Kevin on May 18th, 2009

marine-cpl-jason-jones-awarded-silver-star

Bruce McQuain from Blackfive joined us once again for Someone You Should Know, our weekly tribute to the troops. Bruce spent 28 years in the U.S. Army and he is a veteran of the Vietnam war. He brings a perspective and understanding to these stories that we could never match.

Tonight, Bruce told us about Marine Cpl. Jason Jones,

Cpl. Jason Jones, one of three Marines embedded with the two platoons of soldiers, seized the initiative and began firing his weapon at the enemy while encouraging and guiding his comrades to organize a counter attack.

Jones’ actions grew bolder as casualties mounted and the firefight intensified.

He sprinted across the terrain under heavy enemy fire to a wounded Afghan soldier and pulled him to safety as rocket-propelled grenades and small-arms fire exploded around them. But the fight was not over. Members of the U.S. Army platoon were pinned down.

“We got a call on the radio saying “we’re dying, we’re dying and I’m the last one left,” said Jones, the 24 year-old native of San Angelo, Texas. “I figured we needed to do something about it.”

With bullets still flying, Jones again crossed 130 meters of fire-swept ground wielding a M-240B machine gun. Jones, with fire support from other members of the team, suppressed the attackers long enough to allow him to reach the wounded soldiers and provide life-saving aid.

For his valor, heroism and bravery under fire, Jones was awarded the Silver Star, the third highest decoration a U.S. service member can receive.

The Someone You Should Know radio collaboration began as an extension of Matt Burden’s series at Blackfive. Bruce does an incredible job with the series every week. The Pundit Review Radio Podcast RSS feed can be found here.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

As we do every Sunday at 9pm, we welcomed Bruce McQuain from QandO and the number one milblog Blackfive back to the show. Before we got to this weekend’s edition of Someone You Should Know, we spent a few weeks chatting about the week that was.

We discussed Obama’s decision to reverse himself on releasing the so-called “torture photos” and on the use of military tribunals. Yes, he flip-flopped, but what is most important is that he landed in the right place.

Unfortunately for Obama, his wise eversals were completely overshadowed by San Fran Nan and amateur hour press conference where she accused the CIA of regularly lying to Congress. Pelosi was left to twist in the wind by not only her number 2, Steney Hoeyer, who said “he did not reach that conclusion” about CIA briefings. CIA Director Panetta didn’t just throw her under the bus, he backed it up and ran over her again for good measue. Most importantly, President Obama left Pelosi twisting and alone.

Only a media that loses interest in the story can save Pelosi now. Odds of that happening, 50-50.

The Pundit Review Radio Podcast RSS feed can be found here.

What is Pundit Review Radio?

Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called "groundbreaking" by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston's Talk Station.

Kevin on May 14th, 2009

If you are a Lincoln buff then you must read Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer by James L. Swanson. This book is riveting and it reads like a novel. The book is really sensational. Large portions are dedicated to the assasination itself, obviously, and Ford’s Theater and the Petersen House across the street where Lincoln died are central characters in the story.

I had some time to kill yesterday in Washington DC so I did what any good history buff/political junkie would do. Sightseeing! One of the few things left in Washington DC that I had not seen was the Ford Theater and Petersen House.

Ford’s Theater
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The President’s Box
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Here is a portion of the tour guides description of events on that terrible evening

This photo below was taken directly in front of the Ford Theater facing the Petersen House, the red brick building. Realizing that Lincoln’s wounds were mortal, they were simply looking for a place where he could rest in peace. The Petersen House at that time was a boarding house and the owner heard the commotion following the assassination and was on those front steps and called for Lincoln to be brought into the home, which he was. He died there some eight hours later.

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You’ll notice the long line of people waiting to get in. By a stroke of good fortune, I was walking by between tours and started chatting up the tour guide. We talked a bit about the book Manhunt and I learned that like me, she was a Massachusetts native, originally from Lowell. Since the house was empty, she agreed to give me a personal tour. It was very cool. It was also kind of creppy to be in the same place where such a monumental and horrible event took place. The lighting gets worse in each successive room, apologies.

Here is the first room, immediately to the left of the door. This is forever known as Mary’s waiting room. She stayed in this room for most of the evening, only a few feet away from her mortally wounded husband.

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Only a few feet away is the room which became The Temporary Seat of Government. In this room, Lincoln’s cabinet waited, prayed and started the investigation into the assassination. It is just stunning to actually see how small and close together these rooms are.

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The third and final room on the first floor is the bedroom at the end of the hall where the greatest American who ever lived, died.

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And here is a replica of the bed where Lincoln drew his last breath,
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“And now he belongs to the ages.”
Edwin M. Stanton, Secretary of War

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From Sports by Brooks,

A guy who goes by the moniker Bald Vinny Milano steps up to the plate and describes what happened:

“I was at the game tonight, and the kid in front of me was eating a hot dog. Out of the corner of my eye, I spot a big patch of green mold on the bottom of the bun. I warned the guy about two bites before he ate the moldy bread, and he practically threw up. I can’t believe that would even happen at a place like Yankee Stadium. There are really expensive, high class places to eat in the stadium, but somehow a moldy hot dog roll made its way to a CUSTOMER! I was so shocked, I took a picture of it. Here is the kicker…he went back to the concession stand, and they would not give him another hot dog! They offered him another bun, but not a replacement dog!”

I’m surprised the concessionaires didn’t try to pass off the mold as guacamole.

I would question the truthiness of this story if it was coming from a Red Sox or Mets blog. But it’s coming from a Yankees fan site, and why would they besmirch their favorite team with such a foul stadium food story? As if the astronomical ticket prices weren’t enough to make your average Yanks fan sick.

So last Tuesday my six year old daughter finished her third piano lesson. She was clearly loving it and showing quite a bit of natural ability. When I went home that night, my wife and I decided that we needed to get her something to practice on. We were thinking a desktop keyboard, something small to start with. Just for the hell of it, I checked Craig’s List and came across a fresh post for an upright piano. The best part, it was for $150 delivered! Not only that, the piano was tuned perfectly. On Wednesday morning, I took my daughter to school and an hour later, the piano was delivered. Needless to say, when she came home from school that afternoon, she was so excited. It was like Christmas, only better, because it was so unexpected.

This weekend I set the DVR to tape Diana Krall Live in Paris from 2001. This has long been one of my favorite Jazz CDs. I’ve listened to it literally hundreds of times. However, I’d never seen this concert film. When my daughter came down stairs this morning, we sat together and I told her I had something to show her. I hit play, and we watched this, the opening song,

The look on my daughter’s face was priceless. Her eyes were as big as saucers. What an inspiration it was for her to see a “girl”, as she put it, playing piano like that! It was just a great moment, and a reminder what an influence people like musicians and athletes have on young people. Diana Krall, you’ve touched a six year old and inspired her. Now please don’t go and get busted for taking steroids!

HYPOCRISY

When will President Obama be called to account for his breathtaking hypocrisy on the way the United States conducts this war on terror man caused disasters?

So far, thanks to his servants friends in the media, he has been able to minimize the damage. After only 100 days, one thing has become clear about this administration. The only time of the week worth paying attention is on Friday nights. Why? It’s PR Rule #1, when you have news your trying to bury….release it on a Friday night. As Bruce has noted at QandO, inconvenient news about military tribunals and GITMO has been leaked by the administration two Friday evenings in a row. Bruce asks,

Could the administration be any more obvious in their attempts to “hide” this story?

Um. No. On the plus side, Captain Ed notes about their use of the Friday evening drop,

Give the Obama administration credit for being quick studies in at least one area.

Here’s the news leaked last Friday evening, to their friends at the New York Times,

U.S. May Revive Guantánamo Military Courts

The Obama administration is moving toward reviving the military commission system for prosecuting Guantánamo detainees, which was a target of critics during the Bush administration, including Mr. Obama himself. Officials said the first public moves could come as soon as next week, perhaps in filings to military judges at the United States naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, outlining an administration plan to amend the Bush administration’s system to provide more legal protections for terrorism suspects. Continuing the military commissions in any form would probably prompt sharp criticism from human rights groups as well as some of Mr. Obama’s political allies because the troubled system became an emblem of the effort to use Guantánamo to avoid the American legal system.

Before we move on to this week’s attempt at news burial, let’s reconsider what Senator Obama said about these military commissions. Why, because when it comes to Obama, it is all about the difference between his words and his deeds. Here is Senator Obama speaking on the floor of the Senate on the Military Commissions Act of 2006,

Instead of detainees arriving at Guantanamo and facing a Combatant Status Review Tribunal that allows them no real chance to prove their innocence with evidence or a lawyer, we could have developed a real military system of justice that would sort out the suspected terrorists from the accidentally accused.

And instead of not just suspending, but eliminating, the right of habeas corpus–the seven century-old right of individuals to challenge the terms of their own detention, we could have given the accused one chance–one single chance–to ask the Government why they are being held and what they are being charged with.

But politics won today. Politics won. The administration got its vote, and now it will have its victory lap, and now they will be able to go out on the campaign trail and tell the American people that they were the ones who were tough on the terrorists….The sad part about all of this is that this betrayal of American values is unnecessary.

Ok, back to the present. This Friday, the friendlies at The Washington Post got the story,

Obama Set to Revive Military Commissions: Changes Would Boost Detainee Rights

The Obama administration is preparing to revive the system of military commissions established at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, under new rules that would offer terrorism suspects greater legal protections, government officials said.

The rules would block the use of evidence obtained from coercive interrogations, tighten the admissibility of hearsay testimony and allow detainees greater freedom to choose their attorneys, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The military commissions have allowed the trial of terrorism suspects in a setting that favors the government and protects classified information, but they were sharply criticized during the administration of President George W. Bush. “By any measure, our system of trying detainees has been an enormous failure,” then-candidate Barack Obama said in June 2008.

At first blush, the narrative works for President Obama. He was concerned as a Senator about terrorists rights and due process, and now as President, he is making those changes….except for the following, a must-read from Andy McCarthy, a former Asst. U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York who has worked on a number of high profile terrorism cases. McCarthy has a fantastic post at The Corner in which he slams the reporting by the Post, and the unbeleivable hypocrisy of President Obama,

The Obama commissions will be, in every material way, exactly the same as the Bush Commissions: they will allow the trial of terrorism suspects in a setting that favors the government and protects classified information, and they will be criticized — perhaps not quite as sharply, but sharply — by the same hard Lefties that Obama and Holder were courting during the campaign.

The media will never tell you that the Bush commission trials (as I’ve previously recounted, here) provided elaborate protections for war crimes defendants, such as:

the presumption of innocence;
the imposition of the burden of proof on the prosecution;
the right to counsel—both to a military lawyer provided at the expense of the American taxpayer and to a private attorney if the combatant chooses to retain one;
the right to be presented with the charges in advance of trial;
access to evidence the prosecution intends to introduce and to any exculpatory evidence known to the prosecution;
access to interpreters as necessary to assist in understanding the proceedings;
the right to a trial presumptively open to the public (except for portions sealed for national defense or witness security purposes);
the free choice to testify or decline to do so;
the right against any negative inference from a refusal to testify;
access to reasonably available evidence and witnesses;
access to investigative resources as “necessary for a full and fair trial”; and
the right to present evidence and to cross-examine witnesses.

Those are just some of the trial rights. There are, furthermore, elaborate sentencing procedures and a multi-tiered military appellate process at which a convicted combatant could get a guilty verdict or sentence reversed without ever having to appeal in the civilian courts. As Powerline’s Scott Johnson has pointed out, these protections for our current enemies markedly outstrip the paltry safeguards given the Nazis at Nuremburg—notwithstanding that Nuremburg, an international tribunal that afforded no right to American civilian court review, is celebrated by the Left (and was fondly recalled by candidate Obama) as a triumph of the “rule of law.”

The Obama campaign slandered the commissions, just like it slandered Gitmo, military detention, coercive interrogations, the state secrets doctrine, extraordinary rendition, and aggressive national-security surveillance. Gitmo is still open (and Obama and Holder now admit it’s a first-rate facility), we are still detaining captives (except when Obama releases dangerous terrorists), the Obama Justice Department has endorsed the Bush legal analysis of torture law in federal court, and Obama has endorsed state secrets, extraordinary rendition, and national-security surveillance (and the Bush stance on surveillance has since been reaffirmed by the federal court created to rule on such issues).

Do these people ever get called on their hypocrisy?

Once again, um, no.

As McCarthy noted, the sad fact is that Obama’s hypocrisy on the war on terror man caused disasters goes far beyond GITMO and the Tribunals. Essentially, everything this guy campaigned on, railed against and said were “fundamental issues” about “basic values” has been forgotten or abandoned as he grapples with the awesome responsibility of the presidency, rather than the easy oratory of a candidate.

A terrific blog post by American University Law Professor Darren Hutchison at Dissenting Justice neatly summarizes the ever-growing list of war on terror man caused disaster hypocrisy from President Obama,

The Obama administration has embraced many of the same positions that liberals and Obama himself criticized during the Bush administration. For example:

* Obama and members of his administration have embraced the use of rendition. Many of Obama’s most ardent defenders blasted progressives who criticized Obama on rendition as jumping the gun. Today, their arguments look even more problematic than in the past.

* Obama has invoked the maligned “state secrets” defense as a complete bar to lawsuits challenging potential human rights and constitutional law violations.

* Obama has argued that detainees at Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan do not qualify for habeas corpus rights, even though many of the detainees at the facility were not captured in the war or in Afghanistan.

* Even though it no longer uses the phrase “enemy combatants,” the Obama administration has taken the position that the government can indefinitely detain individuals, whether or not they engaged in torture and whether or not they fought the United States on the “battlefield.” This logic combined with the denial of habeas to detainees in Afghanistan could make Bagram the functional equivalent of Guantanamo Bay.

* Now, it is clear that the Obama administration will use a “kinder, gentler” military commissions process to prosecute terrorism suspects — despite liberal condemnation of the proceedings during the Bush administration and the curtailment of due process that this decision will naturally involve.

It remains unclear, however, whether these contradictions will erode any of Obama’s political support. Despite his blatant departure from some of the most important progressive issues that defined his campaign, most liberals remain quite pleased with Obama’s performance.

It says so much about Obama, and his supporters. They are hypocrites of the worst kind. Candidate Obama and his supporters thought they were railing against George W. Bush when they were really trashing the United States of America. The things they said about GITMO, military tribunals, rendition, waterboarding and all the rest, did more damage to the United States and its reputation than any of the policies actually put into place by the Bush administration. They gleefully helped spin a narrative about the U.S., torture and Human Rights that has badly damaged our reputation. President Obama talks endlessly about our “restoring our reputation in the world” and has traveled much of it already, apologizing for the U.S. at nearly every stop. His mission is all the more complicated becuase he is trying “restore” something using essentially the same tools in the war on terror man caused disasters as that evil bastard, our torture president, George W. Bush.

Maybe, just maybe, the previous administration put into place an agggressive series of measures that were carefully considered in order to protect the United States? What other conclusion can you reach if so many of them are suddenly acceptable to our new president?

Hypocrisy, they name is Obama.

Kevin on May 9th, 2009

TN Senate To Vote On Al Gore Statue
Resolution Previously Passed House Unanimously

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A resolution urging the creation of statues to be built on the Tennessee Capitol grounds of the state’s two Nobel Peace Prize winners, Al Gore and Cordell Hull, is on its way to a full Senate vote. The Senate State and Local Government Committee on Tuesday advanced the measure supporting the privately funded statues on a 9-0 vote. The resolution previously passed in the House unanimously. Gore was awarded his Nobel prize in 2007 for his work on global warming, while Hull received the award in 1945 for his role in creating the United Nations and improving international trade relations.

Both men served as Democratic congressmen and senators from Tennessee before moving on to the executive branch, Hull as secretary of state and Gore as vice president.

Here are a few suggestions…

libertyunderwater

global_warming

gorebulbs

SnowinVegas

frozen_gore

polarbearforgore

the-goracle