Archive for the ‘Patriotism’ Category

19
Feb
Winter Soldier: Iraq & Afghanistan
by QuestionGirl

This video is from the Iraq Veterans Against the War website.

From March 13-16th, U.S. veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan will testify to what is really happening day in and day out, on the ground in these occupations. To provide a preview, we’ve created this short film. The film features three members who will be testifying at Winter Soldier and includes videos and photographs of Iraq from their deployments. This video contains graphic content. We need your support to help make Winter Soldier a success. Find out more about Winter Soldier.


25
Nov
Conservatives: Those “Values” Folks
by Buck

A post by George Lakoff, over at Rockridge Nation, (via C&L), addresses conservative name-calling of the “Aw you liberals just hate America” type.

“Aw you liberals just hate America.”

No. We love democracy and we want to return it to America.
- You want a presidential dictator.

We love liberty and we want to return it to America.
- You want to tap our phones.

We love equality and we want to return it to America.
- You think some people are better than others.

We love honesty and we want to return it to America.
- You love lobbyists and corruption.

We love fairness and we want to return it to America.
- You want to oppress the powerless.

We love openness and we want to return it to America.
- You love secrecy and hiding the facts.

We love nature’s glory and we want to return it to America.
- You love the profit that comes from destroying nature.

We love community and we want to return it to America.
- You want everyone to fend for himself.

We love public education and we want to return it to America.
- You want to destroy public education.

We love civilian control of the military and we want to return it to America.
- You want to militarize America.

And on and on…


Leave a ReplyEmail PostToggle Meta • 10:35 pm
19
May
A Message To You, Rudy Giuliani
by Jim Swanson

How the zero-tolerance policies of “America’s Mayor” set us up for the Patriot Act and Guantanamo.

from Mother Jones Magazine
By JoAnn Wypijewski

In Miami last fall, amid news that corrupt housing authorities and developers had deprived thousands of poor people of promised homes, Ivan Martinez began projecting immense images against the walls of the luxury towers that have sprouted with wanton ambition in the footprint of demolished low-income housing. No one commissioned these images; Martinez is a guerrilla artist, an outlaw. As governments across America have imposed increasingly harsh penalties against postering, graffiti, and their requisite tools (New York has made graffiti-writing a felony in some instances, as has Ohio, convicting a man for spraying “Troops Out Now” on a highway overpass; Richmond, Virginia, threatens its citizens from the backs of buses, “Use a spray can, go to jail”), wall’size projections have developed as a fleet-footed alternative. One of Martinez’s ephemera featured a running silhouette crying, “Gentrification!!!!” Another showed a man saying, “I love downtown’s revitalization, but where are the poor people?” One night as Martinez and two friends were projecting from a moving car, police pulled them over and pointed guns at their heads. He hasn’t done a projection since.
broken_window250x195.jpg
Martinez broke no window, destroyed no property. Except through the play of evanescent light, he didn’t even “aesthetically alter” property, as some graffiti artists describe their work. No reasonable person would call him a vandal, one of those punks who elicit curses for their indecipherable scrawl. Like them, though, he made an unsanctioned claim on public space, which was enough to get a gun to his head, and shut him up.

Among a thousand political lies, one of the most durable, and lulling, is the assertion, central to a “quality of life” or “broken windows” theory of policing, that graffiti is the first link in a criminal chain that ends in murder. Hammer petty flouting of the law, the theory holds, and violent crime will decline. New York was the pioneer in this. Mayors Ed Koch and David Dinkins cracked down on graffiti writers in the 1980s and early ’90s, but it was Rudolph Giuliani who redefined quality of life in terms of a theory and practice of brute force that has since been adopted by city administrations and police departments across the land. Now the graffiti-murder continuum is widely accepted as fact. New York is officially the safest big city in the country unless one is unlucky enough to be on the receiving end of 50 shots, or 41, or a toilet plunger, from the police. It is also a strangely passive city, its political atmosphere inert. Like the midnight wheat-paster, whose posters about displacement or aids death distinguished the urban vista until the early ’90s, the dissenting slogan, the broadsheet alert to action from corner mailboxes, has largely vanished. Giuliani is running for president, and no handicapper counts his easy sacrifice of liberty to security as a political liability. He compares President Bush’s escalation of the war in Iraq to his own big-fist approach to New York, and suffers no harm for the implication of that admission: that he pursued a war on part of the city’s population while the rest of us became inured to punishment, to brakes on free expression and policing as a way of life.

read more at MOTHER JONES


Comments OffEmail PostToggle Meta • 6:52 pm
21
Apr
Had Enough?
by Buck

Found the following on AMERICAblog

Lee Iacocca is my new hero. This is a must-read!

Excerpt from BORDERS:

Where Have All the Leaders Gone?

By Lee Iacocca with Catherine Whitney

Had Enough?

Am I the only guy in this country who’s fed up with what’s happening? Where the hell is our outrage? We should be screaming bloody murder. We’ve got a gang of clueless bozos steering our ship of state right over a cliff, we’ve got corporate gangsters stealing us blind, and we can’t even clean up after a hurricane much less build a hybrid car. But instead of getting mad, everyone sits around and nods their heads when the politicians say, “Stay the course.”

Stay the course? You’ve got to be kidding. This is America, not the damned Titanic. I’ll give you a sound bite: Throw the bums out!

You might think I’m getting senile, that I’ve gone off my rocker, and maybe I have. But someone has to speak up. I hardly recognize this country anymore. The President of the United States is given a free pass to ignore the Constitution, tap our phones, and lead us to war on a pack of lies. Congress responds to record deficits by passing a huge tax cut for the wealthy (thanks, but I don’t need it). The most famous business leaders are not the innovators but the guys in handcuffs. While we’re fiddling in Iraq, the Middle East is burning and nobody seems to know what to do. And the press is waving pom-poms instead of asking hard questions. That’s not the promise of America my parents and yours traveled across the ocean for. I’ve had enough. How about you?

I’ll go a step further. You can’t call yourself a patriot if you’re not outraged. This is a fight I’m ready and willing to have….

Why are we in this mess? How did we end up with this crowd in Washington? Well, we voted for them-or at least some of us did. But I’ll tell you what we didn’t do. We didn’t agree to suspend the Constitution. We didn’t agree to stop asking questions or demanding answers. Some of us are sick and tired of people who call free speech treason. Where I come from that’s a dictatorship, not a democracy….

On September 11, 2001, we needed a strong leader more than any other time in our history. We needed a steady hand to guide us out of the ashes. Where was George Bush? He was reading a story about a pet goat to kids in Florida when he heard about the attacks. He kept sitting there for twenty minutes with a baffled look on his face. It’s all on tape. You can see it for yourself. Then, instead of taking the quickest route back to Washington and immediately going on the air to reassure the panicked people of this country, he decided it wasn’t safe to return to the White House. He basically went into hiding for the day-and he told Vice President Dick Cheney to stay put in his bunker. We were all frozen in front of our TVs, scared out of our wits, waiting for our leaders to tell us that we were going to be okay, and there was nobody home. It took Bush a couple of days to get his bearings and devise the right photo op at Ground Zero.

That was George Bush’s moment of truth, and he was paralyzed. And what did he do when he’d regained his composure? He led us down the road to Iraq-a road his own father had considered disastrous when he was President. But Bush didn’t listen to Daddy. He listened to a higher father. He prides himself on being faith based, not reality based. If that doesn’t scare the crap out of you, I don’t know what will….

I have news for the gang in Congress. We didn’t elect you to sit on your asses and do nothing and remain silent while our democracy is being hijacked and our greatness is being replaced with mediocrity. What is everybody so afraid of? That some bobblehead on Fox News will call them a name? Give me a break. Why don’t you guys show some spine for a change?

Hey, I’m not trying to be the voice of gloom and doom here. I’m trying to light a fire. I’m speaking out because I have hope. I believe in America. In my lifetime I’ve had the privilege of living through some of America’s greatest moments. I’ve also experienced some of our worst crises-the Great Depression, World War II, the Korean War, the Kennedy assassination, the Vietnam War, the 1970s oil crisis, and the struggles of recent years culminating with 9/11. If I’ve learned one thing, it’s this: You don’t get anywhere by standing on the sidelines waiting for somebody else to take action. Whether it’s building a better car or building a better future for our children, we all have a role to play. That’s the challenge I’m raising in this book. It’s a call to action for people who, like me, believe in America. It’s not too late, but it’s getting pretty close. So let’s shake off the horseshit and go to work. Let’s tell ‘em all we’ve had enough.


Comments OffEmail PostToggle Meta • 1:43 pm
12
Mar
The Chart That Explains It All!
by Batocchio

(Cross-posted at Vagabond Scholar)

authoritarians_2.jpg

Welcome to the Chart Project! This is the first and probably weightiest installment of a week-long series. All of these charts are works in progress, imperfect and perhaps dealing in gross overgeneralizations, but they result from my desire to try to visualize some of the dynamics at work in society and politics today.

Derrida and many post’structuralists would argue that Western civilization tends to see everything in terms of binary oppositions, and furthermore, that one half of the pair is seen as slightly superior: male-female, white-black, etc. Regardless, it’s certainly the case that much political reporting and commentary traffics in oversimplifications, false dichotomies and false equivalencies.

For instance, most media outlets will approach any political issue using this framework:
Read more »


Comments OffEmail PostToggle Meta • 4:03 am
06
Dec
On Gates: An Uneasy Feeling
by Buck

Senate panel unanimously approves Gates nomination

By Gordon Lubold

BlueHerald ImageThe man tapped to run the Pentagon said he will respect the military he is charged to lead and will not be afraid to tell President Bush what he thinks.

Then Robert Gates, nominated by Bush to replace outgoing Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld put his money where his mouth is by saying the U.S. is not winning the war in Iraq.

The committee wasted no time approving Gates- nomination, voting unanimously after the hearing to send the nomination to the full Senate, which could act as soon as Wednesday, aides said.

Gates appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee to be grilled by Democrats and Republicans on just how he sees the job as Pentagon boss and what he would do in Iraq. A former CIA director who is now the president of Texas A&M University, Gates said he wouldn-t be afraid to tell Bush the truth.

Gates, who accepted Bush’s nomination because he said he thinks he can bring something to the job, said he isn-t returning to Washington to be “a bump on a log.”

Asked straight out at the hearing by Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., whether the U.S. is winning in Iraq, Gates said: “No, sir.” He later said he believes the United States is neither winning nor losing, “at this point.”

Gates also said bluntly that there aren-t any new ideas on Iraq because most individuals believe in their own entrenched positions. The challenge, he said, is to assemble those different views into a coherent policy that can stand up for the long haul to the whims of presidents and lawmakers.

Link

He later said he believes the United States is neither winning nor losing, “at this point.”

Maybe he’s not “stay the course”, but I don’t see our troops coming home any time soon either. I don’t have a good feeling about this man… but I hope he proves me wrong.


11
Nov
To All Of Our Veterans, With solemn Gratitude
by Mirth

tomb_mrp.jpg

“Here Rests
In Honored Glory
An American Soldier
Known But To God”

Tomb Of The Unknowns
National Cemetery
Arlington, Virginia

The United States Department Of Veterans Affairs


01
Nov
Donald Trump cited for 80-foot flag pole
by Buck

CNN ImagePALM BEACH, Florida (AP) — Donald Trump’s display of patriotism is apparently too flamboyant for this chic oceanside town.

Palm Beach officials cited Trump for hoisting a large American flag atop an 80-foot pole at his lavish Mar-a-Lago estate and club.

Town officials said the real estate mogul has violated zoning codes with a flagpole taller than 42 feet and for erecting it without a building permit and permission from the landmarks board.

Trump has until November 27 to apply for approvals or face a December 21 code enforcement hearing that could result in $250-a-day fines.

“You don’t need a permit to put up the American flag,” Trump said Tuesday. “The day you need a permit to put up the American flag, that will be a sad day for this country.”

Lee Hanley, vice chairman of the town’s landmarks commission, previously said the 15-by-25-foot flag makes the town look like “we have an Okeechobee car dealer,” referring to a strip of auto dealerships along Okeechobee Boulevard in West Palm Beach.

Trump responded in a letter last week saying that “anyone who objects should not, in my opinion, hold a public office of any kind — at least not in this country.”

The flag first appeared outside the estate October 3.

Link

I understand patriotism. I suspect most of us do. BUT… if I were to purchase an American flag large enough to wrap around Trump’s home, blocking the sunlight and filling his home with darkness, would he stand in perpetual salute, or would he sue my ass off?
I think you know the answer to that one.