Iraq
Americans Say No to War with Iran: Will Washington Listen? by Sarah van Gelder
Posted by islander07 from Yes! Magazine
Public opposition to Resolution 362, which encourages what amounts to an act of war against Iran, is growing.
Losing Private Dwyer, War Hero
Posted by Shemuses from New York Times
The photo below captures everything that Americans wanted to believe about the Iraq war in the earliest days of the invasion in 2003. Pfc. Joseph Dwyer, an Army medic whose unit was fighting its way up the Euphrates to Baghdad, cradles a wounded boy. The child is half-naked and helpless, but trusting. Private Dwyer's face is strained but calm. That story turned bitter years ago, of course. And the mountain of sorrows keeps growing: Mr. Dwyer died last month in North Carolina. He was 31 and very sick. For years he had been in and out of treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder and addiction.
U.S. Soldiers No Longer Find Haven in Canada
Posted by Jeff from New York Times
The Canadian government's effort to remove Mr. Glass contrasts with the warm reception given to deserters and draft avoiders from the United States during the war in Vietnam. And although the war in Iraq has very little support among Canadians, the situation of Mr. Glass and others who abandoned their military positions provokes a wide range of responses. For American soldiers seeking an escape, Canada is no longer a guaranteed haven.
Jon Soltz: The Flip Flopper on Iraq? McCain
Posted by Damianmann from Huffington Post
You'd think with all the media consternation with the non-existent "flip flop" of Obama on Iraq (you know, the one where he didn't change his position at all), reporters would be blowing their stack at the true flip flop from John McCain on Iraq.
McCain Blasts Obama For FISA 'Flip-Flop'
Posted by Jeff from Feeds.huffingtonpost
Never one to miss an opportunity for a lunge to the jugular, the McCain campaign's rapid response man is going after Barack Obama's failure to support a filibuster on the FISA compromise bill in the Senate.
Quoth Tucker Bounds:
"A few short months ago, Barack Obama outwardly opposed terrorist surveillance legislation, saying that he would filibuster any bill that includes immunity for American telecommunications companies that had been asked by the government to participate in the program. Today, the U.S. Senate will approve legislation providing the immunity Barack Obama supposedly opposed, and despite his promise, he will not support a filibuster. What Barack Obama will do is show that he's willing to change positions, break campaign commitments and undermine his own words in his quest for higher office.
But of course if Obama were supporting a filibuster today, Bounds would likely be at the Illinois Democrat's throat for blindly putting the liberal "party line" ahead of the national security risks purportedly addressed by the FISA legislation, which McCain also supports. The reason we can say this with confidence is because that's precisely the line Bounds used against Obama two weeks ago to attack him, at that particular second, for inflexibility on the matter of national security when it comes to Iraq:
"The Obama campaign's ideological determination for withdrawal at any cost has blinded them to the facts on the ground even as they avoid the advice of our commanders. America is looking for a leader who will put country before the party line, and on issues from Iraq to energy, Barack Obama has offered nothing but the same old partisan positions." (Emphasis mine)
So if Obama shows flexibility on a national security matter, he's an untrustworthy hack -- and if he stands his ground, he's a rigid partisan. That's a neat game of three card monte, as far as it goes, but as TIME's Michael Scherer has noted, this kind of rapid response inanity hastens along the already precipitous pace of the dumbing-down of American politics. Especially since the McCain campaign would like to have flexibility be the province of noble statesmen when it comes to the issue of, say, offshore drilling.
Jesse Ventura Running For Senate
Posted by Jeff from Feeds.huffingtonpost
In an interview with NPR's David Welna that ran today, former Gov. Jesse "The Body" Ventura, Ind-Minn., says he will run for Senate, challenging incumbent Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., whom Ventura defeated for governor in 1998, as well as Democratic nominee and former Saturday Night Live humorist Al Franken.
Ventura, born Jim Janos, tells Welna that the main reason he's running is because of Coleman's support for the war in Iraq. "That's the reason I run," he says. "I run because it angers me...All you Minnesotans take a good hard look at all three of us. And you decide: if you were in a dark alley which one of the three of us would you want with you?
1,215 Troops Re-enlist on Independence Day | I'm A Pundit Too
Posted by theauthor from Thenewpundit
Servicemembers from all over Iraq gathered here today in the Al Faw Palace rotunda on Camp Victory, to re-enlist and celebrate America's Independence Day.
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koroth comments on:
Iraq Contracts Have Cost Taxpayers At Least $85 Billion Since Invasion
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Jeff
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Jeff is the founder of NewsCloud. He is also a freelance writer and blogs at Idealog.
Damianmann
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Damian is a former campaign worker for Ralph Nader and current delegate/precinct captain for Barack Obama . He is also a registered Independent voter. He's written columns for "Tabula Rasa" magazine as well as many music magazines around the globe. Whatever you do, don't offer him alcohol.
theangryindian
Member since Sep 2008
“The Angryindian” is an internationally recognized Indigenist activist and outspoken critic of U.S. colonialism practised against Aboriginal societies in America and abroad. He is editor of IntelligentaIndigena Novajoservo and the host of Radyo Inteligentaindigena, an independent, non-partisan international Indigenist podcast.
Shemuses
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Jodie lives, plays, and blogs in Vancouver, BC. Her day job at ONE/Northwest puts her talents to work supporting social change strategies for greening our world.
okami
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former US Marine, retired police; now alternately protected and terrorized by gangs of cats
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