Monday, May 28, 2007

Hate War - Always - we must - part 2



(MG) Writing at TruthDig.com, Scott Ritter indicts the American people for their passive acceptance of the lies leading to the invasion and occupation of Iraq.

May 11, 2007 by
TruthDig.com
The Good American
by Scott Ritter

I joined the American Legion a few years back. As a veteran of the Persian Gulf War in 1991, I was eligible to do so for some time but always hesitated, perhaps out of a sense of trying to deny that my days as an active-duty combatant were long past. Every year, on Memorial Day, my fellow firefighters and I would gather in the basement of the local American Legion hall before we paraded before the town we protect. I would look around at the uniforms and faded patches and ribbons worn by the veterans who joined us in the hall and realize that they, too, were deserving of a great deal more support than simply being wheeled out once a year to participate in a parade. So I sent in my application and was accepted.

One of the fringe benefits of membership in the American Legion is a subscription to its monthly journal, The American Legion, billed as “the magazine for a strong America.” It quickly became apparent that The American Legion magazine was a sounding board for many holding quite militaristic and jingoistic opinions based on their rather limited personal experiences, many dating back to World War II. The war in Iraq, together with the overarching “global war on terror,” seems to be viewed by many in the American Legion as an extension of their own past service, and much effort is made to connect World War II and the Iraq conflict as part and parcel of the same ongoing American “liberation” of the world’s oppressed.


It’s a shame for these Legionnaires that the Iraqis couldn’t have turned out to be blond, blue-eyed Germans who looked like us, and whose women could be wooed with chocolate and nylon stockings by the noble American liberator and occupier. Or, short of that, passive Japanese, who freely submitted their women to the massage parlors and barracks of their American conquering heroes while their men rebuilt a shattered society. The simplistic approach of many of the American Legion’s most hawkish advocates for the ongoing disaster in Iraq seems to be drawn from a selective memory which seeks to impose a carefully crafted past experience dating back to the last “good war” (i.e., World War II), expunged of all warts and blemishes, onto the current situation in Iraq in a manner which strips away all reality.

It turns out that the Iraqis aren’t like German or Japanese people at all, but rather a fiercely independent (if overly complex) nation deeply resentful of a so-called liberation which has brought them nothing but pain and agony, primarily at the hands of those who have, unbidden, “freed” them from their past. The fact that the Iraqis resent the ongoing American occupation, and choose to express this resentment through violent resistance instead of submissive passivity, is in turn resented by many of the Legion’s membership. “War has been declared on the United States by those who are envious of our freedom, and they won’t stop until we are under their heel,” writes one Legionnaire in a letter published in the May 2007 issue of “the magazine for a strong America.” The juxtaposition of Iraq with those who perpetrated the events of Sept. 11, 2001, implied in this statement is reflective of a level of ignorance that boggles the mind. Iraq never declared war on the United States, the salesmanship exhibited in our promotion of “freedom” in Iraq leaves nothing to envy, and the Iraqis will stop resisting when we leave their country.

Don’t try telling that to the blustery former Marine who authored the letter in question, however. He, like the majority of the Legion, is tired of hearing about “Bush’s war.”

“Death, Not in Vain” is the title of the feature article of the May 2007 issue. The story revolves around how the parents of one Marine who died in Iraq seek to define their son’s sacrifice. “People may not agree with the reason we went to war,” the mother of the fallen Marine is quoted as saying, “but while our troops are over there, we can’t be telling the world what they are doing is wrong. If we say we support them, we have to support what they are doing.” Of course, the nature of the “disagreement” surrounding the Iraq war is never fully articulated in the article. There is no mention made of the discredited claims by President Bush and other war advocates about weapons of mass destruction or connections between Saddam Hussein’s government and al-Qaida. Instead, the reader is told repeatedly about how fallen American service members gave their lives for America and a “free Iraq.” Quoting their fallen sons, the families of Marines killed in Iraq speak proudly of bold statements such as “We need to be there, but it’s going to be hard, and it is going to be a long time.” Yet they never explore the actual “need” cited.

“We’ve got to support the troops and the mission,” the article quotes one family member as saying. “The two are dependent on each other.” I’m all for supporting the troops. But blind support for a mission of such nebulous origin? This is a much different matter, one requiring more introspective investigation. I don’t think it was the magazine’s intent, but a foundation of such an investigation was laid in the very same issue. In his article “Minimizing the Holocaust,” Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz slams those who seek to dismiss Nazi Germany’s effort to commit genocide against Europe’s Jews. It is a very difficult article to digest, not because of the legitimate premise that those who seek to deny or minimize the Holocaust are deserving of condemnation, but rather for the ease with which the moralistic Dershowitz explains the bombing of Dresden in 1945 as a “legitimate act of belligerent reprisal for the relentless bombings of civilians in London and elsewhere,” or the dismissive waving-off of the systematic starvation of 1 million German prisoners of war by the United States after the surrender of Germany as an inconvenient result of a “food crisis across Europe, a result of the continent’s decimation,” and being a “far cry from the 6 million innocents who perished at the hands of the Nazis with absolutely no military justification.”


I would be curious to know how Dershowitz would judge how the families of German soldiers deployed in combat operations should have viewed the Second World War. What if a mother of a young panzer grenadier fighting on the Russian front was to say, “The troops are the mission, and we cannot separate our support for either”? Should blind support for the fighting men likewise have blinded the families of German soldiers to the illegitimacy of their cause? Certainly Dershowitz would favor the “good German,” one who would have sought to deny facilitation of the Holocaust by refusing to support the war which empowered it. Would he so favor the “good American,” one driven by a sense of moral responsibility to speak out against acts perpetrated in Iraq and elsewhere by American fighting forces ostensibly in support of freedom, but in reality an extension of illegitimate policies reeking of global hegemony and American empire? Or would he choose to explain away Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib,
Bagram, the CIA’s secret gulag of torture as “legitimate acts of bellicose reprisals” for the events of Sept. 11, 2001? In Dershowitz’s tortured legal brain the events at Haditha and elsewhere, including the Marine massacre of civilians in Afghanistan, likewise assume legitimacy in this newfound legal defense of “legitimate bellicose reprisal.”


In the end, Dershowitz’s opinions are irrelevant. The disturbing reality, however, is that his mind-set is not limited to the soap box he enjoys as a teacher of jurisprudence at one of America’s finest institutions of higher learning but rather is increasingly embraced by American service members deployed in harm’s way. A recent U.S. Army
survey shows that some 40 percent of American soldiers and Marines support the use of torture as a means of gathering intelligence. Some 66 percent would refuse to turn in a fellow soldier or Marine for abusive actions against civilians, and less than 50 percent believe that noncombatants should be treated with dignity and respect. Ten percent of those surveyed actually admitted to abusing civilians and their property for no reason whatsoever. While acknowledging that this mind-set is at complete odds with official policy concerning the conduct of military personnel in a combat zone, the Pentagon did its best to portray the survey results as clear evidence that there was, in fact, “good leadership” in place, since the desires of the troops had not manifested themselves in large-scale acts of abuse or torture. True, but the survey is also clear evidence that when such abuse or torture does occur, it is not the result of a few “bad apples,” so to speak, but instead indicative of a trend that could easily spiral out of control on any given day.


The survey results should not come as a surprise to anyone. The innumerable home movies shot in Iraq and Afghanistan, some immortalized on YouTube, some in documentary film, some simply shared with friends and family, all show the same disturbing trend. Whether it is a Marine singing the lyrics to the self-written “Hadji Girl,” or soldiers speaking disparagingly about “ragheads” or “sand niggers,” or any other dehumanizing remark imaginable, the reality is our troops aren’t in Iraq to liberate the Iraqi people. We’re there to kill them and we do an extraordinarily good job. The British government recently certified as “sound” the methodologies used by the study published in the medical journal The Lancet which estimates the number of deaths (as of 2006) that can be directly attributed to the 2003 invasion of Iraq and its aftermath at 655,000. If anything, this number has grown by leaps and bounds since the study was conducted.


One can point to sectarian violence as a major contributor to this total, but as an American I tend to reflect on the American-on-Iraqi violence, such as the barely mentioned deaths of Iraqi children in a recent air-delivered bomb attack against suspected Iraqi insurgents. I’m sure Dershowitz and those American service members desensitized to their own acts of depravity can explain the deaths of these innocents as “legitimate acts of bellicose reprisal.” I call it murder, even if these deaths occurred in time of war.


Every mother and father of every soldier, sailor, airman and Marine deployed in Iraq should reflect on this as well. “Little Johnny” may write home about what he says is a “just war” that “needs to be fought,” but before one embraces the words of someone in harm’s way in desperate need of self-justification for the things he has seen and done, re-examine the area of operations your loved one is serving in or, worse, has perished in. Are they “living among the Iraqi people,” as some would have you believe? Or are they sequestered away in base camps or fire bases, forced to conduct patrols out among a population that for the most part hates them and wants them gone from Iraq? Does “Johnny” himself call the Iraqis ragheads? Does he give a frustrated kick at the Iraqi male he just apprehended, not because of any crime or offense committed, but simply because he was there? Does he point his rifle and scream expletives at the mother or wife or daughter who cries out for a loved one? Does he break a lamp or table to emphasize his point? Or does he do worse, allowing his emotions and frustration to break free as he beats, shoots or rapes those he now hates more than anything else in the world? Freedom? Get real. The mission of our military in Iraq is survival, and that is no military mission at all.


The war in Iraq is as immoral a conflict as the United States has ever been involved in. Past wars were fought in a day and age where information was not readily available on the totality of issues surrounding a given conflict. One could excuse citizens if they were not equipped with the knowledge and information necessary to empower them to speak out against bad policy. Not so today. For someone today to proclaim ignorance as an excuse for inactivity is as morally and intellectually weak an argument as can be imagined. The truth about those who claim they simply “didn’t know” lies in their own lack of commitment to a strong America, one founded on principles and values worth fighting for, and one where every American is committed to the defense of the same. Ignorance is bad citizenship. In this day and age, bad citizenship carries ramifications beyond the environs of our local communities. Given America’s dominant role in the world, bad American citizenship has a way of manifesting itself globally.


I’m not calling the parents of those who have fallen in Iraq and who continue to voice their blind adherence to the Bush administration’s policies in Iraq bad citizens. I understand their need to come to grips with their loss the best way possible, which is to try and extract some meaning from the sacrifice their family has had to make. But I draw the line when these families allow their suffering to translate into blanket suffering for others. As The American Legion magazine quoted one such individual who advocated in favor of the Bush administration: “Are more servicemen and women returning the way my son did, in a casket, as a result of our words and actions? I believe the answer is yes. The perception of a weak American military, should we lose, will make our enemy stronger than we ever imagined. Because we don’t want to be at war any more doesn’t mean the war is over.”


Thus, in a blind effort to find meaning in her son’s death, this mother is willing to inflict suffering on other American families. (MG) this is the problem with "an eye for an eye" ... there are presently more American soldiers dead from the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan than there were civilians murdered in the 9/11 attacks ... and THIS is what an eye for an eye leads to ... to avenge the loss of one eye ... we poke out our other ... This may sound like a harsh indictment, but she indicts herself. The same mother concludes the article with the following quote: “I told President Bush last summer that the biggest insult anyone could hand me would be to pull the troops out before the job is complete. If we’re going to quit, at that point I’ll have to ask, ‘Why did my son die?’ ” The question she should have been asking long before his death was, of course, “Why might my son die?” That she failed to do so, and now seeks to send others off to their death in a cause not worthy of a single American life, is where she and those of her ilk stop receiving my sympathy and understanding.


The American Legion magazine, in its May 2007 issue, belittles those who speak out against the war. “While our forefathers gave us the right and privilege to challenge our leaders,” one father of a fallen Marine writes, “the manner and method that some people have chosen to use at this time only emboldens the enemy.” Reading between the lines, freedom of speech is treasonous if you question the motives and actions of those who got us involved in the Iraq war. Alan Dershowitz can only wish that there had been more “good Germans” speaking out about the policies of Adolf Hitler before the Holocaust became reality.


I yearn for a time when “good Americans” will be able to stop and reverse equally evil policies of global hegemony achieved through pre-emptive war of aggression. I know all too well that in this case the “enemy” will only be emboldened by our silence, since at the end of the day the “enemy” is ourselves. I can see the Harvard professor shaking an accusatory finger at me for the above statement, chiding me for creating any moral equivalency between the war in Iraq and the Holocaust. You’re right, Mr. Dershowitz. There is no moral equivalency. In America today, we should have known better, since we ostensibly stand for so much more. That we have collectively failed to halt and repudiate the war in Iraq makes us even worse than the Germans.

(MG) In the Chicago Tribune op-ed pages, prior to the invasion, Scott Ritter warned that there WERE no WMD in Iraq. His voice is one that needs to be heeded. And this indictment will NOT set well with most Americans ... but until one looks into the mirror of guilt, and professes one's guilt, one's culpability, and by our inactions were ARE culpable ... until such moments as that ... well, we may expect more of the same, ever more of the same

Scott Ritter was a Marine Corps intelligence officer from 1984 to 1991 and a United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 to 1998. He is the author of numerous books, including “Iraq Confidential” (Nation Books, 2005) and “Target Iran” (Nation Books, 2006)

© 2007 TruthDig.com

Hate War - Always - we must

(MG) Military.com has this article which came to my attention via Melanie Mattson's Just a Bump in the Beltway Blog. Why do we the people let our elected / appointed officials drape themselves in the flag and hide behind the troops to wage our never-ending imperialist invasions and occupations (wars of choice)?


Health Care System Puts Troops at Risk
Associated Press | May 04, 2007
WASHINGTON - The military is putting already-strained troops at greater risk of mental health problems because of repeated deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, a Pentagon panel said Thursday in warning of an overburdened health system.

(MG) and in present day warfare, guerrilla wars waged against innocent civilians in countries that never asked us to be there, the daily grind of warfare is SO different from "the big one (II)" where troops cannot distinguish friend from foe (face it, at this juncture, they are all opposed to our presence) where troops cannot let their guard down for one minute ... but where mostly it is about waiting ... waiting in anticipation the pressure of battle is ever-present ... these wars of choice take a HUGE psychic toll ... and think about how many of our troops are reservists, and national guardsmen ... these are NOT soldiers who have signed on for this type of never ending battle

Issuing an urgent warning, the Defense Department's Task Force on Mental Health chaired by Navy Surgeon General Donald Arthur said more than one-third of troops and veterans currently suffer from problems such as traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder.

(MG) the only even REMOTELY hopeful thing about this article is that post-traumatic stress disorder is now recognized as debilitating ... there were huge debates over PTSD and Viet Nam vets ... because the cost of providing counseling IS so high ... and the costs of not providing counseling ... well, that simply is higher ... and this is the absolute bare bones minimum we need to do for our troops

With an escalating Iraq war, those numbers are expected to worsen, and current staffing and money for military health care won't be able to meet the need, the group said in a preliminary report released Thursday.

"The system of care for psychological health that has evolved in recent decades is not sufficient to meet the needs of today's forces and their beneficiaries, and will not be sufficient to meet the needs in the future," the 14-member group says.
Branding Pentagon policies overly conservative and out-of-date, the task force called for more money and a fundamental shift in treatment to focus on prevention and screening - rather than simply relying on Soldiers to come forward on their own.

It cited a significant stigma in which Soldiers believe they would be ridiculed or their careers damaged if they were to acknowledge having problems.

(MG) the taking of a life of another human being is as unnatural an act (for most humans) as can be imagined ... the losing of the life of a soldier-in-arms is devastating ... plus survivor's guilt ... that good 'ole boy "tough it out" attitude causes SO much damage ... when one buries one's feelings, those feelings are buried ALIVE, and they will claw and scratch and fight their way to come out to light, to fresh air .. and WHEN (or if) they finally resurface, there is no guarantee that they will resurface human

The four-page summary of findings, which will be incorporated in a final report to Defense Secretary Robert Gates in June, comes amid renewed attention on troop and veterans care following recent disclosures of shoddy outpatient treatment at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

The task force found 38 percent of Soldiers and 31 percent of Marines report psychological concerns such as traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder after returning from deployment.

(MG) traumatic brain damage -- so many more troops SURVIVE head wounds today (than in Viet Nam) because of the rapidity with which they can be flown to specialty hospitals ... many of these troops would have died in wars past

Among members of the National Guard, the figure is much higher - 49 percent - with numbers expected to grow because of repeated deployments.

In recent weeks, several U.S. senators have pointed to problems in the Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs' mental health care, citing the Army's Fort Carson in Colorado where some troops have said their pleas for mental health care went unanswered or were met with ridicule.

(MG) it's inbred .. that macho culture

In its report, the task force - which visited 38 military bases in the four armed services within the past year - underscored many of the lawmakers' fears. Without citing specific examples, it said Soldiers too often don't seek the care they need.

Care for family members also needed improvement, the report said.

Many base mental health programs have had to limit their practices to active-duty military, shutting family members out or forcing them to try to access civilian providers through the cooperative program known as TRICARE. But in many places, the list of TRICARE providers is small, inadequate or even incorrect.

Both the VA and the Pentagon in recent weeks have acknowledged a need to improve mental health treatment. Jan Kemp, a VA associate director for education who works on mental health, has estimated there are up to 1,000 suicides a year among veterans within the VA system, and as many as 5,000 a year among all living veterans.

(MG) although there are discrepancies in the reported numbers, I have read that the number of Viet Nam veterans who have committed suicide is greater than the number killed in combat ... there are no memorial walls to the suicides - but they too have given their lives, serving their country

A recent investigation by the Government Accountability Office found that just 22 percent of U.S. troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan who showed signs of PTSD were being referred by Pentagon health care providers for mental health evaluation, citing inconsistent and subjective standards in determining when treatment was needed.
(MG) about one out of five returning troops WHO SHOWED SIGNS of needing mental health care have been referred by Pentagon health care providers ... this is NOT what one would call supporting the troops

Where Progressives Fear The Unfamiliar

(MG) Writing in the Black Commentator (as fine an e-zine as I've found), Dr. L. Jean Daniels speaks on the sad, sorry state of the "white washing" of Madison Wisconsin's progressive movement.

Represent Our Resistance
Madison Wisconsin
Where Progressives Fear The Unfamiliar
By Dr. L. Jean Daniels, PhD
BC Columnist

I think people believe I am lucky to live in Madison, Wisconsin. After all, it is the home of a “progressive” movement that is the mother of all progressive movements, they tell me. But somehow I am not encouraged by this movement here. I have had to re-examine the definition of a progressive. I have had to consider the atmosphere surrounding a progressive foothold. Raised as a teen by the activism of Jesse Jackson and other older Black civic and political leaders, I was urged to stand strong and stay focused on “the least among us.” But "the least among us” are not so visible in Madison, Wisconsin.

(MG) The first writings of the "liberal (progressive) project" can be traced biblically to the Book of Exodus. The call to feed the hungry, shelter the homeless, be hospitable to strangers, and take care of the widows and orphans resonates throughout the Bible, through the prophets (major and minor) and oh so clearly in the words of the carpenter, the teacher, the rabbi, the healer, Jesus of Nazareth. This IS the heart and soul of the liberal project and it is QUITE divorced from any racial limitations

As a member of an historically oppressed race, some of us have a “unique” position in the struggle for justice and equality. I strive to do my part to resist despair and degradation, while working to de-mystify the narrative of the imperialists. The progressive has a responsibility to work daily against oppression and toward a truly democratic way of life, one in which human needs are more important than profit for the individual or mega-corporations alike. It is a heavy responsibility to consider "the least among us" and the creation of a democratic society because it sets off those individuals or groups who would dare to stand up for the poor, working class, Mexican and Haitian immigrants etc.

Progressives need not always call attention to themselves and the work they do in the resistance movement. It will be duly noted. It will require critical intervention and generally such intervention will be risky and could jeopardize relations among family members and friends. People will know - for to call attention to the indigenous history of enslavement and genocide, to denounce the collective denial of this historical experience and its legacy, is to denounce the rumbling roar of America as Empire.


(MG) and to do so invariably brings forth the question my own son is so wont to ask, "Why do you hate America?" DAMN IT TO HELL, I don't hate America. What I hate are the imperialistic policies of our elected (and appointed) political leaders, the deceitful conceit of "American exceptionalism", the rampant racism, the war mongering military-industrial-educational-infotainmnet complex that FEEDS itself, GORGES itself at the corporate welfare teat of the U.S. governments coffers ... wrong is wrong, and this nation has been WRONG on so many issues of humanity, justice, truth that it simply boggles my mind (oh would some power the giftee gie us)


This understanding and attitude that comes with it represents the core construction of “certain kinds of human beings,” as Cornel West explains, who see this form of activism, this way of being in the world, in relationship to injustice and inequality, as “a calling” and not a career.


Unfortunately in Madison, in the practice of “activism,” of helping the “helpless,” the progressives silence the voices from the Progressive Movement’s heart and soul. It silences those who have a right and an obligation to stand witness. This state of affairs in Madison is normal. It allows for the illusion of bright and shininess, of safety and security, at least for the predominantly white students attending the UW Madison and the residents (90%-plus white) and the tourists (also predominantly white). This state of affairs provides a haven for businesses and mega-defense corporate folks. Madison stays on the list of the most progressive towns. All nice and all white - and the progressives never complain about this state of “normalcy” in Madison.



Certainly there are a few progressives in Madison sincerely dedicated to transforming the legacy of enslavement and genocide. But we are individuals who receive less attention in Madison, let alone in the world outside of Madison. We always have “bad” news, it seems. Our “joy” in resistance is translated into “bad” news, presenting us with the danger of recrimination and retaliation for soiling that which is so wonderfully, magically safe. Our focus on this litany of suffering and injustice is a scary thing in a town that would prefer to shine with optimism for the bright futures of so many of its residents.


(MG) But ultimately there can be no bright future for peoples who willfully refuse to face reality, to admit the sins of generations past ... there can only be an endless series of repeated past mistakes ... wars in Viet Nam, invasions in Iraqs, etc, etc


If Madison thinks about “the least among us” or thinks on race and class issues, it does so as an exercise in “diversity” learning! Yeah, moms and dads - with a pail of cleanser and scouring pads, let’s evoke the old days of the Civil Rights Movement, known as the good old days, when helping the “helpless” was great exercise too.


(MG) few things offend so-called "Progessives" / "Liberals" as much as being asked to do more than they are prepared to do ... case in point - President Lyndon Baines Johnson was inspired by the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King to pass Civil Rights Legislation ... BUT ... when King decried the American invasion and occupation of Viet Nam, LBJ took it as a personal affront


The heart and soul of this nation’s historical progressive movement is missing in Madison’s progressive movement. The spirit of this history is dead - expunged for a more pragmatic idea of individual and collective profit.


Economics. Like the conservatives in other cities such as Washington D.C., Madison puts profit before considering the welfare of “the least among us.” The progressive movement in Madison consists of residents for whom history of the left is history of white activism. (MG) history books tend to be published by predominantly white run publishing companies ... so, this is not surprising Some, I believe, know better. But there are others for whom the historical activism of Black Americans, whose ancestors, African women, threw babies and themselves overboard slave ships rather than acquiesce to enslavement, is some startling new information. Distinguishing Madison’s progressive narrative from the narrative of white supremacy is difficult, for they have in common the sacrifice of an entire struggle for justice and equality. An entire struggle silenced for the progress of economic development in the city.


In a college town with a high number of intellectual progressive minds, I am amazed at how many are unaware of a Black radical/progressive tradition. Beyond the superficial data espousing the polished glories of this or that Civil Rights Black figure (so many suffer from the permanent affliction of no long-term memory), the progressive movement in Madison caters to those “undereducated” leftists, who are done with Black folks and their problems, and want no further reminder of what they left behind when they returned to their own lives and families. For some progressives in Madison, to read Black radical thinkers is to give credence to a people whose memory of the historical is haunting and therefore a nuisance. It is unthinkable to credit people who need to be discredited. On the other hand, it is comparable to rejecting “family values” and the American way of life, the apple pie - and America, for heaven's sake!


Therefore, a history of THE progressive movement, in its entirety, starting with its core representatives, will not be found in Madison - and this state of affairs seals, while it conceals, the economic dominance of white interests.

It is a sad state of affairs in Madison, Wisconsin. The progressives are not particularly bad folks, but they are frightened that while turning a corner, their children or grandchildren will run into Chicago or Milwaukee (big monstrous images of gang bangers and drug dealers). Their fear of the unfamiliar has them afraid of what they will do in that close an encounter in that dark corner. Will they respond like the Bush administrations and the conservative administrations before that? Prevent and be saved. Thus, the progressives, visible and vocal members, offer prevention rather than intervention. For Madison, drug users come in Black skin. Crime comes in Black skin no matter your employment status or family status.


(MG) all over American, drug users come in Black skin ... just look at the statistics ... citing from memory, somewhat recently in Illinois, for one calendar year, more than 1,000 Blacks were incarcerated for drug / narcotic offenses ... the number of whites incarcerated for said offense was ... drum roll ... 24 ... leading one to conclude, possibly (erroneously to be sure) that the incidence of drug / narcotics usage within the Black Community is ... 40 times higher than in the Anglo Community? ahem ...


You are guilty until proven “innocent” - dead! It seems I have heard this phrase about the “best” Indian or the “best” Viet Con is a dead one. Death, sad to say, is promoted here - the death of African American children, drained of their heritage and left bloodless. It is tragic. So goes our culture and heritage here in Madison, so goes any hope of a future for this nation.


(MG) look at access to health care, look at how physicians "treat" their black patients as opposed to how they treat white patients ... it is separate ... it is unequal


Those of us, living among the progressives in Madison, arise in the morning, face the sun, and call to our ancestors to begin the struggle of another day. We go about our apartheid existence. We are lucky to be alive to struggle another day.

(MG) and white America NEEDS for you to continue this struggle, because until the day when all embrace the lifting up of the "least amongst us", until that day comes, NO citizen of this country can rest easy ... not even the wealthiest and most powerful ... as a matter of self-interest, this struggle needs to be taken up by ALL peoples, but more importantly, as a matter of MORALITY, and HUMANITY it is the right fight ... it must be fought, and we all need to unite as one

BC Columnist Dr. Jean Daniels writes a column for The City Capital Hues in Madison Wisconsin and is a Lecturer at Madison Area Technical College, MATC. Click here to contact Dr. Daniels.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Democratic Spin Won't End the War

(MG) Writing at the Counterpunch web site, John Stauber points out the obvious. The leading Democratic Presidential candidates have NO interest in ending the invasions and occupations of Iraq (and Afghanistan). They are playing politics, falling back on an all too familiar pattern exhibited by US political leaders vis-a-vis failed "wars". (MG) Immanuel Wallerstein made the same point back in early April at the start of his analysis of the situation in Afghanistan:

Everyone knows that the United States has lost the war in Iraq. The politics of Washington, DC today is simply a series of maneuvers between Republicans and Democrats to position themselves so that the other party pays the electoral price for the fiasco.


Stauber delves more deeply into the matter:


After several months of empty posturing against the war in Iraq, politicians in Washington have made what Democratic congressman James P. Moran called a "concession to reality" by agreeing to give President Bush virtually everything he wanted in funding and unrestricted license to continue waging the increasingly detested war that has made Bush the most unpopular president since Richard Nixon.

This is the outcome that we warned against two months ago when we wrote "Why Won't MoveOn Move Forward?" In it, we criticized MoveOn for backpedaling on its previously claimed objective of ending the war in Iraq immediately. Anti-war sentiment was the main factor behind last year's elections that brought Democrats to power in both houses of Congress. Once in power, however, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pushed through a "compromise" bill, supported by MoveOn, that offered $124 billion in supplemental funding for the war. To make it sound like they were voting for peace, the Democrats threw in a few non-binding benchmarks asking Bush to certify progress in Iraq, coupled with language that talked about withdrawing troops next year.

Understanding how legislative processes work, we expected then that even those few nods to anti-war sentiment would be eliminated in due course. Bush had already said he would veto the Pelosi bill and pledged to hold out for funding without restrictions of any kind. Moreover, there was little doubt that the Democratic leadership would eventually cave to his demands. Notwithstanding their stage-managed photo ops and rhetorical flourishes for peace, prominent Democrats signaled early that they would give Bush the funding he wanted. Barack Obama even went so far as to state publicly that once Bush vetoed the original bill, Congress would approve the money because "nobody wants to play chicken with our troops on the ground." (MG) what Obama means is that nobody wants to be ACCUSED of "playing chicken" with the troops, of "not supporting the troops" -- we all remember how any initial criticism of the invasion was cast as virtual treason -- and all the old lies about how badly returning Viet Nam vets were treated by "the hippies" resurfaced ... it's all about politics, and this is much worse than a shame -- this is a crime against humanity ... (Two weeks later, MoveOn announced that it had polled its members, and Obama was their "top choice to lead the country out of Iraq.") In effect, the confrontation between Bush and the Democrats was a high-stakes game of poker in which the Democrats went out of their way to make it clear that they would fold once Bush called their bluff.

...

A "tactic," as the dictionary explains, is "an expedient for achieving a goal." If the goal is to end the war in Iraq, the Pelosi bill was never a tactic that had any chance of succeeding. Its provisions had no teeth and it was clear that too many Democrats never intended to see the fight through. As this week's betrayal by the Democratic leadership demonstrates, ending the war is simply not their goal. (MG) John Kerry told the U.S. Senate in 1971 how to end the war ... just stop funding it ... tres simple Their goal is to continue the war for the time being, while giving themselves just enough distance from it that they can run as the anti-war party in next year's presidential and congressional elections. (MG) and after that? after the dems sweep the senate, take over an even bigger chunk of the house, win the presidency? THEN WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? Will they call the whole thing off? NO WAY in hell is my estimate ... because to do so would subject them (later on down the line) to the criticism that they didn't give the troops a chance to win the invasion / occupation .. and given the short term memory limitations of the U.S. public ... perhaps people will forget that this was ALWAYS dubya's war ... even after all the upcoming Democratic victories (yes, I'm a believer) ... the most likely scenario is MORE OF THE SAME BULL SHIT WAR ... and an increasingly negative perception and ever stronger distrust of politicians and the political process ... setting up conditions for another republican takeover much sooner down the road than many people can imagine ... Stoller seems to have belatedly arrived at this realization himself. Responding to this week's news, he writes:

We're in Iraq because the political system, the public, and all of us became unable to distinguish between truth and falsehood. We're still in Iraq, and will be there until the public is genuinely convinced to leave. Right now, we're not there. I know what the polls say, but I also am watching Clinton, Edwards, Obama, Giuliani, Romney, etc running for President, and not one of them is calling for a full withdrawal. Not one. Clinton, the leading nominee in a supposedly antiwar party, is a hawk and doesn't even think that voting to authorize the war was a mistake.

Amazingly, the conclusion that Stoller draws from these facts is the following non sequitur:

So do not tell me that Pelosi, Reid, and Moveon are doing a bad job. They are not. They are persuading a country and a politics that is used to lazy bullshit that kills a lot of people to think twice about it, and resist.

Here's the point that Stoller seems to have missed: There is a difference between what the public wants and what politicians do. Just because the high and mighty politicians don't get it yet, don't assume that the average American doesn't. It is not "the public" that needs to be persuaded. The politicians, their marketing campaigns, and the bloggers who join them may be "unable to distinguish between truth and falsehood," but the public at large fully understands that we need to get out of Iraq. The question is simply how to translate that public awareness into effective pressure that will force the politicians to change course. As we wrote in March, "When politicians and advocacy groups like MoveOn play anti-war games of political theater while effectively collaborating with the war's continuation, they merely add one more deception to the layers of lies in which this war has been wrapped."



Since 2003 we've co-authored two books on Iraq, and we have been reporting on the war for over five years now, since we began to dissect the Bush administration's propaganda push almost immediately after 9/11. We've been reporting on MoveOn for almost as long. And by the way, we are not "ardent critics" of MoveOn, as Stoller claimed. We are trying to constructively criticize an organization whose leaders mean well, even though they have been selling a flawed strategy. ...

The bottom line, however, is that MoveOn until now has always been a big "D" Democratic Party organization. It began as an online campaign to oppose the impeachment of President Clinton, and its tactical alliances with Democratic politicians have made it part of the party's current power base, which melds together millionaire funders such as George Soros and the Democracy Alliance, liberal unions like SEIU, and the ballyhooed Netroots bloggers like Matt Stoller, Jerome Armstrong and Markos Moulitsas ZĂşniga of the Daily Kos. At a personal level, we presume the members of this coalition genuinely want the war to end, but their true and primary priority is winning Democratic Party control of both houses of Congress and the White House. Now that the war in Iraq hangs like a rotting albatross around the neck of the Bush administration, it has become the Democrats' best weapon to successfully campaign against Republicans. From a "shrewdly pragmatic" point of view, therefore, they have no reason to want the war to end soon.

Some Democrats (not the top politicians, of course) are saying this openly. Here, for example, is how one blogger at the Daily Kos sees things:

I know, that means more American casualties, more Iraqi casualties, more treasure and lives wasted.

But I think you've got to keep in mind the big picture here. ... [B]y the end of September, people will be beginning to pay real attention to the next election...

I think this does give the Democratic party a tremendous opportunity to crush the Republicans for perhaps a couple of decades to come. Iraq, and the Republican support of it, may well do for the Republicans what Vietnam did for Democrats - make the public suspicious for decades about the party's bona fides on foreign policy.

In this analysis, "more treasure and lives wasted" are the "little picture," while winning elections is "the big picture." Democrats like Russ Feingold who oppose the Iraq supplemental do not share this strategy, and it is never explicitly stated even by the Democratic politicians who are signing on this week to fund the war, but it is implicit in their actions.

...

MoveOn is expert at marketing, PR and advertising. Their emails to members convey a friendly, informal style and a sense that "they" are just like "us." But there are important differences between the organization and many of the people who sign their petitions and give them money. MoveOn has not been primarily a movement against the war. It has been a movement of Democrats to get the party back into power.

We do not doubt that MoveOn's leadership sincerely believes they are pursuing the most practical and effective course to improve America's political problems by vanquishing the Republicans and getting Democrats elected. However, when given a choice between building a powerful grassroots movement to end the war, versus exploiting the war for the benefit of getting Democrats elected, MoveOn has repeatedly chosen the latter while probably believing there is no difference.

There is an organized anti-war movement in America that is not an adjunct of the Democratic Party. Up until now, it has been weak and divided and unable to organize itself into an effective national movement in its own right. In its place, therefore, MoveOn and its Netroots allies have become identified as the leadership of the anti-war movement. It is vitally important, however, that a genuinely independent anti-war movement organize itself with the ability to speak on its own behalf.

In the 1950s and the 1960s, the civil rights movement was most definitely not an adjunct of the Democratic or Republican Parties. Far from it, it was a grassroots movement that eventually forced both parties to respond to its agenda. (MG) this may not be the greatest example in the world ... actually, it is a MOST informative example ... many of the gains of the Civil Rights Movement have been turned back, because there will always be a virulent strain of white-supremacist racism that abhors the idea of doing anything even remotely fair for black Likewise, the movement against the Vietnam War was not aligned with either the Democratic or Republican parties, both of which claimed to have plans for peace while actually pursuing policies that expanded the war. (MG) and the anti-war movement really accomplished very little .. until the soldiers / sailors themselves turned against the war, and stopped fighting, and mutinied

That's the sort of movement we need again, if we wish to see peace in our lifetime.

John Stauber is Executive Director of the Center for Media and Democracy in Madison, Wisconsin and co-author of Weapons of Mass Deception and The Best War Ever. He can be reached at: john@prwatch.org

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Bush's Dumbest Utterance

(MG) Posting at Steve Gilliard’s News Blog, uncommon sense poses a great question and arrives at the best answer.

Uncommon Sense: "What Is Bush's Dumbest Utterance?"

The Nation asks (with poll):

What Is Bush's Dumbest Utterance?
A) "You know, one of the hardest parts of my job is to connect Iraq to the war on terror."
B) "If the Iranians were to have a nuclear weapon, they could proliferate."
C) "Those who enter the country illegally violate the law."
D) "It is a time of sorrow and sadness when we lose a loss of life."
E) "I believe that....young cows ought to be allowed to go across our border."
F) "The illiteracy level of our children are appalling."



The answer is, "G) None of the Above."

Bush's dumbest utterance, ever, is: "We leave before the mission is done, the terrorists will follow us here."

Not only is it the dumbest thing Bush has ever said about Iraq, it could be the dumbest thing that anybody has ever said about anything.

I have yet to hear anybody even ask Bush what it means. On its face, it means that as American troops depart from Iraq, The Terrorists will board airplanes they do not have and, literally, follow them back to the United States. Hopefully, you do not need for me to explain how absurd that is.

If Bush does not mean it literally, then he can only mean it metaphorically. Again, the absurdity of such a metaphor should be self-evident. The Terrorists found us just fine on their own on September 11, 2001. They didn't need to follow anybody here. And if The Terrorists decided to come here and attack us while our troops remain bogged down in Iraq, they will have no trouble finding us, and will not find themselves restrained by some magical, Neocon "flypaper."

It is a sign of just how degraded our public discourse has become that Bush can make such a nakedly stupid statement and not be laughed off of the political stage.

Notes & Observations on the Post-Satirical Age

- posted by Uncommon Sense

Republicans in Self-Destruct Mode

May 23, 2007
Applauding Torture and Giuliani's Put Down of Ron Paul
Republicans in Self-Destruct Mode
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

As everyone except for a dwindling band of Bush supporters now knows, the US is in a terrible situation in Iraq from which it cannot extract itself. For Bush and Cheney, their own pride and delusion are more compelling than US casualties, the destruction of Iraq and its people, and the inflaming of sectarian strife and anti-American violence throughout the Middle East.


Congress is complicit in the great strategic blunder. Republican flag-wavers led Americans like lemmings into the abyss. The Democrats have already abandoned the electorate that gave them Control of Congress six months ago in the false hope that the Democrats would corral the White House Moron and lead America out of the abyss.

(MG) Do not forget this … the DEMOCRATS have abandoned the electorate that gave them Control of Congress

Like the Republicans, the Democrats serve the few special interest groups that benefit, or believe that they benefit, from the war. By now we all know who these groups are: the oil industry, the military-security complex, and the Israel Lobby, AIPAC. This contrived war, based on lies and deception, serves no other interest.

(MG) This is perhaps the single most important paragraph one needs to know in order to understand the present state of U.S. politics

There is no longer any question whatsoever, not a single sliver of doubt, that Americans were deceived into this disastrous war. The President of the United States lied to the American people, as did the Vice President, the National Security Advisor, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, the Undersecretary of Defense, as did every neoconservative in the Bush administration, think tanks, and media.

(MG) Especially the media … war mongering media, TV waiting with bated breath to show the video game war that led to the emergence of Ted Turner’s CNN news as a force to be reckoned with during the last BIG ONE that WE WON … Gulf War I

The fact that the American people were lied to and deceived does not absolve them from blame. The lie was transparent, the logic nonexistent, the true facts available and easy to discover.

(MG) Repeat after me … The lie was transparent
(MG) Repeat after me … the logic was nonexistent
(MG) Repeat after me … the true facts available and easy to discover
(MG) Yes, we the people get exactly what we deserve in the way of leadership


America failed, because the American people failed. The American people failed, because their self-righteousness and their hubris made them easy saps for deception.

(MG) Great smack down … perfect call, thank you so much Paul Craig Roberts

Even now after five years of a disastrous policy, Republicans cannot accept the facts about the US invasion and failed occupation of Iraq. At the recent "debate" between Republican presidential candidates in South Carolina, US Representative Ron Paul dared to tell the truth. Rep. Paul said that our difficulties in the Middle East are "blowback" from our government's determined attempts to exercise hegemony over the Middle East.

Republican presidential candidate Rudy Guiliani, a person who sunk so low as to frame innocents while serving as US Attorney in order to boost his name recognition, played the self-righteous card to extreme. How dare Ron Paul suggest that US policy toward Muslims has anything whatsoever to do with attacks on the US! With all the outrage he could muster, Guiliani asked Rep. Paul "to withdraw that comment and tell us that he didn't really mean that."

The thunderous applause from the Republican audience to Guiliani's put-down of the only honest person present underlines that the Republican Party is incapable of leadership to end a futile and lost war that under international standards is a war crime, an unprovoked naked aggression based entirely on lies, deception and a secret agenda.

(MG) well, uh, yes, the republican party is incapable of leadership to end a futile and lost war, etc, etc, etc … sadly, if history has anything to offer … the democratic party may very well prove to also be so incapable ….

At other times, the Republican audience applauded in support of torture and greeted John McCain's protest against the practice with cold silence.

(MG) we all know how popular the TV show 24 is … and that indeed shows torture as a necessity against theurgency of all the bombs, nukes, chemo, bio threats just waiting around every corner for joe and jane 6-pack … that would be a 6-pack of wine spritzers, btw … beer drinkers I assure you are opposed to this invasion and occupation, still being spun as a “war”

In the opening years of the 21st century the Republicans have made it clear that they are willing to sacrifice the US Constitution and Bill of Rights in order to wage "war against terrorism." This willingness makes the Republican Party a more dangerous threat to Americans than Muslim terrorists. Muslim terrorists cannot destroy our country's reputation, trash our civil liberties and wreck our system of accountable government, but the Republican Party has done a thorough job of it.

(MG) Oh .. the almighty threat of Muslim terrorists … and, just how many of these are there? How many Muslim terrorists waiting to drop nuclear bombs on the US? How many Muslim terrorists waiting to drop lethal bio-chemical weapons in the US? How many Muslim terrorists waiting to fly their vast air force bomber fleet into US air space and punk the Midwest, the west, the east coast, the south, and Texas too? Just what exactly is the order of battle for these Muslim terrorists that are up against us? I REALLY want to know.

The Democratic Party is complicit in the Republican Party's crimes, but unlike the Republican electorate, the Democratic electorate does not support the occupation, the domestic police state measures, and the Bush administration's decision to send more combat troops to Iraq. Although none of the current frontrunners for the Democratic presidential nomination are independent of the special interests that benefit from the war, it might still be possible for a Democrat to emerge who will represent the Democratic electorate instead of the special interests.

(MG) This is my prayer … of the possible emergants, Kucinich is still my favored guy, but Mike Gavel and Bill Richardson offer hope … but Roberts is exactly spot on about the rest of the Dem’s .. the front runners … it’ll just be meet the new boss, same as the old boss ….

Republican support for Bush's contrived war against Iraq has diminished the Republican party. Intelligent and decent people have abandoned the party, which has morphed into a Brownshirt Party with which fewer people are willing to be associated. The diminished Republican ranks will make it difficult for the party to steal any more elections.

(MG) Why not a third political party? Why not indeed?

If we are fortunate, Republicans will complete their self-destruction before they extinguish the Constitution and destroy America.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com

Justice Served

Justice best served by dropping charges against Cary-Grove essay writer

By Charles Keeshanckeeshan@dailyherald.comPosted Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Saying justice is best served by no longer pursuing the case, McHenry County prosecutors dismissed charges this morning against a Cary-Grove High School senior arrested over a violent essay turned in for a creative writing class.

(MG) If justice is best served by no longer pursuing the case, how was justice ever served by pursuing the case in the first place? ….

The decision, made formal in a brief court hearing, allows Allen Lee to graduate alongside his classmates this weekend without criminal charges looming and to again seek entry to the U.S. Marines after his prior enlistment had been canceled because of his arrest.

(MG) Good. Now the McHenry County States Attorney’s office can no longer be accused of not supporting the troops. …

It also ends a case that drew international attention to the county and sparked debate over students’ free speech rights.

(MG) I don’t think this case should be over. The fact of the matter is, that attendance at CG high school and completion of in class assignments has been proven to be hazardous to the health of at least SOME CG high school students. … As for free speech? Allen Lee didn’t SAY anything. He wrote something. …

“We knew this conclusion would be reached, either by motion, by trial or by agreement,” Lee attorney Thomas Loizzo said. “Fortunately for Allen, it was by agreement.”

(MG) Attorney Loizzo is an optimist. This case could have ended up any number of ways, depending on the mood, disposition, attitudes, etc of the judge that drew the case ….

Lee, 18, of Cary, was not in court today when prosecutors dropped the case. His presence was waived, officials said, so he could take his final exams.

(MG) Nice of the to let Lee take his final exams … just in case …


Authorities arrested and charged Lee on two misdemeanor counts of disorderly conduct last month after he turned in an essay authorities say disturbed and alarmed his teacher, Nora Capron. The essay describes a shooting spree, drug use and stabbings. It ends with a comment that Capron could one day inspire a school shooting spree.

(MG) The essay also critiques the general attitudes of the American voting public … and FINALLY a newspaper gets it correct … it ends with a comment that CAPRON could one day inspire a school shooting spree. She has already inspired a lot of sound and fury … about nothing … sheesh .. .get that idiot OUT of the teaching of public schools … and look REAL closely at the university which granted her a teaching degree. An utter incompetent …

McHenry County State’s Attorney Louis Bianchi today stood by the decision to charge the student, but said his office opted to drop the case after determining Lee was not a threat to his classmates or teachers.

(MG) Of course he is going to “stand by the decision to charge the student” otherwise, it would be an admission of an idiot decision (which it was in the first place) … a clear case of covering one's buttocks

“Most importantly, it is clear to us that Ms. Capron has no desire for this matter to continue any longer,” Bianchi said. “As prosecutors, we have to consider the wishes of the victim as well as the likely result of what can be gained if the case were to proceed.

(MG) BUT … you see, Ms Capron, whether or not she desires the matter to continue … is NOT the one ultimately responsible for pursuing the charges … she filed the charges, the state’s attorney’s office is the one which pursues the charges … Ms Capron is most assuredly guilty of at least BAD JUDGMENT … and, to reiterate … just bad teaching in general ….

“(Lee) did admit to police he intended to alarm and disturb her,” Bianchi added. “I think it’s a fair assessment that they didn’t get along.”

(MG) Lee DID admit this? Says who? This is the first reference to such an admission that I’ve seen. Furthermore, Ms Capron needs to take responsibility for her own alarmedness and disturbedness, and, having once cried WOLF, well .. just don’t let her get into a position of sufficient authority to do this type of mischief again. …

Lee’s defense today continued to lay blame for the furor on the assignment itself. The assignment instructed students to write anything that came to mind in a stream-of-consciousness style, and without any self-censoring.

(MG) No shit. Mr Lee performed the assignment to the letter of the assignment, and as a result was arrested, had his life placed on hold, was subject to superficially deep scrutiny, and yet, had enough friends and supporters to create an uproar over the injustice of this farcical travesty ….

“There must be some accountability on the part of the school district or curriculum committee,” Loizzo said. “Had this assignment not been given, we wouldn’t be here. Be careful what you wish for, because you might get it.”

(MG) Thank you very much Mr Loizzo. Indeed, had this assignment not been given, we wouldn’t be here. But the assignment WAS given, and you ARE here … agency falls entirely on the dip stick shoulders of the teacher, her department head, the principal of the school, the police and the state’s attorney’s office. …

Defense lawyers also were critical of authorities’ decision to arrest and charge Lee before first speaking to the student and his family about the essay.

(MG) No shit. ….

Bianchi, however, said authorities acted quickly to ensure Lee had no weapons and could not act upon threats they believe the essay contained.

(MG) And just how certain were they that Lee had no weapons? How difficult is it to purchase weapons? At gun shows, for example. And hide them? And what kind of profiling had they done … again, the secret service did a profile of school shooters .. and quite frankly Mr Lee is highly unlikely to fall into that segment, that of so small splinter of society ….

As for the assignment, Bianchi said Capron frequently warned students that their writings must be “classroom appropriate.” Anything offensive, he said, would be reported to a guidance counselor or principal.

(MG) How would Bianchi know this? And just what the hell is offensive. There were previous reports of a student writing one of these and assuming the part of a mob hit man. Why wasn’t THAT considered to be offensive. And I’d REALLY like to see ALL of the other assignments .. offensive … just WTF is that all about? We’ve already gone down the censorship road … I find it offensive that CSI (among other TV programs) shows dead bodies in such off hand detail … I find it offensive that Rush Limbaugh preaches his racist eliminationist crap about liberals, feminists, etc, etc … I find Ann Coulter inordinately offensive … to any sense of journalistic integrity … check out the crap these kids play with on their video games, or watch on TV .. there is a WHOLE lot of offensive crap out there ….

“She responded appropriately to the situation, as did the principal, the school and the Cary police department,” he said. “The arrest and charges were clearly warranted.”

(MG) Bull fucking shit. If they were clearly warranted, then prosecution would have been clearly warranted, and prosecution was NOT forthcoming. …

Lee regrets the unwanted attention his essay brought to himself and his family, his lawyers said today, but does not believe he should apologize for following what he believes were his teacher’s instructions.

(MG) I side here with Lee.

“Allen wrote an essay that created an international disturbance,” Loizzo said. “That’s pretty creative. If I was the teacher, I would have given him an A-plus-plus on that assignment.”

(MG) No .. it was NOT the essay that created the disturbance. It was the reactions of … the manifestly incompetent teacher, and a series of ever higher-ranking authorities who were NOT willing to say .. .hey, this is an in-class writing assignment … not some manifesto … this is a popular, student-athlete, a patriot who would rather serve his country NOW than go to college … it’s NOT the essay, and it’s NOT the student who wrote it that are responsible for this mess …. It’s the people in charge who would not accept responsibility … and they should all suffer consequences … fire the teacher, demote the department head, suspend the principal without pay for a while … but, I won’t hold my breath waiting for any of those results to occur.