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To: Sully- who wrote (27483)7/18/2007 6:12:32 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
It’s Time to Withdraw…

By Texas Rainmaker on Gun Control

…from Chicago?

Rob highlights an interesting quote from Barack Obama yesterday:

<<< “Nearly three dozen Chicago students have been killed this year, according to Chicago Public Schools. Obama said that figure is higher than the number of Illinois serviceman who’ve died in Iraq in 2007.” >>>


As Rob points out, “And Iraq is a war zone. Chicago Public Schools is just…high school. Kind of puts the war in perspective, no?

feeds.feedburner.com

sayanythingblog.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)7/19/2007 8:36:21 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (25) | Respond to of 35834
 
Fact or Fiction?

A mission for the blogosphere.

by Michael Goldfarb
The Weekly Standard
07/18/2007

The New Republic runs a piece in this week's issue titled "Shock Troops" and authored by Scott Thomas--described by the magazine as a "pseudonym for a soldier currently serving in Baghdad." "Thomas" is the author of two previous dispatches from Iraq for the New Republic, both of which recount deeply disturbing anecdotes (in one, an Iraqi boy who calls himself James Bond has his tongue cut out for talking to Americans; in the other, dogs feast on a corpse in the street). His latest piece is even more disturbing. It recounts several instances of gross misconduct by the men in his unit, some of which are, to echo the title of his piece, deeply shocking--If they are true--a big if, according to several people with experience in Iraq. One described it to me as sounding like a "pastiche of the 'This is no bullshit . . . stories soldiers like to tell."

The first episode puts "Thomas"'s unit at a "chow hall" at an unnamed base. A woman eating there is wearing "an unrecognizable tan uniform, so I couldn't really tell whether she was a soldier or a civilian contractor." The woman's face is described as having been "more or less melted, along with all the hair on that side of her head," by an IED. She sits down for lunch next to the men. Here's how "Thomas" describes what happens next:

<<< We were already halfway through our meals when she arrived. After a minute or two of eating in silence, one of my friends stabbed his spoon violently into his pile of mashed potatoes and left it there.

"Man, I can't eat like this," he said.

"Like what?" I said. "Chow hall food getting to you?"

"No--with that fucking freak behind us!" he exclaimed, loud enough for not only her to hear us, but everyone at the surrounding tables. I looked over at the woman, and she was intently staring into each forkful of food before it entered her half-melted mouth.

"Are you kidding? I think she's fucking hot!" I blurted out.

"What?" said my friend, half-smiling.

"Yeah man," I continued. "I love chicks that have been intimate--with IEDs. It really turns me on--melted skin, missing limbs, plastic noses . . . ."

"You're crazy, man!" my friend said, doubling over with laughter. I took it as my cue to continue.

"In fact, I was thinking of getting some girls together and doing a photo shoot. Maybe for a calendar? 'IED Babes.' We could have them pose in thongs and bikinis on top of the hoods of their blown-up vehicles."

My friend was practically falling out of his chair laughing. The disfigured woman slammed her cup down and ran out of the chow hall, her half-finished tray of food nearly falling to the ground. >>>


Is it possible that American soldiers would be so sadistic when confronted by a badly burned woman, who may be a fellow soldier?
Well, yes: Anything is possible when it comes to human depravity. But consider: these are enlisted men who, by the author's own account, don't know who this woman is or what rank she might hold. (Incidentally, wouldn't soldiers be able to distinguish a soldier from a contractor--especially if she is a regular at the chow hall?) Would they really ridicule her with raised voices in a public place, on "one especially crowded day"?

The next episode is every bit as shocking. Indeed, the behavior it describes is a clear violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The author claims that his unit stumbled across a mass grave filled with the remains of Iraqi children, and, rather than report the find, chose to desecrate the corpses:


<<< About six months into our deployment, we were assigned a new area to patrol, southwest of Baghdad. We spent a few weeks constructing a combat outpost, and, in the process, we did a lot of digging. At first, we found only household objects like silverware and cups. Then we dug deeper and found children's clothes: sandals, sweatpants, sweaters. Like a strange archeological dig of the recent past, the deeper we went, the more personal the objects we discovered. And, eventually, we reached the bones. All children's bones: tiny cracked tibias and shoulder blades. We found pieces of hands and fingers. We found skull fragments. No one cared to speculate what, exactly, had happened here, but it was clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort.

One private, infamous as a joker and troublemaker, found the top part of a human skull, which was almost perfectly preserved. It even had chunks of hair, which were stiff and matted down with dirt. He squealed as he placed it on his head like a crown. It was a perfect fit. As he marched around with the skull on his head, people dropped shovels and sandbags, folding in half with laughter. No one thought
to tell him to stop. No one was disgusted. Me included.

The private wore the skull for the rest of the day and night. Even on a mission, he put his helmet over the skull. He observed that he was grateful his hair had just been cut--since it would make it easier to pick out the pieces of rotting flesh that were digging into his head. >>>


Again, American troops might be capable of such behavior. But most incidents of soldiers taking such war "trophies," to be blunt, involve dead enemy fighters, not massacred children. The questions pile up. Would a child's skull fit on the head of fully-grown man? Would pieces of flesh and hair still remain so long after the fact? Would American soldiers fail to report the discovery of a mass grave? Are there really units corrupt enough for a private to dare do such a thing for a day and a night?

Finally, the author tells of a friend who drives a Bradley armored vehicle and has a penchant for careening around the streets of Baghdad in the hope of causing as much destruction--and killing as many stray dogs--as possible.


<<< I know another private who really only enjoyed driving Bradley Fighting Vehicles because it gave him the opportunity to run things over. He took out curbs, concrete barriers, corners of buildings, stands in the market, and his favorite target: dogs. Occasionally, the brave ones would chase the Bradleys, barking at them like they bark at trash trucks in America--providing him with the perfect opportunity to suddenly swerve and catch a leg or a tail in the vehicle's tracks. He kept a tally of his kills in a little green notebook that sat on the dashboard of the driver's hatch. One particular day, he killed three dogs. He slowed the Bradley down to lure the first kill in, and, as the diesel engine grew quieter, the dog walked close enough for him to jerk the machine hard to the right and snag its leg under the tracks. The leg caught, and he dragged the dog for a little while, until it disengaged and lay twitching in the road. A roar of laughter broke out over the radio. Another notch for the book. The second kill was a straight shot: A dog that was lying in the street and bathing in the sun didn't have enough time to get up and run away from the speeding Bradley. Its front half was completely severed from its rear, which was twitching wildly, and its head was still raised and smiling at the sun as if nothing had happened at all. >>>


One simple fact renders this tale highly implausible. Such erratic driving is likely to greatly increase a vehicle's exposure to roadside bombs, which insurgents frequently hide in the corpses of animals, or beside trash-strewn curbs.

We contacted the New Republic in order to get any information that might help us to verify the authenticity of "Thomas"'s disturbing account, and the magazine, while insisting that it had promised to protect the identity of the author to shield him from retribution by the military, did provide us with some additional details. "Scott Thomas" claims that the incident at the chow hall occurred at Forward Operating Base Falcon. And the mass grave, he says, was discovered a couple miles south of Baghdad International Airport in farmland. We have also contacted the Pentagon in the hopes of getting more information to either corroborate or disprove "Thomas"'s account.

But we believe that the best chance for getting at the truth is likely to come from the combined efforts of the blogosphere, which has, in the past, proven adept at determining the reliability of such claims. To that end we'd encourage the milblogging community to do some digging of their own, and individual soldiers and veterans to come forward with relevant information--either about the specific events or their plausibility in general.

Does anyone who has served at FOB Falcon remember hearing about or seeing the humiliation of this woman? Do they know her name and how we might get in contact with her to confirm the author's account of the events that day?

Is anyone familiar with a combat outpost a few miles south of the Baghdad airport where a mass grave of Iraqi children was discovered? What about the other parts of the story? And does anyone else know of Bradleys careening wildly through the streets of Baghdad?

Please email any information, thoughts, and suggestions for further lines of inquiry to THE WORLDWIDE STANDARD at wws@weeklystandard.com. Click here for updates at THE WORLDWIDE STANDARD.

Michael Goldfarb is online editor at THE WEEKLY STANDARD.

weeklystandard.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)7/19/2007 11:12:16 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Sullivan on Me on the NIE

Andy McCarthy
The Corner

Andrew Sullivan personifies the Left’s suicide syndrome. It is not enough to be right that the war has been prosecuted poorly in Iraq. For him, our penance for making errors must be to abandon the field and endanger ourselves rather than change course and quell the danger.

In last night’s lengthy post (link below), which I think most will agree—if they wade through it—is hardly an apologia for the Bush administration’s handling of the war, I wrote the following:

<<< Al Qaeda is massed in Iraq — the NIE released today says al Qaeda in Iraq is the network's "most visible and capable affiliate." (Emphasis added.) I don't know how anyone could justify withdrawing from Iraq when we have an opportunity to inflict major damage on al Qaeda's most capable force. >>>

Andrew objects:

<<< “Notice how McCarthy actually inverts the reasoning of the NIE. He turns al Qaeda's most capable ‘affiliate’ into its most capable ‘force’ within two sentences. You don't see a more clinical example of denial than that.” >>>

This is a bizarre objection. Al Qaeda is a network with a centralized hierarchy which acts through cells and affiliates throughout the world. It is a terror network, which means those cells and affiliates are properly described as “forces”—force is what they do. The NIE conveys that al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) is currently al Qaeda’s most capable force. I didn’t need to use the word force; I could have repeated the word affiliate, or I suppose I could have said component, faction or some-such. But I wasn’t, as Andrew seems to be suggesting, saying that AQI is more capable than al Qaeda as a whole. As AQI is part of al Qaeda, that would be impossible.

So what have I inverted? According to Andrew,

<<< “The NIE is clear, in fact, that by far the gravest threat is from "good old, OBL-led al Qaeda.” >>>

Well, yes, Andrew. I didn’t say otherwise. Al Qaeda is a grave threat precisely because it has lots of forces, affiliates, components, factions and cells which, like AQI, are very capable (if not quite as capable as AQI).

I don’t really understand what Andrew thinks “good old, OBL-led al Qaeda” consists of, but he may have noticed that Osama and central command do not blow stuff up themselves. They plan from their safe havens, like northwest Pakistan, but they execute through their, well, forces. I am not minimizing the importance of central command and its safe-havens. I have argued it many times, including in the very post that has Andrew carping:

<<< “My hope with the surge has been that we stay on the field, fight al Qaeda, and — finally — realize that there is no choice but to deal with the Mullahs and the Pakistani border region. That's what our security demands, and it's much less likely to happen if we pull out.” (Emphasis added.) >>>

Indeed, I have argued that among the most important goals in Iraq is to deny al Qaeda a safe-haven there. Al Qaeda is much more dangerous when it has stable headquarters.

Strangest of all, however, is what Andrew deduces from what he sees as a divergence—but what is actually a convergence—between AQI and “good old, OBL-led al Qaeda”:

<<< Yes, al Qaeda in Mesopotamia [(aka AQI—Andrew uses “AQM”)] has now the capacity to strike in the West—and may well have inspired recent terror attacks in Britain. But, of course, AQM only exists at the strength it does because of the Bush administration's bungling of the Iraq occupation. >>>

Okay, so then … what? We pull out? AQI is the most capable affiliate, it wants to attack the West, we are in Iraq now in a position to take it on, and we should … leave and let them have their safe-haven? We should let them win and become more dangerous, even if that can be prevented, because we made errors?

And Andrew’s wind-up:

<<< “And we are being asked to follow the same leadership that did this to us into a new and unpredictable war with Iran. Are they kidding?” >>>

In case no one has noticed, the leadership he is talking about does not want to fight Iran, and part of why the “good old, OBL-led al Qaeda” is so menacing is that it has been aided and abetted by Iran for at least fifteen years. There is nothing new about war with Iran — the mullahs have already been fighting it for years. Are we supposed to do nothing about that because Andrew is unhappy with President Bush?

corner.nationalreview.com

corner.nationalreview.com

andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)7/20/2007 10:21:28 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    What surprises me is that the extremists have fallen so 
deeply into their own narrative that they are wholly
unaware of how their call for strict control of the news
and their slander of the widely and rightly admired
extraordinary hero that is General Petraeus exposes them
to the public as deeply unbalanced, anti-intellectual and
far, far removed from the mainstream of America. This
disconnection from ordinary Americans is always obvious
when a leftist resorts to the most foul sorts of profanity
and vulgarity, but the rage that bubbles and erupts again
and again is the sort of eye-opener that not even friends
can ignore for very long. The demands for the Fairness
Doctrine’s return displayed the same sort of zealotry in
the attempt to shut down voices not in keeping with their
own. The illiberal reflexiveness of the left tells you all
you need to know about how they would govern if they ever
got close to power.

Attacking General Petraeus: The Hysterics of the Anti-War Fringe

By Hugh Hewitt
Townhall.com Columnists
Friday, July 20, 2007

The decline of the leftwing netroots into one great, venomous snarl is far advanced, well-known, and much remarked upon by political observers from across the spectrum. But even given its deserved reputation for poisonous invective, the assault mounted against General David Petraeus surprises. General Petraeus made the unforgivable mistake in their eyes of appearing on my radio program and answering questions.
(The transcript is here and the audio is here.) Both because he agreed to be interviewed by a journalist favorable to victory and supportive of President Bush and because his answers suggest progress is being made in Iraq, Petraeus has been savaged by leftist bloggers big and little.

Among center-right bloggers and pundits, the reaction of Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds was typical. “Every Member of Congress should have to read [the transcript]. Reynolds opined –the expected reaction of anyone interested in the facts about the surge. Others on the center-right applauded the general for agreeing to an extended interview and urging more, not fewer engagements with the press. For a couple of examples of thoughtful responses to the general’s answers, see The Belmont Club and In From The Cold. (“The exceptionally high tempo of special forces activities suggests that they have been ‘unleashed’ in Iraq, and are engaging the enemy with deadly efficiency,” concludes the retired spook who is “In From The Cold.” “While most media reports focus on conventional units, engaged in large-scale operations such as the recent clearing of Baquba, there is another equally important conflict being waged in the shadows. And that’s where Al Qaeda is taking a major beating.” The Belmont Club’s Wretchard noted that in the interview “Petraeus gives us a glimpse into the sharp end of the war. The kinetic battle,” and he goes on to speculate on the long-term impact of the war’s tactics on the American military.)

Analysis of what the general actually said was in short supply among the critics. Even before he had read the transcript, Andrew Sullivan launched into one of his trademarks explosions of hysteria and slander.

Sullivan declared,


<<< “I think such a decision to cater to one party's propaganda outlet renders Petraeus' military independence moot”. “I'll wait for the transcript”. >>>


He continued, before not waiting for the transcript,


<<< “But Petraeus is either willing to be used by the Republican propaganda machine or he is part of the Republican propaganda machine. I'm beginning to suspect the latter. The only thing worse than a deeply politicized and partisan war is a deeply politicized and partisan commander. But we now know whose side Petraeus seems to be on: Cheney's. Expect spin, not truth, in September.”(emphasis added.) >>>


Even for a scribbler as discredited and cartoonish as Sullivan has become, the casual slander of General Petraeus’ integrity is breathtaking. Sullivan’s smear, however, was far from the worst the anti-war crowd produced in their pre-emptive assault on Petraeus’ status report on the surge, due in September. The famed “constitutional rights litigator” (self-described) Glenn Greenwald denounced General Petraeus for using “White House talking points” and unveiled how he will be working overtime to dispute Petraeus’ September assessment:


<<< Despite the Mandate Orthodoxy that Gen. Petraeus be treated as the Objective, Unassailably Credible Oracle for how we are doing in Iraq and whether we are winning, his track record of quite dubious claims over the last several years about the war strongly negates that view. It ought to go without saying that no military commander -- particularly in the midst of a disastrous four-year war -- is entitled to blind faith and to be placed above being questioned. It is not only proper, but critically necessary, to subject happy war claims from the military to great scrutiny. >>>


The Atlantic’s Matthew Yglesias also blasted the general’s decision to be interviewed by me (a “lunatic”) and derisively labeled him as “The New Jesus.”


Over at The Carpetbagger Report, a post concluded:

<<< And speaking of Petraeus, what should we expect from him come September? It’s probably best to lower expectations now. Petraeus’ credibility suffered a serious blow this week when he appeared on far-right activist Hugh Hewitt’s radio show, and stuck closely to the White House script. >>>

Many of the comments that followed were as vile, an example of which is “Can you call him Betrayus now? He’s just an GOP stooge in a uniform.”

Ron Beasly began his assessment at Gun Toting Liberal with a slander on all active duty generals:


<<< To reach the rank of general you have to be part politician, it has always been that way. A good general is always a general first and a politician second. Those who have been generals first have over the last six years be driven from the service by Donald Rumsfeld and the Bush administration. What we have left are men like General Petraeus. Not only a politician but a political hack. We know what he’s going to say in September because he said it all yesterday on wingnut radio, The Hugh Hewitt Show. On cue from Hugh he recited all the administration/neocon talking points. >>>

At Talk Left, “Big Tent Democrat” thinks he’s more respectful of General Petraeus than some of his anti-war colleagues, but he too preemptively attributes deceitfulness to Petraeus in the September assessment:

<<< Does anyone believe that a proud soldier like Petraeus will provide a sense that he can't succeed? Of course he will not. Heck, if he would, would you really want him to be leading the forces? Unlike Glenn, I am not as skeptical of Petraeus' intentions; I just realize he is human and the commander of the operation is not going to be the one to declare his operation a failure. >>>


The paranoia that has gripped the “we must lose in Iraq” forces is exemplified by these graphs at “D-Day” blog:


<<< I have little need to wait for a transcript. This has become a Defense Department strategy, intentionally reaching out to conservative bloggers and media types in order to get their "unfiltered message" out. They even have a name for it; the "Surrogates Option". Of course, those partisan ideologues that continue to defend the President are all too happy to scrupulously type up military propaganda. Because that's what it is.

This is nothing new in wartime, but it ought to be known that the General leading forces in Iraq is only speaking to partisan ideologues instead of any reporter that would ask a tough question. And Congress should use that as a guide when they take a look at his report in a couple months.>>>


At Balloon Juice, John Cole’s bitterness at seeing the commander in Iraq be asked and answer a long series of straightforward questions the answer to which might encourage a reader/listener to believe in victory exploded into view:


<<< I am actually pretty shocked that Gen. Petraeus took time from his busy schedule to appear on what is little more than an organ of the right-wing spin machine.

Just kidding. It isn’t surprising at all.

You would honestly think that the military, at the very least, would want their leadership to appear to be more than GOP party organs. Instead, Petraeus is appearing on Tinkerbell central, and now brings his credibility into question.

Excellent work, General. Was Limbaugh busy, or something? >>>


I am not surprised that the Bush haters like Sullivan and Cole are outraged that General Petraeus would be interviewed by an admirer of the president, or that the anti-war extremists like Greenwald, Yglesias and the others cannot disguise their contempt for the military (though they think their attack on General Petraeus’ integrity won’t identify them as anti-military.)

I’m not surprised that new media journalists producing interviews of a sort far superior to what MSM serves up in one minute sound bytes excites the anger of folks who prefer their defeatist agendas advanced by a dominant MSM. They don’t want the Beltway-Manhattan media elites to lose their monopoly on “important” interviews as that means instead of Democratic journalists like Tim Russert, George Stephanopoulos and Chris Matthews asking defeat-slanted questions, new media outlets will step in and allow serious people to make extended arguments about the stakes in Iraq and the state of the various battles in the broader war on terror.

And I’m not surprised that the unmistakable signs of the tactical success of the surge has the gang breaking out in the sweats at the prospect of a change in some of the public’s view of Iraq. There’s a long time between now and November, 2008, and continued progress in Iraq and Afghanistan will leave the defeatist Democrats exposed as wholly unqualified to steward the national security of the United States.

What surprises me is that the extremists have fallen so deeply into their own narrative that they are wholly unaware of how their call for strict control of the news and their slander of the widely and rightly admired extraordinary hero that is General Petraeus exposes them to the public as deeply unbalanced, anti-intellectual and far, far removed from the mainstream of America. This disconnection from ordinary Americans is always obvious when a leftist resorts to the most foul sorts of profanity and vulgarity, but the rage that bubbles and erupts again and again is the sort of eye-opener that not even friends can ignore for very long. The demands for the Fairness Doctrine’s return displayed the same sort of zealotry in the attempt to shut down voices not in keeping with their own. The illiberal reflexiveness of the left tells you all you need to know about how they would govern if they ever got close to power.

The anger at the growing influence of center-right new media will grow. Rush Limbaugh enrages the left because he is so obviously and undeniably successful at building and maintaining the largest audience for a single point of view in the country. Little tiny bloggers generating a thousand visitors a day, or even large ones with a few tens of thousands of visitors a day, don’t begin to match even 1% of Limbaugh’s audience. Envy becomes fury in a hurry.

My program repeatedly gets their bile rising because it is –objectively—a place where serious people go for serious conversation about serious subjects, a product with a large and growing audience of smart, successful and usually patriotic people who are politically active, deeply compassionate, and extraordinarily supportive of the troops. Its audience dwarfs even the biggest of the lefty blogs, though not of course the MSM powerhouses. Again, envy becomes fury in a hurry on the left.

Bill Kristol, Fred Kagan, Fred Barnes, Michael Yon, John Burns, Mark Steyn, Max Boot –any member of the media or any intellectual—who is even open to the idea that the overthrow of Saddam was necessary and the fight for a stable, democratic Iraq a crucial moment for the world, one requiring victory over the butchers—is despised because they know what they know and refuse to let the debate end. They are influential because they are experienced and persuasive, and this enrages especially the obscure anti-war radical whom no one will listen to no matter how much evidence they accumulate that Tower 7 was an inside job and that steel doesn’t melt.

And any member of the military who speaks candidly about the necessity of victory and with confidence in our forces and with facts about their increasing success is going to get slimed by the extremists, even if it is General Petraeus. That’s just the cost of defending the country these days –exposure to all the many dangers war brings, and a relentless smear campaign from the very people you are keeping safe from terrorists and the religious extremists who would stone them the first week they had power over them.

The Administration and the Pentagon have never emphasized enough the direct engagement of the public via the new media, or even the old media in the extended, one-on-one form which is the very best form for explaining the war to the public. The ear-splitting shrieks of outrage at General Petraeus’ interview with me should be a huge signal that this is what the anti-war extremists fear most: The calm presentation of facts at length by those in a position to know them, engaged in an interview the unpredictability of which makes the exchange interesting. Speeches rarely hold the attention of an audience, which is why only small excerpts of them make it on air. Interviews –conducted professionally by a prepared host—can be riveting. The war on terror depends upon sustaining the will of the American people to fight it, and sustaining that will means giving the public the facts, again, and again and again. Making themselves available in at least 30 minute chunks to all sorts of skilled interviewers –Russert, Brit Hume, Charlie Rose, and Chris Wallace are the best on television, my colleagues at Salem, Bill Bennett, Dennis Prager, and Michael Medved, excel at the form as does Laura Ingraham, Dennis Miller and Sean Hannity—is the best way to educate the American public about what is going on in the war on its many fronts.

I and the vast vast majority of listeners/readers are grateful that General Petraeus made time at the end of a very long day for the interview, a day which is nowhere near the end of his three plus years of tremendous service in Iraq and thirty years of service and sacrifice on behalf of the country. I hope he continues to agree to appear on any show or to be interviewed by any blogger or journalist –left, right, or center-- who will treat him with respect and fairness. I hope the same thing for other senior military and civilian officials engaged in fighting the war. Allowing the know-nothing, anti-intellectual fringe to block the flow of information to the American public via invective, slander and scorn that would be to keep the best, most compelling testimony from the public at a time when they need it most.


Hugh Hewitt is a law professor, broadcast journalist, and author of several books including A Mormon in the White House?: 110 Things Every American Should Know about Mitt Romney.

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)7/23/2007 7:47:44 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Sheehan has her "road to Damascus" moment - better late than never I suppose

By feedback@qando.net (McQ)
The QandO Blog

The "conversion" of Cindy Sheehan, from Democrat and peace activist to just plain peace activist has been alternately funny and, well, something, I’m not sure yet.

Sheehan, if nothing else, has shown us how the media can create a personality out of just about anyone.
Given, Cindy Sheehan’s son’s death is not a laughing or joking matter, nor is her grief over it. However it is hard to claim she hasn’t exploited his death as a means for her to push her agenda. And while that may have been acceptable when it seemed her aim was to end the war in which her son died, it has, since then, gone into areas well outside what anyone would nominally claim would be appropriate in that regard. One example of that point would be her visits in support of dictators and enemies of the US, such as Hugo Chavez.

In fact, what has happened to Sheehan is she has evolved from a grieving mother to an irritating activist with an obsession about George Bush.
Because of her son and her grief most people were fairly willing to look past the growing obsession. At least for a while. Until, that is, it became more of a political millstone than a boon. That’s part of why she feels ostracized and abandoned by the Democrats. She went from being a mother with the full metal jacket of "full moral authority" to a harpy screeching incessantly about impeachment and hanging out with dictators.

Now I don’t mean this to be a post about excusing the Democrats and their exploitation of Sheehan. Boy did they ever exploit her. In every way, shape and form they could imagine. And they did it knowingly and ruthlessly. In the parlance, she was a ’useful idiot’. Wind her up, pump her full of good rhetoric and point her at a camera and watch the fun begin.
But as she began to change and become more obsessed and more shrill, Democrats seemed to find more and more reasons to be elsewhere when she found a camera.

And when she began being photographed with people with whom the Dems weren’t particularly excited about being associated, the crowd and the support began to thin even more. In fact, it thinned so much that Cindy was left standing pretty much alone. Suddenly phone calls to those who’d told her they supported her and were there for her went unanswered. Messages were ignored. Finally, after all these years, it dawned on Sheehan (who I think may be one taco short of a combination plate anyway) what had happened. Her usefulness was ended and with it, her support and her access. Last week, DailyKos cut her off.

Just another bit of political trash, she was left to her own devices.

We’ve already seen the single-mindedness she can exhibit. All one need to do is follow the trail from Camp Casey to now to easily recognize an obsessive personality. You don’t even have to be a psychiatric professional to figure it out.

Her obsessions build constantly. What has happened since the Dems said adios to her is she’s added a new obsessionon top of her old one. Her Bush obsession says that Bush is evil incarnate and the source of all problems in the world. Her new obsession says that her old party [the Democrats], which once claimed to share her Bush obsession and planned, with her help, to do something about it, has abandoned her and the cause. So they now fall into a similar category as Bush.


<<< I was a lifelong Democrat only because the choices were limited. The Democrats are the party of slavery and were the party that started every war in the 20th century, except the other Bush debacle. The Federal Reserve, permanent federal income taxes, not one but two World Wars, Japanese concentration camps, and not one but two atom bombs dropped on the innocent citizens of Japan — all brought to us via the Democrats.

Don’t tell me the Democrats are our "saviors" because I am not buying it — especially after they bought more caskets and more devastating pain when they financed and co-facilitated more of President Bush’s abysmal occupation. The Democrats also are allowing a meltdown of our republic by allowing the evils of the executive branch to continue unrestrained by their silent complicity. >>>


Now anyone with the IQ of a paving stone knows that much of her history is a bit revisionist. For instance I don’t believe any of us would blame "starting" the World Wars on Democrats, although it is an interesting list she’s compiled. And a majority of this country would never agree the first Gulf War was a "debacle". Some Iraqis might, but not Americans. But it shows the level of delusion to which she’s able to commit herself when obsessed. It doesn’t take much to justify herself to herself.


<<< She is single-mindedly determined to find a way to impeach George Bush, and, ironically, she feels that if you’re not with her, as the Democrats now seem not to be, then you’re against her. >>>

All this to say the entertainment value of her psychosis should be something, at least, that might break up the stultifying boredom we’ll probably experience many times during this elections season.

Oh, and keep this in mind as well:

<<< The feedback I have been receiving since I announced that I would challenge U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, for her House seat — unless she gives impeachment the go-ahead — has been running about 3-to-1 positive. >>>

Stranger things have happened.

qando.net

sfgate.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)2/6/2008 12:21:06 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Berkeley Vs. America, Again

By Michelle Malkin
townhall.com
Wednesday, February 6, 2008

The troop-bashers in Berkeley are at it once more. But this time, the rest of America lashed back. Message to the Left Coast: It's not the 1960s anymore.

On Jan. 29, the Berkeley city council passed several measures targeting the lone Marine recruitment office in town. The anti-war harridans at Code Pink have been picketing the center for months. Last fall, they defaced the building by slapping a sign that read "assasination" (sic) in the military office window. Instead of rising to defend the recruiters' property rights, the city council and mayor voted to sabotage them further. They granted Code Pink special parking privileges directly in front of the Marines' workplace to facilitate their protests -- and also offered them a free sound permit for six months.

In the home of the free speech movement, the peace and love mob abused the power of government to help drive the Marines out of the city. They proceeded with zoning changes to treat recruiting centers like porn shops. They encouraged residents to continue to impede the recruiters' work. Never mind federal law making it a crime to willfully obstruct the recruiting or enlistment service of the United States. If that weren't blood-boiling enough, the Berkeleyites put the troops under further siege by voting to send a letter to the U.S. Marine Corps calling them "uninvited and unwelcome intruders."

Video of the council meeting showed city officials trashing the Marines as "the president's own gangsters" and "trained killers" who are known for "death and destruction and maiming." One of the council members complained that our men and women in uniform were responsible for "horrible karma." Mayor Tom Bates offered to "help" the Marines evacuate.

But, of course, they continue to argue shamelessly that they're not against the troops. Just against President Bush's policies.

Only one council member, Gordon Wozniak, opposed the Code Pink measure -- pointing out that the council was bending the rules, intentionally setting up a confrontation between the group and the recruitment office, and "showing favoritism." He was outnumbered, 8-to-1. Code Pink co-founder Medea Benjamin and her minions gloated over the vote and turned up at the recruitment center to rub salt in the wound: "We are the defenders of democracy, the upholders of the Constitution. If it weren't for people like the people in Berkeley, standing up for what they believe, we'd be living under Hitler."

Her thugs defaced the recruitment center again -- this time with a banner of bloody handprints stretched across the window as recruiters tried to do their jobs.

In another decade, Berkeley would have gotten away with this intolerant, illiberal, un-American power trip. But in the age of the Internet, talk radio and YouTube, word of the siege at Berkeley spread like lightning. And citizens across the country weren't willing to look the other way. The San Francisco-based Move America Forward, led by talk show host/conservative activist Melanie Morgan, launched an online petition protesting the city council measures. Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina moved to strip Berkeley of pork barrel spending worth $2 million.

The American Legion mobilized as well. National Commander Marty Conatser lambasted the votes: "The American Legion not only strongly condemns this action by the City Council but also believes that a sincere apology is in order to all Marines, past and present. What these recruiters do is essential to our national security. Without recruiters we have no military. And I don't think we can count on the flower children from Berkeley to protect this nation when it comes under attack. They have to remember that Marines are not the enemy; the terrorists are."

After feeling the heat, not just from veterans, military families and troop supporters outside of Berkeley but also from their own embarrassed citizens, the council is waving a partial white flag: Two council members will move to rescind the obnoxious letter and Code Pink privileges next week. It seems a little light bulb went off in Councilwoman Betty Olds' head: "I think we shouldn't be seen across the country as hating the Marines."

Too late. The city's "horrible karma" is on full display. Sit back and watch Berkeley be Berkeley? No more.


Michelle Malkin makes news and waves with a unique combination of investigative journalism and incisive commentary. She is the author of Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild .

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)2/9/2008 6:26:45 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 35834
 
    "Toledo to Marines:  Drop Dead."

Make Sure You're Taking Your Blood Pressure Medication Before Reading This

Andy McCarthy
The Corner

The Democrat Mayor of Toledo, Ohio, Carty Finkbeiner, has told the United States Marines to get out of his town. At his blog, Roger's Rules, our friend Roger Kimball has the details in a post aptly entitled, "Toledo to Marines: Drop Dead."

corner.nationalreview.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)2/12/2008 1:38:02 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Berkeley Cops: "We're Neutral"

In Marines
Little Green Footballs

At the CODEPINK demonstration outside the Marine Corps recruiting office in Berkeley, the Marines are getting no help at all from local police. This video shows the thuggish protesters blocking the doorways, as policemen do nothing. One of the cops tells a counter-protester, “We’re trying to remain neutral.”
(Click for video)

bayareanewsgroup.com



(Hat tip: princetrumpet

littlegreenfootballs.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)2/13/2008 4:45:37 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Warning! Not for the squeamish.

Berkeley Marines Protest (edited)

Zombietime
February 12, 2008

These photos were taken on February 12, 2008 in front of Berkeley City Hall, at the protest and counter-protest over the decision by the Berkeley City Council to support Code Pink's attempt to expel the Marine Corps officer recruiting office from Berkeley.

These pictures will, for now, be presented without captions or an introduction; they are a work in progress. Many more pictures, videos, links and captions will added over the upcoming hours.

























zombietime.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)3/27/2008 12:12:11 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hat tip to Libertas



libertyfilmfestival.com



To: Sully- who wrote (27483)10/8/2009 3:34:11 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Code Pink Fascists Re-Think Anti-War Stance

By Mark Noonan on Liberal Fascism
Blogs For Victory

Of course - Bush isn’t President any more.

Code Pink: Just another propaganda arm of the left.

     'Code Pink' rethinks its call for Afghanistan pullout

Blogs For Victory