Saturday, October 28, 2006

The True Meaning of Yellow Ribbons



Freeway Blogger


PDF download here.


Getting Waterboarded

Kaj Larsen investigates the practice of waterboarding, an interrogation practice allegedly used by the U.S. government. Is it a legitimate technique or torture?



Current TV


I can honestly tell anyone, Don't Try This, unless you take proper precausions, and than some!
I received it during S.E.R.E. Training, before going to Vietnam, and even though you know they won't let you die{?}, or aren't suposed to, it can be an extremely troubling experiance you don't forget!
And it should Not be used as a Torture Tactic by a Country that Supposedly Condemns Violations on Human Rights!

"The Saints Are Coming"

U2 and Green Day "The Saints Are Coming" video




ARMAGEDDON ON YOUR MIND

Excellent music vid, from Crappco

Friday, October 27, 2006

White House Fence Jumper Speaks

Iraq War Veteran


Until They All Come Home

The Reflection Of The Living In The Dead



A peacemaker's reflection is seen in the
gravestone of the dead.

You demonstrate because the living must speak for the dead.

You speak, because you cannot not speak.

You march until it becomes a movement.

You march until paper covers the rock of
war.

You are relentless, until there are no
more dead.

You march.

You march...

Mike Hastie
Vietnam Veteran
October 23, 2006

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Runaway

No Need To say More:


Clinton Got A BJ

This is Good, especially if you listened to song downthread:


Wednesday, October 25, 2006

"Catch a Fire"

Catch a Fire



Derek Luke and Tim Robbins
in "Catch a Fire."
© Universal Studios



Amnesty International USA is proud to announce its support of the film Catch a Fire. Starring Derek Luke, Tim Robbins and Bonnie Henna, Catch a Fire is directed by Phillip Noyce and produced by Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Anthony Minghella and Robyn Slovo based on an original screenplay by Shawn Slovo. Sydney Pollack, Debra Hayward and Liza Chasin are the executive producers.
About this film

A political thriller based on the true story of Patrick Chamusso, an ordinary man forced to resort to terror in extraordinary circumstances. It is the story of one man's struggle amongst a nation's, set in a divided South Africa in the nineteen eighties, climaxing in the present day.

Read the production notes: PDF »


Watch Trailer

Reason for pResident Press Conf Today

But first some Fun:

Dave has this up over at AfterDowningStreet, it would make a GREAT Flash Video Presentation, any takers, I'm Pooped!!

Clinton Got A BJ Post

This is the song of the year, and you should have heard the group sing-a-long of it at Camp Democracy: Listen Here: Clinton Got a Blow Job


Now to the reason:

"Appeal For Redress"

Service members press Congress to end occupation in Iraq

ATLANTA Active duty service members, including one from Atlanta, are using the military whistle-blower protection act to urge Congress to end the U-S occupation of Iraq and bring American soldiers home.
Jonathan Hutto of Atlanta, a Navy seaman based in Norfolk, Virginia, says the idea to appeal for redress originated in January when he was deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom when one of his friends suggested he read the book "Soldiers in Revolt." It chronicled opposition to the Vietnam War by active duty military and how they appealed to their congressmen to end the conflict and bring the troops home.
Speaking in a conference call with an attorney and two other active members of the military, Hutto said that many soldiers have reservations about their orders and feel compelled to let their feelings be known.
Hutto says 65 service members from multiple branches of the military initially decided to file their appeal, a number that had grown to 219 at the start of today's conference call.
Hutto urged any member of the military who wished to join the movement to go to the Web site Appeal For Redress
The web site's wording for the appeal says -- quote -- "As a patriotic American proud to serve the nation in uniform, I respectfully urge my political leaders in Congress to support the prompt withdrawal of all American military forces and bases from Iraq. Staying in Iraq will not work and is not worth the price. It is time for U-S troops to come home."
Hutto says the service members are not pacifists nor conscientious objectors and they don't advocate doing anything illegal.
Hutto says that under the military whistle-blower protection act, service members have a right to send an appeal to Congress person without reprisal.


The Idiot wanted to Squash this with his own noise and jibberish jabber!!

Folks the Number is growing, and these Active Duty Troops are going to need All the Help They Deserve, FIGHT FOR THEM!!!!

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

PBS News Hour - Iraq

*Deadly Month in Iraq Bolsters Calls for Withdrawal

Eighty-six U.S. soldiers died in Iraq in October, making it one of the war's
deadliest months. Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies considers a
withdrawal of U.S. troops in this first part of a series on Iraq views.



*Plan Floated to Divide Iraq Along Ethnic Lines

As the debate continues over the United States' next steps in Iraq, some
proposals have called for sectioning the country along ethnic lines. The
NewsHour presents the next report in a series about Iraq views.

The October Surprises

The Unger Report
By Brian Unger
A Menu of GOP Tricks for an October Surprise



Day to Day, October 23, 2006 · An "October Surprise" is political-speak for an event that can change voters' minds just before they go to the polls. Humorist Brian Unger offers Republicans worried about losing control of Congress a menu of October Surprises to choose from.

P.O.V. on PBS Tomorrow Night!!

PBS Television
P.O.V.:

My Country, My Country:

Wednesday, October 25, 2006, 9:00 PM

"My Country, My Country" is an unforgettable journey into the heart of war-ravaged Iraq in the months leading up to the January 2005 elections. Symbolized by fingers marked with purple ink, the 2005 elections posed challenges to all sides of the debate about the war. | Read the synopsis »

"There's a war going on. A lot of people have died, a lot of people will continue to die and this is a war that was started by my country. I felt that my life wasn't any more valuable or precious than anyone else's; it was worth taking that risk to tell this story."
—Laura Poitras

Monday, October 23, 2006

Active Troops to Congress: "End Iraq Occupation"

Monday, October 23, 2006



Active troops ask congress to end Iraqi occupation


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sixty five active duty service members are officially asking Congress to end the war in Iraq -- the first time active troops have done so since U.S. invasion began in 2003.

Three of the service members will hold a press conference Wednesday explaining their decision to send "Appeals for Redress" under the Military Whistleblower Protection Act to their members of Congress. Under the act, National Guard and Reservists can send communications about any subject to their member of Congress without punishment.


Here's the Press Release





Employment - Veterans -Employee Redress and Appeals for Federal Government Employment Actions

Veterans who are federal government employees have certain rights of appeal and redress when they are aggrieved by governmental actions. The avenues available to them, however, depend upon the type of governmental action involved, such as adverse employment actions, reductions in force, actions relating to restorations, and actions violating statutory or regulatory protections.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

'AMERICAN LIE'

The Long-Awaited Sequel to 'American Pie'


The following updated 21st century version of Don McLean’s 1972 song American Pie was sent to me by Brother Mark Hartford a member of Veterans for Peace (VFP), Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW), and Korean DMZ War Vet. Lyrics re-written By Don Davis to the original melody American Pie by Don McLean (#1 Record on the charts in 1972)


You can read the New Lyrics Here and humm along, I know you will!!

Just One of 2,787 and Growing

The following was 'the' above the fold front page article in the Saturday Charlotte Observer
Grieving family views life in shades of Gray
Beloved son. Brave fighter. One of 2,787 dead.
The first thought I had was "Why Saturday and not Tomorrows?"!
This is the Lead article for today, Sunday, Charlotte Observer:
Pageants: 'Miss Paula' is N.C.'s Queen Maker
I don't get the sunday observer and didn't see the front page yet, but the above is the lead off online article, and I'll bet a front page article if not 'the' above the fold.


COURTESY OF THE COCKERHAM FAMILY
"The armed forces ... afford us the luxury to squabble, sit here and live everyday lives. My son gave his life so that everyone else could have that trivial existence." Ben Cockerham, father of Gray Cockerham (above), who was killed in Iraq Oct. 21, 2005


This leads off the article:
Today, Gray Cockerham's family will visit him at the only place they can, the address etched in their memory: Section 60, headstone 8290, Arlington National Cemetery.


Gray's father makes this observation, a true Marine would believe, but you know that in his heart and mind that isn't what really should be, as the above statement, below the photo, is his and the rest of the article attests to.
"War is inevitable, and there has to be someone with the guts to fight it," said Ben, 46, a former Marine himself. The Cockerhams didn't want to discuss their politics. Marines, he said, fight for their country, not a political party.

The last sentence, above, is a reality as most are a-political, be they Marines, Army, Navy, or Air Force.

Excerpts from an essay by Ben Cockerham
About Arlington National Cemetery
Guest book: Offer your condolences

Cpl. Benny Gray Cockerham III, known to everyone as Gray, was in constant motion from the time he was a baby, never able to sit still, always ready to throw himself into outdoor activity, the more challenging the better.
He snowboarded, wakeboarded, Jet Skied, hunted, fished, played paintball and ran and dove across the field as an all-region forward on the St. Stephens High School soccer team.


The change came from serving in the Hell on Earth of War:
But he returned from his first tour of duty a different man. Wounded by a mortar round in the battle of Fallujah in April 2004, and awarded a Purple Heart, he seemed older in appearance, outlook and demeanor.
He became closer to his family, more patient and easygoing. One day, Jill noticed Gray standing in the driveway, staring at the sky. "What are you doing?" she asked. "Looking at the clouds," he replied. "You don't see clouds in Iraq."


The night before Gray left for his second tour of duty, in July 2005, he planned his own funeral. I want it done exactly like I said, he told his father.
"Tell everyone in the family I love them," Gray said when he phoned Jill on Oct. 18, 2005, promising to call back the following Sunday.
Three days later, at about 9:30 p.m., Ben and Jill were coming home from a Hickory restaurant and noticed a white van in their driveway. "Who drives a white van?" they wondered.


Than the 'Visit':
The Marines stepped from the van. "We regret to inform you there was an explosion," they said. Gray was missing. Recovery operations were under way.
Ben knew what the military language meant. Jill held out hope. If anyone could have made it, she thought, Gray would have.
On Monday night, the Marines phoned. Gray had been found in a canal next to the road.

Gray's body was flown to Arlington, outside Washington, from Charlotte/Douglas airport. "The hardest thing I've ever had to do," Ben said, "is watch my child lifted on a forklift, in a crane, and put on an airplane."


Visiting their son and others sons and daughters, ever growing numbers in these times:
Each time they make the trip, they notice that the rows of tombstones have grown.
Gray was killed that October day with three other men, two of whom -- Chris Thompson, 25, of Millers Creek, outside Wilkesboro, and Kenneth Butler, 19, of Landis -- were from N.C. towns about an hour apart.
Staff Sgt. Jason Ramseyer, 28, of Lenoir, who was killed by a roadside bomb in April, lies about 10 graves away. His birthday: Oct. 21.
Ben is both proud and remorseful about the way his son died. Jill feels differently but declines to elaborate.


In this country, we concern ourselves with who won the football game, Ben said. We drive down the road talking on our cell phones. We have televisions and cars and nice homes. We worry about the lyrics to rap songs.
"All this other stuff seems so trivial, and the reason it feels trivial is that the armed forces let it be trivial, afford us the luxury to squabble, sit here and live everyday lives," Ben said. "My son gave his life so that everyone else could have that trivial existence."


Earlier this month, Ben was in a restaurant where the TV was tuned to CNN. The announcer mentioned that three Marines had been killed in Iraq. "No one even stopped their conversations," Ben said. "It's a non-event for them. It's like there was a train wreck in Siberia."


The family has made a long planned move to a new home, another city:
At their new home, the Cockerhams no longer imagine seeing the white van in the driveway, as they had every day since last Oct. 21. They do not run into people in town who look at them like they don't know what to say.


The article ends with this:
Adam, now 18 and a college freshman, has asked, "How much longer before our house gets back to normal?"
Jill has a reply. "I don't think it ever will."


We have a Nation who like to think of themselves as the Most Powerful and Above All Others that share this planet! We have a Nation that Argue about who is More Responsible as to the Security of same! We have a political party that prides{?} itself on being the leader of that concern of Security, of who's leaders were asleep at the wheel on 9/11 and Katrina! We have a Nation with Huge Defense and Intelligence Budgets that very few Question where those monies Actually Go, we just buy the fact that the More Spent the Better our Security and Safety! While we have World Policies that just plain Piss People Off who are on the other end of those Policies, causing a Less Secure Existance of Security and Safety!
We also have a majority in this Nation, while spending those Huge Defense and Inteligence Budgets questions unasked political party makes no differance, pay little heed to the Budget of the VA even while invading other countries and creating New Generations of Combat Veterans in need of Care as well as their Family Members!
The following Should Not Be Happening:

'Gold Star Families' NOT Receiving Grief Counseling!!
Military spouses seek more grief counseling
America's Gold Star Wives want widows and widowers to get help - free of charge.
October 11, 2006
For more than two years now, Suzanne Stack has been living with the reality that her husband won't be coming home. That he was killed in Iraq. That their three young children - until very recently - have been unable to talk about their father without breaking down. And still, "I don't really fully understand the whole grief process," she said.


We as a Nation Create Wars, than we Ignore the results of same. Why{?}. you might ask; Because It Costs To Give The Care Needed, and in our Materialistic Society That Cost Is Just Too Much!
Tricare, which oversees health care coverage for military families, doesn't cover extended grief counseling for military families unless they are diagnosed with a mental disorder, like depression.


We all should be asking these questions:
But some women with Gold Star Wives of America are asking why a grieving parent should have to claim that his or her child has a mental disorder to get them a professional to talk to when they're understandably, even naturally, bereaved.


In this Election year, with Unnessesary War Waging, ask those Running for Political Jobs 'We Hire Them For' if they will join, not only the Gold Star Wives, but Everything that needs to be done for the Military and their Families, and Fight Hard for the issues that We Must Pay For!
The Gold Star Wives, a nonprofit organization for military widows, is beginning a campaign to get some sort of grief counseling added to the benefits covered under Tricare.

While the 10,000-member group hasn't formally started lobbying legislators in Washington, it has begun to gather supporters for the cause.

Late last month, Rose Lee, the Gold Star Wives' chairwoman for government relations, testified before the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, saying, "Mental health is an issue affecting widows and children. I'm hearing from new widows more and more. Vet centers provide counseling, but it's not always nearby. And Tricare doesn't provide grief counseling."


Part of the problem, though, is that in medical terms grief isn't considered an illness.

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, which both military and civilian clinicians use to identify an illness, includes everything from Alzheimer's and alcohol-induced sleep disorder to anxiety and social phobia. Grief is not listed.


And making a hard situation even harder, she said, some families aren't getting their loved ones' entire bodies back to bury. Stack was at least able to see her husband's body.

That didn't make seeing a coffin any easier for the three of their six children still living at home. The younger kids were 3, 5 and 7 years old at the time.

"It was a very tough age. They don't really understand death. They don't really understand war. When you combine the two, it's a very difficult conversation to have."


"I get therapy from getting up every day and getting my kids going and hearing their laughter. I'm trying ... to give them the best I can give them, to raise them the way we had talked about, and to give them the love that both of us would have."


Help the 'Gold Star Widows' , the 'Gold Star Mothers' and the 'Gold Star Families'!
We created the situation that has made them members of these Exclusive Groups, none would choose to join otherwise!

Be Careful What You Say

Greg Palast video Homage



Just a hint: Before you export Democracy, try having it at home!
You're not stupid, they just talk to you that way!

Iraq

The Real Story


Sean Smith, the Guardian's award-winning war photographer, spent nearly six weeks with the 101st Division of the US army in Iraq. Watch his haunting observational film that explodes the myth around the claims that the Iraqis are preparing to take control of their own country.


Click HERE To Watch The Video, or Above Link