Archive for March, 2008

Cornell’s Winter Soldier

The fifth anniversary of the start of the War on Iraq was a couple weeks ago, and the Cornell community has been “commemorating” ever since.  One of my lectures last week was centered on the situation in Iraq, a protester on Ho Plaza about peed himself when I said I support the war, and the Cornell Daily Sun is still publishing guest columns by everyone and anyone who has an opinion about the war.  It’s similar to when the 2000th soldier died in Iraq.  Anti-war protesters already had their posters painted and demonstrations planned.  It was as if they were looking forward to it.

I was actually impressed with the Sun on March 25, when they published a guest column by Patrick Byers ‘08, a veteran of three deployments to Iraq.  Unlike all the white people with dreads, Byers has a pretty unique perspective on the war.

In “Life During Wartime“, he writes:

The truth is that it is not the Army that discriminates against other members of the Cornell community. The truth is it is the Cornell community that discriminates against veterans, not openly or intentionally but regularly none-the-less. I wonder where my support group is on campus in any form similar to one established for LGBT? When I report to Gannett for counseling it’s mentioned that I might be better off seeking help through the VA. The truth is my only true resource is the VFW downtown, further extricating me from the Cornell community. I bet I’m not the only veteran who’s felt this way.

Just another manifestation of Open Doors, Open Hearts, Open Minds… eh?

Today, the Sun published another guest column, this time by Perry O’Brien ‘08 who served one tour of duty in Afghanistan.

In “This Winter’s Soldiers“, O’Brien writes of his experience as a medic with the 82nd Airborne Division:

As part of the humanitarian component of our mission, we also offered emergency care to local civilians who had been involved in accidents or caught in the crossfire between U.S. soldiers and Afghan resistance fighters. As might be expected, many of our patients didn’t survive. Rather than preparing these corpses for burial, however, as was always done with dead American soldiers, a different policy was followed for Afghans. After dying, Afghan corpses were routinely used as teaching tools for medical “practice.”

The first time this happened, I was re-stocking one of our trauma stations when I heard an officer yell out from the surgery room: “Who wants to see what a human heart feels like?” Following surgery, the patient’s chest had been cracked open to reveal the thoracic cavity. Soldiers were invited to come into the surgery room, don gloves, and feel around inside the body. Some took pictures. It was an informative lesson on human anatomy, but it was also a flagrant violation of both the Hippocratic Oath and international law, to say nothing of common sense morality.

The rest of the column is basically the same song and dance.  Leftist anti-war activists claim to “Support the Troops, Not the War”… but how can they morally justify supporting the troops when they believe the troops commit horrific human rights violations such as those described by O’Brien?  Answer:  they don’t support the troops.

On the other hand, I don’t buy into the story O’Brien and his fellow anti-war propagandists are trying to sell.  If only they had some semblance of legitimacy, but time after time the “Winter Soldiers” have been shown to be either not actual service members or simply liars.  While O’Brien is obviously no Jesse MacBeth or Micah Wright (fake soliders), I suspect he may be a member of the Beauchamp club.

Let me clarify:  I am not meaning to suggest that there have been no atrocities in the War on Terror. War sucks.  As of yet, there is no scientifically provable method of completely avoiding civilian casualties in a war.  Even worse, sometimes, stupid people get in the military and create non-accidental situations like Abu Ghraib - for which there is no excuse.

That said, these so-called “Winter Soldiers” propose that the United States Military is systematically committing war crimes, carelessly killing innocent civilians, and doing medical experiments on dead bodies.  All it takes is one look into the organizations that sponsor such testimonies to figure out their agenda.  Plus, where is their evidence of such atrocities?  They have nothing.  They are repeatedly proven wrong.

As much as I disagree with Ron Paul’s anti-war stance, at least his position is legitimately grounded in foreign policy reasoning and not in careless lies about the American military.  Why can’t the American left take up that kind of logic rather than vilifying American soldiers?

Samsphere Chicago 2008

I’m headed off to Chicago in the morning for Samsphere Chicago 2008.

Samsphere is a new media forum, hosted by the Sam Adams Alliance, where bloggers and e-activists from across the country can gather together to network and share ideas. Samsphere will be specifically geared toward bloggers and e-activists who focus on local and state-level politics, and who are dedicated to the principles of individual freedom and limited government.

Check out this list of confirmed attendees:

Name*Blog*Blog Region
Erick Erickson * RedState * National
Allen Fuller * Flat Creek Management * National
John Fund * Wall Street Journal * National
Brad Jones * Face the State * National
Jenn Sierra * Fort Hard Knox * National
Erik Telford * Americans for Prosperity * National
E.M. Zanotti * American Princess * National
Bill Smith * ARRA News Service * Arkansas
Ben DeGrow * Mount Virtus * Colorado
Mark Johnson * ILGOPnet * Illinois
Doug Welch * Stix * Illinois
Bob Weeks * Wichita Liberty * Kansas
Earl Glynn * Kansas Meadowlark * Kansas
Jeff Blanco * Louisiana Conservative * Louisiana
Lance Dutson * Maine Web Report * Maine
Jack McHugh * Mackinac Center * Michigan
Chet Zarko * Outside Lansing * Michigan
Jim Hoft * Gateway Pundit * Missouri
Craig Sprout * Montana Politics * Montana
Chuck Muth * Muth’s Truths * Nevada
Skip Murphy * Granite Grok * New Hampshire
Mario Burgos * Mario Burgos * New Mexico
Maggie Thurber * Thurber’s Thoughts * Ohio
Chris Arps * Oklahoma Political News Service * Oklahoma
Trent Siebert * Tennessee Policy Institute * Tennessee
Leslie Carbone * Leslie Carbone * Virginia
Don Ward * Sound Politics * Washington
Fred Dooley * Real Debate Wisconsin * Wisconsin
tieki rae * Haemet * Wyoming
Chad Everson * Grizzly Groundswell * Minnesota
Steve Sibson * Sibby Online * South Dakota

As a pretty amateur blogger, I’m excited to learn from the best! :)

GPO outsources passports, pockets the profit!

Via Drudge, from the Washington Times:  Outsourced passport work risky

The State Department is now charging Americans $100 or more for new e-passports produced by the GPO, depending on how quickly they are needed. That’s up from a cost of around just $60 in 1998.

Internal agency documents obtained by The Times show each blank passport costs GPO an average of just $7.97 to manufacture and that GPO then charges the State Department about $14.80 for each, a margin of more than 85 percent, the documents show.

The accounting allowed GPO to make gross profits of more than $90 million from Oct. 1, 2006, through Sept. 30, 2007, on the production of e-passports. The four subsequent months produced an additional $54 million in gross profits.

The agency set aside more than $40 million of those profits to help build a secure backup passport production facility in the South, still leaving a net profit of about $100 million in the last 16 months. GPO was initially authorized by Congress to make extra profits in order to fund a $41 million backup production facility at a rate of $1.84 per passport. The large surplus, however, went far beyond the targeted funding. 

So, not only am I paying the US Government to pay Europe and Thailand to make my passport under questionable security standards, but I’m paying them too much?

As someone who just dished out $100 last week to get a new passport, this “large surplus” talk makes me a bit unhappy…  I knew the price seemed more than when I got my passport in 8th grade.

(Sidenote:  I filed this under the gossip category for kicks and giggles since the GPO hasn’t ‘fessed up to anything.  But seriously, does anyone doubt this?)

The Prenatally and Postnatally Diagnosed Condition Awareness Act

Well, that’s a mouthful, isn’t it?

Wesley J. Smith, noted bioethicist, author, and blogger (Secondhand Smoke), has a new column up at the Weekly Standard titled Politically Correct Eugenics.

It is a bitter irony that even as we are enlarging our commitment to human equality in many areas, we are turning our backs on it in others. In particular, we may be about to eliminate from our society people with Down syndrome (DS) and other genetically caused disabilities.

The entire column is well-worth the read, but I would like to draw your attention specifically to the mention of the Prenatally and Postnatally Diagnosed Condition Awareness Act.

To prevent parents from being subtly or expressly pushed in making decisions about their genetically disabled child, a strange pair of bedfellows–Senators Edward Kennedy and Sam Brownback–have coauthored the “Prenatally and Postnatally Diagnosed Condition Awareness Act” (S 1810), which just passed its first committee hurdle.

Kennedy’s adamant support for abortion rights infuriates pro-lifers, while Brownback is ardently pro-life, accused by paranoid liberals of harboring theocratic tendencies. Their disagreement about abortion notwithstanding, their bill would require parents faced with pre- and postnatal diagnoses of disability to receive “timely, scientific, and nondirective counseling about the conditions” as well as “up-to-date, comprehensive information about life expectancy, development potential, and quality of life” for a child born with Down syndrome or any other genetic disability, as well as “referrals to providers of key support services.” Their hope, clearly, is that when parents receive a more complete picture, more of them will welcome their disabled babies into the world.

Strange bedfellows seems to be putting it a bit mildly, doesn’t it?  I never dreamed I would type these words, but this bill actually increases my respect for Senator Kennedy.  By increases, I mean causes the existence of.  Perhaps he is being pressured by some Massachusetts disability rights advocacy group?  Perhaps he has not been completely possessed by demonic forces? ;)  Whatever the case, I wholeheartedly embrace his support on such an important issue.

I encourage all of you to look into the act (S. 1810) and the House version (H.R. 3112) and in turn, contact your congressional delegation to encourage them to support this legislation!  Though I tend to believe that everyone ought to be able to agree that killing any unborn child is wrong, the issue of specifically aborting children merely because they are different or might have a disability should turn the stomach of any human being — pro-life or otherwise.  We reject discrimination in all forms, why should the womb be any different?

The point is, if aborting babies simply because they might have Down Syndrome is acceptable, why not abort babies simply because they are black?  Or female?  Or any other superficial reason?

This bill would increase parental awareness about genetically caused diseases and disorders.  Perhaps more parents will learn that having a DS child can be a blessing, not a curse.

Something to think about.

Grace

Romans 5:6-8

“For while we were still helpless, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.  For one will hardly die for a righteous man; though perhaps for the good man someone would dare even to die.  But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.

Something to remember as we celebrate Jesus rising from the grave.  We don’t earn His grace.  We definitely don’t deserve His grace.  He gave it to us, while we were yet sinners.

I have been hearing a lot of teaching on this lately.  It is important that we realize no matter how much we do, how much we pray, how much we worship, we are not doing it to earn or secure our salvation.  That part of the deal has already been made.  He gave everything, we gave nothing.

What we do after we accept God’s grace is an expression of love and commitment, obedience to such an amazing God who would sacrifice His only son, while we were yet sinners.

Happy Easter! :)

Gun Fires Itself at Florida A&M

As I learned earlier this month from my peers, people can’t fire guns without the guns helping.

Someone should tell that to the police at FAMU.  It’s really not fair to put a person in custody when we know the gun is at fault.

Also, I can’t seem to find it mentioned anywhere, but I’d be willing to bet the house that FAMU is a gun free zone.  I think they need bigger signs.

Question:  Can guns read?