If civilians are going to be killed, I would rather have them be their civilians than our civilians.
—Stuart Symington
If civilians are going to be killed, I would rather have them be their civilians than our civilians.
—Stuart Symington
Disgusting … but not at all surprising.
The anti-war group American Friends Service Committe is planning hundreds of event across the U.S. to mark the pending passing of the 2,000th death by American service personnel in the Iraqi theater (hat tips to LGF and General Quarters). Details about the events can be found on the AFSC site.
Soon we’ll be reaching another horrific milestone in the war in Iraq – the death of the 2,000th U.S. service member. AFSC, Military Families Speak Out, Gold Star Families for Peace, and Iraq Veterans Against the War are calling for people across the U.S. to stand up and say that the needless killing of U.S. troops and Iraqis must stop and that the resources funding this war are needed for other things.
The AFSC is calling for candlelight vigils and public actions. While I disagree with LGF’s characterization of these as parties, I must agree to referring to those participating as ghouls. For those who superficially claim to support the troops, these anti-war elements are quick to jump on any allegation, supported or completely imaginary, against our troops and quite eager to use any nice round casualty figure to their advantage. In short, these people, as a group, sicken me.
Here is a list of planned event locations, including a dozen sites in Texas. If anyone is interested in a counter-demonstration at a DFW-area location, send me an email. Time is short, as CNN currently shows American military deaths in Iraq at 1,993, as of this writing.
Meanwhile, Wikipedia currently has the death toll at 2,108, as of this writing, for the one-day battle of Antietam. Oh yeah, that’s just for the Union side. Just a little perspective for ya.
A little mindless listing meme while listening to the Aggies playing K-State and watching the Texas Tech-Texas game. I got it from Llama Butcher Robert, who got it from ObscuroRant, who got it from … nah, you can track it back further if you desire. The meme consists of a listing of science fiction movies, and I’ve bolded the ones I’ve personally seen.
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension!
Akira
Alien
Aliens
Alphaville
Back to the Future
Blade Runner
Brazil
Bride of Frankenstein
Brother From Another Planet
A Clockwork Orange
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Contact
The Damned
Destination Moon
The Day The Earth Stood Still
Delicatessen
Escape From New York
ET: The Extraterrestrial
Flash Gordon: Space Soldiers (serial)
The Fly (1985 version)
Forbidden Planet
Ghost in the Shell
Gojira/Godzilla
The Incredibles
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956 version)
Jurassic Park
Mad Max 2/The Road Warrior
The Matrix
Metropolis
On the Beach
Planet of the Apes (1968 version)
Robocop
Sleeper
Solaris (1972 version)
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope
Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back
The Stepford Wives
Superman
Terminator 2: Judgement Day
The Thing From Another World
Things to Come
Tron
12 Monkeys
28 Days Later
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
2001: A Space Odyssey
La Voyage Dans la Lune
War of the Worlds (1953 version)
Of the movies on this list that I’ve missed, I feel I really need to see the following: The Day the Earth Stood Still, Metropolis and On the Beach.
As the hours tick down before the opening of the 2005 World Series, I wanted to throw down a few final thoughts on the Houston Astros’ accomplishments this season.
First, I think this is an awesome image, one that I’d begun to believe I would never see.
Second, I don’t need a World Series victory by the ‘Stros. Oh, I’d love one and I’ll certainly be rooting for one, but I’m perfectly content with Houston just getting to the match-up with the ChiSox. I’m happy that long-time Astros icons Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell will finally play a game in baseball’s primest of prime time. I’m happy for the franchise’s exorcism of the ghosts of 1980, 1986 and 2004 when they came oh so very close by a team that has shown tremendous resillience all season long. I’m happy for the city of Houston and that a World Series game will finally be played in the Lone Star state.
No, I don’t expect the Astros to win the series, though I can hope. With Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte and Roy Oswalt on the mound, there’s always hope. Still, I’m just enjoying the National League pennant. In fact, I may have to pick up one of those.
Oh yeah, third, it’s particulary tasty that the Astros success came at the expense of the Cardinals and continued the Curse of Keith.
The Brits are celebrating the bicentennial of their great naval victory at Trafalgar in grand fashion.
A thousand beacons lit the skies last night as Britain remembered its fleet at Trafalgar and celebrated its greatest naval victory.
The Queen lit the first beacon on the dockside in Portsmouth in front of Lord Nelson’s flagship, Victory.
Flames shot 30ft into the air and were the signal to light beacons in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and at Nelson’s birthplace at Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk.
Hundreds more were lit across the country, mirroring the beacons of 1805. Had Nelson lost the battle, they would have stood ready to give warning of an invasion by Napoleon’s armies.
But yesterday they marked the beginning of a weekend of celebrations, taking in hundreds of parties and services.
Robert at The Llama Butchers has much more on the battle, including links to others blogging on the matter. Meanwhile, his fellow Butcher Steve chips in with an alternative look at Lord Nelson.
The National Guard has been forced to go hat in hand before Congress as overseas deployments have taken a hit on equipment stocks.
The Army National Guard has lost so much critical equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan that its ability to respond to a national emergency could be severely hampered, says a government report released Thursday.
Lt. Gen. H. Steven Blum, chief of the National Guard Bureau, told the House Government Reform Committee that the Guard needs $1.3 billion to replace or upgrade radios, helicopters, tactical vehicles, heavy engineering equipment, chemical detection gear and night-vision goggles, which are essential to responding to national emergencies such as the recent Gulf Coast hurricanes and terrorist attacks.
Blum’s testimony, along with that of other top National Guard and military officials and the governors of Idaho and Pennsylvania, coincided with the release of a new Government Accountability Office report, which says the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have left many Army National Guard units dangerously short of critical equipment. The shortages threaten the National Guard’s ability to prepare its forces for future missions at home and overseas, the auditors found.
“The bottom line is that our inventory is now at 34 percent” of what it should be, Blum said.
The article cites three key reasons for the equipment shortcomings, which may have an impact on the Guard’s ability to fulfill stateside emergency responsibilites.
On the bright side, there are signals of relief coming from Capitol Hill.
Government Reform Committee Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., said he and Sen. Christopher Bond, R-Mo., are working to ensure that the National Guard gets the $1.3 billion it needs in the next supplemental spending bill.
“Quite simply, we are robbing the nondeployed Peter to pay the deployed Paul,” he said. “I understand the need to prioritize, but this shouldn’t have to be a zero-sum game.”
That is good to hear. Whatever one’s views on the current overseas military efforts, the idea that those operations should be allowed to affect the Guard’s stateside responsibilities is, in my view, indefensible.
The Astros Win the Pennant! The Astros Win the Pennant!
More later but, for now, I’ll recommend you check out the Houston bloggers. Personally, as an H-Town fan, I’m too stuck in disbelief right now.
Like father, like son.
Iraqi police on Wednesday arrested Saddam Hussein’s nephew in Baghdad, charging that he served as the top financier of Iraq’s rampant insurgency, senior Iraqi security officials said.
Yasir Sabhawi Ibrahim, son of Saddam’s half brother Sabhawi Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti, was arrested in a Baghdad apartment, several days after Syrian authorities forced him to return to Iraq, the officials told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Cairo. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to deal with the media.
One of the officials, who works as a coordinator between Iraqi authorities and U.S. military intelligence, described the purported financier as the most dangerous man in the urgency. The other official, who is a senior member of the Iraqi Defense Ministry, said the arrest was a serious blow to terrorist networks.
Both officials said Syrian authorities “pushed” Ibrahim into Iraq but did not hand him over to authorities.
The Syrians were aware of his whereabouts in Baghdad and informed U.S. authorities, who then passed the information to Iraq security forces who carried out a “fast, easy” raid on the fugitive’s apartment, the Defense Ministry official said.
Chad Evans at In the Bullpen looks at the news as possible good turn in Syrian policy.
Is this a possible sign Syria may be starting to turn the corner from allowing terrorists and Saddam-linked insurgents to operate freely from their soil? Let us hope.
Sorry, Chad, but it’s no change from less than eight months ago when, on Feb. 27, the Syrians actually handed over Ibrahim’s daddy to Iraqi authorities. At that time, I harbored the same hope about the Syrians. Nope, they haven’t changed much yet.
Australia, our stalwart ally Down Under, has lost a key piece of its history.
Eighty-seven years after the end of World War I, only a gossamer thread now links the nation to its baptism of fire and blood, after the death of the last Australian to go to the Great War.
Evan Allan died late on Monday night at the age of 106, leaving only one living connection with the “war to end all wars” – Jack Ross, 106, who enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in 1918, but who never saw a shot fired in anger.
Born in Bega, NSW, in July 1899, (William) Evan Allan enlisted in the Royal Australian Navy as a boy sailor at the outbreak of the Great War, when he was only 14 years old.
He served 33 years in the navy and was the sole surviving Australian veteran to serve in both world wars.
A statement from his family said he passed away peacefully.
The countdown to the passing of those Aussies from the first World War has been a painful but steadily progressing process, as history must be.
On a day when her predecessor, Danna Vale, attracted widespread condemnation for suggesting that a Gallipoli theme park should be established on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, with re-enactments of the Anzac landing, Veterans Affairs Minister De-Anne Kelly said: “With his passing, we have lost an entire generation who left Australia to defend our nation, the British Empire and other nations in the cause of freedom and democracy.”
In Bendigo, Victoria, Jack Ross’s daughter, Peggy Ashburn, offered condolences to Mr Allan’s family. “I just feel very sad, really,” she said.
The countdown to the last link with the Great War had been “a bit like the green bottles, standing on the wall”.
She said her father was a modest, unassuming man who had “answered the call” and enlisted in January 1918, two months before his 19th birthday.
Transferred to the Light Horse Brigade as a wireless operator, he was decoding German propaganda in Sydney when the war ended, and was demobilised on Christmas Eve, 1918, six weeks after the Armistice.
One by one, year after year, the Great War generation has slipped away, while holding no less a powerful grip on the national psyche.
The last battlefield Digger, Peter Casserly, died in Perth in June, aged 107. His death extinguished the nation’s last link with the slaughter on the Western Front. One newspaper marked his passing with the headline “All is quiet on the Western Front”.
The last Gallipoli Anzac, Alec Campbell, a boy soldier who upped his age to enlist, died in May 2002, aged 103.
At his state funeral in Hobart, the Prime Minister described Campbell as “Gallipoli’s last sentinel”. He spoke of a reflective silence and the gentle stirring of half-flown flags.
Obviously, we are talking about people who were youths from a different time, a different standard of patriotism.
At a time when Australia’s population was less than 5 million, 416,809 enlisted for the war (about half of the eligible men), 331,000 served overseas and 61,720 perished (all causes).
I, for one, mark the passing of Mr. Allan with the haunting Gallipoli-based tune “The Band Played Waltzing Matilda” by the Pogues.
And now every April I sit on my porch
And I watch the parade pass before me
And I watch my old comrades, how proudly they march
Reliving old dreams of past glory
And the old men march slowly, all bent, stiff and sore
The forgotten heroes from a forgotten war
And the young people ask, “What are they marching for?”
And I ask myself the same question
And the band plays Waltzing Matilda
And the old men answer to the call
But year after year their numbers get fewer
Some day no one will march there at all
[full lyrics can be found here]
Contrary to the song, though, I would like to say that neither the heroes nor the war can or should ever be forgotten. History slowly but unfailingly slips by us — please find a veteran, thank and talk to the person. Hear, honor and remember the tales.
This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Searchlight Crusade. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.