Saturday, April 26, 2008

THIS JUST IN! PELOSI ANSWERS!

BULLY BOY PRESS & CEDRIC'S BIG MIX -- THE KOOL-AID TABLE.
 
U.S. SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE NANCY PELOSI CANNOT SEEM TO STAY OUT OF THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY TO DETERMINE THE PARTY'S DEBATE.  SHE RECENTLY DECLARED THAT HILLARY CLINTON AND BARACK OBAMA SHOULD NOT SHARE THE TICKET
 
THESE REPORTERS CAUGHT UP WITH PELOSI FOR AN INTERVIEW.  WE ASKED, "DID WE SURPRISE YOU?  WE THOUGHT WE WERE ANNOUNCED."
 
"OH, NO, I'M NOT SURPRISED," PELOSI EXPLAINED, "I'VE JUST HAD SO MUCH PLASTIC SURGERY THAT I'M PERMANENTLY BUG-EYED.  I CALL MYSELF 'POPEYE THE MAGNIFICENT.'  WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU?"
 
WE EXPLAINED WE WERE ATTEMPTING TO FIGURE OUT HER OPEN HATRED FOR HILLARY.
 
"WELL, IT'S JUST NOT FAIR!" EXPLAINED PELOSI.  "I AM THE MOST POWERFUL WOMAN IN THE UNITED STATES EVER -- IF YOU DON'T COUNT ANNA NICOLE -- AND I DON'T.  NOW COMES HILLARY WANTING TO BE PRESIDENT?  FORGET IT, SISTER, THIS IS MY TIME TO STRUT.  AND I ALSO FEAR THAT IF PEOPLE SEE HILLARY AS A PRESIDENT, THEY'LL REALIZE HOW BAD I AM AT EVERYTHING.  I NEVER MISS AN OPPORTUNITY TO GO OFF TOPIC OR BUNGLE A FACT."
 
GAVIN NEWSOME SUPPORTS SENATOR CLINTON.
 
"SCREW GAVIN! I AM NANCY PELOSI, THIRD IN LINE FOR THE PRESIDENCY!  THAT'S REALLY SECOND IN LINE BECAUSE YOU KNOW DICK CHENEY WOULD FALL OVER AT A SWEARING IN CEREMONY.  WHO DOES HILLARY THINK SHE IS TRYING TO OUTSHINE ME?  HUH?  I BOUGHT MY WAY INTO POLITICS AND I'LL BUY BARACK'S AS WELL.  HE'S MY SEXY BOY AND I LIKE TO RUB AGAINST HIM."
 
HUH?
 
"OH, SORRY.  I WENT OFF TOPIC AGAIN."
 
 
Starting with war resistance.  Claudia Feldman (Houston Chronicle) reported a week ago on consientious objector Hart Vines and his participation at Iraq Veterans Against the War's Winter Soldier (IVAW's Ronn Cantu who started the first IVAW chapter in Texas, at Fort Hood, is also covered in the article).  Feldman reports:

 
One of his jobs in Iraq was to stand guard with a .50-caliber machine gun while his buddies searched houses supposedly inhabited by insurgents and enemy combatants. At the conference, searches of that kind were described vividly. Sometimes soldiers kicked in the front doors. Sometimes they upended refrigerators and ripped stoves out of walls. Sometimes they turned drawers upside down and broke furniture.
One day Viges was instructed to search a suspicious house, a hut, really, but he couldn't find pictures of Saddam Hussein, piles of money, AK-47s or roadside bombs.
"The only thing I found was a little .22 pistol," Viges said, " ... but we ended up taking the two young men, regardless."
An older woman, probably the mother of the young men, watched and wailed nearby.
"She was crying in my face, trying to kiss my feet," Viges said. "And, you know, I can't speak Arabic, but I can speak human. She was saying, 'Please, why are you taking my sons? They have done nothing wrong.' "
 

 
And after I came home I've come to realise that we've got to make better choices,  I applied for Conscientious Objector [status]. I was able to remember the Sermon on the Mount. I'm a Christian, what was I doing holding a gun to another human being? Love thy neighbour. Do good for him. Pray for those who persecute you, don't shoot them. 
I get my Conscientious Objector packet approved. I'm alone. I'm free, I'm done. It's all gone now, right? 
No! I still swerve at trash bags
fireworks. I'm looking at everyone's hands and faces [tonight] to see who's going to want to shoot me.  
I can't express anything, I can't express love. All my relationships are falling apart because they can't f**king understand me. How do they know the pain that I've gone through or the sights that I've seen, the dead bodies? The innocence gone, stripped, dead?  
I couldn't do it myself. I couldn't stand the pain. People were leaving me. I was alone. I couldn't cut my wrists. So I called the police. They come stomping through my door. I have my knife in my hand. "Shoot me. Shoot me". 
All of a sudden I was the man with the RPG, with all the guns pointed at him. Misled, miseducated, thinking that "Yes, we can solve all the world's problems by killing each other". How insane is that?  
Lucky enough I lived through that episode as well. See, you can't wash your hands when they're covered in blood with more blood. It's impossible; the wounds carry on. Families are destroyed.

 
Meanwhile, in Canada, many US war resisters are currently hoping to be granted safe harbor status and the Canadian Parliament will debate a measure this month on that issue. You can make your voice heard. Three e-mails addresses to focus on are: Prime Minister Stephen Harper (pm@pm.gc.ca -- that's pm at gc.ca) who is with the Conservative party and these two Liberals, Stephane Dion (Dion.S@parl.gc.ca -- that's Dion.S at parl.gc.ca) who is the leader of the Liberal Party and Maurizio Bevilacqua (Bevilacqua.M@parl.gc.ca -- that's Bevilacqua.M at parl.gc.ca) who is the Liberal Party's Critic for Citizenship and Immigration. A few more can be found here at War Resisters Support Campaign. For those in the US, Courage to Resist has an online form that's very easy to use.         

There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Matt Mishler, Josh Randall, Robby Keller, Justiniano Rodrigues, Chuck Wiley, James Stepp, Rodney Watson, Michael Espinal, Matthew Lowell, Derek Hess, Diedra Cobb, Brad McCall, Justin Cliburn, Timothy Richard, Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Peter Brown, Bethany "Skylar" James, Zamesha Dominique, Chrisopther Scott Magaoay, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Jose Vasquez, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Clara Gomez, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Abdullah Webster, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Stephen Funk, Blake LeMoine, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Logan Laituri, Jason Marek, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Dale Bartell, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Kjar, Kyle Huwer, Wilfredo Torres, Michael Sudbury, Ghanim Khalil, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, at least fifty US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.

Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline [(877) 447-4487], Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. Tom Joad maintains a list of known war resisters. In addition, VETWOW is an organization that assists those suffering from MST (Military Sexual Trauma).
 
Turning to the Dept of Veteran Affairs.  Pia Malbran (CBS News) reports that, "While on the stand in California federal court" yesterday, "where the VA is facing a lawsuit filed by veteran advocates who are demanding better health care, Dr. Michael Kussman, the VA's Under Secretary for Health, said, 'I Disagree with the premise that there was some effort to cover up something.' On March 10 of this year, Everett Chasen, the chief communications officer for the VA's Veterans Health Administration (VHA) sent an e-mail message to several top agency officials including Kussman.  At the time, CBS News was preparing a report about attempted suicides among VA patients.  Chasen wrote, 'I don't want to give CBS any more numbers on veteran suicides or attempts than they already have -- it will only lead to more questions'."  CBS News has been covering this story for some time.  Today Peter Hart (FAIR's CounterSpin) explained:
 
Sadly, there's no end of examples of US journalists accepting and parroting official government statistics without challenge so when we find a case of an outlet actually questioning an official source and bringing that challenge to the public it seems worth taking note of.  Last year CBS Evening News reported what they and others have called an "epidemic of suicides" among those who have served in the US military. The network noted that there were more than 6,200 such suicides in the year 2005.  Those numbers were challenged however by the Department of Veterans Affairs head of mental health Dr. Ira Katz who insisted that CBS had it wrong, the suicide rate for vets was actually no higher than normal.  In a distrubing April 21st follow-up, however, CBS provided evidence that those numbers were not wrong and evidently that's why the VA didn't want the public to know them.  CBS reporter Armen Keteyian noted that the VA recently provided date indicating just 790 attempted suicides by vets in all of 2007; however, Keteyian had access to an e-mail  Katz sent to his top media advisor in which the VA official said something dramatically different acknowledging that "our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among veterans we see in our medical facilities."  That's pretty far removed from the 790 a year the VA had reported to CBS and consequently to the public.  Even more disturbing is the evidence that Katz knows he's actively misinforming the public on this critical issue.  His e-mail was titled "Not for the CBS News interview request" and the opening line was "Sh!"  The note closed with Katz' concern: "Is this something we should carefully address before someone stumbles on it?"  Clearly this is a story that will require further follow-up to find out what else the VA would like to hide from the public about yet another of the devastating impacts of the war on Iraq.  We certainly hope CBS will continue in the way they've started out and that they won't be alone.
 
Note on the above, all links in Peter Hart's commentary go to CBS News which has text and video for each link and the e-mail itself, PDF format warning, is hereBob Egelko (San Francisco Chronicle) reports that Kussman stated on the stand yesterday, "The number of patients who have adjustment reactions to the experience that they have in Afghanistan or Iraq is very important, but we don't believe that's mental illness.  It would be unfair and inappropriate to stigmatize people with a mental health diagnosis when they are having what most people believe are normal reactions to abnormal situations."  There is no care or concern, just a desire to cut down on expenses.  Diagnosis the mental health disorder requires that it be treated.  Dropping back to IVAW's Winter Soldier Investigation last month:
 
Adrienne Kinne: And then they went to go to the next step, to actually make this happen. And I was actually on a conference call when someone said, "Wait a second. We can't start this screening process. Do you know that if we start screening for TBI there will be tens of thousands of soldiers who will screen positive and we do not have the resources available that would allow us to take care of these people so we cannot do the screening." And their rationale was that medically, medical ethics say if you know someone has a problem, you have to treat them. So since they didn't have the resources to treat them, they didn't want to know about the problem.
 
That's the reality for refusing to diagnose, Kinne's point that the VA would then be ethically bound to treat.   If you missed Winter Soldier you can stream online at Iraq Veterans Against the War, at War Comes Home, at KPFK, at the Pacifica Radio homepage and at KPFA, here for Friday, here for Saturday, here for Sunday. Aimee Allison (co-host of the station's The Morning Show and co-author with David Solnit of Army Of None) and Aaron Glantz were the anchors for Pacifica's live coverage.  Kinne testified Friday afternoon.  Wednesday saw the VA's deputy chief Gordon Mansfield facing questions from the Senate's Veterans Affairs Committee.  Armen Keteyian and Pia Malbran (CBS News, link has text and video) reported that Senator Patty Murray questioned  him about how anyone could have faith in statements from the VA since "every time we trun around we find out that what you're saying publicly is different from what you're saying privately?"  Les Blumenthal (Seattle Times) quotes Murray stating, "I used to teach preschool, and when you bring up a 3-year-old and tell them they have to stop lying, they understand the consequences.  The VA doesn't. They needed to stop hiding the fact this war is costing us in so many ways."  Murray also noted, "I am very angry upset that we find out this week that several inernal VA e-mails that were made public -- not becuase you wanted them to, but because of a lawsuit that ws ongoing -- showed that the VA downplayed significantly the number of suicides and suicide attempts by veterans in the last several years.  Just a few months ago in November the VA was confronted with an analysis that said there were 6,250  veterans who had committed suicide in 2005 an average of 17 a day.  VA officials said that number was inaccurate, it was much lower.  These e-mails that were uncovered this week show that Dr. Katz, who is the VA's top mental health official, not only backed up those alleged numbers but he acknowledged that the numbers were much higher than that.  So what they were telling us in November and December  was that the number was lower but inside the VA   everyone knew it was higher.  And there are e-mails saying that and showing that".     Thursday on the Senate floor, during a vote on the Veterans' Benefits Enhancement Act, Murray stated the following:
 
 
And just this week, we got more evidence that the Administration has been covering up the extent of the toll this war has taken on our troops.  Internal e-mails that became public in a court hearing show that the VA has vastly downplayed the number of suicides and suicide attempts by veterans in the last several years.  Last November, an analysis by CBS News found that over 6,200 veterans had committed suicide in 2005 -- an average of 17 a day.  
When confronted, VA officials said the numbers were much lower.  But according to the internal e-mails from the VA's head of Mental Health -- Dr. Ira Katz -- 6,570 veterans committed suicide in 2005 -- an average of 18 a day.  The e-mails also revealed that VA officials know that another 1,000 veterans -- who are receiving care at VA medical facilities -- attempt suicide each month.            
Mr. President, these numbers offer tragic evidence that our nation is failing thousands of veterans a year.  And they reflect an Administration that has failed to own up to its responsibilities, and failed even to own up to the true impact of the war on its veterans.   
What is most appalling to me is that this is not the first time the VA has covered up the problems facing veterans who sacrificed for our country.  Time and again, the VA has told us one thing in public -- while saying something completely different in private.  It is outrageous to me that VA officials would put public appearance ahead of people's lives.  Yet, Mr. President, it appears that is what has happened again.  
When we -- as members of Congress -- sit down to determine the resources to give the VA, we must have a true picture of the needs.  And if there's a problem, we have to act.  It's our duty -- and the duty of the Administration -- to care for veterans.  By covering up the true extent of that problem, the VA has hindered our ability to get those resources to the veterans who need them.  That is irresponsible, and it's wrong. 
 
Senator Daniel K. Akaka has joined Murray in calling for Ira Katz' resignation.  Meanwhile C.W. Nevius (San Francisco Chronicle) reports on the attorney handling the lawsuit against the VA, Gordon Erspamer: "He's a rainmaker attorney for a major firm in the city who has set aside time to take legal action that doesn't earn a penny. And besides that, he's got a compelling and personal back story and a chip on his shoulder to prove it.  Erspamer's cause since the late '70s has been the rights of armed forces veterans, and this week's trial has the VA squirming over a shocking rate of suicides among vets and has captured the national spotlight."   Aimee Allison and Aaron Glantz hosted a live report on KPFA about the trial Tuesday and  Gordon Erspamer was interviewed in the first hour.
 
[. . .]
 
Turning to US politics.  First up, Wednesday's snapshot referenced Big Tent Democrat's post (TalkLeft) on the nonsense of Tom Hayden -- the latest nonsense from a lifetime of nonsense but the link was wrong.  My apologies.  The correct link is here.  Wednesday night, Elaine provided the letter Hayden needs to write -- the public letter -- and why no woman need listen to him until he does. (Not that they need to listen to him after, for that matter.) Wednesday night, Taylor Marsh also weighed in on Tom's nonsense and, let me repeat something here, Tom invents things.  He invents conversations that allegedly happened years ago when he needs them for modern times.  We've avoided commenting on his current wife here because who knows what the woman did or didn't know.  Tom loves to embellish a tale.  But the point is that he's a longterm sexist and no women needs him speaking for her.  On the topic of sexists, Keith Olberman of MSNBC, as Jeralyn (TalkLeft) points out, made a comment on air that has some wondering if he was calling for Hillary Clinton to be assaulted or murdered: "Hyperbole? A figure of speech? Sexist? Or a call to snuff her out?"  Joan Walsh (Salon) explains Olberman has 'apologized' -- he still doesn't get how offensive his statement was and how his add-on only more so.  He gets that it sounded to some like murder but he still doesn't get (and Walsh doesn't appear to either) that the "apology" is still stating a woman needs to be taken into a room and forced "politically" out of the race.  It's undemocratic and, with his pattern, it's sexist.  Susan UnPC (No Quarter), writing before the 'apology,' gets it very clearly, "Take notice of his use of the pronoun 'he'."  Meanwhile Paul Krugman (New York Times) examines the working class support for Hillary Clinton and how Obama still -- all these months later -- can't connect with those voters?  Jonathan Mann (CNN) explains, "Hillary is back.  Until now, Hillary Clinton's campaign hd one consistent quality -- it kept coming up short. . . . The biggest question about her campaign was when it would finally succumb to being so second-place. This week that changed. She won the Pennsylvania primary by 10 percentage points, a margin that convinced contributors to flood her Internet site with $10 million."


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