Michael Yon’s latest Dispatch is titled Bless the Beasts and The Children. It is a haunting post, the kind that will stay with you for hours, if not days.

I told the Iraqi commander, Captain Baker, that it was important that Americans see this; he took me around the graves and showed more than I wanted to see. He said the people had been murdered by al Qaeda. I made video of him speaking, and of the horrible scene. The heat and stench were crushingly oppressive and broken only by the sounds of shovels as Iraqi soldiers kept digging.

I warn you, the post contains some graphic images. As always with Michael, you get the good, the bad and the ugly. This is ugly.

Michael continues to provide the most balanced, comprehensive coverage of the situation in Iraq. He is completely independent and supported by his readers. Help him out if you can.

Kevin on June 28th, 2007

Meet Christian Bagge. Christian was wounded in Iraq, a double-amputee. You can read his story here .

Christian Bagge participates in sports – running, golf, biking. He mows his own lawn and does his own home repairs. He works on the Wounded Soldier Project and is a spokesman for the American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial Foundation, which is raising funds for a memorial to wounded veterans. He also speaks at events around the country, but especially enjoys speaking to school children.

ChristianBagge

Christian is a finalist in the Energizer “Keep Going” Hall of Fame. You can Vote for Christian here .

Gregg on June 25th, 2007

Amity Shlaes debunks the most common claims of the liberal-Left regarding FDR’s New Deal.

Roosevelt did famously well by one measure, the political poll. He flunked by two other meters that we today know are critically important: the unemployment rate and the Dow Jones Industrial Average. In his first inaugural address, Roosevelt spoke of a primary goal: “to put people to work.” Unemployment stood at 20% in 1937, five years into the New Deal. As for the Dow, it did not come back to its 1929 level until the 1950s. International factors and monetary errors cannot entirely account for these abysmal showings.

With regard to the main claim often posited by liberals such as the late Arthur Schlesinger, that Herbert Hoover was a right winger whose laissez-faire caused the 1929 Crash and the resulting Great Depression:

But a review of the new president’s actions reveals him to be a control freak, an interventionist in spite of himself. Hoover signed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, which worsened a global downturn, even though he had long lived in London and understood better than almost anyone the interconnectedness of markets. He also bullied companies into maintaining high wages and keeping employees on their payrolls when they could ill afford to do so. Perhaps worst of all, he berated the stock market as a speculative sinner even though he knew better. For example, Hoover opposed shorting as a practice, a policy that frightened markets at an especially vulnerable time.

As to the claim that the “Brain Trusters” of the Rosevelt Administration who developed the alphabet New Deal programs were “moderate.”

In the summer of 1927, a group of future New Dealers, mostly junior professors or minor union officials, were received by Stalin for a full six hours when they traveled on a junket to the Soviet Union. Both Stalin’s Russia and Mussolini’s Italy influenced the New Deal enormously. The Brain Trusters were not, for the most part, fascists or communists. They were thoughtful people who wrote in the New Republic. But their ideas were wrong. Their intense romanticization of the concept of the economy of scale ignored the small man. One of the New Dealers from the old Soviet trip, Rex Tugwell, even created his very own version of Animal Farm in Casa Grande, Ariz. As in the Orwell book, the farmers revolted.

The third major claim is that Rosevelt inspired the American people and that his New Deal programs got America through the Depression.

Roosevelt’s radio voice may have inspired — yes. But the New Deal hurt the economy, and that mattered more. At some points Roosevelt seemed to understand the need to counter deflation. But his method for doing so generated a whole new set of uncertainties. Roosevelt personally experimented with the currency — one day, in bed, he raised the gold price by 21 cents. When Henry Morgenthau, who would shortly become Treasury Secretary, asked him why, Roosevelt said that “it’s a lucky number, because it’s three times seven.” Morgenthau wrote later: “If anybody ever knew how we set the gold price through a combination of lucky numbers, etc., I think they would be frightened.”

And the author concludes:

In the past half-century, we have learned that much of our capital comes from the private sector, not the public sector, and that most of our growth inheres in the private sector. After the 1980s and 1990s we know that markets can do much of the work that Roosevelt believed only government capital could do.

If only today’s Big Government Democrats(and even some purported conservative Republiacans) would learn what we now know(and have known for many years) that Rosevelt’s New Deal Programs only exacerbated the Grat Depression and that the best way to generate economic growth is not via government socialist entitlement programs but via low taxes, regulations, and the competitive free market.

Gregg on June 25th, 2007

That’s the conclusion that Joshua Muravchik reaches in today’s Wall St. Journal with his piece (subs req) entitled “Winds of War.”

Today, this same dynamic is creating a moment of great danger. The radicals are becoming reckless, asserting themselves for little reason beyond the conviction that they can. They are very likely to overreach. It is not hard to imagine scenarios in which a single match–say a terrible terror attack from Gaza–could ignite a chain reaction. Israel could handle Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria, albeit with painful losses all around, but if Iran intervened rather than see its regional assets eliminated, could the U.S. stay out?
With the Bush administration’s policies having failed to pacify Iraq, it is natural that the public has lost patience and that the opposition party is hurling brickbats. But the demands of congressional Democrats that we throw in the towel in Iraq, their attempts to constrain the president’s freedom to destroy Iran’s nuclear weapons program, the proposal of the Baker-Hamilton commission that we appeal to Iran to help extricate us from Iraq–all of these may be read by the radicals as signs of our imminent collapse. In the name of peace, they are hastening the advent of the next war.

The only thing that bullies respect is strength. Trying to achieve “peace” via negotions and diplomacy with those intent on destroying us at all costs who don’t believe that our Western ideals and beliefs are compatible with theirs will only prolong and exascerbate the inevitable. Western Civilization and Jihadist Barbarism cannot peacefully co-exist. It seems to me that diplomacy with Iran and Syria are useless (despite what Ambassador Pelosi may say). Time to send them a message that there will be consequences for their repeated acts of war and agression against the free world. And that will be the most effective way to achieve the “peace” that so many desire and the quickest way to “bring home the troops.”

It was a pleasure to welcome Bill Roggio and Bruce McQuain, who gave us an overview of Operation Phantom Thunder, the major offensive unfolding in Iraq. This was a very interesting, extended discussion of the strategy and tactics at work. There was praise for Gen. Petraeus and a few swipes at the MSM, and the president, for their respective shortcomings.

Bruce and Bill provided incredibly valuable analysis for those who still care about Iraq.

Bill is one of the sharpest analysts on the long war, period. It was great to welcome him back to the show. Tonight he joined us from vacation. Previously, he’s joined us from Kabul, Afghanistan, the Milblog Conference and Iraq.


What is Pundit Review Radio?

Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week Kevin and Gregg give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Hailed as “Groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 7-10pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

Kevin on June 24th, 2007

Someone You Should Know is a weekly series that highlights the battlefield heroics of our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Bruce McQuain from QandO, a Vietnam veteran with 28-year’s experience in the U.S. Army, does a wonderful job with the series because he knows of what he speaks and he is an incredible writer and narrator.

Tonight he told us about Maj. James Gant who serves as chief of the Iraqi National Police, Quick Reaction Force Battalion Transition Team in the area of Balad, Iraq.

Maj.JimGant

As part of his Project Hero series at QandO, Bruce said the following about Jim Gant,

His story is an incredible one and highlights the determination and professionalism these fine soldiers take to this tough and mostly unnoticed job.

The Someone You Should Know radio collaboration began as an extension of Matt Burden’s series at Blackfive.


What is Pundit Review Radio?

Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week Kevin and Gregg give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Hailed as “Groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 7-10pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

We had an lively and fun discussion about the media, new and old, with Town Hall’s Dean Barnett and Paul Gillin, author of The New Influencers: A Marketer’s Guide to the New Social Media. Paul predicts that in a few years, we will be left with five national newspapers, and local papers. Big dailies like to the Globe will be obsolete, unable to align their cost structure with future prospects.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week Kevin and Gregg give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Hailed as “Groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 7-10pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.