Category: Usual Suspects

  • Our newest patriot

    The Washington Times notices this morning that the president, who before his election wouldn’t wear a flag pin on his lapel, suddenly surrounds himself in American flags at every opportunity;

    Oh, say – can you see? Look. It’s President Obama, and he’s surrounded by American flags.

    They’re on the dais in star-spangled glory. They’re at the town-hall meeting and the news conference, in bold folds of red, white and blue. The White House has rediscovered – or possibly reinvented – the patriotic cachet of Old Glory as a perfect frame for the new president.

    That’s the same president who once would not wear an American flag pin. Things have changed.

    “The biggest factor is that Barack Obama is now the president,” said Jack Glaser, a social psychologist with the University of California at Berkeley.

    “He’s around more flags now. They’re behind him or on the podium. That’s the reality. He’s not running around on the campaign trail.

    “Now that he’s president, Mr. Obama most likely knows he’s an American symbol. So he wears an American flag pin. He appears before American flags. That’s part of the job.”

    Actually, it was part of his job before he was elected to the Presidency, seein’s how he was a United States Senator, not to mention that he was a US citizen – the rest of us don’t need to be president to start acting like we’re proud of being Americans. It was just a year ago this week that Michelle Obama made the comment that she’s finally proud of this country.

    I guess what we can take away from all of this new-found sense of pride in this country by the Obamas is that as long as we keep doing things for them, they have no problem with us.

  • Lifting of ban on media gawking considered

    This is one thing I’ve never been able to figure out – the media, since the Persian Gulf War, has wanted to film coffins containing the remains of our military returning to the US at Dover AFB. The ever-vigilant Washington Post ruminates over the issue today;

    President Obama said last week that he is considering lifting the ban on photographs and videos at Dover, in place since the Persian Gulf War in 1991, raising fundamental questions about the impact of such images on the public morale in wartime.

    For Obama, changing the policy would carry some political risk as he ramps up the war effort in Afghanistan with tens of thousands of fresh troops, increasing the likelihood of combat deaths that could produce photographs of numerous coffins arriving at one time at Dover, the sole U.S. port of entry for the remains. At the same time, Obama has advocated transparency in government, and continuing to hide the Dover ritual from public view conflicts with that principle as well as with public opinion on the issue, polls indicate.

    Yeah, well, there is no political risk for Obama – as we’ve seen with every other issue Obama faces, he’s quick to blame the previous administration for forcing him to make unpopular choices, depending on the crowd. Whatever he decides, the media will gaily celebrate his wisdom.

    It’s the media’s apparent obsession with it that bothers me;

    Ralph Begleiter, a former CNN correspondent and WTOP radio reporter who teaches journalism and politics at the University of Delaware, has sued the government to obtain the release of some military photographs of honor ceremonies at Dover under the Freedom of Information Act.

    “Dover is the only place in the country where the entire nation can observe the return of these casualties,” Begleiter said. “The most important and dramatic . . . cost of war is the casualties, the troops who make the ultimate sacrifice and come back to their country in a casket draped with an American flag, and to leave that image unobserved seems to be disingenuous.”

    No, what’s disingenuous here is the false impression that there are scads of people who would care about the war if only the media were allowed to take pictures of coffins on an airstrip in Delaware. Like so much other hyperbole we get from the drama queen press, this is just ignorant rantings of self-important idiots.

    There are funerals across the country everyday that we never read about in the media, not because they’re banned from reporting, but because they don’t think it’s news. The only reason the media thinks this particular issue is news is because it’s something they’re not allowed to do.

    Much like the gays-in-the-military issue – there are not millions of gays waiting for the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy to be lifted for them to join the military, neither are there millions of news readers waiting for the ban at Dover AFB to be lifted before they pick up a newspaper.

    Every year, there’s an hours-long ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on Memorial Day and Veterans’ Day. The media is there for hours through the whole thing, yet the only thing that makes the evening news is 5 seconds of the President placing the wreath at the Tomb. Every Friday night, wounded soldiers roll up to Walter Reed Army Medical Center from the war – no reporters are ever there to record it.

    If the ban is eventually lifted, there may be a story about the first time the media is allowed to record the event, they’ll make a big deal out of it and thrust their puny fists in the air in victory, one picture might appear in your newspaper, five seconds of video might make a continuous loop every thirty minutes on CNN for a day – and then it will be over.

    In exchange, the solemn event will have lost it’s last shred of dignity so some greasy, vacuous borderline paparazzi photographers can gawk at the flag-draped remains of better people than they’ll ever be.

    ADDED: I guess the American Legion agree with me.

  • How many more $billions to “sell” this POS bill?

    I’ve just got one more question for the new Obama Administration; how many more billions of dollars is the new president spending flying around the country to cram this POS bill down our throats?

    You can’t convince the half of the nation that didn’t vote for Obama that he’s acting in our best interests, so just cut the crap and sign the damn thing and let’s get to the part where we start drowning in this morass instead of wasting more of our money on this victory lap.

    From the same article;

    “The president has said it’s likely to get worse before it gets better,” Axelrod said. “But I do expect the rise in unemployment to be retarded.”

    Unemployment isn’t the only thing that’s going to be retarded, Dave.

  • Collins easily impressed by Dems

    The Washington Post is lovin’ them some Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe (the two Maine Senators who saved last week the Obama stimulus bill) this morning. They recount a phone call between VP Biden and Collins last year;

    Just before Christmas, Susan Collins, a moderate Republican senator, was driving alone on that road, headed to her parents’ home near the Canadian border in the tiny town of Caribou, when her cellphone rang. It was Joseph R. Biden Jr., the soon-to-be vice president, calling to talk up the Obama administration’s economic stimulus plan.

    The call kept getting cut off. Once. Twice. Three times. But Biden kept calling back.

    “I was very impressed with his persistence,” Collins recalled in an interview.

    So she voted for the stimulus bill because Biden impressed her with his ability to continually hit the redial button on his phone. Knowing Biden like I do, I’ll bet he had a staffer to punch the button for him. He’s a friggin’ genius, you know.

    I guess Biden’s ability to redial the same number repeatedly was so impressive that Collins forgets that just a month before, she was reportedly angry at the Democrats for sending their Senators to Maine to campaign against her, after all she had done for them in the last eight years (From The Hill);

    The tactics used by Democrats to secure at least 58 Senate seats may have damaged their chances of winning vital support from Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) in key votes in the 111th Congress.

    Collins told colleagues at a small Senate prayer breakfast meeting last week that she still felt lingering resentment toward Democratic senators who campaigned against her in Maine.

    She confessed that she had “trouble forgiving colleagues” who traveled to Maine and told voters she was “a Bush clone and called into question her ethics,” said a senator who attended the meeting.

    Collins’s lingering resentment could emerge as a snag for Democratic leaders who expect her to side with them on many important votes.

    I guess the Democrats knew what they were doing – they knew that the spineless weasel Collins could never bring herself to vote against them no matter what they said about her.

    Collins and her home-state colleague, Sen. Olympia Snowe (R), have voted with GOP Senate leaders less often than any other Republicans. They are the two Republicans whom Democrats are expected to court most often.

    Before Congress adjourned, Collins voted with Democrats and against her own leaders to advance an emergency stimulus bill. She also recently voted with Democrats to quash a Republican filibuster of the defense authorization bill.

    Yet her willingness to cross the aisle from time to time didn’t stop Democrats from lobbing attacks during her recent campaign for reelection. Collins received her hardest shots from Democratic Sens. Frank Lautenberg (N.J.) and Sherrod Brown (Ohio).

    She’s so freaking spineless, she’d rather stand up to her own party (who’ve supported her and keep returning her gutless ass to office) than the people who bend her over and stick it to her in her own state. Maybe we should call her repeatedly and see if she’s impressed with us.

    * Washington, D.C. Office (202) 224-2523
    * Augusta Office (207) 622-8414
    * Bangor Office (207) 945-0417
    * Biddeford Office (207) 283-1101
    * Caribou Office (207) 493-7873
    * Lewiston Office (207) 784-6969
    * Portland Office (207) 780-3575

    Fax:

    * Washington, D.C. Office (202) 224-2693
    * Augusta Office (207) 622-5884
    * Bangor Office (207) 990-4604
    * Biddeford Office (207) 283-4054
    * Caribou Office (207) 493-7810
    * Lewiston Office (207) 782-6475
    * Portland Office (207) 828-0380

  • Bi-partisan my foot

    Apparently Gibbs and Axelrod see that their boss’ stimulus plan is doomed because the went out to tell the world that it was a bi-partisan effort. Bi-partisan because three linguini-spined Republicans voted for it?

    If they thought that it was going to work, they’d be hogging the credit instead of trying to spread the blame. How stupid do they think we are?

  • Guantanamo ex-guards report hearsay

    Several people have sent me this Associated Press article about a Baby Huey-looking guy, Brandon Neeley, who claims to have been a guard at Guantanamo. For two days now, I’ve been reading his testimony and the testimony of another supposed Guantanamo guard, Terry C. Holdbrooks, Jr. that has been posted on the UC Davis Human Rights Project on Guantanamo.

    First, I probably don’t need to say this, but Neeley is the president of the Houston chapter of IVAW;

    Neeley seems to be fairly forthright in his testimony, to the apparent chagrin of the interviewer who is hoping for stories of children imprisoned at Gitmo, sexual abuse of prisoners, torture stories of waterboarding, the fingerprints of Rumsfeld and Bush on detainee abuse. To his credit, Neeley gives them none of that.

    (more…)

  • Feinstein’s leak

    I first read about Dianne’s Feinstein’s leak of classified drone flights in Pakistan from McQ at Blackfive then again this morning at Gateway Pundit.

    Here’s the video;

    Of course, the media is just calling it a “likely embarrassment” to Pakistan. From a tiny article on the incident from USAToday;

    For months, Pakistani leaders have criticized the use of Predator-launched CIA missiles against Islamic extremists along the northwest border.

    The California Democrat’s remarks came during a Congressional hearing in which she expressed surprise over Pakistani opposition to the use of the missiles.

    “As I understand it, these are flown out of a Pakistani base,” she said.

    Philip J. LaVelle, a spokesman for Feinstein, said her comment was based solely on previous news reports that Predators were operated from bases near Islamabad, the newspaper reports.

    I’ll remind you what Dianne Feinstein said about leaking information in a previous incident;

    Such intelligence, and the sources and methods necessary for its acquisition, are critical to our national security. The decision to invade Iraq illustrates the essential role of intelligence, and the deep consequences when it fails.

    It is especially disturbing to learn that the intelligence was being leaked to influence public opinion. Intelligence material should be used to inform decisions, not to manipulate the American press.

  • Shepherd wins “peace prize” for cowardice

    I hate to keep writing about this dork, Andre Shepherd, but it just gets more ridiculous every day. Someone sent me a link to an AFP story on Military.com which reports that some smelly hippies are awarding Shepherd a “peace prize”;

    The Munich American Peace Committee said it was awarding the prize to Shepherd for his “courage and conviction in despite of the possibly extreme punishment from the US authorities” and “for publicising your convictions to give other soldiers the courage also to leave the army and to push for peace.”

    “Extreme punishment”? Like sleeping on a bed of two layers of newspaper pages on a concrete floor in a dank tropical prison windowless cell with a milk carton for a toilet. Brown warm water and bread for breakfast, fish head soup (complete with real fish head) and rice for lunch, spaghetti noodles with ketchup for supper? A shower once-a-week? A beating every morning for not waking up soon enough? That’s what my days were like in a prison somewhere. So what kind of “extreme punishment” are the smelly hippies trying to convince us Shepherd would suffer.

    Well, at least these hippies left the country.

    Poor Shepherd can’t accept the award personally;

    While Shepherd’s asylum application is being assessed, he is not allowed to travel beyond the confines of Karlsruhe in southern Germany where he is staying at a refugee-processing centre, Friedrich said.

    Figures that he’d find some laws he can obey when his fat ass is on the line.

    Other Shepherd posts.