Saturday, September 02, 2006

"VFP" by Tom Chelston

Wether you've viewed, listened to, Tom's song and video already it has been Uploaded to the 'Huffington Post - Contagious Festival' at this URL:

Veteran's For Peace



Click on URL to view or visit the Huffington Post and go to the 'Contagious Festival' and view from there, do it often and pass on to your family/friends etc., as each view is a Vote for the Video and Song!

James Starowicz
Member: Veteran's For Peace

Labor Day?? War!! Reality!

Just below you will find two pieces from Tom at MilitaryProject.org - GI Special in his recent Newsletter. This is the direct link, the links given above each are to my host site for downloading the .pdf files for the complete Newsletter, which can also be found at above link.
The rest of the posting consists of reports and links about Costs as to Personal, Labor, and Societal. And these are but a few that can be found as to the Destructive Follies of the few for their own enrichments of Wealth and Power!!



From: GI SPECIAL 4I2: 'GI COMING HOME LABOR DAY BLUES'.pdf
GI COMING HOME LABOR DAY BLUES
[Then And Now]
1971:

SAM STONE
by John Prine, 1971

Sam Stone came home
To his wife and family
After serving in the conflict overseas
And the time that he served

Had shattered all his nerves
And left a little shrapnel in his knee
But the morphine eased the pain
And the grass grew round his brain

And gave him all the confidence he lacked
With a Purple Heart and a monkey on his back

[Chorus]
There’s a hole in daddy’s arm
Where all the money goes
And Jesus Christ died for nothing
I suppose

Little pitchers have big ears
Don’t stop to count the years
Sweet songs never last too long
On broken radios

Sweet songs never last too long
On broken radios
Sam Stone’s welcome home
Didn’t last too long

He went to work when he’d spent his last dime
And Sammy took to stealing
When he got that empty feeling
For a hundred dollar habit, without overtime

And the gold rolled thru his veins
Like a thousand railroad trains
And eased his mind in the hours that he chose
While the kids ran around wearing other people’s clothes

[Chorus]
There’s a hole in daddy’s arm
Where all the money goes
And Jesus Christ died for nothing
I suppose

Little pitchers have big ears
Don’t stop to count the years
Sweet songs never last too long
On broken radios

Sweet songs never last too long
On broken radios
Sam Stone was alone
When he popped his last balloon

Climbing walls while sitting in a chair
Well, he played his last request
While the room smelled just like death
With an overdose hanging in the air

But life had lost its fun
And there was nothing to be done
But trade his house that he bought on the GI Bill
For a flag draped casket on a local heroes’ hill

[Chorus]
There’s a hole in daddy’s arm
Where all the money goes
And Jesus Christ died for nothing
I suppose

Little pitchers have big ears
Don’t stop to count the years
Sweet songs never last too long
On broken radios

Sweet songs never last too long
On broken radios

2006:
GI COMING HOME LABOR DAY BLUES
From: Dennis Serdel
To: GI SPECIAL 4I2: 'GI COMING HOME LABOR DAY BLUES'.pdf
Sent: September 01, 2006

By Dennis Serdel, Vietnam 1967-68 (one tour) Light Infantry, Americal Div. 11th Brigade, purple heart, Veterans For Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against The War, United Auto Workers GM Retiree, in Perry, Michigan

GI Coming Home Labor Day Blues

His brother at 30 is still living at home,
he works most nights making pizza.
His Dad just sighs because he knows
he might have to work until he dies.

Old glory is torn and faded
the stars shine for only a few
leaving closed factories and generations
living these Labor Day blues.

His Dad voted Democratic
like his Union said,
but it looks like both of the parties
are sleeping in the same bed.

The government is for the new gilded age
companies are leaving the country,
and his Dad with a good job realizes,
he may never get to retire.

Old glory is torn and faded
the stars shine for only a few
destroying the Union made middle class
causing these Labor Day blues.

His Mom works for a lawyer
who gives her woman’s pay.
But she knows the law of the jungle,
she could never raise a family this way.

His Dad's car is getting beat
and he'll have to buy another soon.
They now cost more than his house did
after Vietnam and his honeymoon.

Old glory is torn and faded
the stars shine for only a few
leaving closed factories and generations
living these Labor Day blues.


Workers Bear the Costs of War (September 1, 2006)
This Labor Day marks the third year that thousands of working Americans have left their families and their jobs to fight in a war that the Bush administration will not bring to a close.
As always, labor has borne the brunt of the war. The vast majority of the 2,600 dead and 20,000 wounded are young men and women pulled off the factory and shop floors and told that they should defend their country from a threat that proved to be nonexistent.
More than half of those killed were under the age of 24. Many enlisted because the policies of the Bush administration destroyed their chances for a college education or a viable economic future. The armed services seemed like a way out of a life where the minimum wage remains at $5.15 an hour and unemployment is rampant for young men without a college degree.


A new study from the nonpartisan National Priorities Project has calculated the cost of the Iraq war at $1,075 for every American or $2,844 for every household. The calculations are based on a Congressional Research Service June 2006 report, which put the total cost of the war at $318.5 billion.
The money for the war is being spent at a rate $10 million per hour and $244 million per day, according to NPP.


From a second study:
With these costs included, the Stiglitz Study puts the direct cash cost of the war at $750 billion to $1.2 trillion. This amount is based on the assumption that the Bush administration will begin to withdraw troops in 2006 and continue to decrease military operations over the next five years, an optimistic view.
The study notes that including these costs still do not provide a total picture of the real economic impact of the war.
It reports that official accounts of the cost disguise the real economic impact. For example, the military quantifies the value of each lost life as the amount it pays in death benefits and life insurance payments to survivors. To boost recruitment, the death benefit was recently increased from $12,240 to $100,000, and the life insurance benefit was increased from $250,00 to $500,000.
The military does not include loss of the income that each soldier would have earned or other contributions that the soldier would have made to the economy and society.

These studies only cover the effect on our Countries personal costs and economy, lets not forget the devestating costs to the Country of Iraq and it's citizens!

This report closes with the following:
The Stiglitz Study reminds us that before the war began, Larry Lindsey, Bush’s economic advisor, estimated that the cost of the war might be as much as $200 billion, which the White House called a gross overestimation. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz claimed that Iraq could finance its own reconstruction, and the Bush administration announced that the war would be short, with few casualties.


Keep in mind who Actually Fights, Dies, and are Maimed in these Contrived Conflicts:
Wages
$2.10 for Minimum Wage Workers, Billions for the Ultra-Rich (August 2, 2006)
If anyone ever doubted that the Republican Party is the party of the rich, working tirelessly to make themselves richer off the labor of American workers, those doubts were erased as Republicans moved into action in the final days of the Congressional debate over the federal minimum wage.

A host of reports on Labors Costs of this War can be found online, below are but a few, keeping in mind the Costs in Lost Lives and the Physical, Mental losses for many who serve and fight these Conflicts Based On Lies of those who won't!
US Labor Against the War : Iraq War Costs Now Exceed Vietnam's
The U.S. Treasury is paying out more each month to sustain the war in Iraq than it did during the Vietnam War, according to a new report that calls the ongoing conflict "the most expensive military effort in the last 60 years".


LMV - Labor's Militant Voice
The invasion of Iraq by the US government and its corporate backers, otherwise known as US Imperialism, has being going on now for over three years. The real purpose of the war was and is for the US corporations to get a tighter grip on the Middle East, especially with the oil there, put down deeper roots through more US bases in the Middle East and Central Asia and in this way increase their efforts to encircle China. Every day the US corporation's own propaganda media fill peoples head with lies as to the real reason for the invasion of Iraq. We must not be fooled.


Michael Roberts: War, Debts and Deficits
As soon as it became clear that the US-UK war against Iraq was on, stock markets around the world rocketed upwards by as much as 20% and the price for a barrel of crude oil fell back sharply. Capitalism was convinced that the overwhelming firepower of the US military backed up by the more puny forces of the British army would quickly overwhelm the Iraqi army, which would melt away or even hand over Saddam in a coup. The war would be over by Easter at the latest and maybe a lot earlier.


WHO DIES : US Civilians
Why Labor Should Oppose the War.
U.S. Labor Against The War has produced a useful one-page fact sheet that makes a sharp, compelling case against the war.

Friday, September 01, 2006

Fascist Appeasers

William Rivers Pitt | Fascist Appeasers


"I am no appeaser of fascism, for I have fought this administration at every step. Millions have done the same, and will continue to do so. To stand in opposition to this new type of fascism, embodied in the hypocrisies and lies of men like Rumsfeld and Bush, is as much our patriotic duty as the time I spent in that jury room," writes William Rivers Pitt.



All I have is a voice
To undo the folded lie,
The romantic lie in the brain
Of the sensual man-in-the-street
And the lie of Authority
Whose buildings grope the sky:
There is no such thing as the State
And no one exists alone;
Hunger allows no choice
To the citizen or the police;
We must love one another or die.


- W.H. Auden, "September 1, 1939"



DEAD

Star Tribune: Sack

Killing in the Name of Democracy


By James Bovard

The U.S. government's first experience with forcibly spreading
democracy came in the wake of the Spanish-American War. When the
U.S.
government declared war on Spain in 1898, it pledged it would not
annex foreign territory. But after a swift victory, the United
States
annexed all of the Philippines.

Thursday, August 31, 2006

Chicks vs. Daniels

Having been rained out of work I happened to catch this Diary, Charlie Daniels calls for war on opposition
by FreeTradeIsYourEpitaph
This morning.

Shortly after reading it I heard the below report from 'Morning Edition' on NPR;

Dixie Chicks Summer Tour Not All Smooth Sailing
by Craig Havighurst

Morning Edition, August 31, 2006 · It's been more than three years since one of the Dixie Chicks told a London audience that she was "ashamed" President Bush was from the group's home state of Texas. Some predicted the group would suffer long-term consequences because of the comment. Now their summer tour is coming up short in some cities. Craig Havighurst of Nashville Public Radio reports.


Chris Willman, who speaks on the report has the following book out:
Rednecks & Bluenecks: The Politics of Country Music
by Chris Willman

Take a vist over to the site and listen in.

I'm not a big fan of Country, I am a fan of Good Music by Real Musicians, not canned music produced by marketers hyping what otherwise wouldn't be.

I was a fan of Daniels, and other Country singers, years back. But most of them, Daniels included, lost me long ago with their rethoric and lack of new material {even stopped listening to their older stuff, which I had enjoyed}. And much of Country today is just what I describe above, Canned Music, for the quick buck.
The 'Chicks', on the other hand, are the type of Real Musical Artists, that come out of all forms of music, that have a Sound and Feeling in their songs that just graps hold and makes you want to hear more, and hope they will keep producing their Art without loosing that Heartfelt Feeling that they are putting into most of their songs, Real Musical Artists!

I find myself on Daniels, and the others out of my generation, knowing All that happened as to the War, myself and thousands of others served in, Disgusted that they Could and Would Support what this Administration and Republican Controlled Congress have done to this Present Generation, as to Iraq, and this Country as a whole on way to many fronts, Especially as to the Warmongering 'In Our Names'!!


To Fight Back at least follow what is reported below that will be taking place in DC. Listen to the Press Conferance, Read about it, Attend if you can {this one I'm going to be unable to attend, sadly}, find anything you can about what will be coming out of this 'GrassRoots Movement Action', Get Involved In aking Back Your Country!

VIDEO: Announcement of Camp Democracy
By David Swanson
We held a press conference on August 29, 2006, to announce Camp Democracy. It aired on C-Span. The Associated Press wrote an article. PoliticsTV.com filmed the event, and has posted the one-hour video. The advisory that we sent to the media prior to the event has more information.



And for you all who are having a hell of a time keeping track of the Lies, as I often find myself scratching my head, there are Just Too Many, MoJo has put together their 'TimeLine-Lie by Lie' and continuing to update. Take a visit over to clear your head as it's spun on and off over these last few Destructive Years!


Lie by Lie;Chronicle of a War Foretold: August 1990 to March 2003

The first drafts of history are fragmentary. Important revelations arrive late, and out of order. In this timeline, we’ve assembled the history of the Iraq War to create a resource we hope will help resolve open questions of the Bush era. What did our leaders know and when did they know it? And, perhaps just as important, what red flags did we miss, and how could we have missed them? This is the first installment in our Iraq War timeline project.


Visit Mother Jones at the link above for the Timeline and continue the visits, or sign up to receive their E-News Letters, as they Update this timeline of Lie by Lie.

Lie by Lie:

Chronicle of a War Foretold: August 1990 to March 2003


The first drafts of history are fragmentary. Important revelations arrive late, and out of order. In this timeline, we’ve assembled the history of the Iraq War to create a resource we hope will help resolve open questions of the Bush era. What did our leaders know and when did they know it? And, perhaps just as important, what red flags did we miss, and how could we have missed them? This is the first installment in our Iraq War timeline project.


Visit Mother Jones at the link above for the Timeline and continue the visits, or sign up to receive their E-News Letters, as they Update this timeline of Lie by Lie.

VIDEO: Announcement of Camp Democracy

By David Swanson
We held a press conference on August 29, 2006, to announce Camp Democracy. It aired on C-Span. The Associated Press wrote an article. PoliticsTV.com filmed the event, and has posted the one-hour video. The advisory that we sent to the media prior to the event has more information.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

rummy TakeDown

Keith Olbermann Blasts the rummy


Commentary Response on the 'rummies' Facist Remarks! An Employee {the Real Facist} Of The People Calling The People 'Facists'!!


Keith Olbermann
"That, about which Mr. Rumsfeld is confused is simply this: This is a Democracy. Still. Sometimes just barely.

And, as such, all voices count -- not just his.

Had he or his president perhaps proven any of their prior claims of omniscience -- about Osama Bin Laden's plans five years ago, about Saddam Hussein's weapons four years ago, about Hurricane Katrina's impact one year ago -- we all might be able to swallow hard, and accept their "omniscience" as a bearable, even useful recipe, of fact, plus ego.

But, to date, this government has proved little besides its own arrogance, and its own hubris."

Saving the Arctic Refuge

Robert Redford on Saving the Arctic Refuge


From NRDC Action Fund - The Bush Administration wants to let oil companies destroy the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for the sake of one penny per gallon at the pump. Watch Robert Redford's video about America's greatest birthing ground for wolves, caribou and polar bears. Then, speak out in defense of the Arctic Refuge by going to NRDC Action Fund and sending a message to your two U.S. senators.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Impeachment Wisconsin 30-31 August 2006



A BEAUTIFUL DRIVE THROUGH AMERICA’S DAIRY LAND

See the cows. See the corn. See the citizens working to impeach George Bush.

The White Rose bus is on its way from California to Washington, D.C. Pat Tate, the president of VFP #116 has to be at Camp Democracy on 5 September for a reunion with Cindy Sheehan. You might remember that Cindy rode the VFP Impeachment Tour bus to Crawford, Texas last year to camp in a ditch and ask “What noble cause.”

But before that happens the Veterans for Peace Impeachment Tour will traverse Wisconsin, once the home of “Fighting Bob” LaFollette the famous progressive politician from the turn of the previous century. The bus will visit a number of gems of Wisconsin civic life to recognize the citizens for their stalwart work for peace and justice.

These citizens of small town, small city Wisconsin have been working hard to impeach George Bush and to bring the troops home. They didn’t wait for anyone’s permission. They didn’t need a well heeled not-for-profit to back them up. They saw wrong and set out to correct it. People from central Wisconsin have been going door to door collecting signatures to put impeachment and peace on the ballot. Wisconsin is a state with direct legislation. It’s a legacy of a different era - a progressive era - and era when at least some politicians were standing up for the little guy.

Now, over a hundred years later, the sons and daughters of Wisconsin have remembered where the real power lies - with the People. And, the Veterans for Peace Impeachment Tour members want to recognize and thank these people for their service. They are serving their country and neighbor well by refusing to stay quite and stay put.

Come on out, if you can. Red Wing, Pittsville, Wisconsin Rapids, Middleton,(30 August); then Watertown, South Milwaukee and Racine (31 August).

Homeland Security - Coast Guard Issues

VIDEO: Whistleblower uses YouTube to tell his story

RAW STORY
Published: Tuesday August 29, 2006
{Link above takes you to the Raw Story Writeup}



From imispgh
Video describing serious safety and security problems with the Deepwater Program - specifically the 123 class of patrol boats. This video is factual . I created the video and posted it hoping someone with the right connections sees it and can assist me in fixing the problems. While the DHS IG is currently investigating the issues the US Coast Guard has been stonewalling and not cooperating fully. As such the investigation cannot conclude. My hope is to instill a sense of urgency..

Iraq Vet, Too Damn Bad, Take A BUS Home!!!!!!!

Iraq Vet? Take the Bus


by ilona
Mon Aug 28, 2006 at 08:56:52 PM EDT

Splendid
Welcome Home
after a year in Iraq, huh?

150 soldiers in the Massachusetts-based 220th Transportation Company , 94th Regional Readiness Command , arrived at Camp Atterbury in Indiana just after midnight Friday for demobilization, they were told they would have to take the bus home -- an 18- to 20-hour ride. Furious families of the soldiers called the office of Senator Edward M. Kennedy , a Massachusetts Democrat and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. ...

The senator dashed off a letter to Secretary of the Army Francis J. Harvey , pointing out that the Indianapolis International Airport was 38 miles from Camp Atterbury. ``With air service such a viable option, I don't believe putting these soldiers on buses for an extended overnight ride is the most appropriate way for the US Army to show its gratitude for their considerable sacrifices," Kennedy wrote.


Why were they told they'd have to hitch a ride on a bus to get home? >>>
Why were they told they'd have to hitch a ride on a bus to get home?

[Kennedy] said the soldiers were told there was not enough money to pay for their air travel home. ``This is a demobilization," he said. ``They're on their way home, they served in Iraq and to be told . . . there are not enough resources in the Defense Department budget to treat people first-class is indefensible, unwarranted, and outrageous."


Welcome back to Bush's America, boys and girls.

When Your Soldier Comes Back Home

Click here to listen or on post title.

by Martha Ann Brooks, wife of an OIF Veteran with PTSD

When your soldier comes back home
You will be happy

You want things to be like they were before
But your soldier has been forged through trial by fire
After all he lived through war
Be patient when you see he’s not the same

Your soldier’s changed
When your soldier comes back home
He will be different
He’ll think about those that gave their lives

He might be feelin guilty that he’s living
He will keep that guilt inside
It may show sometimes in things he’ll say and do
Please help him through

Chorus:
War is never over
For the ones who fought side by side
They are bruised and battered
The deepest wounds don’t show outside

You may think that time will heal
There is no healing
The days are like sandbags around him
But ghosts will not be held back by a wall
Bad memories always win
If you love him you must be the one who stays
You must be strong
When your soldier comes back home

Chorus:
War is never over
For the ones who fought side by side
They are bruised and battered
The deepest wounds don’t show outside

Story Behind the Song
Veterans often come home from war to family members who expect them to pick up where they left off. For the combat vet, that is not always possible. I wrote this song in the hope that it will help families and friends of returning veterans embrace them with understanding.

The song is currently #2 on Neil Young's website.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Katrina - One Year On!!

Just a few of the Many Reports about this Continuing Tragedy 'Within The United States Of America', or is it still the 'Good Ole USA'!!!



Katrina's Second Crisis
by Van Jones and James Rucker, TomPaine.com
Continuing conservative failures have stymied New Orleans' recovery. Here are ways to respond.


* Top Hurricane Expert Says Officials Threatened His Job Over Pre-Katrina
Warnings *

On the eve of the first anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, investigative
journalist Greg Palast reports that a top hurricane expert says government
officials threatened his job over his warnings about the impending disaster.
Listen/Watch/Read


* For Whom is New Orleans Being Rebuilt? City Demographics Radically Altered
With Many Black Residents Still Unable to Return *

A year after Hurricane Katrina hit, only about half of New Orleans'
population of 450,000 has returned. Many of those unable to come back are
poor and African-American, drastically altering the demographics of a city
that used to be two-thirds black. Investigative journalist Greg Palast
reports from New Orelans.
Listen/Watch/Read


* Common Ground Collective Continues to Bring Thousands of Volunteers From
Around the World to Gulf Coast For Post-Katrina Relief Efforts *

We speak with New Orleans community activist and co-founder of the Common
Ground Collective, Malik Rahim, about his continued relief efforts in the
Gulf Coast, the racism in the federal government's response to the disaster
and much more.
Listen/Watch/Read


Louisiana senator wants to 'punch' Bush
Posted by David DeGraw at 12:06 PM on August 27, 2006.
One year after threatening to 'literally punch' Bush over his inept response to Hurricane Katrina, Senator Mary Landrieu still has some harsh words for the administration's "lack of follow through."
One year ago, Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu was so frustrated by Bush's inept response to Hurricane Katrina that she went on national television and threatened to 'literally punch him.' Now, a year later, Landrieu is still disgusted by the administration's "lack of follow through."
In this Video Clip from ABC's This Week, she explains that only 12% of the $110 billion Katrina relief package has actually reached the people who need it most.
David DeGraw is AlterNet's video blogger.


New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina
By Mother Jones
NEWS: Full coverage of the New Orleans disaster and its aftermath


The Nation On Hurricane Katrina
One year ago this week, as Hurricane Katrina tore through the Gulf Coast, people across the country watched in horror. The scenes of destruction were bad enough, but the federal government's abdication of responsibility to the desperate citizens of New Orleans was impossible for many to forget--and to forgive. Ultimately, Katrina came to symbolize the combination of negligence, ineptitude, corruption and mendacity that has distinguished the administration of President Bush.
Each step of the way, online and in print, The Nation exposed the morally bankrupt policies and practices that compounded the costliest natural disaster in US history with a man-made crisis that continues to unfold. Unnatural Disaster: The Nation on Hurricane Katrina, published today by Nation Books, is a collection of the magazine's coverage of the storm and its aftermath.
Unnatural Disaster is not only a chronicle of what went wrong. It also highlights the pitched battle over reconstruction--in which ordinary citizens and grassroots groups have struggled mightily for a voice in their own future.
Featuring an original introduction by expatriate New Orleanian and political scientist Adolph Reed, Jr., the volume, edited by Nation executive editor Betsy Reed, includes essays, blog posts, web-only articles, and on-the-scene reporting by Naomi Klein, Jeremy Scahill, Christian Parenti, Mike Davis and Anthony Fontenot, Patricia J. Williams, Eric Alterman, Gary Younge, Alexander Cockburn, Robert Scheer, Earl Ofari Hutchinson, Katrina vanden Heuvel, Eric Foner, Curtis Wilkie, Billy Sothern, Susan Straight, William Greider, Nicholas von Hoffman, Mark Hertsgaard, Max Blumenthal, Michael T. Klare, Tom Englehardt and Nick Turse, and many others.
An invaluable compendium narrating the key moments of this crucial historical episode, Unnatural Disaster showcases some of the best non-fiction writers in America today. Click here for info and to purchase copies online.
If you missed this past weekend's RadioNation with Laura Flanders live from New Orleans, you can still listen online to interviews from the People's Hurricane Relief Fund event. Broadcast each Saturday and Sunday from 7:00 to 10:00pm EST on the Air America Radio Network, RadioNation also produces a one-hour version, which is provided free to noncommercial community and college stations.
And check out The Nation's ActNow blog for ways you can help support relief efforts and organizing toward a just reconstruction.
Finally, please visit The Nation online to read new Nation blogs, to view newsfeed links updated each day, to see when Nation writers are appearing on TV and radio, to get info on nationwide activist campaigns, and to read exclusive online reports and special weekly selections from The Nation magazine!

Best Regards,
Peter Rothberg,
The Nation

P.S. If you like what you read at TheNation.com, please consider subscribing to The Nation at a sharply discounted rate. Subscribing is the only way to read ALL of what's in the magazine week after week--both in print and online.


Schieffer on Katrina:

Hezbollah more efficient than Bush admin

On Face the Nation, Bob Schieffer rips the Bush administration by suggesting that Hezbollah's effort to help war victims is more effective than Bush's ability to help Katrina victims.


Transcript:


"Arrogance is galling enough, but it was the next story by [CBS news correspondent] Allen Pizzey that really set me off. He reported that Hezbollah agents are on the streets of Southern Lebanon handing out U.S. dollars to people whose homes were bombed out.


One year after Katrina and we can't figure out how to get money to people who lost their homes in New Orleans, we're still not sure if it can survive another hurricane but a terrorist group has figured out how to get American money to the homeless in Lebanon?


Talk about threats to national security – how about government so big, so complicated and so unmanageable, it can't get out of its own way?


That's what scares me."

Watch The Video HERE

Sunday, August 27, 2006

"Israel" - Moral, Political, Psychiatric Free Fall

Soldiers' Families Question Rumsfeld on Deployment

The wives of soldiers whose duty in Iraq was extended to add troop strength to Baghdad peppered US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld with tough questions, some that he could not answer, at a closed-door meeting in Alaska on Saturday.

*****

Robin Morgan | Manhood and Moral Waivers

Her birthday is August 19, her death day March 12. We cannot let this crime, too, pass into oblivion. When news surfaced that GIs allegedly stalked, terrorized, gang-raped, and killed an Iraqi woman, the US tried minimizing this latest atrocity by our troops-claiming the victim was age 25 or even 50, implying a rape-murder is less horrific if the victim is an older woman.

*****

Jonathan Alter | Bush Still Blind to the Poverty

"How could George W. Bush have blown the aftermath of Katrina?" wonders Jonathan Alter. "It's not as if he lacks confidence in the power of his office."

*****

Pipelines to 9/11
Rudo de Ruijter, POACThis article is about backgrounds of the US war against Afghanistan. It is about oil, gas and pipelines around the Caspian Sea. To transport oil and gas from the east side of the Caspian Sea, pipelines had been planned through Afghanistan. Because a US company, UNOCAL, failed to control the Afghan route, the war was prepared. When the military was ready to strike, the terrorists of 9/11 gave Bush the pretext to start this war and obtain support from Congress, the U.S. pop! ulation and the rest of the world...
Read the full article / Leggi l'articolo completo

*****

Civilian Casualties of War

NATO pilots accused of killing Afghan children
Nato pilots have been accused of killing 13 Afghan civilians, including nine children, during an attack close to the British base at Musa Kala in Helmand province.

*****

Palistinians, and the rest of the People of the area, Have A Voice Also, That Isn't Heard Listened To!! With the recent Devestation 'Who Is Wanting To Drive Whom Into The Sea??'!!!

Zionist state of "Israel" seems to be in moral, political, and psychiatric free fall
PalestineFreeVoice"Israel's" goals in Palestine and Lebanon are inherently irrational. They, argues Issa Khalaf*, represent a distorted rationalisation of power and create the conditions for consequences that "Israel" cannot control. As we witness the unfolding spectacle of ferocious, indiscriminate violence, destruction, and brutality in Gaza and Lebanon, it's difficult to resist the conclusion that there is something terribly ! wrong with the "Israeli" state and society. It's as though all moral and psychological constraints and boundaries have been breached, deviancy normalised...
Read the full article / Leggi l'articolo completo

Nuclear Weapons and Diplomacy

Jan Barry Newsletter



Having invaded Afghanistan and Iraq, the Bush Administration has its
sights set on Iran. That has prompted a protest by former U.S. military
commanders, who called instead for a diplomatic offensive.

"As former military leaders and foreign policy officials, we call on the
Bush Administration to engage immediately in direct talks with the
government of Iran without preconditions to help resolve the current
crisis in the Middle East and settle differences over the Iranian nuclear
program,” said 22 retired generals, admirals and diplomats in a recent
statement amid renewed fighting by Israelis and Muslims in Lebanon that
Bush officials blamed on meddling by Iran.

"We strongly caution against any consideration of the use of military
force against Iran. The current crisis must be resolved through diplomacy,
not military action. An attack on Iran would have disastrous consequences
for security in the region and the U.S. forces in Iraq, and it would
inflame hatred and violence in the Middle East and among Muslims
everywhere,” the former officials continued.

The latest saber rattling at the White House is aimed at forcing Iran’s
government to stop backing militant Islamic groups and manufacturing
nuclear power plant fuel that could also power nuclear weapons. Nothing,
however, was said about addressing the potentially catastrophic dangers of
nuclear-armed arsenals in India, Pakistan, China, Israel, France, Great
Britain, Russia and the United States.

For those who remember ducking and covering under classroom desks or in
school hallways in the event of nuclear war, threatening to go to war over
nuclear weapons may be a jolting return to the past.

For most of my life, including air raid drills in school, military service
during the Cuban Missile Crisis and with an Army unit in Vietnam, the
greatest national security threat to the United States was the doomsday
possibility of nuclear war with the Soviet Union. That threat ultimately
was dissolved through a combination of military containment and dead
serious diplomacy.

We are alive today because previous presidents chose diplomatic action to
keep military actions from triggering nuclear war. It is what ultimately
ended the nuclear stand off with what is now the former Soviet Union.
Decades of military threats did not budge the Soviets. Resolving the
threat of nuclear war, however, allowed a transformation that had been
unimaginable—the virtually peaceful dissolution of the Soviet Union into a
number of smaller, less hostile nations.

As a veteran of military actions and peace actions, I was as astounded as
anyone when the Cold War abruptly began to dissolve. I got a glimpse
during a trip to the Soviet Union with a group of New Jersey residents on
a citizen exchange mission in 1986, at a time when the U.S. and USSR were
expelling each other’s diplomats and yet again rattling nuclear weapons.
Everywhere we traveled in Russia, Estonia and Soviet Georgia we ran into
other Americans from communities across our nation working to make peace
with Soviet citizens at the grassroots level. Back in our hometowns, our
neighbors helped host an influx of Soviet visitors invited to see how
Americans live.

This process was called citizen diplomacy. At the State Department, it was
called “track two” diplomacy, meaning it was in addition to government
approaches. Embraced by the Reagan Administration as part of a wide scale
diplomatic approach to the Soviet Union, this change in policy prompted
historic agreements with the Soviets that swiftly ended the Cold War.

The Cold War has been succeeded by a furious clash between militant
Muslims and a military-mobilized America. One general at the Pentagon
predicted that the U.S. “war on terrorism” could go on for 30 years. A
number of retired generals and admirals contend that this is the wrong
approach. They maintain that this deadly dispute could be addressed much
more effectively, utilizing lessons from the Cold War.

Retired Marine General Joseph Hoar, a former commander of U.S. forces in
the Middle East, recently told news reporters “we have used a slogan, ‘the
war on terror,’ to describe the dynamic of what is existent now in the
Middle East, and if we're not careful, is going to spread throughout the
world. This whole idea of taking terror, which is a technique, and turning
it into a slogan, has caused us not to think about root problems here.”
Hoar, an outspoken critic of the war in Iraq, called for diplomatic
actions, rather than counter-productive military missions.

Americans could help make historic change, these experienced military
commanders contend, by reaching out to Islamic societies and undertaking
the diplomatic actions that ended Cold War hostilities. To do that would
mean changing U.S. military actions into real peacemaking missions and
mobilizing American civic groups.

People-to-people outreach was an idea fostered by President
Eisenhower—another general who sought workable international solutions
rather than wage war in the Middle East. Numerous American communities
have organized sister-city ties with cities around the world, hosted
exchanges of students and adults of all sorts, assisted overseas
communities ravaged by war or natural disasters, and demonstrated the
benefits of civic action. That is what impressed the Soviets and helped
make the Cold War diplomatic campaign work.

As the Reagan Administration discovered, an America mobilized for
diplomacy can be a powerful force for peaceful change.

The Mosquitoes

From: Dennis Serdel
To: GI Special
Sent: August 25, 2006
Subject: The Mosquitoes by Dennis

[Written by Dennis Serdel, Vietnam 1967-68 (one tour) Light Infantry, Americal Div. 11th Brigade, purple heart, Veterans For Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against The War, United Auto Workers GM Retiree, in Perry, Michigan]

The Mosquitoes

"Sometimes I think my religion just makes it easier to die,"

Pat commented to his buddy Al who popped another beer open.

They were deep into the Vietnam jungle and after looking around,
he took a sip. Al didn't carry C-rations, extra socks or any of that,
just ammo and beer.

Pat began again, "I mean, they're saying
if I lead a good life that when I die, I'll live forever. Christ,
how can I live a good life here, I mean, I already made
my mistakes Al, you know that."

Al brushed away in the half dark
what felt like a million mosquitoes flying around his face,
so thick that sometimes he would breathe in one through his nose
or mouth or it would fly in his eye.

The silence and pain diving in and out of his ears.
Pat reflected again, "I mean, I hear they tell Charlie that he will go
straight to Buddha heaven when he dies fighting for his country.

And that sounds right Al,
but what the fuck are we fighting for?

I mean, Charlie's trying to kill us, the Vietnamese hate us,
why are we here ?

Al just shook his head, it was unclear if he was commenting
or shaking off mosquitoes.

"I mean, if I'm going to live life everlasting,
what's this thing inside me that doesn't want to die. This fear, I mean, what am I afraid of ?"

Al just shook his head again.

Later when it was so dark that they could not see each other,
Pat heard the sound of a beer popping and the fizz
and he knew Al was still awake
and on guard.

bush Legacy & The 'American Taliban'




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Mardi Gras From Hell



From melfeasance
On the first anniversary of Katrina, I offer this tribute to the tens of thousands of victims. The movie features images I pieced together using national news photos to illuminate the actual, unaltered utterances of George W. Bush & Co.



Forgotten Communities, Unmet Promises:

An unfolding tragedy on the Gulf Coast
Briefing Paper


Published: August 2006

Download this publication (PDF, 2.1 MB)


20/20 Webcast: Katrina Insurance Fraud


Sisters blew whistle on Katrina claims

Richard "Dickie" Scruggs, a prominent lawyer of tobacco litigation fame, created a stir by announcing in March that two "insiders" were helping him build cases against insurers for denying claims for Hurricane Katrina losses. Their identities remained a mystery until the day in early June when Cori and Kerri Rigsby — employees of a company that contracted with State Farm — told a supervisor they were cooperating with Scruggs.

That startling admission — and their subsequent resignations — ended a risky charade. The Rigsbys say they spent months collecting reams of internal State Farm reports, memos, e-mails and claims records before they gave them to Scruggs and state and federal authorities.