Thursday, March 15, 2007

THIS JUST IN! DARLENE SUPERVILLE? NOT SO SUPER!

 
TODAY WAS NOT A SLOW NEWS DAY BUT THESE REPORTERS SPENT MOST OF THE DAY ASSURING THE ASSOCIATED PRESS' DARLENE SUPERVILLE THAT THERE HAD TO BE SOMEONE MORE STUPID THAN HER.
 
DARLENE HAD ONE HAND GRIPPED AROUND A RAZOR AND ANOTHER AROUND A BOTTLE OF SLEEPING PILLS DUE TO HER 'REPORTING' TODAY.  SHE'D THOUGHT BEING SNARKY ABOUT VALERIE PLAME WOULD BE EASY.
 
CERTAINLY MOST OF THE D.C. PRESS HAS SNARKED WITHOUT FEAR OF ACCOUNTABILITY.  BUT THEY WEREN'T AS IDIOTIC AS DARLENE.
 
VALERIE PLAME IS THE UNDERCOVER C.I.A. AGENT WHOSE CAREER ENDED WHEN THE WHITE HOUSE DECIDED TO OUT HER.  HER HUSBAND IS JOE WILSON. 
 
DARLENE KNEW THAT MUCH BUT NOT A LOT MORE.  IN HER FIRST PARAGRAPH, SHE REFERRED TO PLAME HAVING "A MAGAZINE COVER IN HER PAST."  LATER IN THE ARTICLE SHE 'EXPLAINED,' "THE COUPLE FAMOUSLY POSED IN HIS JAGUAR FOR THE JANUARY 2004 COVER OF VANITY FAIR MAGAZINE."
 
 
DARLENE THOUGHT IT WOULD BE EASY.  DARLENE THOUGHT IT WOULD BE FUN.  CERTAINLY MOST REPORTERS GETTING SNARKY ABOUT PLAME DON'T FACT CHECK.  BUT DARLENE WENT BEYOND NORMAL STUPID.
 
ANY IDIOT KNOWS VANITY FAIR ISN'T VANITY FAIR WITHOUT A CELEBRITY COVER AND JOE WILSON AND VALERIE PLAME AREN'T STARS.  THE COVER OF THE JANUARY 2004 ISSUE WAS VIGGO MORTENSEN OF LORD OF THE RINGS FAME.  PLAME AND WILSON HAD BEEN A STORY INSIDE THE MAGAZINE. 
 
DARLENE ASKED US IF WE THOUGHT SHE SHOULD PACK IT IN?  WE REMINDED THAT THE BULLY BOY MADE IT TO THE OVAL OFFICE SO WHO KNOWS WHAT LIES IN HER FUTURE?
 
"C'MON, DARLENE," WE SAID, "PUT DOWN THE RAZOR, PUT DOWN THE PILLS.  YOU'VE STILL GOT A TON OF LIES IN YOU WAITING TO BE RELEASED IN PRINT."
 
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Starting with news of war resistance.  Dean Kuipers (LA City Beat) examines the war resistance within the military and notes AWOL figures (8,000 since the start of the illegal war according the US Defense Department), desertion figures (40,000 since 2000) and that: "Several hundred of those soldiers have fled to Canada, according to unconfirmed reports, but only a few have identified themselves and thus face prosecution."  On the issue of the sentencing of war resisters who go public, attorney Jim Feldman, who represents Agustin Aguayo among others, sees the sentencing as encouraging, noting that, "People who really are sincere, the Army judges are not going to come down hard on 'em.  The judges seem to recognize that as a mitigating circumstance."  Agustin Aguayo's recent court-martial in Germany found him sentenced to eight months and the time he had been in custory already (since turning himself in at the end of September 2006) was credited to his sentence.   Iraq Veterans Against the War's Kelly Dougherty shares her view with Kupier, "At the same time, I think they are taking a tough stand because eight months in prison is still a long time in prison, especially for refusing to serve in a war because your conscience says it's wrong to kill people, or because you reel that this particular war is illegal.  They could certainly be prosecuting people more.  But the sentences that they are giving are being handed down as a message to others serving in the military not to apply for CO status and not to refuse to go to Iraq." 
 
Ehren Watada, the first commissoned officer to publicy refuse to deploy to Iraq, is but one example of the attempt to "send a message."  His second court-martial is scheduled to begin July 16th.  The double jeopardy issue (a Constitutional issue) is something the military seems determined to ignore.  Courage to Resist is asking that a mail campaign (snail mail) be used to demonstrate to Lt. Gen. James M. Dubik how much support there is for Watada.  Dubik "has the power to drop all charges and let Lt. Watada out of the army". You can write to Lt. Gen. Dubik at: Bldg 2025 Stop 1, Fort Lewis, WA 98433.   
 
In other news, Vue Weekly reports: "Toronto hip-hop artist Mohammad Ali is about to release his new album at an event here in Edmonton for the War Resisters Support Campaign, a coalition of indivduals supporting US soldiers seeking asylum in Canada because they refuse to fight in Iraq.  The self-proclaimed in-your-face activist ('I write about names, events and dates -- specifics.') is highlighting some of the controversial politics behind the war in Iraq, drawing some examples from the experiences of Darrell Anderson, an Iraq combat veteran."  Darrell Anderson is the US war resister who served in Iraq, was awarded a Purple Heart and then self-checked out in January 2005 and moved to Canada.  In September of last year, Anderson announced that he was returning to the US to turn himself inOn October 3rd, he turned himself in at Fort Knox. He was released by the military on October 6th and, as expected, he was not charged and was given an other-than-honorable discharge.
 
Darrell Anderson, Agustin Aguayo and Ehren Watada are part of a movement of resistance within the military that includes Joshua Key*, Kyle SnyderMark Wilkerson, Camilo Mejia, Patrick Hart, Ivan Brobeck, Ricky Clousing, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Jeremy Hinzman, Stephen Funk, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Corey Glass, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Katherine Jashinski, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake and Kevin Benderman. In total, thirty-eight US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.


Information on war resistance within the military can be found at Center on Conscience & War, The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline, and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters.
 
 
 
[*Yesterday, the third time I mentioned Joshua Key, I wrongly called him Josh Wolf.  Wolf is a reporter who has been imprisoned for refusing to roll over on the First Amendment -- imprisoned "longer than any other reporter in U.S. history for refusing a federal grand jury subpoena" as Howard Vicini notes.]
 
 
Turning to the selling of the illegal war, a wave of Operation Happy Talk hit big media and they suited up, grabbed the Sticky Bumps and rushed to ride that wave. The talking point was that the ongoing crackdown in Baghdad (which began in June of last year and has been beefed up and juiced up ever since) had achieved real results!  It was a success!  This was true because they were told it was true!  One of the few who remembered he was a reporter and that the occupation entails more than mere stenography was Damien Cave (New York Times) who noted problems with the announcement that violence had declined: "But the degree of improvement was unclear, partly because of the continued confusion over casualty counts here, and an American general cautioned against reading too much into optimistic reports, given that January and February were two of the worst months for car bombings since the invasion. The Iraqi review came from Brig. Qassim al-Moussawi, a military spokesman, who said at a news conference that civilian deaths since the start of the plan on Feb. 14 were counted at 265 in Baghdad, down from 1,440 in the four weeks before. He said 36 car bombings struck the capital over the past four weeks, down from 56. [. . .] It was not clear what his statistics were based on, though, and they may not have taken into account the bodies found strewn around the capital each day. An analysis by The New York Times found more than 450 Iraqi civilians killed or found dead during the same 28-day period, based on initial daily reports from Interior Ministry and hospital officials."  While Cave reported, many of his cohorts were at the beach (mentally, if not physically). 
 
 


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