I congratulate President Obama on his selection of Penny Pritzker to be his new Secretary of Commerce – a GREAT choice. Finally, there will be a champion of that sector of the electorate that the President derisively termed “the one percent” during his 2012 campaign. Finally, a “strong voice” for the rich that will advocate lower taxes for the wealthy and support “off shore” banking to avoid taxes. Finally a “seat at the Cabinet table” for wealthy investors who know “how the game is really played” and how to manipulate the rules to make her rich class richer and avoid paying their “fair share.” In other words, a true successful American businesswoman!
At the beginning of his first term in early 2009, President Obama floated her name for a Cabinet post but relented in the face of opposition from the Liberal press, especially the New York Times, who identified her as “one of world’s most notorious Tax Cheats and money manipulators.” As a fall back, he quietly named her to his White House Economic Recovery Advisory Board on 6 Feb 2009 –but even that did not go unnoticed by that citadel of Liberalism, the New York Times!
Here is what the NY Times had to say about Pritzker when her name was floated then as a possible Secretary of Commerce: "it had never made sense for Ms. Pritzker to become a nominee. 'The confirmation hearing could have been quite ugly' .... In 1988, the Pritzker family and another wealthy investor took over a failing savings and loan and turned it into Superior Bank. Ms. Pritzker was its chairwoman from 1991 to 1994, after which she sat on the board of the bank’s holding company.... concentrating on packaging subprime mortgages into securities.... regulators later discovered accounting irregularities that overstated the value of its assets. The bank was forced to write down huge losses, leaving it without adequate capital... A 2002 report by the inspector general of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation concluded that 'the failure of Superior Bank was directly attributable to bank management and the board of directors' ...Pritzkers agreed in 2001 to pay the F.D.I.C. $460 million .... The family also increased its wealth by exploiting loopholes in the tax code, including setting up a series of offshore trusts that sheltered their assets from taxes.
The I.R.S. fought several battles with the Pritzkers over the arrangements. But the agency was hindered by foreign bank secrecy laws that concealed what the Pritzkers owned. In 2002, a few cracks appeared in the wall of secrecy when two young Pritzker heirs filed a lawsuit claiming their older relatives had looted their trusts. The litigation revealed that the family was worth at least $15 billion, that it was held in some 950 trusts...."
With this obviously unfair criticism by the NY Times but knowing he would need that paper in his 2012 reelection as his propaganda arm, Obama decided not to nominate Penny back in 2009. But with all elections now safely behind him, Penny will be our next Secretary of Commerce. To date her hearings have been a veritable love fest with Republicans welcoming her as “one of their own” (in practice if not in party identification) while Democrats who unfailingly support Obama, regardless the issue, will let her nomination sail through. And don’t expect any Senator to do anything to derail this nomination like questioning her ethics or implying she is a Tax Cheat; there will be no questions during her confirmation and certainly none from the IRS who, in keeping with how they treat all BIG Dem contributors, long ago dropped all efforts at getting her to “pay her fair share.”
A blog to capture random thoughts, mainly dealing with politics and especially military matters.
Monday, May 27, 2013
Remembering on Memorial Day - 2013, but Especially WWII and The Greatest Generation
As a Vietnam combat Vet who spent 30 years in the Army (and have been in Afghanistan as a civilian), I honor ALL those killed in defense of our country but this Memorial Day 2013, I will especially remember those lost in World War II. All other modern Wars pale in comparison to that fought by our “Greatest Generation” and I’m proud that both my Father and Mother served overseas in WWII.
To put World War II in perspective, compare it to our other modern wars and conflicts.
In the almost 12 years we’ve been in Afghanistan (Oct 2001-Today/27 May 2013), we’ve lost 2174 military killed from all causes in country and the surrounding regions and the breakdown of those lost is: 70.0% Soldiers, 19.7% Marines, 4.7% Airmen and 5.6% Sailors. Hence, like in all wars, the Army has done the overwhelming bulk of the fighting and dying there.
In the 9+ years we were in Iraq (Mar 2003-until our withdrawal), we lost 4472 military killed from all causes in country and the surrounding regions. Again, the breakdown was: 73.7% Soldiers, 22.8% Marines, 1.2% Airmen, 2.3% Sailors (+ a single Coast Guardsmen) so the Army did the “heavy lifting” in Iraq also.
Between Vietnam and our present wars, our military also saw combat in Grenada (total lost from all causes = 19), Panama (24), The Gulf War (293).
The Vietnam War lasted 10 years but 51,585 of the total 58,220 killed occurred during the real 5 years (1966-70) of the war when we were heavily engaged (at the height of that war in 1968 we were losing 50+ a day killed and in May 1968 alone we had 2416 Killed!)
The Korean War lasted 3 years and one month (Jun 1950 – Jul 53) and total US Killed was 36,516 (that averages ~32+ killed a day).
But ALL these conflict pale in comparison to World War II where the US lost almost half a million men. The Battle of the Bulge alone lasted 40 days (16 Dec 44 – 25 Jan 45) with over U.S. casualties 81,000 and 19,000 killed. The 36-day Iwo Jima assault resulted in more than 26,000 American casualties, including 6,800 dead while the 82-day Battle for Okinawa lasted from early April until mid-June 1945 and U.S. (5 Army and 2 Marine Corps Divisions) casualties were over 62,000 with over 12,000 killed.
To me, the real heroes of WWII were the men of the 8th Air Force (one of 16 numbered Air Forces in the War). The 8th AF sustained more than 27,000 killed; that’s more than the entire Marine Corps (24,500) lost in that war. I will never understand how men had the courage to board those bombers day after day knowing they would often sustain 40-50% casualties on a single mission.
Like all Memorial Days, I honor ALL who've served and especially who made the ultimate sacrifice but I reserve a special place for the Heroes from World War II and especially my Mother and Father!
To put World War II in perspective, compare it to our other modern wars and conflicts.
In the almost 12 years we’ve been in Afghanistan (Oct 2001-Today/27 May 2013), we’ve lost 2174 military killed from all causes in country and the surrounding regions and the breakdown of those lost is: 70.0% Soldiers, 19.7% Marines, 4.7% Airmen and 5.6% Sailors. Hence, like in all wars, the Army has done the overwhelming bulk of the fighting and dying there.
In the 9+ years we were in Iraq (Mar 2003-until our withdrawal), we lost 4472 military killed from all causes in country and the surrounding regions. Again, the breakdown was: 73.7% Soldiers, 22.8% Marines, 1.2% Airmen, 2.3% Sailors (+ a single Coast Guardsmen) so the Army did the “heavy lifting” in Iraq also.
Between Vietnam and our present wars, our military also saw combat in Grenada (total lost from all causes = 19), Panama (24), The Gulf War (293).
The Vietnam War lasted 10 years but 51,585 of the total 58,220 killed occurred during the real 5 years (1966-70) of the war when we were heavily engaged (at the height of that war in 1968 we were losing 50+ a day killed and in May 1968 alone we had 2416 Killed!)
The Korean War lasted 3 years and one month (Jun 1950 – Jul 53) and total US Killed was 36,516 (that averages ~32+ killed a day).
But ALL these conflict pale in comparison to World War II where the US lost almost half a million men. The Battle of the Bulge alone lasted 40 days (16 Dec 44 – 25 Jan 45) with over U.S. casualties 81,000 and 19,000 killed. The 36-day Iwo Jima assault resulted in more than 26,000 American casualties, including 6,800 dead while the 82-day Battle for Okinawa lasted from early April until mid-June 1945 and U.S. (5 Army and 2 Marine Corps Divisions) casualties were over 62,000 with over 12,000 killed.
To me, the real heroes of WWII were the men of the 8th Air Force (one of 16 numbered Air Forces in the War). The 8th AF sustained more than 27,000 killed; that’s more than the entire Marine Corps (24,500) lost in that war. I will never understand how men had the courage to board those bombers day after day knowing they would often sustain 40-50% casualties on a single mission.
Like all Memorial Days, I honor ALL who've served and especially who made the ultimate sacrifice but I reserve a special place for the Heroes from World War II and especially my Mother and Father!
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Wahington Post Fact Checker Awards Obama 4 Pinocchios for his Benghazi Claim - Doesn't Candy Crowley Deserve at Least 6!

If Glenn Kessler, the Washington Post Fact Checker, awarded President Obama on 14 May 2013 his highest acknowledgment of Four Pinocchios (see below), for his mega-whopper: Claim he called Benghazi an ‘act of terrorism,’ then Presidential debate moderator (and part-time CNN hack but full time Democrat shill) Candy Crowley’s ultra-mega whopper during the debate is worthy of at last six!
When Republican presidential candidate Romney charged that President Obama failed to call the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi an "act of terror," Crowley decided she would enter the debate on the President’s side. Romney had correctly responded to a question by stating: “it took Obama days to call the Benghazi attack an act of terror” when, for some unexplainable reason, Crowley felt compelled to “assist” Obama by joining the debate on his side and erroneously stating: "He did in fact call it an 'act of terror."
This below Washington Post Fact Check should finally set the record straight and show Crowley for the partisan and less than honorable Democrat shill she is. If CNN were truly the non-partisan news outlet they claim to be, Crowley would have been gone the day after the debates. By keeping Crowley on the air almost eight months after her outrageous debate conduct, CNN has demonstrated how impartial they really are.
As for President Obama, seems there is no limit to his ability to lie to the American public. Here almost nine months after Benghazi and in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, he continues to try and “spin the same yarn.” Seems he adheres to the Stalin philosophy that: “if you tell the same lie long enough, people will begin to believe it." This might be acceptable for a CNN hack but is it for a sitting President?
Labels:
Benghazi,
Candy Crowley,
Obama,
Presidential Debate,
Romney
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Neocon COWARDS Like Krauthammer, Kristol, Stephens and Rubin Dishonestly Gang Up Against 2-Time Purple Heart Recipient Hagel's SecDef Nomination
See my below
article: Let's
ALL Get Behind Former Army Sergeant and Two Time Purple Heart Recipient Chuck
Hagel to Be the Next Secretary of Defense! for a full explanation of why Chuck
Hagel will be a superb Secretary of Defense but lately I have become increasing
incensed by the unfair and outright dishonest venom being spewed against him by
the likes of Charles Krauthammer and the other Right-wing neocon columnist arrayed
against his nomination. These COWARDS include the Wall Street Journal’s Bret Stephens, the Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol and the Washington Post’s Jennifer Rubin.
All
these “columnists” have one thing in common. Unlike Hagel, none of these chicken hawks have ever
donned a uniform let alone shed a drop of blood or even a bead of sweat, in defense of this
nation!
To reiterate something I’ve already said, those questioning Former Army Sergeant Chuck Hagel’s credentials to serve as Secretary of Defense should ponder Shakespeare’s famous St. Crispin's Day Speech delivered by Henry V before the Battle of Agincourt to see if there might be a subconscious reason for their bias.
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers.
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
For he today that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; …
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's Day.
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's Day.
As an old infantry sergeant with two Purple
Hearts, Hagel isn’t afraid or opposed to war (he voted for the Balkans,
Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts) but he also knows the horrors of it so would
only resort to as the last and unavoidable option, unlike his Chicken Hawk
neocon critics who “hold
their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's
Day.”
For those who might attempt to
excuse Krauthammer’s draft dodging during Vietnam when he became draft eligible
in 1968, the most deadly year of the war when almost 17,000 troops were Killed
in theater, because he was he was paralyzed in a diving accident; don’t forget
that happened in 1972 after US combat troops had been withdrawn. Charles had plenty of opportunity to
participate in defending his country if he hadn’t been too busy hiding out with draft dodgers and deserters in Canada at McGill
University or with fellow draft dodger
Bill Clinton at Oxford
during the height of the conflict.
If you want to know how I really feel about
Former Army Sergeant and Senator Chuck Hagel becoming the next SecDef, check
out my previous Blog article!
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
District of Columbia Homicide Rate Has Dropped Every Year Since the 2008 Landmark Supreme Court Ruling Making It Legal for Law-abiding Residents to Own Guns
Again this
year the Washington Post New Years Day headline boasts: “Homicides decrease in Washington region.” The New Years Day 2012 headline was:
As homicides fall in D.C., rise in Prince
George ’s, numbers meet in the middle. This year’s article also proudly notes that
DC Homicides dropped to 88 in 2012 while the 2011 number was 108, in 2010 it
was 132 and in 2009 it was 140. As it
does every year The Post also noted the homicide statistics for the surrounding
Maryland and
Virginia DC suburbs but again this year makes no attempt to compare the rates
among the various jurisdictions.
A cursory
analysis of the stats in this article might reveal why the Liberal WaPo avoids
any analysis --- could it be because it would clearly demonstrate a
dramatically inverse relationship between homicide rates and restrictions on
gun ownership?
Using the
US Census Bureau’s latest population estimates, DC
with 617,996 people had 88 homicides in 2012 for a rate of 14.2 per 100,000
people. The two Maryland DC-suburbs of Montgomery County
and Prince George ’s
County have 1,861,027 with 78 homicides for the same period for a rate of 4.2
per 100,000. The three Virginia suburbs of Alexandria City ,
Arlington County
and Fairfax County have 1,460,997 people with 21
homicides for a 1.44 per 100,000 rate.
This reveals
that a DC resident, where gun ownership is still very restricted is almost ten
times more likely to be a homicide victim than a “gun loving” Virginian where
gun ownership is almost unrestricted.
Even a Marylander, with moderately strict gun laws, is almost three and
a half times less likely to be a homicide victim than a DC resident. Much
better than DC but a Marylander is still almost three times more likely to be a
homicide victim than one of us “gun tottin” Virginians.
Now I’m not
opposed to registration and some reasonable limits on ownership such as
terrorists, ex-cons and the mentally unstable but there should be no
restrictions on ownership by average citizens – anywhere in the US . There is a
“God-given” right of self protection, especially in one’s own home, and a gun
is the only way to exercise that right. One has to go no further than right
here in our own DC-area backyard to clearly demonstrate that contrary to
liberal rhetoric, it is an “inconvenient truth” that “guns actually do make us
safer.” Case in point, Virginia
has by far the laxest gun laws and the least gun violence of any of the
surrounding jurisdictions. Additionally, the DC homicide rate only began
declining after the Supreme Court ordered the loosing of DC gun ownership laws
in 2008. Is the fact that this dramatic drop coincided with this landmark court
decision coincidence or might there be a cause-effect relationship? Could it be
criminals are not so anxious to attack law-abiding citizens if they might be
"packing heat?"
The obvious
message in these statistics - guns make us more and not less safe!.
While we’re
addressing restrictions on guns, here’s a riddle for you. What do New York City Mayor Michael
Bloomberg, Congressman Gerald E. Connolly (D-VA) and Obama advisor David
Axelrod all have in common other than they all three trashed NRA CEO Wayne
LaPierre for suggesting to have armed officers in schools to protect children?
Answer: they all live in Democrat controlled
jurisdictions that have ARMED Officers in their schools and two of them,
Bloomberg and Connolly, were the local elected officials responsible for them
being there!
In a recent
press conference Mayor Bloomberg dismissed the plan saying “I think it’s a
terrible idea. We don’t need (armed officers) in our school system” but it
turns out the NYPD already has 350 armed officers who rotate throughout the
school system. Congressman Connelly
describe the idea of allowing armed guards to carry firearms in schools as
“reprehensible” and “outrageous” but for his entire time as Fairfax County
Board Chairman (2003-2008) he assigned armed police officers to be on campus at
all times during the school day in ALL county high schools and intermediate
schools. Chairman Connolly’s actions
were consistent with Bill Clinton’s 2000 $60M "Cops in Schools"
program.
While we’re
at it, here are a couple other interesting (and maybe) inconvenient FACTS:
In any
given year in this country there is one child drowning death for every 11,000
residential swimming pools or 550 children under the age of 10 drown every year
in our 6 million pools. Meanwhile there is one child killed by a gun for every
one million (plus) guns in this country or with about 200 million guns,
approximately 175 children under 10 die. This means a child is over 100 times
more likely to drown in a pool than be killed by a gun. Hence, banning
residential pools is a much more effective way of protecting children than
banning fire arms.
In Switzerland ,
every male adult is issued an assault weapon for militia duty and required to
keep it in his home. As a result, Switzerland has the highest per
capita rate of guns in homes in the entire World yet is one of the safest
places to live. Fire arm deaths in Switzerland is .56/100,000. Compare
that to the United States
where Assault Weapons are heavily regulated and automatic ones are outlawed and
our rate of fire arm deaths is 2.97/100,000 per year. That means an American is
5.3 times more likely to be killed by a gun in the United
States than someone in Switzerland where everyone and
their brother has an automatic assault weapon. Go figure!
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Let's ALL Get Behind Former Army Sergeant and Two Time Purple Heart Recipient Chuck Hagel to Be the Next Secretary of Defense!
Those questioning Former Army Sergeant Chuck Hagel’s
credentials to serve as Secretary of Defense should ponder Shakespeare’s famous St. Crispin's Day Speech delivered by Henry V
before the Battle of Agincourt to see if there might be a subconscious reason
for their bias.
From this day to the ending of
the world,
But we in it shall be remembered,
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers.
For he today that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition.
And gentlemen inEngland
now abed
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's Day.
But we in it shall be remembered,
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers.
For he today that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition.
And gentlemen in
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's Day.
Question: What do Florida Senator Marco Rubio, Bill
Kristol (Weekly Standard), Texas Senator John Cornyn, Bret Stevens (Wall Street Journal), Pennsylvania
Senator Pat Toomey, New Hampshire Senator Kelly
Ayotte, and Abe Foxman (Director, Anti-Defamation League) all have in common
other than trashing former Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel in an effort to derail
his potential nomination as Secretary of Defense?
Answer:
unlike Chuck Hagel, none of them have ever donned a uniform let alone shed a drop of blood or even a bead of sweat, in defense of this nation!
Sergeant
Hagel was leading troops in combat as a 9th Infantry Division Infantry Squad
Leader in Vietnam (67-68) and earning the Combat Infantryman Badge, two Purple
Hearts, the Army Commendation Medal and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry among
other decorations, before many of his critics were even born although some like
Foxman, Kristol and several others were certainly of an age where they were
eligible to serve with Sergeant Hagel if they had had the guts.
There are still enough metal shards
from a Viet Cong mine embedded in Hagel’s chest that he sets off metal
detectors in airports and the scars on the left side of his face from another
mine explosion a month later can scare young children. His younger brother Tom
was assigned to his squad and the first time Chuck was struck by shrapnel it
was his brother Tom that stopped the
bleeding and saved his life. During that second mine attack a month later, the
roles were reversed and Chuck rescued Tom
who was knocked unconscious in the explosion. Seems heroism runs in his family
and his father was even a WWII Vet. Once
confirmed, Chuck Hagel will be the first Secretary of Defense
with a Purple Heart since Elliot L. Richardson during the Nixon administration.
“Stopping a war is a hell of a
lot harder than starting it, and Chuck understands that,” said Bob Kerrey,
another former Nebraska
senator and Vietnam Medal of Honor recipient. “Sometimes it provokes cries from
the right that he’s soft. But it’s just that he’s experienced it, and it
animates him.” Hagel once told a Library
of Congress Veterans History Project interviewer in 2002: “thinking to myself,
you know, if I ever get out of all of this, I am going to do everything I can
to assure that war is the last resort that we, a nation, a people, calls upon
to settle a dispute. The horror of it, the pain of it, the suffering of it.
People just don’t understand it unless they’ve been through it.”
An independent thinker, Hagel was often uncomfortable at Republican
caucus meetings especially when Vice President Dick Cheney attended, as Cheney
would give “him the hairy eyeball” but hostility from the White House or party
leadership never muted Hagel as his Vietnam experience gave him the boldness to
speak independently. It’s hard to
intimidate a combat veteran by threatening to withdraw a committee assignment. About the only way a Draft Dodger like Cheney
could have hurt Hagel was to give him a paper cut while handing him the meeting
agenda!
Another example of Hagel’s
independence is President Reagan appointed him deputy Veterans Administration administrator
in 1982, but he resigned over a disagreement with his boss, VA Administrator Robert
P. Nimmo. He opposed Nimmo cutting the funding
for VA programs and his referring to veterans groups as "greedy," and
to Agent Orange as not much worse than a "little teenage acne."
Among his defenders and supporters, most of whom are also
former military and often combat vets, is IN Senator (and former Navy Lieutenant)
Richard G. Lugar, a foreign policy mentor to Hagel who is leaving the Senate. Lugar calls Hagel “an excellent candidate”
and predicts “most senators who served with Chuck would be favorable to his
nomination.”
Two top former Republican
defense officials also support Hagel. Former
Bush 43 Deputy Secretary of State (and 3 tour Vietnam Vet and former Navy Lieutenant
Commander) Richard Armitage, says of Hegal “I happen to know the guy. He’s not
owned by anybody, he happens to think for himself, and this apparently causes
some fear in some cases. He’s got an unerring bullshit sensor, he’s got real
stones, and he doesn’t mind telling you what his opinion is, which will stand
him in very good stead in the Pentagon if the president nominates him.”
Retired Air Force Lieutenant General Brent Scowcroft, a
former Ford and Bush 41 National Security Adviser calls Hagel “one of the most
well-respected and thoughtful voices on both foreign and domestic policy. At an
uncertain time in America –
with a significant debt burden, a polarized Congress, and a host of challenges
facing the international community, I am confident Senator Hagel will provide a
vibrant, no-nonsense voice of logic and leadership to the United States .”
Even Washington Post liberal columnist Dana Milbank defended
Hagel in his 18 December column calling Hagel’s pro-Israel legislative record
one which reflects “an infantry sergeant who isn’t opposed to war (he voted for
the conflicts in the Balkans, Afghanistan and Iraq) but knows the grim costs of
going to war without a plan… indicative of a decorated military man who, unlike
some of his neocon critics, knows that military action doesn’t solve
everything.”
Nobody can ever predict how well
a Defense Secretary nominee will perform, case in point Les Aspin, or if Hagel will
be a good manager during this pivotal time in Pentagon history. With the US Afghanistan
combat role ending and budgets shrinking, refereeing the infighting among the
services for resources is going to require all the finesse of an NFL Official. Hagel brings some obvious strengths to the
job. As a Republican and genuine
military hero, he provides the “street cred” for executing the Afghanistan withdrawal that only a combat
veteran can bring and the withdrawal will succeed only if our military leaves
an Afghanistan
that can hold together.
Hagel’s military record is
surely one big plus. Rhode Island Senator
(and former Army Major) Jack Reed says of Hagel “He’s a guy who knows how to
talk to the troops and has walked in their boots. He’s blunt, direct and
impatient with pettifogging. In these traits, he’s similar to the current
secretary, Leon Panetta, and his predecessor, Bob Gates. And like both of them,
Hagel has a temper.”
Hagel will handle the tough,
no-nonsense-boss part of the job with no problem but he’s more blunt than
nuanced and nobody ever called him a defense intellectual so it remains to be
seen how he is at steering Pentagon procurement decisions in this age of
technology and officiating as the Joint Chiefs mud wrestle over budgets. Fortunately, to help him Hagel will have as the
Deputy Secretary Ashton Carter who has a wealth of experience at Defense
including having served as the Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology and Logistics (USD AT&L), the official responsible for procurement
decisions. Hagel will have no problem saying
NO to the Chiefs and their logrolling allies on Capitol Hill and with Carter as
his Deputy and chief operating officer to help, I’m confident he’ll skillfully manage
the complex spending and strategy decisions.
The most formidable obstacle to
his getting the job, that I’m comfortable he’ll successfully negotiate, is the array
of neoconservative journalists who are ganging up against him and trying to
smear him as an anti-Semite despite his votes for the Iran Nonproliferation
Act, the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act and the Iran Missile Proliferation
Sanctions Act. He even co-sponsored resolutions opposing any unilateral
declaration of a Palestinian state and praising Israel ’s efforts “in the face of
terrorism, hostility and belligerence by many of her neighbors.” He also co-sponsored
legislation urging the international community “to avoid contact with and
refrain from supporting the terrorist organization Hamas until it agrees to recognize
Israel ,
renounce violence, disarm and accept prior agreements.”
The Right-wing neocon columnist arrayed
against him include the likes of the Wall Street Journal’s Bret Stephens and the
Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol and they all have that one thing in common I
previously mentioned, unlike Chuck Hagel, none of these chicken hawks have ever donned a uniform
let alone shed any blood or even sweat, in defense of this nation!
As an old infantry sergeant with two Purple Hearts,
Hagel isn’t afraid or opposed to war (he voted for the Balkans, Afghanistan and
Iraq conflicts) but he also knows the horrors of it so would only resort to war as
the last and unavoidable option, unlike his Chicken Hawk neocon critics who “hold
their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks that fought with us upon Saint Crispin's
Day.”
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Seems Redskins Quarterback Robert Griffin III Isn’t “Black Enough” to Suite Some!
Criticism of Robert Griffin III (RGIII)
not being “Black enough” by clowns like ESPN’s Rob Parker (ESPN suspends
Rob Parker) is just further proof of how disconnected most Americans have gotten from
their Military since the Draft ended following Vietnam. Without any understand of
Military culture, people have no clue about RGIII’s life experience. RGIII grew up a Military Brat (a term of
endearment) of a Senior Army NCO having been born at Lester Military Hospital
on Okinawa, Japan and growing up on various Army posts including Fort Lewis
(WA) and finally Fort Hood (TX) where his family finally settled down in
Copperas Cove, the “Post Town” supporting what is the Army’s largest post.
Growing up a Military Brat myself, when I was drafted into the Army I
considered it just a PCS to another base.
Remaining in the Army 30 years, my kids had the same life experience I
did, including going into the service while I was still on active duty so I
have some knowledge of this subject.
My point, the US Military has long been a meritocracy on the forefront
of equal rights so those who criticize RGIII’s “Lack of Blackness” are simply
ignorant of the essence of Military culture and RGIII’s life experience.
Growing up a Military Brat myself, when I was drafted into the Army I
considered it just a PCS to another base.
Remaining in the Army 30 years, my kids had the same life experience I
did, including going into the service while I was still on active duty so I
have some knowledge of this subject.
In the Military culture, it’s your Dad's Rank NOT Race that interests other kids. As a Senior NCO’s kid
growing up in the Military culture, I suspect RGIII rarely experience a race
problem – when his father retired after 22 years of service, the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff was even Black! Army Brats ALL speak the same using Military Slang, NOT street slang. Another example of this “Military colorblindness” phenomenon is Tiger
Woods who is also often criticized as not being “Black enough.” Tiger’s father was an Army Lieutenant
Colonel.
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