John Furie Zacharias
having a bad day in a strange place
Thunderstorms Anywhere

Thunderstorms in the Imajica



 The different ways I don't like you 
 in a list that may never become organized
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Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Iraq: Teenagers' voices


Click for more videos from peacetakescourage

Last summer, I told you about the Alabama teen peace activist, Ava Lowery.  She's still making videos.  The one above is called "Confront the war president" made in order to promote the peace march that took place last month.  She has remained positive and steadfast in the face of some very powerful right-wing critics in the media.  Visit her website peacetakescourage.

 

Click for more videos from flutiecutie

Unlike the Vietnam era, this generation of teenagers seems to be able to be supportive of the country's military personnel while at the same time seeing war with open eyes.  I thought this video from Lizzie Palmer, a teenager from Ohio, was especially well done.  It was featured on the Iraq Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) blog.

It's interesting to me that the IAVA was formed as a Republican political counterweight organization to the Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) and yet both are concerned with many of the same issues concerning the health and welfare of veterans and active duty military personnel.

 

How will this end?

Well, we know the surge will end in April and a drawdown of troops will commence.  The ground forces of Army and Marines can not maintain the current operational tempo of deployment as it is.

President Bush has unequivocally stated that the U.S. military will stay in Iraq during his term as president.  Cheney has opined that he had hoped that Israel would strike Iran, so when Iran retaliates, we could have a viable excuse to attack Iran.

Some military leaders at the Pentagon have been trying to put the neocon crazies back in their playpens quite publicly lately.  They show little to no support for any military action against Iran.

Cheney has held up the publication of the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran for over a year.  It's very likely he and the other neocon crazies are trying to influence the intelligence estimate, but simply can't find any damning evidence or make it up like they did during run up to Iraq.

As long as Iran doesn't take the bait, so to speak, and remains calm in its own actions to various provocations -- like U.S. economic sanctions or border skirmishes with the MKO -- the best we can hope for over the next year is not allowing Bush/Cheney to widen the current war to Iran.

The 2008 presidential elections will be pivotal, of course.  Whomever is elected, I think the current Iraqi government will make some moves.  To save face, the United States could start withdrawing its military presence next December, if the Iraqi government simply asks the U.S. to leave.  So far, the Maliki government has renewed the legal justification for U.S. occupation at the United Nations each December.  So, we'll see.

The United States is unlikely to completely withdraw from Iraq.  A billion-dollar embassy compound and several huge airbases that have been built over the last 4 years make me think that we're there to stay until the middle east countries deplete their oil reserves in about 50 years.  The United States is going to be the security guard standing in front of that store for as long as its got stuff to sell.

 

The future

Despite my own pragmatic pessimism, it does make me happy to see two teenagers civically involved and engaged.  There needs to be involvement, not self-centered apathy.  There needs to be an honest debate and discussion.  If the last 7 years of the Bush regime taught us anything as a country, it should be that the path to tyranny is paved by sheeple and slackers.

 

[ headphones ]  - Xeideus' Project Playlist

   

 


Monday, November 12, 2007
Veteran's Day


I find myself very depressed this Veteran's Day for so many reasons.  I didn't go to a parade or eat BBQ with fellow military veterans.  This weekend was spent alone, at home, not speaking to anyone in person.  I'm just too angry and depressed to be in polite company making small talk.  And knowing myself well enough to know that I have an argumentative and sarcastic nature, I don't want to be "that guy," who is the social buzz kill for those who prefer to enjoy Veteran's Day like little kids who believe that the Easter Bunny has hidden a treat for them to find on the White House lawn.  Some veterans need that Neverland to simply cope with the conflicting surreality raging in their minds between their belief in duty, honor and country and being frontline chum in the war machine of corporate interests.

While my personal situation certainly is a part of my unhappiness with how military veterans have been treated in the United States, I honestly don't feel comfortable detailing my personal situation or whining about it in a public forum.  Certainly, there are literally millions of fellow veterans far worse off than I am.  I'm grateful for many positive things in my life which have mitigated the severity of my woes, none of which has anything to do with being a veteran.

Since I do often write about U.S. politics and foreign policy, those are the areas where my complaints will be primarily laid.

So-called War on Terror

When the Berlin wall fell, the neocons within the Washington D.C. establishment of government, politics, defense, state, think-tank and lobbying organizations licked their chops for their version of America Superpower 2.0.  It's not a secret conspiracy.  It's been out in the open for many years.  Infotainment media might have had a role in distracting middle America from the machinations of powerbrokers struggling in our nation's capitol, but one can't blame the inanimate shiny keys when the citizenry is fixated on Paris Hilton.  Citizens have responsibilities as well as rights in a representative republic.

One of those responsibilities is to vote.  Many of you simply suck for your slackerness.  You think it's cool to be a slacker?  You are exactly the bored, uninvolved type of person that facist regimes around the world and throughout time have exploited.  Thanks for nothing, assholes.

If you think politics is boring, try some Orwellian prison time.  We can build a border wall around the United States and you can live in that federally monitered society, like East Berlin, and you can wave the party flag and pray to your Lord Jesus that your son or daughter, niece or nephew, won't be drafted when the next war for oil with Iran, or Venezuela, or Nigeria happens.  Good luck with that plan.

Right now

Right now, 1 in 4 homeless people in the United States are veterans.

Right now, 2007 was the deadliest year for military personnel serving in Iraq.

Right now, 2007 was the deadliest year for military serving in Afghanistan.

Right now, your local TV news probably doesn't even air any news about Iraq.

Right now, you think everthing is just fine and dandy.

Right now, only 1 percent of the citizens of the U.S. are active military.

Right now, you're probably thinking about ways not to think about this reality.

That's why I stayed home and hunkered down.  I'm burdened with the knowledge of the facts and it screams to blow away the mythology of the ignorantly blissful and patriotic around me.

[ headphones ]  - Jude's Project Playlist

     

 


Friday, November 09, 2007
Movies: Killer Bean Forever


Killer Bean Forever - Official Trailer

 

"Several years ago, I was the Lead Animator of Matrix Reloaded. It was a great job, but it wasn't my dream job. I wanted to make my own feature film. So I quit to pursue my dream.

For the past 4 years, I've been working at my computer 14 hours a day, 7 days a week. I've spent my entire life savings and maxed out credit cards. After all this time and effort, my movie is almost done. I present to you a preview of my feature film directorial debut... Killer Bean Forever."

— Jeff Lew, Director

 

You know how I like independent films!  This animated film looks pretty damn cool. I can't wait for it to be finished. I can't imagine rendering all those CG frames at home for a feature length film.  .

Do check out the Killer Bean Forever website for news about the upcoming release.  Lew also has some interesting information about animation, too.

I did get to finally go to theater and see "30 Days of Night."  It was quite shocking on the big screen.  Living in Florida, though, the cold of Barrow, Alaska scared me much more than did the pesky vampires.  I felt that sense of dread from the bitter cold that I used to feel during Michigan winters.  It's a good horror flick.

[ headphones ]  - Twisted Housewife's Project Playlist

   

 



Currently drinking:
Kool Aid Tropical Punch 72's




Wednesday, November 07, 2007
Fraggin' Substitute


I am number pne

Muahahaha!  After only 500 attempts at playing Substitute, I finally brought the mighty Starfighter down and spanked his mom! ®

Now I can stop perseverating on this game and get a life ... except that there are two more difficult levels to master.  Dammit.

The astronauts have finished their STS-120 mission and plan to land space shuttle Discovery at Kennedy Space Center around 1:00 P.M. today.

[ headphones ]  - Sinja's Project Playlist

      

 


Tuesday, November 06, 2007
Bush: Cheney Impeachment


Darth Cheney

Anti-war presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich from Ohio introduced his resolution, H.R. 333, to impeach Vice President Dick Cheney on the floor of the House of Representatives today.  And then, all hell broke loose among the politicians for a little while.

 

It seems the Democratic party leadership was caught flat-footed.  The Republicans decided that to debate H.R. 333 on the floor of the House might serve to embarrass the Democrats, so they supported the resolution in parliamentary votes.

Immediately following Kucinich reading his Cheney impeachment resolution, Democratic majority leader Steny Hoyer made a motion to table (kill) H.R. 333.  Normally a 15 minute vote, the vote tally was kept open for an hour.   Despite this, and because of the support of Republicans and the anti-war caucus, Hoyer's motion to kill H.R. 333 failed.  Hoyer then made a motion to refer H.R. 333 to the House Judiciary Committee.  This motion passed.  Being referred to committee meant that no open floor debate on the merits of impeaching Vice President Cheney could be held or heard today.

It's been widely reported that Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi was quoted as saying, "Impeachment is off the table."  It is also known that House Judiciary Committee Chairman, John Conyers, told anti-war Code Pink activists that winning the 2008 election was more important than dividing the Democratic party over the issue of impeachment or the Iraq occupation.

 

This is about the Constitution

One could say both Republican and Democratic party members are playing politics.  However, when asked specifically how the introduction of H.R. 333 might benefit his presidential campaign, Kucinich stated flatly, "I introduced this resolution six months ago.  This isn't about my campaign.  This is about the Constitution.  This is about the rule of law."

I applaud Kucinich for bringing his Cheney impeachment resolution to the House of Representatives today.  I think that many Americans believe that Bush and Cheney have most certainly committed acts worthy of impeachment far greater than even presidents Nixon or Clinton.

And honestly, I think both political parties are acting very cynically with respect to their political strategies.  I think that many people are not happy that the result of the 2006 election that simply put the Democratic party in power only to see the party lose their spine in opposition to the Bush administration.  If the Republicans think that impeaching Cheney would somehow be embarrassing to Democrats, perhaps it is a cynical strategy that supposes that the American people don't care about the rule of law or their U.S. Constitution.  GOP leadership could be misunderestimating again.

 

Why impeach Cheney?

Kucinich lays out the reasons quite plainly.  You can and should read the text of Kucinich's speech here.  Supporting documentation is here.

In a nutshell, Kucinich's resolution to impeach Cheney has three articles.

1. Cheney "has purposely manipulated the intelligence process to deceive the citizens and Congress of the United States by fabricating a threat of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction to justify the use of the United States Armed Forces against the nation of Iraq ..."

2. Cheney "purposely manipulated the intelligence process to deceive the citizens and Congress of the United States about an alleged relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda in order to justify the use of the United States Armed Forces against the nation of Iraq ..."

3. Cheney "has openly threatened aggression against the Republic of Iran absent any real threat to the United States, and done so with the United States proven capability to carry out such threats ..."

 

Related References

The Impeachment Process (PDF) (wiki)
impeachbush.org
pelosiwatch.org

[ headphones ]  - Jude's Project Playlist

     

 


 
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