Tag Archives: military

Cheney’s push of deregulators led to BP disaster

Lobbyists & Executives in charge of regulation. Most of our military bases in middle east are built near existing or proposed Oil pipe lines. – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – If it was supervised, if it was overseen, if it was regulated by the federal government, Cheney with his marvelous bureaucratic talent moved in and essentially replaced the people who were in the positions that were central to this regulation, this oversight, with people who were either lobbyists for the industry being regulated or executives from that industry. About Lawrence Wilkerson: Lawrence Wilkerson is a retired United States Army soldier and former chief of staff to United States Secretary of State Colin Powell. http://www.progressivenewsdaily.com/?p=4206 added by: Stoneyroad

6/2/2010 “The Liberty Solution” Radio With Amanda Owens & Mike Shanklin

6/2/2010 “The Liberty Solution” Radio with Amanda Owens & Mike Shanklin Every Wednesday 10pm-12am Eastern An introduction to Freedom ideals with co-hosts Amanda Owens & Mike Shanklin. This weeks guests, Darren O’Connor – from http://nocoercion.com/ , Aaron Yeargan – Military Veteran, & Sean Haugh/Christina Tobin from freeandequal.org on to discuss the 2010 Libertarian National Convention. Every Wednesday 10pm-12am, Call-in 347-633-9636 Thanks for listening to PFP Movement Radio by http://www.peacefreedomprosperity.com http://www.peacefreedomprosperity.com/?p=3548 added by: shanklinmike

Sandra Bullock: The Troops’ Choice

In her first public appearance since the Jesse James cheating scandal and the double divorce and adoption bombshells that followed, Sandra Bullock was in good spirits. And certainly worthy of being called the Troops’ Choice. Returning to the spotlight Saturday, she made a surprise visit to the Spike TV’s Guys Choice Awards to accept the “Troops Choice” Award for Entertainer of the Year. Presenter Robert Downey, Jr., awarded her the honor, bestowed by members of the military, and the star received a standing ovation from the Los Angeles audience. The Blind Side Oscar winner looked stunning, too … THE TROOPS SUPPORT HER : And for good reason! In addition to her good looks, the new mother of baby son Louis’ trademark, self-deprecating wit was on display as she accepted the honor last night … “Let’s be honest here, just for a moment. We’re all going to be honest, right? Did I win this for being entertainer of the year, or because of the spectacular I.E.D. [improvised explosive device] explosion that became my personal life?!” Once the laughter subsided, she said , “No, it’s okay. Because I would do it over again if it was to entertain our troops, and our extraordinary troops deserve something much more than some actress in a tight dress talking about herself.” “I would sing, but you’ve seen enough pain in your lifetime. I would dance – I’m a pretty good dancer, but as I mentioned, the dress is pretty tight.” She’s the best.

The rest is here:
Sandra Bullock: The Troops’ Choice

The Daily Spill: Diamond Saw Fail, BP Should Not Pay Out Dividends

http://environment.change.org/blog/view/the_daily_spill_diamond_saw_fail_and_bp_… The Daily Spill serves you up the latest developments as oil continues to coat the Gulf. Forget Plan B, C or D. With how fast their schemes are failing, BP may be soon require the Greek alphabet. So, remember that diamond-tipped saw intended to cut through that troublesome well pipe in order to cap it? Yeah, that got stuck. Most of yesterday went by before it was freed. Now, I kid you not, the company has turned to giant “garden” shears, though it’s unclear when that will begin. Don’t hold your breath. Oh, but just in case you were worried, federal officials assured us that nuclear weapons are not on the table. Nothing would surprise me at this point. Back on the East Coast, President Obama gave a serious and politically important speech yesterday at Carnegie Mellon University. He finally spelled out the obvious: the Gulf disaster should be a catalyst to pass a climate bill with a price on carbon, and also said he wants to roll back billions of dollars in oil company tax breaks – something he had tried to do in past budget proposals. He also vowed to personally whip votes for a climate bill “in coming months,” which climate advocates have urging for awhile. While Obama talked policy, other politicians did what they do best (for better or worse): made demands. Alabama Republican state senator Ben Brooks explained that “there’s nothing inherently contradictory” with a small government advocate, such as himself, demanding the very same wimpy government protect public safety. Um, sure, no comment. Democrats, meanwhile, made some more sensible demands: Sens. Chuck Schumer and Ron Wyden rightly told BP it was “unfathomable” that the company is considering pay shareholder dividends before total cleanup costs are known (the latest estimates rise to nearly $40 billion). Florida Sen. Ben Nelson, in a letter, formally asked that the military take charge, and others said BP CEO Tony Hayward’s head should roll. Some news on this should play out when Hayward addresses his investors tomorrow. Speaking of – the man of the hour has been busy backpedaling, said he was “appalled” by his own “I’d like my life back” remark and admitting to The Financial Times that criticisms of BP’s spill preparedness are “entirely fair.” As for BP’s response since, Vice President Joe Biden seems to believe the company is doing the best it can. BP and Halliburton are certainly experts at getting politicians to favor their interests. The former hired at least 27 former government insiders to be their lobbyists in the first three months of this year alone, reports the Huffington Post, and is a company with incomparable influence. In a busy donation month, the latter gave $17,000 to candidates this November, Politico reports, several of whom are on committees investigating the oil spill. And so much for a respite from new offshore drilling. Yesterday, the Minerals Management Service approved the first new shallow oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico since President Obama put a short moratorium in place. The site is a mere stone’s throw from a Louisiana state wildlife refuge. Drilling in deeper waters, for the record, is still frozen, but I’m not sure I get why drilling closer to the shore is better. At the very least, Interior has taken steps to demand more in drilling applications and, as The Hill reports, is asking approved permit holders to resubmit plans if they’d used a loophole that exempted them from environmental review. And lastly, sometimes being funny pays. Or at least being friends with funny people. The anonymous tweeter behind BPGlobalPR’s fake feed donated $10,000 to the Gulf Restoration Network yesterday. added by: captainplanet71

AZ Gov Brewer: "my father died fighting Nazis in Germany" Liar Liar pants on fire

This is starting to look like a pattern. First Mark Kirk, now Jan Brewer. Governor Brewer's effort to stir sympathy for her cause seems to have backfired on her. Gov. Jan Brewer said in a recent interview that her father died fighting Nazis in Germany. In fact, the death of Wilford Drinkwine came 10 years after World War II had ended. During the war, Drinkwine worked as a civilian supervisor for a naval munitions depot in Hawthorne, Nev. He died of lung disease in 1955 in California. Brewer made the comment to The Arizona Republic while talking about the criticism she has taken since signing SB 1070, the new immigration law that makes it a state crime to be in the country illegally. “Knowing that my father died fighting the Nazi regime in Germany, that I lost him when I was 11 because of that… and then to have them call me Hitler's daughter. It hurts. It's ugliness beyond anything I've ever experienced,” Brewer said in the story, published Tuesday. How exactly does one stretch work for a munitions depot stateside into “fighting the Nazis”? Evidently by making the claim that the lung disease that killed her father was caused by toxic fumes at the munitions factory. Her claim that she didn't mean to embellish the story rings hollow to me. The phrase “my father died fighting the Nazi regime in Germany…” clearly intends to convey the impression that he fell in combat in Germany fighting Nazis. If she had intended to convey otherwise, she would have framed it as the result of the country's war with Nazi Germany. She did not. Of course, she is now trying to spin as a simple misinterpretation on the part of the reader, which points directly to my overall problem with the faux patriotism candidates put on under the guise of military service. We live in a country where service is voluntary (despite our unenforced draft laws). Serving or not serving is not a benchmark measure of anyone's patriotism. As far as I'm concerned, military service should not be a marker of a candidate's qualification to run for or hold office. When it starts being pimped as some kind of extra qualifier, or when candidates use their family's service as a qualifier (as Brewer did), it's an insult to every member who is or has served in the military today. Brewer just keeps proving her ambition and lack of qualification for office. Arizona, you can do better than this. http://crooksandliars.com/karoli/az-gov-jan-brewer-stretches-truth-political added by: Stoneyroad

Anti-gays hide their bias behind the Bible

Grand Rapids, Michigan (CNN) — My partner and I recently took our mothers to Las Vegas for a week for Mother's Day. It's not our favorite city, but for a pair of 60-somethings who can sit at the penny slot machines for hours, it was heaven. When they were not being robbed by one-armed bandits, we saw a couple of shows and had some amazing dinners. We also enjoyed trying to figure out which women were hookers and which were just dressed like one. And of course saying “public drunkenness” is pretty redundant after 11 a.m. But that's why we go to Vegas, right? Life on the Strip. What happens here stays here … and all that good stuff. By the end of our trip, the four of us had seen just about everything you would expect to see in a place nicknamed Sin City — except for faith-based protesters. Funny, a week of walking up and down the main artery of the self-proclaimed heart of moral debauchery, and nary a Bible verse could be heard. In the many times I've been to Las Vegas over the years, I've never seen a religious protest. And yet let a midsize city try to add sexual orientation to its municipal nondiscrimination policy or a high school senior bring a same-gender date to prom, and you would think it was the apocalypse. Where are the faith-based organizations trying to make adultery a crime punishable by death, as suggested in Leviticus 20:10? The Bible doesn't state that one sin is greater than another, but you wouldn't know that by counting the number of comments that quote Scripture on news stories about the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered community. Compare them with how many address murder, or the environment, or the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and well, the word “hypocrite” comes to mind. I am never ashamed to say I follow the teachings of Christ, but I am not always proud to say I am a Christian. That's because I am bothered by the continual mutilation of my religion's basic principle of love by the extremists in my religion who construct a hierarchy of sin — which does not exist in the Bible — for no other reason than to protect their own prejudices. We've seen this throughout this country's history, and perhaps with the exception of abortion, no current issue illustrates this transgression more so than gay rights. Some conservatives might attend church only twice a year, but ask their opinion about gays in the military. They can find Leviticus 18:22 blindfolded, handcuffed and sinking underwater: “Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind; it is an abomination.” Rarely do you hear them mention the other “sexual sins” in Leviticus, such as making love to your wife while she's menstruating. There are some people who say Jesus freed us from the old laws with one side of their mouths while using old laws to condemn GLBT people with the other. Many turn to the destruction of Sodom as proof against homosexuality. But the King James version lists fornication, greed and lying as sins committed in Sodom as well, and never specifies which particular sin caused God's wrath. In fact, the word “Sodomite,” which some like to toss around as an anti-gay insult, is a mistranslation and is not used in the original Hebrew text. The actual word is “kadesh,” and it does not refer to the city, its inhabitants or a specific sexual act. It refers to the occult male prostitutes in the shrines, just as “kedesha” refers to the female equivalent. Neither word reflects sexual orientation. It may be convenient to say Sodom was all about homosexual people, but historically and scripturally, that isn't accurate. This is why I, like so many other Christians, do not follow a literal interpretation of the Bible. I'm not ducking Leviticus, I'd just rather go directly to the source. Concepts get lost in translation, and we all know history is filled with influential people and institutions that have defined religion for the masses based upon their own selfish needs. For example, King Henry VIII, the man who authorized the first English translation of the Bible, was married six times and essentially had the British Empire separate from the Roman Catholic Church so he could divorce in peace. Then there's King James, whose own writings suggest he was secretly gay or bisexual, according to historians such as Michael B. Young and Caroline Bingham. He was directed to marry for the sake of the throne before authorizing the version of the Bible that swapped “kadesh” for “Sodomite” in the first place. Hmm, where have we heard that story — closeted gay politician with an anti-gay policy — before? But theology and history aside, it is clear from the lack of consistent reaction to and organization against the litany of other present-day sins that a large number of people who call themselves Christians do not follow the literal interpretation of the Bible either. So, if some of us are picking and choosing which Bible verses to follow, why are so many opting to pick and choose verses that appear to condemn homosexuality and not the one against marrying a woman who isn't a virgin? If sin is sin, why such Christian angst directed at the GLBT community and not the greedy corporate community, which, quite frankly, has more direct impact on the average person's life? The answer is simple: Those who are uncomfortable or fearful of someone who is different from them sometimes hide behind religion to gain power, nurture their ignorance and justify their prejudices. It's no different from Christian slave owners using Scriptures to feel better about enslaving Africans, or men pointing to Jezebel as a way to keep women out of the clergy, or Bob Jones University picking verses that supported the school's ban on interracial dating. The extremists aren't fighting gay rights because of sin and honoring Leviticus 18:22. If they were, then where are the faith-based organizations spending millions trying to make adultery a crime punishable by death, as suggested in Leviticus 20:10? Is 18:22 more true than 20:10, or does it just support a more common and entrenched prejudice? added by: TimALoftis

A Gay in the Life: He’s my boyfriend, not my partner

I’ve called my boyfriend many things since he strolled into our first date almost six years ago. Late, first of all. He went to the wrong restaurant. But after that, dreamy. Next was friend, both with and without benefits. Lover, though usually in a funny kind of way, because that’s too cheesecake. Jerk. (I have a temper.) I’ve called him a slew of nicknames that’d make Cupid giggle (or ralph, depending on his own marital status at the moment) — and I’ve even called him my husband. Y’know, ring and legality aside. We can’t get married, but maybe soon we can join the military and defend the country which denies us this basic right — and even ”admit” that we’re gay! Go progress. But one thing I’ve never called my boyfriend —well, other than punctual — is partner. I don’t care how many gays or lesbians use the term to describe their significant other, I refuse to believe it was ”one of us” that coined it. I’m no activist, but almost the very second I accepted that I was gay, I wanted equality: even if, at the time, it meant telling my friend Jessica that I was more in love with Justin Timberlake than she was. She could declare her love, so why couldn’t I? READ MORE AT: http://blogs.creativeloafing.com/dailyloaf/2010/06/01/a-gay-in-the-life-hes-my-b… added by: Ryan_Jent

“AWOL Bush” NY Times Coverup Revealed, President “Runs Away” During Vietnam War : Veterans Today

FLASHBACK: When the NY Times ignored gaping holes in candidate Bush’s war record May 25, 2010 2:10 pm ET by Eric Boehlert One of the striking talking points that came out of The New York Times in the wake of its controversial article last week about whether Connecticut Democrat Richard Blumenthal had, over the years, exaggerated his military service during the Vietnam War era, was the insistence from the Times that the story was a deeply important one and one that needed to be covered. The Times, faced with stiff criticism for its handling of the Blumenthal story, seemed to suggest it had a moral obligation, not to mention a newsroom duty, to look closely at the military service rhetoric from a New England politician running in a statewide election. A Times flack even appeared to lecture Blumenthal about how he needed to be straight with Nutmeg State voters. But I’m having a tough time buying the Times‘ sudden devotion to the topic, considering that during the 2000 presidential campaign, the same Times staff went out of its way not to report on the web of detailed allegations that Republican George Bush had failed to fulfill his military obligation while defending Texas air space as an Air National Guard pilot and that the presidential candidate had routinely lied about that fact. For that story, the Times team shrugged. But it’s decided this spring to go all-in over Blumenthal? Seems strange. Now, I realize that it’s been an entire decade since the 2000 campaign played out and that most people don’t recall what the coverage was like — and specifically have virtually no memory of how Bush’s Air National Guard story was covered. But I’m not overstating things when I say the Times’ stubborn failure to cover the controversy really did mark one of the true cases of journalistic malpractice of that crucial campaign season. The full scope of Bush’s lack of Guard service was revealed on May 23, 2000, when The Boston Globe’s Walter Robinson reported a Page One piece detailing all the holes in Bush’s military service: “1-Year Gap in Bush’s Guard Duty; No Record of Airman at Drills in 1972-73.” After combing through 160 pages of military documents and interviewing Bush’s former commanders, Robinson reported how Bush’s flying career came to an abrupt and unexplained end in the spring of 1972 when Bush asked to be transferred so that he could work on a family friend’s Senate campaign in Alabama. But Bush’s Alabama commander, Lt. Col. William Turnipseed, told the Globe that Bush never showed up for duty. (A trained pilot, Bush asked to be reassigned to an Alabama base that had no airplanes.) In 2000, a group of veterans offered a $3,500 reward for anyone who could confirm Bush’s Alabama service — and nobody from Bush’s unit stepped forward. Consider this: The Times‘ Frank Bruni tailed Bush obsessively on the campaign trail that year, filing more than 200 dispatches. But he never once referenced in print the Globe allegations. (Just try to imagine the Times‘ reaction if, during the 2000 campaign, the same Boston Globe had reported on Page One that Gore’s discharge papers from Vietnam showed he rigged his wartime duty and orchestrated an early exit by simply refusing to report for duty during the final two years of his commitment.) During 2000, the Guard story never landed on Page One of the agenda-setting New York Times. In fact, the Guard story barely even made it inside the daily, while key facets were boycotted. Here’s how many times in 2000 the Times, supposedly busy scouring the backgrounds of the candidates, reported the fact that Bush was grounded by his Guard superiors in 1972 for failing a mandatory physical: zero. Just more than a week after The Boston Globe had raised serious questions about Bush’s Guard service, the Times ran a May 31, 2000, story headlined “Bush Questions Gore’s Fitness for Commander in Chief.” The article noted that some were “questioning the nature of Mr. Bush’s military service in the Vietnam War,” but did not provide any further detail about the substance of the criticism. Instead, the Times simply reported that “Mr. Bush did not serve overseas but instead served in Houston in the Texas Air National Guard.” The article made no mention whatsoever of the thorny allegations swirling about Bush’s lack of military service. On July 11, 2000, the Times‘ Nicholas Kristof wrote a biographical feature on Bush’s life during the Vietnam War: ” Close to Home; Bush’s Choice in War: Devoid of Passion or Anxiety.” The feature omitted any reference to questions about Bush’s absenteeism, getting grounded, failing to take a physical, and walking away from the Guard for months at a time. But Kristof was hardly alone at the Times. It was a determined team effort to play dumb. In late July, the Times got around to addressing Bush’s wartime experience with an article headlined “Governor Bush’s Journey; After Yale, Bush Ambled Amiably Into His Future.” Certainly a piece focusing on Bush’s post-Yale years in the late ’60s and early ’70s would center its attention on the troubling allegations raised by The Boston Globe, right? Wrong. It wasn’t until 2,500 words into the article that the thorny issue was detailed. In total, the Times article dedicated about 300 words to the entire controversy, giving readers the sketchiest outlines of Bush’s perplexing missing year from the Texas Air National Guard. And that fleeting, buried reference represented the bulk of the Times’ coverage for most the entire campaign. In a September 4 article on the campaign debate over military readiness, the Times referenced the fact that “Mr. Bush trained as a fighter pilot in the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam War.” The Times politely omitted any mention of Bush’s Guard controversy. Twenty days later, the Times reported, “An array of veterans, including senior officers who served under Mr. Clinton and Mr. Gore, last week endorsed Mr. Bush, who served as a fighter pilot in the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam War and was, for the record, a lieutenant.” Again, the article politely omitted any mention of Bush’s Guard controversy. It wasn’t until the eve of the election that the Times set aside an entire news article to examine some of the crucial questions raised by the Globe. The Times‘ conclusion in November 2000? See for yourself [emphasis added]: Two Democratic senators today called on Gov. George W. Bush to release his full military record to resolve doubts raised by a newspaper about whether he reported for required drills when he was in the Air National Guard in 1972 and 1973. That’s right, half a year after the Globe published its scoop, the Times finally addressed the issue, announcing in the second paragraph that some questions about Bush’s Guard service were “unfounded.” (“The Times got spun,” was how the Globe’s Walter Robinson later described the Times’ Guard reporting.) Bottom line: In 2000, candidate Bush’s military record during the Vietnam War was very much in doubt, as was Bush’s repeated explanation as to why, after receiving $1 million worth of taxpayer-funded flight instruction, he had essentially vanished from the Guard and failed to fly, show up for monthly drills, or even take a mandatory physical. Yet back in 2000,The New York Times didn’t seem to care much about that military-record story. And the Times newsroom seemed to make a decision not to cover the controversy — a controversy that, given the historically close nature of the 2000 race, could have tipped the balance of the vote. So, yes, given that stark background, it’s tough to make sense of the Times‘ recent dedication to pursuing the Blumenthal story. More at the link: added by: Monkey_Films

U.S. using old and risky strategy « My Bloggity Blog

(excerpt) Many both here and abroad believe that the United States has the most powerful military in the world; and for the most part they are correct. However the U.S. will be losing that spot rather quickly if they don’t change up the ways they use to win wars, and the people who think them up. The U.S. currently spends 1.75 billion dollars a day on the military all for things that seem new to most added by: Colin_McCabe