Friday, November 16, 2007

Joe Nuxhall

To understand how the love of Hamilton, his hometown, and the love
of baseball, which took him far beyond it, were intertwined in Joe
Nuxhall’s heart, you had to be in Hamilton’s Schwarm Stadium on a sunny
Sunday afternoon last August.

The West Side All Stars, a team of
12-year-old baseball players, had just come home from Williamsport,
Pa., where the boys fell short of their goal of winning the Little
League World Series but won the hearts of everyone back home.

A
parade carried the West Side All Stars through the streets of Hamilton,
ending in Schwarm Stadium, home of Hamilton High’s “Big Blue.”

Nuxhall, of course, rode in the parade, waving to the crowds that lined Main Street from the backseat of an open-top Corvette.

You
could hardly celebrate baseball in Hamilton without him – the greatest
ballplayer of all the great ballplayers to come out of this hard-nosed,
blue-collar town. A town where there is no such thing as “recreational
sports” – just hard, sweaty, mud-on-the-jersey play on the diamond, on
the gridiron, on the court.
When the parade pulled into Schwarm
for a ceremony honoring the West Side boys, the pint-sized ballplayers
clambered onto one set of bleachers while the politicians, the big
wigs, the men in suits sat themselves down on the other side of the
speakers’ podium.

Nuxhall veered away from the politicians and sat himself down among the boys.
He sat with the ballplayers. Where he belonged.

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The ol'lefthander has made it home.

Joe Nuxhall, who was the youngest player in major league history and
the beloved "old left-hander" on Cincinnati Reds radio broadcasts, died
overnight following a bout with cancer, the team said Friday. He was 79.

Nuxhall always finished his broadcasts with "This is the ol'lefthander rounding third and headed for home"

Joe Nuxhall pitched for the Cincinnati Reds while attending Wilson Jr High School, Hamilton, Oh. This was in 1944. That brief stint earned him the title 'youngest player in major league history'.

Nux will be missed.




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Monday, November 12, 2007

Pope to visit USA in 2008

Pope to make first visit to U.S. in 2008

Pope
Benedict XVI will make his first visit to the U.S. as pontiff next
year, and plans to visit the White House, ground zero and speak at the
United Nations, officials announced Monday.


Question: Will Columbia University invited the Pope to speak?
The Pope is a head of state.
The Pope is outspoken.

So, Columbia University should issue an invitation.

But, the Pope opposes birth control, homosexuals,
and worst, the Pope is Christian.

So, I doubt if Columbia will invite the Pope.
That would be asking to listen to an opposing point of view,
and more importantly,
Columbia would have to ensure the safety of the Pope.




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Sunday, November 11, 2007

Wimps, total crying Wimps

at Baylor University, Texas

"We've yet to add cleaning paraphernalia to the list of banned items, '
Dr. Traber continued, 'but in the light of recent events it would be
prudent to disallow such cleaning kits on campus as students, faculty,
and staff members might get the wrong idea about our zero-tolerance
program with regards to guns. Our psych professors are in agreement
that the very sight of a cleaning swab or even worse, the presence of
an empty shell, could very well send the more sensitive students into
shock whereby they could harm themselves while frantically fleeing from
an unattended cartridge case that in and of itself does most assuredly
bespeak violence and death."


Teach those 'sensitive people'
how to think for themselves.
how to look objectively at an inanimate object and know that it can not hurt them.
how to objectively evaluate their situation.

"Gun Free Zones" do not protect you from criminals/insane people.
A responsible law-abiding gun owner, can and will.




Learn your history

It was colonials with their personal rifles who outlasted the professional British Army to create this great nation.

It was the Union Army, with their rifles, who freed the slaves.

It was the US Armed Forces who have defended freedom around the globe.


Your right to Free Speech is protected by your Right to Bear Arms.

An armed man is a Free Citizen.
An unarmed man is a Subject.


The City of Kennesaw, Georgia has required its homeowners to own a firearm for over 20 years.
FACT: There have been no deaths by firearms in Kennesaw since that law was enacted.






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On 11/11 give $11

This is an idea that is too good not to steal.

11/11/18 that is the end of the WWI.

The 11th hour, of the 11th day, of the 11th month.......

So to honor all the veterans

Please give $11 (or more) to Project Valour-IT..
These wounded vets need voice activated laptops to reconnect with the world.

The donation button is on the right.......

THANKS


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Saturday, November 10, 2007

The Code of Conduct

Enacted by Presidential Order in 1955:
The Code of Conduct is a personal code for all members of the US Armed Forces.
It states the tradition established by the soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen since 1775.

Simply put: Keep faith with your countrymen.

Article I: I am an American, fighting in the armed forces which guard
my country and our way of life. I am prepared to give my life in their
defense.


Article II: I will never surrender of my own free will.
If in command I will never surrender the members of my command while
they still have the means to resist.


Article III: If I am
captured, I will continue to resist by all means available. I will make
every effort to escape and aid others to escape. I will accept neither
parole nor special favors from the enemy.


Article IV: If I
become a prisoner of war, I will keep faith with my fellow prisoners. I
will give no information nor take part in any action which might be
harmful to my comrades. If I am senior, I will take command. If not, I
will obey the lawful orders of those appointed over me and will back
them up in every way.


Article V: When questioned, should I
become a prisoner of war, I am required to give name, rank, service,
number, and date of birth. I will evade answering further questions to
the utmost of my ability. I will make no oral or written statements
disloyal to my country and its allies or harmful to their cause.


Article
VI: I will never forget that I am an American, responsible for my
actions, and dedicated to the principles which made my country free. I
will trust in my God and in the United States of America.


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What started in a Tavern...232 years ago

Has become the most respected and feared fighting force on the planet.

US Marine Corps

Yes, they still visit taverns.

Semper Fi

Please remember them by donating to Project Valour-IT...

Never leave a man behind.

Voice Activated Laptops for our Injured Troops



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Friday, November 09, 2007

Thank You, Clinton Brown



Because of the heroics of the 101st Airborne, and the rest of the US Military from 1941-1945, We are free.

Because of the heroics of the US Marines, and the rest of the US Military from 2001-present, The Afganis and Iraqis are free.

The UNITED STATES of AMERICA fights for FREEDOM.

PLEASE help those wounded in this great fight by donating to Project Valour-IT (Voice Activated Laptops for Our Injured Troops) - Click the link on the right.

THANK YOU

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

France is our friend, again

"I want to tell you that whenever a U.S.
soldier dies anywhere in the world, I think of what the Americans and
-- the American army and Americans have done for us."

French President Nicolas Sarkozy
Toast to the American People



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Monday, November 05, 2007

Project Valour-IT - Diggers

Go and donate to Project Valour-IT while you enjoy these ladies. (Link is on the starboard sidebar.)

This is simple appreciation for the diggers.





And for the jarheads:

Truth Hurts

The Real Story Behind the Falling Casualty Rate in Iraq
from Daily Kos by Brandon Friedman <rss@dailykos.com>

Simply put, the answer is no. The surge is not working and George W.
Bush and Frederick Kagan were not right. Despite what right-wing blogs
are saying, and despite what conservative observers are noting,
the plunge in violence is actually the result of an Iraqi political
decision made by and implemented by Iraqis—and the drop has little to
do with the "surge"—an infusion of 30,000 troops (which wouldn’t fill a
Major League stadium) into Baghdad, a city of six million people.


"the plunge in violence is actually the result of an Iraqi political decision.."
George Bush and the US Military made it possible for the Iraqi people to make their own decisions.

The 'surge', with its new tactics, has made Iraq a much safer place. The US ARMY and the USMC has worked with the IRAQI ARMY and IRAQI POLICE, and created the conditions in which Iraq has a chance for lasting terror-free peace.

The liberals in this country, who are the best friends of terrorists, need to accept the fact, that George Bush has succeeded in Iraq.

The 30,000 additional troops were required to initiate this new strategy. With these troops, who are now based in small outposts, the US Military has made a better connection to the Iraqi people. And the Iraqis have now throw the terrorists out. The Iraqis have stopped harboring terrorists, because they have learned to trust the US Military.

If the liberals could only put aside their blind hatred of George Bush, and see reality, then maybe they would support the troops by donating to Project Valour-IT.





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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Project Valour IT



Using TypoGenerator.net I created the image above.

Please help provide
V
oice Activated Laptops for our Injured Troops
Click on the donation link on the starboard sidebar.

Iraq Service

World Net Daily:


Responding to reports that State Department officials are refusing
to serve in Iraq because it’s too dangerous, Rep. Duncan Hunter,
R-Calif., has proposed a novel plan to President Bush – to bypass the
agency and recruit from among U.S. military troops discharged after
suffering injury.

Hunter, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, told
talk-radio host Glenn Beck today he met with Bush just 30 minutes prior
to the interview and gave him a letter outlining the plan.

“I said, ‘Let’s go over to Bethesda and Walter Reed (hospitals) and
as we get these new – these soldiers and Marines who are embarking on
new careers,” Hunter said, “let’s recruit them for the State
Department; and let’s fire these guys that refuse to go, and we’ll give
the State Department careers to these military guys.”

I disagree somewhat with Duncan Hunter, I would recruit amongst all veterans to find new Foreign Service Officers for the State Department. Targeting the wounded vets is unfair to those who have truly given for their country.

Duncan Hunter needs to donate to Project Valour-IT.
Hillary Clinton needs to donate to Project Valour-IT.
Fred Thompson needs to donate to Project Valour-IT.
Barack Obama needs to donate to Project Valour-IT.
Mitt Rommey needs to donate to Project Valour-IT.
Dennis, Ron, Rudy, John, all need to donate to Project Valour-IT.

I am willing to serve in Iraq, as a Foreign Service Officer.



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Thursday, November 01, 2007

Project Valour-IT

The ground pounders have taken the lead in fundraising for
Project Valour-IT,

The combined fleet (USN/USCG) needs to get going.

Lex has sailed, and please help save the dog.

Project Valour-IT (Voice Activated Laptops for Our Injured Troops) fundraising drive goes till Veterans Day.

Over 1500 injured soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen have benefited from this program. Soldiers Angels provides laptops, with voice recognition software to troops who have suffered hand injuries, this allows these troops the ability to use computers.

This is a registered charity, all donations are tax-deductable.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Project Valour-IT

Project Valour-IT helps all injured soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen.

In 2005, USS Frank CableS suffered a major steam leak, eight sailors badly burned.

Soldiers Angels stepped up to help those injured sailors, for the story click here

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

The Real Heros



Ben Stein is right, our troops are the true heros and they deserve much more than they receive.

One way to help is to support Project Valour-It and help provide a Voice Activated Laptop for Our Injured Troops.

Just a click, for a soldier, sailor, marine or airmen who has been wounded and cannot type on a keyboard.

Monday, October 29, 2007

“Support our Troops”

"Support our Troops"

So says the ubiquitous magnetic sticker on yet another non-descript vehicle on the road up ahead – but one wonders if the driver/occupant knows of a program that directly, materially supports our troops in a life-changing way? That program would be Valour-IT (Voice Activated Laptops for OUR Injured Troops). 

The short story is Valour-IT, an IRS-certified non-profit, non-political, volunteer organization provides laptops with voice activated software to wounded Soldiers, Marines, Sailors and Airmen in military and (thanks to coordination with the Military Order of the Purple Heart) VA hospitals. These laptops enable severely injured servicemen and women to remain in contact with family and friends in spite of those injuries. Since the program began in late 2005, over 1500 laptops have been issued to these wounded heroes.

The story of this project's development is compelling and typically American. Then-CPT (now MAJ) Charles "Chuck" Ziegenfuss, son of the late SFC William Ziegenfuss, a seventeen-year Army and Vietnam Vet who succumbed to Agent Orange-related cancer, as deployed to Iraq in 2005 as commander of a tank company. He also was a "milblogger," keeping an online commentary of his experiences in combat as part of the military blogging community. 

In June 2005 he was severely wounded by an IED, suffering grievous injuries to his hands. Having gained a large and loyal following via his blog, he wanted to return to writing during his recovery in Walter Reed, but found he was significantly hampered by his injuries. Upon learning of these difficulties via the blog (which his wife had kept up for him), one of his readers donated a laptop with voice-activated software to bypass the handicap of his wounded hands. Soon it became apparent to him and his readership that this was a capability that could, and should be made available to the many other similarly or worse injured heroes. Following contact with another milblogger who writes under the pseudonym FbL, and subsequent contact with the Soldiers' Angels service organization, Project Valour-IT was up and running. 

As initially set up, libraries at Walter Reed and Bethesda were established using refurbished computers and Dragon Naturally Speaking software for issue to patients who requested them. It was soon apparent that the demand for these laptops was such that fundraising efforts would have to take place to even begin to put a dent in that demand. 

One of the fundraisers created is an online competition between teams of bloggers, aligned by service, using auctions, information and other methods to generate interest and funds for the project. Running from Halloween to Veteran's Day, last year's online event raised over $230,000 dollars during that two-week period. This year's event, with teams Army, Marine, Navy/Coast Guard and Air Force, will run from 28 October through 13 November. The direct effect of these efforts — in combination with partnerships from corporate and public donors like Dell, Toshiba, the San Antonio Area foundation and Newman's Own Foundation; has led to new and more powerful laptops and software being issued to a larger population that now includes Balboa Naval Hospital, Brooke Army Medical Center, Madigan Regional Medical Center, Naval Hospital, Camp Pendleton, and Robert E. Bush Naval Hospital (29 Palms) (as well as the aforementioned VA hospitals and individual locations across the country).

That said, how can you help? Read the tributes from those who have benefited from this program. In Chuck's own words:

"I know how humbling it is, how humiliating it feels, and I know how much better I felt, how amazingly more functional I felt, after Soldiers' Angels provided me with a laptop." And when he started to use the voice-controlled Laptop? "It was the first time I'd felt whole since I woke up in Landstuhl." 

Contribute during the upcoming 2007 fund drive via your preferred team – every single penny donated goes directly to the purchase and delivery of laptops; all overhead is funded from other sources. Spread the word – survey the websites located at the end of the article for more information about contributing time or funds. (See the contribution button over there to starboard…)

The need is great: over 22,000 service members have returned wounded from combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.  Imagine what a boost it would be to that young Marine, an Army officer who is a husband and father, or a Sailor in a burn unit with third degree burns on her hands to be able to reach out from their hospital beds and contact distant friends and families, and how much that can help in the recovery process.

So here is how you can directly, materially support our troops and help those most in need of it in the process – and it won't scratch your paint like a magnetic sticker can…

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Project Valour IT

October 28, 2007

Project Valour-IT

Project Valour It was started by Soldiers Angels - This project provides voice operated laptops for wounded veterans.
From now till Veterans Day, there is a fund raising competition between the services to which team can raise the most money.

Army (ugh),

NAVY (OH YEAH!),

Air Farce (Force),

Grunts (Marines).

To donate click on the link on the starboardsidebar.

Laptops are provided based on need, not branch of service.
for more information - Soldiers Angels

THANK YOU

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Mass Murders for Democrats

“We see Hillary and other candidates are competing on who
will withdraw from Iraq,” said Abu Jihad of Al Aqsa’s Nablus unit.
“This is a moment of glory for the revolutionary movements in the Arab
world…”


Al Aqsa’s Nasser Abu Aziz, considered it “very good” that there are
“voices like Hillary and others who are now attacking the Iraq
invasion.”


Islamic Jihad’s Abu Ayman felt “emboldened” by Clinton’s demands
that America retreat from Iraq. He said: “It is clear that it is the
resistance operations of the mujahideen that have brought about these
calls for withdrawal.”


“All Americans must vote Democrat,” insisted Jihad Jaara, an
exiled Al Aqsa agent who commanded 2002’s siege of Bethlehem’s Church
of the Nativity.



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American Thinker


American Thinker:

by Michael O’Shea


Snipers aim for a soldier’s heart; congressional leaders aim for the
heart of why he serves: Honor, Country, Duty to both. But to
congressional leaders, there’s no honor in Iraq. There can’t be: it’s
immoral. Illegal. And it’s not even their country’s war: it’s Bush’s.


Telling parents their child died for George Bush is telling Christa McAuliffe’s folks she died for Ronald Reagan.


JFK committed the US to space, but it wasn’t his race — it was
America’s. Astronauts knew the risks, the myriad of things that could
go wrong, yet signed on, boosted by their countrymen as much as by
rockets. There’s no such lift for soldiers today; they’re stranded,
ignored unless exploited, gains unseen, achievements unheard. The Tomb
of the Unknowns isn’t only in Arlington.


It’s one thing for leaders to oppose a mission, another to undermine
it; one thing to make course corrections, another to sabotage the ship,
one thing to overhaul an engine, another to wreck it in flight. The
time to abort a mission is before it’s launched. Once launched, it’s
all hands on deck. But for congressional leaders, it’s every man for
himself.


It’s not rifles or smart bombs or Humvees or night vision that separate American troops from others: it’s Honor.


Walter Reed can give soldiers news limbs, but where do they get
honor lost? There was honor in firemen’s fight to save those in Twin
Towers, honor in Flight 93’s Todd Beamer struggling to save those on
the ground in D.C., honor at D-Day, honor in Desert Storm: but to
congressional leaders there is no honor in Iraq: only pity.


And potshots at America’s new ally.


Every problem in Iraq is being attacked in Iraq by Iraqis and Americans together, yet congressional leaders snipe.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t choose democracy: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t approve a constitution: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t share oil revenues: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t reintegrate former Baathists: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t fire corrupt commanders: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t turn against Sadr: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t turn against Al Qaeda: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis wouldn’t welcome American troops: they have.

Snipe that Iraqis troops are cowards: they’re not.

Snipe that Iraqis politicians are bickering, partisan, and self-serving.

Yet congressional leaders bicker on, partisan on, self-serve on,
proclaiming all the while Iraqis will never be statesmen like them.


Statesmanship may be the stance, but hunting is the game, the bigger the game the better.


Summon a general shouldering 160,000 American lives — his own son
soon to be among them - to an ambush disguised as a hearing and to
blasts, disguised as “disbelief,” that he lies.


Demand the head of a general, this one Marine, Vietnam vet, 40 years
dedicated to his country, whose name itself — Pace — means “Peace” in
his father’s native Italy, telling him he can’t be trusted with the
future of America’s fighters because of his past with America’s
fighters, his own son included. To his peers he’s a man of integrity,
to congressional leaders he’s unfit.


No matter

that he pledged and lived a life of sacred honor,

fought, as Vice-Chairman and then Joint Chiefs Chairman, to assure that troops shall not have died in vain,

that more Marines — 5,521 — died from five weeks at Iwo Jim than all services have in four years in Iraq.

Congressional leaders demanded his head. Marines routed Al Qaeda in
Anbar: on Capitol Hill, they haven’t got a chance. Such are the ways of
leaders paying lip service to troops while kissing up to backers.


Who exploited Abu Ghraib more — Al Qaeda or congressional leaders?
How many leaders came to troops’ defense saying those few betrayed
their buddies and their commanders, their commander-in-chief included?


Wronging prisoners is a capital offense; wronging military leaders
is a Capitol pastime. Friendly fire in battle is deplorable; on Capitol
Hill, it’s routine. Collateral damage is despicable, collateral damage
to troops matters as much to congressional leaders as nursery tots did
to Timothy McVeigh.


Congressional leaders love to mesmerize, hypnotize, repeating again
and again that Iraq is a fiasco staged by Bush, waged by Bush,
controlled by Bush, unaltered by Bush, conducted by Bush.


Unanimous advice of the Joints Chiefs? Never mentioned. Unanimous
judgment of the world’s intelligence communities? Never heard.
Unanimous resolutions by the UN Security Council? Never happened.
Unanimous conclusion by the 9/11 Commission that a failed Iraq will be
the top breeding ground for attacks against Americans? Never mind.


Iraq isn’t a quagmire — it’s a crucible. Masks are burned off,
character stands bare, make-up is wiped off, what you’re made of shows
through.


Rob troops of honor, parents of belief, Iraqis of hope: and what’s
left? A world peopled by the two-faced. Abandon hope all who enter here.


And prepare to be lulled by their lullaby. Within their world
there’s no Heaven, no Hell below us, Above us only sky, no countries,
nothing to kill or die for, no religion too, no possessions, no need
for greed or hunger, all the people living for today, living life in
peace, sharing all the world, the world will live as one: just Imagine.
Thus it is sung, thus it is sold. What a wonderful world it would be.


But that world is not this world. That world has no snakes; this one
does. That world has no rapists, killers, thieves, child molesters;
this one does. And this world has terrorists. Only in an imaginary
world would they vanish


Only in their imaginary world would Saddam not have rearmed as
sanctions ended and as he pledged. Only in their imaginary world would
there be

no North Koreans arming Saddam with outlawed missiles,

no weapons experts snuck in past inspectors’ eyes,

no Iraqi experts ordered not to leave,

no millions siphoned from Oil for Food,

no UN officials bribed,

no “friends” kicking back,

no financing terrorist attacks on Israel,

no race with Iran to nuclear-arm,

no Libya nuclear-arming already,

no A.Q. Kahn exposed since there’d be no one to expose him,

no No-Fly zones since there’d be no sanctions,

no attacks on Kurds north and Shias south when Saddam was again free,

no mass graves, rapist rooms, wires electrocuting testicles,

no millions of barrels of oil gushing out, billions of bucks gushing back in,

no haven offered to Al Qaeda when Afghanistan was attacked but Iraq was not.

All they are saying is give peace a chance: Saddam had 17.


How different the world would be were today’s congressional leaders
in power in 1957. Three years earlier, Brown v. Board of Education;
three years later, Arkansas National Guardsmen blocking blacks from
enrolling in Little Rock Central High. Ike sends the 101st Airborne,
nationalizes Arkansas National Guard, Blacks integrate, Supreme Court
enforced.


But congressional leaders, content with Saddam like Orval Faubus was
with segregation, would have pled for the status quo, letting the
Supreme Court issue opinions — and the UN issue resolutions — but God
forbid they ever be enforced.


Like Ike, Washington and Lincoln faced challenges unsought yet
sought victory. Such times would cow today’s congressional leaders.
They not only seek defeat now, they’d tell the world how to defeat
America again: homemade bombs, Hollywood stars, and
heroic-to-themselves bloggers are all that’s required.


Blue Angel pilots soar due to crews on the ground and Americans
backing those crews in return. Soldiers succeed in combat because of
team support and Americans, in turn, supporting those teams. But that’s
history. Marcus Welby is passé, Jack Kevorkian is Chief of Staff, Rosie
the Riveter dims, Susan Sarandon shines.


Congressional leaders — Saddam’s defense team — proclaim they know
now what they didn’t know then and thus would have let Saddam go. In
their imaginary world with their imaginary friends Schroeder and
Chirac, they’d have contained him. No sweat, no threat.


Nor would there have been lessons learned from Iraq because there’d
have been no Iraq to learn lessons from. IEDs — kryptonite in Iraq —
wouldn’t have exploded nor would suicide bombers. There’d be no
protesters: no soldier deaths to protest.


Congressional leaders would flood Afghanistan with troops and be
welcomed as liberators, no formerly anti-Soviet turned anti-American
jihadists among them. Poppies would disappear, democracy would pop up
in a civilization, like Iraq, thousands of years old. Bin Laden would
be seized or, should he flee to Pakistan, tribal Pakistanis - with no
Iraq invasion to goad them to ally with the US - would embrace American
troops and rally to rout Al Qaeda.


We’ve seen this play — and this ploy — before. Washing their hands
of a war whose unpopularity they helped create, concocting Pilate
programs so they didn’t get nailed, they ask not, What is truth?, but
What is Honor?


Such is the imaginary world of imaginary leaders — pretenders to the throne, pretenders to the noble, pretenders to good.


Little boys love toy soldiers; little leaders love toying with
soldiers, toying with honor, playing heart games, mind games, while
affirming they can touch hearts, touch minds of Muslims around the
world.


Contrast congressional leaders’ world with the one war fighters see:

a man who had weapons before and swore he’d have them again — and use them again — is gone;

a people terrorized for decades are free from him but not from Al
Qaeda, not from neighbors, not from other terrorists in their midst.

There’s honor in helping them, or should be. There’s an ally gained
from helping them through their stumbles and struggles, or can be.
There’s security for America as Iraq’s enemies who are America’s
enemies are annihilated. But sacrifice and selflessness are not
congressional leaders’ style.


Theirs is a world of one-liners and put-downs, cartoonists and
comedians, in-crowds and the trendy and the fashionable and zingers,
sermons about imposing democracy while foisting civil war, rants about
Halliburton while the real war profiteer, Michael Moore, waddles away.
In their world Cindy Sheehan marches into combat; in a soldier’s world,
medics would get her help. Billed as a world peaceful and loving,
beneath the mask it’s a world of bullies and cut-throats, soothing on
the outside, savage within.


A soldier’s world is one of straight-shooters, in more ways than
one. Asked if more troops will likely die in Iraq, David Petraeus
answered, Yes. Asked if billions more will be spent, David Petraeus,
answered, Yes. Asked if Iraq was worth it, David Petraeus answered,

Sir, I wouldn’t be here, and I wouldn’t have made the recommendations
that I have made if I did not believe that…this is about continuing to
commit yourself to something that is bigger than self.

No wonder congressional leaders have lost faith; faith in themselves is
the only faith they’ve ever had. Soldiers have faith in something, and
someone, bigger.


Iraq is about faith: faith that our troops know what they’re
fighting for, faith that their commanders do everything they can to see
them through and see them live; faith that Iraqis want to live free;
faith that their prime minister is risking his life — like the
slaughtered sheik leading Anbar against Al Qaeda — for his country and
not for spoils; faith that all men are endowed by their Creator with
inalienable rights; faith that American civilian leaders do their best
with the light they have for one nation under God.


There are honorable Democrats in Congress. The majority of House and Senate leaders are not among them


Nor is a senator, strengthened by sips from Lake Superior, scolding
General Abizaid that hope is not a method. To which he replied, Despair
is not a method.


Despair: literally meaning? “Hopeless.”


The only thing hopeless about Iraq is congressional leaders.



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