Norfolknet Opinions

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  • 2/6 11:02pm It seems odd that one with a history of illegal activity such as hacking, would be so concerned with the government eavesdropping on the bad guys... who should really be concerned...
    - JPB

  • 2/6 11:02pm The significance of the "offending" caricatures is far greater than simply making a point of the importance of freedom of speech, which is itself reason enough to the editors of the European newspapers that published them. For it is they who are on the front lines of the culture war that the West finds itself in today. They that feel the sting of the radical-Islamic tide that has invaded Europe. I suspect many of the events of 2005, and already in 2006, will move our European friends further to the conservative wings of their respective political spectrums. Australia and Canada have already begun to do so.
    If the Islamic world wishes to participate in the world at large (the free world), it must learn to accept the rights of cultures that they see as offensive to them without resorting to violence and attacking innocent people and property.
    If one chooses to take the position that freedom of speech comes with responsibility (which I happen to agree with to a great degree), and that it was irresponsible to publish these caricatures; one must be prepared to answer a number of questions such as:
    1. Why is it then acceptable to burn the American flag, as it offends so many so deeply?
    2. Why is it acceptable to burn crosses, as it offends so many so deeply?
    3. Why is it acceptable to publish a swastika, when it offend so many?
    4. Why is it acceptable to publish the Confederate Flag, when it offends so many?
    5. Why is it acceptable to defame images of Christ, if it offend so many?
    6. Why is it acceptable not to remove Christmas songs from school plays?
    7. Why can it be acceptable not to allow a "Christmas tree" in a community?
    8. Is it acceptable to do violence when these offences occur?
    9. Where is the line between responsibility and irresponsibility with regard to free speech?
    10. Who determines that line?
    11. Can we American determine if for Europe?
    12. Can Islamic nations determine for US?
    PS: It appears that the government of Lebanon would agree that the violence which has occurred in the name of Islam warrants an apology. The Christians in that country know all too well how repressive radical Islam can be.
    Lebanon apologized to Denmark -- where the cartoons were first published -- a day after protesters set fire to a building housing the Danish mission in Beirut. The attack "harmed Lebanon's reputation and its civilized image," Lebanese Information Minister Ghazi Aridi said.
    [ref]
    - JPB

  • 2/6 2:01pm President Bush states "I'm waging a war, and I'm entitled to take any and all measures I deem necessary during hostilities." Thus he's claiming martial law powers -- the freedom of a ruler to annull those civil rights he sees fit, when he sees fit, without any legal oversight or recourse. Unitary, unopposable, unchecked powers. Unilateral say-so. Kingship.
    In George Bush's America, he insists he has the right to ignore any law (via signing orders), detain citizens without a warrant, hold them indefinitely without charges (just by labeling them "enemy combatants"), abuse them (by redefining torture), ship them out of the country (Guantanamo) or send them abroad to be tortured (renditions). US citizens!
    This is not our government! What happened to our checks-and-balances democracy? What a loophole -- attack another country, revert to authoritarianism. This is not what the Constitution says. Why is this not a bigger story? Where is the press, our watchdog on the excesses of government? Where are the true patriots who care about our country and where it's headed? Or is chanting the "liberal, liberal, liberal, terrorist, terrorist, terrorist" jingle really enough to pull the wool over voters' eyes?
    And even as the Pentagon prepares for the "Long War," we should recall how James Madison warned of the dangers war poses to freedom and democracy:
    No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.

    Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes. And armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few.
    [ref]

    - AR

  • 2/6 1:59pm Re. "Islamic-Fundamentalist government of Iran ... Such governments have no tolerance for freedom of religion or speech" -- yes, that's what it means to have a religious government. This is what our Constititution protects us from. Now that we can clearly see the result, I'm heartened that others share my opinion that it's dangerous to civil liberties to allow God and Government to mix.
    Re. Omar Ahmad's "agenda," his comments on resisting the loss of culture and identity and teaching America the ways of Islam instead ("Muslim institutions, schools and economic power should be strengthened in America, he said. Those who stay in America should be 'open to society without melting (into it).' Keeping mosques open so anyone can come and learn about Islam, he said" (ref) ): Nothing wrong with that, but if they start sending missionaries door-to-door, I'm not buying from them, either.
    - AR

  • 2/6 1:57pm With freedom of speech, as with a firearm, comes the responsibility to use it carefully and wisely. In retrospect, it was foolish to insult all Muslims just to make a point about freedom of expression. It proved nothing, and clearly some of objects of the caricature didn't get it. Or perhaps got it all too well.
    Imagery was not the only problem with the Danish cartoons. They were insulting, which is, of course, the point of a cartoon. But they also portrayed the Prophet as a terrorist and, by extension, all Muslims, thereby engendering hate against them.
    [ref]
    Such a pointless shame. More fuel for the extremists' fire, on both sides.
    - AR

  • 2/5 10:13pm
    Last week, the editor of a Jordanian newspaper chastized his fellow Muslims in an editorial. "What brings more prejudice against Islam? These caricatures or pictures of a hostage-taker slashing the throat of his victim in front of the cameras or a suicide bomber who blows himself up during a wedding ceremony in Amman?" asked Jihad Momani.

    But Mr. Momani has since been fired and arrested. The newspaper was removed from newsstands.
    [ref]

    - JPB

  • 2/5 9:57pm Does the Islamic movement is America have an agenda? Who is driving it? Interesting questions to ponder in light of its attempts to suppress free speech (to include expression of Christian beliefs). For they know that a vacuum is far easier to fill than a full cup.
    ...CAIR Chairman Omar M. Ahmad..."Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant. The Koran . . . should be the highest authority in America, and Islam the only accepted religion on earth."
    As reported by the San Ramon Valley Herald
    - JPB

  • 2/5 9:48pm This article from the Iran Press Service offers yet more evidence that the Radical Islamic-Fundamentalist government of Iran is willing to coerce Western countries that do not bridle free speech. Such governments have no tolerance for freedom of religion or speech. This has been a hallmark of radical Islam since its inception in the 9th Century. Once again we find it moving west. Not yet in the form of an army, but as a tide, slowly saturating Western shores. It is paramount that we challenge this attempted suppression of Western values and rights, whether from individuals, groups or governments.
    In a letter to the to Trade minister, the ultra fundamentalist President (of Iran) has ordered him to form a "study and review group" to identify all the countries involved in insulting the holly Prophet and present "ways and means" to cancel all existing trade, exchanges and other cooperation agreements signed with them. [ref]
    - JPB

  • 2/5 9:58am While the risk of being accused of inciting bad feelings or political incorrectness is present, I feel the overriding threat to Western freedom of speech is worth it. Below are some of the violent actions that have occurred this past week in response to the cartoons.
    In contrast, it appears Muslim have no strong outrage over terrorizing and beheading innocent people such as Jill Carroll and others.
    Demonstrators protesting caricatures of Islam's prophet set fire Sunday to a building housing the Danish Embassy in Lebanon...

    ...In Damascus, thousands of Syrians enraged...torched the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus on Saturday - the most violent in days of furious protests by Muslims in Asia, Europe and the Middle East...

    ...In Gaza, Palestinians...storming European buildings and burning German and Danish flags. Protesters smashed the windows of the German cultural center and threw stones at the European Commission building, police said.

    - JPB

  • 2/3 10:03pm This is one of the cartoons that offended Muslims around the world after being published in several European countries. A war is being waged on the West's precious freedoms of speech. It is clear that Muslims not only demand that we obey their customs and laws while visiting their countries; but that we obey them in the West as well. This is not a new phenomenon, the Serbs, the French, the Italians, and many others have been burdened with this as well...
    ... for example, former French actress Brigitte Bardot was convicted for inciting racial hatred and fined $6,000 for anti-Islamic remarks in her book "A Scream in Silence."... Regarding the "Islamization of France" she wrote, "not only does it fail to give way to our laws and customs. Quite the contrary, as time goes by it tries to impose its own laws on us..."

    ..." Last year, too, the head of the Muslim Union of Italy filed charges against Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci for insulting Islam. At issue was Fallaci's book, "The Rage and Pride," which said Muslim immigrants in Europe had "multiplied like rats," and that the continent was turning into "a Muslim province, a Muslim colony."
    (UPI)

    One of the offending cartoons.
    - JPB

  • 2/3 10:03pm Cost of the war... much like the Big Dig debacle, except infinitely more complicated and unpredictable. And like Baghdad still unsafe to drive through. I wonder what the cost would be to build a tunnel to Europe.
    - JPB

  • 2/3 1:40pm On an unrelated note, I would like to divert the discussion a bit -- I'm thinking the time may have come to split this file into to parts, to not have to always reload a quarter of a megabyte of text. I'm curious whether anyone has a preference either way (whether this would make a difference or affect the way people use the page, eg searches), and where a suitable point for breaking would be.
    Post replies and indicate if you don't wish them added to this page (ie, for my eyes only), else I will put them on the page by default.
    - Wm.

  • 2/3 12:54pm Bush is asking for another $120 billion for his little Middle-East adventure. This brings the war cost to about $440 billion so far with no end (and no goals) in sight [ref1].
    And to think that heads rolled (White House economist was fired) for predicting back in 2002 an incredibly high cost of $200 billion. [ref2] The administration figure was "$60 billion or less."
    - AR

  • 2/3 12:48pm People accept responsibility all the time for crimes they didn't commit. If one's in jail and one can cop a plea and get out with time served, few indeed are righteous enough to stay imprisoned on principle. It's like a business transaction -- evaluate the likely outcomes, and purchase the preferred resolution.
    The case against Libya was surprisingly weak, and the Lockerbie trial specifically did not link any Libyan higher-ups to the bombing; it was George Bush that forced Libya to pay compensation in exchange for the lifting of sanctions [ref1]
    What it actually "accepted responsibility" for was carefully worded legalese, admitting nothing:
    Libya as a sovereign state has facilitated the bringing to justice of the two suspects charged with the bombing of Pan Am 103, and accepts responsibility for the actions of its officials
    [ref2]
    As the Libyan Prime Minister, Shukri Ghanem, said in an interview with the Today program on BBC Radio 4 on 24 February, 2004,
    Q: ... Why has Libya not actually apologised, said that you're sorry that you were behind this act?

    A: Because it is a case that we came to a conclusion that we reached an agreement in which we feel that we bought peace. We, after a while and after the sanctions, and after the problems we have faced because of the sanctions, the loss of money, and we thought that it was easier for us to buy peace, and this is why we agreed on compensation. Therefore we said, let us buy peace, let us put the whole case behind us and let us look forward.

    Q: So payment of compensation didn't mean any acceptance of guilt?

    A: I agree with that, and this is why I said we bought peace.
    [ref3]

    Like he said - bought peace because it was easier.
    - AR

    [Update 1:33pm: Mind you, that's not to say Libya wasn't partly or wholly responsible, just that they've never admitted guilt, and that the evidence presented at the trial was lacking. - AR]

  • 2/3 12:45pm Re "significant change has only occurred when the stick was applied" - Libya has not had the "stick" applied, yet significant change occurred. That was the reason for mentioning Libya as the "good example of how diplomatic arm-twisting will work" without an invasion being necessary.
    The intellectual part is in asking reasonable questions, like why attack a country completely unconnected to the "war" we're supposed to be fighting. By attacking Saddam Hussein, we dropped the ball on the fight against terrorism. Why, the man wasn't even bearded!
    It would also be intellectual to point out that by forcing Western-style democracy onto a population at the point of a gun, against their wishes, we're only creating more terrorists.
    If the past is any indication, all that may be too intellectual for Bush. But he has a ready, sincere excuse -- Cheney did it!
    - AR

  • 2/3 12:42pm Michael Rubin's WSJ editorial (the AEI reprint) is a good example of what I mean by fear-mongering. It's to be expected that he will viciously attack Iran -- he has a mission, the goading of the American public into another war.
    He's part of the same neocon gang that pressed for war with Iraq, and Iran and Syria are known to be next on their agenda. He's just doing "public relations" -- working the masses.
    - AR

  • 2/2 9:58pm On changing a dictator's behavior... Castro, Kim, Qaddafi and Hussein have all been under diplomatic pressure, embargos and a host of other restrictions for decades. While they all have nibbled on the carrot when offered, significant change has only occurred when the stick was applied.
    That said, diplomacy should always be the 1st option, for it is the most sensible and humane to all concerned. However, when our national security, and the very safety of our children are at risk, we must have the will to use all measures necessary to defend them.
    We find ourselves at the moment in a world war - World War Terror (WWT), if you will.
    Like WWI and WWII, we must keep the enemy across the sea and destroy him there. If not, the chances of a massive attack on the homeland with a WMD will happen. Osama Bin Terrorist and his band of bearded-men have increased the magnitude of each attack they have conducted. If this trend continues, 9/11 will pale in comparison to the next one. Time and the terrorist will not wait for prolonged, intellectual discussion over how to appease these guys.
    - JPB

  • 2/2 7:26pm It seems odd, to say the least, that Col. Muammar Qaddafi would take responsibility for the bombing of Pan A Flight 103, if he were not responsible for it... really now. As outlined in UN resolutions and documents, this article in the Global Policy Forum would shed some light on the matter. He not only admitted responsibility but extradited the perpetrators to whom all evidence lead to Scotland for trial - one was acquitted. Once again the bluest-state / with the reddest face wants the video. He confessed!!
    Now this all happened prior to our American heroes showing up in the neighborhood, but he did not hand over possession of his weapons of mass destruction until George put a boot into the hornets' nest.
    Libya will present a letter to the UN security council today accepting responsibility for the Lockerbie bombing, in a move which looks set to end its pariah status. Following complicated and protracted negotiations, Colonel Muammar Gadafy's government has produced a statement of responsibility for the bombing of the Pan Am airliner in 1988 ...

    ...Compensation and Libya's letter pave the way for the permanent lifting of UN sanctions, which were suspended in 1999 when Col Gadafy handed over Abdel Baset al-Megrahi and Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah for trial. Megrahi was convicted and Mr Fhimah acquitted. But a late hurdle could come from France, which is pushing for compensation from Libya for the 1989 bombing of a French airliner over Niger before any permanent lifting of sanctions takes place.
    [ref]

    - JPB

  • 2/2 8:39am Paul Craig Roberts, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under Reagan, has an incisive little essay on the intelligence of the American public. He's not kind, either to the voters or the current administration, but he makes good points that don't get mentioned in the press.
    What does it say for democracy that half of the American population is unable to draw a rational conclusion from unambiguous facts?
    [ref]
    - AR

  • 2/2 8:36am Libya is an good example of how diplomatic arm-twisting will work over time to change a dictator's behavior without having to resort to military force. Then again, when you have only a hammer, all problems look like a nail.
    The case of Libya is interesting: it became a pariah state because of two terrorist acts, the bombing of a German Discotheque in 1986, and the PanAm 103 jet bombing in 1989. (Reagan even ordered a strike on Muammar Qadhafy's houses in Tripoli and Benghazi in "retaliation" for the bombing of the discotheque. 30 civilians were killed, among them Qadhafy's 5 year old daughter; Qadhafy himself was not hurt.) The only glitch -- Libya was not responsible for the disco bombing [ref1]. And now doubts surfaced about the key evidence presented at the Lockerbie trial as well. [ref2]
    - AR

  • 2/2 8:31am Newsweek has an inside look at how the justice department operates under Cheney's influence (specifically, under Cheney's former counsel and now chief of staff, David Addington). A fascinating story about how loyal, patriotic Republicans quietly put their careers on the line to thwart the shameful hijacking of the department of justice by the neocon cabal, stand up for what's right and uphold the law. Above and beyond duty; true honor and service. More power to you, and a sincere thank you.
    "they were the people committed to getting it right-and to doing the right thing-whatever the price. These people know who they are. Some of them did pay a price for their commitment to right, but they wouldn't have it any other way."
    [ref]
    - AR

  • 2/1 10:46pm For those who may be concerned with the recent attempt in Medway to ban Christmas songs from school programs there, the below article might be of interest. It is interesting to learn that freedom of speech has taken a backseat to Islamic sensitivities in Europe...
    In 2004, for example, former French actress Brigitte Bardot was convicted for inciting racial hatred and fined $6,000 for anti-Islamic remarks in her book "A Scream in Silence." While Bardot trashed a variety of apparent evils of modern French society, she singled out Islam and immigrants for the most vitriol.

    Regarding the "Islamization of France" she wrote, "not only does it fail to give way to our laws and customs. Quite the contrary, as time goes by it tries to impose its own laws on us."

    Last year, too, the head of the Muslim Union of Italy filed charges against Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci for insulting Islam. At issue was Fallaci's book, "The Rage and Pride," which said Muslim immigrants in Europe had "multiplied like rats," and that the continent was turning into "a Muslim province, a Muslim colony."
    [UPI]

    - JPB

  • 2/1 8:13am Hmmm... I wonder what the Islamic Revolutionary government of Iran is really thinking? Article from the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research...
    Destruction of Israel is a pillar of the Islamic Republic's ideology. Soon after leading the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini declared, "Every Muslim has a duty to prepare himself for battle against Israel." President Ahmadinejad's recent Holocaust-denial and call for Israel to be "wiped off the map," may have shocked Europe, but his statements mark only a change in rhetorical style, not ideological substance. When it comes to Israel, there is no difference between hard-liners and reformers. While Mr. Annan honored Mohammad Khatami for his Dialogue of Civilizations, the reformist president's instructions to the Iranian people were less high-minded. "We should mobilize the whole Islamic World for a sharp confrontation with the Zionist regime," he told Iranian TV on Oct. 24, 2000. "If we abide by the Qur'an, all of us should mobilize to kill." In a Dec. 14, 2001 sermon, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, perhaps the second most powerful man in Iran and one often described as a pragmatist by Western officials and journalists alike, declared, "The use of even one nuclear bomb inside Israel will destroy everything. . . . It is not irrational to contemplate such an eventuality." During a Sept. 22, 2003 military parade, authorities displayed a Shihab-3 missile draped with a banner reading, "Israel must be uprooted and erased from history."
    [ref]
    And so, if Israel must go, what would a prudent man believe should become of the great Satan - that's us folks?
    - JPB

  • 2/1 8:09am Even the Globe gets it!!
    BY TELLING a conference in Tehran Wednesday [Oct 26, 2005] that ''Israel must be wiped off the map," Iran's new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was not only revealing the hate-twisted face of the Islamist hard-liners who took over key government posts following his suspect election last June. He was also throwing down a challenge to the governments of the world ...

    What Ahmadinejad said expressed a fanatical mentality, the outlook of a political leader who served as a security boss in Iran's notorious Evin prison after Ayatollah Khomeini came to power and is said by former inmates to have personally finished off executed political prisoners with a bullet to the head. Iran specialists commonly report that Ahmadinejad represents only one current of thought in Iran's leadership and that other influential figures are more pragmatic. If so, that is even more reason to make it clear that there is a price to pay for a regime that not only assassinates its domestic dissidents but issues overt threats of eradication against another nation.
    [ref]

    - JPB

  • 2/1 8:08am Its seems the Islamic revolutionary regime in Iran is already using coercion... they don't want a negative report to the UN or else....
    Iran yesterday upped the ante in the dispute over its nuclear programme by threatening to block inspections of its facilities if it is referred to the UN security council
    [ref]
    - JPB

  • 2/1 8:04am The elite Islamic revolutionaries that rule Iran are no different from their Islamic Terrorist brethren that attacked our country on September 11, 2001. Their goals are the same, the spread of Islam, by force if needed, across the Middle East and eventually the world.
    It is they in fact that seek to coerce the region to submit. However, they know this is impossible so long as the US has the will to stop them. Would nuclear weapons serve that purpose, they think yes. That is why they have been persistent in attempts to develop a nuclear capability, under the guise of a civilian energy program.
    A Norman Schindler, Deputy Director of the CIA Nonproliferation Center, in a speech to a Senate proliferation committee in September 2000, stated that Iran continues to seek development of fissile material and ultimately a nuclear weapon. And that they - the Iranians - have developed a covert network of organizations to acquire this capability. [pdf] Whereas the Bush administration has been accused by democrats as being slow to address the Iranian issue, I'm sure we can conclude that this speech, only nine months after Bush took office, is untainted by Bush administration influence.
    In an interview with the Washington Post on 29 Aug 2004, John Edwards said... Iran is further along in developing a nuclear weapon than they were when George Bush came into office... A nuclear Iran is unacceptable for so many reasons, including the possibility that it creates a gateway and the need for other countries in the region to develop nuclear capability -- Saudi Arabia, Egypt, potentially others," Edwards said. [ref]
    Is a Nuclear-armed Islamic revolutionary Iran a danger to the region and all those who are not Islamic fundamentalist? I'm going with John Edwards on this one!
    PS: My fortune cookie says, "A prudent man would ask why a nation in the oil-rich Middle East would have such an urgent need for nuclear energy." Isn't that sort of like shipping sand there?
    - JPB

  • 1/30 9:35am It is pretty clear that Iran is committed to mastering the nuclear fuel cycle (uranium mining to power generation), but to that they are legally entitled -- it is explicitly permitted under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. There is no proof that Iran is working on nuclear weapons. In fact, they don't need them for their purposes; the US knows this.
    No, the whole row is precisely about nuclear know-how and not nuclear devices. The objections the US and the G3 have are all about Iran getting the know-how and experience of processing uranium into fuel. This is the hard part; with this, Iran would be nuclear capable. Not nuclear armed, but in a position where the possibility of retaliation could not be ruled out if attacked with tactical nuclear weapons (like the US and Israel occasionally threaten to do.) They don't need nukes for this, merely having the option would make them much less susceptible to military coercion, ie. less vulnerable and more independent. They can achieve this without having to build a single bomb.
    And the appearance of even one such independent nation in the region would puncture the aura of Western invincibility that we use to bend them all to our will.
    So the hoo-hah about Iran's nuclear plans is really about maintaining the status quo in the Middle East bluff-and-posture game. The hot rhetoric coming from the administration is demagoguery for domestic consumption -- fear politics and war hype keep incumbents in power.
    - AR

  • 1/28 2:43pm Meanwhile, back at the ranch... within the span of a month, Iran has stated its will to destroy Israel and attack US & British forces. And it appears they have developed a missile capable of striking Israel and allied forces in the area.
    A top Iranian commander accused U.S. and British intelligence agents of fomenting unrest in southwestern Iran and threatened to respond with missiles if attacked... Iran's improved version of the Shahab-3 missile can strike more than 1,300 miles from their launch site, putting Israel and U.S. forces in the Middle East in easy range.
    [ref]
    - JPB

  • 1/28 9:00am Normalization of political and business relationships between Libya and the West are yet another step towards maturing the Middle East and bringing them it into the mainstream.
    This became possible only after its leader, Col. Muammaer Qaddafi, abandoned his nuclear weapons program, renounced terrorism, and accepted responsibility for the 1998 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, compensating the victims' families. [CSM]
    On a somewhat personal note, I was assigned in Germany at the time and a young Air Force family in my unit were on the flight and perished. They were heading home for the holidays.
    The west and its allies must take the same hard-line with Iran if we are to avoid a nuclear catastrophe.
    The US will to face terrorism and nations that aid it, and our being in the general area of Tripoli, I'm sure, has had a small impact on the Col's decision.
    - JPB

  • 1/28 12:04am Remember the death of Princess Diana? News from London is that there may be more to it than originally admitted.
    An inquiry into the death of Princess Diana is "far more complex than any of us thought," the official leading the investigation said Friday (...) Lord Stevens, the former head of London's Metropolitan Police, acknowledged that some of the issues raised by Mohammed al Fayed -- whose son, Dodi, was killed in the 1997 car crash with Diana -- were "right to be raised." He did not elaborate.
    [AP]
    Presumably this means that they've found indications that there may indeed have been a conspiracy to kill Diana, and/or found evidence of who may have been behind the incident. Royal intrigue, indeed.
    - AR

  • 1/28 12:02am New story on AP appears to confirm what the Iraqis have been alleging:
    The U.S. Army in Iraq has at least twice seized and jailed the wives of suspected insurgents in hopes of "leveraging" their husbands into surrender, U.S. military documents show.
    [AP]
    - AR

  • 1/26 1:24pm Since Iran broke off negotiations with Carter and held off releasing the hostages until Reagan got inaugurated [ref], it could be argued that our recent string of conservative administrations have been helped into being by a radical terrorist regime. (All you far-out left-wingers, try to act surprised :-)
    Iran received some arms at the time, but their action eventually brought about the proliferation of anti-US militants, the erosion of civil liberties here at home, and the replacement of their mortal enemy, pro-US Saddam Hussein, with friendly pro-Iran Islamic fundamentalists. Allah works in mysterious ways.
    Iran must be wondering, with enemies like this, who needs friends?
    - AR

  • 1/26 12:39am Here's a question that I've pondered before, and has now come up again -- is a purchased vote equivalent to a freely cast vote? If the US makes deals to obtain support for its foreign policy (in this case, refer Iran to the UN Security Council), is it morally entitled to claim that it received the willing backing of the international community? What if it obtains the votes using blackmail (negative pressure, stick) instead of purchasing them (positive temptation, carrot)?
    Washington yesterday raised the stakes in the confrontation over Iran when it warned India that Delhi's own nuclear deal with the US could be ditched if the Indian government did not vote to refer Tehran to the United Nations Security Council.
    [FT]
    Always interesting to observe these "coalitions of the willing" in the process of formation. Democratic it isn't (well, maybe in the same way Jack Abramoff purchased votes for his clients -- throw up the cash, and each senator democratically decides whether to grab for it), but very free trade. And here we fret about a few senators getting bought, when there are entire countries up for sale.
    Of course, the fact that we ourselves offer bribes for voting our way did not stop us from accusing France and Russia of voting their pocketbooks when they favored continued inspections and negotiations instead of an unjustified (and devastating, for the population) invasion. (Oddly enough, in some parts of the country they still call them "freedom fries," even though the French turned out to have been right, and the administration wrong in the claims it made while pressing the case for war.)
    What's striking to realize, with rather counter-intuitive implications for the principle of democracy, is that in the free marketplace of ideas, the idea with the deeper pockets wins.
    - AR

  • 1/26 12:37am Found an interesting BBC interview with two US army officers who've returned from one-year tours in Iraq. Something we don't get much from our sound-byte media -- the voice of introspection.
    "When I got on the ground a lot of people were very receptive to US forces. We weren't offered chocolate or candy but we had a lot of people begging for food, we had a lot of people trying to sell us things. When I left Iraq, those same people that were begging and trying to sell us things were throwing rocks at us.

    "I think that he (Bush) doesn't have a very good grasp of what victory is in Iraq. He doesn't really understand what the Iraqi people think and what the American people think. Especially as a democracy I think more than ever we have to have our leadership represent what the people believe and what the people feel."
    [BBC]

    - AR

  • 1/25 4:10pm A new study commissioned by the Pentagon reports that the Army is overextended and cannot achieve a military victory in Iraq at the current level of engagement.
    Andrew Krepinevich, a retired Army officer who wrote the report under a Pentagon contract, concluded that the Army cannot sustain the pace of troop deployments to Iraq long enough to break the back of the insurgency. He also suggested that the Pentagon's decision, announced in December, to begin reducing the force in Iraq this year was driven in part by a realization that the Army was overextended.

    The 136-page report represents a more sobering picture of the Army's condition than military officials offer in public. ...

    He wrote that the Army is "in a race against time" to adjust to the demands of war "or risk `breaking' the force in the form of a catastrophic decline" in recruitment and re-enlistment.

    Krepinevich's analysis, while consistent with the conclusions of some outside the Bush administration, is in stark contrast with the public statements of Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and senior Army officials.
    [CNN]

    In other words, we're asking too much of our troops, this (unprovoked and needless) military adventure has weakened our national defense capabilities, and the administration is in (public) denial.
    Krepinevich (West Point, PhD Harvard) has many articles on the subject of warfare, including the Iraq war. He recently wrote in Foreign Affairs:
    Because they lack a coherent strategy, U.S. forces in Iraq have failed to defeat the insurgency or improve security. Winning will require a new approach to counterinsurgency, one that focuses on providing security to Iraqis rather than hunting down insurgents. And it will take at least a decade.
    [ref]
    The Foreign Affairs article is long and thorough. I especially enjoyed the detailed and in-depth analysis of the situation and what approaches would be productive; a refreshing break from the usual shallow pro-war cheerleading. Interestingly, in spite of public denials by the White House, recent news reports from the Pentagon (the FA article is from Sep/Oct) are much more in line with the report's suggestions than earlier ones, implicitly confirming its accuracy.
    - AR

    [Update 1/26 11:29pm:
    The military commanders aren't backing the administration line; they confirm that the army is stretched thin because of Iraq.
    Gen. George Casey's remarks contrasted sharply with statements made on Wednesday by U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who disputed findings of an unreleased study conducted for the Pentagon that said the Army is overextended because of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. President Bush shrugged off the report Thursday.

    "The forces are stretched ... and I don't think there's any question of that," Casey said of U.S. armed forces deployed in large numbers in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    On Tuesday, The Associated Press reported ... A day later, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld disputed that, asserting that "the force is not broken."
    [ABC]

    Technically, Rumsfeld didn't dispute the findings of the report, he disputed that the forecasted eventual outcome had already occurred. A deceptive vigorous non-contradictory non-denial from the man personally responsible for the current predicament.
    - AR
    ]

  • 1/25 12:36am If you could get a car for $20,000 that got 330 miles per gallon, would you buy it? If it looked a little... unconventional, would you still drive it? A Carlsbad, Calif company (just north of San Diego) has come up with designs and manufacturing processes for an ultra-light two-seater that is claimed to offer phenomenal gas mileage. They're committed to bringing it to market, with production scheduled for the near future. [ref]
    - AR

  • 1/24 10:33am Wm: Are you and [initials] one and the same or not?
    - JPB

    [I believe I've addressed this topic before; see the discussion of the night of 11/4 7:18pm and 11/4 10:05pm - Wm.]

  • 1/24 12:39am All right, time out everybody.
    Although the Opinions page is run by more relaxed rules than the main page -- it was assumed that people would be willing to support their opinions in the face of vigorous challenges -- we seem to have gotten past "vigorous challenges" into personal attacks, slurs, and name-calling. This makes maintaining the page a drudgery, because though I still read every message and check for typos and apply formatting, all I get out of them is heat but no light -- vehemence without illumination. Not to mention that it upsets my family, wastes a lot of my time, and, frankly, doesn't reflect well on Norfolknet or the town.
    I don't want to censor this page, because I believe Norfolknet benefits from a place where strong views can be stated. But I also don't want to ruin the page by letting it spiral out of control into chaos.
    A suggestion: Be polite! Be clever, be humorous, be thought-provoking! Be terse! Offer insights, not judgements! Explain, don't just correct! A lot of meaty issues have been mentioned already, dig in, don't just skim! Pick a topic, read up on it, and enlighten us!
    The point of this page is not the destination, but the trip. Don't expect results, because nothing anyone says here will change anything; the most to hope for is that someone else will read and think about what you've written, and perhaps better understand your point of view.
    Personally, I want to be educated, not lectured; what makes this fun for me (speaking as the typist who updates the page by hand) is being exposed to new information, new ideas, new ways of looking at the world. When we get into reruns, it gets old fast. Come on, people, keep it interesting! If it's no fun, what's the point? (And, just to be clear, barroom fights are not my kind of fun.)
    Finally, I wish to extend my apologies on behalf of Norfolknet to those who were upset by the brawl; I should have stepped in sooner, before people got hurt. I also wish to apologize to those who were offended by and expected better from a shared community resource.
    - Wm.

  • 1/23 10:46pm TEM/AR/RH/TC:
    Calling me a right-winger, a bully, a neocon, insinuating that I am depressed, now a call to censor me. Something rottin' in Denmark. Don't preach to me about name calling and labeling. You guys have done plenty of that, directed at me and others; and I have the backup text to prove it!
    Yes, intellectual debate is indeed good, but results are what counts. Having a long discussion and coming up with the same results each time is not intellectual, mind you. I would say that the large majority of this country places the fight against terrorism higher on the priority list than the issues you four... or three discuss here. It seems you can't see the forest for the trees.
    Freedom and democracy for millions is Eastern Europe in the 1990s thanks to Ronald Reagan; freedom and democracy for millions is the Middle East in the 1st part on the 21st century thanks to George W Bush; 4.9% unemployment in the US, stock market flying high, economy is in great shape, wages and homeownership higher than ever.
    Iran wants a nuclear bomb guys, wake up! They want to destroy Israel, Wake up! They are responsible for the rise in oil prices and the 213 point drop in the stock market last week, Wake up!
    And by the way... this is an opinion page for Norfolk residents - I've been expressing my opinions here... and your little group here disagrees with them. And if one compares the opinions that you four... or three have posted here, one would easily deduce that they seldom stray form the "party-line". If that party-line sounds a lot like an Osama Bin Terrorists speech, I'm going to point that out. And if your statements have the potential effect of helping the enemy, I'm going to point that out. Just as you point out that you believe my opinions are not for the good of the nation.
    The reason I suggest labels is because no one knows what to call your ideology... you change its label so often. Best I can tell from this page is that it started with communists and is currently progressive. Just stop retreating and say what you are. It confuses the constituency, quarter of whom can barely read.
    Finally, (for now) as you can see below, this page is not for children, I'm reading that to mean it's for big people... bully??
    Norfolknet Opinions

    This is the first Norfolknet OpEd page, there are none before this one.

    This page contains the comments opinions, editorials, and commentary by Norfolk residents about matters important to them, but not directly related to town (or not suitable for a general audience that may include young children). Local comments and opinion about our town, businesses, officials, (web pages :-) go on the main page.

    - JPB

  • 1/23 6:25pm You know, JPB, I was about to fall into your trap and explicitly answer your question (whether I love America), when I read JC's post. And it struck me that yes, there are people out there with subtle, considered views who express them eloquently and with sensitivity toward others. Versus blunt rhetorical tricks -- Have YOU stopped beating YOUR wife yet?
    And along with that came the realization that you don't really want an answer.
    You couldn't care less -- you haven't shown any sign of paying attention to what anyone else thinks, you just rag on all but the most conservative views as "liberal" or "socialist" or "communist," taunt people and bully them by calling them names.
    It makes no difference to you whether I love my country or not. You wouldn't show any more courtesy or think about the issues raised either way, so what would be the point? Would I have fewer rights under the Constitution if I didn't? Would what you're advocating transforming it into hurt less if I did?
    You don't care. You're not trying to make your country a better place, you're just attacking anyone who disagrees with your party's line. You seem to view yourself as the appointed guardian of the Gospel of Neocons, and viciously attack and unfairly smear anyone who strays from scripture. Life in your America is life in a tightly regimented theocracy. You spout your ultra-right-wing dogma without thinking of what it is you're really saying or supporting or how it affects others.
    I'm an idealist -- I want to do right. You're a fan -- you want your team to win, right or wrong. A no-go from the start.
    I don't believe I'll answer you. It wouldn't make a difference either way. And you don't deserve it.
    - AR

  • 1/23 6:24pm I concur with JC's post 100%. It's on the money. I do believe JPB resorts to tiresome labels and name-calling far too often. Not only that, the dictatorial tenor and tone of his (or her) posts sometimes lean toward the personal, as if they were indirect attempts at intimidation. One example from one his recent posts (1/19/10:06 PM) was "perhaps you and your friends can get a job writing his (bin Laden's) speeches" directed at someone who had the unmitigated gall to differ with his positions. I think remarks like that (as well as his most recent rant directed toward me) do not belong on this forum and it surprises me they slipped by the webmaster. Perhaps it's just a matter of style and no offense is meant, but I still think JPB is at risk of becoming the classic neighborhood bully who cannot understand why no one will come out to play with him. Or was that his actual goal right from the start? And, by the way, I choose not to reveal whether I'm Communist, Socialist, Liberal, or Progressive. Not only do I find the question impertinent, I would never pass up the opportunity of intensifying a right-winger's paranoia.
    - TEM

  • 1/23 4:52pm Re: 1/13 7:42pm ...And I served 20 years in uniform but did not serve there as 9/11 occurred two months after I retired. ...
    JPB: For information, in which uniform did you serve 20 years? If you wish you may include your rate or rank but there is no requirement for that. Thank you for your service!
    - RH

  • 1/23 3:53pm TEM: Your efforts to stifle opinions on this site that do not agree with yours by suggesting what the content should be is...Castro-like. It is a clear demonstration of cowardice. I will be here regardless of the subject or the opponent - I'm sure we agree on more than a few items but have not discovered them yet. But rest assured, you will continue to receive the proverbial "black eye" when we disagree.
    We conservatives (me with a medium "c") are confident enough to proudly announce our affiliation. While liberals/socialists or whatever the title of the day is...Communists?... are afraid to. Heck, AR can't even indicate if he loves America or not.
    - JPB

    [Let's see, that's one deliberate falsehood, three instances of of rude taunting, and three of unwarranted name-calling. I'm beginning to see JC's point - Wm.]

  • 1/23 2:17pm JPB -- Why do you insist on painting everyone who disagrees with you with the same brush? This name-calling behavior on this site is becoming, as my dear mother would say, "utterly ridiculous!" The United States is a complex country, with lots of varying opinions, and it would do us all well to find common ground with each other rather than always resorting to name-calling when we disagree. I had hoped that Norfolknet would be a forum for well-formed discussions regarding our country's issues -- I certainly would enjoy hearing intelligent disagreements so I could be more informed myself. But insisting that people demonstrate to your specifications that they love their country or be labeled a Communist, Socialist, Progressive, or, God forbid, a Liberal shows how shallow your understanding of patriotism is.
    And, by the way, the merit-based system you refer to is decidedly NOT a Judeo-Christian concept. Would you like to explain to Mother Teresa how she was wrong in helping those poor miscreants whom the rest of society decided were not pulling their weight? I'm sure Catholic Charities (or any other faith-based outreach program) does not feel that they should only help those people who DESERVE their help. In fact, the early Christian Church had quite a "commune" feel to it, with all church members giving up their personal possessions for the use of the group as a whole, without regard to how much each individual brought to the group -- or so says my pastor, when I discussed your posting with him last week.
    - JC

  • 1/23 1:50pm I really think the focus of this forum should return to the Iraq War and related topics, but I can't resist two more points about Reagan and his Oscar-winning performance as our 40th President. (1) In regard to the illegal and sinister selling of arms to Iran, it immediately brought to mind how he eventually escaped from criminal charges: Reagan declared that he did not have the foggiest notion what was going on in his own Administration, a claim many of us found hilarious because, with that President, it was entirely possible and somewhat believable, and (2) It has been said before (in different ways), and I don't think there is any doubt about it: Ronald Reagan could very well turn out to be the most overrated figure in all of American history.
    - TEM

  • 1/23 1:26pm AR: ...so which is it, Communist, Socialist, Liberal or Progressive? You see... changing the name of a file does not change its contents! By the way do you love this country or not... you never answered?
    PS: I would never attempt to compare George Bush with Ronald Reagan... but those American principles of fighting to secure freedom - even when its not ours - are universal and part of the very fabric of America.
    - JPB

  • 1/23 12:49pm Re: Do you guys prefer Liberals, Socialists, Communists or Progressives this year??
    But we love our little tin-pot tyrant! We want him to be our ruler forever! El Presidente rules by martial law, ignores the constitution of the nation, wins power amidst rumors of election fraud, and drives the budget deep into the red with large handouts to his cronies. He is revered just like Reagan! Long live King George!
    Some of us, of course, prefer to attend a party for tea instead.
    Fine print: In King George's America it is aiding the terrorists to say otherwise. Your communications may be monitored by the NSA for better quality control of your thoughts. Opinions void where prohibited. This web site and all its contents are visible to the enemy, and posting to it may be construed as overseas communication subject to monitoring. Posting jokes is definitely illegal, because if even a single Al Qaeda member laughs, it will help his mood, therefore his day, therefore his actions, therefore his cause. Wait, there's knocking at the do..x;kuf
    - AR

  • 1/23 11:58am TEM: Yes, that's why Ronald Regan was elected the 2nd time by an overwhelming margin, and all the world reveres him. I believe he won all but two states the 2nd time!
    Yes, people pray; and your not going to make them hide in closed to do it.
    Hey... what's it say on an atheist's tombstone?... All dressed-up and nowhere to go!
    I suppose the same could be said for liberals on election day!
    PS: Do you guys prefer Liberals, Socialists, Communists or Progressives this year??
    - JPB

  • 1/23 10:47am There you go again, JPB. A day of prayer? I don't think it's that much of a stretch to believe that millions of Americans DID resort to prayer during the Reagan years, impassioned pleas that the American people never again elect a shallow man of so little substance to the Presidency. So much for the power of prayer.
    - TEM

  • 1/23 10:45am Ronald Reagan:
    We have every right to dream heroic dreams. Those who say that we are in a time when there are no heroes just don't know where to look. You can see heroes every day going in and out of factory gates. Others, a handful in number, produce enough food to feed all of us and then the world beyond. You meet heroes across a counter-and they are on both sides of that counter. There are entrepreneurs with faith in themselves and faith in an idea who create new jobs, new wealth and opportunity. They are individuals and families whose taxes support the Government and whose voluntary gifts support church, charity, culture, art, and education. Their patriotism is quiet but deep. Their values sustain our national life.

    I have used the words "they" and "their" in speaking of these heroes. I could say "you" and "your" because I am addressing the heroes of whom I speak-you, the citizens of this blessed land. Your dreams, your hopes, your goals are going to be the dreams, the hopes, and the goals of this administration, so help me God.

    We shall reflect the compassion that is so much a part of your makeup. How can we love our country and not love our countrymen, and loving them, reach out a hand when they fall, heal them when they are sick, and provide opportunities to make them self-sufficient so they will be equal in fact and not just in theory?
    [1981 inaugural address]

    - JPB

  • 1/23 9:57am If God intended us to be free, why did She establish a nation under Herself that institutionalized slavery and counted blacks as only 3/5 of a person?
    Oh, sorry, I forgot -- "under God" was added to the Pledge of Allegiance in 1954, during the Communist scare, to distinguish us from those heathen Godless atheists. So before the red menace, presumably we were not under God yet.
    The Pledge, as written and intended by its author:
    I pledge allegiance to my Flag and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. [ref]
    As an aside, what makes this flag special is that it protects your very right to trample it... You can't injure a piece of cloth, but by legislating it into a muzzle, you can certainly desecrate what it stands for.
    - AR

  • 1/23 12:07am Ahh yes, I remember the Iran-Contra affair... I mean the Iran Hostage Crisis. Google is a wonderful thing, I always used to worry about forgetting the details.
    Allegations persist that the hostage release was delayed until after the election through an illegal deal between the government of Iran and the Reagan kitchen cabinet, which was keen to avoid ... a pre-election hostage release that would have handed the vote to Carter.
    [ref]

    Proponents of the theory ... allege that William Casey and other representatives of the Reagan presidential campaign made a deal at two sets of meetings in July and August at the Ritz Hotel in Madrid with Iranians to delay the release of Americans held hostage in Iran until after the November 1980 presidential elections. ... The allegations included a date-specific allegation that William Casey met with an Iranian cleric in Madrid, Spain, and ... critical pages of his daybook diary were unaccountably missing when the investigators came to look for them over a decade later.
    [ref]

    The book October Surprise by Gary Sick details
    - The Reagan-Bush campaign's systematic penetration of the national security complex of the U.S. government, through which a network of former and current intelligence agents kept Casey - not then in any government position - informed of highly classified military movements, diplomatic initiatives, and policy decisions.

    - The secret meetings that took place in Europe during the summer and fall of 1980, at which Casey hammered out the deal with the Iranians.

    - Israel's shipment of arms to Iran during the last weeks of the presidential campiagn (in deliberate violation of the U.S. embargo) and the massive covert arms transactions between the two nations immediately after Reagan's inauguration.

    - The connection between the Republicans' 1980 arms-for-hostages deal and the Iran-Contra Affair five years later.

    I also remember listening to the Iran-Contra trials -- remember Ollie North and the "I do not recall" hearings? I was acutely conscious that recall is voluntary, remembering is involuntary. But not once was the answer "I do not remember," or even "I can not recall." Always "I do not recall." A question, a soft "I do not recall" from the defense attorney, then a loud "I do not recall" from the defendant. Question after question.
    (Yes, JPB, we know, we heard it the first time... Ronald Reagan was a GREAT American, and Ollie North a TRUE PATRIOT. Reagan didn't know a thing, and an arms embargo is an anti-capitalist, anti-free-trade, evil anti-American law, and it's our patriotic duty to ignore it. There, it's been said.)
    To paraphrase tenement queen Leona Helmsley, "We don't obey the law. Only the little people obey the law" [ref]. Come to think of it, not all that different from the Republican adminstration of today.
    - AR

  • 1/22 10:49pm JPB: The release of the American hostages on this day 25 years ago was a deliberate slap in the face to Ronald Reagan, not a measure of his promise as the future leader of the free world. For a time we were the laughing stock of the world for electing Bonzo himself, and our detractors in the Middle East were tickled pink to poke fun at him. The release of the hostages had nothing to do with Reagan, and had everything to do with making him look foolish by stealing his show on inauguration day. How may people tuned in that day to watch Ron and Nancy waving from the podium, when the other channels showed the poor hostages being released. Duped again, you were. It wasn't by any means an endorsement of Carter, but was definitely a slap at the "rich cowboy."
    - TC

  • 1/22 6:59pm TEM: This just in!! It seems that Canada is now following Australia in replacing 13 years of liberal rule with conservative rule. Odds have it that the conservative candidate for prime minister, Steven Harper, will win the election there Monday morning. This leaves, it seems, Massachusetts and Mexico as the only remaining blue states in North America.
    ...Perhaps the most dramatic campaign story has unfolded in Quebec, where Conservatives failed to win a single seat in the last election. According to a recent poll, the Conservatives' leader, Stephen Harper, is more popular in Quebec than he is in his home province of Alberta, the most conservative region in the country... Some see parallels between Harper's campaign and the successful election bid of Australian Prime Minister John Howard, which ended the 13-year rule of the more liberal Australian Labour Party...

    ...Meanwhile, the Liberals "didn't say much in the first half of the campaign, and then they got a lot of bad news," he adds, referring to a corruption scandal miring the Liberals' campaign.

    [CSM]

    - JPB

  • 1/22 6:58pm My hero: I am told that tens of thousands of prayer meetings are being held on this day, and for that I am deeply grateful. We are a nation under God, and I believe God intended for us to be free. It would be fitting and good, I think, if on each Inauguration Day in future years it should be declared a day of prayer [ref]
    - JPB

  • 1/22 5:15pm TEM: Transformation... growing pains are difficult. Yes is did cost a lot of money and pain to pull the US economy and military out of the mud that the Democrats left it in. Such as DOUBLE-DIGIT inflation and interest rates, and a military that was approaching Mexico in the quality of its equipment and training.
    Good old days... did someone forget to tell me that the Democrats have retaken the house... senate.. presidency? It seems YOU are delusional about who is longing for the good old day. The Republicans have steadily gained in all branches of national government since 1980. Perhaps you do not have cable or have you not heard of the red state - blue state concept?
    - JPB

  • 1/22 5:14pm TEM: You have an extraordinary ability to overlook the obvious (or is it ignorance). My posts and their inclinations have had a presence on this site long before the drop last week, which was due to Iran's announcing that they will restart their nuclear program - the same Iran that a couple of weeks ago announced that Israel has not right to exist and that they intend to assist is its demise.
    AND this January also happens to be the 25th anniversary of Ronald Regan's inauguration... you know the same day the same Islamic-Extremist Iranian government released our innocent American hostages after storming our sovereign US Embassy in Tehran and holding the hostage for 444 days + or -.
    - JPB

  • 1/22 3:06pm Just days after the stock market plunges some 213 points, we have what could only be described as a somewhat desperate (or depressed?) Bush supporter surfacing on this forum with a nostalgic look back at, of all people, Ronald Reagan--the man who brought us "voodoo economics," presided over the worst recession since the 1930s, tripled the national debt, transformed the US into a debtor nation with massive $300 billion dollar deficits, double-digit unemployment, and set the stage not only for unprecedented white collar fraud and greed that led to the savings & loan crisis among other things, but also encouraged further class warfare with increased poverty numbers up a whopping 20%. And on top of all this, flatly refused to acknowledge or even mention the word "AIDS" for six full years spanning two administrations, despite the millions of people who were at risk or dying from it. Ah, yes, how sweet it all was!!
    - TEM

  • 1/22 10:16am Ronald Reagan... Icon of a free world:
    ...Above all, we must realize that no arsenal, or no weapon in the arsenals of the world, is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women. It is a weapon our adversaries in today's world do not have. It is a weapon that we as Americans do have. Let that be understood by those who practice terrorism and prey upon their neighbors.
    [ref]
    - JPB

  • 1/22 10:14am If one dared to say on inauguration day 25 years ago that within ten years the Soviet empire would collapse, he would have been sent to an insane asylum...
    ...Chief Justice Warren Burger administered the oath of office to the former broadcaster, screen actor, and Governor of California. In the election of 1980, the Republicans won the White House and a majority in the Senate. On inauguration day, American hostages held by the revolutionary government of Iran were released.
    [ref]
    PS: Those who chose to be on the losing side of history yet again speak - or as George would say, "fool me once - you can't fool me again."
    - JPB

  • 1/21 3:14pm AR: I completely agree that the concept of service to one's country is not exclusive to a handful of occupations, but a handful of occupations are necessarily exclusive. During the course of discussion on this site, I have been prompted for my credentials on a given issue, and supplied them. Interesting how our discussion has moved from a national to a local one... cunning.
    PS: I basically share your feelings about the Miers nomination. But let us not forget that Ronald Reagan was once a movie actor.
    - JPB

  • 1/21 8:25am Since I'm not a candidate either for the presidency or for for the supreme court, I fail to see how my presidential or judicial credentials are relevant.
    There are lots of great Americans who love their country who could be earning more elsewhere but serve selflessly instead. My personal gratitude goes to schoolteachers. I certainly couldn't do their job, but do complain if I believe that my child's needs are not adequately met.
    Everyone chooses the manner in which they serve their community. There are some who would observe that expending this much effort trying to shepherd such a tiny part of our nation toward the path of law, justice, honesty and openness is itself a clear demonstration of dedication and civic service. The pen being mightier than the sword and all. But it's a subtle point.
    - AR

  • 1/21 12:35am AR: ...US Citizen?? I suppose you think you are smarter than Bush? Do you have the credentials to become president? You cited Thomas' ABA rating... do you have an ABA rating? Point being both men are GREAT Americans and love our country. Both have chosen to serve and could be earning more elsewhere. Do you love our country? Have you served this country?
    PS: Good catch on the Marshall thing!
    - JPB

  • 1/20 10:34am My credentials are that I am a citizen who reads, listens, and expects better. What, specifically, do I lack? - AR

  • 1/19 10:11pm AR: Yes the buddy-system, unlike the liberal democrat buddy-system that created Massport jobs for the crew and created a sweet spot from which the Islamic Terrorists chose to launch the 9/11 attacks. Perhaps next year we can add reduced tuition for family members of terrorist... what do you think??
    - JPB

  • 1/19 10:09pm AR: You list the scholastic attributes of Bush and Thomas but I noticed your credentials are undocumented...
    - JPB

  • 1/19 10:08pm AR: Bush's shameful waste of life (as you put it) is saving countless lives around the world to include Iraqi, American and Israeli. And oh by the way, has freed 55 Million people in Iraq and Afghanistan!
    - JPB

  • 1/19 10:06pm AR: You will be pleased to know that it appears Osama Bin Terrorist may still be alive and he completely agrees with YOU, Howard Dean, Ted Kennedy, John Kerry, Dick Durban, and the rest of the liberals/socialists: He thinks we are losing the war and can not win it, that our war on terrorism has nothing to do with the fact that we have not had am attack within the US since 9/11, that Bush is doing this to make money for his friends, we "US" are the terrorists, that our American Heroes are akin to Nazis, the US should not listen to conversations between US citizens and people connected to known Islamic terrorists.
    [article]
    However, rest assured our families are still the object of his destructive affection:
    ...Instead, the speaker (Osama Bin Terrorists) says, further attacks are in preparation and "you (American citizens) will see them in your houses as soon as they are complete, God willing." [ref]
    Perhaps you and your friends can get a job writing his speeches!
    - JPB

  • 1/18 9:44am If conservatives believe that God gives life and therefore only God can take it away, they must be the strongest opponents of the death penalty and the butchery in Iraq. I'm heartened to hear that conservatives share the liberals' outrage over Bush's shameful waste of life.
    I certainly hope that the Supreme Court does not decide questions of law based on their personal religious beliefs. Their job is to decide the legality of the laws passed by the states and Congress, not to ponder the moral path the voters have (overwhelmingly) chosen. But, unfortunately, I share your fear that Alito, too, would have voted along party lines, his radical activist views notwithstanding.
    As to Thomas, and his on-the-job performace being a "racist notion" -- oh please, get real. Though you're right, Clarence Thomas is the dimmest of the justices by far, having received the very lowest "qualified" ABA rating ever awarded. (Sort of like Bush just barely squeaking into college in the bottom 10% of his class, which is also dismal; I want leaders I can respect, but I digress.) Legal abilities apparently were secondary for the the job he must have been intended to serve. Now, Thurgood Marshall -- he was a Supreme Court justice worthy of the name.
    I also see a different "merit system" at work among conservatives -- the "buddy system." As in, if you're my buddy, you get the perqs. Bush clearly values loyalty higher than ability, else how to explain Michael Browne's appointment as director of FEMA, or the Harriet Miers nomination? "Heh heh, just checkin' to see if y'all were still payin' attention?"
    And don't get me started on all the "accomplishments" of the "grand old party" of Tom DeLay and Jack Abramoff during the past 6 years (and a merry time was had by all, I'm sure) -- I'll just say that I always thought blowing a huge budget surplus in favor of giant deficit spending was a liberal kind of thing to do. Go figure.
    - AR

  • 1/17 9:34pm AR: I gotta' believe BH meant illegal not terrorists... wouldn't you agree?
    - JPB

  • 1/17 9:21pm AR: Although only time will tell, I suspect Alito would have voted along the same lines as Roberts, Scalia and Thomas (who you seem to think is incapable of thought). That's why Bush nominated him... and the country elected Bush. Here again we find the fundamental contrast between conservative and liberal thought. Conservatives believe that God gives life - and therefore only God can take that away, and that such state-sponsored suicide will eventually lead to other more hideous practices, such as coercing the old and less able into suicide, and the marketing of human organs from these suicides. The list of obscene possibilities goes on. Liberals on the other hand believe that the state can make such decisions for it knows best - so long as it is liberal.
    Since you have injected the racist notion that black judges do not have the ability to think independently and make decisions, I'd add the following contrast. Conservatives believe in the merit system, the bedrock of our Judeo-Christian roots. Whereby individuals are appointed to be judges, Secretary of State; Secretary of Defense, and all other positions on their proven ability to perform. Liberals maintain the fundamental belief that certain minorities are unable to ascend themselves to such positions. That they need the "party" to help them. This ensures two things: the "party" will have a stable of dependent voters, and the Democrats will never see illegal immigration as a problem.
    Republican Civil Rights Achievements:
    - Freed the slaves
    - Nominated the 1st woman to the supreme court
    - Nominated the 1st black to the supreme court
    - Appointed the 1st black Secretary of State
    - Appointed the 1st black Secretary of Defense

    Democrat Civil Rights Achievements:
    - Enslaved blacks in welfare for 30 years
    - The Big Easy

    PS: Lincoln, too, was a strong advocate for states' rights.
    - JPB

  • 1/17 1:45pm The Supreme Court just ruled that the federal government does not have the right to override Oregon's assisted suicide law. Oregon, a source of novel and innovative legislation in recent years, has voted to permit physicians to prescribe lethal doses of painkillers to terminally ill patients.
    The irony is that it was the most conservative justices (Scalia, Rogers, and of course the rubber stamp, Thomas) who were the ones who voted against states' rights and for greater federal authority. All others backed Oregon.
    It would have been interesting to see how Alito would have voted, pitting his extreme states' rights views against his extreme executive brach powers views.
    The Bush administration position would ``effect a radical shift of authority from the states to the federal government to define general standards of medical practice in every locality,'' Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the court.

    ``If the term `legitimate medical purpose' has any meaning, it surely excludes the prescription of drugs to produce death,'' Scalia wrote.

    Oregon voters approved the measure twice, in 1994 and 1997, the second time with 60 percent favoring the law.

    [Bloomberg]

    - AR

  • 1/16 11:59pm A google search yields lots of fascinating statistics about immigration, some of it quite surprising. For example
    ``Between March of 2000 and 2004, the number of unemployed adult natives increased by 2.3 million, while the number of employed adult immigrants increased by 2.3 million. Half of the 2.3 million increase in immigrant employment since 2000 is estimated to be from illegal immigration.'' [ref 1]
    Also, between one half to one million illegal immigrants arrive in the country each year. If "many such illegals are reportedly terrorists," that's a lot of terrorists (primarily Mexican terrorists, one would presume, since Mexicans make up 60 to 70% of all illegal aliens.)
    And our economic welfare, predicated as it is on continued growth, is heavily dependent on immigrants: ``The annual arrival of 1.5 million legal and illegal immigrants, coupled with 750,000 annual births to immigrant women, is the determinate factor - or three-fourths - of all U.S. population growth.'' [ref 2]
    It would seem that my information about illegal aliens occupying a non-overlapping niche in our economy is dated. Looks like the economy is retooling to employ immigrant labor preferentially over native-born. Wonder how much is due to the Wal-Mart effect.
    This in turn would explain the suggestions for a guest worker program (which would officially permit and likely increase the influx of foreign, and less expensive, labor into the country.)
    - AR

  • 1/16 2:17pm Thanks for the tweak, I'll have to read up on the subject of immigration.
    Regarding the rude wall: I believe the government should have the means and desire to know who comes into our country and who leaves. The laws and regulations should be such that summer workers, for instance, can visit from other countries and work as restaurant help, landscapers, etc., and other workers can work in various jobs, but all should be able to be tracked and monitored. I would vote for a wall if that is what is needed to prevent folks from going around the laws and coming here illegally with no knowledge and approval of the Immigration Service, since many such illegals are reportedly terrorists. As Robert Frost quoted in his poem Mending Wall, "Good fences make good neighbors."
    - BH

  • 1/16 9:34am Apropos the flag burning bill -- would action such as on the photo be considered the desecration of our flag? Notice that the flag they're burning is not in fact the US flag, just a so-so imitation. (The photo is of Pakistanis protesting the US missile strikes that killed 18 civilians when trying to assassinate Ayman al-Zawahri. Appears to be a small protest.)
    - AR

  • 1/15 8:50pm Ok, no-one had a serious comment on immigration yet, but I'll bite.
    I think building a wall along the Mexican border would be needlessly rude. It's not as if the illegal aliens benefit more from being here than the many businesses that hire them. Agriculture, specifically, relies heavily on migrant Latino labor, many of whom are illegal. In fact, businesses lobbied hard for H1-B visas that provide a way to bring in lower-wage non-citizens to work in high tech jobs; illegal migrants provide the same benefits to the low-tech sector.
    As to changing the rules for citizenship, I'm not aware of what's been proposed -- though wouldn't it take an amendment to the Constitution to make a child born to illegal immigrants not automatically be a citizen?
    - AR

  • 1/15 8:17pm I don't say I personally have the answer to the hole Bush(*) dug us into, but there are numerous civilian and military thinkers who have published articles outlining strategies. The ones I skimmed involved limiting expectations, speeding up withdrawal, and calling it done. When in a hole, the first thing to do is to stop digging.
    "Staying the course" is less even about saving face for Bush than trying to salvage the grand neo-conservative vision, but it costs us money and sacrifice without gaining anything in the long run. It is not a solution, it's a delaying tactic.
    Perhaps one small suggestion I could make is that it is better whenever possible to try and avoid problems with Islamic fundamentalists than to go and deliberately stir up more of them. By invading Iraq (that had absolutely no connection to Islamic terrorists, as was pointed out to him) Bush created lots more terrorists than there were before (as was also pointed that this would do.) It's just our bad luck that he couldn't be satisfied with a million dollar missle instead of seeking the glory of a trillion dollar (million million dollar) invasion. In the future, it would be better not to elect the short-sighted candidate with bad judgement.
    (*) By Bush, I mean in his role as proxy for Cheney and the neo-conservatives. I don't believe Bush himself would have attacked without being led into it by frivolously optimistic, deceitful advice. "Cakewalk," as George Tenet put it.
    - AR

  • 1/15 8:13pm It's not the mistakes that upset me, it's the policies. Do not misunderstand, I do not fault the troops, but the leadership and policies of the White House -- on torture, on extra-judicial detentions, on the use of chemical arms against city inhabitants, on the suspension of civil rights, on the fabrication of evidence and manipulation of the media and the public to build support for the war, on the willful ignorance of laws and the short-circuiting of the Constitution, on squandering the nation's wealth and good name and the saddling of our children with huge debts. The lies, the deception, the hypocrisy.
    The core of democracy is the consent of the governed, and by deceiving us the government breaks the pact between governor and governed, and cheats us.
    Yes I sometimes deliberately overstate my point, but the charges I level have a large dose of truth in them, and are illustrated with the incidents that got me upset. What does it say to complain about my posts while overlooking what prompts them? I suppose it would be easier if I didn't care, but there used to be a time when I really thought we were better than that. Call me a political innocent, but truth, justice, and right and wrong matter to me.
    There is no honor in an unprovoked war of conquest, no matter how valiantly fought. It is noble to serve and serve well, but by using the nation's troops as mercenaries, Bush brings dishonor on us all. Dishonor and shame.
    - AR

    Ayman al-Zawahri

  • 1/13 9:19pm AR: Here is the real terrorist... I challenge [Wm.] to show his picture! [NBC breaking story]
    - JPB

    [No problem with the image, so long as I don't get in trouble with the NSA or the copyright office... - Wm.]

  • 1/13 8:25pm AR: Indeed, please post your essay as to the solution to our immediate and long-term security problems with Islamic terrorists. Whining liberals are quick to criticize but offer NO solutions. All we have at this point is: I voted for the war before I voted against it, we can not win the war in Iraq, Kerry accusing our American heroes of terrorizing women and children in Iraq. Is it any wonder that the country despises them even more than the right-wing nuts?
    - JPB

  • 1/13 8:24pm TC: I'd say firing a million dollar missile into a ten dollar tent like, Clinton did, is oversimplifying it!
    - JPB

  • 1/13 7:42pm TC: I know more than ten people who have or are serving there. They are all happy when they leave there with their lives and limbs. They understand the reason they were there and are proud of it. Out of approximately 100 military members, officers and enlisted, who I have known since 9/11, I know ONE who does not agree with US being in Iraq. Some do not completely agree with all that has occurred and how things have been done but they do understand that this is very difficult and unpredictable work... and that mistakes are inevitable.
    By the way, my brother-in-law is a Naval officer and he completely agrees with the action we have taken there. And I served 20 years in uniform but did not serve there as 9/11 occurred two months after I retired. I might add... I speak to active duty military members daily and NONE like what is said about their efforts on this post. Particularly when they are compared to terrorist such as has been the case on at least two occasions.
    I'll address AR's post here as it fits perfectly: while there may be some military personnel who have come out against the war or the prosecution of it... ALL the evidence suggest that they are a very, very small minority - like liberals. Have mistakes been made at all levels? Yes they have. Have there been some crimes committed on the ground? Yes there have. We are talking about many, many people in very difficult situations that have to make split-second decisions. I would make this challenge. Show me a man that has not made a mistake and I will show you God.
    Does this place me in a position to know a little bit about military culture and pulse the situation? I'm not sure, but I am an American who supports my country in this war and I am free to express that - even if some liberals would have it another way!
    - JPB

  • 1/13 6:08pm Terrorism -- Our heroes. In our name.
    As one American officer explained to New York Times reporter Dexter Filkins, the willingness to sacrifice local civilians is part of a larger strategy in which US military power is used to "punish not only the guerrillas, but also make clear to ordinary Iraqis the cost of not cooperating". A marine calling in to a radio talk show recently stated the argument more precisely: "You know why those people get killed? It's because they're letting insurgents hide in their house." This is, by the way, the textbook definition of terrorism - attacking a civilian population to get it to withdraw support from the enemy. (emphasis added) What this strategic orientation, applied wherever US troops fight the Iraqi resistance, represents is an embrace of terrorism as a principle tactic for subduing Iraq's insurgency.

    [article]

    - AR

  • 1/13 6:07pm
    President George W. Bush called on Tuesday for a responsible election-year debate on Iraq and said Americans should demand a discussion "that brings credit to our democracy, not comfort to our adversaries."
    [Reuters]
    Translation -- "Don't just tell me I screwed up, tell me how to fix it!"
    - AR

  • 1/12 11:12pm Good Lord, JPB! Do you actually know anyone who is serving or has served in Iraq? Your confidence that each and every one of our troops knows exactly why they are there and feels so damn good about it is exceedingly offensive. My cousin served 18 months in Iraq. Thankfully, he is home safe and sound. He does not feel as you suggest. He is simply horrified with the way this war unfolded, and deeply, deeply wounded that his life was put on the line under false pretenses. No, he is not a fan of Saddam's, or Osama's. But he, and many of his brothers in arms, are shocked not only by the lies and spin, but by the lack of planning and common sense demonstrated in the execution of this war. That alone would have soldiers feeling betrayed. He is an American soldier who did what he was asked to do, feels he was betrayed, and thanks God every night that he didn't come home in a box. Okay, you are a big fan of this war, and you've taken it upon yourself to be its cheerleading squad. But please, stop speaking for every soldier. They do not all agree with you, with Bush, or this awful war. Stop oversimplifying it. You owe it to our heroes to consider they might have something other than Bush propaganda to say. They went, they fought. They know. Enough with the platitudes.
    - TC

  • 1/11 11:01pm Ok, so we know what George's opinion is... anyone have one their own?
    - JPB

  • 1/11 11:16am And truthfully, sometimes the truth slips out.
    "Unfairly but truthfully (sic), our party has been tagged as being against things. Anti-immigrant, for example. And we're not a party of anti-immigrants. Quite the opposite. We're a party that welcomes people."
    - George W. Bush, Cleveland July 1, 2000
    - TEM

  • 1/10 8:35pm Does anyone have an opinion on immigration, changing the rules of citizenship or the proposed wall on the US - Mexico border?
    - JPB

  • 1/10 8:31pm AR: Yes, what an odd turn of events, comical really... a liberal purporting to balance a budget - but then again there are elections this year. To our American heroes, another man's freedom is worth their very life, not much when compared to a liberal sacrificing Jane Fonda reruns on TBS, but yet significant.
    That said, the goals we seek in Iraq are not purely altruistic, as I'm sure you know. We do have immediate and long-term national security issues to tend to. Without going into painful detail: the hope is to establish democratic AND other institutions in which Iraqis can participate, voice their opinions and vent without fear of death. Institutions beyond the only ones that existed prior to our arrival. Radical Islamic ones. Many necessarily underground as Saddam ruled with the iron fist of death. As such institutions take root, history has proven that individual ideas emerge and the society at large experiences far less frustration. Turkey would be a good example, although not Arab. Historically, western society has dealt with the radical Islamic threat by supporting dictators to keep them in check. This has been the quick-fix and has failed. It has merely served to stifle legitimate concerns of the individual, cause frustration and maintain a healthy radical Islamic underground in which one can be heard or take action. The long term solution of creating an environment that HOPEFULLY will support democratic-like institutions is a far more complicated proposition. One in which the free flow of ideas and opinions is common and encouraged. And one that is less likely to support such radical views such as flying airplanes into our buildings.
    PS: I'd say that George Bush has earned his money over the past four years.
    - JPB

  • 1/10 8:14am How much are you willing to pay to secure some other guy's liberty? To give him the option to choose to live in a hard-line Islamic theocracy? Sacrifice how many lives, forego how many comforts, cancel cable TV for how many months, not buy how many Christmas presents? Hand over how much money?
    The cost of the Iraq war could top $2 trillion, far above the White House's pre-war projections, when long-term costs such as lifetime health care for thousands of wounded U.S. soldiers are included, a study said on Monday.

    "Even taking a conservative approach, we have been surprised at how large they are," said the study, referring to total war costs. "We can state, with some degree of confidence, that they exceed a trillion dollars."

    Before the invasion, then-White House budget director Mitch Daniels predicted Iraq would be "an affordable endeavor" and rejected an estimate by then-White House economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey of total Iraq war costs at $100 billion to $200 billion as "very, very high."

    [Reuters]

    How easy for a coddled rich boy to spend other people's hard-earned money. Government by tax-and-spend conservatives... what an odd turn of events, to find ourselves needing an honest, disciplined liberal to bring the federal budget back under control.
    - AR

  • 1/9 10:47pm TEM:
    Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Death
    Patrick Henry, March 23, 1775.

    No man thinks more highly than I do of the patriotism ... Gentlemen may cry, Peace, Peace - but there is no peace. The war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the north will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms! Our brethren are already in the field! Why stand we here idle? What is it that gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!

    - JPB

  • 1/9 10:46pm RH: I hope they have a third seat at The Hague. One for Bill "bomb the baby-formula factory in Khartoum" Clinton. Do you imagine that was Monica's idea or was it just bad intelligence?
    - JPB

  • 1/9 10:45pm TEM: I imagine you would be hard pressed to convince the millions of Iraqis yielding those purple thumbs that the idea is outrageous or stupid... Saddam and the terrorists perhaps... but not them.
    As for those 2000 plus American heroes, they knew why they were there, and were willing to die to see those now free people with purple thumbs smiling as they emerged from the polling places. They took great pride and joy in it. A sense of self actualization in their profession. That "piece of cloth" represents their sacrifice, their belief in these principles and the very blood they shed in defense of them.
    - JPB

  • 1/9 4:16pm JPB: Obviously you have been in a panic for a long time. (kidding) I certainly would not accuse any heroes of war crimes, only suits in authority, including Bush and Cheney. I presume both will be impeached well prior to their trial at the International Court of Justice at the Peace Palace at the Hague in the Netherlands.
    I understand that on this evening's news, we may hear the latest Bushism: Bush's reference to "the imminent Judge Alito"!
    - RH

    [Update 5:46pm: removed spurious characters "^2" - Wm.]

  • 1/9 11:45am It is truly baffling and tragic that large segments of our population will not question policies that are based on the outrageously stupid premise that an outside power can occupy another country and create a healthy and permanent democracy at the point of a gun. Or worse, are not even concerned with the loss of thousands of innocent lives in a war declared and fought under false pretenses. Yet some of these very same people are outraged and waste taxpayer time and money over the burning of a piece of cloth--a defiant but totally ineffective exercise of free speech. What in the world is happening to us??
    - TEM

  • 1/9 9:40am RH: When was the last time we have heard from Osam Bin Terrorist? Have you any evidence that he is alive? Are you so naive as to believe he is still a viable planner is this? My guess is that he is dead (1st choice) or incapacitated. But like the O.J. jury, I'm sure you would want to see the video to be convinced. But then you would accuse our American heroes of cruel and unusual punishment or war crimes!
    Bush mistakes, Bush-isms, Katrina miscalculations... voters STILL prefer this over the Democrats! By the way, I'm sure Rice will have a job well into the future be it in Washington or otherwise, but the point was a reply to an accusation of bigotry and misogynism on the part of flag-waving conservatives made earlier... let's not get so red in the face that we neglect to read the entire chain of events. But be calm, panic is a mind killer. This stuff gets a little more difficult when there is an opposing view!
    - JPB

  • 1/9 9:39am "Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel." Samuel Johnson
    - TEM

  • 1/9 8:37am I prefer a results oriented person in the White House, thank you. While George has made many mistakes and maintains a long list or questionable decisions, at least he has achieved results. But even if one chooses to ignore those results... what does it say about the American voters' vote of NO CONFIDENCE in the Democrats during the past two elections?
    Bush Results: Saddam in jail, free elections in Iraq, Sunnis voting, the Taliban defeated, Syria out of Lebanon after 30 years of occupation, women's rights in Afghanistan, Libya giving up its weapons stash, Egyptian elections planned, Jordan sets requirements for Islamic students to take more rounded classes such as sociology and psychology, not a successful terrorist attack in the US since 9/11, only three house members vote to withdraw from Iraq, US economy growing, unemployment rate BELOW 5%.
    Democrat Results: Voted for the war in Iraq before they voted against it! Our soldiers can not win the war in Iraq! Let the Iraqis terrorize the women and children or Iraq! Oh yes, and voted overwhelmingly last month to NOT pull our heroes out of Iraq immediately.
    To Summarize: I'd have to say that the American voters have decided, based on results, that given the opportunity, the Democrats would allow the Islamic terrorist to spread across the globe unchecked while they - the Democrats - debate what course of actions we could take that would not "make them angry" or further disrupt the world harmony that has existed throughout history; as they did for 30 years while Communism spread across the globe like wild fire. But I detect it will take a mosque to go up on town hill before you get it. At which point it will be too late... and don't you dare say that it can't happen. [article]
    - JPB

  • 1/9 8:28am Re:
    1/7 2:02pm TEM: I'm flattered and proud to be labeled super-patriotic and a flag-waver. It is my hope that at least that part of your myopic post was directed at me - please say it is so.
    As for longing for the good old days, I'd have to say that is a liberal/socialist affect. Meaning the 30-plus years they controlled the congress, courts, media, and universities; allowing communism to spread across the globe, our nation to be humiliated by 3rd world nations like Iran, a welfare culture to develop in our cities, and a judicial system that allowed criminals to commit violent crimes only to be placed on probation and repeat them.
    Even Hillary Clinton it seems has abandoned you in her quest to gain favor with the red states as she focuses on the 2008 election. She has co-sponsored the Bennett bill, which will allow the government to fine or imprison someone who intentionally defaces or destroys the flag - Sen. Bob Bennett is a Republican.
    PS: I propose a Condoleezza Rice / Hilary Clinton face-off in 2008. If Condoleezza isn't busy in the kitchen of course. - JPB
    Interesting, JPB: - you say "our nation to be humiliated by 3rd world nations like Iran." The neo-con Republicans' obsession with Saddam Hussein led us into this costly and mistaken war, yet the most armed and dangerous single enemy of the US, and putative planner of the 9/11 attack, Osama Bin Laden, continues to be free.
    And while the cost of Bush's war passes $232 billion, American deaths pass 2189, and our wounded are more than 16,329 of our soldiers, Bush is concerned about rewarding unqualified political cronies: ("You are doing a great job, Brownie" Bush to Michael Brown, former FEMA director, looking at the flood waters in Louisiana, at a staged photo-op.) Unfortunately, the GOP Congress rubber-stamps the flawed leadership surrounding Bush: Cheney, Rumsfeld, formerly Wolfowitz, Frist, the devious Rove, and others.
    An honest prosecutor is now responsible for the indictment of Scooter Libby (of Cheney's office) in the investigation of the disclosure of the name of an undercover CIA agent, which was retribution against the agent's husband, Ambassador Joseph Wilson. That disclosure shows just how far this corrupt Republican Administration is willing to go to attack those who try to tell America the truth about Bush policy; specifically, in this case, that there were no nuclear weapons in Iraq.
    Senator Clinton hasn't abandoned anyone, referring to your simplistic supposed quid pro quo. Senator Bennett sponsored a flag bill, S1320, 7/1/05, with cosponsors Byrd, Conrad, and Dorgan. Later he sponsored a re-write, S1911, 10/24/05 with Sen Clinton as cosponsor.
    Previously, 1/25/2005, in the House, Randy (Duke) Cunningham, Republican of California, sponsored a resolution (HJ Res 10) to amend the Constitution to prevent desecration of the flag. It picked up one hundred and ninety six (196) cosponsors. Unfortunately, Duke isn't in the Congress anymore to push his resolution:
    SAN DIEGO - Disgraced ex-Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham wore a wire for federal agents before pleading guilty to corruption charges on Nov. 28, it was reported today.

    Sources told Time magazine that the San Diego Republican wore a recording device during the short interval between the time he started cooperating with investigators and when he pleaded guilty to charges of taking about $2.4 million in bribes from defense contractors.
    [article]

    P.S.: Condoleezza Rice may start the year 2008 unemployed. I cannot guess her political or culinary future.
    Now we wait to see the political names associated with Jack Abramoff. Reportedly many! In high places!
    Thoughts on politics:
    An honest politician is one who, when he is bought, will stay bought. - Simon Cameron

    The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. - Thomas Jefferson 1743-1826)

    - RH

  • 1/8 10:38pm An amusing and quite interesting insight into coffee and economics is offered by this Slate article by Tim Harford: if you want a better cappuccino at Starbucks, you'll have to ask, because they omit it from the menu.
    Here's a little secret that Starbucks doesn't want you to know: They will serve you a better, stronger cappuccino if you want one, and they will charge you less for it. Ask for it in any Starbucks and the barista will comply without batting an eye. The puzzle is to work out why.

    The drink in question is the elusive "short cappuccino"--at 8 ounces, a third smaller than the smallest size on the official menu, the "tall," ...

    This secret cappuccino is cheaper, too--at my local Starbucks, $2.35 instead of $2.65. But why does this cheaper, better drink--along with its sisters, the short latte and the short coffee--languish unadvertised?

    Economics has the answer: This is the Starbucks way of sidestepping a painful dilemma over how high to set prices. Price too low and the margins disappear; too high and the customers do.

    [Slate]

    - Wm.

  • 1/8 10:34pm Zbigniew Brzezinski has an essay in Friday's Washington Post about what we can reasonably expect to achieve in Iraq. He points out, however, that the obstacles are getting the message across to Bush, and firming up the backbone of the opposition to state the obvious.
    "Victory or defeat" is, in fact, a false strategic choice. [...] But the real, practical choice is this: "persist but not win" or "desist but not lose."

    His [Bush's] policymaking and his speeches are the products of the true believers around him who are largely responsible for the mess in Iraq. They have a special stake in their definition of victory, and they reinforce his convictions instead of refining his judgments.

    Finally, Democratic leaders should stop equivocating while carping. [...] They fear being labeled as unpatriotic. Yet defining a practical alternative would provide a politically effective rebuttal to those who mindlessly seek an unattainable "victory." America needs a real choice regarding its tragic misadventure in Iraq.

    [WP]

    Always refreshing to read level-headed thinkers who see past the programmed chant.
    - AR

  • 1/8 10:32pm Hate? No point in hating Bush, there's not enough substance there to hate. Total disrespect and contempt, certainly, that's deserved; how can he let himself be used like that and still look himself in the mirror. The man is Karl Rove's creation and Cheney's puppet, without having shown signs yet of understanding, let alone of independent judgement.
    We ask him, "Mr. President, how could you do this to the innocent Iraqi people?" and he answers, "I will stay the course." We ask him, "Mr. President, how could you contravene the law and the Constitution?" and he answers "I am Command in Chief of the Armed Forces." Judging by the answers, he doesn't get even the questions.
    An empty shell, a prop. Reads speeches written by others off cue cards. Takes mountain bike rides. Attends fundraisers. What's to hate?
    As to Hugo Chavez, he can try bringing lots of cash and standing in line. Watching Randy Cunningham and Jack Abramoff and Tom DeLay operate, it seems reasonable to conclude that refusing support in exchange for "incentives" would be un-American. Who knows, someone might give in and do the Washington thing even here in Massachusetts.
    - AR

  • 1/7 3:57pm ...I might add that if it were left to the liberals in our nation, the women and minorities in Afghanistan and Iraq would still be oppressed. But fortunately for them, they now have the right to self determination, thanks to our American heroes.
    - JPB

  • 1/7 2:02pm TEM: I'm flattered and proud to be labeled super-patriotic and a flag-waver. It is my hope that at least that part of your myopic post was directed at me - please say it is so.
    As for longing for the good old days, I'd have to say that is a liberal/socialist affect. Meaning the 30-plus years they controlled the congress, courts, media, and universities; allowing communism to spread across the globe, our nation to be humiliated by 3rd world nations like Iran, a welfare culture to develop in our cities, and a judicial system that allowed criminals to commit violent crimes only to be placed on probation and repeat them.
    Even Hillary Clinton it seems has abandoned you in her quest to gain favor with the red states as she focuses on the 2008 election. She has co-sponsored the Bennett bill, which will allow the government to fine or imprison someone who intentionally defaces or destroys the flag - Sen. Bob Bennett is a Republican.
    PS: I propose a Condoleezza Rice / Hilary Clinton face-off in 2008. If Condoleezza isn't busy in the kitchen of course.
    - JPB

  • 1/7 10:51am Or, better yet, let's further divide and degrade contributors to this site by creating a second forum limited to posts by superpatriotic flagwavers who long for the good old days of unbridled bigotry, homophobia, and misogyny, when father always knew best, mom knew her place, and the kids were trained to mindlessly pledge allegiance to the nearest wall.
    - TEM

  • 1/6 7:47pm I have an idea... let's rename our little site here to "I Hate George Bush," or "The Whining Liberal." Perhaps "Cosa Nostra"... our thing. Talk about a vast left-wing conspiracy!
    Hey... I hear Hugo Chavez is looking for some supporters in Massachusetts.
    - JPB

    chart

  • 1/6 10:29am 2005 saw not only the the first tropical storm ever named after a Greek letter (alpha), but the second (beta), third (gamma), fourth (delta), fifth (epsilon), and sixth (zeta) as well.
    Tropical storms are caused by hot ocean temperatures, and as it happens, 2005 was the second hottest year ever (1998 was tops). [BBC] In fact, nine of the 10 hottest years on record have occurred since 1995. Global warming - not just a possibility any more.
    Zeta again strengthened into a tropical storm Thursday and could break the record for the storm lasting the longest into January since record keeping began in 1851.

    Zeta, the 27th and final named storm in a tumultuous, record-breaking hurricane season that officially ended more than a month ago, had sustained winds near 40 mph at 10 a.m., up from 35 mph earlier in the day, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. Winds had reached 65 mph on Wednesday.

    [CNN]

    Consider, 2 million people in Louisiana live less than 3 feet above sea level. The ice sheets melting on Greenland over the coming century or two will elevate sea levels by 20 feet. That's a lot of refugees.
    Kyoto? Nah, that's a pinko commie plot (oops, I'm dating myself, of course I mean Islamo-Fascist terrorist plot :-)
    - AR

  • 1/4 1:26pm Remember the grassy knoll? The pristine bullet? The second shooter? It's baaack...
    Cuba lay behind the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy by Lee Harvey Oswald and its agents provided the gunman with money and support, an award-winning German director says in a new documentary film.

    Wilfried Huismann spent three years researching "Rendezvous with Death," based on interviews with former Cuban secret agents, U.S. officials and a Russian intelligence source, and on research in Mexican security archives.

    Laurence Keenan, an officer of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) who was sent to Mexico City immediately after Kennedy's death to investigate a possible Cuban connection, said he was recalled after just three days and the probe was aborted.

    Keenan, 81, said he was convinced Kennedy's successor, Lyndon Johnson, blocked further investigation because proof of a Cuban link would put him under irresistible pressure to invade the island, a year after the Cuban missile crisis had brought the United States and Soviet Union to the brink of nuclear war.

    Robert F. Kennedy, brother of the assassinated president and attorney general in his administration, had personally ordered eight attempts on the life of Castro, who is still in power to this day.

    [Reuters]

    - AR

  • 1/4 1:25pm News flash: the conservatives mind that most university faculty are politically to the left of them. They talk of a "liberal bias" in academia.
    Instead of trying to impose their own notions of "right" and "wrong," maybe they could reflect on what could have caused the smartest minds in the nation to arrive at a different conclusion than they did.
    Just a thought.
    (PS: Actually, I have my own theory, not related to "smarts" :-)
    - AR

  • 1/4 12:37pm Question: When is a law not a law? Answer: when it's a law signed by George Bush!
    Laws apply to all citizens, but clearly, our George must be special.
    When President Bush last week signed the bill outlawing the torture of detainees, he quietly reserved the right to bypass the law under his powers as commander in chief.
    [Globe]
    Call a spade a spade -- the power to bypass civil law is called "martial law." To use it, Congress has to have declared war, not the President. The Constitution specifically assigns the authority to declare a state of war to Congress (out of prudence, lest Presidents get carried away with their global ambitions); to have otherwise would make large portions of the Constution easily bypassed, thus pointless. Delegating authority to act is not the same as having declared war -- and without a declared state of war, the rule of law applies.
    This concept, laws applying to everyone, must be difficult for a spoiled little rich boy like George. He never had to pay much attention before -- he could always rely on his dad's clout and connections, for his National Guard service, college eduction, oil industry employment.
    - AR

  • 12/27 2:30pm Anthony Wood of Knight-Ridder has a good piece on the Gulf Stream current and its role in climate change. It has particularly good descriptions of why the Gulf Stream is sensitive to being slowed or diverted by the melting of Greenland's glaciers. [article]
    - Wm.

  • 12/26 6:51pm A word about "Able Danger" from [CNN] -
    Congressman Curt Weldon, R-Pennsylvania, (vice chairman of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees) says a military intelligence unit called Able Danger identified four September 11 hijackers in 2000, more than a year before those attacks.

    And he accuses the Defense Intelligence Agency of conducting a smear campaign against Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer, the intelligence officer who said he tried to alert the FBI and, later, the commission investigating the attacks about the terrorists.

    ``...The 9/11 Commission is... embarrassed. They've got egg all over their face. The reason they didn't report on it, is because for some reason, I think it was deliberate. They never interviewed the key participants in Able Danger.''

    - RH

  • 12/25 12:19am Re: 12/22 10:25pm The fruits of our heroes' labor and sacrifice are beginning to bud. The political process and suppression of the Islamic terrorists and insurgents will take time, but the spring of Middle Eastern democracy has undoubtedly arrived!
    If only it were true! I am reminded of the comments of one of my EE profs, who said: "Always consider the source." Even here, in this context, I read the source article, then the author's bio, then the header:
    Reading the header notes: " About The Heritage Foundation" "Some of the finest conservative minds in America today do their work in The Heritage Foundation. - Rush Limbaugh November 10, 2000"" What an endorsement. What a person to give an endorsement.
    Interesting: Neither of the statements in JPB's post appear in the referenced article.
    "Author James Phillips is Research Fellow in Middle Eastern Studies in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation"
    Phillips is a good author who carefully qualifies some of his statements. His last paragraph:
    "The United States can help create the conditions for success, but ultimately only the Iraqis can build a sustainable democracy in Iraq. Iraq's new leaders must work together in an effective manner to improve the daily lives of Iraqis or they will squander the popular support bestowed by today's vote and risk plunging Iraq into a bloody civil war."
    Let us all hope that the new Iraqi leaders will be successful, so that our troops can come home!
    - RH

  • 12/22 10:25pm The fruits of our heroes' labor and sacrifice are beginning to bud. The political process and suppression of the Islamic terrorists and insurgents will take time, but the spring of Middle Eastern democracy has undoubtedly arrived! [article]
    - JPB

  • 12/19 10:32am What are the costs of Bush's war? (He acknowledged that he started it, 12/18/2005) What is the cost to the United States, in lives and treasure? (to quote Sen. McCain)
    Lives: 2156 US Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and other US forces killed in Iraq
    Wounded: 16,061 US Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and other US forces wounded in Iraq
    Per the DOD website [link]
    (Iraqis and others, killed estimated 30,000; wounded: no estimate)
    Dollars: All of the United States 227.6 Billion, as of 12/19/2005
    Massachusetts alone: 6.9 Billion, as of 12/19/2005
    Per website [link]
    - RH

    [When I visit the second link, I see a different number: ``The War in Iraq Costs 0 JavaScript must be enabled.'' Given a choice, I'll go with the lower figure :-) - Wm.]

  • 12/19 9:08am Bush Accomplishments: Saddam in jail, free elections in Iraq, Sunnis voting, the Taliban defeated, Syria out of Lebanon after 30 years of occupation, women's rights in Afghanistan, Libya giving up its weapons stash, Egyptian elections planned, Jordan sets requirements for Islamic students to take more rounded classes such as sociology and psychology, not a successful terrorist attack in the US since 9/11, only three house members vote to withdraw from Iraq, US economy growing, unemployment rate down to the 5% range.
    Democrat Accomplishments: Voted for the war in Iraq before they voted against it! Our soldiers can not win the war in Iraq! Let the Iraqis terrorize the women and children in Iraq!
    Massachusetts Accomplishments: One of the last remaining blue-states in the nations!
    Merry Christmas All!
    - JPB

  • 12/15 12:13pm What's behind Iran's reluctance to allow Western controls on its nuclear technology? Could it be that they don't trust us? The following quote by Iran's president Ahmadinejad provides an insight:
    "When in the past a murderer regime ruled Iran, those who imposed sanctions against us today gave that regime everything. But when the Islamic revolution became triumphant and freedom and independence of the people were fulfilled, they imposed sanctions on the nation. Now what assurances exist that they will not do the same thing regarding nuclear fuel?"
    [article]
    The murderer regime referred to is the Shah, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, who was placed in power by the CIA in 1953 (operation Ajax) [NYT scoop] when the democratically elected leader Mohammed Mossadegh pursued an oil policy not to our liking. The Shah's secret police, the SAVAK (founded in 1957 with the assistance of the CIA), was as nasty and as feared as Saddam at his worst. The Islamic Revolution refers to the overthrow of the Shah by a popular mass uprising led by the Ayatollah Khomeini. So the harsh theocracy in Iran *is* the population's democratically chosen form of government (and let that be a lesson to those who think they have all the answers.)
    Seems, in historical retrospect, we're not really about democracy after all. We're just as likely to install brutal despots like Saddam, along with his tools of torture, as we are to get rid of them. Perhaps there's something more basic at work...
    But it is a wonderful era in which to be an oil capitalist.
    - AR

  • 12/8 8:33am Remeber how the Iraq war was first thought to be all about oil? And how the first and primary mission the US troops after the fall of Saddam was to guard the oil wells and oil ministry offices, while the archeological treasures were looted? And how the first plans Cheney and company made was for the "privatization" of the oil assets of the Iraqi public (plans which were changed only after the outrage upon their disclosure)? And how we questioned the French objections to the war, calling it profit-driven, because they had a couple of billion invested in the country?
    Well, we've come full circle -- privatization by a different name, just as profitable. Up to $194 billion profitable. Gee, I guess our hundreds of billions of reasons to attack trumped France's measly few billion not to.
    Control of Iraq's future oil wealth is being handed to multinational oil companies through long-term contracts that will cost Iraq hundreds of billions of dollars, according to a new report published today in London.

    "The Bush administration has gone to great lengths to hide the truth, but this report confirms what many have long suspected. In short, the winners for control of Iraq's oil are the US, the UK, and their oil companies.

    [article], [report pdf,] [html].

    - AR

  • 12/8 8:31am As an update on the current conditions on Iraq: per-capita income is down sharply, poverty is increasing [CSM]. Abuse and torture by Iraqi police is common, fueling ethnic hatred [SMN], [CSM]. Large areas, including some major cities, are under the control of Shiite militias and neither the US nor Iraqi military. The country is on the verge of a breakup along ethnic lines into three de-facto political entities, and the upcoming elections are likely to bring to power a strongly pro-Iran Shiite government [KM], [CSM]. For most Sunnis, the new life is neither freer nor better than the old one. Democracy - not yet in sight.
    "Progress is running far behind Iraqi expectations in virtually every area," said Wayne White, head of the State Department's Iraq intelligence team from 2003 to 2005 and now an adjunct scholar at the Middle East Institute. "In their view, most Iraqis are not seeing 'amazing progress.' All too many of them live in constant danger, with less electricity in many areas than under Saddam Hussein."
    [WP]
    - AR

  • 12/6 9:55pm We do not torture our prisoners, nor do we send them to other countries to be tortured, so says Condi Rice.
    "The reason she is able to say that the United States does not engage in torture is that the administration has redefined torture to exclude any technique that they use," said Tom Malinowski, Washington director of Human Rights Watch. "What makes this awkward for Secretary Rice is that the state department has continued to condemn as torture techniques such as waterboarding when they are used by other countries - in other words the very techniques the CIA has used against these high level detainees."
    [article]
    What happened to the days when the difference between the good guys and the bad guys was obvious just by observing what they did?
    - AR

  • 12/5 8:50am So, what have we accomplished so far in Iraq? Out of the frying pan, into the fire:
    Iraq's first post-Saddam prime minister, Ayad Allawi, has pointed out that the situation on the ground is worse than ever. "Human rights abuses in Iraq are now as bad as they were under Saddam Hussein and are even in danger of eclipsing his record," Allawi said in an interview with the Observer.
    [Guardian]
    - AR

  • 12/5 8:48am Here's a tid-bit that would be nice if it were true, though, sadly, too late to make an appreciable difference... but it hopefully might keep us out of Syria and Iran.
    The role of Vice President Dick Cheney as the administration's point man in security policy appears over, according to administration sources.

    Over the last two months Mr. Cheney has been granted decreasing access to the Oval Office, the sources said on the condition of anonymity. The two men still meet, but the close staff work between the president and vice president has ended.

    "There's a lack of trust that the president has in Cheney and it's connected with Iraq," a source said.

    The sources said Mr. Bush has privately blamed Mr. Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld for the U.S.-led war in Iraq. They said the president has told his senior aides that the vice president and defense secretary provided misleading assessments on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, as well as the capabilities of the regime of Saddam Hussein.
    [article]

    - AR

  • 12/2 11:57am Here's some ``hot'' news -- global warming may be in the process of cooling Europe.
    It has been forecast that continued global warming will interfere with the Gulf Stream. The Gulf Stream is created when the arctic polar ice cap chills the ocean water, which then sinks and flows away, pulling warmer surface water north to replace it. This is the ``heat pump'' that keeps Europe up to an average of 18 degrees warmer than Canada is at the same latitude.
    north Atlantic conveyor Global warming is predicted to interfere with this mechanism several ways. With a decrease in the amount of ice, less cold water will be produced; the pump will be weaker. Also, the melting-ice fresh water produced will cool the current, and since it's lighter than salt water, will spread on top, pushing the Gulf Stream underneath, diffusing it and deflecting it from reaching the Europe.
    I've posted about the Woods Hole study discussing this back on 9/30/2002. At this point, it seems some kind of tipping point may have been crossed --
    Measurements of ocean currents in the North Atlantic reveal that they have weakened by about 30 per cent since 1992. The findings, published in the journal Nature, fit computer predictions of what would happen when Greenland glaciers begin to melt because of global warming. The models suggest that extra freshwater released into the North Atlantic could weaken ocean currents and even shut down the Gulf Stream.

    Professor Harry Bryden, one of the scientists leading the project, said: "The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, sometimes called the Conveyor Belt, carries warm upper waters to northern latitudes and returns cold deep waters southward across the equator. It is a massive system that includes the Gulf Stream and it carries heat northward out of the tropics into the northern Atlantic, warming the atmosphere and helping to provide northern Europe with a moderate climate.

    [Independent 1]

    "In previous studies over the last 50 years, the overturning circulation and heat transport were reasonably constant. We were surprised that the circulation in 2004 was so different from previous estimates."

    The researchers predict that if the 30% weakening persists, it may lead to a 1C fall in temperature over northern Europe in the next 20 years.

    Further disruption to the system could be expected to have greater effects.

    [Independent 2]

    Such a 1C temperature dip caused the ``mini ice age'' of the 1700s, when the Dutch masters were painting ice-skaters on the canals of Holland. The "greater effects" would be 10C colder, like continental Canada located at the same latitude, land of permafrost and polar bears.
    Experts say Greenland's 9,800 ft thick ice sheet, which has been melting at ever higher altitudes in summers in recent years, may be vulnerable to a runaway thaw.

    If the Greenland sheet melted entirely over the next few centuries, world sea levels would rise by about 23 ft.

    "The concern is that there are tipping points out there that could be passed before we're halfway through the century."

    [Reuters]

    - Wm.
    [Update 3:01pm: Changed that to "may be" cooling Europe -- it's not clear what's going on. What's known is: 30% drop in arctic return current, 30% diversion of North Atlantic warm current, condition normal along Labrador. Some more articles on the subject 11/30 New Scientist, 11/30 BBC - Wm.]

  • 11/21 4:47pm So Cheney's calling "dishonest and reprehensible" those who call him and Bush dishonest and reprehensible for having manipulated the evidence they presented to make the public case for the attack on Iraq. Fair enough, as far as it goes -- but since the criticism is about actual events, it should be possible to look into the matter. For example, remember the Iraqi biological weapons and the mobile trailers? The Sunday Globe had a fascinating article about the "intelligence," or lack thereof, behind that claim.
    ''This was not substantial evidence," a senior German intelligence official said. ''We made clear we could not verify the things he said."

    Curveball was the chief source of inaccurate US prewar assertions that Baghdad had a biological weapons arsenal, a commission appointed by President Bush that was reported this year. US investigators did not interview Curveball ...

    The White House, for example, ignored evidence that UN weapons inspectors had disproved virtually all of Curveball's accounts before the war.

    At the CIA, senior officials embraced Curveball's claims, even though they could not verify them or interview him until a year after the invasion.

    They ignored multiple warnings about his reliability, punished in-house critics who had provided proof that he had lied, and refused to admit any error until May 2004, 14 months after invasion.

    [article]

    Like with the Niger uranium purchase, again they knew the information was not trustworthy, even that it was false, but sold it as fact anyway. Dishonest and reprehensible indeed.
    - AR

  • 11/20 7:44pm
    The Republicans make great hay about Saddam Hussein's use of chemical weapons against the Iranians and the Kurds. But when that attack was made in 1988, it was Democrats who moved a resolution to condemn those attacks, and the Reagan White House quashed the bill in the Senate, because at that time the Republicans considered Saddam one of our own.

    So in 1988, who abandoned the Iraqi people to tyrants and a thugs?

    UNICEF and World Health Organization studies based on infant mortality studies showed a 500,000 increase in mortality of Iraqi children under 5 over trends that existed before sanctions. From this, it was widely assumed that over 1 million Iraqi deaths for all age groups could be attributed to sanctions between 1990 and 1998.

    A report from Johns Hopkins suggests that over 100,000 civilians have died in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion, most of them violent deaths and most as "collateral damage" from US forces.

    - Rep. Cyntia McKinney
    [article]

    We chose to not speak out about Saddam's crimes when they occurred, and were willing to directly and indirectly cause the pointless deaths of 500,000 children and 600,000 adults -- not a good footing from which to make eloquent moral pronouncements about the evils of Saddam. We've already far surpassed the 300,000 that weighs on Hussein's conscience, plus there's another million from 1998 til today, and Fallujah has yet to be tallied. Time for some introspection and self-examination, methinks.
    - AR

  • 11/20 7:42pm What's wrong with the following quote:
    "So long as I am commander-in-chief, our strategy in Iraq will be driven by the sober judgment of our military commanders on the ground." -- George W. Bush
    As I recall, the sober judgement of the military commanders was that it would take twice as many troops to take and hold Iraq as Rumsfeld was willing to send. That's one.
    Also, it's not the job of the military commanders on the ground to define our national geo-political objectives -- it's the President's. As commander-in-chief, Bush is the one responsibile for telling them when to fight and when to call it good enough. That's two.
    And the last time our objectives within Iraq were discussed, we were looking for WMDs; no updates since then. What exactly are we doing there?
    That's three strikes; are we out yet? You know, for someone in his second term, I expected some on-the-job learning to have taken place by now.
    Remember the "Mission accomplished" photo? We were successful; it's done already! There is nothing more that the military can accomplish, it's time for negotiations, compromise and statecraft. Bring our soldiers home!
    And here's a different angle on the troop deployment -- since the Iraq mess is likely to hurt the GOP in the 2006 elections, expect a significant draw-down of troops over next year to help the Republican Party's chances in November.
    The plan, which has been submitted to Donald Rumsfeld, the US defence secretary, calls for more than 60,000 troops -- over a third of the total -- to leave by the end of next year.

    [London Times]

    - AR

  • 11/20 7:37pm Interesting how the Pentagon is insisting that white phosphorus is not a chemical weapon. They argue that the damage is merely thermal, as from a hot stove, and does not affect body chemistry. All nice and legal, see?
    Let's consider -- it's spread into the air, engulfs large areas, and if it lands on your skin or you inhale it, you die a gruesome death. Your lungs burn away from the inside out, and your flesh sears and melts off your bones. Looks like a duck, quacks like a duck...
    Funny, a missile that flies farther than 95 miles is an illegal weapon of mass destruction, while a device that indiscriminately kills every living creature in the surrounding area is a nice, legal, gentle conventional weapon. War is Peace. Ignorance is Strength. Maybe this is what is meant by "gentle conservatism."
    So, how'd it go again about Saddam's inhumane subjugation methods? Let's hear it for the "good guys."
    - AR

  • 11/16 12:06pm Following up on the use of chemical weapons by the US, this update is from Britain; interestingly, still very little coverage in the "liberal" US press.
    The US initially denied reports it had used white phosphorus as a weapon in Falluja in November 2004, saying it had been used only for illumination and laying smokescreens.

    However, the Pentagon has now confirmed the substance was used as an "incendiary weapon" during the assault.

    The row began when Italy's state television network Rai claimed that white phosphorus had been used against civilians in a "massive and indiscriminate way" during the Falluja offensive.

    Its documentary, Falluja - The Hidden Massacre, alleged that Iraqi civilians, including women and children, had died of the burns it caused.

    [BBC]

    The US did not sign the 1980 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons that expressly forbids the use of white phosphorus, but its use against people makes it a chemical weapon per the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention:
    But America is a signatory to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which it ratified in 1997, and that agreement forbids the use of any substance to kill or harm either soldiers or civilians if it is being used mostly for its toxicity.

    A US Army handbook published in 1999 states clearly that the use of white phosphorus burster bombs against enemy personnel is "against the law of land warfare" and the US State Department clearly denied last year that any such weapons were being deployed in Iraq.

    [London Times]

    - AR

  • 11/14 2:42pm Wow! Norfolknet is just a hotbed of animosity and vitriol these days! This thread has veered far from where it began. Intelligence indicating that Iraq had WMD and was posing an imminent threat was THE reason Congress and public opinion supported the war. That was in a climate of fear and anxiety begun by 9/11 and perpetuated by the administration's secret agenda.
    The mere fact that supporters of this war are now citing Saddam's crimes against the Kurds as justification for THIS war tells you all you need to know: WMD was not the real reason for this war. Now before anyone starts jumping up and down, yes, Saddam was a bad man, and it's great he's gone. But real questions remain: Why now? (We stood by under the first Bush administration and did NOTHING while 200,000 Kurds were gassed, why the sudden need to liberate? Why are we, the great protectors of human rights and liberty, sitting on our hands while there is a full-blown genocide taking place in the Sudan?)
    This isn't about the troops on the ground and whether or not they are heroes. Clearly, they are brave and heroic every day, and we owe them our deepest gratitude. This is about the people we elect who put these brave people in harm's way. It's unpatriotic NOT to demand the truth on their behalf, and on behalf of every mother, father, husband, wife, son, daughter, sister, or brother of the more than 2000 fallen soldiers.
    - TC

  • 11/14 12:11pm About those "thousand socialist lies" -- If you're saying that one who lies about WMDs is a socialist, well, I've never heard Bush described quite that way before, but he does spend in huge deficits with a taste for lavish and expensive government programs, so you make a good point.
    If you're saying Iraq had WMDs right before we attacked, that's false. All the solid evidence we had indicated that he didn't; Saddam had disarmed by then. What vague suspicions remained were uncertain before we attacked, were reported as false by the weapons inspectors, and remained false after our own search. There were none.
    In fact, the reason the administration is accused of having lied is precisely because they stressed the unconfirmed rumors and speculation and silenced the reports and analyses that disagreed with their view. Doctored the intelligence, in other words; slanted it. Deliberately presented as concrete fact internal speculation, something that was known to be uncertain and unreliable.
    If you're saying Saddam Hussein had chemical weapons in 1988, before the first Gulf War, of course he did! And we were mightly glad to have supplied him; he was fighting the evil Ayatollah on our behalf, and would have lost the war without them:
    The US not only helped arm Iraq with military equipment right up to the time of the Kuwait invasion in 1989, but also sold and helped Iraq to integrate chemical weapons into their US-provided battle plans while fighting Iran between 1985-1988.

    C.I.A. officials "were desperate to make sure that Iraq did not lose" to Iran. "The use of gas on the battlefield by the Iraqis was not a matter of deep strategic concern," he said. One veteran said, that the Pentagon "wasn't so horrified by Iraq's use of gas." "It was just another way of killing people - whether with a bullet or phosgene, it didn't make any difference."

    [Counterpunch]

    See also [Greenleft: US supplied targeting for Iraqi chemical attacks], [Wikipedia: Iran-Iraq War]
    - AR

  • 11/14 12:06pm Have there been chemical weapons in Iraq recently? Perhaps so. There are reports (so far only in the European press) that the US firebombed Fallujah with white phosphorus, an incendiary agent. This powder, which starts burning on contact with skin with an inextinguishable flame and causes horrific injuries and death, is classified as a "conventional weapon" by the Pentagon. Its use has been banned in many other countries.
    Contrary to what was said by the U.S. State Department, white phosphorus was not used in the open field to illuminate enemy troops. For this, tracer was used. A rain of fire shot from U.S. helicopters on the city of Fallujah on the night of the 8th of November.

    [RAI video excerpt and transcript]

    The war in Fallujah was a lot more brutal and capricious than we were ever let to know. The article and video footage is particularly disturbing because it shows the senseless butchery being done in our name.
    US soldiers appeared on the roofs of surrounding houses and opened fire. Eyad's father was shot in the heart and his mother in the chest.

    They died instantly. Two of Eyad's brothers were also hit, one in the chest and one in the neck. Two of the women were hit, one in the hand and one in the leg.

    Then the snipers killed the wife of one of Eyad's brothers. When she fell her five year old son ran to her and stood over her body. They shot him dead too.

    [eye-witness account]

    - AR

  • 11/14 12:04pm An in-depth and much much more detailed chronology of the Valerie Plame outing has been published in Counterpunch, [here] Lots of quotes and assertions by administration officials, documenting the real (neocon) agenda that they're following: regime change.
    "Stability is an unworthy American mission, and a misleading concept to boot. We do not want stability in Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and even Saudi Arabia; we want things to change. The real issue is not whether, but how to destabilize."
    - Michael Ledeen
    - AR

  • 11/14 11:19pm RH: Although a private matter, I must admit that I do not receive Fox News at home as I have only basic cable - 'nuff said there. Now... Hitler killed the Jews with gas, and Saddam used WMD on both the Kurds and the Iranians. Congress saw the same Intelligence that Bush did and they voted to go - then in Kerry's case not go - oh yes, then he found his Jewish roots. Saddam is not only a dictator but a terrorist in his own right, he terrorized the Kurds and all those who dared to disagree with him. I am one of many who still have unanswered questions. Who produced the WMD that Saddam used on the Kurds and Iranians? Where were they produced? Does that source still exist? Did he use his entire stock on the Kurds and Iranians and had none left in 2003? Am I to believe that he would not or did not give any of this to terrorist organizations? Is this stuff well hidden in Iraq somewhere? If we use the amount of sarin gas used in Tokyo as a point of reference, is it implausible to think that Dr. Blix, and our heroes may have missed it?
    You will find some useful links below. Webster's online even lists Iraq as one of the countries that may posses them.
    [Webster's: WMD]
    [reference.com: WMD]
    P.S. Not all weapons identified by the Iraqi's in 1991 to UNSCOM were destroyed or found. That is to say, they were asked to self-identify what they had prior to the arrival of inspectors, which they did. As of March 2003 they were still unable to account for much of it. I'm sure you will find this in the UN reports if you care to dig a bit deeper.
    - JPB

  • 11/13 11:31pm Re.: Did Saddam possess WMD? A picture is worth a thousand socialist lies: Please shut off Fox News long enough to read this:
    Definition: Weapons of mass destruction (WMD) generally include nuclear, biological, chemical, and increasingly, radiological weapons. The term first arose in 1937 in reference to the mass destruction of Guernica, Spain, by aerial bombardment. Following the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and progressing through the Cold War, the term came to refer more to non-conventional weapons. The terms ABC, NBC, and CBRN have been used synonymously with WMD, although nuclear weapons have the greatest capacity to cause mass destruction. The phrase entered popular usage in relation to the U.S.-led multinational forces' 2003 invasion of Iraq.

    [Wikipedia.org WMD]

    Per Dr. Hans Blix, 27 Jan 1993, in an update to the UN:
    The implementation of resolution 687 (1991) nevertheless brought about considerable disarmament results. It has been recognized that more weapons of mass destruction were destroyed under this resolution than were destroyed during the Gulf War: large quantities of chemical weapons were destroyed under UNSCOM supervision before 1994. While Iraq claims - with little evidence - that it destroyed all biological weapons unilaterally in 1991, it is certain that UNSCOM destroyed large biological weapons production facilities in 1996. The large nuclear infrastructure was destroyed and the fissionable material was removed from Iraq by the IAEA.

    [UNMOVIC]

    Though Dr. Blix is from the Kingdom of Sweden, an arguably Socialistic country, no credible source has accused him of lying. While clearly Sadam's forces had WMD (Gas and Chemical weapons) in 1987-88, none were found in Iraq during the Iraq war.
    The degree to which, in the months immediately following the war*, US citizens believed the misconception that WMD had been discovered in Iraq varied with the respondants' preferred media source: (*Since the peremptory war is still in effect, "war inception" is more correct.)
    Media source	Respondents believing WMD had been found in Iraq
    		since the war ended
         
    Fox		33%
    CBS		23%
    NBC		20%
    CNN		20%
    ABC		19%
    Print media	17%
    PBS-NPR		11%
    
    Based on a series of polls taken from June-September 2003.
    Misperceptions, the Media and the Iraq War, PIPA, October 2, 2003.
    

    [PIPA PDF]

    - RH

  • 11/13 3:28pm Did Saddam possess WMD? A picture is worth a thousand socialist lies: [Halabja, 1988]
    - JPB

  • 11/12 1:51pm The thousand of Kurds and Iranians that Saddam gassed was evidence enough. That is why his on trial in his own country at the moment, thanks to out American heroes. I suppose Hitler did not gas the Jew either...
    - JPB

  • 11/12 9:05am
    "Some Democrats and anti-war critics are now claiming we manipulated the intelligence and misled the American people about why we went to war," -- President George Bush.
    With all due respect, Mr. Bush, the critics have been claiming that well before the war began. What's different now is that proof has emerged showing that NONE of the reasons originally cited for invading Iraq were known to be true -- not the nuclear weapons, not the WMD, not the links to terrorism. Your administration was engaged not in just a small exaggeration here or there, but wholesale fabrication.
    "The stakes in the global war on terror are too high and the national interest is too important for politicians to throw out false charges."

    [BBC]

    But then you know that -- once again, you attempt to mislead the public by the telling of deliberate falsehoods. Right you are, Mr. Bush -- the stakes are too high, and the national interest too important. Please refrain.
    - AR

  • 11/11 4:56pm All: I'd like to turn our focus on this Veterans' Day to our brave heroes who stand on the frontlines of the war on terror defending us. I would ask that you click on the link and read the article, "Dedication is visible among new soldiers" [here]. Thank you brave men and women of America.
    - JPB

  • 11/8 9:54am To AR: The revealing information and statements by Carl Levin in your post prompted me to point out the following: Levin, the Democratic Senator from Michigan, was one of 23 Senators who saw through the deceptions spun by the present Administration regarding WMDs or Iraqi connections to Al-Qaeda and voted against the 2002 Iraq War Resolution on October 11, 2002. I think it is also revealing to note who else voted against it, as a number of interesting observations surface. Due to space limitations, I will only list a few: Another of the 23, Senator Robert Byrd, the old timer from West Virginia, stated the following in an attempt to influence a "nay" vote: "This is the Tonkin Gulf Resolution all over again. Let us stop, look, and listen. Let us not give this president or any president unchecked power. Remember the Constitution." Of the 23 Senators who voted against the resolution, one was a Republican, Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island. Six Republicans (Ron Paul of Texas, Connie Morella of Maryland, Jim Leach of Iowa, Amo Houghton of New York, John Hostettler of Indiana, and John Duncan of Tennessee) joined 126 Democrats in voting against an identical resolution in the House of Representatives. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), after casting his "nay" vote, stated there were many Americans who preferred "a peaceful resolution of matters in Iraq... looking towards the United States to be a nation among nations."
    The bad news here is that every major potential contender for the Presidency in 2008 (whether Republican or Democrat) did not possess the foresight or spunk to vote against that resolution and bought into the reactionary, black and white view of the world being pitched. This includes McCain, Kerry, Hillary Clinton, Biden, or Frist (whom have I left out?). Sadly, this also sets the stage for the painful reality of two governors becoming front runners, Romney or that other oil-rich carpetbagger in Florida. What was his name again? Yikes! Nader in 2008!!
    - TEM

  • 11/7 11:39pm You don't have a democracy without informed consent, and you're not informed without being told the truth. For an administration so intent on spreading democracy abroad, they shamefully neglect it here at home. What did they know and when did they know it? It's becoming more and more evident that they knew all along, just lied to get their way.
    In February 2002, the Defense Intelligence Agency questioned the reliability of a captured top al Qaeda operative whose allegations became the basis of Bush administration claims that terrorists had been trained in the use of chemical and biological weapons in Iraq, according to declassified material released by Sen. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.).

    In fact, in January 2004 al-Libi recanted his claims, and in February 2004 the CIA withdrew all intelligence reports based on his information. By then, the United States and its coalition partners had invaded Iraq.

    "We've learned that Iraq has trained al Qaeda members in bomb-making and poisons and deadly gases," Bush said, an assertion that was based primarily on al-Libi's material.

    "Just imagine," Levin said, "the public impact of that DIA conclusion if it had been disclosed at the time. It surely could have made a difference in the congressional vote authorizing the war."

    [Washington Post]

    The President lied to the public, but worse, he lied to Congress to deceive them into approving his military re-election adventures abroad. So much for the "we will ask not only what is legal but what is right" administration.
    - AR

  • 11/7 4:11pm ...and a view I have advocated all along if you consider the aggregate of what I have posted, TEM.
    - JPB

  • 11/7 3:38pm Good find, BK, this is a levelheaded view of the Iraqi War from a conservative viewpoint and I'm not conservative. I also found it informative (agreeing with JPB for the first time since he stormed onto this site warning us about balance and all those "socialists" at our newsdesks). However, you also might want to read the report "Strategic Redeployment" by Lawrence Korb and Brian Katulis to supplement what you found in the National Review. Not only is this an article with a corresponding levelheadedness from a non-conservative point of view, I believe it fulfills JPB's previous request for viewpoints that "offer a better way." Because it is in PDF format, linking it to emails seems to cause problems. Simply do a search or Google the title and/or authors for access to the piece.
    - TEM

    [The full article is [here], an overview [here] - Wm.]

  • 11/7 2:06pm BK: A very informative article. It appears that the Islamic Terrorists now want the French out of the sacred city Paris! ...maybe we should start packing too.
    - JPB

  • 11/6 10:37pm For those who, like myself, struggle to understand the long-term U.S. strategy of the war on terrorism, I believe this article by Victor Davis Hanson, Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institute, effectively places the current Iraqi War, and the broader war on Islamic terrorism, in its proper context. [National Review article]
    - BK

  • 11/5 7:06pm AR: ...no thanks to George Bush ...the American Soldier? Who was flying those missions?
    - JPB

  • 11/5 7:02pm TC: I'm not sure how many of my posts you have read but my intent here is to maintain balance on this site. The Bush bashers have ruled the roost on this site since its inception and those who have disagreed have been marginalized. The publisher - he has no business editing content - clearly has facilitated and been on one side of this discussion. This is not unlike the national media, which has been dominated by Socialists for the past 30 years. Now that Americans can choose cable TV, the conservative wing of our America has a voice and the far left is horrified. Mostly because they have learned that the nation as a whole is not remotely close to their platform. I hope the same can be said for the far right.
    As I have indicated in previous posts, I am no fan of George Bush, but we have to fight the Islamic terrorist that wish to decapitate us - and we need to fight them any place but HERE! The way I see it: Bush leveraged Saddam's WMD attacks on the Kurds, Saddam's huge unpopularity in Iraq, and the neocons, to do away with Saddam and find a place in which to fight these terrorist. I too think that he has made many mistakes in this endeavor. But as he has told us on many occasions, this is going to be a long, hard and expensive road. I am no parrot for the neocons. I would say that my thought and opinions on this war (the one on Islamic terrorists) take into consideration the long history of this problem. Not simply the Bush basher or the neocon rhetoric - although both bring useful facts and ideas to the equation. I happen to believe that in this regard, mine is the most logical method of arriving at an opinion. This war has in fact existed longer than the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, Muhammad was a jihadist and so is Osama Bin Terrorist (if he is still alive). It took the Europeans centuries to push the jihadist back to the hornets' nest, now it is up to us to contain them - that I firmly believe.
    I would challenge you and all who express their opinions on this site to offer an effective way to do that. I find it rather irresponsible and unmanly to simply bash the Bush effort and not offer a better way. Let the cards fall where they may with regard to Libby and any others who are indicted. I personally believe that if they are found by the courts to have revealed the identity of an operative, they should be executed. Let's let the law do what it is suppose to do. But, lets also not forget that Bill Clinton was impeached for obstruction of justice. And that he made a decision to attack a baby formula plant in Khartoum on faulty intelligence. Did it in fact have anything to do with diverting attention from his legal problems?
    There is one thing you can be sure of, I will be here for the duration to ensure you guys don't have free rein over this post.
    - JPB

  • 11/5 5:08pm Whom do the innocent victims thank? Well, the Kurds thank the international sanctions and the no-fly zone, since they've had a de facto independent country free of Saddam since 1991. The Marsh Arabs actually thank themselves, because the 20-30,000 troops that were stationed there were pulled back to Baghdad, and they believe it was their own brave resistance that caused it. The middle class that fled the country and is now living in Jordan, Syria, and Saudi Arabia -- theirs is an interesting dilemma: a good life under a bad regime or no regime, no house, and no job. They're presumably thanking their passports and savings.
    Perhaps not the flattering answer you might have had in mind, but more accurate.
    - AR

  • 11/5 3:10pm JPB and BC: First and foremost, we should be constantly thanking Wm, whoever s/he really is, for managing this page. Like any publisher or editor, s/he will have procedures and standards, and I sincerely doubt s/he takes those far enough to alter the meaning of any posts. If so, it's what occasionally, and regretably, happens in editing. S/He deserves appreciation, not attacks.
    Secondly, I am so sick and tired of you folks claiming to be more moral, more patriotic, more ethical, and overall superior to those of us who disagree with the way this administration has tackled a real and genuine threat. You are riding the wave of spin created by a few clever, and devious, spinmasters, who claim to own the high road in this country. (They all happen to be facing indictments right now, but that is another matter.) I am religious, patriotic, extremely moral and ethical, and I think George Bush is dead wrong on 90% of the issues facing his presidency. I support our troops far more than he does, because I believe it is immoral to take human life and beyond forgiveness to do so based on a lie. Before this started I argued endlessly with my liberal friends who claimed he was just a puppeteer for Cheney/Rove and the gang, and this was a war for oil and money first, and nation-building last. I was incredulous that under the threat of terrorism, anyone could prescribe such hateful and deceitful tactics to a sitting president. I've been eating my words a lot lately.
    You have fallen for their black and white only logic; there is good and evil. If life were only so simple. That Saddam Hussien is evil doesn't make George Bush good. That Saddam is gone, which itself is too good to be true, doesn't mean that Bush's flawed, poorly planned and even more poorly executed war in Iraq represents anything close to an effective war on terror. Let's face it, if you have a malignant tumor on your left lung, you would not radiate the right one, because it's close by, has similar characteristics, and may be somehow involved. Taking out Saddam Hussien was a good thing for the Iraqi people. Leaving them in the midst of a civil war is not. This was not the first order of business in the fight on terror, it was a sideline, and one that has made us more vulnerable than ever. His first order of buisness should have been to secure the country better. Clearly, any hope of that was dashed with the response to Katrina. We should be afraid, very afraid.
    Don't be so confident that all those yellow ribbons you see on bumpers mean the drivers agree with you. You haven't cornered the market on caring for our troops, or our heroes, on the front line. We just might think caring means something vastly different.
    - TC

  • 11/5 3:07pm AR: (Your reply to my question is that...) George Bush did not know Saddam was in Iraq and we have Osama to thank that the Islamic terrorists are not blowing things up in Manhattan?? Now that's rich! I hope your party plans to use that in their platform in 2008. Perhaps you can have Howard Dean or Wm. present it at the DNC. Wait, I have a better idea - Louis Farrakhan [bio].
    Now, for the 4th time, to whom do the innocent victims of Saddam give thanks that their 30 year nightmare is over?
    - JPB

  • 11/4 11:59pm AR: Once again you got it wrong... do you even read the full text?
    - JPB

  • 11/4 11:14pm JPB, No need to "post ANYTHING to bash Bush," there is plenty of good material to choose from, one can be selective. Hey, did you hear the one about the President who didn't realize his Vice President was actually running the show? He got suckered along with the voting public into attacking the wrong country! Whack! Whack! (See? It would be funnier if it weren't true, but hey, we have to work with what we're given)
    Nothing bashes quite like the unvarnished truth. Doesn't it strike you as curious that liberal stations are full of recitations of facts, while conservative stations are full of liberal-bashing? One uses what material is available, be it a blue dress with stains or forged proof in making the case for war. When there is nothing good to use to bolster one's argument, increase the volume!
    Reminds me of the fundamental rule of lawyering: "If you have the law on your side, argue the law; if you have the facts on your side, argue the facts; if you have neither, pound the table."
    As to whom to thank that terrorists are not blowing up Manhattan -- let's see, one key test-taking skill one learns is to eliminate the obviously wrong choices, and what's left is the answer. With that in mind,
    C is out because he DID try to blow up Manhattan,
    B is out because Saddam had nothing to do with 9/11,
    D is out because Clinton's out of office and no longer in a position to influence events in Manhattan or anywhere else,
    E is out because Bush didn't even know that Osama bin Laden was in Afghanistan and Saddam Hussein was in Iraq,
    ...which leaves A, Osama bin Terrorist! Easy!
    "Once you've eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, is the truth" (apologies to Sherlock Holmes, of course).
    - AR

  • 11/4 11:06pm Wm: Ask the Kurds in the north of Iraq and the Iranians if Saddam had WMD. You're more likely to trust them than fellow Americans anyway. Don't worry about being tortured, Saddam is in custody. Besides, you sound tortured enough. I wonder if Ronald Reagan's policies had anything to do with your ultimate freedom from oppression...
    At any rate welcome to the greatest country on earth... but remember I'll be around challenging your futile attempt to change my capitalist country into a socialist one.
    P.S. You have no right to change the meaning of ones prose, regardless of the excuse.
    - JPB

    [Of course Saddam had WMD's, that wasn't the question. The question was whether he had any left, say, in the five years before we attacked him. We had no proof that he had, and the post-war inspections determined conclusively that he had not. And I don't worry about Hussein torturing me, it's not his laws that I live under. But the CIA and FBI looking for ways around the Constitution, now those are our guys, and that does worry me.
    As to changing the meaning of a post, I quite agree, one must not, and whenever I have to reword a portion, I try my best to be careful not to. And I'm quite confident that I never have. - Wm.]

  • 11/4 10:05pm BC: Say it's not so : ) The individual who is posting these, edited what you wrote? Talk about desperation. If this is true, Wm's credibility is ZERO and nothing he posts henceforth can be trusted. Someone should call the Boomerang right away! This is big news in Norfolk... a conspiracy perhaps?
    Wm: I'm not sure where you are from originally but is appears you brought with you some of the censorship that went along with those hard times. PS: Do you know my identity and address? It makes me a bit nervous that one would be so desperate.
    - JPB

    [Re. edited - absolutely! That's what it means when text is in [square brackets] in the middle of a post. It says right there on the Posting Guidelines, we "sometimes reword or remove comments likely to offend", and "outing" a user of this site is one of the seven deadly no-nos. Besides, what else can you expect from an overgrown blog? (I also fix typos and grammar errors, but you can consider that a personality quirk -- I try to present all opinions to the best of my ability, even ones I disagree with.)
    Otherwise, I guess you found out our little conspiracy... Don't torture me, I confess!! I was being paid by Scooter Libby to spread WMD propaganda. It was easy money, and it almost worked, too! Vhat byootiful kapitalist systeme in dis kountry...
    But wait, I just posted your note -- does that mean it can't now be trusted? Could it right before I saved the page update? And are you and BC now corresponding privately, too? Or are you two really the same person, playing with my mind? Whoa, this is confusing... I'm desperate in search of some clarity of insight... :-) - Wm.]

  • 11/4 8:27pm BC: Thanks for the comments. I too have been shocked - and outraged - by many of the comments AR and others have posted. But I have arrived at the conclusion that they will post ANYTHING to bash Bush. They are clearly frustrated that their party (just a wild guess) is in the process of a slow painful death. They are desperate and scared. So much so that they have ignored two U.S. presidential elections and the FIRST free Iraqi election. The most alarming thing is that they believe the constitution can only change in one direction - theirs!! AR and company have demonstrated their true colors over the past couple of weeks; they are red, white and blue, but they have the very distinct odor of the very socialist and very secular Jacques Chirac.
    P.S. What was the comment regarding revealing his identity about?
    - JPB

  • 11/4 8:11pm AR: My question about the peace-loving Muslims was, in a sense, rhetorical. Nonetheless I provided my own answer. The point being that moderates in Iraq (individuals whom do not believe that beheading those that disagree with them is civil) have been unable to express such ideas. However, since our heroes arrived on the scene many - millions if you count the national elections there recently - have done just that. So again I would ask you: To whom do the innocent victims of Saddam give thanks... and to whom do we give thanks that the Islamic terrorist are not blowing up Manhattan??
    In the interest of political correctness I'll make this one multiple choice:
    1. Osama Bin Terrorist
    2. Saddam "kill the Kurds with chemical weapons (AKA WMD) Hussein"
    3. The guy with the funny Christmas hat that coordinated the 1993 WTC Bombing
    4. Bill "Bomb the baby formula factory in Khartoum" Clinton
    5. George Bush
    - JPB

  • 11/4 7:18pm AR - Cautiously and tentatively... I wade back into the discussion. I promised I wouldn't, but JPB is taking a beating and there have been some things posted that have shocked me.
    I guess your math may be a little fuzzy. Are you really arguing that there are only 25,000 non-peace loving Muslims in the world? I'm sure that there are people in Israel, Eastern Europe, London, Madrid, Manhattan, Indonesia, the Ukraine, and countless other places around the globe that would beg to differ... perhaps that number is just a little bit higher. And let's take a close look as to what is happening in and around Paris during the past week. (Or haven't you heard... seems to be difficult to learn anything about this unless you dig a bit) If you read or watch CNN, you will see it's violence started by the French police who forced 2 teens to accidentially electrocude themselves by chasing them when they hadn't done anything wrong. That served as a springboard for 7 days of rioting by "African immigrants". In reality, the rioters are Muslim. Should be interesting to see how France responds to this. I'll echo the words of JPB... why aren't we hearing from the "peace-loving" Muslim community?
    Now, that being said, I am still in shock over a few other things that have been posted on here in the past week. In one post you said "Meanwhile the honorable commitment of our troops is being shamelessly abused by Bush to grind them into a self-serving mission." Yet today, you accuse the troops of Geneva Convention crimes: "Nobody likes their wives bombed, children machine-gunned, cities bulldozed" Which is it? Are we going to support the troops or call them baby killers? The one that really got my blood boiling, however, was "One can only hope that the Iraqis eventually forgive us." Are you serious? Are we (our troops) not securing their freedom? Is their former president not in custody awaiting trial for the cold blooded murder of over 600,000 of his own people? One can hope that they forgive us... hmmm...
    And on the subject of forgiving and in the interest of being fair... I think everyone should know [who you, Wm., are] so that when you editorialize people's comments, the readers should know that this may be done because you don't agree with what is being said. And in the interest of full disclosure, I appreciate the apology, but I also notice you have not taken the comment down. (Editorial comment to my post on October 26th).
    Keep plugging away, JPB. There are others out here who appreciate your opinion.
    - BC

    [8:09pm: BC, I hear what you're saying, but my preferred solution is that all initialed posts be equal on the page, and for me to not annotate posts based on opinion. I'm working on it :-) As to the last annotation, I try not to alter content once up on the page, because it affects all that follows. Consider -- your comments and my reply would lose context without it. And though not completely opinion-neutral, it made two points that apply universally and that I stand by: cite sources, and think twice about sending cut-and-paste form letters. - Wm.]

  • 11/4 1:30pm JPB, I don't understand what exactly is being asked, but let me attempt to answer, "Are there millions of peace loving Muslims."
    There are about 1,300 million Muslims around the world. According to the Pentagon, we're at war with about 20,000 Iraqi insurgents, and -- let's be generous -- another 5000 Al Qaeda operatives around the world. That leaves over 1,299 million peace-loving Muslims.
    (And even the insurgents would not be blowing up our heroes had they not been sent in to invade and occupy their country. Nobody likes their wives bombed, children machine-gunned, cities bulldozed. If we absolutely had to go and avenge 9/11 on an uninvolved nation, we should have bombed and conquered Jamaica -- just as pointless, but much smaller, a lot closer, much, much cheaper, and better vacation resorts!)
    But this line of thinking naturally starts one wondering, what exactly does it mean to be peace-loving? Are our troops abroad peace-loving? What about the people they're shooting at, who've never left their own country? How about the many who still support an unjust and illegal war on a country and people that had done us no harm?
    It's a tough one. Anyway, I hope the numbers were helpful.
    - AR

  • 11/2 10:48pm AR: Once again - Are there millions of peace loving Muslims in the world? I prefer to believe there are. But I'm not hearing them. If they do exist I'm sure of two things: they fear a dreadful death at the hands of the jihadist among them if they profess their beliefs; and our heroes are over there giving them the opportunity to speak. This will not happen overnight. It will take time, it will take sacrifice - theirs and ours. Yes, the terrorist will continue to blow up water plants, power plants and other essentials to stifle the thing they fear most, free elections. But to whom do the innocent victims of Saddam give thanks ? And to whom do we give thanks that this is not happening in Manhattan?
    - JPB

  • 11/2 10:47pm Here's the link to the Washington Post article on the secret CIA prisons where they keep those prisoners they don't want to openly declare and track, want to subject to "enhanced interrogation," or possibly don't want investigated if they disappeared forever -- after all, no-one could ever find out.
    Places, at least according to CIA lawyers, beyond the reach of due process, the Constitution, or judicial oversight. Why US law does not constrain US citizens performing US government jobs when outside US territory is a bit hazy to me, but then I'm not a CIA lawyer. Hey, want to legally pass a bribe to a public official? Do it on an overseas junket!
    But as the volume of leads pouring into the CTC from abroad increased, and the capacity of its paramilitary group to seize suspects grew, the CIA began apprehending more people whose intelligence value and links to terrorism were less certain, according to four current and former officials.

    The original standard for consigning suspects to the invisible universe was lowered or ignored, they said. "They've got many, many more who don't reach any threshold," one intelligence official said.

    [article]

    This is especially disturbing to those of us who were refugees from regimes where such practices were routine. We finally felt safe in a land where the law applied equally, rights were guaranteed, and the security service's powers were checked in fact, not just on paper. Where things like this just didn't happen. Perhaps all good things must come to and end, but it's still a shame when they do.
    - Wm.

  • 11/2 11:48am What is the indictment of Libby really about? Why distract the public's attention with a judicial nomination sleight-of-hand?
    "Because it's not just about Wilson," maintained [Seymour] Hersh. "Fitzgerald's going deep. He may just unravel the whole conspiracy."

    [T]he whole conspiracy [was that] the Iraq war was planned and orchestrated long before the administration began to build its case for regime change; and that the case it attempted to build, as laid out by former secretary of state Colin Powell to the United Nations, was essentially a fraud (and known to be a fraud).

    [Globe and Mail]

    Making Iraq over in the Neocons image was part of their master vision, published in the early 90's. They had been planning regime change there since before the first President Bush. And next on the agenda, apparently already in motion (with the Mehlis report), the Neocons are busy concocting pretexts for yet another illegal war, on Syria -- also on their published list of target countries. Hang on, here we go again...
    - AR

  • 11/2 11:43am Re. "our boys over there are not all boys" -- clearly. "Our boys" is never taken literally any more, it's the commonly used term to refer to members of our families and communities deployed in dangerous terrain. As to the rest of the post, I don't understand where you're coming from. I always thought soldiers were just like everyone else, normal.
    For their "historic deeds," I fully fault Bush. I've never imagined I'd see our country fall so low so fast as it has under this man's command. One can only hope that the Iraqis eventually forgive us. Meanwhile the honorable commitment of our troops is being shamelessly abused by Bush to grind them into a self-serving mission. Yellow bumper stickers are a fashion statement; Support Our Troops with actions, not words: bring them home! Their families need them more than the Neoconservatives need Iraq.
    With a heavy heart, I join you in praying for our troops and our nation. I'll omit Bush, though -- I'm not yet ready to forgive and forget. Bush and his administration were the ones who hijacked the country and put both the nation and the troops in need of divine assistance.
    - AR

  • 11/1 7:10pm
    "In my administration, we will ask not only what is legal but what is right, not just what the lawyers allow but what the public deserves." -- George W. Bush, Oct. 26, 2000.
    That was before Halliburton, Guantanamo, Katrina, Abu Ghraib, and an invasion built on a lie. None of it moral, none of it right. All allowed by the administration's own lawyers. Now, technically, the public voted him into office, so the public deserves all it has coming, but I sort of assumed he didn't mean to say he'd do more of same and worse...
    - AR

  • 11/1 7:08pm Well, for those who ask whether we're better off with Bush leading the fight against the terrorists, the answer is in: he's made us less safe. Read it and weep:
    U.S. terrorism experts Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon have reached a stark conclusion about the war on terrorism: the United States is losing.

    Despite an early victory over the Taliban and al Qaeda in Afghanistan, the two former Clinton administration officials say President George W. Bush's policies have created a new haven for terrorism in Iraq that escalates the potential for Islamic violence against Europe and the United States.

    "It's been fairly disastrous," said Benjamin, who worked as a director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council from 1994 to 1999.

    "We have had some very important successes getting individual terrorists. But I think the broader story is really quite awful. We have done a lot to fuel the fires, and we have done a lot to encourage people to hate us," he added in an interview.

    [Reuters]

    - AR

  • 11/1 1:11pm Goodness gracious, AR, tell us it ain't so! These incontrovertible facts must ALL be fabrications and distortions - lies perpetrated by our godless, disloyal, and unpatriotic press.
    - TEM

  • 11/1 10:36am The Sunday Washington Post has an excellent recap of the events that resulted in the indictment against Irv Lewis "Scooter" Libby, [article] In brief:
    The Italians hand over to the US (and British) what they believe is a forged document alleging the Iraqis were looking to buy uranium from Niger (never mind that Iraq has plenty of uranium already). They assume the US will be better able to determine authenticity.
    This tidbit is much hyped as fact by administration neocons, in spite of CIA and state department cautions that the documents are not authentic. Why? Because it sells well - the public understands that "uranium" means nuclear weapons.
    The CIA sends Joseph Wilson, former ambassador with contacts in Niger, to invesitage, and he returns and reports that the document is not authentic, the incident did not occur. (In fact, the IAEA was able to establish that the documents were faked by using Google -- the officials whose signatures were on the document were not in office when the document was dated. This was not a subtle, hard-to-detect forgery.)
    The administration continues referring to the uranium deal, even after knowing that it never occurred. Wilson, upset about the disregard of his findings (the truth), goes public with his conclusions. Presumably the public will understand that "lie" means no nuclear weapons.
    Libby (and possibly Rove and Cheney), affronted that the primary public relations selling point for the war was so openly contradicted, decide to get revenge on Wilson. As MSNBC's Chris Matthews said to Wilson, "I just got off the phone with Karl Rove, who said your wife was 'fair game.'" Libby starts spreading the information that Wilson's wife works for the CIA, trying to discredit Wilson's mission by insinuating that he was only sent because of nepotism.
    Exposing a covert CIA agent's identity is not only illegal, it makes it impossible for them to continue at their job, and puts them and their contacts and friends overseas into danger -- everyone who had dealings with Plame automatically comes under suspicion for having sold out their country to American spies.
    The CIA, upset that one of its operatives was purposefully exposed, requests an investigation. John Aschcroft, because of conflict of interest (Karl Rove worked on his election campaigns, too), delegates full attorney general powers to Patrick Fitzgerald to conduct the grand jury investigation.
    Pretty straightforward, but for the one juicy rumor making the rounds [article] - there are signs that Rove and the Neocons may have had a hand in planting the forged Niger documents in the first place.
    - AR

  • 10/31 9:08pm AR: ...our boys over there are not all boys. There are many women serving as well. They have children and other family members waiting at home. They are all brave volunteers who know exactly why they are there and are willing to do those things you are unwilling to. They are not naive or ignorant. They are the highest educated group of people to ever serve in any military. They have accredited diplomas at all levels. They freely read the liberal editorials and have watched the likes of Dan Rather. They are the heart and brains of the eagle, not the right wing or the left; and they are disgusted with liberal attempts to marginalize their honorable and historic deeds.
    I pray for our nation, our troops and our president and so should you - or least fall down on your knees and thank them.
    - JPB

  • 10/30 9:08am AR: The jihad in which we currently defend against has existed longer that the Palestinian / Israeli conflict - yes that one... Muhammad, known to Muslims as a prophet and the creator of this disaster, was himself a jihadist. The beginning phase of his jihad took place in the 7th Century C.E.. in Mecca. He and his followers (a minority group at the time) declared jihad on the local "modern" government there but subsequently were repelled and exiled. He then proceeded to Medina and ultimately took it by means of jihad. He later returned to his place of birth, Mecca, and "converted" it. Not to belabor the point but Muslim armies subsequently marched across the Middle East, Central Asia, India, and North Africa; "converting" them as well. They ensured not only the conversion of these regions, but the Arabization of them. By as early as the eighth century they had begun their European invasion into Spain, Portugal, Italy and, over the Pyrenees onto France. I'll add for the benefit of all (since I'm sure you are fully enlightened, AR) that the provinces of Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and North Africa were Christian prior to this.
    After several centuries of Arab jihad, much of the Iberian peninsula and Italy were retaken by the brave Europeans of that time. To the Spaniards this was known as the Reconquista (Reconquest of their...land, culture, language and religion...no religion for some I imagine). How macho of them!!
    A later attempt to conquer Europe, this time from the East, was made by the Ottoman Sultan of the day (a Sultan is the Jihadist leader of THE Islamic state). This attempt was made via Balkans and the Tatars into Russia. It too was eventually repelled...after much internal debate no doubt.
    I hope you would agree that the concept of jihad has been a cornerstone of the Islamic faith since its inception and that its history would lead you to intellectually conclude that it can not be appeased. While I agree that Bush is struggling with this, Clinton failed. He kept his head buried in the sand or...well...wherever, only to come up long enough to fire a million dollar cruise missile at a ten dollar tent in Afghanistan and to decline custody of Osama Bin Terrorist when Sudan offered him to us.
    Osama and the Islamic terrorist (jihadists) of our time aspire to be like Muhammad. They had been on the offensive around the world since the Soviets left Afghanistan. That gave them the false belief that they could defeat the only force that stands between them and their expansionist goals. The impotence of the Clinton administration after several attacks on our citizens reinforced that belief. Let's not forget that 9/11 was not the first attempt to take down the towers. Where was homeland security after that tragic event...Where was the outrage?? Did not taking the fight to the hornets nest stop them? NO.
    Are there millions of peace loving Muslims in the world? I prefer to believe there are. But I'm not hearing them. If they do exist I'm sure of two things: they fear a dreadful death at the hands of the jihadist among them if they profess their beliefs; and our heroes are over there giving them the opportunity to speak. This will not happen overnight. It will take time, it will take sacrifice - theirs and ours. Yes, the terrorist will continue to blowup water plants, power plants and other essentials to stifle the thing they fear most, free elections. But to whom do the innocent victims of Saddam give thanks ? And to whom do we give thanks that this is not happening in Manhattan?
    - JPB

  • 10/29 7:24pm Special Counsel's Website: The Office of Special Counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald has a website at URL [usdoj.gov/usao/iln/osc] On the webpage, under News, can be found documents pertaining to I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby:
    October 28, 2005 Press Release
    October 28, 2005 Indictment
    The Press Release and Indictment make interesting reading, based on events, names mentioned, and names not mentioned. There are other interesting documents under "Legal Proceedings".
    - BH

  • 10/27 8:48pm There appears to be a tremendous amount of genetic alterations in the ova gathered for in-vitro fertilization. Many of the changes make the egg non-viable, and not just in older women, but across all ages. From the BBC:
    (Study 1:) However, the three new studies suggest that on average 42% of eggs from all women have serious genetic defects that could prevent embryos surviving to term.

    (Study 2:) Nearly two-thirds of the embryos produced by the younger women and three-quarters of the embryos from the older women had chromosomal abnormalities.

    (Study 3:) A study a the Shady Grove Centre for Preimplantation Genetics in Maryland found eggs from healthy donors aged 21 to 31 had a 52% change [sic] of genetic abnormality.

    "These defects should not be present in such a high proportion of patients."

    Experts believe it might be that the drugs used for IVF that stimulate a woman's ovaries to produce eggs add to the risk of genetic damage.

    It could also be that defective eggs are common among the general population but are rejected early on by the body if they are fertilised.

    Doctors already know that many women miscarry very early in pregnancy without ever realising they were pregnant.

    If it's not the drugs, this would have some fascinating implications for the theories on evolution, on genetic drift, even on when life begins.
    - Wm.

  • 10/26 3:04pm
    Things that make you think a little:

    When some claim that President Bush shouldn't have started this war, state the following:

    1. FDR led us into World War II.
    2. Germany never attacked us; Japan did. From 1941-1945, 450,000 lives were lost ...an average of 112,500 per year.
    3. Truman finished that war and started one in Korea. North Korea never attacked us. From 1950-1953, 55,000 lives were lost ...an average of 18,334 per year.
    4. John F. Kennedy started the Vietnam conflict in 1962. Vietnam never attacked us.
    5. Johnson turned Vietnam into a quagmire. From 1965-1975, 58,000 lives were lost ...an average of 5,800 per year.
    6. Clinton went to war in Bosnia without UN or French consent. Bosnia never attacked us. He was offered Osama bin Laden's head on a platter three times by Sudan and did nothing. Osama has attacked us on multiple occasions.
    7. In the years since terrorists attacked us , President Bush has liberated two countries, crushed the Taliban, crippled al-Qaida, put nuclear inspectors in Libya, Iran, and North Korea without firing a shot, and captured a terrorist who slaughtered 300,000 of his own people.
    The Democrats are complaining about how long the war is taking. But... It took less time to take Iraq than it took Janet Reno to take the Branch Davidian compound. That was a 51-day operation.

    We've been looking for evidence for chemical weapons in Iraq for less time than it took Hillary Clinton to find the Rose Law Firm billing records.

    It took less time for the 3rd Infantry Division and the Marines to destroy the Medina Republican Guard than it took Ted Kennedy to call the police after his Oldsmobile sank at Chappaquiddick.

    It took less time to take Iraq than it took to count the votes in Florida!!!!

    The military morale is high! The biased media hopes we are too ignorant to realize the facts.

    I know 2,000 lives is a tremendous loss to the country. In the same time frame there have been nearly 45,000 murders on American soil. Where's the outrage from the Left to these numbers? In the same time period, over 50,000 Americans have been killed by drunk drivers across the country. Yet we have state lawmakers who are also defense attorneys making it increasingly easier for repeat offenders to be given a 2nd or 3rd or 10th chance to get behind the wheel and kill innocent civillians. Where's the outrage to these numbers?
    - BC

    [Update 4:10pm: When quoting from other sources, please provide references -- otherwise we assume that the work is original. Better yet, post only the URL and summarize! [Snopes.com] Oh, and I don't think the user instructions were meant to be left on top of the canned rebuttal :-) - Wm.]

  • 10/26 1:49pm Compassionate Conservatism Update: U.S. Military killed in Iraq: 2001; U.S. troops wounded in Combat: 15,220; Iraqi police and military deaths: 3,430; Iraqi civilian deaths: Estimates range from 26,690-100,000. The bill so far: $204.4 billion. Contracts awarded to Halliburton: $10 billion. Increase in Halliburton stock value since March 2003: 138%
    For further news you're unlikely to hear in White House and Defense Department Press Conferences visit the Institute for Policy Studies at ips-dc.org/iraq/quagmire
    And, according to the U.S. National Intelligence Council, the Iraq War has created "a training and recruitment ground for terrorists, and an opportunity for terrorists to enhance their technical skills," in addition to accelerated recruitment for al Queda.
    This is a war on what?!!!!
    - TEM

  • 10/23 10:07pm JPB, I think RH was pointing out that although by pushing for a war with Iraq Bush may have been diligently carrying out the Neocons agenda of social engineering the Middle East, the 9/11 Commission's conclusion was precisely that he was NOT "fighting these monsters." The outrage is that by using the excuse of 9/11, Bush started a war completely unrelated to terrorism!
    So now our boys are overseas, getting killed and killing innocent civilians, all in the name of "staying the course." If only Bush too had had the decency to keep his indiscretions confined to the White House...
    - AR

  • 10/22 3:41pm As if we needed any more terrorists... When attacking Iraq Bush not only abandoned the war on terrorism, he made that job harder.
    Iraq has become a "post-graduate faculty for terrorism" and is attracting thousands of foreigners who could foment violence when they return home, the head of Canada's spy agency said in an interview published on Thursday.

    Jim Judd, director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, told the Toronto Star newspaper that a new generation of militants was using the war in Iraq to get first-hand experience.

    "We all obviously hope the conflict in Iraq ends soon, but then worry about what all these people are going to do," he said. "They will re-migrate around the world and return home."

    [Reuters]

    - AR

  • 10/22 3:36pm So under Saddam Hussein, there was electricity, water, food, gasoline, and lawful order. Speech had to be guarded, and anti-regime elements were quickly eliminated. Under the Americans, there is chaos in the streets, no electricity, no water, little gasoline; lawlessness reigns. Speech has to be guarded (because of the militias), and anti-regime elemnts are quickly precision-bombed.
    One of the few who does not mind being named, Professor Adel al-Thamary of Basra University, told me:

    "All in all, our life is worse than when we used to live under Saddam because now we are under fire. Now we can be killed any time on the streets."

    [BBC]

    But it helps to explain the joke,
    "Be nice to America or we'll bring democracy to you." [Asia Times]
    - AR

  • 10/21 10:03pm Norfolk: They want you to forget this, september11news.com, so they can press their socialist agenda.
    - JPB

  • 10/21 10:02pm RH: Catch a clue, we needed a place to fight these monsters, other than Manhattan, how do you think we got into WWII and how do you think Panama was created? If Clinton wasn't so busy defiling the White House with Monica, he may have had time to take custody of Osama Bin Terrorist from Sudan.
    - JPB

  • 10/21 7:39pm 9/11 - WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? Researching 9/11/2001 and the start of Bush's Iraqi War - My paper copy of the 9/11 Commission Report is mostly unread: it is not user-friendly. That explains why more people have not read it.
    In response to comments from the community, the US Government Printing Office has refined the Full Report as an improved, interactive, user-friendly PDF, optimized for screen viewing. There is also an executive summary, plus staff monographs and statements. Whereas the Authorized Edition paper copy had no dates of release or of publication, the date of release, 7/22/2004, is on the web site, which has been frozen and archived by NARA. (National Archives and Records Administration)
    The 9/11 Commission Report is available in .pdf and HTML formats. The page numbers in the .pdf format match those in the printed copy. See 911commission.gov. Read it, Americans!
    Bush keeps referring to 9-11 as a basis for his war against Iraq, now that no Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) have been found.
    The 9-11 Commission disagreed: (page 66)
    "Similar meetings between Iraqi officials and Bin Ladin or his aides may have occurred in 1999 during a period of some reported strains with the Taliban. According to the reporting, Iraqi officials offered Bin Ladin a safe haven in Iraq. Bin Ladin declined, apparently judging that his circumstances in Afghanistan remained more favorable than the Iraqi alternative. The reports describe friendly contacts and indicate some common themes in both sides' hatred of the United States. But to date we have seen no evidence that these or the earlier contacts ever developed into a collaborative operational relationship. Nor have we seen evidence indicating that Iraq cooperated with al Qaeda in developing or carrying out any attacks against the United States.76 "
    Paul Wolfowitz was a hawk regarding Iraq: (page 335)
    "Within the Pentagon, Deputy Secretary Wolfowitz continued to press the case for dealing with Iraq. Writing to Rumsfeld on September 17 in a memo headlined "Preventing More Events," he argued that if there was even a 10 percent chance that Saddam Hussein was behind the 9/11 attack, maximum priority should be placed on eliminating that threat. Wolfowitz contended that the odds were "far more" than 1 in 10, citing Saddam's praise for the attack, his long record of involvement in terrorism, and theories that Ramzi Yousef was an Iraqi agent and Iraq was behind the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center.73 The next day, Wolfowitz renewed the argument, writing to Rumsfeld about the interest of Yousef's co-conspirator in the 1995 Manila air plot in crashing an explosives-laden plane into CIA headquarters, and about information from a foreign government regarding Iraqis' involvement in the attempted hijacking of a Gulf Air flight.
    Comments: WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE?
    Unfortunately, Wolfowitz's views ultimately prevailed. Now he is the head of the World Bank. Heaven help the World.
    It is appalling that these men including Bush and others have wasted our young men's lives, and our country's treasure, fighting this war, which had nothing to do with the attack on the U.S.!
    This action by the demonstrably stupid Bush and the devious Wolfowitz and their associates such as the duplicitous Rove and others certainly constitutes evil ! Bush should be impeached!
    Where is the outrage among the people of the United States?
    COSTS TO DATE
    US fatalities in Iraq as of 20 Oct 2005: 1992. One thousand, nine hundred and ninety two of our finest young men.
    US Wounded in Iraq as of 14 Oct 2005: 15,220. (includes those returned to duty) [icasualties.org]
    Cost of the Iraq war, in US Dollars, to date: $202 billion (includes $6 billion from Massachusetts alone) [nationalpriorities.org]
    - RH

  • 10/20 10:03pm TC: I could not agree more. Our national unity during the months following 9/11 were indeed rare and very special. It is during such synergetic moments that we Americans are able live up to our national potential. Our friends envy us and our enemies fear us. Regrettably, I too feel that President Bush's strategy during that time had the net result of alienating some of our allies. Furthermore, I believe much of the nation realized it, but nonetheless, they reelected him in 2004 in overwhelming numbers. And let's not forget the 2002 midterm congressional elections and the German presidential election were pending during the following year to year-plus, and that France had millions of dollars tied up in Iraq that they knew would never be recouped if we were to invade - not to mention the millions of Muslims in that secular country, that will in the next 15 years be predominantly Muslim. But nonetheless, Bush could have done better.
    I too agree that the Islamic terrorist seek to destroy Western culture as a whole - but they must destroy US first in order to do so. By the way, all Christian church attendance has been up since 9/11, not just in "conservative" churches, however you define that. For example, St Mary's Catholic church in Franklin is bursting at the seams.
    Did we as a nation overreact to the events of 9/11? Perhaps when it comes to a bit of patience with our allies... our president - the one charged with protecting us - had and has a very difficult job of doing that. A brief look at a before and after photo of George Bush indicates to me a man who cares and worries about our nation. Has someone really got you convinced this is an evil man? Sounds like something Louis Farrakhan would say. Now I'm not a huge fan of George Bush mind you, but look what losing an election did to John Kerry and Al Gore... these guys would have had a nervous breakdown if they had gone through all that Bush has gone through. Howard Dean...
    I don't believe that the ENTIRE world is divided into those who love and hate freedom. Like anything, common sense would indicate a continuum exists. But, the discussion here is about the war and the Islamic terrorist that seek to destroy us. We need to seek and destroy those whose will is to do us harm. I think back to the days when President Reagan (my hero) stood down the Godless Soviet expansionists. Oh, how many liberals both here and in Europe called him a warmonger, how many called him incompetent, how many questioned his character, his integrity... oh how many were wrong... how many?? He too would have leveraged Saddam to put a boot in the hornets nest!! And the opportunity to offer freedom to oppressed people such as in Afghanistan and Iraq - need we ponder what he would say to that?
    P.S. Times have changed and the voters of our nation have no liberty to... change them back? I was unaware that our constitution provides for change in only ONE direction... how rich.
    - JPB

  • 10/20 9:01am Not to belabor the obvious...
    Flaying away with a stick at a hornets' nest while loudly proclaiming "I will stay the course" is an exercise in catastrophic leadership.

    - Zbigniew Brzezinski

    [IHT]

    - AR

  • 10/19 9:50am JPB: I assume when you refer to "affections" being directed at each other you are being ironic, and mean in fact that dividing the citizens of a country leaves them vulnerable in the face of the enemy. I could not agree more. I remind you however, that in the months after 9/11, the country, in fact the world, rallied around this President in unprecedented numbers. Whatever their intentions in that regard, the violence and hatred of Islamic terrorists only served to unite the people of this country (including those on the far left who at that time believed Bush was handed the presidency and hadn't really won it.) To me, that was the true demonstration of what it means to be a free country and dedicated to the principles of freedom; people of all stripes came together to protect each other and all we believe in.
    This administration squandered that unification, and the good will and trust the world placed it in to do the right thing. Internationally, they alienated our allies, and left us essentially alone in fighting what is really a war in defense of Western culture more than one singularly against American culture. Domestically, they blurred national security, budget, tax, and social issues to advance an anti-government, conservative domestic agenda in the name of a War on Terror while the country was busy buying duck tape! The great galvanizing of the Christian Conservatives had little to do with that fateful day, and had everything to do with the earlier, and unrelated, courting of them by Karl Rove and the gang to get Bush into office. Why the resurgence in church attendance and membership in conservative churches, I really can't say. I have my guesses, but I think 9/11 and the terrorist threat are not high among them.
    Lastly, George Bush has EVERYTHING to do with establishing military regulations and protocol. Abu Graib? The infamous memos? The blatant ignoring of the Geneva Conventions? As you pointed out, a president populates his cabinet how he sees fit, and has that privilege because he was elected. His choices are the very establishment of protocol and regulations. He and his defense secretary, secretary of state, etc., have everything to do with defining the culture of a war, from signaling what is acceptable to supplying the equipment and tools necessary to do the job.
    The world isn't divided into people who love freedom and those who hate it. Yes, there are crazy extremists who wish us genuine harm, and we need to be diligently protecting ourselves against them, but the real division is based not on whether freedom is good or bad, but how best to protect it. Clearly, I disagree with just about everything this administration has done, but I do not hate freedom, as W. would have you believe. Quite the opposite. And I believe military action was and is required to combat this threat, but I also believe they have bungled it.
    I don't hate faith either. I don't begrudge you your faith. I think it is wonderful to hold such deep beliefs. They are just personal, they are not the foundation on which to base foreign policy or domestic social policy in a free (secular, even though that word clearly offends) society, despite the role in played in our founding 225 years ago. Times have changed. Now I will stop, I am taking up too much space on this site!
    - TC

  • 10/17 11:16pm TC: Allow me to fully support your assertion; there is no doubt in my mind that the various flavors of religious groups (and those who choose not to believe) have existed so harmoniously for so long is precisely due to our Constitution - the greatest document that democracy has ever produced. Those who love freedom revere it, and those who hate freedom despise it. Furthermore, it is quite possible that if it were not for that document, you and I would be living in different nations - and that, my fellow American, would be a bad thing for all of us. If the U.S. Civil War had not done us in - something else would have. And it is precisely that which the Islamic terrorist seek to do. Keep our "affection" directed at each other while they devise a way to destroy us.
    Both regrettably and necessarily, the rules did change after we were savagely attacked by the Islamic terrorist on that beautiful autumn day in September of 2001. I fear we will never again have the freedoms we enjoyed that morning, and less regrettably, we can never again afford our enemy the benefit of the doubt. It is but by the grace of a peaceful and loving God that those planes did not carry chemical or biological weapons that day (call it what you want if you don't believe, but please don't try to stifle my expression of thanksgiving and love for God by suggesting I am intolerant because I don't cite everyone's beliefs when I seek to express the only one which I am an authority on...mine). We must do all we can to deny them their evil objective - our demise. Make no mistake about it, they want to destroy us and our way of life because it is the only thing standing between them and the creation of a super Islamic-state in the Middle East and beyond, their stated goal.
    While I'm not sure what protections - other than those measures aimed at preventing the Islamic terrorist from destroying us - have been dismantled, I am sure that all such measures have been approved by Congress in overwhelming numbers and/or are being reviewed by courts with jurisdiction. And, that the voting population of the United States has spoken in several elections, both congressional and presidential, since that day in September 2001 when the Islamic terrorist attempted to decapitate us before the world. We can conclude one of two things from this: the number of Conservative-Christians in our nation is far greater than was thought by the left, or huge sectors of the US voting population have decided that the Socialist driven secular movement away from our God-derived liberty and values has gone too far. Perhaps given the choice between Islam, Secularism, and their Judeo-Christian values (that has served them so well for more than 225 year) they have decided to support, advocate and practice Christianity. This would certainly explain the explosion in attendance at our nations churches and the construction of mega-churches across the nation. Should they suppress such thinking? Should they vote for leaders who do not support their views?
    Should all candidates, whom liberals or Socialist believe to be Conservative-Christian be constitutionally forbidden from holding office? I'm not sure the "red states" would pass that amendment - Massachusetts is questionable, however. As I'm sure you know, ours is a Democratic Republic. Now this may sound harsh, but it means that the majority gets to choose those who represent the nation. This is accomplished, as it has been for more than 225 years, through elections. Said elected officials, Presidents Bush or Clinton for example, then appoint other individuals to positions throughout the government, such as the United States Supreme Court. That said, the rights of the minority must be reasonably protected as well. I also completely agree with you that we must monitor with true diligence our God-given blessing of liberty.
    George Bush had nothing to do with establishing military regulations or protocol... George Washington perhaps. There are long establish laws that govern the conduct of military members, and all who pass thought those gates of honor understand that they waive certain rights to protect those of the nation at large. There are however, certain administrative processes that address the dilemma of the 22 year old enlisted troop you cite. To be quit frank; not many heroes would want a one such as him "watching their back" so administrative discharge would likely be welcomed by all concerned. I can not address adequately one who would commit violent acts on innocent people in the name of religion. I do fear, however, that the spiritual vacuum that Socialist secularism leaves could eventually be filled with the most violent and fastest growing religion known to modern man. A religion that uses jihad as its method of evangelizing when elections, words, fear, and intimidation fail. [
    - JPB

  • 10/17 5:14pm PFD: True, but do you kill for your secular country because its leader received a message he believes to be from God, or do you serve your country to protect and defend the freedoms and rights, bestowed by the Constitution, and to defend the homeland against an imminent threat? When our sons and daughters enlist, must we now tell them they may be put in harm's way because of an individual's religious beliefs? What if the leader of the free world converted to Islam mid-presidency? I have immense respect and gratitude for those who serve. They, more than any of us, deserve to know why they are fighting.
    - TC

  • 10/17 3:07pm TC, re: But what of the 22-year-old enlisted person's message from his/her God that says Thou shall not kill? When that enlisted person enlisted in the military they swore to defend this country. The defense of this country supersedes what they may believe. If they were not willing to kill for this country then they should have just gone the college loan route.
    - PFD

  • 10/17 9:48am JPB: Thank you, too, for your thoughtful response. Since it is clear you very much respect the first amendment and believe deeply in our freedom to worship as we choose, our disagreement is on some of the finer points. You are right that the origins of the Constitution and our system of government were influenced hugely by a prevailing belief in God and Christianity at the time. Personally, I take no issue with that. It's historical fact. For many decades now those Christian overtones have co-existed peacefully with the changing culture and attitudes - religious, social, ethical, legal, and moral, that we've witnessed in the U.S. While I would like to think it's because we as Americans are tolerant, open-minded, and respectful of others, it likely has more to do with the protections offered by the Constitution. What has changed is that religious extremists are trying to hijack the Constitution, much as they hijacked the Bush Administration, and are aggressively dismantling the protections that have kept us a free and open society. It may be more palatable if you are a conservative Christian, but for the average Christian who believes deeply in their own faith but also respects that others believe differently, these are frightening times. Us "liberals" are rightly a little sensitive. It is a slippery slope we are now on, and we all should be very, very afraid.
    I don't agree that non-believers are unable to understand the deep faith of others. (It may well be the other way around. How many of us can imagine the genuine anguish of devout Catholics who feel betrayed and now adrift because of the abuse scandal?) Faith is personal, hard to articulate, and very much a private matter. Yes, we should all be free to pray and communicate as we wish. But the First Amendment seeks to protect us against one person making policy that impacts others on the basis of one person's religion, or "conversations" with "their" God. I am not making fun of one communicating with their God. But what of the 22-year-old enlisted person's message from his/her God that says Thou shall not kill? Does Bush's conversation with his God override the enlisted man's conversation with his God? What about the person who doesn't believe in God, or a divine being? Are they left out of the conversation? Are they to do others bidding based on another's belief? And, of course, the Islamic terrorists believe deeply that they are doing the work of their God by flying planes into buildings and strapping explosives to themselves. If that isn't a deep belief I don't know what is. Yes, I think it's crazy, but they genuinely believe they are instructed by Allah to kill all infidels. Clearly, there is no place for religion in modern foreign policy, military policy, and domestic policy. The country, and indeed the world, is too complicated, too diverse, to base any policy on religion. The mess we are in is precisely due to the lack of separation of church and state, and, getting back to Harriet Miers, we in America should be taking steps to rebuild the wall of separation, not seeking to bring it down further.
    - TC

  • 10/15 4:22pm TC: Thank you for your post. It is well framed and I completely agree with much of what you wrote. Possessing a graduate degree, I have read and considered the First Amendment many times. In fact, I spent 20 years of my life defending it in the armed forces of our great nation. As such, I offer this as evidence that I fully support it. I am keenly aware that the freedom to worship is a right, not a religion, and that no official religion is implied. That said, I believe the tricky proposition is where the rubber meets the road. I'm sure you would agree that the culture, laws and value systems of a nation are, in large part, derived from its religious origins and teachings. This is clearly demonstrated in our laws, and it would be most difficult to deny in much of the Islamic world. I cite Iran, Afghanistan, and others as extreme instances, as they are - or in the case of Afghanistan, have been examples of Religious States (a nasty proposition regardless of the flavor). Organizations and individuals are no different in this regard, their thoughts, ideas, values, and choices are derived the same way. That any organization or individual would choose to represent them, one who holds the same values, should come as know surprise to anyone in a free country such as ours. We American have both a constitutional, and the super-majority believe, a God given right to these liberties. I offer the opening words our United States Constitution as food for thought:
    "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."
    I hope you would agree that a "Blessings of Liberty", as such, would be given by God, particularly during the time period and context presented above. The word blessing is found many, many times in my bible, and I'm sure in most other religious books. Its origin is deeply rooted on the blessings of God. It is very important to note that it is not something given by the state, or up to any person, organization or other authority to take away. As the bible states, it is up to the individual to decide if he or she will accept God, his blessings or even recognize him.
    With regard to President Bush's most recent pick for the supreme court, I do not agree with it either. But my reasoning is that of an apparent lack of judicial experience, and not that she has not proven herself a right wing nut. Any executive or responsible individual hiring for a position would want to see a proven track record - Republicans and Democrats are no different in this regard. Yes, there are some far right wingers that would like to stack the court in a way that would not benefit the nation at large. Likewise, there are some far left wingers (socialists) who would like a shot at it too. Please indulge me while I offer a metaphor that occurred to me when I was 18 years of age: "The eagle has a left-wing and a right-wing, but the brain is found between the two". I suggest the novel idea of allowing the confirmation hearing to proceed as prescribed by the constitution and learning what qualifications this nominee has.
    I would say this, for a non-believer to suggest that they understand the faith and relationship another has with God, or to suggest the means by which one professes to communicate with God is crazy, completely misses the point of at least one element of the 1st Amendment.
    - JPB

  • 10/12 1:14am JPB: That we in America are free to worship as we choose is not a "religion," despite being a widely held belief. It is a legal right, guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. It guarantees freedoms of religion, speech, writing and publishing, peaceful assembly, and the freedom to raise grievances with the Government. In addition, it requires that a wall of separation be maintained between church and state. It reads:
    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."
    Pointing this out will no doubt strike you as splitting hairs, as you are obviously committed to the concept of freedom of religion. You appear to be equally committed, however, to assuming that anyone who takes issue with the current swagger of Christian conservatives is anti-God, which is ludicrous. That conservatives across the country are up in arms with Harriet Miers being reluctant to discuss the role of religion in public policy is all the evidence you need that the wall of separation of church and state is crumbling at an alarming rate. These folks want actual proof that a justice appointed to the Supreme Court, whose most important task is to uphold the constitution, will in fact ignore it. The U.S. is not a "Christian country," it is a country that is predominantly Christian. There is a big difference, and anyone willing to point that out should not be vilified and considered anti-Christian, anti-God, or anti-American. In fact, they should be commended for their willingness and presence of mind to wade through the dangerous propaganda that permeates the airwaves, and remain committed to the principles of the constitution, which all us Americans hold dear. The Bush administration's bungling of the War on Terror, itself an important and worthy fight, has germinated the seeds of the very thing it claims to want to protect us from -- religious intolerence.
    The voice of God that Bush hears is anything but. Karl Rove and Dick Cheney, perhaps, but God? I doubt it. While I can't claim to have had actual "conversations" with the Almighty, the Christian lessons I am guided by include things like not lying, not stealing, feeding the poor and healing the sick, loving thy neighbor. Not sure exactly who is whispering in Bush's ear, but he should change the channel.
    - TC

  • 10/10 3:32pm PFD it is clear that you and I will have to stay engaged here to ensure this anti-God, anti-conservative, liberal campaign is balanced. I'm sure you and I would both agree that many mistakes have been made in the current administration's efforts to combat this menace that the Clinton administration allowed to grow (his mistake). But we know that fighting this war over there (ok, so Iraq was a battlefield of choice, but at least we chose it not the Islamic terrorists) is better than fighting it here. We are clearly dealing with some leftover frustration from the previous two elections. Let's hang around and not allow these guys to just play the same old fiddle so as folks forget the real issue - we are at war with these terrorists... as is much of the world.
    - JPB

  • 10/10 2:19pm PFD, I wasn't saying anything about people who believe in God, I was commenting on the Commander in Chief of the U.S. Armed Forces. Pretty rich, claiming divine guidance while with every act spreading evil and corruption. Then again, those who walk with God are recognized by their actions - and the devil speaks with a forked tongue.
    PJB, Ashcroft, Bush and Congress have done more to threaten my way of life than any foreign agent. Locking up people without charges and torturing them to extract confessions (sorry; "actionable intelligence") used to be something only our enemies did...
    - AR

  • 10/10 2:17pm To JPB: Hopefully, this mysterious, unidentified "religion" you speak of also includes those who choose not to worship at all. It is unclear to me why you are making certain assumptions in your posts. For example, what have I said in any of mine that indicates an attack on my fellow Americans? Jesus Christ?? I have never even brought the name up, only you have. Right, wrong, or otherwise it has become obvious to me that we are on vastly different wavelengths, making further debate futile. In parting, I would hope you would keep in mind that disagreeing with the deceitful policies and failed strategies of the present administration does not constitute a lack of concern for the "threat to our way of life and our children." On the contrary, it only means we want policies that work effectively against such a threat, strategies that do not include deception, hidden agenda, or unnecessary loss of human life.
    - TEM

  • 10/9 8:48pm TEM: I'm sorry you chose to overlook my very specific reply to your very specific question - our religion is the freedom to peacefully worship as we choose. I cite your mention of the diversity of victims of the terrorist attacks on our nation in your 10/8 post in support of this observation. The Islamic terrorist seek to destroy that freedom, as well as others, and force the world to suffer theirs. This is a stated goal and no surprise to the enlightened.
    While I am always willing to discuss domestic differences, I believe that at the moment my focus is better spent on the advancing self-declared enemy that seeks to destroy me; rather than attacking fellow Americans - as the enemy would have me to do! Now... for your benefit once again I digress - what about the threat to our way of life and our children?
    P.S.: I was surprised to find that a seemingly tolerant and educated one such as yourself would generalize so easily based on the mere mention of the name Jesus Christ.
    - JPB

  • 10/8 5:22pm You certainly do digress, JPB, but more importantly, you still have not answered my very specific question. In your post of 9/30 you made a clear reference to "our religion" implying that we all adhere to one organized religion in this nation. These types of generalizations or oversimplifications (which seem to be growing by the minute) are starting to concern a lot of us, whether liberal OR conservative. I will give you the benefit of the doubt and dismiss it as an unfortunate choice of words, but I would also like to remind you that the terrorist acts of 9/11/01, as well as any of these violent extremist actions (including those of our very own home-grown terrorists such as Timothy McVeigh, Terry Nichols, et. al.) were not aimed at any one group or religion. The diversity of the victims reflect the diversity of the population at large--some were religious, some were not, some were members of organized religions, some were not, some were Christian, some were not, some were Islamic, some were not, some were Jewish, some were not, etc. I only bring this to your attention because your posts have a certain tone or ring that, with all due respect, suggest the myopia of a Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell (and their followers). Perhaps I'm reading too much into your comments, mistaking passion for intolerance. If that's the case, I apologize.
    - TEM

  • 10/8 5:15pm As others see the United States, specifically the administration of GW Bush:
    In a dramatic rebuff to President George Bush, the Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to the man who dared to tell the Americans that the main plank of the US argument for waging war on Iraq was based on a lie.

    The Nobel committee bestowed the prestigious award for 2005 on Mohamed ElBaradei, the UN official who rose to prominence by exposing the lengths that America would go to in its efforts to build a case for war.

    Mr ElBaradei, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which shares the prize, delivered a body blow to the Bush administration on the eve of the Iraq war.

    During a televised meeting of the UN Security Council in March 2003, he told assembled foreign ministers that documents purporting to prove Iraq had attempted to import uranium from Niger to make a nuclear weapon were fake.

    Leading lights of the Bush administration, particularly Condoleezza Rice and Vice-President Dick Cheney, had advanced Iraq's supposed nuclear weapons programme as a major reason for going to war.

    [Independent]
    Published: 08 October 2005

    - RH

  • 10/8 9:28am To TEM: If the events of 911, Bali and the slaughter of innocent little school children in Russia have not enlightened you, I fear there is little I can do to help. Our religion is the freedom to peacefully worship as we choose, as it has been for over 200 years. (I happen to believe in Jesus Christ who is an historical fact - not merely a thought is one's mind). The Islamic terrorist, who by the way are also sexist, racist and elitist, would destroy all who oppose their religion. But I digress - what about the threats to our way of life and children?
    - JPB

  • 10/7 2:23pm Hey AR, what next are you going to say about people who believe in God? So now it is nothing more than "voices in his head"? Maybe liberal heroes like Clinton (take your pick on which one), Kennedy or Kerry could learn a thing or two by listening to God.
    - PFD

  • 10/7 1:39pm In case you were wondering why the man makes such strange decisions, yes, apparently there are voices in his head telling him to do so. And here I thought it was just cronyism and bad judgement.
    President George Bush has claimed he was told by God to invade Iraq and attack Osama bin Laden's stronghold of Afghanistan as part of a divine mission to bring peace to the Middle East[.]

    The President made the assertion during his first meeting with Palestinian leaders in June 2003, according to a BBC series which will be broadcast this month.

    "I'm driven with a mission from God. God would tell me, 'George, go and fight those terrorists in Afghanistan.' And I did, and then God would tell me, 'George go and end the tyranny in Iraq,' and I did."

    "`And now, again, I feel God's words coming to me, `Go get the Palestinians their state and get the Israelis their security, and get peace in the Middle East.' And by God I'm gonna do it."

    The White House has refused to comment on what it terms a private conversation.

    [Independent]

    Now, many believe, but it's quite... rare to have conversations with the almighty.
    - AR

  • 10/2 4:46pm JPB: I had the same question as TEM. What religion is "our religion?"
    - TC

  • 10/2 11:10am To JPB: What is "our religion"?? Enlighten us.
    - TEM

  • 9/30 5:42pm The war we currently find ourselves in is a war of wills. We can fight it there or we can fight it here; make your choice wisely for they prefer here. Think about it next time you are deciding to go to a football game or Quincy Market!
    If the Islamic terrorists put away their anger and weapons today war will end - if we stop defending ourselves today - we, our precious children, and our way of life will end. Do you have the will to fight and live or cower and die?
    This plague must be faced as any other that we have encountered, the Nazis could not be defeated without war and sacrifice nor can this racist menace that seeks to destroy our religion and our way of life.
    - JPB

  • 9/25 10:38am Welcome to the new Opinion page! Well, OK, not so new, since this is the direct continuation of the GulfWar page, just the name has changed.
    There are always topics in the news that we have strong opinions on; this is the place where they can be expressed. My personal list of current topics of interest includes Iraq, Iran, the Supreme Court, Halliburton, Intelligent Design, and our local Katrina relief effort.
    - Wm.

    Recent discussion topics on Norfolknet have included:
    The ongoing Gulf War (last 9/25 10:38am)
    The Delta House group home (last 3/30 9:12am)



    There are no older messages, this is the first Opinion page. .

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