Tuesday, August 24, 2004
Another Swift Boat Vet Supports Kerry Account
Some swift boat veterans support Kerry
Since this link will only work for a few days, here's the article:
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Vietnam veteran Del Sandusky, speaking at a news conference in Pennsylvania, said he personally witnessed the battle action for which Kerry received Silver and Bronze stars and two of his three Purple Hearts. (AP photo)
Some swift boat veterans defend KerryBy Jon Brodkin / News Staff WriterTuesday, August 24, 2004
Michael Alogna says he knows what it's like to serve on a swift boat in Vietnam. And he doesn't think it's possible John Kerry fabricated the events for which he was awarded war medals.
"They're only 51 feet long," Alogna, a Waltham resident, said of the swift boats. "You're totally visible, and everybody can see what's going on....You can't claim you did something (you didn't do)."
Alogna said he was a naval officer in charge on a swift boat during two tours of duty in 1966 and 1967.
He didn't serve with Kerry, but believes attacks on the presidential candidate by the group Swift Boat Veterans for Truth are unwarranted. Alogna said accounts given by those who served with Kerry prove he deserved the medals.
He also compared the Swift Boat Veterans group's claims to previous Republican attacks on Arizona Sen. John McCain and former Sen. Max Cleland of Georgia, a triple amputee Vietnam veteran.
"This is a pattern of not just misbehavior, but low behavior," Alogna said.
Kerry, who was awarded a Silver Star, Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts for his service in Vietnam, has been forced to fight off charges he did not deserve the medals. Veterans who served with Kerry have come to his defense, and the anti-Kerry group has been accused of distorting facts to cast the senator in a bad light.
The New York Times reported Friday the accounts given by group members are "riddled with inconsistencies" and that material they offer as proof of their claims is discredited by their own previous statements and official Navy records.
Still, there's reason to be skeptical of Kerry, believes Bob Harris, a Vietnam veteran who is also Hudson's veterans agent. He noted there is controversy over whether Kerry's account that he spent Christmas Eve 1968 in Cambodia is true, and also said he was offended by Kerry protesting the war upon returning home.
"He's got a lot of explaining to do on the screw-ups in his story," Harris said. "He's given different versions. I have a problem with him throwing his medals away. You can argue medals, ribbons, or what. If anybody was ever awarded a medal, it comes with a ribbon. If you throw one away, you throw them all away."
Harris, who said he fought for the U.S. Army in Vietnam in 1967 and 1968, said he is leaning toward voting for President George Bush, but criticized the president for sending Americans to war when he wasn't willing to serve overseas himself.
"Anybody that joined the National Guard was trying to avoid Vietnam," Harris said.
Bush himself has faced questions about whether he fulfilled his National Guard service requirements during the Vietnam war.
Harris said the accusations against both candidates "tells you a lot about their character."
While polls have shown most military veterans favor Bush over Kerry, not all think the candidates' Vietnam records should be election issues.
"They were different people back then," said Fred Otten, an Ashland man who served in the Air Force in Vietnam in 1968 and 1969. "As far as running a country, I don't think what they did back in those days should have anything to do with the election."
( Jon Brodkin can be reached at 508-626-4424 or jbrodkin@cnc.com. )
Go Low CARB
57-year-old veteran called for duty
This particular man has skin cancer & high blood pressure.
I say, send the CARBs: Cheney, Ashcroft, Rumsfield, & Bush.
Volunteering to serve their country would be a novel experience for Cheney, Ashcroft, & Bush.
Monday, August 23, 2004
Someone Agrees With Me!
Reader, you heard it here first. Paul Waldman at Gadflyer agrees with me:
Everyone knows the presidential election is going to be a squeaker.
Liberals are mad at Bush, but conservatives love him. For every blue state,
there's a red state. November 2nd is going to be a long night.But what if it
isn't? What if it isn't even close?Let me go out on a limb: John Kerry is going
to win the 2004 election – not by a nose, not by a chad, but by a
landslide.
Sunday, August 22, 2004
I Went To School With Doug Flutie
O'Neill took over Kerry's Swift Boat in 'Nam 2 month after he left it. He never met Kerry while in Vietnam. He never heard of him until the Nixon White House recruited him to go up against Kerry.
I, on the other hand, attended Boston College. Flutie came to Boston College 3 months after I graduated. I never met him. Therefore, I went to school with Doug Flutie.
Suicidal Soldiers
Just a heartbreaking story of a boy from Belchertown, Mass., who signed up at 18, was sent to Iraq, forced to kill innocent Iraqis, then killed himself when he got home.
The link is to the "Democracy Now" transcript of an interview with his heartbroken parents.
Kerry in a landslide.
It Ain't Over Until....
On a day when the race is the closest it's been since May:
AL East
W L Pct. GB
New York 76 47 .618 --
Boston 69 52 .570 6.0
Maybe they had the bright idea to put this in the Magazine section last Sunday, when the Yankees were ahead of the Red Sox by a season-high 10 1/2 games.
See you in Octo-buh.
See you there, too, Nomar.
Bad Dream Team
The men showed up late in the third quarter & suddenly they were the focus of MSCNBCBCNMBNC's coverage. Craig Sager did a 10 minute interview with coach Larry Brown, so that the audio completely ignored the game being shown. The camera slowly panned over the US men. There was Alan Iverson, staring vacantly into space and nodding to the music from his headphones. Ditto for LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, & Shawn Marion. (A second shot of Shawn Marion in his headphones showed him applauding a US basket, so he at least wasn't completely tuned out.) Only Emeka Okafor seemed to be paying attention to the game, standing & taking photos of his former schoolmates Diana Taurasi, Sue Bird & Swin Cash. Tim Duncan, headphones. Stephon Marbury, headphones.
The visual message from the US men was clear: they had been ordered to come to the game & they resented it. They had nothing to learn from the women. It was obvious even to the announcers. Mike Breen noted that they didn't seem to be watching the game. Craig Sager asked Brown a question about their seeming disinterest.
NBC goes to commercial, comes back & pans over the US men again. Lo & behold, all the headphones are gone! Every player has apparently during this timeout decided to take off his headphones!
You bet the word went down, whether from USA basketball or from the coaching staff, YOU FOOLS, you are embarrassing us & you are embarrassing yourselves.
I'd rather be represented by a competent group of college players than these spoiled, arrogant asses.
Go Lisa Leslie & the classy US women's team.
News From the Heartland
My Mom worked the Democratic Party booth for two hours on a hot Wednesday afternoon, and reported 5 people came to booth who said they had voted for Bush in 2000 but would vote for Kerry this time.
Later we met up with my cousin who is an attorney in Delaware County. He is a lifelong Republican. He said to me, "This race isn't as close as the polls say it is. I can't tell you how many people I've met who are fed up with Bush. Republicans who just won't vote for the guy. This thing with the Reserves and extending their tours has really hit hard around here."
Tuesday, August 10, 2004
Porter Goss, Re-thug-lican partisan
"Somebody sends me a blue dress and some DNA, I'll have an investigation,"
Goss said."
These thugs -- they're Republican first, American second.
Kerry in a landslide, so he can fire this jerk.
Monday, August 09, 2004
Bush-whacked
Sunday, August 08, 2004
Bush Intelligence -- Ultimate Oxymoron
LINK THE MOLE; TECH GENIUS OUTED FIENDS (from our friends, the ultra-liberal New York Post):
August 7, 2004 -- The Pakistani computer expert at the heart of al Qaeda's communications network has been cooperating with an anti-terror sting operation, it was disclosed yesterday.
But the revealing of Mohammad Naeem Noor Khan's name by U.S. officials may have jeopardized the effort to track down al Qaeda members through their e-mail exchanges with him, Pakistani officials said.
LINK Unmasking of Qaeda Mole a U.S. Security Blunder-Experts (from Reuters)
By Peter Graff
LONDON (Reuters) - The revelation that a mole within al Qaeda was exposed after Washington launched its "orange alert" this month has shocked security experts, who say the outing of the source may have set back the war on terror.
Reuters learned from Pakistani intelligence sources on Friday that computer expert Mohammad Naeem Noor Khan, arrested secretly in July, was working under cover to help the authorities track down al Qaeda militants in Britain and the United States when his name appeared in U.S. newspapers.
"After his capture he admitted being an al Qaeda member and agreed to send e-mails to his contacts," a Pakistani intelligence source told Reuters. "He sent encoded e-mails and received encoded replies. He's a great hacker and even the U.S. agents said he was a computer whiz."
Last Sunday, U.S. officials told reporters that someone held secretly by Pakistan was the source of the bulk of the information justifying the alert. The New York Times obtained Khan's name independently, and U.S. officials confirmed it when it appeared in the paper the next morning.
None of those reports mentioned at the time that Khan had been under cover helping the authorities catch al Qaeda suspects, and that his value in that regard was destroyed by making his name public.
A day later, Britain hastily rounded up terrorism suspects, some of whom are believed to have been in contact with Khan while he was under cover. Washington has portrayed those arrests as a major success, saying one of the suspects, named Abu Musa al-Hindi or Abu Eissa al-Hindi, was a senior al Qaeda figure.
But British police have acknowledged the raids were carried out in a rush. Suspects were dragged out of shops in daylight and caught in a high speed car chase, instead of the usual procedure of catching them at home in the early morning while they can offer less resistance.
"HOLY GRAIL" OF INTELLIGENCE
Security experts contacted by Reuters said they were shocked by the revelations that the source whose information led to the alert was identified within days, and that U.S. officials had confirmed his name.
"The whole thing smacks of either incompetence or worse," said Tim Ripley, a security expert who writes for Jane's Defense publications. "You have to ask: what are they doing compromising a deep mole within al Qaeda, when it's so difficult to get these guys in there in the first place? "It goes against all the rules of counter-espionage, counter-terrorism, running agents and so forth. It's not exactly cloak and dagger undercover work if it's on the front pages every time there's a development, is it?"
OK, people, it's time to send the amateurs packing and bring in the professionals. Kerry in a landslide, anyone?
They Hate Us
This Knight-Ridder report says the Iraqi security forces have melted away again. Therefore Allawi's Iraq government calls on the hated US military to restore order. And why do they hate us so?
LINK Abu Ghraib Victims Speak: Alleged Victim Calls U.S. Jailer Disgrace to All Civilized and Democratic Values
Maybe because, as in this quote from the ABC News article linked above:
"Most recent polls show between 80 percent and 90 percent of Iraqis call
Americans not liberators, but occupiers. And by a clear majority, Iraqis
want Americans to leave the country as soon as possible.
How did America lose the Iraqis' support? For many Iraqis, the answer
is Abu Ghraib."
Or maybe it's because we've killed over 10,000 Iraqis and the killing continues?
LINK Fighting spreads as U.S. troops kill 350 Iraqis
"The fighting in Najaf has included American F-15 fighter jets dropping
bombs, U.S. Apache helicopters shooting missiles and American tanks letting
loose with barrages of fire. "
LINK Clashes and Churches
A must-read post by River at Baghdad Burning. Here are the first two paragraphs:
"300+ dead in a matter of days in Najaf and Al Sadir City. Of course, they
are all being called 'insurgents'. The woman on TV wrapped in the abaya, lying
sprawled in the middle of the street must have been one of them too. Several
explosions rocked Baghdad today- some government employees were told not to go
to work tomorrow.
So is this a part of the reconstruction effort promised to the Shi'a in the
south of the country? Najaf is considered the holiest city in Iraq. It is
visited by Shi'a from all over the world, and yet, during the last two days, it
has seen a rain of bombs and shells from none other than the 'saviors' of the
oppressed Shi'a- the Americans. So is this the 'Sunni Triangle' too? It's deja
vu- corpses in the streets, people mourning their dead and dying and buildings
up in flames. The images flash by on the television screen and it's Falluja all
over again. Twenty years from now who will be blamed for the mass graves being
dug today?"
So, here's the big question: Why has the SCLM stopped covering the war in Iraq? More Americans were killed in July than in June, yet the war virtually disappeared from the television screens. We will hit the 1000 American death mark sometime in September yet those deaths are not marked or solemnized by the mainstream media.
We Closed Saddam's Torture Rooms & Opened Allawi's
Great, our soldiers find Iraqis torturing Iraqi prisoners & are ordered -- ORDERED, by their superior officers -- to let them alone. Let the torture continue, it's not our concern, it's their government now.
Think about this next time you hear Bush touting freedom, given to us all by god.
Kerry in a landslide.
Curse of the Bambino
But Theo? You just traded a first ballot Hall of Famer for two guys who are going to have to buy bus tickets to get to Cooperstown? Dude, get ready to be looking for another job in a few years. This one's gonna hurt us for a long time. Not that we thought you were a fine judge of horseflesh after you traded Shea Hillenbrand, .300 career hitter, for Byung Hyun Kim, pitcher & head case. Why would you trade for a pitcher who melted down against the Yankees in the World Serious? Ah, the eternal mystery & pain of being a Sox fan.
Good luck Nomar. If the Red Sox aren't going to win the World Series this year (they may not even get the wild card) I'll be rooting for the Cubbies.
LINK This was a bad deal: How could the Sox deal Nomar without getting a pitcher in return?
LINK (From El Guapo's Ghost blog) NOMAH FIVE IS NO MORE
LINK Jim Fennell:Don’t blame Nomar for this one, Sox fans
LINK (registration required) Trashing of Garciaparra continues in Boston
OK, this article is so good I will put it in in its entirety:
By RICK MORRISSEYChicago Tribune
CHICAGO - Day 4 of the attempted demolition of Nomar Garciaparra included an assertion by Red Sox owner John Henry that his former shortstop recently had to be talked out of demanding a trade.
This followed accusations in Boston that Garciaparra was a slacker, a malcontent, a clubhouse cancer, selfish, weird, an injury waiting to happen, a faker, a liar and anything else you can think of except a cheap tipper, although that's being nvestigated.
The way it's going, Day 6 will dawn with news that Garciaparra often wore lacy Yankees-logo undergarments and that close personal friend Osama bin Laden, though thinking the bra was a bit much, approved.
The Red Sox know they messed up. We know the Red Sox know they messed up because, ever since they dealt him to the Cubs, they have tried to tear him down. This is what you do to buildings that are dilapidated and lack character. You don't do it to one of the best players in team history.
But the Red Sox carry on, sledgehammer in hand, because they know they received the weaker part of the deal. They know their fans are upset about losing a Boston icon, a man with a career .323 batting average.
I'm not sure I can recall such a lengthy, all-out verbal assault on one player after he had been traded. Know this: The harsher the attacks, the more indignant the protests, the more likely it is that a team is doing the backstroke. The Red Sox have backstroked so much, they're halfway to Europe and spitting out saltwater.
Garciaparra is a Cub now, and although it's all that matters, he would need news conferences between innings to answer the onslaught of charges against him. Somehow he has managed to play well.
The most surprising thing is that his Achilles' tendon, the one that kept him out 57 games this year, hasn't turned into angel-hair pasta. The Red Sox seem to be waiting for that to happen. That, or they're waiting for his Pinocchio nose to take out about seven Cubs' kneecaps in the team clubhouse. They can't seem to decide whether he's delicate or disingenuous.
The Red Sox are getting heat for acquiring Doug Mientkiewicz and Orlando Cabrera in the four-team trade that sent Garciaparra to Chicago. You'd get blow-torched, too, if you made that deal. What they'd like everyone to know is: It's not our fault! That's what all this petulance is about.
The Red Sox weren't able to sign Nomar to a four-year, $60 million contract extension, presumably because Garciaparra didn't like the deferred money in the deal. The Red Sox didn't like their chances of signing him when he became a free agent after this season. So they traded him. Fine. But be adults and swallow it.
They aren't talking much about their role in the lead-up to the trade. They're the team that tried to acquire superstar Alex Rodriguez in the off-season. They're the team that would have traded Garciaparra if the Rangers had traded Rodriguez to Boston.
If you were trying to offend a man who considers himself one of the best shortstops in the game, the best way to go about it would be by trying to acquire Alex Rodriguez.
They expected a proud superstar to put it all behind him? To remember it's just business and to not take it personally? And yet, despite the slap in the face from the Red Sox, Garciaparra and his agent both have denied that he wanted out of Boston.
Trying to put the blame on Garciaparra for Saturday's trade is like blaming Hawaii for Pearl Harbor. This is about Red Sox officials Larry Lucchino and Boy Wonder Theo Epstein attempting to clean up their mess without getting dirty. The egg on their faces would seem to indicate they haven't succeeded.
So almost a week after the trade, Garciaparra is still defending himself against an extremely defensive franchise. Character witness Todd Walker, a former teammate in Boston and a current one in Chicago, said Garciaparra was well-liked in the Red Sox's clubhouse. That doesn't match up with the characterization in the Boston media of him as "cancer."
Wonder where that could have come from.
How the trade will be remembered will depend on how well Garciaparra plays and whether, perish the thought, he wins a World Series ring somewhere other than Boston. It won't be the curse of the Bambino, but it will feel like a close relative.LINK From the ObeyPedro blog:
The best quote I've read so far concerning the Garciaparra trade has to be from Larry Mahnken:
Meanwhile the Red Sox pointed a shotgun at their face, pulled the trigger, and said, "I think we look better now." A lot of reports list the Red Sox as trade deadline winners, which is true only in the sense that everyone who participates in the Special Olympics is a winner.
I don't necessarily agree with him, especially now that Bellhorn is on the DL with a broken thumb, but it's funny nonetheless.
Saturday, August 07, 2004
Terror Alerts Are Always Political
This links to a great aricle which points out what Tom Ridge's terror alerts respond to. Bad news on Enron? Bad news on Iraq? Bad news on the economy? Good Democratic convention? Next step: Be afraid, be very afraid, get the SCLM* to knock that bad news off the front page for even scarier news.
Kerry in a landslide.
*So-Called Liberal Media
Thursday, July 29, 2004
Manchester United v. Celtic -- 1-2 -- July 28, 2004
It was a fun game to watch, though not as good as last year's game against a better team, Barcelona. Man U. at least made an attempt to field a good squad. (They played their first game in Chicago last weekend, and only one starter even played. It was Captain Roy Keane and a bunch of raw recruits. Like going to see the New York Yankees and having them show up with Derek Jeter and the Columbus farm team.) So I was relieved when Man. U. started Tim Howard at goal, a back line of Specter, Keane & Gary Neville, John O'Shea, Phil Neville, Djemba-Djemba, and Richardson at midfield, and Alan Smith, Eagles and Bellion up front.
I have to admit, the only people I knew on Celtic before this game were Henrik Larssen (who is now gone, recently signed by Barcelona) and their coach, the incomparable Martin O'Neil. O'Neil did show up, even though he missed Celtic's first two games of the tour as he was home with his wife who is seriously ill. Celtic is pretty lame without Larssen's punch.
It was a chippy game right from the start. The new kid Eagles (a dead ringer for Colin Ferrell, minus the cigarette) made a bad foul on a Celtic player in the first 5 minutes, sending the guy off for stitches. Then poor Specter (hope I'm spelling it right, he's also a newbie) made a horrible pass to the center of the field from the corner of the box and committed a foul to stop the sure goal. One penalty kick later and it was 1-0 Celtic.
Man U. came back with a nice goal in the second half on a set piece. Eagles took the corner kick and sent it right to Alan Smith who headed it in. I am really impressed by Smith. Mom has liked him for a long time & can't figure out why he hasn't been named to the England squad.
The second Celtic goal was a nightmare. Celtic sent a long pass to Beattie in the corner, and Roy Keane made a long & valiant run attempting to stop him. He intercepted him but fell as the ball spurted out. Timmy Howard came out trying to cut off the angle & Beattie nutmegged him. Ugly. The Celtic fans were jubilant.
Howard had a terrible game, looked very rusty. He almost gave up a third goal when he attempted to catch a simple shot which went through his hands & bounced off his chest. Djemba-Djemba saved his bacon by clearing the ball off the goal line.
About 15 minutes into the second half the Man U. began warming up their subs. The bench pretty much got cleared, meaning we got to see Diego Forlan (also known as Forlorn for his lack of goal scoring since coming to MUFC) & Ryan Giggs, the best Welsh player in the world. Plus more of the back benchers, Luke Chadwick, Bardsley, & others. Giggs is coming off an injury & was carefully monitored, worked out & massaged by a personal coach before coming in the 77th minute. The last 15 minutes of play were exciting with Man U. rush after Man U. rush but they just couldn't finish.
It began to rain during the 85th minute & everyone scrambled into their ponchos (no umbrellas allowed, more ridiculous antiterrorism stuff). At the end of the game both teams just hustled off the field. I guess the thrill of being in the US is gone. Last year both teams circled the field after the game, applauding the fans.
The game was played at Lincoln Financial Field, the home of the Philadelphia Eagles. I saw Man U. play Barcelona there last summer, which was the first ever event at Lincoln Financial Field. So last year, being that it was the first ever event and all, I could forgive them for the snafus at the concession stands. I stood in line for the entire halftime to get my diabetic mother a hotdog for dinner. They had hotdogs, but couldn't figure out how to turn on the hotdog cooker. So mom had peanuts for dinner.
This year, my sister & I stood in line for 25 minutes to find that at 7:35, 25 minutes before game time, they were already out of hamburgers, cheeseburgers and chicken sandwiches. Before the game even started! They had sold over 55,000 tickets and ran out of food before the game started! Whoever runs the concession stands is truly incompetent.
But that was the only negative of a great night. Saturday Mom & I travel to Giants stadium in NY for Man U. v. AC Milan. Whee-hoo!
LINK
Friday, July 23, 2004
Halliburton stealing our $$$$
I read the NYTimes and the WashPost this morning but it was not until I went on the Knight-Ridder site that I saw this little gem about Halliburton: Knight-Ridder story
"Three whistleblowers Thursday charged - and top executives strongly denied - that spending by Defense contractor Halliburton in Iraq was reckless and wasteful. They said the company's KBR unit charged the government $45 for cases of soda, submitted $100 bills for laundry, put up personnel in five-star hotels and abandoned $85,000 trucks on roadsides because of flat tires.......
Truckers Warren and David Wilson of Venus, Fla., said KBR did almost no routine maintenance on its vehicles, which at times meant trucks had to be abandoned when they broke down.
KBR transportation chief Keith Richard denied those charges, saying regular maintenance was performed every two weeks.
Ten other current and former KBR truckers who spoke with Knight Ridder sided with Wilson and Warren, however.
"I never got a truck maintenanced the whole time I was there," former driver Shane Ratliff of Ruby, S.C., told Knight Ridder in April. "
But of course, the Republican-controlled House refuses to do anything.


