SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: KLP who wrote (2584)6/22/2003 9:46:34 PM
From: unclewest  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793991
 
"Charlie" Y'Diam Hmok was laid to rest yesterday.

Charlie's first military service was when he was 12 YO, and a member of his father's partisan guerrilla group that lured occupying Japanese soldiers into ambushes. Later, Charlie was a member of a reinforcing Montagnard unit that parachuted into Dien Bien Phu the night before the French surrendered. Charlie was wounded there and did not like to tell that story except to discuss the French army.

When American Special Forces arrived in South Vietnam, Charlie served with Special Forces A-503, Project Omega, and B-55 Mike Force. Charlie was a Montagnard company Commander in B-55 as we left. He then became a Battalion Commander. After the fall, Charlie was imprisioned for 8 years by the Vietnamese for his support of America's efforts to free his people. Charlie was finally liberated and arrived in America with his wife about 7 years ago.

Before the service, I visited Charlie's open coffin at the church. Charlie's son escorted me to the alter. I Prayed for Charlie, his family and the Montagnard people. I prayed for all Special Forces warriors and their families. Before leaving Charlie's side, I reached down, into the casket, and rubbed the Special Forces crest that gleamed against a 5th Special Forces Group, Airborne background, on the Green Beret Charlie was holding in both hands. I had often seen Charlie wearing that Green Beret comfortably and proudly at military and civilian functions in Greensboro, Ft Bragg and North Carolina. As my hand brushed against his, I wanted to pull him up. I yearned for the sound of a medivac bird for him.
Knowing it was not to be, I saluted a warrior for the last time.

Many Green Berets and more than 50 Montagnards from every American Special Forces unit Charlie served in, attended the service. More Special Forces veterans and Montagnards from every tribe, Cambodians, Nungs and American civilians were also in attendance. Charlie was a true hero of freedom.

Charlie's family has been and continue to be key figures in Southeast Asia working for Montagnard freedom from oppression. While it is not suitable for the internet, I assure you liberation efforts initiated by Charlie continue to bear fruit to this moment.

My buddy, George, and Charlie's closest American Special Forces combat friend told me tonight...Thank God Charlie died free!

George and his bride have invited Charlie's wife to live with them.

In 1969, over 50,000 Montagnard tribesmen were fighting for the American 5th Special Forces Group, Airborne.
At least 85,000 Montagnards died while fighting on the Special Forces payroll.

unclewest



To: KLP who wrote (2584)6/23/2003 4:08:33 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793991
 
The Money Magnet
By BOB HERBERT - NEW YORK TIMES

Another column by a Liberal Pundit showing his frustration with the way things are going.

It's a great time to be George W. Bush.

The president will waltz into Manhattan today for another $2,000-a-plate fund-raiser, the latest stop on his fabulously successful dining-for-dollars tour. These are fun events at which the fat cats throw millions of dollars at the president to reinforce their already impenetrable ring of influence around the national government.

Mr. Bush is expected to pull in $5 million at this evening's sit-down, and may ultimately raise an astonishing quarter of a billion dollars for his re-election bid. During a brief stop Friday at a reception in Greensboro, Ga., where he picked up a quick $2.2 million, the president happily told his supporters, "You put the wind at my back."

I'm sure there's no connection between fat-cat fund-raising and, say, federal tax policy. But there was some particularly interesting information about the Bush tax cuts in an article yesterday by The Times's David E. Rosenbaum. Citing data from a study by Citizens for Tax Justice, Mr. Rosenbaum pointed out that the richest 1 percent of Americans will get an average tax reduction of nearly $100,000 a year, while "the tax relief most people will receive is quite meager."

Half of all taxpayers will get a cut of less than $100 this year. By 2005, three-quarters will get less than $100.

The middle class and working people don't seem to mind that they've been blithely left behind. Mr. Bush's approval ratings are way high, so high they've got the terminally timid Democrats scared to death to confront the president head on. The man who elbowed his way into the White House with a minority of the popular vote is on a roll.

But while these may be the best of times for George W., this is not such a great moment for America.

Start anywhere. Tax cuts? Mr. Bush has behaved like a profligate parent who spends every dollar the family has accumulated, mortgages everything the family owns and maxes out every credit card he can get his hands on. At some point in this scenario the children and grandchildren will be left with nothing but a mountain of debt.

Jobs? More than three million private-sector jobs have been lost on this president's watch. People are staying out of work longer and the pay gains of the late 90's are being eroded. Time Magazine recently asked, "Why are American workers dying the death of a thousand pay cuts?"

Government services? Prepare to wave goodbye to Medicare and Social Security as you've known them. Right wingers have always wanted to cripple the government's social service programs and now they are racing toward achievement of that poisonous goal. With the president's tax cuts bankrupting the government, there will be no money left for meaningful support of even the most popular social programs.

The environment? Among other things, the Bush White House does not like global warming. So it just edits out, eliminates, erases important references to it in official government documents. Gas-guzzling S.U.V.'s are good. But in the Bush II White House, global warming as most scientists know it doesn't even exist.

We've got some waking up to do.

A budget catastrophe is hammering state and local governments across the country, driving up taxes and fees, and driving out important government services. This story is still not getting the attention it deserves. Some public school districts have had to shorten the school year because they ran out of money. In some areas medical services to seriously ill individuals are being curtailed. In some jurisdictions, criminal offenders are being released from prison early, and some criminal laws are not being enforced because of a lack of funds.

Because of cuts in the police budget, station houses in Portland, Ore., now close at night.

These are not topics that will be explored in depth at this evening's presidential fund-raiser. And you can bet that there will not be any straight talk about the quagmire we are sinking into in Iraq, or the outlandish deceptions that the president employed to get us in there.

No, this will be a fun evening filled with the sound of joyous plutocratic laughter. Mr. Bush will leave with his pockets bulging and the wind at his back. The reality of life in George Bush's America for working men and women, and for the poor, will be left for others to attend to, presumably in some post-Bush administration.
nytimes.com