Chris Bell on the right side…of education

Re: education, Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s lack of pragmatism is on display once again. While Dem nominee Chris Bell was in Corpus at the state VFW conference affirming his support for veterans and healthcare, Perry was in Austin getting resistance from teachers for his virulent education policy. While Perry continues to praise the benefit of his archaic standardized test regime, teachers, administrators, parents and education experts continue to denounce the test-only curriculum as a fallacy. Like usual, Rick Perry isn’t listening.

This is what Dr. Linda McNeil, the Co-Director of the Center for Education at Rice University, has to say about Texas’s public schools under Rick Perry:

“Testing has pushed the state into substituting a bogus curriculum of test practice for a real, academically challenging, and instructionally productive curriculum.”

You see? Rick Perry is scary. He hates science, he hates the environment, and his education policy is damaging our state.

Check out what education in Texas will look like with Chris Bell as Governor here and here.

…Great job and a sincere thanks to everyone who voted for the Texas ticket on map changers. Start your engines, round 3 begins later today. The winner hosts a fancy fundraiser with Mark Warner. Lets make that happen. Vote for Chris Bell.

Early Happy Hour at the Froggy Bottom

Image hosting by Photobucket

Froggy Bottom Lounge

Welcome newcomers! Please introduce yourself

Startig early today because
I just finished my last exam!

Time to break out the vodka and random ten lists!

CDs are in their regular spot next to the stereo

Please recommend (and unrecommend the Cafe/Lounge from yesterday)

An Open Letter to the Earth Liberation Front

(For Working Links Go here:
http://www.threeriversonline.com or http://openlettersmostlypowerful.blogspot.com/

Open Letter to the Earth Liberation Front
Phil’s Cool New Meme (Even the Kewl Kids are Repeating It..)

Open Letter to Earth Liberation Front:

  1. After five books and about 2000 pages of evidence, I have concluded that the GOP purposely stole the presidential elections of 2000 and 2004, not to mention numerous house and senate seats that haven’t been looked at too closely.
  2. I don’t think nonviolent resistance can work in a reality where the vote has been and will be thwarted on a continuous basis.
  3. I still can’t sanction the taking of human life, but I’m quite comfortable with the destruction of things. In other words, instead of blowing up a car dealership or two, why not find the warehouses that are storing the machines and destroy the machines, preferably a day or two before the election so that the machines can’t be replaced and you have to rely on a paper ballot–which is harder to hack. Just something to think about.

Sincerely,

Philip Shropshire
http://www.threeriversonline.com
http://openlettersmostlypowerful.blogspot.com/

(emailed to: info@earthliberationfront.com )
posted by Philip Shropshire at 6:20 PM Comments

Israeli-Palestinian Ex-Combatants For Peace{Updated}

I posted this up awhile back after Ellen Barfield, of Veterans For Peace, returned from her invited visit to Israel/Palestine.

In light of what has started, once again, in that region, I’ve added it as a comment to a post that was up at Daily KOS, Diary gone now so decided more should see this if you hadn’t.
While this isn’t the only group, on either side of this Far Too Long running Debacle of Destructive Behavior, trying to find a Peaceful Solution, these are the ones who are creating the Devestation against each other and innocents!

I’m not posting up the full report, from Ellen, you can read that at the title link.

~~~~~~~~
From VFP board member Ellen Barfield
~~~~~~~~

From: Ellen Barfield
Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 09:51:40 (PDT)
Subject: Report on Trip to Palestine and Israel

Israeli-Palestinian Ex-Combatants For Peace

ENEMIES WORKING TOGETHER

And visit the Combatants for Peace website
“Combatants for Peace” Israeli-Palestinian Liberation, for the media their event
generated, some personal stories, and other info.
~~~~~~~
Here is a <object width=”325″ height=”250″><param name=”movie” value=”http://www.youtube.com/v/7slqdEB9Opc”></param&gt<embed src=”http://www.youtube.com/v/7slqdEB9Opc” type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” width=”325″ height=”250″></embed&gt</object&gtVideo of the First gathering in Beit Jala, 16.06.2005

If object for video doesn’t come up Here’s Link

The Only Way To Hopefully Come To A Peaceful End Are For Groups, As Above, To Change The Situations and To Hopefully Quell The Hatreds Already Grown In The Young, Who Will Keep This Destructive Behavior If They Can’t Be Reasoned With, On Both Sides!!!

And that goes for any and all Conflicts that are going on Now!!!
~~~~~~~~~~

Home demolitions in Rafah.
Bulldozers erase densely populated areas,
to make room for the new “iron wall”.
The families lose everything.

Gaza

In Gaza you would find only
one Israeli-soldier-prisoner
among a one million Palestinian occupied population
Surrounding Gaza you would find
658 Tanks, 25.144 soldiers
203 heavy artillery
and 259 armoured vehicles
(not to mention the Air-Power)
The people surrounding Gaza
have more than 10.000 Palestinian prisoners
and three and half million Palestinians as hostages
and 8 Ministers and 16 members of Parliament
in their custody, without charges…

The people inside Gaza were once
outside Gaza, living in Peace
until one day ugly people came from Europe,
took their homes and sent them into Gaza
as refugees inside their own country.
Some Gaza-natives have never seen
Jerusalem nor Ramallah
nor even their birth-place….

Entering Gaza , by force, reminds me
of the Nazis entering the Warsaw Ghetto.
Or when the Roman-legions
finished up with Spartacus…..

How “brave” can a criminal-army be??
They starved Gaza, cut-off its electricity
and water and food and medicines
They have an Army and Gaza does not…

what else do they want ?
Is genocide their only way to Peace ??

Raja Chemayel
29.06.06 anti-allawi-group

{To check out what life is like under a murderous military occupation by foreign terrorists, go to: Rafah Today The occupied nation is Palestine. The foreign terrorists call themselves “Israeli.”}

fri rdm 10 – pick a fight edition (with poll)

Liberal Street Fighter

As we eaze into what will likely be an extended five-day holiday weekend for many of you, make a pledge to get in the face of any winger who seeks to sully Independence Day in your presence with some pseudo patriotic right-wing blather he picked up from talk radio. How better to celebrate freedom than to recommit yourself to stand up for the liberal values upon which this country was founded?

However, there is no reason why you can’t do that and still celebrate the better hopes and dreams upon which this nation was founded. Whether you’re picnicking this weekend, having a cookout with friends or family, or enjoying some celebration near where you live, here’s hoping that you have a fun and safe holiday weekend.

Today’s tunes after the jump.

  1. “Happy” – Rolling Stones
  2. “Harvest” – Neil Young
  3. “Human Cannonball” – Webb Wilder
  4. “Revolution Calling” – Queensryche
  5. “Get it On (Bang a Gong)” – Power Station
  6. “4 Degrees” – Tool
  7. “Don’t Do It” – Little Charlie & the Nightcats
  8. “Eye” – Smashing Pumpkins
  9. “Phone Call” – Los Lobos
  10. “(I’m a) Ramblin’ Man” – Waylon Jennings

Is there any good music in your plans for the days to come? Summerfest here in Milwaukee is pretty bland this year, but I might stroll down Sunday for Ray Davies followed by Joan Jett. Have to see how lazy Sunday feels.

The Declaration of Independence: how far we have fallen

With much of “flag wavin’, beer guzzlin’, jee-zus fearin’ Murka” getting ready to shoot off some fireworks, eat some grilled meat and get all dressed up in red, white and blue to show how much they support the troops and love this country, I was thinking about the document that we really should be celebrating, or at least remembering this weekend.

And in reading the text of the Declaration of Independence it is both sad to see how far this country has gone astray from the principles contained in the Declaration of Independence and how the authors of that document would cringe to see what has happened to the country and freedoms (not “freedomTM”) they fought so hard for.  At the same time, it is amusing (in a sick twisted way) to see how ignorant that `Murka is when they blindly salute the flag and spew their vile hate.
So, with all that in mind, I thought that a few choice selections of the Declaration of Independence, intertwined with commentary and some “post-9/11 world” contrast would be worth putting together on a weekend where I will be doing more reflection than in most other years.

When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

That second paragraph really says it all.  All men are created equal.  Except, of course for these people.  And these people.  As for a form of Government becoming destructive, we need to look no further than the destruction in Iraq, Afghanistan, New Orleans, Mississippi as well as most inner cities.  

As for safety and happiness, well, our ports aren’t too safe.  Our airports aren’t much safer.  Our borders certainly aren’t safe.  And with all of the jobs outsourced, jobs lost, lower real wages, loss of health benefits, more people struggling to make ends meet and families being torn apart due to an unreasonable, unnecessary, costly and illegal war, I certainly don’t think there is much happiness.

I’ll skip down a bit:

But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. — Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government.

A long train of abuses and usurpations.  Where to begin with that…..how about the whole “unitary president” thing?  The fact that Congress is disregarded when they don’t agree with Bush.  Or the 750 laws disregarded by Bush’s signing statements.  Or the lies to Congress and the American people about yellowcake, about aluminum tubes, about Valerie Plame, about illegal wiretapping, torture or rendition.  Or invading a sovereign country.  The “wartime president” even though Congress never declared war.  The enormous wealth transfer from the formerly middle class to the most wealthy.  The altering of expert opinions, the denial of science.  The leak of classified information for political gain.

So what were these abuses and usurpations that King George (and present day wannabe-king George) have done?  Well back in the 1770’s, King George

He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

—snip—

He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

—snip—

He has obstructed the Administration of Justice by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary Powers.

He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

—snip—

He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil Power.

Looks like wannabe-king George used the Declaration of Independence as a guide for his administration.  Rendering the military superior to civil power.  Kind of like the no-bid contracts to Halliburton and the massive military spending on bigger more destructive weapons.  More bombs.  More powerful bombs.  Missile defense that barely functions.  

Obstructing the administration of justice.  We can talk to Fitz about that one.  Appointing judges that are extreme in their views as it relates to personal freedoms.  You know, ones like Samuel Alito.  Refusing to assent to laws – well that one was sort of covered above but can’t be stressed enough.  But we can add Congress enabling this refusal by their own refusal to hold the Executive Branch accountable for, well, just about everything.  Making judges abide by his will – well we will see just how much credence he gives to yesterday’s ruling on Gitmo.

Let’s read on:

For protecting them [armed troops], by a mock Trial from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:

—snip—

For depriving us in many cases, of the benefit of Trial by Jury:

For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences:

—snip—

For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:

—snip—

He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation, and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & Perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.

—snip—

A Prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

A few bad apples punished for Abu Ghraib when the ones who crafted the torture plans like Rumsfeld and Abu Gonzalez are unscathed.  Rendition of suspects to be tortured overseas.  Abolishing our most valuable laws – you know, like those pesky first 10 amendments.  Transporting large armies (granted not necessarily foreign mercenaries) to complete the works of death, desolation and tyranny.  Like in Iraq.  Like in Afghanistan.  By torture.  By using illegal banned chemical weapons.  “Spreading freedom”.  Permanent bases in Iraq.  Military bases all throughout the Middle East.  

Depriving people of the benefit of trial by jury.  Well, that one goes without saying.  The Republican Convention in NYC where hundreds of people were illegally detained for no reason for 48 hours in a dirty holding pen.  Many of whom were guilty only of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.  Free-speech zones.  I’ll mention rendition once again.

And certainly, wannabe-king George’s character is marked by every act which may define a tyrant and is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

Which is a perfect way to end this contrast.  We have come full circle.  We have a tyrant of a ruler.  We have a sham of a government which certainly is no longer Of the People, By the People or For the People.  Power has been abused, usurped, consolidated.  

This should be remembered this weekend.  How far astray we have been taken.  What our country’s founders did when they were in a very similar position as we now are today.  How ashamed they would be to see what has become of the republic they fought so hard for.

Terrorists, Insurgents, and Minutemen

Pat Lang has posted a great piece regarding the political furor in this country over the report that Iraq’s Shiite President was willing to grant amnesty to insurgents who killed American soldiers. The outrage expressed in this country is going to get more of our soldiers killed. This is insane. As Pat notes:

Some people in the United States find this possibility for peace to be unacceptable because the insurgents whom al-Maliki is negotiating with have been fighting American soldiers. The reasoning is that those insurgents are criminals and perhaps murderers and that they must receive criminal justice for their crimes.

This is a truly stupid attitude. It is true that the propaganda that has supported the war effort had described the insurgents as uniformly Jihadist and terrorist. The same propaganda has described them as criminals. This may have been useful in shaping public opinion in the United States over the last three years, but it is no longer useful. The coalition now confronts the need to assist the al-Maliki government in bringing together enough of the disparate factions in Iraq to build itself a support base which will enforce and maintain a peace that will justify the sacrifices soldiers have made in the war.

The United States has rarely, if ever, taken the position that mere service in war against itself constituted criminal behavior. In a few instances after World War II individuals were held accountable and punished for their personal culpability in “crimes against humanity,” “planning and waging aggressive war,” etc., but this sanction was not applied to the men who served in the ranks. Indeed, very senior officers were held blameless for their participation in the struggle.

It is axiomatic that peace must be made with enemies, not friends. If Iraqi insurgents who have fought and perhaps killed Iraqi and coalition soldiers are excluded from the possibility of reconciliation and amnesty, then who will be left to make peace with? The answer is simple. No one. That would mean that the war will go on and on and on. In that case it would prove impossible to withdraw coalition forces for a long time.

As we start the Fourth of July weekend we seem to have forgotten our own Minutemen, who using the criteria we apply in Iraq, would be considered terrorists. Why? They were insurgents, wore no uniforms, and conducted hit and run attacks on the “occupiers”, i.e. the British troops. It took our ancestors a few years to organize a real army.

So, we are unwilling to support a realistic political approach that might isolate the jihadist fighters. We are unwilling to deploy enough troops to Iraq to conduct an effective counter insurgency campaign. We simply leave our troops in harms way without a clear strategy for victory or peace. I suppose someone who has no family members in the military can celebrate a Happy Fourth with a clear conscience. For those who genuinely care about the troops, this takes the shine off of the celebration.

……………………………………………………..


Larry C. Johnson is CEO and co-founder
of BERG Associates, LLC, an international business-consulting firm
that helps corporations and governments manage threats posed by
terrorism and money laundering. Mr. Johnson, who worked previously
with the Central Intelligence Agency and U.S. State Department’s
Office of Counter Terrorism (as a Deputy Director), is a recognized
expert in the fields of terrorism, aviation security, crisis and risk
management. Mr. Johnson has analyzed terrorist incidents for a variety
of media including the Jim Lehrer News Hour, National Public Radio,
ABC’s Nightline, NBC’s Today Show, the New York Times, CNN, Fox News,
and the BBC. Mr. Johnson has authored several articles for
publications, including Security Management Magazine, the New York
Times, and The Los Angeles Times. He has lectured on terrorism and
aviation security around the world. Further bio
details
.


Personal Blog: No Quarter
|| Bio
Recommended
Book List
|| More
BoomanTribune Posts

Rumble in Ramadi

I distinctly remember, after the fall of Baghdad, all the self-congratulatory backslapping over the fact that we hadn’t needed to conduct brutal house-to-house warfare in Iraq’s capital city.  Since then, we’ve been doing a lot of urban fighting.  Right now, we’re doing a whole bunch of it in Ramadi, the capital of Iraq’s Anbar Province.  We’re been trying to tame Ramadi since Saddam’s statue came tumbling down.  

Under the fold: standing up or sitting down?

The latest operation to take control of what Dexter Filkins of the New York Times describes as “…the toughest city in the most violent of Iraqi regions” launched on June 18th.  Filkins reports that “Whole city blocks here look like a scene from some post-apocalyptic world: row after row of buildings shot up, boarded up, caved in, tumbled down.”  Many parts of the city are out of control of either American or Iraqi forces.  

After prior failed efforts to control the chaos in Ramadi, coalition forces are trying something new.  Rather than making a full frontal assault on the entire city, they plan to take the city a neighborhood at a time, and they’re using a prime tenet of the “stand up/stand down” strategy.  U.S. forces seize territory and round up or kill whatever insurgents they find there.  Then they establish a secure outpost and turn the area over to Iraqi troops.  

But nobody, including the U.S. commander in Ramadi, expects the Iraqis to take charge any time soon.  Col. Sean MacFarland says, “I don’t think by this winter we’ll be quite ready to turn over completely” to Iraqi forces.  

The delay in turning the job over isn’t so much a function of readiness of Iraqi troops, but of how many Iraqi troops want to do the job.

How Long Will This Be Going On?

Mister Bush has said that Iraq’s future is in the hands of its new government.  But it appears that the new government’s army doesn’t want to get its hands too dirty in the course of forging the country’s future.

Lieutenant Colonel Raad Niaf Haroosh, commander of the Iraqi battalion in Ramidi, only has 145 of his troops committed to the operation.  He left 500 of them back in Mosul.  Why? According to Colonel Raad, it’s because they fear that they’ll create tribal vendettas if they kill fellow Iraqis. “They said, ‘We don’t want fight our own people.'”

Isn’t that dandy?  NPR reports that recruits have to pay a $600 bribe to get into Colonel Raad’s battalion.  If I could serve in a battalion where I didn’t have to fight if I didn’t want to, I’d pay money to get into it too.  Staying back at the base and peeling potatoes beats the heck out of getting shot at.  

My time at the U.S. Naval War College and subsequent study of military art tells me there are no absolutes in armed conflict.  All wars are the same, and they’re all different.  But a fairly reliable rule of thumb says that if you’re going to conduct a counterinsurgency operation in your own country, your own soldiers are going to have to kill some of their countrymen, including some who are related to those soldiers through blood, marriage, and extended tribal ties.  If you can’t get your soldiers to do that, you’re not going to conduct much of a counterinsurgency.  Moreover, if you can only employ a fraction of any given unit to an operation, none of your units will ever be at full combat effectiveness no matter how well equipped or trained the individuals may be.

And as the Times’ Filkins points out, this situation is not unique to the present operation in Ramadi.  It has been endemic throughout the stand up/stand down process.  If this optional participation policy is anybody’s idea of “standing up,” I’d hate to see what they consider “sitting down on the job.”  This critical vulnerability in the stand up/stand down strategy won’t go away.  We can’t wave a magic wand and un-relate people.  

We’ve arrived at a point where we’re fighting Iraqis because the Iraqis don’t want to fight among themselves.  How many American troops are in harm’s way in Ramadi right now because 500 Iraqi soldiers got to sit this dance out and wax the floors in the barracks instead?  

Are we showing resolve in Iraq, or are we being played for chumps?  Getting into a bar fight over a girl you just met shows resolve.  Waking up in jail the next morning with a black eye and two missing teeth shows how stupid you are.

Iraq has turned into a goat rope tied in a Gordian knot wrapped around a Mobius strip.  How did the mightiest nation in human history let itself get into such a bind?

#

Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach, Virginia.  Read his commentaries at ePluribus Media and Pen and Sword.

Netroots Endorsements

Matt Stoller discusses the criteria for a Netroots endorsement at MyDD. A lot of people have raised questions about how they make their decisions…you should all go read the whole thing. The Cliff Notes are below.

I’m not sure how useful the blogging world was to Jon Corzine’s election in 2005, but the blogosphere that was left behind in the wake of that election has been helpful to New Jersey progressives and Democrats. The Virginia blogs created in the wake of Tim Kaine recruited James Webb, and won him the primary victory. The Montana blogs that grew in 2004 helped Tester immensely in his primary victory. The Connecticut blogs are becoming a permanent part of the Connecticut establistment and beating up on Lieberman, the Texas blogs are remaking the Texas Democratic party, and the Pennsylvania blogs are part of the ‘silent revolution’ that is attacking the very structure of the Philly machine. All over the place, an entirely new progressive and open source political intelligence network is snapping into place, supporting candidates, learning, and growing. Next cycle, they will recruit candidates and one day soon, we will have an entirely different party. It will have its own problems and its own structural weaknesses, but it will be more transparent and it will be people-powered.

What do you think about this strategy?

Iraq War Grief Daily Witness (photo) Day 349

this diary is dedicated to all who suffer because of war and other disasters

we honor courage in all its forms – today in recognition of David T. Harris, TX-06

we love and support our troops, just as we love and support the Iraqi people – without exception, or precondition, or judgement.

cross-posted at DailyKos, Booman Tribune, European Tribune,  My Left Wing, and TexasKos.

image and poem below the fold

Christina Menchaca, 18, center, and other family members visit the flag draped casket of Army Pfc. Kristian Menchaca during a public viewing in Brownsville, Texas, Tuesday, June 27, 2006. Menchaca was one of two soldiers apparently captured and killed by insurgents earlier this month in Iraq. Menchaca’s funeral is scheduled for Wednesday.
(AP Photo/Eric Gay)

from Cement Guitar
by Michael Carlson

Mother of foster-wit, father of straw,
I can see how silence takes the place of those
who cut their thoughts in stone before they need them.
Stone is the past, and the past is a form of flattery.
Last winter, groups of children sent letters
in sadness for the late Christmas suicide.
Addressed to those who managed the fishery,
who named the docks and decided the colors of unfinished boats,
the only way to read them was alive.
To think out loud about those children’s names
was to forget what you meant by dying.
– – –
a personal note: I sat next to David and Michelle Harris during lunch one day at YearlyKos. I don’t envy either of them for the time and effort they are making in the run for TX-06.

David wears a herobracelet, a fact I commented on as we were each leaving the table that day in Las Vegas. You just don’t see many such bracelets, or any other signs that we are at war and that so many people are suffering deeply as a result of it.

Michelle has posted a photograph that includes a bracelet that they recently found at the traveling Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

If serving is an honor, then running is a sacrifice. I wish them the best, and have been pestering my sister and brother in law, who live in Arlington, to support Harris’ run.

additional note: at the risk of sounding like a shill, or embarrasing the Harris’, today seems to be turning into a kind of David Harris TX-06 Day, with an ePulribus Media interview on the recc list and a cross-posted piece by Michelle Harris at TexasKaos.

But I guess that’s just how it works out here on the internets, eh? Serendipity, and everything’s connected.

Peace. Courage. Compassion.
– – –
join CIVIC’s “I Care” photo campaign

support Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America

support a young heart with an old soul peace takes courage (multimedia)

put a meaningful magnet on your car or metal filing cabinet

read Ilona’s important blog – PTSD Combat

poetry matters poets against war

view the pbs newshour silent honor roll (with thanks to jimstaro at booman.)

take a private moment to light one candle among many (with thanks to TXSharon)

support Veterans for Peace
support the Iraqi people
support the Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict (CIVIC)
support CARE
support the victims of torture
remember the fallen
support Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors – TAPS
support Gold Star Families for Peace
support the fallen
support the troops
support Iraq Veterans Against the War
support Military families Speak Out
support the troops and the Iraqi people
read This is what John Kerry did today, the diary by lawnorder that prompted this series
read Riverbend’s Bagdhad Burning
read Dahr Jamail’s Iraq Dispatches
read Today in Iraq
witness every day

While speaking at the YearlyKos 2006 Convention in Los Vegas, former Virginia Governor Mark Warner said (and I paraphrase from memory): “George Bush, incompetent idiot, blah blah blah, went to war in Iraq when the real threat is in Iran.” (my emphasis)

There was a brief pause after his statement, and I regret that I wasn’t brave or quick-witted enough to yell “Bullshit!” into the silence. But the moment passed, Warner picked up his next thread in perfect cadence, and I bit into my box lunch apple.

So now what?

I’m gonna let him know that I think his statement is bullshit, and why. I’m starting here. If anyone knows of other ways, please put them in this thread.

Thanks.