laced with LSD.

    Once more, dear friends, into the breech...

    Thoughts on the Crisis in Palestine

    You know about the middle east crisis? Whose brilliant idea was it to take all of the Jews of Europe, parachute them into the middle of an Islamic Arab nation and call it a country? The Muslims have been there since time immemorial. The place was called Palestine since the Roman Empire, and all of a sudden it isn't? No wonder there's a conflict. How'd you like it if someone came to your house and gave it to some perfect stranger from another country? There haven't been Jews in that area since biblical times, which was what: about 5,000 BC at latest? So the place has been Muslim for 7,000 years.


    I probably could have stopped around the "parachute" sentence, but I couldn't pass up the opportunity to include "reality based" idiocy about Muslims occupying "Palestine" for the last 7000 years or the part where the Romans called the place "Palestine" and therefore that is the name of the area, disregarding entirely salient points like, before the Romans conquered the area around 40 BC, it was the kingdom of Judaea or that Mohammed did not create "Islam" until 622 AD and the Muslims did not invade the area until 640 AD and did not fully control it until the 13th century after many crusades.

    You know this is really sad, right? I probably shouldn't have poked fun at this guy since he obviously has some educational issues, but it was just so damned easy and I was too tired to organize all the information and graphs from an American Culture study I saw presented on CSPAN last week. And it is eminently humorous after this same gentleman proclaims the president should be riding "the short bus".

    It was just too ironic.

    Last little gem I'll fisk a piece of...

    Fill the Fillibuster

    If the Republicans insist on the so-called "nuclear option" in the Senate to break the Demoractic filibuster of right-wing activist judges, an opton that by the way is completely unconstitutional, we need to get angry. Sen. Reid needs to do his best to have these crazy theocratic Rethug Senators kicked out of the Senate - especially the ones from states with a Democrat governor. If Reid can get these unconstitutional criminals removed from their offices, a Democratic governor can then assign a Democrat to the empty seat


    Well, most half way informed folks have already heard that the fillibuster is actually not a constitutionally guaranteed right. You ever read the constitution? No where in there did I see the word "fillibuster". Article 1, section 3 establishes the Senate and it's responsibilities. Nope. No "fillibuster" here. Not even "unlimited debate".

    Article one, section five:

    Each House may determine the Rules of its Proceedings, punish its Members for disorderly Behaviour, and, with the Concurrence of two thirds, expel a Member.


    What? They can make their own rules and it's constitutional?

    Article one, section seven:

    If after such Reconsideration two thirds of that House shall agree to pass the Bill, it shall be sent, together with the Objections, to the other House, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and if approved by two thirds of that House, it shall become a Law.


    Bills are passed by two thirds vote. Doesn't say anything about any "constitutional right" to fillibuster. Article III dealing with the establishment of the judicial branch doesn't say anything about it either.

    According to Wikepedia: Fillibuster, the rules have been changed seven times since the inception of our government. According to this guy, these were all "unconstitutional, criminal acts". The last one was in 1975 when the Democrats forced a rule change allowing cloture (ie, device to stop the fillibuster) with 3/5 vote (ie, 60 votes) instead of 2/3 vote (ie, 70 votes). Maybe we could get in Mr. Peabody's way-back machine and have these guys thrown out of the congress and into jail for breaking an invisible unconstitutional law?

    Then, he really lets go with some hyperbole...

    The filibuster is a time-honored way to prevent Congress from dangerous behavior. And assigning crazy right-wing activist theocratic judges to permanent court seats is dangerous behavior. How's you like to go before a judge who orders you to go to church every Sunday, give your money to religious schools and tells you what you can and can't do in your own bedroom?


    Well, the only part he may have right is "tells you what you can't do in your bedroom" since I know some state (Texas?) recently passed or tried to pass a law about not selling sex toys within the state borders. However, maybe someone knows somebody who has actually been convicted of something like this or been ordered to attend church (although, I'm sure it would do some folks a world of good) or give money to religious schools? Anybody?

    Anybody actually know anything about the judicial nominees in question? Certainly not this guy:

    Even going to court for a traffic violation could mean an entire court-mandated change in your life. How'd you like to be ordered by some religious-freak conservative judge with an anti-humanist grudge to go to your local bell-ringer every Sunday morning, sleep in a separate bedroom from your wife, and only watch The Disney Channel?


    I would say that the Disney Channel is probably a vast improvement over getting your political views from the Kos. Mickey Mouse or Kos?

    And what if you're living an alternative lifestyle? Can you imagine getting the call in the middle of the night to see one of these inquisitors at 5am sharp the next morning?


    Speaking of wet dreams about fascist states, is it me or doesn't Freud or Jung have something to say about this kind of repetetive paranoia? It's like this guy is praying for fascists to wake him up at 5 AM to see the grand master "inquisitor" that makes him get on his knees and beg. Or, praying for a fascist state so he can become part of the apparatus based on his other commentaries about laws and stripping people of their citizenship.

    There is plenty over at his site to read. Certainly don't miss his camping trip with a woman who will not call him back after the trip and he is wondering why.

    Well, I hope you enjoyed even mildly this fisking of nonsense. I almost felt dirty after I did it because it was such an easy target. I absolve myself by saying that the guy gave me the big ass target and that it sounds like so much other crap I've had to hear, it was nice to find it almost all located in one blog all at once.

    For that I say, thank you Asparagus Rex. If nothing else, I was amused.

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    Tuesday, May 10, 2005

    The Importance of Being Taiwan

    There continues to be a lot of talk about how important Taiwan is to China and why. Similarly, there has been much discussion about whether the United States should continue to expend money or effort to protect this tiny quasi-nation.

    China continues to make noises about Taiwan's "Independence" and Japan's "unwillingness" to recognize atrocities during World War II, other issues continue to play under the radar.

    At the same time these "spontaneous" rallies occured in China regarding Japanese school text books, Japan and China were at logger heads over Japan authorizing gas test drilling rights in the East China Sea around the Senkaku Islands. The ownership of these islands and their surrounding natural resources have been in dispute by China since 1971 even though Japan captured the islands from China and has administered them since 1895. China and Japan are the second and third largest consumers of oil behind the United States. China's booming economy continues to demand more and more resources.

    China is a net importer of oil and will continue to be so because its own oil fields cannot keep up with its internal demands. As such, China needs to explore other areas and resources for development. In October 2004, China signed an oil and natural gas deal with Iran that included an ambitious plan to lay a pipline through the China Sea, around Singapore, through the Indian Ocean and on to Iran. In addition, the South China Sea has large deposits of oil (up to 7.5 billion barrels). China claims there are larger deposits while US and other oil experts say the estimates are too large.

    Looking at the map below, the China Sea has many strategic interests for China, Japan and the United States:


    china sea2 Posted by Hello

    The red areas indicate US military presence either as occupied bases or naval ports of call in US friendly countries. The yellow circle indicates Taiwan, blue is Malaysia and green is Singapore. With very little military training, it is not difficult to see the importance of Taiwan. It is more than just a democratic nation that we share political and economic ties with. It holds together the center of the area of control. If China had Taiwan, it could effectivel cut off southern shipping routes to Japan which is also a net importer of oil. It could put pressure or influence Malaysia, the largest oil and gas reserves in the region.

    In a counter strategy by the US and Japan, we control all entrances and exits of the China Sea. In conventional warfare, China's external resources could be effectively choked off from the sea.

    Of course, China isn't exactly ignorant of this issue as the "Rand Organization" points out in this discussion concerning Chinese Energy Security Activities:

    China’s recent shift from a net oil exporter to a net oil importer means that energy security is another issue the United States could exploit to pressure China. The Chinese government is uncomfortable with the fact that the United States Navy dominates the sealanes stretching from the Persian Gulf to the South China Sea
    through which the bulk of China’s oil imports must pass. There is a concern that if Sino-U.S. relations sour, the United States could use its superior military power to disrupt China’s oil supply. Indeed, an article in the Chinese international affairs journal World Economics and Politics contends that the United States could use its control of Middle East oil to “check” China.5 Another Chinese commentary goes even further and argues that the United States has already implemented an “energy containment” policy against China. This policy’s objective, according to the article, is to weaken China by gaining control of the energy resources in western China and blocking China’s access to oil imports.6 The United States currently is not
    pursuing such a policy, but Chinese analysts clearly consider the interruption
    of its oil supply as a possible future containment measure.


    Exactly.

    For all those who argue whether Taiwanese Independence is worth the US going toe to toe with China, please take a look at the map.

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    Sunday, May 08, 2005

    Mother's Day and Rememberance

    Sunday was a lovely day. Not the weather. The weather did it's best not to cooperate. It rained from 10 AM until 4 pm, putting a damper on the BBQ we had planned. Finally, it let up long enough for us to start the grill and throw on some steaks and kabobs.

    I had my nephews Saturday night because this weekend was also my brother and sister in laws wedding anniversary and for the first time in five years, they went to celebrate; alone, without children. The boys were fairly well behaved (of course, I plied them with junk food and movies). They camped out in my living room since it was raining.

    Sunday, we got up and I spent 15 minutes trying to figure out how to put the tent back in the bag. Not having taken it out of the bag in the first place, I had no damned idea how to get it back in. I only hope I didn't break anything.

    We went to the store to get some cards and some gifts. The boys wanted to buy "mom" something for mother's day. I put "mom" in quotation marks because Mer is really the boys' step mom but she's been their mom in every way for the last five, even if the first few years were rocky. It's a long story, but suffice it to say that their real mom is a piece of work. She hasn't seen them or called in over three months. That should tell you something. Anyway, that's not the important part of the story. Really, what's important is that sometime last year the boys went from calling her "Mer" to calling her "mom". I don't know how or when it happened. Just, one day I was at their house and the oldest called out "mom". I was looking around for their real "mom" since that's what they always called her. Nope. It was Mer they were talking to and she answered back.

    Honestly, I never asked why, when or how. I just kept my mouth shut. I didn't want to cause any questions or ripples. The boys needed a "mom" that could be a real mom and not just the biological womb that carried them.

    So, we went to the store and they each picked out something to give her. Not even by my suggestion. They just walked around the store until they saw something that caught their eye. The eldest picked out a fancy pink pen with a matching pink note pad that had pink butterflies and was tied together with a pink ribbon. The younger picked out a "banana muffin" giant candle. Then they picked out cards and pretty mother's day bags to put their gifts in. Right after that they insisted on getting my mom a card. If I hadn't rounded them up, they probably would have kept sorting through the cards. Too many choices are sometimes a pain.

    I bought my mom a 20" 14kt gold chain to put her amythest birth stone on. Her last one had broken twice. All I can say is "wow" I haven't bought jewelry in a long time. No idea what the stuff was going for these days.

    When we got to my bro's, we got to cooking. I actually handled the grill and didn't kill anyone's steak. That's a first on an open grill for me.

    After eating, we sat around and chatted awhile with my cousin Lou and his wife while the kids played downstairs. We were laughing about things our parents told us. We laughed about the "sex education" we had compared to what kids get today. I was relaying a story about the nephews who are hitting puberty and are extremely fascinated by the event. The eldest had just explained to me this very morning that he was "hairy like daddy", but his brother wasn't. Being a naive and absent minded aunt, I naturally assumed he was talking about the mustache and beard, so I assured an offended younger nephew that he would grow up and be hairy like daddy, too.

    Well, I was quickly dissuaded of which hair I thought they were talking about. The eldest also explained that he was this (fingers in appropriate spot) big and the younger one was only this (fingers shrinking a bit) big. Okay, that was enough of that conversation. The younger one had jumped up and was ready to defend his honor at that point. Now I see that the measurement thing starts early and has little to do with how men see themselves in context to sexual relations with women as opposed to some throw back genetics to the herd mentality: who was the best among the men. Women are apparently secondary concerns in this measurement contest.

    Everyone laughed their butts off. Except bro who has noticed that the boy seems to be rather fond of announcing his impending puberty to the world. I think he was mumbling something about having another talk with him on keeping somethings private.

    Then we laughed again about what our parents told us about sex. Bro said that dad simply told him, "boy, don't you dare get that girl pregnant". Lou said his dad told him to be careful whom he "dated" lest she "give him something he couldn't wash off with soap". I explained mine was something like, "men only one want thing, I know, 'cause I'm a man", that from my dad while I sat on the couch trying deperately to figure out how many paces it was to the front door and out to freedom.

    Yeah, I know, repressed.

    Somehow the subject turned to advice given upon marriage. Bro said that our grandmother had told him that he should remain faithful and treat Mer right. If he needed a change in pace, he should try taking care of it himself (ie, masturbate). We all laughed our asses off at that. My gram's had always been the proper one when we were growing up, insisting on manners, but when she got older, she was more intent on speaking plainly. She told me she was "old" and could get away with it.

    Lou had to top that one and said that Gram's had told his wife that she should be "a lady on his arm and a whore in his bed". That had us rolling again. Unbelievable. You could tell we all had the same shocked reaction. Not OUR Grams. Of course, 37 years of marriage should make one able to expound on that subject.

    Unfortunately, it had only been 37 years of marriage. My grandfather died almost 18 years ago at a relatively young age from enternal bleeding from an ulcer he had lived with since he had been young and foolish, drinking himself nearly to death in the early stages of marriage right after the war. Sometime around the time my dad was seven, the doctor told my grandpa that he would die shortly if he didn't stop drinking. So, he stopped. Cold turkey. My grams said it was the best years of her life after that.

    We handed out the gifts after remenicsing. When they were all done, my bro handed me a bouquet of three pink roses from the kids; one for each nephew and one from the neice because they love aunt Kat and thought I should have something for all the time I spent with them. It was very sweet. One thing I can say, even on Valentine's Day, I'm never forgotten.

    The only sad part of the day was in remembering that this weekend had more than one meaning for all of us. It was on May 6, 2004 that my Grams passed away. That was Mother's Day weekend, too. I could write about all the great things that my mom did for us growing up and even now. My mom is the ultra giver. She will do anything for anyone; sometimes even if they don't ask. But, I wanted to write something about this other woman who had a profound impact on my life and is still sorely missed even a year later.

    She was irreplacable. She was the rock of our family and when she passed it seemed that everyone exploded, inlcuding me. She loved children. Most of the things that I can remember were the times we spent at her house, all eight of us grand kids, playing in their yard at the "white house". We always called it that because it was a low ranch home that my grandpa had built a round concrete porch on the front and made columns and trellises in the front. It always looked like the "white house" to us.

    Every summer we would buy Grams tomatoe plants to put out back because she loved fried green tomatoes. At the end of every summer when the tomatoes were ripe, we'd sneak around back and pick a tomatoe for each of us, hiding under the porch enjoying our ill gotten snack. The one time we tried to send my middle bro in to get the salt, he got snagged and gave us up immediately. No one could withstand grandma's patient but never faltering eyes.

    I could tell so many stories about growing up with the family. Grams always had a giant cast iron skillet that she swore was the only way to cook fried chicken right. She also had a huge roasting pan that was good for making army sized portions of hungarian goulash or home made hot cocoa in the winter.

    When they moved down on the farm, we all went with them. That was another great and memorable time in my life. Not just mine, but all of us "grand kids" are always remeniscing about one time or another down there. More stories for a later date.

    My grams had grown up poor, but she always said that being poor was no excuse for being slovenly or having bad manners and she passed that on to us. I don't know all the things she ever said to the rest of the "kids", but, for me, she was the one that always told me that I was smart and could be whatever I wanted. If I professed to want to be a lawyer, she told me I should go do it and I could. If I said I wanted to be a singer, she told me I could sing and I should do the best I could. I think if I'd said I wanted to be a hobo, she would have told me to go be the best hobo I could be. As long as I was happy, that's all that was important.

    For some who've read this blog before, you might know that my parents' marriage was extremely rocky on occasion. Whenever they had trouble, my Grams would have us come stay with her and grandpa. She would listen to our cries and dry our tears, reminding us that we were loved and that, in this rough old world, there was someone we could count on.

    Even when I got older I would talk to her about troubles at work or with family or boyfriends. She would always listen and most of the time she would just let me talk myself into whatever I thought was best and then would tell me that it was exactly what I should do. When she did give me advice, it was usually couched in terms that I could take or leave, but I always knew when I should listen.

    Although, when it came to religion, politics and love, she would sometimes say things that made me reply, "Oh, grandma!" in that long drawn out tone that said I wanted to roll my eyes but knew better.

    So, last year when she was very sick, I put things on hold and went down to help her straighten out her affairs. Not that there was much. At the end of her life, my grams had told me that "you can't take it with you" so she had pared her belongings down to a minimum and lived very simply. I had long talks with her and reminisced about the "old days". She told me some stories I didn't remember and a few I had, but I let her tell them again.

    One day she asked me to get out my guitar and play her the song I'd written for her and grandpa a long time ago. I couldn't remember all the words, but she didn't care, she just wanted to hear it. The old cassette I'd recorded it on had been worn out a long time ago. She laid down on her bed and said she was going to rest while I played "Grandma's Kitchen Table". Funny how now I can remember the words.

    I can still remember
    When I was just a kid
    Sitting at my grandma's kitchen table
    Watching everyhing she did
    And, I could see my grandpa
    Out in the side yard
    Fixing that ol' pickup truck
    So he wouldn't have to buy a new car

    Whenever I had trouble
    I'd ask grandma for advice
    She'd give me a glass of iced tea
    And put the chicken on to fry
    Sometimes grandpa he'd come in
    And join us at the table
    She'd say, tell us what your troubles are hon'
    We'll help you if we're able

    When I got done telling everything
    grandpa put his coffee up on the table
    He'd say,
    I've learned somethings in this life
    So put this in your stable

    Chorus
    Stand up tall and walk real proud
    Whenever you feel down
    Smile when you feel the tears
    don't let'em see ya' frown
    Put your last dollar in a poor man's cup
    And when Jesus comes around
    Your cup will over flow
    When He wears the golden crown

    It's been a long, long time
    Many years have come and gone
    Grandma she's still here
    but grandpa has passed on
    I try to make it home
    As often as I'm able
    So I can sip iced tea sittin'
    at my grandma's kitchen table

    And she'd say...

    Stand up tall and walk real proud
    Whenever you feel down
    Smile when you feel the tears
    don't let'em see ya' frown
    Put your last dollar in a poor man's cup
    And when Jesus comes around
    your cup will over flow
    When He wears the golden crown.


    That's how I remember them. So many times in the last year I would have given anything to pick up the phone and call her, or sit at the table sipping iced tea and just talked about anything.

    My grandpa was the dreamer. He was always chasing one dream or the other. He could build incredible things out of scrap wood, draw things and then build them, all without being a trained draftsman. He would go from being a wealthy business owner to doing side jobs to get by. Grandma was the rock, the patient one, the steady hand on the family. She always figured out how to make things stretch and keep it all together. Something she learned after 37 years of marriage to a dreamer.

    Today was a beautiful day, even with the rain. But it's been a tough day trying to chase away the thought that I should have been buying one more card and gift like I did every year. I know she didn't just touch my life, but many others. My father and his siblings, my brothers and cousins and many of my second cousins who have told stories about growing up and going to spend time at "Aunt Mary's". Not to mention some of the "elders" who are still around and tell stories about parties at "Tennessee's and Leroy's" house with home made bathtub gin and rock-a-billy on the stereo.

    Last year on this date, I was driving home from southern Missouri, coming back after making all the arrangements and preparing for the funeral the next day here in Kansas City. It was raining hard that day, too, so I had to drive very slow on the back roads to the highway. I passed a church on the highway and the sign simply said, "sorrowful, yet rejoicing". It was almost providential. For the next two hours I drove along thinking about that sign and what I would say as the opening and closing of the graveside eulogy.

    The next day, after the pastor gave an opening prayer, I said a few words and then let everyone have their moment. Most of them told little stories about "Mom", "Grandma" and "Aunt Mary". My cousin Mikey read the words of a poem Gram's had asked to be read. He almost couldn't finish it, he was so choked up. Grams had practically raised him and his sister. His sister and I stepped up on either side of him, putting our arms under his because he looked like he might pass out. I straightened out the wind blown paper and began to read where he left off, pointing to the words until he could read again.

    Then, I gave the closing. Sorrowful, yet rejoicing.

    Rejoicing because we had such a great lady for so long.
    Rejoicing because she was with grandpa where she'd longed to be for almost 20 years.
    Rejoicing because we knew we'd see her and grandpa again.

    Yes, we were sad that day, but there was joy in remembering.

    Happy Mother's Day, Grams. We miss you.

    Love Always,
    Kat

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    Saturday, May 07, 2005

    Feminist Against Abortion: Responsibility Begins With Sex

    Well, that ought to be an attention getter although I can't imagine that I am the first to say it or claim it. Since I've been talking about faith and other controversial subjects lately, I thought I'd just put out my thoughts on abortion and see if anybody got crazy either way.

    The first thought I have is an acknowledgement that abortion has been around since man walked around dragging his knuckles. Of course, back then, abortion, crude and dangerous as it was, was probably a "herd/DNA" issue. Females of the tribes or "herds" most likely performed crude self abortions because they were carrying offspring of a weak or unacceptable male or because the herd/tribe/whatever was unable to care for one more mouth and, last, because the superstitious mind conceived the pregnancy as a bad omen.

    Things haven't changed all that much except that crude abortificants have become refined and quicker reacting while the crude stick in the uterus has become stainless steel instruments wielded by a certified physician less likely to damage the female's future ability to have children.

    Really, we can dress up abortion in Feminist linguista all we want about women's right to control her reproductive abilities, but it doesn't change the caveman mentality of herd/DNA control and it certainly doesn't make it a "noble" cause of equality and liberty. It is at best a necessary medical procedure to save a woman's life and at worst an elective medical procedure to end life and take away the evidence of irresponsible behavior.

    Looking back at the period of time when when "legalized" abortion became a word in our normal societal venacular, it seems to me that "legal" abortions for medical reasons were already available. So, the concept of "Roe v. Wade" as a new device to protect women's health seems bizarrely out of kilter with the reality.

    The only positive things it brought to our attention, if one could call it positive, is that rape and incest happens more than society would like to recognize and that the concept of making a woman bare a child from one of these incidents is tantamount to forcing her to become a victim again of the same crime. Still, abortion for these occurances were still available "legally" although, not every state allowed. While trying to change the stigma attached to those incidents and provide universal and safe medical procedures may be one issue, the concept that abortion also has a place in providing women equal ability to control their economic and social status by controlling their reproductive abilities seems almost outrageous in a day and age where birth control is readily available through either prescription or over the counter; sex education, includng birth control methods, is given in most schools and planned parenthood clinics, where birth control can be obtained almost for free or free in many instances and often without parental consent, are in almost every community.

    In the realm of feminist ideology, the concept of abortion as a tool of equality seems to negate the whole idea. Mainly, the struggle for women to be taken as competent and capable of taking responsibility for their decisions, particularly with whom they have sex with, with whom they will procreate and when. By the time that a woman has had sex without protection or birth control and become pregnant, that first control, that first responsibility has been lost. Abortion then becomes a negation of responsibility not a tool to enhance it.

    I believe that as women we have concentrated on this fight to the point where we have lost track of the original idea and lost some of the momentum in educating our sisters on the first responsibility of safe sex and prevention of pregnancies and diseases.

    Power Point: STDs in Young Adults and Adolescents.
    STDs Among Women and Infants

    Chlamydia is on the rise in both young adult and adolescent women since 1996. Chlamydia has significant impact on the health of women, in particular their ability to reproduce. The only good news is that treatment has been effective in reducing the secondary conditions of ectopic pregnancies and pelvic inflamation.

    The real killer among women, HIV, has shown a rapid, nearly insane increase since 1985. Black women are by far the most affected group. And the most common process for transmission is heterosexual contact (ie, sex with a man).

    Thus, abortion as an argument for equality and control of sexual liberty and reproduction is on the far end of the spectrum that my feminist sisters should be concentrating on and I fault organizations like NOW and other women's groups for not speaking up and speaking out loudly and more effectively about what our real responsibility is and has been since the advent of the seuxal revolution.

    Once a woman has reached the stage where abortion is a consideration for birth control, she's already missed her main responsibility of having protected sex and protecting herself from both "unwanted pregnancies" and sexually transmitted disease.

    It's time to spend as much money, if not more, on education and awareness, as groups do for trying to keep a questionable practice "legal" and open as an elective medical procedure when not related to a potentially damaging health condition.

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    Thursday, May 05, 2005

    Congratulations Mr. Blair And Good Luck

    The labour party has maintained it's majority in Britain's elections. The question may be whether Tony Blair maintains his position as Prime Minister, though, part of me highly doubts he'll be replaced.

    An interesting comment on the MSM..One AP title says, "Britons Reluctantly Back Blair", while the numbers indicate that the labour party controls over half of the Parliament (still) and the other two parties continue splitting the other half.

    Where is this reluctance? Well, apparently the AP interviewed one or two people who said they didn't back Blair.

    Brilliant.

    The question of Prime Minister really relies on the majority and the press is playing up a "split" in the party over Iraq and the "narrow" 66 seat majority that the party holds.

    My bet's on Tony.

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    Wednesday, May 04, 2005

    Beverly Hillbilly Bikers: The Sting

    Day 1
    Day 2
    Day 3
    Day 4never.html
    Day 5


    Beverly Hillbilly Bikers: The Sting

    Day Six

    We all had a good night’s sleep. A much needed sleep. I slept like the dead. Day 5 was that damned exhausting. Still, after five days of getting up at 7 AM, it was hard to sleep past nine, especially when life outside the motel was getting started and the blackout curtains didn’t keep out the noise.

    I woke up and laid on the bed with my arm over my eyes, pushing my head back into the pillows. Why couldn’t I sleep a little longer?

    I got up and went to take a shower, a luxury I hadn’t allowed myself the night before being so damned tired. I put on my bathing suit, a t-shirt and some overalls. I knew we were planning to go to the beach.

    I woke up my bro and his wife. By then it was getting on to 10 AM and check out time was 11. We were planning to stay another night and leave the next day, but we’d only paid for one night so we needed to get up to the front office and pay for one more night. I was kind of dreading it after all the commotion we’d caused the night before. Also, we were going to need more towels if we were going to the beach and coming back to take showers before dinner that night.

    Bro and I walked out into the court just as our cousin Mikey came out of his room on his way to pay the man as well. Since I’d paid for the other nights in the motels and camping, Bro was paying for the hotel rooms. It was sunny, but overcast and everyone was wearing sunglasses. I felt like I needed to squint against the gloom. It was too bright, even with sunglasses.

    When we got to the front office, the little Asian man was checking out another customer, so we stood back and waited. Bro and Mikey were picking through the brochures for all the local “fun” that could be had. Here we discovered that the big building with neon lights that we’d seen on our numerous travels up and down the main road, down to Biloxi and back, was a casino. The two boys were still talking about it when the little Asian man was done with the other customer so I stepped up to the counter, partially dreading a confrontation where the man would ask us to leave.

    Frankly, after the night before, I wouldn’t blame him.

    I smiled, “Good morning,” cheerful as if the night before hadn’t happened, “I’m in room 109 and need to pay for another night.” I handed him my credit card and continued to smile.

    “Okay,” he said back cheerfully, “did you have a nice rest? Everything, okay?”

    “Yes, thank you. Is it possible I could get a few more towels?” I was being ultra polite and the guy must not have associated me with the craziness the night before.

    “Oh, yes. Just a moment.” He swiped my credit card and put it on the counter, then turned back to a linen closet behind the counter, pulling out three towels and setting them carefully on the counter before pushing them my way. Then the credit card finished processing and he handed me the slip and pen, “Just sign here, please.”

    I signed the slip and pushed it back, putting the credit card back in my wallet when he didn’t check the signatures (kind of odd since I was out of state, but wasn’t going to argue since I knew who I was), then picking up the towels, “Thank you very much,” I smiled again.

    “No, thank you,” he said with a big smile.

    I walked towards the door and waited for the other two to get done so we could talk about getting some breakfast. My bro was next and he walked up to the counter, “’Morning,” he said a little gruffly pulling out his credit card.

    The manager looked over the counter with narrowed eyes and a thinned mouth. Bro was not going to be as lucky as I was. The man definitely was going to remember the “crazy round eyes” who’d been causing problems in the parking lot.

    “I need to pay for one more night in room 110,” Bro went on when the man didn’t answer him back. Mikey was standing by the counter now, too, and the man was eying them both like he’d just been presented with three day old fish.

    The man picked up Bro’s credit card, “Driver’s license please,” he said in a crisp tone. My Bro was a little slow on the uptake, “I need driver’s license,” the man said again, holding Bro’s credit card. Bro finally pulled out his wallet and handed the man his driver’s license. The man looked at the driver’s license, looked at the credit card, looked at Bro with narrowed eyes, looked back at the driver’s license and then the credit card. Finally, he threw the driver’s license on the counter and I watched it skitter across the counter towards Bro who grabbed it before it flew off the other side. Bro had an irritated look on his face, but, really, what did he expect? So, I cleared my throat loudly as if to say, “dude, don’t go there,” and he quietly put his license back in his wallet.

    The man swiped his credit card and then threw it on the counter, too, this time to land with a little “click” in the middle. Bro picked it up and stuck it in his wallet, too. The temperature in the room had dropped about 10 degrees and the tension was radiating like electrical currents. The man pushed the slip across the counter with barely concealed reluctance. I guess money was going to win out over general distrust. The great equalizer. As bro was signing the slip, he asked for some more towels as well. The man went to the closet again, pulled the towels out with a jerk and tossed them up on the counter. Bro finished up, took the towels and walked over to where I was.

    I opened the office door and stepped out, holding it for Bro to come out and not stand there giving the guy the evil eye. When the door closed, my bro was showing his agitation, “What the hell was that about?” as if he didn’t know.

    “Well, dude, what’d ya’ expect?” I said laughingly.

    “Well, he didn’t ask you for your driver’s license,” bro said grumpily, adjusting the towels in his arms.

    “Well, dude, I don’t have a three day growth of beard that makes me look like a renegade and I didn’t act like some psychopath that just escaped from maximum lock down for the violent, criminally insane.” I couldn’t help laughing, “Besides, it wouldn’t have hurt if you actually smiled,” I teased him, “then again, he would have just taken you for totally schizoid.”

    Mikey came out and joined us, but bro was still prickly about the episode, “Did he ask for your driver’s license?”

    “No.” Mikey said, trying not to laugh.

    “That’s bullshit!” He exclaimed, looking back through the glass doors. I glanced back, too, and noticed the little man was giving us all the evil eye.

    Mikey and I started laughing and I grabbed bro by the arm, dragging him back towards the rooms, “Come on! Let’s go get something to eat.”

    We met some of the others coming out of their rooms, too. A few of the patrons were standing out on the balcony above and I could hear them talking low about the “crazy white boy.” At least we’d livened up their vacations. Gave them something to talk about.

    Everyone decided we’d go down to the IHOP in town and get breakfast before going to the beach. We loaded up in the pickup truck, the younger ones in the back and me driving. When we got there, we had to wait almost a half hour because they didn’t have a seating arrangement for nine people. It was the old IHOP that was the long narrow building with mostly booths and a long counter for people to set at.

    We finally got seated, ordered coffee and perused the menu. We were teasing the boys about which one was going to order the “Rooty tooty, fresh and fruity” breakfast. They were insistent that they were too manly for such a breakfast and who the hell came up with that name anyway?

    After breakfast, we drove back to the beach area not far from the motel where we’d stopped the night before waiting for everyone. The whole crew bailed out of the back and ran down to the beach like they were kids finally let out of school. When I got down to the beach, I carefully took of my t-shirt, overalls and keds, laying them on a towel so they wouldn’t get too much sand in them, then I turned at really took a good look at the water.

    The sky was getting more overcast and it made the water look even more green and murky than it should have. Down by the edge of the water, you could see the black smudgy streaks of oil that was obviously from the off shore rigs. The pier to the right of us went out about a mile into the water in a gentle arch that ended with it being at least twenty feet above the water. Uncle Lou was busy regaling the others about the shark he once caught off the end of the pier.

    I was reluctant to go into the water because it didn’t look all that clean. I’d been swimming in the Atlantic and in the Pacific. I’d swam in the gulf off of Corpus Christi as a child, but this didn’t look the same. There were barely any waves coming in. It was almost like a lake. Uncle Lou mentioned that this area was protected by a very long break about fifteen miles out that kept the water pretty calm. Still, it looked gritty and dirty. Plus, the smell of sulphur, salt and oil was kind of tangy in the air. The same smell that I’d smelled the night before that seemed to stick in the back of my throat. This didn’t seem like the “ocean” that I was familiar with.

    Everyone else went down to the water and ran in laughing. Then they went further and further and the water continued to only be about knee high. The tide was out. They yelled for me to come on and get in the water while they all splashed around. Except aunt Jeanie who was walking along the beach looking for sea shells. I walked down into the water and kept walking about fifteen feet from the shore where the others were. The water was warm and calm, the sand underneath almost solid.

    Everyone started shoving each other and splashing each other, laughing and trying to see who was going to go down first. Not that there was any danger of getting really wet. Finally, I just sat down in the water and it only came up to my chest. I turned over and crawled out about another ten feet and it still didn’t go up any further. Swimming was out of the question. Right about then, it started raining. Not hard, just steady drops. My cousin Candy wanted to go back to the hotel.

    “Why?” Uncle Lou asked. “It’s just water and you’re already wet.”

    “What if it starts lightening?” She asked with trepidation looking up at the sky.

    “Well, then we might want to get out of the water, but it’s not lightening, so just enjoy it.” He leaned back in the water and his pot belly stuck up a bit above the water line.

    Mikey and bro decided they were going to walk out as far as they could and see how far they could go before the water began to rise. Mikey’s wife Sandra was setting on the beach. She didn’t want to get in the gritty water. About thirty minutes later the rain had stopped and Mikey and Bro came back, “We walked almost to the end of the pier and the water didn’t get above our knees.” Mikey was a little disgusted. I think that we were all imagining swimming in the “ocean” not piddling in two feet of water.

    Robert pointed up to the lone shack on the beach, “Hey, that guy is renting some floats. Anybody want to go in with me and rent one? It’s about twenty bucks for an hour.”

    “I’m in,” Mikey said and they waded to the shore. I stood up, “I think I’m going to lay on the beach now that the rain has stopped.” I waded to shore, too and picked through the towels until I found a relatively dry one to lay out. I spread my clothes out, too so they would dry. It might have rained, but it was still 90 in the shade so I figured they’d dry out pretty quick.

    Mikey and Robert rented this giant float thing that looked like a giant tri-cycle with four foot high and two feet wide plastic tires that had “paddles” on them. They took turns tooling around with their wives. Uncle Lou and Aunt Jeanie said they were going to walk across the road to the little souvenir shop to look for some better sea shells.

    I got back in the water right before the hour for the float rental was up. Candy and Sandra had taken it out and were almost thirty feet from the shore. Both were paddling hard, but were obviously tired. They started yelling, “Hey! Come help us get this thing back in!”

    Mikey and I, bro and Mer waded out to where the float was and started pushing them back into the shore. I don’t know why, but we all started pushing it as fast as we could, running and splashing behind the float, laughing as Sandra and Candy complained about it being uneven and almost tipping them out when we hit one of the tiny waves present. Just then I felt a stinging sensation on my right leg like I’d just brushed up against some stinging nettle plants. At the same time, Bro started comically wind-milling his arms and legs and went down with a big splash, mouth wide open in laughter and sucking in some of the nasty sea water.

    I was laughing hard, but had stopped pushing the tri-cycle, looking down at my leg and over at bro who was wallowing like beached whale in the two feet of water, “Dude,” I gasped between laughter, “are you okay?” He was laughing and gagging on the water at the same time, “Don’t drown ‘cause I don’t think anyone here is going to volunteer for CPR duty, ‘cept your wife and she might not even do it.”

    Right then I saw Mikey stop, his legs straight together like he’d been lassoed from behind. He started going over face first, “Son of a bitch! Ouch! Shit!”

    “Dude, what the…” just as I saw a big ass jelly fish swimming as hard as it could away from us.

    “Crap!” Mikey said again, looking down at his legs.

    Robert had kept going with the trike and turned back to see what was going on. “Hey! Are you alright?” He waded back to us.

    “I think we just got stung by a jelly fish!” I was grabbing bro by the arm and lifting him up, “Did you get stung?”

    “No,” he coughed out.

    I let go of him and waded to Mikey. “How bad is it?”

    He was still cursing under his breath, “Hurts like a mother!”

    “Come on! Let’s get out of the water. Salt water can’t be good for it.” I took his arm and Robert took the other helping him limp back to shore.

    Sandra ran over to him, “Mikey, what’s wrong?” She took the arm I was holding and helped him to go sit on a towel on the beach.

    “He got stung by jelly fish. Me, too.” I was wondering how many times I was going to have to say that.

    Robert was standing over Mikey with his hands on his hips, “Dude, you know what’s good for a jelly fish sting?”

    Mikey jerked his head up, “Oh, hell no, you are not pissing on my leg! If anyone’s pissing on my leg it’ll be me and I’m not planning on pissing on anything!”

    We all started laughing, “Dude, let me see.” I squatted down by his legs and noticed that big red welts like rope burns were encircling both of his legs, at least three on each, “That doesn’t look good. You ever been stung by a jelly fish before?”

    “No,” he said irritably.

    “Okay, then, Robert and Bill, go take that stupid trike back to the guy. Let’s get packed up and get back to the motel. We’ll need to put something on that. Where’s Uncle Lou and Aunt Jeanie?” I asked, picking up my own stuff.

    “They’re across the street still,” Candy replied.

    “Okay, let’s get rounded up and headed out.” I grabbed the remaining towels and started walking towards the truck. Crap! We were all wet and my seats were cloth. This poor truck was only two weeks old and it was already getting a work over.

    Bro and Robert helped Mikey in the back of the truck, Sandra jumped in the back with Mikey and Candy and Mer in the front with me, trying to keep our wet butts on the towels. I did a quick U turn and drove over to the souvenir shop where Candy jumped out to get her Mom and Dad. It took them about ten minutes to get out there. I kept looking in the rearview mirror and I could see Mikey looking more and more pale as the minutes went by, “Criminently! How damn long does this take?”

    Right about then they came out and we had to explain all over again what happened at the shore. We drove back to the motel. My leg was still stinging but didn’t have any welts like Mikey so I figured he must be really hurting about now. We piled out of the truck, Robert helping Mikey to his room, the rest of us crowding around the door.

    “Dude, you wanna go to the hospital?” I asked. As pale as he was I was thinking he either got a mega dose or was having an allergic reaction.

    “No, I’ll be fine. I just wanna lay down and then maybe get a shower,” he said with his teeth gritted.

    “Are you sure? You don’t look so good.” The men in my family had a tendency to be too manly for their own good.

    “No, I’ll be fine.” He was laid out on top of the newly made beds. The maid had been in while we were out.

    “Okay, let me check the first aid kit and see if we have anything to use,” which I highly doubted. Most of it was for cuts and burns. I don’t think they were expecting jelly fish stings when they put it together.

    I walked back to my room with Mer and Bro close behind, “Mer, find the yellow pages. Let’s look for a pharmacy around here. I’m sure there must be some over the counter stuff we could buy. We can’t be the first people to get stung by a jelly fish down here.”

    We got the yellow pages and I made a quick call to the closest pharmacy, asking for a pharmacist who then told me there was definitely some over the counter stuff we could buy. Also, people tended to use a homegrown remedy of meat tenderizer mixed with water until it created a paste. The locals swore that it would take the sting away. The pharmacist indicated that they had some of that available as well.

    Mer and I jumped in the truck and drove down to the pharmacy, looking like mermaid rejects after a three day binge. Bad hair, smelled like concentrated ocean water and our skin was oily from the crap floating on the water. I went through the pharmacy quickly, grabbing some benedryl, the anti-sting spray and some meat tenderizer, just in case. We paid and were out the door in about ten minutes on our way back to the motel.

    When I drove up, Mikey’s door was open and the rest of the family was milling around outside. I jumped out of the truck and Aunt Jeanie came over, very agitated, “Where have you been? We need the truck. Mikey needs to go to the hospital.”

    “What? Okay, just a second, let me get in there,” I pushed my way past the rest of them to go into the room.

    Sandra was standing near the door, “He’s dying! He’s dying! We gotta go to the hospital!”

    “Okay, okay, calm down. Let me get in there,” I went into the dim room. The only light was coming from the open door since the black out curtains were still pulled tight. Mikey was laying on the bed with his head on the pillow, his hands clutched across his stomach and his legs straight out, pale and sweaty looking like one of those statues you see on top of medieval sarcophagi. His freckles stood out against his face, “Dude? You alright? You’re wife says you’re dying.”

    He opened his eyes and squinted at me, “I’m not dying, for God’s sake!”

    Sandra was now weeping quietly like she was on a deathwatch, “He needs to go to the hospital!”

    Mikey just groaned, “I don’t need a hospital!”

    “What happened?” I asked. I was pulling stuff out of the bag from the pharmacy.

    “I threw up,” he said, swallowing like even the words might make him do it again.

    “Then he passed out in the shower,” Sandra said, blowing her nose on some tissue.

    I looked back at Mikey, “I didn’t pass out,” he said irritably, “I just felt dizzy for a minute.”

    “He needs to go to the hospital!” Sandra was insistent and a few other voices behind me were insisting the same. Funny now they were all about going to the damned hospital after that other freaking incident a few days ago.

    “I’m not going to the hospital! Besides, I don’t have any insurance,” That’s right, Mikey was a private contractor and didn’t carry any health insurance. Go figure.

    I looked down at his legs as I finished getting things out of the bag, “Dude, are you sure? Be kind of a shame after all this to get down to Mississippi and die from anaphylactic shock, don’t you think?”

    “No, I’m feeling better already. Just my legs are stinging,” he said with a grimace.

    “Okay, your call since you’re still conscience, but we reserve the right to change your mind if you pass out.” I laughed. I told Sandra to get him some water and gave him a couple of benedryl, then sprayed his legs with the anti-sting stuff which stung at first because it had an alcohol base. Who comes up with these brilliant formulas anyway?

    I sprayed my leg, too, “Okay. I think everyone needs a little rest now and then we’ll see what happens. Sandra, just knock on the door if he doesn’t feel any better and we’ll find the local hospital.” Mikey looked like he was about to argue, “Dude, don’t even. Insurance or not, we’re not going to let you die in BFE.”

    I shooed everyone out of the room and we all went back to our own. I felt like lying down for a little bit, too. We all took a nap (who knew our day off the road was going to be so exhausting?). When we got up and got around to take showers and look for food, the sun was going down. Bro said that Robert and Candy, Lou and Jeanie were going to stay in and just grab sandwiches.

    “Well, we’re down by the shore and I want some seafood. Anybody else?” I looked around and you’d think I’d just suggested eating uncooked bugs. Mer was scrunching up her face and wrinkling her nose.

    “What? I’m the only one that eats seafood?” Apparently.

    It was a nice night and we decided we would ride our bikes to look for a restaurant. I convinced bro and Mer that we could probably find a place that served seafood and burgers down here so we could do both. Bro knocked on Mikey’s door and he was feeling much better. He insisted that he and Sandra were up for a short ride to get some food.

    We all got dressed and I stuck my riding boots on. They went half way up my calf and I could feel the front rubbing against my sting a little. It wasn’t painful, just annoying. I imagined Mikey would feel like hell. Still, no one wanted to sit around the hotel rooms for the last night. We drove down the road until I saw a little shack by the docks that said something like “Molly’s Seafood” with an advertisement for “surf and turf”. I figured they’d have something for the rest of the heathens to eat along with my seafood.

    We went inside and it was like every other cheap seafood place I’d ever been to decorated with fake models of ships, pieces of old two inch diameter rope, some pulleys, nets and dried up star fish. Just the kind of place to serve “real” seafood.

    We sat down and got the menus. The other four were looking at hamburgers and chicken fried steak, though Mikey decided on catfish. I ordered a half dozen raw oysters on a half shell with some steamed “u peel’em” shrimp as the main order. Everybody was making gagging noises and poking fun.

    The oysters came out first and I doctored up three of them with cocktail sauce and lemon juice before sliding them down my throat while Bro made disgusting noises and comments about raw meet and boogers. Brothers can be disgusting that way.

    The main dishes came out and I sat the oysters to the side. The steamed shrimp was in a basket covered by another basket. When I lifted the lid off, we all got a surprise as I found “u peel’em” shrimp Mississippi style meant they were cooked whole, including the heads and their little eyes were staring up at me from the basket. Immediately, the whole table was saying, “Eewww! How can you eat that!” “That looks like a bunch of bugs or something.” Accompanied by appropriate shudders.

    I just laughed and decided to play it up, “It’s nothing,” I grabbed a shrimp out of the basket, “You just pop their little heads off,” which I did and tossed it into the other basket, “Pop the tail off,” again, following suit, “Peel off the legs,” the shell crunched sufficiently to send shudders through the heathens, “And, voila!” I tossed it into my mouth. “Uuuhhhmmm…that is good!”

    I thought one or two of them were going to gag.

    We laughed and talked about the trip and the day. Mikey said his legs hurt a little but he’d sprayed them again and they didn’t feel too bad. When we were about done eating, Mikey was spying the three oysters left on the plate with melting ice, “Why do people eat those things?”

    “Besides they taste good?” Everyone let out a big, “Ugghh and Eeeww!” I knew Mikey and Sandra hadn’t been married but five years so I decided to tease him, “Well, some people say they’re an aphrodisiac.”

    “For real?” He looked skeptical.

    “Yeah, for real. You wanna try one? I’ll fix it up for you.” I felt the devil inside me coming out to play. Raw oysters weren’t for everyone, but I figured a little broadening of the horizons wouldn’t hurt.

    “Dude, don’t do it!” My brother exclaimed, “that’s like eating a raw slice of cow liver or something!”

    I laughed, “Come on! Their good for your sex life!” Like they needed any help, but I knew the “double dog dare you” thing would work on “Mr. Super Manly”. Kind of like that “Back to the Future” movie, “What’s the matter? Are you…chicken?”

    “Okay. I’ll try one.” Mikey said without much more thought. The other three were grossing out still, “What? Doesn’t hurt to try one.”

    “That’s the ticket. Let me fix this up for you and show you how it’s done,” I fixed two oysters, one for him and one for me, with cocktail sauce on his and just lemon juice on mine. I made sure the oyster was free from the shell and handed him his. “Now, what you do is, don’t chew it. Just slide it in your mouth, tip your head back and swallow, like this.” And I proceeded to do as I instructed.

    Mikey put the oyster up by his mouth and made a little “O” with his lips. I’m almost spit the oyster back out, but quickly swallowed it, “Dude, you’re gonna have to open your mouth further than that. Come on! We all know you can!”

    Everybody was staring at him at the table and bro continued to make rude noises, “Mooooooo!” followed by a hacking sound. I was sitting next to him so I reached over and punched him in the shoulder, “Knock it off!”

    Mikey was laughing and he almost couldn’t put it in his mouth, “Come on! Just tip it in and swallow! It tastes better when it’s cold.” I egged him on.

    After about three times putting it up by his mouth, he finally opened wide enough to get it in. Then, he just held it there.

    Even I wouldn’t do that, “Dude, just swallow it, don’t hold it in there!”

    “Mooooo! Hack, hack,” bro was still at it and Mer was making gagging noises (although, I think hers were for real). Mikey had his cheeks all pushed out like he was ready to spew.

    I tipped my head back, “Come on! Like this. Tip your head back and swallow.”

    I could see his throat working like he was going to swallow it, but it just wouldn’t go down. Finally, he swallowed with a big gulp and the rest of the table went into paroxysms of gagging, choking and laughing. The rest of the restaurant was staring at us, “Knock it off you morons!” I looked over at Mikey, “How’d that taste?” After five minutes of holding it in his mouth, I was thinking it might even turn me off the taste.

    “Not bad. Kind of salty and fishy,” I think Mikey was trying to be all manly and act like it didn’t bother him.

    “Dude, you should have swallowed faster. Most people don’t hold it in their mouths that long,” I laughed and set back in the chair.

    “Are you gonna eat that one?” Mikey pointed to the last oyster on the plate.

    Actually, I wasn’t because the damn thing was twice as big as the other oysters and even I didn’t think I could swallow it without choking a little. Still, I figured if he wanted it, he could have it, “Nope. You want it?”

    “Yeah,” he said, pulling the plate towards him, “I’ll fix it up this time.”

    “Are you sure? It’s kind of big. You wanna cut it in half?”

    The way he acted, you’d think I’d asked him if he was really a man, “No way! I’ll eat it just like this.” He proceeded to fix it up like I had then we went through the whole debacle again with Mikey having to make himself open his mouth far enough to get it in and then trying to swallow it while bro made gagging and cow noises and Mer slapped Bro in the back of the head.

    “Ow! What’d ya’ do that for?” He asked rubbing his head.

    Mikey looked a little green around the gills at that point, “Dude, hurry up and swallow it!”

    His cheeks were all puffy again like he was going to spew, “Rar rant” he said around the oyster in his mouth. Bro made another covert “moo” sound and Mikey started laughing, then he started gagging, loudly. The,n all of a sudden, he hacked the damned oyster up in his napkin.

    The whole table erupted into “Ewwws” and gagging noises. I noticed then that the other restaurant patriots were staring at our table. “Check please!” I raised my hand as the waitress went by while grabbing my wallet out with the other. I think we’d entertained everyone enough for the evening. With the whole damned restaurant staring at us, it felt like it took an eternity for the waitress to get back with my card.

    We stumbled out of the restaurant laughing, Bro still harassing Mikey about the oyster when all of sudden, Mikey made a run for the dock, hanging over the side of the railing and throwing up the rest of his dinner. Oysters after jellyfish sting was probably not a good idea.

    After a few minutes of sitting on the dock, I asked Mikey if he wanted to go back to the motel. “No way! It’s nice out, let’s ride.”

    I was hesitant to do so, but I figured what the hell. It was Wednesday night in Podunkville and no one was really out. If he got all woozie we could pull over. So we started cruising down the road at a nice even speed, enjoying the summer breeze. The wind was blowing back out to the ocean so the overweening smell of stagnant gulf water wasn’t as prevalent as the night before. As we turned back from the edge of Biloxi again, Bro’s bike started choking and cutting out.

    We stopped at a light, “Dude, what’s up?” Mikey asked him over the coughing and spitting of Intruder.

    “Damned spark plug again and I don’t have one on me. I think there’s an Advanced Auto or something up the road.” He yelled back, turning on his blinker and pointing.

    We rode up to the shop and it was open until 10pm. Bro said he needed a deep socket, specified size and specified spark plug. I ran inside and asked the guy behind the counter where I could get both of these items. The guy was about 20 if he was a day with just enough scruffy stuff on his face to indicate he’d passed puberty, “What kind of bike is it?”

    “Suzuki Intruder. I need the deep socket to get down inside the head.” I explained as he pulled out a book and started flipping through it.

    “According to the book you need this other spark plug.” He flipped it on the counter and pointed it out to me.

    “Usually, yeah, but we’re running rich in the carbs with no baffles in the pipes and need a hotter plug, so, if you wouldn’t mind getting me this size,” I gave him the size again.

    He just kept looking at me like I was crazy or maybe I was a woman and wouldn’t know any better, “You should still run the size they recommend.”

    “What? Are you a motorcycle mechanic? I just need this spark plug if you don’t mind, I’d appreciate it.” I was laughing a little. I mean, did this guy think he was Jesse Freaking James?

    He turned away a little disgusted and put the book down, calling for his supervisor to come over. He explained what he told me to his supervisor expecting him to tell me the same thing. At this point I was getting annoyed. The supervisor came over with the book, but I cut him off before he could go into his spiel to the “little lady” and explained to him what I told the other guy.

    “You know you could burn things up if you run it too hot,” he said standing there with his thumb in his belt loop. Any second I was expecting him to spit out a wad of chaw.

    “Yeah, I know, that’s why we’re only running one size up and not two. So, do you have the size I need or not?” Can you believe I’m arguing with some clowns behind a counter in BFE Mississippi at 9:30 at night about the right size of a spark plug? Just sell it to me already! Geesh!

    The supervisor turned to get the spark plugs off the shelf behind him and the young, cocky know it all came over to the cash register, “You know, if you’d been riding a Harley this wouldn’t have happened.”

    This dude was getting more and more hysterical by the moment. Actually, I could feel myself getting a little pissed off. Who the hell were these guys anyway, the Pep Boys? “Dude, if we’d been riding Harleys we probably wouldn’t have made it this far.” Mer was standing behind me and let out a little guffaw.

    Not that I had anything against Harleys and wouldn’t mind owning one, one day. But the nerve of this little punk giving me shit when I was trying to buy something from them was really irritating me. That and I’d had just about enough crap out of the “newly minted” Harley owners who routinely gave us shit about riding Jap bikes as if they’d just joined an exclusive club of “real riders”. Me, I always just pointed to the oil leaks underneath the bikes and walked off. People.

    “Well, I own a Harley and I don’t have those problems.” He was still being cocky, “You should junk those bikes and buy one.”

    “Really?” Now he was really irritating me. I looked around the shop and then looked at him, “So, how’d you afford this bike anyway? You live with your mom?” Mer snickered again and the guy’s face got redder.

    “No, I don’t live with my mom,” he rang up the spark plugs and the socket, “That’ll be 12.99. I just don’t have those problems with a Harley.”

    I gave him my credit card and smiled, “Well, son,” and yes, I meant that just as condescending as it sounded, “when you ride your Harley 1200 miles non stop instead of up and down the boulevard here, you call me and tell me all about how your bike is doing.” I winked at him and signed the slip, taking the card and merchandise out to my bro where Mikey was waiting with him. Mer and I were laughing as we went out the door. Can you believe the nerve of some people?

    “What took you so long?” He asked with a look of agitation. That just set Mer and I off on another peel of laughter. We explained, laughing still and everyone looked inside, seeing the boy behind the counter staring at us between the bars on the window with his arms crossed. See, we weren’t the only “ignorant ass bikers” on the planet.

    Bro changed the plug and we drove back to the motel. His bike was still backfiring once in awhile. It was still getting too much gas in the carbs. It took us twice as long to get back to the motel as it did to drive down to Biloxi. This was definitely not looking good.

    We said good night and went to our rooms. Tomorrow morning it was back to the road.

    I for one was ready to go. This stopping off point had not been exactly as I thought it would be. Everyone had talked up Gulf Port like it was a cool place to hang at the beach. The only thing worth seeing in town had been the ante-bellum summer homes on the shore. Other than that, I didn’t see much to recommend the place and I certainly hadn’t experienced any fantastic southern hospitality. As a matter of fact, I kept thinking that I should have sided with Bro and Mikey and insisted on going on over to Pensacola or stopping down in New Orleans. At least I’d had something to talk about besides getting stung by a jelly fish, pissing off a motel manager, throwing up oysters and getting talked down to by some jackass at an auto parts store in BFE Mississippi.

    What a vacation.

    Six days. Five more to go.

    Give me strength, O’ Lord, to make it through these travails and not be thrown into prison for murder with malice afore thought.

    Heh.

    At least I could claim temporary insanity when I did it.

    Read More...

    Sunday, May 01, 2005

    Since We're Talking About Religion Vs. Faith...

    I suggest this read on understanding Radical Islam from Free Muslims Against Terrorism

    I might also suggest this article on How to Beat the Global Islamist Insurgency

    Read More...

    Losing My Religion and Finding My Faith

    Do you know what convinced me there was a God? It was science and nature.

    I remember when I was ten years old and we planted seeds in clear plastic cups near the edge so we could watch them sprout. I remember running into the classroom every day so I could see if my seed was sprouting. I remember watering it and caring for it and the first day I saw the little sprout begin to climb from inside the seed.

    I remember the seed gradually opening and unfurling, pushing through the soil until it was no longer a seed, but the roots of the plant as the plant began to climb its way through the soil.

    It was such a little thing, but magnified in significance. There, in perfect synchronicity, was order to nature and the universe. Every part of the seed was used to create this plant and every part of the plant had a purpose. From the roots that took in water and nutrients, to the leaves that performed photosynthesis to the plant turning and growing towards the sun or the leaves that would turn over at night to collect the dew on the underside of the leaves to the stamen and the pistol that were used to pollinate other plants and the fact that bugs and birds and the wind would carry the pollen between plants to create others.

    It was a perfect design.

    That’s when I realized that it WAS a design.

    Now, as a ten year old, the magnitude of that thought was far larger than my mind could hold. It didn’t necessarily make me open my eyes and look at the entire world and the universe in that fashion, it just stayed with me, in the back of my mind playing their like a recording and sometimes hiding when other things, other less mind boggling thoughts and experiences, were taking over my life.

    During this time, while I was growing up, we went to church on Sundays, had vacation bible school during the summer and I belonged to a children’s Christian group called Awanas. The vacation bible school and children’s group was basically designed to teach you scripture and focused on the promise of salvation through Jesus Christ. They never really focused on the world in general or how God created it. Mostly it focused on the soul and the need to prepare for after this world.

    It did teach me things about the difference between good and evil. They never taught me to be intolerant, but the message was about love, that God so loved the world, he gave his only begotten son and that Jesus was an instrument of love and compassion and that we should aspire to follow in his footsteps.

    As guide posts for living in this world, they weren’t bad concepts.

    Still, looking back, I realize that this was half teaching concepts of how to live and half about indoctrination into a belief system. When I was twelve, I accepted Jesus as my savior. I remember the ceremony vividly. We were at vacation bible school. I had passed through most of the levels of learning with my study group and I was convinced that Jesus loved me and wanted to take care of me and insure that I could walk in heaven with him and see the face of God, enjoy an eternal paradise with all those that came before me. I was filled with the Holy Spirit.

    I sat on the front pew with three other children of the same age. The church was relatively empty with everyone down stairs enjoying crafts and other events as vacation bible school went on. The youth pastor came to each of us separately. He took each of the other two off to the side and spoke to them for several minutes. In the Christian church that I attended, it was believed that you had to make a free choice, free will, to make this transference or it wouldn’t count so they would ask many questions about what you believed and why before having a short prayer session.

    Finally, it was my turn. I was the last in the church so the pastor came and sat beside me on the mahogany pew. I was half scared and half excited. To me, this wasn’t just a rite to passage into a great inner circle of people, but a rite of passage into adulthood. We spoke for several moments about what being “saved” meant and what I believed. Then the pastor told me to bow my head and pray, asking Jesus to come into my heart and wash away my sins.

    I did and the whole time I was thinking about what my sins were. Generally, I considered myself a good kid. I got good grades, tried hard to listen to my parents, but I knew that sometimes my brothers and I would fight, we’d say mean things to each other and there were those few occasions when I lied through my teeth (or just didn’t admit to anything) to save myself from grounding, or worse, a butt whooping. All of these things were going through my mind while I prayed and I hoped that God would forgive me and Jesus would help me be a better person.

    The pastor prayed silently, too. When we were done, I felt euphoric. This then must be what it was like to feel the spirit inside of you and to be complete. When we went home that night, my family was very happy for me, but after that, they didn’t really talk about what being saved meant or having crossed this threshold. It was just another thing that we did.

    Naturally, as I got older and learned more about the world, I had more questions and they didn’t always seem to be answered by the pastor or the church. When I was fourteen and looking for the answers, I read the bible from front to back, looking for them. The bible seemed full of great stories, but it didn’t make me feel closer to God or make me understand anything greater. I was full of “buts”.

    The church I attended was going through an upheaval. We had a different pastor every few weeks as the deacons tried to choose the one best able to guide the flock. By the time I was seventeen we’d had about ten guest pastors. I started wondering what was going on that it took so long to get a pastor. I finally started listening after church in the parking lot as the deacons and others would discuss the different pastors and the issues they had with each one. Some of it was about doctrine and some of it about politics in the church. I couldn’t exactly understand about the doctrine issues because I had always thought that God was God and Jesus was Jesus and the bible didn’t change every week, so what was the question?

    As time went on, the church membership became less and less. I recall a time when the pews would be filled and you’d be lucky if you could sneak in a seat in the back, but, as the search for a pastor went on, the pews became more and more empty.

    The last pastor I remember was a relatively young man. The last two services I attended at the church, right in the middle of my own crisis of faith, pretty much put the final nails in the coffin. The pastor was preaching about sin. He was just a little less verbose than other hell, fire and brimstone pastors I had had the privilege to hear, yet he was very forceful and occasionally did bang on the pulpit. To the dwindling congregation, he gave a sermon that focused on tithing. The church was in bad shape financially with the low turn out. He was excoriating the remaining congregation, spread out with large gaps, about tithing ten percent. I remember thinking how strange that was. Even today I realize that was just bad economics. Fifty or less people were not going to support a church and a pastoral residence with tithing. The church needed more people and the hem-hawing around of the deacons had left it in a sad shape.

    The last service, the pastor was preaching on the sins of pornography. He admitted that he had looked at such pictures and had to ask God for forgiveness for such a sin. Then, two longstanding members of the congregation, a man and a woman, came up front and took the microphone. They admitted that they had a marital problem and that each of them had committed adultery. They asked the congregation for forgiveness and then God. There was much weeping and begging. Picture Jimmy Swaggert times two.

    The pastor then asked if anyone else wanted to get up and make any statements or ask for forgiveness.

    At this point, I was kind of shocked. Not that I thought everyone was perfect, but that we were now in the business of public confessions as if these things were not between the man and his wife and God and not for public consumption or requiring forgiveness from people who had no ability to intercede with God.

    Was this what faith was about?

    I remember after that that I would make excuses not to go to church.

    At the very same time, my family was beginning to break up for the last time. My parents were on the brink of divorce and faith, which might have given me a place to rest in the bad times, but faith had started fading.

    We learned in school about the dinosaurs and evolution. We learned about the universe and how stars were created. We learned about molecules and atoms and how they functioned together to form things. In all the learning of the technicalities of things, the idea that we, or these things, were created by something powerful when science seemed to say it was an accident of colliding atoms explained by mathematical equations, seemed strange. I couldn’t hold the two ideas in my head.

    It wasn’t as if I woke up one day and had an epiphany that God didn’t exist. It was a slow and gradual eroding until the thought rarely entered my mind.

    I went on, left home, did a lot of crazy things. I learned the world was crazy and a lot of random things seemed to happen and turn life from one direction to another. I rarely went to church except for weddings and funerals. My friends and I rarely spoke about religion or faith. It really had no place in my life.

    Watching that plant grow in fourth grade and remembering the miracle was hidden away in my mind. Add to that all the insanity in the world and the cruel things that humans seemed bent on doing to each other and it seemed that a spark of divinity could hardly be present in such people, so how could I believe in a God who knew everything and controlled everything, who made us in his image, yet allowed such cruelty to exist?

    I think that this is why there is a difference in “believing” something and understanding something. Belief is blind often and doesn’t look for answers, but simply accepts something as true. Some say that this is the basis of faith, the not knowing yet believing. It seems to me that, belief without a firm foundation of understanding is like sitting on a chair with only one leg. You’re bound to fall and break something.

    So, did I wake up one day and have an epiphany that God existed? No. Did I suffer a crisis and look once again to my youthful faith for answers? No.

    Like the erosion of faith I once experienced, the idea that there was God and an order to the universe, was equally slow in arriving. Unlike my youthful self, I am not easily convinced of ideas. However, I am an avid reader of just about anything that sparks my interest. I am also fond of watching the discovery channel and other informational programs.

    I remember watching a program on the birth of stars and the theory on how earth was created from gas and molecules. How, eventually, falling into the gravitational pull of the Sun, these molecules began to spin, creating a sphere with its own gravity, the sun heating the elements and the spinning separating them into earth and atmosphere, the gravity causing the atmosphere to remain around the planet, until the core of gas began to cool and create solid masses surrounded by oceans created by other gasses. Then, how the solar system was created by other such planetary objects being pulled into the gravity of the sun, each being affected differently the further away from the sun they orbited.

    Other programs talked about the evolution of animals and plants and the movements of tectonic plates; the slow erosion of oceans, seas and rivers forming canyons and mountains and rich plains.

    I was, in a very real sense, re-learning the things I had been taught in school, but now they seemed to make more sense.

    Somewhere in that learning, I realized that there was order to the universe. There was a design. Even the most seemingly random of activities came together in a precise function to create something. And, each thing that it created, worked together with another to create something else.

    Even if you could drill down to the smallest molecule or atom, there was still something there that began from something else and you could drill down for eternity and never find the ending or the beginning.

    Revelations Chapter 22:13

    · "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end."
    Of course, Revelations was written to talk about the end of time as we know it, but I took these words to mean something more than just the creator and possible final destroyer, or the end.

    I am the Alpha and the Omega. To everything there is a beginning and to everything there is an end, but the end of everything is the beginning again.

    It wasn’t the mystery of not knowing from whence the beginning came, but the fact that it was orderly and had a purpose, that convinced me there was something greater at work than random chaos.

    There is a design. Where there is a design there is a purpose and where there is a purpose there is a logical Creator.

    I call Him “God”.

    Read More...

    Colossus

    Well, early morning CSPAN is often quite more entertaining and educational then day time or evening as much as I find the committee hearings on Social Security, Medicare and other financial debates, energizing.

    I caught a segment on Andrew Bacevich's lecture or discussion or whatever one would call it, to the "Committee on Foreign Relations" regarding his new book, The New American Militarism fascinating if not slightly flawed.

    Yes, I come right out and say it, this professor of International Relations at Boston University specializing in "American Diplomatic and Military History", started his book in the wrong century when he decided to discuss this alleged "New" American Militarism. Or, maybe he just decided to keep his focus on a narrow period of history and what caused the new "new American Militarism".

    First, let me explain, during the conference, Mr. Bacevich explained that he was politically on the right. He considers himself more conservative then the current "conservative" party. Which, in many respects, I would agree with him when he states that the current administration is not exactly "conservative". Secondly, during the conference, he persistently points out that this "new American militarism" is not "new" in terms of being started by the Bush administration, but has been manifesting itself for years since the end of Vietnam and even more forcefully since the end of the Cold War, seeing its major manifestation, not in a Republican administration, but in the Clinton administration that was more likely to use American forces in a number of theaters for a number of issues including maintaining no fly zones in Iraq for eight years and routinely bombing targets, then Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Haiti, etc.

    He conceives that this new militarism began during the post Vietnam era where the loss had a definite impact on the American psyche. Couple this with the established colossal enemy of the USSR and the fear of global war, and you have the American populace preparing itself for constant war. His perceptions are that it is not some fabled military industrial complex that forced the idea on America, but that the American psyche, the American people and its ideas that created this collosus.

    He points out, vaguely, that, through out American history and beginning with the founding fathers, the idea of a large standing army required for "defense" was antithetical to the founding ideology and that, when armies were needed they were raised up, but when the war was over or the crisis over, the army was largely disbanded and only maintained for actual defense. He points to the Civil War, WWI and even WWII as periods that this occurred.

    He did not leave the military out of this idea. He also points to the loss of Vietnam as having an effect on the officer corps and their idea that, never again would they be unprepared or unable to project military might or be sucked into a "quagmire". He uses Gulf War I as an indicator that this new idea was starting to take real shape in the amount of force that was brought to bear on Iraq.

    I would agree with him on his concept that the first Gulf War was ambiguous even though it was presented as this megolithic victory, since it did not really achieve what it set out to, regional stability, but instead, set the stage for current events.

    From his book, the opening Chapter on "Normalization of War":

    At the end of the Cold War, Americans said yes to military power. The skepticism about arms and armies that pervaded the American experiment from its founding, vanished. Political leaders, liberals and conservatives alike, became enamored with military might.

    The ensuing affair had and continues to have a heedless, Gatsby-like aspect, a passion pursued in utter disregard of any consequences that might ensue. Few in power have openly considered whether valuing military power for its own sake or cultivating permanent global military superiority might be at odds with American principles. Indeed, one striking aspect of America's drift toward militarism has been the absence of dissent offered by any political figure of genuine stature. (...)

    Under the terms of that consensus, mainstream politicians today take as a given that American military supremacy is an unqualified good, evidence of a larger American superiority. They see this armed might as the key to creating an international order that accommodates American values. One result of that consensus over the past quarter century has been to militarize U.S. policy and to encourage tendencies suggesting that American society itself is increasingly enamored with its self-image as the military power nonpareil.


    I should go on to say that I don't totally disagree with every aspect of Mr. Bacevich's book, nor what he proposed on his discussion this morning, but I do disagree with him that this militarism is new, despite the periods of times he indicates that America disarmed.

    During his discussion, he said that in the 19th century and early 20th century, Americans saw themselves as living in times of peace broken by occasional war where the last part of the 20th century and today, America sees itself as constantly preparing or acting on war, broken by moments of peace. He did point out that the world as a whole has not been particularly peaceful through out this time.

    I would say that he has one aspect of this correct, that Americans have not always seen themselves as perpetually at war or had that perception, yet, the perception belies the reality of American history or the concept that America has only newly come to recognize and use its military power as a tool in foreign relations. He did admit, during his discussion, that he purposefully did not focus on the current global economic aspects of the "new" American security, but focused on the psychological aspects. This after a question from a member of the panel, who asked if the development of globalization and its financial impact on America was not also a reason why this manifested itself.

    By the way, I should point out that Mr. Bacevich was in the military and is a devotee the Shinseky plan for Iraq. If you are going to go in, go in with overwhelming force, complete the job and get out ASAP. He has also authored a number of pieces for news organizations ranging from that point to comparing Iraq, not to Vietnam, but to the French war with the Algerians for independence beginning in 1954.

    I suggest that you read the pieces and I will refrain from categorizing them except to say that I believe he was wrong on a few accounts, but you should read for yourself.

    Now, the real issue that I had is Mr. Bacevich's assertions that this is a new fascination with military power and that it is essentially a new use of military power by American government as a policy tool instead of a use as a necessity.

    One fellow on the committee did comment that he believed this actually began after Pearl Harbor and that those who lived through that period were also the ones that, during the end of the Vietnam War, seeing the evils of the perpetual draft, had recommended to Nixon to create the beginnings of this large standing army. This gentleman strangely felt compelled to apologize to those present for being one of the constructionists of this policy.

    My thoughts are that, as a student of history, the concept that American military growth and use as a tool for policy making is new, seems very short sighted and possibly even misleading. The very first thing that came to mind was the official Marine Corp song that goes something like:

    “From the halls of Montezuma, to the shores of Tripoli…”

    Which alludes to a detachment of Marine Corp and several ships being dispatched to Tripoli in Algiers to depose the local despot who was essentially using the Barbary Pirates to raid all ships in the Mediterranean that belonged to countries not paying tribute. Well, that was the basis, of course the pirates would raid just about anyone if they could get away with it, tribute or not. The Americans did not feel compelled to pay such a tribute and felt that this was having a detrimental effect on their trade so off went the Marines to settle the problem.

    It also alludes to the marine assault on the Castillo de Chapultapec in Mexico City during the Mexican-American War.

    Frankly, I believe the use of military power as a tool for American Policy actually began around the war of 1812. I believe that war was essentially started over blockade of trade and the press-ganging of American sailors on to British ships? It didn’t actually begin when the British marched once again on American soil, but was being fought on the sea for several years before it came to a head.

    Other incidents come to mind such as the Banana Wars post WWI that were essentially done to protect American interests in resources. But lets not forget the American-Spanish War at the end of the 19th century that was to get rid of a colonial power within our hemisphere (despite that whole hoopla about the sinking of the Maine). I believe it was Teddy Roosevelt who said, “Speak softly and carry a big stick”. He wasn’t just talking about a baseball bat. He was in fact talking about the newly minted and ever expanding American Navy with its faster, well armed ships that manifested the British Dreadnought. Or before even that, when admiral Perry sailed into the Japanese bay at Edu (Tokyo) and fired his cannon across the city to announce the arrival of American power and demand the opening of Japanese markets to western, mainly American, trade after originally being blocked a few years before.

    Panama?

    One shouldn’t forget that the preceptor for WWII was the American expansion into Asian Pacific waters and establishment of bases there to protect American resources like rubber and oil, with the ensuing oil embargo on Japan who thought that America was encroaching on their own sphere of influence and hindering their ability expand empire, thus declaration of war and Pearl Harbor.

    So, I would argue that, while his premise on the current American juggernaut is not completely improbable, it isn’t exactly correct to surmise this as a new concept of American power and policy.

    I also question whether the size of the current standing army actually precipitates this possible coming of crisis. For instance, while he gives interesting numbers regarding defense spending on new technology and compares the size of the military to standing armies for Britain and a few other notables around the world (note that he never mentions a comparison to China which is the next standing leviathan in global military strength), he actually did not present in his discussion:

    1) A comparison of the American standing military in number of members compared to the over all population, with percentages, compared to different points in history. Is today’s standing military larger in percentage of citizen members than any other time in history?
    2) Comparison of the number of American military personnel enlisted today compared to total population, compared to similar numbers for Britain, France, Germany, and China. Are we really bigger and how much?

    As for the American psyche newly allegorizing the military, I’d say that was bunk as well. It is only “new” in the last decade because the division over Vietnam did tear down the image of he American soldier as heroic and noble in the public eye and this is just changing back to how its always been. I’d say that Americans are well aware that it’s real men and women who perform the job;real people with real daily lives, families and problems. But, I’d say they are no more feted and ennobled than they were when Hollywood wrote the Sands of Iwo Jima or the Civil War period that saw the Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane. There are thousands of poems, stories, songs, plays, pictures that have been written or drawn depicting military life and great battles in American history, long before today.

    I also think back to the first battle of Manassas. By all accounts, the local towns people turned out by the hundreds, if not thousands, with their picnic baskets, blankets and parasols to watch the first clash of the Titans. Of course, they were quickly dispossessed of the notion that it was going to be glorious and bloodless. Still, it didn’t stop people from immortalizing the military or ennobling it beyond what the reality of its actual soldiers might have rendered it.

    I recall also the daguerreotypes (photos) of the soldiers posing in their uniforms. They weren’t simply photos for a reminder, but poses rendered for posterity often in the soldier’s best uniform and posing just so with their weapons.

    In short, it’s not really a new idea or a strange new lesion on the American psyche. It has existed for centuries. Certainly, it has seemed to grow exponentially over the years, but I submit that is not because it has suddenly taken a greater place in our minds or government’s plans, but simply kept pace with and adapted to the rate of population growth, the development of technology and growth of global communication and transportation.

    The only other thing he does have right is that we should be cautious with our continued growth and wary of its outcomes. Simply put, as proven through out history, as America expands, whether across the continent or into global markets, there will always be hostile entities and, as the ages go on, technology makes it more and more likely that a hostile entity will be on equal footing with America. We may not be forever up against third rate armies from third rate countries so we should not become too enamored with our quick wins and minimum losses.

    Further, the ability now to do “surgical strikes” with minimal death, to Americans at least, and destruction, can sometimes lead to callousness and carelessness about the cost of war.

    Strangely, I am reminded by an episode of the Original Star Trek, where they come on a planet and the warring parties having seen the terrible ugliness of war, decided that they can make it less ugly and stop the actual fighting by promising to put 30k of their citizens into a vaporizer every month, a cold offering to the god of war. Captain Kirk is suitably appalled since this cold blooded and callous activity keeps both sides from ever actually deciding on and enacting peace.

    A lesson on the legitimate outcome of war; peace.

    A fascinating subject and important to discuss, however, I believe this is another bogeyman, over played by a group of people who are as yet still scarred by the failed concept of Vietnamization of Vietnam and the fear that we go forth still to do it today and fail. There is further fear of trying to make the world in the American image, enforcing a doctrine on people who may never understand it nor except it and quite possibly be resentful.

    Mr. Bacevich, during his speech was quite sure that the Iraq war only created more of something than was there in the first place. He also indicated that the concept of the “War on Terror” was inappropriate because it left us battling a tactic and not another people and that the war was actually against radical, fascist Islam.

    Many, including me, have had a problem with the name of this war and its alleged intent. On the other hand, I’ve realized that the naming of this war was to avoid naming fascist, radical Islam as the enemy directly, even if it is, in order to be able to peel off parts of its adherents and deal with them separately instead of having them unite against us and causing full scale war.

    A war that I believe Mr. Bacevich would warn against considering the implications of cutting off resources from the region and thus drawing in even larger players, like China, that would be sorely tested without said resources. So, he may not like the name and neither do I, but the strategy is taken right out of the cold war playbook.

    So, while I appreciate Mr. Bacevich’s concern and note that it should be taken to heart, I find parts of his study to be hyped beyond historical significance, not fully exploring the American military growth and actual policies enforced from its inception.

    Other books and articles:

    Iraq is Algiers
    Sensible, Limited War
    Hour of the Generals
    Review of “American Empire” by Andrew Bacevich

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