Archive for the 'cornell daily sun' Category

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?

Cornell Student Assembly Rejects Concealed Carry

Surprise, surprise, SA Rejects Resolution 17 (and in the process demonstrates contempt for the Constitution).

Honestly, I think the real story here is in the picture posted on the Sun website.

Sign Language by Lindsay Myron

1. Frat party + Guns = Disaster. Frat party + nothing = disaster. Guns might add excitement.

2. You don’t trust Republicans with your government, but you trust them with a gun? Classy. And, call me crazy, but I wasn’t aware that the founding fathers put party affiliation as a limiting factor in the 2nd amendment. I love how smart Cornell students are!

3. “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people…” I think the guns help! What did one gun say to the other? NOTHING, guns don’t talk.

Personally, I am in favor of outlawing cars because a couple of my friends died in car accidents — vicious friend-killing cars — and we should obviously ban bridges and tall buildings because some people jump — mean, seductive high structures — and heck, can we please make midterms and finals illegal because they make me really sad.

Let the war on inanimate objects begin!

Update:  I thought of a better one:  The KKK can’t lynch blacks without the help of nooses!  Outlaw ROPES!

Cornell’s Battle Against Constitutional Rights Continues…

At this point, I keep trying to remind myself that Cornell is a prestigious academic institution. Somewhere on campus, there must be signs of intelligent life. It seems fairly obvious that such intelligent life is hit-or-miss in the Cornell population at large, a rarity on the Student Assembly, and completely non-existent at the Cornell Daily Sun.

Latest news in the battle of students of Cornell University versus essential liberties:

S.A. Broaches Concealed Carry

…At one point S.A. President C. J. Slicklen ’09 had to ask members of the S.A. to “curb [their] side comments.”

After the resolution was presented, Elan Greenberg ’08, a representative at-large and the former president of the S.A., called the resolution “terrifying” and said that he thought it was only a matter of time after the resolution was passed before there would be a “deadly accident.”

Please, dear readers, try to curb your laughter.

I think an anonymous commenter at the Sun had the perfect response to the terror felt by Mr. Greenberg:

It is very revealing that Mr. Greenberg is terrified. There are two types of leaders: those who trust the people they’re leading and those who feel they have to act benevolently on behalf of those they lead. A true man of the people will feel secure with his fellow students armed, but an elitist will be terrified.

As if Greenberg’s position on the S.A. is not discouraging enough, he also happens to be a member of ROTC. Raise your hand if it reassures you that a future military officer doesn’t believe citizens have the right to bear arms!

Other comments on the Sun article demonstrate a depressing lack of knowledge, but I suppose that is nothing new. One commenter decries the notion of allowing 18-20 yr. olds to own handguns. First of all, this resolution is not asking to change any state/national laws beyond restrictions related specifically to campuses. In other words, 18-20 yr. olds cannot possess weapons off campus, so there is no reason to believe they will be permitted to do so on campus. That said, it still pisses me off every time I remember going into a gun store right after my 18th birthday and being shocked senseless that I was still not a full citizen in that I have no protected guarantee of the 2nd amendment… but at least I only have 114 days left of being deprived of my right to bear arms.

Yet another commenter asks one sponsor of the resolution, Ahmed Salem, how he can be comfortable as a blind person with the thought of everyone around him being armed. Uh… call me crazy, but if I was blind and could not see a crazed gunman, I am quite confident I would want my seeing friends to be armed and able to protect me.

Anyway, there was also a letter to the editor published on Friday in response to the Sun editors’ atrocious Thursday editorial, Way Off Target.

By a member of the Cornell Republicans: Sun editorial about concealed carry off base

In yesterday’s editorial “Way Off Target,” The Sun made several naïve assertions about the issue of concealed carry on campus.

It stated that “weapons of intimidation” have no place in the “open society” that is the university, marked by “free inquiry, unhindered debate, and giving full credence” to all opinions. The insinuation seems to be that, if allowed on campus legally, guns would be used to intimidate those with whom we disagreed. This hypothetical is completely and absolutely baseless, and represents a much larger flaw in thinking.

The entire letter is well worth the read. I’ll leave you with this gem that I couldn’t have said better myself:

It would behoove The Sun to enter the real world. Assumptions do not reality make, and safety is not achieved simply by perceiving it.

The Average American Critic: European Wanna-Be

I thought this was a very interesting column in today’s Sun. I usually don’t read Ari’s columns because they can be a little on the dry side (long, serious, not super funny), but at the same time, I’m pretty sure he’s always saying something worthwhile. It’s just a different writing style than I prefer - I mean, he’s no Ann Coulter or Michelle Malkin, haha.

But anyway, back on focus. I thought this was an article worth reading, even though it is pretty much common sense. It’s nicely summed up common sense that provides many a retort to silly liberals who say France is where it’s at.

In an era when Europeans view their society as deeply troubled — when they seek to Americanize Europe — it would be silly of us to imitate policies that Europe is now rejecting. Our country’s founding goal was independence from Europe. It would be unfortunate if we were at this late date to adopt the discredited policies of a continent in turmoil.

The next time your not-so-friendly neighborhood socialist drops in for a chat, you can throw some of those facts at him/her. Not that he/she will really care… or listen… or even be near the same intellectual level necessary to comprehend said facts. It will still boost your ego just a bit to know you’re in the right.

Do they even have not-so-friendly neighborhood socialists off college campuses? Besides the insane asylums and the DNC I mean.

“Totalitarianism Lives”

There was a column in the Cornell Daily Sun today titled “Totalitarianism Lives” by Angelika Byorth, a student at the University of Nebraska. Sometimes, when the Sun doesn’t have enough original material to publish, they resort to this “College Exchange” which I always assumed featured a column from some other college newspaper. However, although numerous google searches confirmed the existence of this “Angelika Byorth,” there was no evidence of the aforementioned column being published in Nebraska. If anyone can find it, I would be eternally grateful.

Why? Why, you might ask, is this certain column of such importance? Really, I am in awe. It is an amazing work of a mixture of complete incompetency and absolute ignorance. The whole article is actually quite poorly written - surprise! a liberal who isn’t the brightest bulb in the box! But it is definitely worth reading. Although, I would recommend not eating beforehand, I almost regurgitated my lunch.

Background (since I am not typing out this whole stupid mess for you): apparently this “student” is at least 50 years old. Jewish. Lived in Germany post-Holocaust, something something something. Tells a sad story about repression and oppression that I honestly thought would have a legitimate message until this point:

For decades I’ve tried to suppress painful memories of growing up in post-Holocaust Germany. I didn’t want to talk about 1957, when my family gave up house and home then fled with only five suitcases of personal belongings from the totalitarian regime in the former East Germany. I didn’t want to speak or write about the poverty, the food rationing, the hunger and the government intrusion into our lives.

But I must come forward about that part of my personal history, because I have been an eyewitness to what can happen when a once free society allows itself to slip into the nightmare of totalitarianism. I have seen it for real and, long before the year 1984 arrived, what George Orwell described in his book.

Unfortunately, I am seeing it happening right here in the U.S. today. You know the details: widespread wiretapping, checking on library records, taking away the rights of people who are suspected of terrorism, monitoring online communications, being treated like a criminal when traveling by airplane, torturing political prisoners, fighting war upon war, often with imperialistic motives, and the list goes on.

I ask that you pay attention to political matters and get involved. Adolph Hitler was elected by only 37 percent of the German people because the rest didn’t care to vote, preferring apathy. According to U.S. Census Bureau and Federal Election Commission statistics, President George W. Bush was elected in 2000 by only 27 percent of eligible American voters.

The numbers don’t lie. Bush was less popular than Hitler.

<Insert barfing here.>

Seriously, this is unbelievable. I think the main reason it stuck out to me was because lately the Sun has been running a couple very interesting columns about how the world’s treatment of Ahmadinejad’s actions is eerily similar to the way they handled (read: mishandled) Hitler leading up to World War II. The title of this Byorth’s piece of trash, “Totalitarianism Lives,” was misleading in that context. Especially from a Jewish perspective.

Give me a break! Is she even aware of her own implications? These people have no limits. At a time when the Jewish population ought to be far more concerned about insane Islamo-fascist dictators in the Middle-East, this idiot is comparing Bush to Hitler. Nay, she is actually implying that Bush is worse than Hitler.

Brilliant. Apparently, along with totalitarianism, stupidity thrives.