Elmer's Brother

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2005/6/29

Not a Retooling

@ 04:50 PM (34 months, 27 days ago)

Hugh Hewitt is all over this....throwing the Libs under the bus and then running them over!!!

Gitmo Flip-Flop

@ 04:47 PM (34 months, 27 days ago)

Gitmo Flip-Flop
A Muslim cleric formerly held at Guantanamo Bay prison said Tuesday that U.S. guards there regularly desecrated the Quran by putting it into a toilet," the Associated Press reports. But Airat Vakhitov acknowledges that "he never witnessed it himself":

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2005/6/28

Is Iraq Vietnam? Ask Those Who Know

@ 01:41 PM (34 months, 28 days ago)

Is Iraq Vietnam? Ask Those Who Know.
That Iraq is "another Vietnam" was a cliché long before the U.S.-led coalition even liberated Baghdad, but lately the drumbeat has become louder and more tired than ever. A Google News search for "Iraq" and "Vietnam" turns up more than 6,500 articles in the past month; this piece from Bloomberg News is typical:

An unreliable ally in a U.S.-led war against guerrillas, declining public support at home and lack of a coherent exit strategy: That was Vietnam 35 years ago, and it increasingly seems to fit Iraq today.

Is Iraq really similar to Vietnam? Only in the sense that some in politics and the media would like to see America lose. That is to say, much of the Vietnam talk we've been hearing is wishful thinking. As Andrew Sullivan wrote in July 2003:

There's an under-current of complete gloom in news reports that seems to me to be more fueled by ideological fervor than sober analysis. Given the magnitude and complexity of the task of rebuilding post-Saddam Iraq, it seems to me we're making slow but decent progress. The lack of a complete social implosion or exploding civil war is itself a huge achievement. And no one said the post-war reconstruction was going to be easy.

So what's behind this drumbeat of apocalypse? I think it's a good rule among boomer journalists that every story they ever edit or write or film about warfare will at some point be squeezed into a Vietnam prism.

But here's one honorable exception. Last week USA Today asked people who would actually know if Iraq is "another Vietnam": Vietnam veterans now serving in Iraq:

If there are parallels between Iraq and Vietnam, these graying soldiers and the other Vietnam veterans serving here offer a unique perspective. They say they are more optimistic this time: They see a clearer mission than in Vietnam, a more supportive public back home and an Iraqi population that seems to be growing friendlier toward Americans.

"In Vietnam, I don't think the local population ever understood that we were just there to help them," says Chief Warrant Officer James Miles, 57, of Sioux Falls, S.D., who flew UH-1H Hueys in Vietnam from February 1969 to February 1970. And the Vietcong and North Vietnamese were a tougher, more tenacious enemy, he says. Instead of setting off bombs outside the base, they'd be inside.

"I knew we were going to lose Vietnam the day I walked off the plane," says Miles, who returned home this month after nearly a year in Iraq. Not this time. "There's no doubt in my mind that this was the right thing to do," he says. . . .

1st Sgt. Patrick Olechny, 52, of Marydel, Del., an attack helicopter crew chief and door gunner in Vietnam from March 1971 to February 1972, says the most important difference to him is the attitude of the American public.

"Vietnam was an entirely different war than this one," he says. The basic job of flying helicopters is the same, but the overall mission now is clear when it wasn't then. "We thought in Vietnam we were doing the right thing, and in the end it didn't seem that way," he says.

Now, "the people in the United States respect what the soldiers are doing," says Olechny, who still fills in at the door gunner position when he can get away from his administrative duties.

Browning, recently back from two weeks of R&R in the USA, says he was overwhelmed by the reception he got stateside: More than a hundred people met the airplane to help the soldiers and wish them well. "I can't tell you what, as a Vietnam vet, that means to me," he said.

What mystifies us is why some politicians think defeatism is a winning political strategy. That didn't work last year, and it didn't work even during Vietnam.

2005/6/25

Intention, Causation, Responsibility and Culpability

@ 12:45 PM (35 months, 1 day ago)

Hugh Hewitt has a great commentary on why we are where we are today

2005/6/24

Myth Ohio

@ 11:50 AM (35 months, 2 days ago)

Remember the Internet conspiracy theories that President Bush had won Ohio -- and therefore the presidency -- through fraud? Those theories fueled a challenge to the certification of Mr. Bush's victory last January when Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer forced Congress to debate the issue when it counted the Electoral College votes.

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America--the Bully? Hardly, If you Know Your History

@ 05:53 AM (35 months, 2 days ago)

 The Politics of American Wars

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2005/6/23

Taught at Home, but Seeking to Join Activities at Public Schools

@ 10:47 AM (35 months, 3 days ago)
NY Times
June 22, 2005 By JAMES DAO

STRASBURG, Pa., June 16 - Mary Mellinger began home-schooling her eldest sons, Andrew and Abram, on the family's 80-acre dairy farm five years ago, wanting them to spend more time with their father and receive an education infused with Christian principles. Home schooling could not, however, provide one thing the boys desperately wanted - athletic competition.

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2005/6/21

Red on Red - the insurgents are turning on each other

@ 12:50 PM (35 months, 5 days ago)

'Red on Red'
Here's an interesting bit of very good news from Iraq, from the New York Times of all places (albeit buried on page 6 of the paper). It turns out the U.S. Marines "have for months been seeing a strange new trend in the already complex Iraqi insurgency." The military calls it "red on red," or enemy-on-enemy, fire:

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2005/6/20

Gitmo Cocktail

@ 03:34 PM (35 months, 6 days ago)

New York Post
June 16, 2005

By Ralph Peters
The demands to shut down our Guantanamo lock-up for terrorists have nothing to do with human rights. They're about punishing America for our power and success. From our ailing domestic left to overseas America haters, no one really cares about the fate of Mustapha the Murderer o Ahmed the Assassin. The lies told about Gitmo are meant to undercut U.S. foreign policy and embarrass America. The Gitmo controversy is about many things, from jealousy of the United States and outrage that we refuse to fail, to residual anger that we won the Cold War and exploded the left's great fantasy of a dictatorship of the intellectuals. But the one thing the protests aren't about is human rights. Except, of course, as a means to slam the United States Torture? Who and when? Koran abuse? I'd rather be a Koran in Gitmo than a Bible in Saudi Arabia. Illegal detentions? Suggest a better way to handle hardcore terrorists. Maltreatment? Spare me. The food the prisoners receive is better than what I had to eat in the Army.

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2005/6/16

Durbin Digs In

@ 03:20 PM (35 months, 10 days ago)
Best of the Web Today - June 16, 2005

    By JAMES TARANTO


    Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Senate's No. 2 Democrat, is refusing to apologize for likening U.S. servicemen to Nazis, comments we noted yesterday. Instead, as the State Journal-Register of Springfield reports, Durbin issued a statement that said, "This administration should apologize to the American people for abandoning the Geneva Conventions."

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2005/6/15

All in the Family

@ 11:54 AM (35 months, 11 days ago)

The Pruett's

2005/6/12

Fund for Truth Monger stands at $ 1 Million

@ 06:39 PM (35 months, 13 days ago)

 

Send Truth Monger to Afghanistan

Canada's health-care system

@ 06:23 PM (35 months, 14 days ago)

Who's the Fairest of Them All?
From an Associated Press story on Canada's health-care system:

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2005/6/11

TOUGH LOVE vs. SPANKING

@ 09:30 AM (35 months, 15 days ago)
Most of America's populace thinks it very improper to spank children, so I have tried other methods to control our kids when they have one of "those moments".

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2005/6/10

Amnesty International and moral idiocy

@ 02:02 PM (35 months, 16 days ago)

by Dennis Prager             

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2005/6/9

Send TruthMonger on a Mission to Afghanistan

@ 01:54 PM (35 months, 17 days ago)

    Due to a recent comment about this post by Truthmonger, I propose raising enough money to send him/her to Afghanistan so he can do some real good. Seems millions and millions of Afghans were supposed to have perished from hunger after we invaded it. This will be a mission of sorts. Seems TM is unable to raise the money himself  and I have decided out of the kindness of my heart and generosity of all those millions who read this blog to help him out. If you wish to donate let me know. I personally have set aside $1 million of the money I made from all the investments in the Iraqi oil industry (just prior to the invasion mind you) to see to it that TM gets to spend plenty of quality time helping the Afghans out. I will keep a running total and I promise to not be held accountable to some non-American citizen or entity who doesn't know what he's talking about. So donate or I'll send pictures of me in my underwear from jail.

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Who's Responsible for 9/11? You Guessed It, Conservative Christians!

@ 01:24 PM (35 months, 17 days ago)

This is from sixstringblues blog.

Who's Responsible for 9/11? You Guessed It, Conservative Christians!

Today I attended a panel discussion at ASU East with the topic being "Faith and Our Times", an attempt to bring representative religious spokespeople together and have a little, well, dialogue.

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2005/6/8

The Sound of One Hand Clapping

@ 04:08 PM (35 months, 18 days ago)

The Sound of One Hand Clapping from the Opinion Journal's Best of the Web
Our item yesterday on John Kerry*, his military records and his Yale transcript prompted this criticism from a reader:

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2005/6/7

Best of the Web - Kerry had lower grades than Bush in College

@ 01:42 PM (35 months, 19 days ago)

By JAMES TARANTO     A "C" Man in the Navy


On Jan. 30, John Kerry* told NBC's Tim Russert that he would release his full military records to the public, something he had refused to do during last year's campaign. It took 128 days, but today the Boston Globe reports that he had done so. The records revealed what many of us had suspected: Kerry served in Vietnam. But according to the Globe, "the lack of any substantive new material about Kerry's military career in the documents raises the question of why Kerry refused for so long to waive privacy restrictions."

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2005/6/6

Guards at Gitmo describe attack by detainee

@ 04:51 PM (35 months, 20 days ago)
By Guy Taylor
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published June 6, 2005

U.S. NAVAL BASE GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba -- Army "block guards" were making their daily walk through the stifling heat of the cellblocks inside the barbed wired camp here in late May.
    But after a guard discovered a dangerously sharp object hidden in the empty cell of a detainee, a violent confrontation ensued, illustrating military officials' contention that criticisms from human rights groups only tell part of the story.
    According to two Army prison guards, one 22 years old and the other 28, the prisoner was temporarily in another part of the prison for a bath when the jagged, rectangular piece of metal, three to four inches long was found and removed.
    But the two guards, who spoke in a rare interview with The Washington Times on the condition of anonymity, said an altercation then followed in which the detainee tried to gouge out one of the guards' eyes.
    After first allowing the detainee to return from his shower to the cell, a five-man team of guards then began a carefully choreographed "cell extraction" to move him to another cell, where he would not be able to do further damage. "He was extremely aggressive from the moment we went in," said the 28-year-old guard, whose job it was to "push the detainee back" as another guard quickly handcuffed the prisoner.
    Before the cuffs could go on though, things went wrong and the detainee forced his hands up under the first guard's plexiglass face mask and began digging for the eyeball. "He tried to insert one finger into my eye socket, then he transitioned into a fishhook maneuver," the guard said. "He got his finger into my mouth and was trying to rip my cheek off." After another moment, the detainee's hands were forced down and into the cuffs.
    The entire incident was videotaped, as are all cell-extraction procedures under the tight protocol with which military officials have been running the Guantanamo prison amid scrutiny and harsh criticism from human rights advocates. Senior officials here, several of whom take ongoing criticism of their performance at the prison personally, eagerly described the incident as an example of "the other side of the story" about Guantanamo, which they say deserves a closer look. "It's an extreme slap in the face to me frankly that the American public is being led to believe that we're abusing, or mistreating detainees," said Col. Michael Bumgarner, the senior officer working inside the prison camp, which holds 585 enemy combatants held on suspicion of working for the Taliban and al Qaeda. Human rights groups aggressively criticize the camp, where most of the detainees have been held more than three years without ever being told the "classified" charges against them. Most recently, Amnesty International described Guantanamo as "the gulag of our time." A classified report by the International Committee of the Red Cross, a neutral organization with access to military prisons worldwide, has described abusive interrogation techniques used on the detainees. In March, the Massachusetts-based group Physicians for Human Rights, cited "systematic psychological torture" of detainees. Last week, the Pentagon also acknowledged several incidents of Koran mishandling, although most were inadvertent and all were punished.
    The military is spending about $2.8 million to construct a psychiatric ward for mentally ill detainees.
    Buildings being constructed according to state-of-the-art standards for federal prisons will replace the existing outdoor camp. One with 100 beds opened last year, and construction on another with 220 beds is expected to start soon. The psychiatric facility is needed because about 4 percent of the detainees are on psychotropic medications for illnesses ranging from schizophrenia to manic depression, said Navy Capt. Steve Edmonson, the head doctor for detainees. "We have an ethical responsibility to provide treatment they need regardless of what they've done or what they're accused of," he said, denying the new psychiatric ward was a response to criticism by human rights groups.
    Military officials said about the late-May incident that, aside from deep scratches and bruises, neither the detainee nor any of the prison guards were seriously injured. The sharp object turned out to be a chunk of steel broken from the wire-mesh wall dividing cells in the camp. Officials refused to give more details about the detainee, such as where he is from or why he is being held. Col. Bumgarner claimed that the detainee was "a guy who's trained in terrorism combat."
    Command Sgt. Maj. Anthony Mendez, the senior enlisted man inside the camp, said the majority of the time guards and detainees get along, and that it is "a small amount" of detainees who are consistently aggressive.
    One of the two guards who spoke anonymously with The Times said it was "a daily event" for he and others to have insults and threats hurled at them by a small group of angry detainees.
    Col. Bumgarner said some detainees taunt guards by referring to the leader of the al Qaeda terrorist attacks in Iraq. " 'Zarqawi kill you' -- that's their favorite line," he said.

2005/6/4

U.S. Confirms Gitmo Soldier Kicked Quran

@ 06:59 AM (35 months, 22 days ago)
U.S. Confirms Gitmo Soldier Kicked Quran
By ROBERT BURNS
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. military officials say no guard at the Guantanamo Bay prison for terror suspects flushed a detainee's Quran down the toilet, but they disclosed that a Muslim holy book was splashed with urine. In other newly disclosed incidents, a detainee's Quran was deliberately kicked and another's was stepped on.

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2005/6/2

The Global Test

@ 04:26 PM (35 months, 24 days ago)

The Global Test
Amnesty International, once a respected human-rights group, "is on the verge of discrediting itself altogether." Those aren't our words but those of the Washington Post's Anne Applebaum, whose own over-the-top complaints about "torture" we criticized in January. At issue is Amnesty's preposterous declaration that the terrorist prison camp at Guantanamo Bay is "the gulag of our time." Writes Applebaum:

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Great Moments in Socialized Medicine

@ 04:25 PM (35 months, 24 days ago)

Great Moments in Socialized Medicine
"A New Brunswick man who told police that a friendly dog scuttled his plan for a bloody shooting rampage was sentenced Wednesday to a three-year prison term after admitting it was all a ploy to get life-saving surgery while in jail," the Canadian Press reports from Toronto:

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