This is just depressing…I know several folks that wouldn’t be alive today had they not spent $3,000 of their own money on personal protective gear.

What do Bush and Rumsfeld think they are doing in failing to reimburse deployed military service men and women for body armor they bought to protect themselves in Iraq and Afghanistan? Do they think that this is like public school…

 

[The Washington Note]

By Thomas Brock | - 12:42 pm - Posted in Journal, News

GOOD! The Osprey is awesome and will prove to be a valuable weapons system. 

The Pentagon gave the go-head for production of the MV-22 Osprey.

 

[FOXNews.com - Politics]

By Thomas Brock | - 12:41 pm - Posted in Journal, News

Sharon tried and the Palestinians don’t have the self-control to accept a good thing. The unilateral pull-out cost Sharon quite a bit of political capital, but he knew it was the right the thing to do, even if it’s the hard thing. The Palestinians would do well to learn from him.

TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on Thursday rejected suggestions from aides that Israel could quit more of the occupied West Bank and unilaterally set a border with the Palestinians after its Gaza pullout.

 

[Reuters: International]

By Thomas Brock | September 28, 2005 - 1:13 pm - Posted in Journal

I’m a new Johnny Cash fan (thanks Viva Podcast!) and wish that I could go to this. 

NEW YORK (Reuters) - He topped Nashville charts, conquered New York publishing and is the subject of a new movie. Now the late Johnny Cash will reach Broadway in February with the opening of “Ring of Fire,” a musical featuring the classic songs of the legend known as “The Man in Black.”

 

[Reuters: Entertainment]

By Thomas Brock | - 12:54 pm - Posted in Journal, Politics

Really? Very interesting. Would an indictment for Mr. Rove remove him from the White House? Of course, such an indictment would be convenient to get him out of Washington and down south for the rebuilding that he’s apparently in charge of…

So let’s see. House Majority Leader Indicted for Criminal Conspiracy. Senate Majority Leader the target of an increasingly serious probe of potential insider trading. Rumors of October Rove indictment in the Plame case. Is this a problem yet?

[Talking Points Memo: by Joshua Micah Marshall]

Oooooh this will be fun! 

DELAY INDICTED:September 28, 2005 DeLay Indicted in Texas Campaign Finance Probe By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 12:36 p.m. ET WASHINGTON (AP) — A Texas grand jury on Wednesday charged Rep. Tom DeLay and two political associates with conspiracy in…

 

[War and Piece]

Why do we make so many of the past mistakes? Can the Americans (and the rest of the world, for that matter…) not see the Holocaust and Rwandan genocides repeating themselves?

Eugene links to this new “Miami Herald” op-ed

Never again.

I remember the phrase with haunting clarity — uttered over and over again on Yom Hashoah, or Holocaust Remebrance Day. I was just a fourth grader at Solomon Schecter School in Queens. And that year, like every on Yom Hashoah, our teachers would tape yellow paper stars that read ”Jude” onto our blue-and-white uniforms then march us down to the library to watch grainy black-and-white films of Jewish Holocaust survivors. The film was apparently taken by allied forces after the Germans fled the Nazi concentration camps, leaving thousands of tortured, starving survivors to await rescue. Naked men smiled for the cameras, their flesh hanging lose over bone-thin frames. I remember being confused by their unapologetic nudity, confused by their laughter. I was too young to really understand how this was a moment that captured a freedom thought futile.

And then the world uttered Never Again. But, here we go again. This time I’m much older, and the emotions don’t provoke confusion, just a profound, heavy sadness. This time it is mostly women who smile for the cameras — their black, dusty flesh hanging over bone-thin frames. Some clutch tiny children — pouring formula onto their chapped lips.

Surrounded by Jews

This isn’t a concentration camp, but a refugee camp in Chad where thousands of Sudanese women and children are sheltered after fleeing the Janjaweed — a maniacal militia supported by the Sudanese government and armed to rid Darfur of its black Africans. A tall white man walks among the refugees — explaining to a 60 Minutes crew how this 2 ½-year conflict has already cost the lives of more than 300,000 people, threatening millions more. His name is John Prendergast. Today as I watch the video, I am again surrounded by Jews — this time men and women who have gathered at the Greater Miami Jewish Federation to hear Prendergast explain how it is happening all over again.

”This is Rwanda in slow motion,” explains Prendergast who has spent a good part of the last 20 years of his career focused on conflict resolution in Africa. The Jewish Community Relations Council invited him to speak last week to raise awareness and promote action to stop the Genocide in Darfur. This former director of African affairs during the Clinton administration likens this genocide to the Holocaust and most recently Rwanda in the ’90s when more than 800,000 Tutsis were massacred over the course of 100 days by the majority Hutus after a coup.

Back then the world didn’t react — ambivalent, in part, and confused over whether the killing in Rwanda was in fact genocide.

This time there is no confusion. One year ago, almost to this day, President Bush concurred with then-Secretary of State Colin Powell calling the killings in Sudan’s Darfur region genocide. The United States, under the 1948 U.N. convention on genocide, is committed to preventing such killings and punishing the killers if it deems a genocide is taking place. And yet, the killings continue one year later. Never again?

Sudan conflict to forefront

”Shame them,” says Prendergast to his all-Jewish audience. ”Shame them into doing something,” he continues acknowledging that grass-root efforts by Jewish organizations have brought the Sudan conflict to the forefront of our consciousness. Because it isn’t enough to wear a yellow star and watch videos of the dying to honor the victims of the Jewish Holocaust. ”Never again” means making the world aware that the only response to genocide isn’t designating a day of remembrance but designating everyday to fighting injustice for those who can’t fight for themselves.

To see the interview with John Prendergast and video from the refugee camps, watch today’s [Wednesday's] CBS 4 News First at Five.

Jennifer Santiago is a reporter for CBS 4 News.  ["CBS 4" here refers to WFOR--the CBS O&O in South Florida.  The station has a content agreement with the "Miami Herald". - EJM]

[Sudan: The Passion of the Present]

I saw this on the Daily Show last night…Seems that the White House has flip-flopped

By Thomas Brock | - 10:20 am - Posted in Journal

How far can a government stoop? Science fiction is great, but public policy it doesn’t make…

This morning, the Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee will hit an all-time low when it comes to wasting taxpayer time and money by calling in science fiction writer Michael Crichton to testify on global warming. I kid you not.

Only a madman would think it’s a good idea to have a guy paid to make stuff up testify on a serious scientific issue with national security implications. Enter Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK), chairman of the aforementioned committee — a man who repeatedly claims that global warming is the “greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people”. Who is he planning to call next, Professor Irwin Corey?

Crichton’s latest novel alleges that environmentalists created global warming to make it easier to collect fundraising dollars. At a time when we cannot afford to waste another minute in protecting the American people against continued extreme weather events, having Crichton testify is an unbelievable misuse of public resources.

Perhaps Inhofe should call Stephen King as his next witness, because if the Senator’s global warming-denying viewpoint prevails, our future will surely be a horrific nightmare.

stopglobalwarming.org

 

[The Huffington Post | Raw Feed]

By Thomas Brock | - 7:51 am - Posted in Journal, Politics

Here’s the message and road map for success for the Democrats. It’s even pretty good. Too bad I don’t have any Democratic elected representatives to send it to!

I have written for some time that the search for one single, intelligent and coherent message from this thing people used to call “The Democratic Party” is an exercise in futility. But hey, I’m not above admitting when I am wrong.

Check out the new report from the folks over at The Democracy Corps which serves up a mighty simple roadmap for Democratic message. Here’s the relevant portions which suggest four ways to go and a poo-poo for any notion of a blame game, backward-looking Katrina Commission.

From a list of more than a dozen proposals from across the political spectrum for moving forward after Katrina, four specific ideas emerged and together form a compelling argument for Democratic leadership:

1. Designate a strong leader with unquestioned integrity to oversee the rebuilding process and the huge sums of taxpayer money going to it. It is most important that this individual have a proven record of efficient, effective management experience and a proven independence from the corporate ties of the Bush administration.

2. Reduce funding and troop levels in Iraq so we can focus more resources on defending and rebuilding our own country. As highlighted earlier, Katrina has fundamentally altered the debate on Iraq and created more support than ever before for this message. But the message framework for this is not about failure in Iraq, it is about taking care of your own home first. There is a growing belief that we are rotting from the inside, ignoring the growing number of poor, homeless, and uninsured in our country while trying to save the rest of the world, and images of people standing on rooftops or bodies floating in flood waters only reinforce this. Given the huge price tag for post-Katrina rebuilding and recovery, everyone but the Republican leadership recognize that hard choices will need to be made, and this is where Americans believe a large share of the funds should come from.

3. Equip first responders across the country with compatible equipment that operates on the same wavelength and allows them to communicate with one another in emergency situations. This relatively modest step is symbolic of the inexcusable failure to make needed changes after 9/11 and;

4. An Apollo project-level commitment to using American know-how to develop and produce alternative energy sources to achieve energy independence within ten years. The panic over gas prices, which we expect will only grow stronger as the weather turns colder, has clearly increased already-strong support on this issue. This is the kind of bold step that Democrats must take if they want to really separate themselves. This issue is very difficult for Republicans, who must either sign on or very publicly carry water for their very unpopular special interests allies.

One last possibility that we must address is the Democratic proposal for an independent commission based on the 9/11 Commission. Voters are not interested in anymore fingerpointing, but they definitively do want to know why government at all levels failed and what we must do to ensure this type of failure never happens again. However, there was relatively little enthusiasm for this proposal simply because there is no sense that the 9/11 Commission really accomplished anything. Without real accountability and follow-through, another investigation is useless.”

What’s next after you digest this? Well, it wouldn’t be bad to send along these good words to your Senator, or Congressperson or anyone you know who might preach this hymn. Yes-yes-yes — I know this is a far cry from actual leadership or implementation, but when it comes to offering initial spinal support to elected officials lost in the wilderness (and far from the comfort of a 2008 nominee), they do straighten up a bit when spoon-fed certified message from “experts.” So I say serve it up.

[The Huffington Post | Raw Feed]