Which direction is Iraq moving?

Sometimes, things have to get worse before they get better.

Iraqis have some freedoms that they once were not allowed. Cell phones. Satellite television. A free press.

But just how free is Iraq’s budding media?

Under a broad new set of laws criminalizing speech that ridicules the government or its officials, some resurrected verbatim from Saddam Hussein’s penal code, roughly a dozen Iraqi journalists have been charged with offending public officials in the past year.
Currently, three journalists for a small newspaper in southeastern Iraq are being tried here for articles last year that accused a provincial governor, local judges and police officials of corruption. The journalists are accused of violating Paragraph 226 of the penal code, which makes anyone who “publicly insults” the government or public officials subject to up to seven years in prison.

Problems you are not allowed to talk about are nearly impossible to solve. I know this from personal and recent experience.

If Iraq is going to move in positive directions, a free press is absolutely critical to the process. How can we claim we’ve liberated a country where the press cannot question the actions of government officials without fear of imprisonment? That’s a really tough sell…

What happens when the troops go home

Solving problems in Iraq is a long-term proposition that will continue to be challenging in years and decades to come. America faces some tough choices. Some questions that will be painful to answer no matter what the answer is. What happens if we leave too early? We already know that:

The Shiite south — including Karbala, Najaf and Maysan provinces, which coalition forces made the first test cases for withdrawal — is now a virtual Militiastan, ruled by armed gangs and warlords playing the part of politicians. In Hilla, the Iraqi commander of an effective (and even rarer, non-sectarian) police unit that works closely with U.S. Special Forces told me this summer that local officials, including his governor, regularly call him to their offices to pressure him to incorporate more militia members into his ranks, even threatening him with dismissal. He has survived at least a half-dozen assassination attempts.

In Basra, Iraq’s second-largest city, where British forces have dramatically scaled back their patrols (as some withdrawal proponents would like to see U.S. troops do in other cities), the murder rate tripled this year and at least four Shiite militias are waging a bloody turf war. When British troops withdrew from the city of Amarah, militia loyalists ransacked their base and celebrated what they called a victory over “the occupier.”

Right now, Iraq is the wild west of the Middle East. Rule of law is practically non-existent in biggest population centers for many reasons. American troops can provide security very well, but there are not enough of them to do so everywhere all the time. Not even close. Does America want a draft? I don’t see that happening.

The Iraqi Army doesn’t work the same way as the U.S. military. The cultures are too different. Iraqi soldiers are much more casual and much less disciplined than we are. There are good Iraqi units out there, but they seem to be the exception rather than the rule. Militias provide a lot of the security for various neighborhoods in Baghdad, but they are incompatible with rule of law as envisioned by the planners and administrators who are trying to build a working democracy in the war-torn nation. This is mostly because the militias are motivated by religion and sect. Iraq lacks the nationalist drive and vision that keeps America glued together.

What’s needed? Strong secular leaders on the national and local level. When the United States was being formed, there was a great amount of debate between federalists and anti-federalists. The federalists won. In Iraq, a similar debate is taking place. In the next year, Iraqis will decide whether they want to split the country into three semi-autonomous regions – one for Shia, one for Kurds and one for Sunnis.

I don’t think Iraq is in freefall. Hope exists, and there are many brave Iraqis working to make things better. Ultimately it will be up to them to mold the direction Iraq will take. What will rise from the ashes of Saddam? That remains to be seen.

I’ve been here a year, and perhaps contributed a tiny drop in a giant bucket. I hope that in coming years, I will see more honesty from American leaders when it comes to our role in Iraq. We have a responsibility to stay and work with the fledgling Iraqi government until they ask us to leave. I would like to hear less glossing over of the horrible violence and more realistic statements explaining that Iraq’s current situation will take at least a generation to stabilize. The American people have a responsibility to support the legitimately elected government as long as is necessary to bring peace and stability to average Iraqis.

If we shy away from the truth, as ugly as it sometimes is, I believe we will be spitting in our own eye. We legally punish a parent who abandons a child. Iraq is our child now. We birthed her. Running away when things get tough isn’t the answer. If we run away I will consider it abandonment.

Ten things I will miss when I leave Iraq

With only a few days left to go before my unit leaves Iraq, it’s time to list the 10 things I will miss about being here.

  1. Friends – I’ve made friends in the unit, and I’ve also become friends with some of our Iraqi translators and groundskeeping crew. I will truly miss some of these people and will worry about them – their futures are tied to the ongoing process of trying to build an Iraq where Iraqis have more choices in life.
  2. Low maintenance lifestyle – Although I’m often frustrated beyond belief by the reality of military life; a reality where most of your decisions are made by someone else, I will miss having other people do all the cooking and cleaning to some extent.
  3. Multi-million dollar gym – I’ll miss all the free exercise equipment.
  4. Being a part of something bigger than I am – Iraq is messy, and it’s disheartening some of the time, but what’s happening here is much bigger than I am. I’ll miss participating in world-changing events on some level.
  5. Short commute – At home, I drive 70 miles a day each way to work. The scenery is much nicer than what I’ve had here in Iraq, but I lose two hours a day. I’ll miss the one-mile daily commute.
  6. American public support – I’ve had a lot of thoughtful and caring supporters during my time in Iraq. I appreciate each and every one of you. Thank you for your kind words and thoughtful comments. They meant a lot.
  7. Carrying a weapon openly – If it was socially acceptable, I would openly carry my pistol in civilian life back home. I think part of the responsibility of being a citizen includes basic self-defense. An armed society is a polite society. I wish we had more of a gun culture in the U.S.
  8. Camraderie – One of the things I love (and hate) most about the military is being thrown together with people from walks of life I wouldn’t otherwise be exposed to. Military service has expanded my understanding and tolerance of people from backgrounds that I previously had little to no understanding of.

Well, that’s it. I guess eight things is going to have to do it. I’m sure that as time passes, my reflections on my service in Iraq will change, and I’ll see what I did, and what we did together in a different light. Right now, all I can think about is getting back to my wife and my life as it was before I left.

It won’t be exactly the same – human beings cannot help but change in a year. I’m as ready as I can be.

Googling the Fair Tax

by TD of The Right Track

A quick and dirty search through Google News for articles, news, and editorials revealed no less than 14 pieces written in the last month regarding the FairTax. Fully 1/3 of those were editorials agreeing with the need for the FairTax.

A sampling:

From the Denver Daily News, an editorial titled “FairTax, not flat tax, needed to fix nation’s taxation woes“:

Dear editor,

The IRS needs to be eliminated and replaced with the FairTax, not the flat tax, as suggested by columnist Aaron Harber in Monday’sDenver Daily News.

The flat tax changes absolutely nothing the IRS, tax code, regulations, 16th Amendment, corporate taxation and payroll taxes (the way Social Security is funded) stay exactly the same under the flat tax.

At best, the flat tax is temporary, the wrong direction to move towards simplification.

From the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, “The Fairer Tax“:

The Fair Tax (FairTax.org) will make our true tax burden — most of which is concealed in the price of goods and services — visible to all and is a necessary first step toward smaller and less-intrusive government.

We cannot allow the perfect to become the enemy of the good.

So first, let’s replace the current complex and dishonest system of taxation with a fair and transparent system that will allow the people to choose how much government they can afford in full knowledge of how much it really costs.

The Raleigh/Durham News & Observer has an editorial headlined “Total Replacement“:

Our tax code has grown steadily more complex, unwieldy, expensive and out of control ever since its overhaul in 1986. The IRS is increasingly unable to cope with the tax code, and puts much of its resources to uses unrelated to raising revenue and contrary to the wishes of the Founders.

Like Icarus flying ever closer to the sun, the tax system appears to be headed for self-destruction. It is far beyond any fix and is losing respect and credibility. The only reasonable solution is to finally and completely scrap it and replace it. I support the revenue-neutral FairTax plan. (http://www.fairtax.org/ 1-800-FairTax).

This is just a sampling of what people are saying all across the country. Truly a grassroots effort, it takes people willing to step up and show public support for the FairTax to convince politicians that it’s in their best interest to support the bills.

One way to show public support is to write an editorial to your local paper, no matter how large or small. Use the FairTax category that may appear on this participant blog, visit http://www.fairtax.org/, or read the FairTax book by Boortz and Linder to learn more. Get your facts straight, then write your editorial and submit it. Many papers now have a way to submit online or via e-mail.

However you decide to do it, your public support for the FairTax is vital.

The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

Ten things I won’t miss when I leave Iraq

  1. The heat – It was 150 degrees one day this summer. Our air conditioners managed to keep it at 85 inside our trailers when they worked. We had our unit replaced six times while I was here.
  2. European toilets and plumbing – Waste removal systems aren’t what we take for granted in the U.S. Here in Baghdad, we had to put our toilet paper in a special little trash can because the plumbing would clog if you just flushed it. All the bathrooms had little signs reminding you not to flush your used toilet paper. Better than a port-a-potty, sure, but I had to use those quite frequently too.
  3. Micromanagement – Any large bureaucracy is top heavy with middle managers. I’ve grown sick to death of having six levels of approval for every task. Any task I would have done in my civilian job took ten times longer in Iraq because of the overmanagement.
  4. The food – Lots of people rave about our dining facilities. Me – not so much. The variety of menu items left something to be desired. The quality of the ingredients left something to be desired. Not being able to go whenever you want left something to be desired.
  5. Work pace – Think you’re tired? Our first four months here, I didn’t get a day off. I worked between 12-16 hours a day. Later, when things fell more into a routine, I got one day off a week, sometimes.
  6. Fun police – The military is filled with this type of petty bureaucrat. You may be an adult, but you certainly won’t often be treated like an adult. You can’t have a beer because you can’t be trusted to drink in moderation. You can’t wear civilian clothes because you’re always on duty. You need a sign in your vehicle window reminding you to wear a seatbelt. At least once a day, someone will send you an e-mail designed to ensure you’re reminded of things you are not allowed to do, or a detailed breakdown of the only approved method of doing something the "Army way." If someone else does something stupid, expect a new policy designed to ensure you don’t have the freedom of choice to repeat that mistake. Need to go to the bathroom? Make sure you grab a buddy to hold your hand and shake it off for you.
  7. Loud noises – As soon as you drop off to sleep one of the following events will happen: a) Helicopter will fly over at 50 feet above your hooch, shaking you awake b) Suite mates in the room next door will drop a heavy object or jump off the bed, vibrating you awake c) Rocket or mortar will land a few hundred yards away causing you to spring out of bed and run around fully awake d) EOD will explode something they found, booming you awake e) Roommate will turn the TV on, banalizing you awake. f) Big giant voice will announce that the marines will be conducting an exercise and not to react, pointlessly awakening you.
  8. Just do it – I like things logical. If something doesn’t make sense to me, I don’t like it and don’t want to be involved with it. I question tasks or activities which I don’t fully understand the purpose of. This is my nature. In the Army, you are not supposed to do that. If someone who outranks you says "dig a ditch," then by God you better start digging. I often get hard looks and a raised voice because I don’t just start digging. If I know why I’m putting the ditch there, then I’ll dig with everything I have (if the ditch will do something useful). In my civilian life, I don’t dig a ditch "just because" and that’s the way I like it. I eagerly await digging my next ditch that will do something useful, like draining water away from my garage.
  9. Unecessary meetings – Meetings are awful unless you’re talking about something you really enjoy or have a great interest in. Meetings where we discuss why Spc. Bumblef**k was late for a formation suck. Meetings to discuss the proper way to wear a uniform or how best to tie your boots are silly. We have e-mail. Use it appropriately. Then there are the endless micromanagement meetings. What did your section do today? What will you be doing tomorrow? How about next week? I’ll give you a hint – we’ll probably be in a meeting you mandated. Enough meetings. Let’s get some work done. Thanks.
  10. Mandatory fun – The two words don’t go together. Talk about your oxymoron. If I want to play volleyball with you, I will tell you. I’m reminded of being forced to participate in activities I didn’t enjoy back in summer camp when I was thirteen. Now that I’m 35 I don’t really need a do-over. You cannot make someone have fun.

Tune in soon for ten things I will miss about being in Iraq. In the meantime, I wish you a life filled with opportunities to be creative, inventive and most of all independent. Choices are the spice you never notice till someone removes them.

Why Do We Have To Put Up With This?

Chavez’s attack on President Bush wasnt just an attack on President Bush; but an attack on all Americans as far as Im concerned.  Probably not the best way to promote his business.  [image:346:r:l=x]

The French boyscout-pirate look cracks me up though.   

A great clip from Neal’s Nuze on Chavez’s antics yesterday:

Yesterday the president of Venezuela Hugo Chavez took to the podium at the United Nations and spoke to the General Assembly.  In his speech, he slammed President Bush, calling him “The Devil” and talked about the Noam Chomsky book he’s been reading.  That should be enough to tell you everything this crazy leftist stands for…but there was more to the story.

Sounding like he was reading a script prepared by the Democrat Party and Moveon.org,  Chavez ranted on and on about how the United States was an imperialist nation that didn’t really want peace.  He criticized Bush for thinking he owned the world and called him an imperialist, fascist and an assassin.  Not much of a surprise.  But in making his remarks, Chavez made Bush’s point.

One by one, these supposedly elected tinhorn dictators are making the Bush Administration’s point.  Hugo Chavez is an America-hating socialist that cavorts with the world’s thugs.  He is an enemy of the United States, just like the president of Iran is.  He would be saying what he is saying no matter who was in charge in the Oval Office.  He hates George W. Bush because Bush doesn’t give people like himself much wiggle room.

By the way, anyone notice the lack of response from the Democrats on these speeches by Chavez and the president of Iran?  Do they agree with what they’re saying?  How about it, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Hillary Clinton?  Are you going to not disagree with these crazies?  It sure seems to be the case.  Wouldn’t you think that when some foreign footstool calls our president the “devil” that at least some of the loyal opposition would have something to say?  Evidently not.

Why do we have to put up with this?  Why do we have to open our arms to voids surrounded by a sphincter muscle like Hugo Chavez; allowing them to come to this country to demean our institutions?  Why?  The United nations, that’s why.

but then .. Chavez had one fabulous idea in all of his rantings.  He proposed moving the United Nations to Venezuela.  That is a fabulous idea….get the whole sham of an organization completely out of here.  He can have it.

I’ll remember that the next time I drive past a Citgo station.

Brave new world

Bruce Schneier advises his readers to renew their passports now. Why? Because RFID chips will soon be embedded in them, and that presents a security risk.

By itself, this is no problem. But RFID chips don’t have to be plugged in to a reader to operate. Like the chips used for automatic toll collection on roads or automatic fare collection on subways, these chips operate via proximity. The risk to you is the possibility of surreptitious access: Your passport information might be read without your knowledge or consent by a government trying to track your movements, a criminal trying to steal your identity or someone just curious about your citizenship.

At first the State Department belittled those risks, but in response to criticism from experts it has implemented some security features. Passports will come with a shielded cover, making it much harder to read the chip when the passport is closed. And there are now access-control and encryption mechanisms, making it much harder for an unauthorized reader to collect, understand and alter the data.

Things might be different if the government had a good record of keeping your personal data secure. It doesn’t. Look at how abused social security numbers are. RFID chips that store your personal data are vulnerable to sophisticated criminals.

Whatever happens, if you have a passport with an RFID chip, you’re stuck. Although popping your passport in the microwave will disable the chip, the shielding will cause all kinds of sparking. And although the United States has said that a nonworking chip will not invalidate a passport, it is unclear if one with a deliberately damaged chip will be honored.

The Colorado passport office is already issuing RFID passports, and the State Department expects all U.S. passport offices to be doing so by the end of the year. Many other countries are in the process of changing over. So get a passport before it’s too late. With your new passport you can wait another 10 years for an RFID passport, when the technology will be more mature, when we will have a better understanding of the security risks and when there will be other technologies we can use to cut the risks. You don’t want to be a guinea pig on this one.

Hmm, the microwave idea sounds like a good one. Be careful though – that sparking can cause a fire. If you don’t believe me, put a CD you don’t care about in your microwave for 10 seconds and watch. I’m not responsible for toxic fumes or other damage that may result from doing so.

As technology continues to march your personal data will become less and less personal. It’s up to the individual to safeguard that data, since government has never been able to so in a responsible manner.

Where Iraq Itself Finds Hope

Here’s a thought provoking op-ed by Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih.

We have a sense of urgency, but we refuse to give in to panic. While it is important to highlight the progress made, particularly given the extremely pessimistic tone of debate in Washington, we know we must confront many grave challenges. The unrelenting security problem, sectarian polarization, corruption and the inability of the government to deliver services are all threats to the transition. They could prove fatal if not dealt with urgently.

We Iraqis must recognize that it is up to us to resolve our problems. Outsiders cannot deliver for us. The Iraqi leadership must assume responsibility, deal with these challenges and turn the tide. This can be done by Iraqis, but they will undoubtedly need sustained support from the international community and particularly the United States.

The key here is that a member of Iraq’s elected government is stating that Iraq needs sustained support from the United States. Giving up on the mess we’ve made shouldn’t even be one of the options being discussed back at home in my opinion.

We must defend diversity. Those responsible for the violence, the Baathist-jihadist terrorist axis, hate and reject diversity and democracy. They seek supremacy and theocracy.

Despite all the muddle, confusion and rampant violence in Iraq; despite my own personal war weariness, I’m not ready to trade a single secular strongman dictator for 1,000 theocratic tinpot tyrants. Iraqis deserve much better. Iraq as an embattled police state is unsustainable. Iraq as a source of instability and jihadism for the region is intolerable. So what do we do that we are not already doing? How do we educate Iraqis? How do we encourage economic growth that will employ desperate Iraqis? How do we help the government provide basic services on the local level? I don’t have clear answers, and from the ground after a year, it sometimes seems all we are doing is treading water.

On the other hand the Dhi Qar province is scheduled to be turned over to Iraqi control later in the month. Kurdistan just hosted an international expo. Hope exists. Progress exists. They are both often overshadowed by continuing violence, mismanagement and political selfishness on the part of both Iraqi and American officials.

Iraqi government to dig trenches around Baghdad

Iraqi security forces will dig trenches around Baghdad and set up checkpoints along all roads leading into the city to reduce some of the violence plaguing the capital, the Interior Ministry said Friday.To help halt that bloodshed, more U.S. troops have been shifted to Baghdad from the insurgent stronghold of Anbar province, a senior U.S. commander said.

I very much doubt this plan was part of the original scope of Operation Together Forward. I’m not sure exactly how this is going to work but I can see the security value. Various criminal elements, revolutionaries and rabble rousers might be able to walk across the trench with small arms, but they will have a hard time getting a VBIED or other large munitions across.

Baghdad is the key to everything and bringing security is the key to making Baghdad livable. I’ll follow this new development with great interest.

Update: The U.S. is saying the “moat” around Baghdad is an exaggeration.

Get over yourself

You know, people insult me on this blog from time to time. It’s my home turf, and I get testy about it, but I can’t recall ever having demanded a personal apology. What is it with fundamental religious types? Why are they so sensitive and demanding?

Anger spread throughout the Muslim world yesterday following an address given by Pope Benedict XVI at the university of Regensburg in Germany last Tuesday in which he quoted a 14th century Byzantine emperor on the spread of Islam through violence.

Last night a high-ranking Catholic Church source expressed fears for the Pope’s safety, saying “while I think the controversy will go away, it has done damage and if I were a security expert I’d be worried”.

Easily offended people who also carry around a large bag of self-righteousness are quite dangerous. I’m very tired of them. Perhaps the Pope’s comment were out of line. Wouldn’t it be enough to politely say, “we disagree.” Wouldn’t it be enough to point out evidence that contradicts what the Pope had to say? Then leave it alone.
You know what? I’m not going to apologize for my perceptions and beliefs. Words are just that – words. I may feel offended when someone smears something I hold dear, but I don’t go to rallies and demand official apologies or renouncements. If you believe something different from me, something that’s offensive to me, that’s your right. As long as you aren’t inciting people to kill me, or trying to do so yourself, then by all means, carry on.

I wish people would grow up.

Zip zoom blam; we’re outta here soon

Our deployment is winding down. Our replacement unit will be here soon, and we are getting very busy trying to make all the necessary preparations. The missions don’t slow down just because we have to pack and ship all our gear home.

I think that our unit is tired. While many of us have grown more physically fit during our time in Baghdad, it’s my impression (and certainly for me personally) that most of us have mentally been worn down by this experience. The reasons vary, but certainly, there has been a price paid.

We’ve all sacrificed some or many things to be here. A year away from a professional career. A year away from loved ones. A year off from college. A year without alcohol, fine dining and night life. We traded those things for an aluminum sleeping box and the sound and sonic fury of explosions and the constant overflight of Blackhawk and Apache helicopters accompanied by near and far staccato sounds of small arms fire.

We’ll all be going our separate ways soon enough. Some of us are going back to civilian life for good. Some will continue down a military path. I’m waffling right now. I’m sick to death of the bureaucratic roadblocks that impeded every activity we were tasked with here in Baghdad. I spent more time fighting bureaucrats than any other single activity. The U.S. Army is top heavy with paperwork shufflers and short of the type of people who “get it done.” That’s been the single most discouraging factor of this deployment – it’s weighed more heavily on me than any of the explosions or attacks I’ve seen, heard or felt. I’ll leave here with somewhat of a sour taste in my mouth, despite my best efforts to stay positive and upbeat. As far as I am concerned, the reality is that every three steps forward we take, we also take two back.

Success or failure in Iraq won’t be determined primarily by the insurgency; rather the final outcome of this conflict will be determined by the paper pushers. The people who make the rules of engagement, the people who choose the missions and the people who report on progress or lack thereof will lose or win this thing for us.

The miliary in general must find better ways to allow information to circulate. The old chain of command structures still have some value, but they won’t help us win modern wars. A massive and rigidly structured organization with information flow that only goes up and down will always be beaten by a small, mobile organization that has no barriers to information flow.

Think about this – it takes three years to make a simple change to the officially approved chow hall menu in the Army. How can an organization that moves that slowly hope to outthink and outmaneuver its enemy? I wonder… A lot of people like to tell me I need to stop whining and just do what I’m told. They’re all part of the problem, from my persepective.

The military cannot succeed in this day and age if the people who make it go insist on adhering to that sort of stupid, mindless rigidity.

Military’s Baghdad death count excludes some types of murders

While I was in Qatar on pass, I read the following article about the levels of violence in Baghdad during July.

The decision to include only victims of drive-by shootings and those killed by torture and executions allowed U-S officials to argue that a security crackdown led by U-S forces had cut the capital’s murder rate in half.

The omission of bombs, mortars, rockets or other mass attacks put the U-S military’s toll into conflict with Iraqi Health Ministry numbers. The ministry counted more than 1500 violent deaths in and around Baghdad — nearly the same number as in July.

To say that I am flabbergasted by this article would be an understatement. The process of tracking and monitoring levels of violence in the capital is a complicated one, but in my mind, there is no way that underreporting the violence by leaving out certain types of murders was unintentional. That reflects poorly on every individual tasked with helping to improve the security situation, including me.

If we are not being completely forthright about the situation on the ground in Iraq, then how can we expect to improve the situation on the ground in Iraq? I’m sure that someone, somewhere has a rational explanation for the above. Maybe this is bad reporting, or someone muddled something up. I certainly hope so. Someone needs to clarify what happened.

After nearly a year here in Baghdad, I am very weary of the violence. I cannot even begin to imagine what it must be like for the run of the mill residents who do not live behind blast walls and who are not protected 24/7 by an array of military weapons and security forces. Winning the long war requires always telling the truth, without editing, without spin. You cannot fix this broken city without examining its reality, and publicly facing daily life and death on its streets.

Things will eventually improve. Whether they improved during July or not remains in doubt, at least in my mind. I’m sure the city’s rank and file residents would have an opinion on that too, were I able to safely go out and interview them. I am not, and so I must often gather my news the same way you do, from behind a keyboard. I have been out and about in Baghdad, but always within the security of an armored and armed convoy, which is not something available to city residents.

Operation Together Forward is ongoing and it does appear that those neighborhoods being focused on are experiencing reductions in daily violence. Long-term plans to expand and extend the overall plan will be critical to the future of Baghdad, which is home to about 7 million of the nation’s 27 million citizens. Are the 6,000 additional troops enough? Time will tell. In the meanwhile, I hope that we get better, clearer news for the months of August and September.

With Allies Like Germany Who Needs Enemies?

[thumb:343:r:l=x] Thanks to Germany Hezbollah has one more fanatic back in its ranks.  

Mohammed Ali Hamadi was released despite strong U.S. objections, FOX News learned. Those objections were raised in phone calls to German authorities by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and FBI Director Robert Mueller, as well as by top-level State Department and administration counter-terrorism officials.

Good to know Germany has our back in the war on the terror. Unless of course; an archeologist gets kidnapped and then all deals are off.  Germany is low on archeologists; war on terror be damned:

U.S. officials said they “can’t rule out” the possibility that Germany deported Hamadi, after he had served 19 years of a life sentence, in exchange for the release of Susanne Osthoff, a German archeologist taken hostage in Iraq and freed four days after Hamadi’s deportation. German authorities have denied any such deal was made.

Mohammed Ali Hammadi is the Lebonese terrorist who helped hijack TWA Flight 847 and personally beat and bludgeoned Navy diver Robert Stethem with a pistol before murdering him and dropping his body on the runway more than 20 years ago.

With allies like Germany who needs enemies?

Back from Mosul

My hands to warI spent the last few days in Mosul gathering information for a story on the Ninewa Provincial Reconstruction Team.

I’ve been shot at lots of times with rockets and mortars since I arrived in Iraq. That’s not personal. It’s just luck of the draw whether or not those things will land on you.

In Mosul, I experienced a small arms attack for the first time. Small arms attacks are very personal. The first mission I was out on took sniper fire from somewhere. We don’t know where. The driver’s windshield on one of our humvees took a direct hit. Had it not been for the bulletproof windshield he would have been shot through the face. American engineering and technology prevented that.

Rolling in humvees is a hair raising experience. The tension is palpable. We stop for nothing at all. I have to admire the soldiers who participate in such missions daily. They are my heroes. Their lives are on the line every single day, yet they remain calm, controlled and professional. I cannot emphasize enough just how professional these young men were at every moment I was with them.

Meanwhile, back home, the debate rages.

Bush made clear at a recent news conference that defense of his Iraq policy would be at the center of this year’s campaign. He noted that there are “people in the Democrat Party who believe that the best course of action is to leave Iraq before the job is done, period, and they’re wrong.”

The president repeated that message Thursday to American Legion delegates, declaring: “The United States will not leave Iraq until victory is achieved.”

So the battle is joined. That leaves it to Democrats to find their voice, to get beyond criticism of Bush’s decision to launch the Iraq war (which many of them supported), the conduct of the occupation and their vague call for “a new direction in Iraq, with responsible redeployment of U.S. forces … that begins this year,” as House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi has put it.

Just what sort of victory are we trying to achieve in Iraq? Well, after my trip to Mosul I can speak on that, and I will. We’re trying to bring Iraqis running water, stable electricity and basic human rights. We’re trying to help them educate their children and live peacefully with each other. In the north of Iraq, there are Sunnis, Kurds, Christians and Yezidis. All of them are human beings, but they were not treated equally under Saddam. In the new Iraq that the coalition and the newly elected Iraqi government are trying to build, these people will be equal.

Equality does not interest those who had power under Saddam’s rule. They want to be back on top. And then there are the common criminals. Saddam released 200,000 of them back into the general population in 2003. Add to that the long history of conflict between various sects and ethnic groups in the regoin, and you have the messiness that is Iraq in 2006.

George W. Bush and his administration have made some mistakes. Whether or not you believe the original invasion was a mistake is long past being irrelevant. What matters now, to me at least, is the principle of “you break it, you pay for it.”

We inserted ourselves into this country to remove an evil man from power, ostensibly because he was harboring bad people who represented a threat to our citizens. In so doing, we removed stability. And we’ve got to stay until we can reintroduce a completely different kind of stability. The stability of the old Iraq was achieved through ruthlessness. Just ask the Kurd I interviewed while in Mosul. He works for the coalition now. Several decades ago, when he was 19, Saddam’s men kidnapped him from the north and brought him to Baghad, where they pulled out his toenails with pliers and did other things which he doesn’t talk about to this day.

When you vote, you must vote your conscience. I have not heard the Democratic party lucidly explain how they will fix what we broke. All I’ve heard is how Iraq is a mess. Well, it is. But things are slowly improving. Iraq’s national and provincial government are learning and growing stronger. Iraq’s security forces are building and improving in capability. It’s expensive, messy, and sometimes heartrending. And people are dying everyday.

The alternative, however, is unpalatable to me. Pulling our troops out now would be a disaster. What the Democrats would do if they became the majority again in regards to Iraq is quite unclear. That means I won’t be able to cast a vote for any of them. I’m unwilling to condemn Iraq to 40 more years of what my Kurdish friend and his family members were subjected too. We need to stay and help clean up the mess. Where’s the Democratic plan to do that? Someone point me in the right direction.

MA Congressional Candidate Rick Barton Supports The Fair Tax

Massachusetts candidate Rick Barton is running for the Sixth Congressional District seat.  He’ll be running against incumbent liberal John Tierney this November.      

I found out about Mr. Barton from an email interview with Sher Zieve of The Conservative Voice.  That’s when I discovered he was a Fair Tax supporter:

…I feel that there is room for a great deal more tax reform and back scrapping the IRS and implementing a national sales tax as proposed by H.R. 25 The Fair Tax…

I also liked the six principles he outlined in the article.  He’s definitely one of the better candidates out there: 

• “Is it the governments business?

“Washington should only concern itself with those things that cannot be handled at the state, community, or individual level. Federal action must remain within the limits of constitutional authority.

• “Does this measure promote self-reliance?

“Programs should help individuals stand on their own. The objective of any government program should be equality of opportunity. Too many government programs punish individual initiative and condemn their clients to permanent dependence.

• “Is it responsible?

“Programs must be able to stand on their own and withstand the scrutiny of citizens and legislators. Our federal government has become so bloated from pork and wasteful spending it has trouble getting off the couch to act in times of genuine need.

• “Does it make us more prosperous?

“Excessive government regulation, high taxes, and trade barriers all stifle our economic freedom and national prosperity.

• “Does it make us safer?

“Government policy should protect our country and make for a better future. Washington must take seriously the perils we face at home and abroad. They must commit to the kind of strength, courage, and resolution demonstrated by President Ronald Reagan in leading us to victory in the Cold War.

• “Does it unify us?

“The government should serve to bind us together with our shared national values, not exaggerate our differences and undermine our national identity, principles and purpose. Government policies and programs must encourage patriotism, American values, a common language, a unified national identity, and a level playing field, without fear or favor.”

Trouble In Turkey

Here’s an article I found about terrorist activity in Turkey. 

The editorial covers a lot of interesting points quickly so I’ve pasted the article below: 

This week has seen the start of terror operations by another group of deluded people. The fatuously named Kurdistan Freedom Falcons have set off six bombs in Turkey, killing three people and seriously injuring dozens more in attacks largely aimed at tourist destinations. They have promised to turn “Turkey into hell” and that frightening statement pretty well sums up the emptiness and nihilism of their aims.

The Kurds have reason to be bitter about their history with the three states, Iran, Iraq and Turkey that cover what they see as their homeland. Saddam Hussein brutalized and massacred Iraqi Kurds. From 1988 the Turks fought a bitter war against Kurdish PKK rebels in the southeast of the country in which more than 30,000 lives were lost. The Kurdish language was proscribed. Moderate politicians, Turkish as well as Kurdish, who even suggested mildly that Kurdish culture deserved some sort of official recognition were prosecuted.

But the world has changed hugely for the Kurds. They now have political and cultural recognition in Turkey. In northern Iraq, the Kurdish region is effectively autonomous and the only undisputed shining beacon of hope of stability and development in Iraq. Jalal Talabani is president of a multicultural Iraq; he is also a Kurd.

The Talabani and Barzani clans, once bitter rivals representing respectively the Western Turkic- and Eastern Persian-influenced Kurds, are now united in an alliance running their autonomous region in Iraq. Istanbul, the vibrant commercial heart of Turkey, is notable for its large and vibrant Kurdish population, many of whom originally fled the troubles in the east. As and when Turkey makes it into the EU, Turkish Kurds and by extension their cousins in Iran and Iran will enjoy the benefits.

Now, therefore, is a time for consolidation of the very real gains that Kurds have made in Iraq and Turkey. It is not the moment for renewed violence. There are still many Turks, particularly in the Kemalist military, newly headed by the hard-liner Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, who fear that the abolition of discriminatory laws against the Kurds threatens the cohesion of the Turkish state. A new bombing campaign will make it more likely that the Turks will do what they have threatened repeatedly to do, which is raid northern Iraq to take out PKK guerrilla camps. Like other terrorist groups, by specifically targeting civilians, the so-called Freedom Falcons make things worse by creating populist support for hard-line responses that often lead to further oppression or discrimination of the people these groups profess to represent. Ordinary Turks, angered by the latest terrorist violence, are calling for firm action to crush Kurdish rebels once and for all.

However, any crackdown would only open old wounds, cause further bloodshed and put back by years the Kurds’ chance of a lasting settlement. Therefore, right-thinking Kurds who know anything about the murderous Kurdish Freedom Falcons should inform on the terrorists before they do any more serious damage to the Kurdish cause.

Hezbollah, Marlboros and The Great Viagra Caper

I read stories like this and I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.  On the surface it’s almost funny but the underlying threat isn’t.

A man has pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to racketeering charges in connection with a scheme to buy cigarettes in North Carolina and then sell them in other states to raise money for the Hezbollah.

Nothing out of the ordinary here; just your typical arab gangster trying to make a quick buck for him, his cronies and Allah. 

He was arrested in March and indicted, along with nine other men, in connection with a scheme to sell cigarettes, counterfeit rolling papers and counterfeit Viagra.

Counterfeit rolling papers?  Isn’t that… like making counterfeit pennies?  Really makes you wonder about these people.

Portions of the profits were funneled to Hezbollah militants in Lebanon, the government claimed.

U.S. Attorney Stephen Murphy said the men conducted the operation from 1996 to 2004.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office said 18 men were involved in the scheme overall.

It’s not funny though when you think of how many cells may be out there exploiting our government loopholes and working our system to stuff the coffers of the ill-minded and self-destructive.

Improving life in Iraq

If the situation in Iraq seems confusing to a soldier who is actually here, I can only imagine how much more confusing it seems to someone back home, whose only source of information is the confusing stream of images and stories being thrown at you on television and in print media.

Contrary to what you may be seeing or hearing though, there is a coherent plan for improving the situation here.

It has three main facets: unity, security and prosperity. In my opinion, these three go in order of precedence and are predicated upon each other. Unity is the most important. Without a desire for a unified Iraq, the violence will continue. Once Iraqis desire unity more than they desire whatever other goals they have in mind, it will be possible to begin achieving real security. Once inroads have been made in achieving security for average Iraqis, then prosperity can begin. The coalition can only achieve so much. The real work must be done by the Iraqi politicians and by the Iraqi military.

The work being done in Baghdad now is very important. The nature of the hopes and goals of the current operation are reflected in its name – Operation Together Forward.

“I think what’s really important is that we, as a team, treated the people with dignity and respect, and that the locals appreciated the way Iraqi security forces treated them when they were out patrolling and clearing for the security of their areas,” Shields explained.

“I think the confidence of the people has gone up with the Iraqi security forces … The Iraqi Army, the National Police and Iraqi Police have been instrumental in improving the perception of security within these areas,” he said.

Even with those successes, Shields admitted there is a lot of work still to do.

As I’ve said many times, the road ahead for Iraq is a long one. The nation is in a struggle to save its own soul and emerge reborn as a country, instead of a group of squabbling tribes and disparate groups who are all at odds with one another. It will take more than a generation for real change and improvement.

Types of reinforcement and personnel retention

I often wonder why the military has such a hard time keeping its most talented people. And I think I know at least one of the answers.

There are four methods for achiveing desired responses from human beings through the process of reinforcement. Here are those four types:

Positive Reinforcement. The examples above describe what is referred to as positive reinforcement. Think of it as adding something in order to increase a response. For example, adding a treat will increase the response of sitting; adding praise will increase the chances of your child cleaning his or her room. The most common types of positive reinforcement or praise and rewards, and most of us have experienced this as both the giver and receiver.

Negative Reinforcement. Think of negative reinforcement as taking something negative away in order to increase a response. Imagine a teenager who is nagged by his mother to take out the garbage week after week. After complaining to his friends about the nagging, he finally one day performs the task and to his amazement, the nagging stops. The elimination of this negative stimulus is reinforcing and will likely increase the chances that he will take out the garbage next week.

Punishment. Punishment refers to adding something aversive in order to decrease a behavior. The most common example of this is disciplining (e.g. spanking) a child for misbehaving. The reason we do this is because the child begins to associate being punished with the negative behavior. The punishment is not liked and therefore to avoid it, he or she will stop behaving in that manner.

Extinction. When you remove something in order to decrease a behavior, this is called extinction. You are taking something away so that a response is decreased.

Research has found positive reinforcement is the most powerful of any of these. Adding a positive to increase a response not only works better, but allows both parties to focus on the positive aspects of the situation. Punishment, when applied immediately following the negative behavior can be effective, but results in extinction when it is not applied consistently. Punishment can also invoke other negative responses such as anger and resentment.

Guess which type is most popular in the military? Punishment. I don’t disagree with punishment as a tool for achieving desired behaviors. However, over the long term, constant punishment coupled with a tendency to fail to reward a soldier when he or she performs at or above expectations will simply drive people away from a career in the military.

My command probably won’t want to hear this, but I can honestly say that the way I’ve been treated during this tour has been unprofessional and demotivating. You cannot deal with a middle aged business professional in the same way you deal with a middle schooler and expect to achieve positive results.

A perfect example of this counterproductive mentality is the way we deal with vehicle maintenance in the unit. A vehicle maintenance checklist is due once a week. Understandably, due to constant personnel shuffling, schedule changes and various unexpected things that happen in the type of environment we live in people sometimes forget to turn their checklists in. Rather than simply asking the section where the checklist is, or saying something like “have it on my desk in the next hour,” our unit just takes the vehicle away if the checklist is late. This is a punishment mentality. In the long run, it causes more harm than good.

People who have no vehicle are severely limited in their mobility, which is counterproductive. The soldiers who have had their vehicles taken away also tend to feel resentment. It takes them longer to get to work and to get home. They have to scrounge rides or take the bus system. The school marm mentality that produces this sort of “solution” to the problem of paperwork being turned in late will be remembered by each soldier down the road. They will have to ask themselves – do I like being treated like a child? Do I want to sign up for another three to six years of punishment?

When adults work together cooperatively great things can be achieved. This is no less true in the military than anywhere else. The problem is that many military leaders have the wrong mentality. Instead of looking for ways to reward hard work and achievement, they focus on petty bureaucracy and punishing banal minor deficits. The end result is that self-motivated professional soldiers are driven to other units or back into the civilian world where they have a much higher chance of finding employers who will value and appropriately reward their strengths.

Here’s a challenge for you military unit leaders – find ways to use positive reinforcement. Those of you who spend more time rewarding your troops for the good things they do than punishing them for the minor mistakes will reap the benefits of loyalty and high morale. No one wants to be kicked like a dog for every petty mistake they make. And if that’s your leadership style don’t be surprised when you get snarled at every time you come around.

Khairi Abaza on Arab Terrorism

Khairi Abaza is a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies; a foundation focused on reforming the middle east through democracy.  I’ve outlined some very interesting points from his article:  Khairi Abaza: Socio-political roots of Arab terrorism

After being dominated by foreign powers during the first half of the 20th Century, the Arab street was buoyed by hopes of “liberation” following World War II. Instead, colonial rule was replaced with oppressive and inefficient national governments. These regimes have failed to secure economic or social progress, and have denied political liberties. Most damaging, they redirected the desire of their citizens for a restored sense of pride to an external cause: the liberation of Palestine and the defeat of the “Zionist enemy,” on which they blamed all the region’s woes.

Arab nationalism, the misused ideology in these conflicts, was created by Arab Christians in the Levant in the late 19th Century, as a way to unite the Arabic-speaking population of the Mideast and North Africa on a cultural-ethnic ground, rather than a religious one — namely, Islam. The Arab-nationalist ideology eventually became the legitimizing ideology of every Arab dictator. But it failed to “liberate Palestine” or to create a unified Arab world. The ensuing conflicts with Israel led only to defeat upon defeat, deepening humiliation and frustration. Its main legacy: uniting the Arab public in humiliation, pain and sorrow, increasing the desire to vanquish Israel and thus restore lost Arab pride, at any cost.

All of them exploit the Arab public’s sense of humiliation to mobilize support for their personal ambitions.

Already, there is pressure on the Bush administration from both the right and the left to give up on the administration’s dream of a democratic Mideast. But this would be a terrible mistake.

A return to the so-called realism in which tyrants are tolerated as long as they keep their restive populations contained and their fiefdoms stable will ensure only that the Mideast remains the number-one recruiting ground for terrorists. Good governance won’t solve every problem of the Mideast, but it must be part of the solution.

Not forgotten

What seems like a lifetime ago, I dedicated my service in Iraq to the memory of Mike Stokely. I got this e-mail from his dad today:

On August 24, 2005, at approximately 5:00 p.m., I went to Hartsfield Atlanta to meet the most important flight I had ever met. I went alone, wearing a favorite blue blazer, grey pants, and red tie with navy stripes – the same I had worn to a prayer vigil for the Georgia National Guard 48th Brigade held by the Governor at the State Capitol in Atlanta a week earlier. It was an outfit that I felt very comfortable and fit me “good” and respectful dress for the passenger I was meeting.
As I stood in the office of the US Airways air cargo office and watched through the glass office door to the cargo bay, a motor tram pulled forward to the front of the air cargo hanger and stopped. Two Sergeants in dress uniform stepped forward as the cargo cart stopped. One Sergeant had come in on the flight I was meeting and pulled out paperwork and with the other Sergeant started comparing the paperwork with that of the crate on the air cargo tram. Once satisfied, they broke the shipping seals and began to remove the crate, revealing a casket with a box on top.
The two Sergeants carefully removed the contents of the box and as they did, in the best way I knew how to do, having never been properly trained, I came to attention and saluted as they unfolded an American Flag. I remained at attention and full salute, tears streaming down my face as the two Sergeants were ever so meticulous as they drapped the American Flag over the casket. Pain stabbed my heart even as it swelled with pride. An office full of people who were at that moment busy with the typical noise of an office suddenly became quiet and I could feel their eyes watching me. For the next few minutes, not a sound could be heard as the office staff seemingly froze in place with me, tears now dropping off my cheek and onto my shoulders and lapel. Then the flag drapped casket was loaded in a hearse and I crisply ended my salute as the two Sargeants then turned and saw me. Their eyes and nods of approval were reassuring.
I then walked outside to get fresh air, collect myself and called my wife, Retta. As she answered the phone, I said to her, tears welling in my voice, “Our boy is home.” We sobbed together a few moments. She was worried and asked if I would be OK, for she loved him as her own and we had never been us without him. She knew I would be, but had to hear me say I would. Then, I got in the hearse to make a thirty plus mile ride to the funeral home, a route taken many days over may years when I took my boy home after visitation weekends, holidays, and summers. Every mile had a memory, and a new welling of tears inside, but I kept them in as the Funeral Home Director drove. While I talked to conceal my heart breaking inside and to keep nervousness at bay, I was thinking of this time or that time with my boy at various points along the route. Too many memories to even begin to share in this writing, but a king’s treasure of beautiful memories from a toddler to a grown man just married and about to go off to war.
Then, the ride was over – my last ride taking my boy home. It was time to share him with others. My boy had come home a man’s man who was a fallen warrior. He gave as much as he had to give to his God, Family, Duty, Honor and especially his Country. In return, he asked for nothing.
Even now, I wince and cry as I think about that August 24th evening. Privileged to say the least to be there and have that time with my boy, and never to forget.
Robert Stokely
proud dad SGT Mike Stokely
KIA by IED 16 Aug 05 at 2:20 a.m. near Yusufiyah south of Baghdad
A man who lived for a just cause and died just because…John 15:13 no greater love
You are remembered, Mike.

Blackhawk UH-60 Lomo




Blackhawk UH-60 Lomo

Originally uploaded by the.myrmidon.

I’ve never experienced anything like the helicopter ride I took over northern Iraq recently. I felt as if I was trapped inside the devil’s hair dryer the entire time. We flew over endless barrens randomly interspersed with signs of a hardscrabble life below. The picture here shows one of the greenest areas we flew over. All life is clustered around the water sources.

Amazingly, I saw shepherds and sheep out in the middle of places that looked completely barren of any life. I don’t know what they were surviving on. There must have been hidden water I could not see. People manage to eke out an existence in some environments that are incredibly daunting. Everytime we flew over children, they waved. The adults are much more cautious.

IRS outsourcing of tax debts

by Julie of Degree of Madness

If you owe back taxes to the federal government, the next call asking you to pay may come not from an Internal Revenue Service officer, but from a private debt collector.

Within two weeks, the I.R.S. will turn over data on 12,500 taxpayers  each of whom owes $25,000 or less in back taxes  to three collection agencies. Larger debtors will continue to be pursued by I.R.S. officers. (link)

So now, private firms will have access to our tax information, or at minimum how much you (may or may not) owe to Uncle Sam. Our tax information is private. Or it was up until now.

Within two weeks, the I.R.S. will turn over data on 12,500 taxpayers  each of whom owes $25,000 or less in back taxes  to three collection agencies. Larger debtors will continue to be pursued by I.R.S. officers. (my emphasis).

And the IRS isn’t too particular about the business ethics of the firms they select to receive our tax data:

One of the three companies selected by the I.R.S. is a law firm in Austin, Tex., where a former partner, Juan Peqa, admitted in 2002 that he paid bribes to win a collection contract from the city of San Antonio. He went to jail for the crime.

Last month the same law firm, Linebarger Goggan Blair & Sampson, was again in the news. One of its competitors, Municipal Services Bureau, also of Austin, sued Brownsville, Tex., charging that the city improperly gave the Linebarger firm a collections contract that it suggested was influenced by campaign contributions to two city commissioners.

And how will these debt collectors be paid? They will receive 25% of what they collect. Whether or not the tax bill is accurate or actually owed at all (the IRS is in a league of its own when it comes to mistakes, errors and general incompetence), will not be the concern of these collectors.

And the privacy issue is not insignificant. It’s not clear whether these firms will be given the taxpayer social security number, but:

Private collectors will have authority to set up installment payment agreements, and gather financial information about those targeted, presumably to assess their ability to pay or to locate assets that might be attached.

Private collectors will have the authority to gather our personal financial information. Authority handed over to them by the federal government. Most everyone is aware of the aggressive, heavy-handed methods of collections agencies. I guess a partnership with the IRS just makes sense. A marriage made in heaven, so to speak.

The federal government already has too much access to our private financial information. And the ability of the IRS to audit at will, with no constraints or accountability is something we should not tolerate. And should not be forced to tolerate. And now private firms can get in on the action. And profit from it. At our expense.

There are so many good reasons to support the Fair Tax. Preventing the IRS from giving our private financial information to outside firms is just one more.

With the Fair Tax, the IRS will be abolished. No other tax plan under consideration abolishes the IRS. This is important. The IRS operates under the “guilty until proven innocent” theory. And however unjust that may be, that’s the way it is. It will never change. The IRS has power that most politicians only dream about. And IRS abuses are legend. And most of the abuses never make the headlines. They are relatively small in nature but very significant to those involved.

The convoluted tax code is an outrage. The enforcer is an even greater outrage. Leave your Constitutional rights at the door when the IRS shows up, ’cause you no longer have any. The IRS has virtually free will to demand access to every single detail of your financial life. With no probable cause.

Some things just can’t be reformed. Our tax code is one of them. The IRS is another. With the Fair Tax, we will all pay our fair share, but we won’t have to give up our privacy, or our sanity, to do it.

The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

If It Walks Like A Duck…

A recent article about an Australian acquitted of a terrorism charge after returning from an al qaeda training camp had me wondering; doesnt that make him a terrorist?

Melbourne man Jack Thomas has been acquitted of terrorism offences in Victoria’s Court of Appeal. His convictions for receiving funds from a terror group and using a false passport were quashed on Friday. Mr. Thomas was earlier sentenced to five years in jail.

After reading that article I didnt think so but I always like to do a little digging.  It didnt take long before I came up with this:

 In the interview, the applicant admitted that he had altered his passport in order to conceal the amount of time he had spent in Pakistan. He was concerned that questions might be asked about his associations and activities whilst absent from Australia, which included his contact with members of the al Qaeda terrorist organisation and his having been in Afghanistan (more specifically, at the al Faroq camp at which al Qaeda training was conducted). He also stated that the ticket and money had been provided to him by a man named Khaled bin Attash, who was an associate of Osama Bin Laden and a high ranking al Qaeda operative.

Yup.  Sounds like a terrorist in the making to me.  People who attend al Qaeda training camps arent there for unleavened bread recipes. 

All he got was five years… what the hell is that?  That doesn’t set much of precedent does it?   Don’t people do harder time for stealing cars?

Update from Baghdad

I’ve become a victim of my own success. Now that the MNF-Iraq.com web site is up and rolling, I’m going to be participating in lots of trips “outside the wire.”

This leads me to reflect somewhat on the nature of safety. In the months that I’ve spent in Iraq, I’ve noticed that a lot of people are pretty carefree and relaxed when they are inside Iraq’s biggest forward operating base – the fabled Green Zone. There isn’t much that’s green about this place. Rocket and mortar attacks are frequent. I don’t see any advantages, safety wise, to living where I live.

So I’m not sure what there is to worry about outside the walls of the Green Zone that I shouldn’t be worried about inside the walls of the Green Zone. Maybe snipers are a bigger concern, but snipers have a much smaller chance of killing me than a direct hit by a mortar or rocket. I’ve been outside the wire a number of times now, and not once has a rocket or mortar attack occurred. Iraqis are generally either reserved or friendly, but none have been openly hostile. Most are struggling to maintain a life, a family and looking for opportunities in a country that has long denied them such.

The vestiges and trappings of millenia old religious memes are still the driving force behind so much of society here. Everything that happens is “inshallah” or God’s will. Life is cheap, and the citizens of the country are reminded of that constantly by the sectarian fighting between Shia and Sunni. I met an Iraqi colonel the other day who represents the future of what I’d like to see Iraq become. He is a Sunni married to a Shia and they have two children. One is named a Shia name, and the other named a Sunni name. He leads Iraqi soldiers from both sects of Islam, and does not tolerate strife between the two.

For Iraq to become a modern, prosperous state, it must become a nation where Sunnis can marry Shia and vice versa, without having to worry about being murdered for it. Who do we blame for the current environment? Religious zealots from all over the Muslim world, but primarily from inside Iraq and Iran. Who will save Iraq? People like Colonel Ali, who refuse to judge people based on their names, or their religious sect.

Thanks to all my readers

Several of you have noted recently that I seem really busy. You’re right, and I am. This doesn’t mean I don’t read your e-mails or comments. I’m just behind, and unlikely to catch up until long after I return to the United States. But thank you so much. Especially those of you who have sent soccer balls and other gifts. They will be distributed to Iraqis and if I can, I’ll post some pictures here.

I’ve been getting postcards and care packages and personal notes in my in-box that have really meant something.  The support of several of my regular readers and commenters has been absolutely invaluable to helping me maintain a healthy mental state on days when I just wasn’t coping very well. This year has been very hard on my wife and I, and support from back home has really been important. Thanks. It makes a difference.

Choosing Political Correctness Over Safety

It’s a problem that will cost lives again; just like it did on September 11, 2001.

Just ask Michael Tuohey, the ticket agent who gave the boarding passes to Mohamed Atta and Abdul Aziz Alomari.  Clearly a product of liberal conditioning; he allowed who he instinctively knew to be terrorists to board the plane:

 

I said to myself, ‘If this guy doesn’t look like an Arab terrorist, then nothing does.’ Then I gave myself a mental slap, because in this day and age, it’s not nice to say things like this,” he said. “You’ve checked in hundreds of Arabs and Hindus and Sikhs, and you’ve never done that. I felt kind of embarrassed.”

Embarrassed until the jet crashed into the WTC.  Im glad I don’t have to live with that.

Even with testimony from an agent who readily admits his training and instincts spotted a terrorist isn’t enough to convince civil right dingbats like the ACLU that the human being is the best judge of friend or foe.  Let me share a quote from Johnah Goldberg’s column from The Kansas City Star:

Our concern is that giving TSA screeners this kind of responsibility and discretion can result in their making decisions not based on solid criteria but on impermissible characteristics such as race,” the ACLU’s Gregory T. Nojeim told the Journal.

Obviously Gregory Nojeim isn’t familiar with Michael Tuohey’s dance with the devil that morning of September 11th.

I don’t believe racial profiling is the end-all to screening out the filth hell-bent on America’s destruction but I definitely don’t think it should be a forbidden factor either.

Im sure Michael Tuohey would say the same.

Progressive Democrat speaks out in support of Fair Tax

Reprinted with permission from Running in Circles
by Connor Carney

The Progressive Democrats’ Sales Tax

I consider myself to be fairly liberal on most issues. So some of you might be surprised that I am about to take a position that’s usually the providence of hardcore conservatives. I support HR25the Fair Tax Act of 2005.

Yeah. The one that would replace virtually the entire tax system with a 23% sales tax.

I read about it most recently in an unnecessarily hostile editorial by Matthew Holmes. Truth be told, his article did nothing to convince me that the tax is a good thing. But it convinced me to wade through the full text of the legislation, and I’ve decided that not only is the Fair Tax Act justifiable, it is the ideal legislation for progressive Democrats. I’ll explain why.

Defining Progressive

I used the word progressive up there in my introduction. Exactly what that term means can be a little shaky sometimes, but when we’re talking about tax code, it has a pretty clear meaning: people with more money shoulder more of the tax burden. Using this definition, sales taxes are usually something progressives would avoid, since they often hit the poor the hardest. Most sales taxes make life considerably harder for the impoverished, because they increase the cost of basic necessities, making it harder for people to get by.

A National Luxury Tax

This proposal isn’t like that. The secret lies in Title II, Sections 301-303, a provision called the family consumption allowance. These provisions allow families to purchase necessities without paying taxes on them. (Family means 1 or more family members sharing a common residence).

This exemption does something interesting: it means that the government would only get taxes from the sales of nonessentialsthings that the impoverished, by definition, don’t buy. By allowing essential products to be purchased without the tax, it turns the national sales tax into something more like a national luxury tax.

In other words, people who spend most of their money on things like food, clothing, and medicine end up paying almost none of the tax burden, while people who spend a greater percentage of their income on luxuries pay a greater percentage of the tax burden. People who don’t have very much money almost uniformly fall into the former group, while people with lots of money almost uniformly fall into the latter group. People with more money shoulder more of the tax burdenit’s as progressive as is gets.

Helping the Needy

The family consumption allowance is a rebate, mailed monthly by the Social Security Administration to families of 1 or more(?!?). According to II’301, the amount of the rebate check is equal to the product of the tax rate and the poverty level.

Using this definition, families making (and thus spending) less than the poverty level could conceivably receive more money in their rebate check than the actual sales tax rate.

This is a similar concept to the Earned Income Tax Credit currently administered by the IRS, with a few exceptions. Unlike the EITC, it the consumption allowance can be claimed by the unemployed. The consumption allowance would also require a lot less paperwork than the EITC just names, address, proof of citizenship, etc. That’s a good thing for families who are especially time-constrained or people who are poorly educated. And statistics show that such families are exactly the ones who would need such a credit the most.

Tax Evasion

Of course, the Fair Tax Act would also virtually eliminate tax evasion. Right now, companies can move their assets offshore and avoid paying U.S. taxes on them. Some people, particularly business executives and accountants, consider it to be good business.

I, along with most Democrats, consider this to be tax evasion. The Fair Tax Act would put an end to it. The Act would mandate that anything sold in the United States would incur U.S. taxes. There’s really no way to outsource that. Businesses couldn’t get around it by moving production to China, or by moving their income to Bermuda. If they want to sell their product in America (and they all do), it will be taxed.

There are no less than a thousand articles out there that deal with the tax evasion issue, so I won’t say much more about it, but corporate tax evasion is contrary to the spirit of a progressive tax system. It’s currently legal in many forms, thanks to loopholes in our indecipherably complex tax code. That’s bad, and this would put an end to it.

Illegal Immigration

The Act would also provide a serious new tool in the attempt to end illegal immigration. It wouldn’t involve any weapons or border guards or checkpoints or fencesand it wouldn’t cost the government a single extra cent. Again, it has to do with the consumption allowance that I talked about a few paragraphs back.

See, only citizens are eligible for the credit. That effectively increases the cost of living for illegal aliens (okay, okay, undocumented immigrants) by 23% (assuming, of course, that they live under the ceiling for such a credit, which I’m just guessing that most do.

Since the primary motivations for the border jumpers are economic, this throws a wrench in the whole concept of entering the country illegally. It gets at the reasons that illegal immigrants are trying to come into Americawhich is exactly what a lot of Democrats have been saying we should do all along.

Where Does All The Money Go?

The budget of the IRS is currently over ten billion dollars per year, plus the equivalent of a hundred thousand federal employees. Let’s think about that for a moment: ten billion dollars and a hundred thousand people what could we do with that?

Some of it, of course, would go to the collection agencies established in III’302, but not nearly the scale of the IRS. For one thing, there’s a lot of administrative overhead that gets out of the way because the new Federal Sales Tax Bureau would, for states that already implement sales tax, be working with an infrastructure that is mostly already in place.

So let’s look at what we could do with the money, and with those employees. Let’s assume that a high school can accommodate 2400 students for 3 million doallars a year. That’s an averagein some places it costs more, in some places less, but it’s a fairly realistic estimate. $10 billion would cover the entire cost of operating over three thousand high schoolsthat’s the total cost of educating 7,200,000 students.

And that doesn’t include the agency’s hundred thousand employees. Let’s say we divided them evenly among the states and put them to work in DMV offices. Anybody who has ever applied for a driver’s license can appreciate the notion of having 2000 extra people in the DMV office. We could do that, in addition to the school thing, for no more than we are already paying just to operate the IRS.

No Tax Cuts for the Rich

The income tax and payroll tax systems that HR25 would replace have not been working out too well for progressives in the past four years. Why? Because the systems we have in place are too obscure. How many people even know what it means to tighten the tax brackets? How many people even realize that their income is not all taxed at the same rate?

The simple fact is, George Bush’s tax cuts for the rich that were so offensive to the idea of a progressive tax system were only possible because the tax system is so unbelievably complex. Under the system that HR25 proposes, targeting tax cuts at the top 1% of income earners would be not only politically impossible, but literally impossible. Why? Because the system inherently gets a greater percentage from those with more disposable income. (See the section above, A National Luxury Tax).

Unlike the current system, the national sales tax would do this without any disparity in the established rates. In other words, the only way that politicians could shift the tax burden away from the rich would be to explicitly give them a lower rate. That, my friends, sits in the dictionary as the cardinal example of political suicide.

But Shouldn’t Businesses Pay Their Fair Share?

One of the more obvious questions that comes up when we talk about replacing our entire tax system with a sales tax is whether it shifts too much of the burden away from business. A few people go so far as to say it shifts the entire burden away from business. And quite honestly, I cannot see how that is the case.

The argument that a sales tax shifts the burden away from businesses is fallacious because it assumes that consumers have unlimited disposable income. I will concede that if you are rich enough to believe that, you should absolutely oppose HR25. Most people I know do not have an unlimited supply of money.

If consumers had unlimited spending money, then the businesses could go on as usual. They’d hang on to their existing margins, pass the entire cost of the tax on to consumers, and the price of everything would go up by 23%. Again, that’s assuming that every customer has unlimited money.

In the real world, if the price of almost anything were to actually go up by 23%, they would price almost all of their existing customers out of the market. We’re talking a serious hit to their sales. So, we can expect most of them to change things to keep their numbers upto decrease margins in exchange for increased sales. They don’t have to, but those who don’t will find that most of their customers can’t afford their products. No customers=No income=No business.

There is actually an exception to this. Businesses that cater almost exclusively to the indescribably wealthy could conceivably pass the entire cost of the tax to customers, but keep in mind that that is a relatively small market (and will remain that way), simply because so few consumers fall into the indescribably wealthy category.

Conclusion

It’s kind of hard to believe that I’m finishing up an 1900-word analysis of the tax code. I mean, who am I to evaluate the complex intricacies of tax law?

Ordinarily I’d defer to the accountants on an issue like this. After all, they’ve studied economics and spent years of their life working with and around the tax code. They know taxes like some people know their way home from work. I, by comparison, am a rank amateur.

But this is an issue where deferring to accountants is profoundly dumb. The accountants, as people who make their living off of a tax code so complex that only trained professionals can understand it, are inherently biased against a tax code so simple that garbage men can understand it.

And so I don’t, in this case, trust the people who I would usually look to for analysis. Instead I’ve done my own analysis, and I’m liking the prospect of a tax code that even I am able to analyze. Pretty cool.

Like most progressive Democrats, I’ve learned to be pretty averse to sales taxes. But in this case, we have a proposition that actually bolsters everything that progressives fight for in a tax code. I don’t believe that any progressive worthy of the cause can oppose HR25, and those who give any thought to it should wholeheartedly support it.

The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry . You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

Feel safer yet?

A self-proclaimed nerd complains bitterly about our “security” at airports.

Talk to many people who are in-the-know in the airline security business and they’ll admit that the current system is kind of a joke. Don’t forget that airport security is federalized, so, in other words, the government is in charge of your in-flight safety. The long-and-short of the current system is this: Pretend you’re in an airport and all the screeners are members of Congress and FEMA. Feel safer?

You’ll be pleased to know that as a card carrying member of the U.S., I get treated exactly as poorly and stupidly as the rest of you when I fly commericial, and even worse when I fly a government chartered flight.

Iran fighting two wars by proxy

I have no intimate knowledge of Iran’s involvement in Lebanon, but I can definitely confirm this information:

Iran is fighting two proxy wars, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told servicemembers here Aug. 13.Marine Gen. Peter Pace told servicemembers gathered at the camp chapel that Iran is “fighting a proxy war against Israel by supporting Hezbollah” in Lebanon. Iran also is fighting a proxy war against Iraq and the United States by supporting elements inside Iraq.

Every Iraqi I have talked with says the same thing about Iran. They are causing most of the trouble in Iraq, I am told. In fact, several Iraqis have told me that all we need to do to calm the situation in Baghdad is seal the border with Iran and expel Iranians. Of course, that’s not a simple task. Iraq and Iran have an intimate love/hate relationship and a recent war in their past. Many of Iraq’s current politicans spent a decade or more hiding in Iran to avoid execution at the hands of Saddam’s regime. All of this is tied into the larger conflict between Sunnis and Shias. Iraq and Iran are the two largest Islamic nations with a majority population of Shia. In Iraq under Saddam, Shias were brutally repressed. Now that the repression is over, the backlash must be dealt with.

Iran is playing a dangerous game by inciting Shia against Sunni and everyone against the Coalition. How the game will end remains to be seen. Every day, people die because of the game Iran insists on playing. The Coalition would like to leave. Most Iraqis would like us to leave as well. The time to consider leaving is not right, nor is that time near.

Mahmudiyah


Mahmudiyah 6

Originally uploaded by the.myrmidon.

I went on a mission to Mahmudiyah and got some good photos during the trip. This is one of them. The Iraqi Army is standing up a number of new units during the next few months. It’s likely I’ll cover some of these events. You can read the full story over at http://mnf-iraq.com/.

The “Desert Lions” brigade that I covered the day this photo was shot were smart. They paraded well. They acted professional by Iraqi standards (very different from our standards.) They did an amazing demonstration taking down some “insurgents.”

There is hope for security and peace in Iraq, and these guys are it.

Old Iraqi


Old Iraqi

Originally uploaded by the.myrmidon.

Mahmudiyah is the heart of the fabled “Triangle of Death.” I visited there yesterday and spent most of the day at Forward Operating Base Mahmudiyah South. Pictured here is one of the men who makes his living working with the new Iraqi Army.

They were taking over the base and assuming authority for security in this south Baghdad suburb.

I don’t know what he was trying to say, but he certainly didn’t mind having his picture taken. What this man must have been through in his life, I can only imagine from the worn lines etched into his face.

The Iraqis I met yesterday were sharp, disciplined and dedicated. You have to be to make it in Iraq. I spoke to an Egyptian translator in uniform who is upset about the Lebanon/Israel conflict. I spoke to Iraqis who have lost loved ones in Baghdad recently to terrorist bombs. I spoke to others who said their relatives have fled the country. They are all concerned that it will take a long time for things to get better.

They may be right. If we leave too early, things will get much, much worse. There are 1,000 tiny Saddams waiting for an opportunity.

Everybody Loves Chocolate

[thumb:341:l:l=x]I got the new LG VX-8500 last week; better known to many as “The Chocolate“.  It’s the device many technophiles have been waiting for myself included.  You can toss out Chewbacca’s bandolier because you might not need that blackberry, gps, ipod and camera phone anymore.   

For those that aren’t familiar with Verizon’s Chocolate here’s the 411:  It’s a web-enabled, multimedia, bluetooth capable, 1.3 mega pixel camera/video phone with a laundry-list of bells and whistles.

I love the design.  It has a beautiful glossy black finish and bright red futuristic touch-sensitive buttons.  They seemed clumsy at first but my big fingers have adapted well.  I imagine every chocolate owner has to find their “sweet” spots.  You can also program shortcut keys which work great.  You can use the phone’s features with the slider closed giving it that mp3 player “feel” which is a nice touch.

I dont have any bluetooth devices (did I just admit that out loud?) and it’s going to be hard to resist all the all toys that I can use with this phone including wireless headphones or speakers.

I like the web-enabled feature.  The big, bright screen looks great and has plenty of real estate for actually reading your email or the news.  Im still disappointed this comes with a $5-a-month fee however; they seem to get you coming and going.  In their defense though they give you the first month free so I guess “try before you buy” is  a fair way to decide.

The GPS feature is amazingly accurate if anything.  It found my exact location (as in my home address) in a matter of seconds.  Not as much fun or as easy as other regular GPS devices but it does provide the basic features you’d expect to find like maps, driving directions, prior searches and “Where Am I?”. The $9 a month price tag is ridiculous but fortunately there’s a $3-for-24hours option instead Im sure Ill take advantage of on more than one occasion.

On to the multimedia portion; you wont be doing anything with it without the $30 multimedia pack.  It includes the USB cable, ear buds and Windows Media Player10 which is required to synchronize your phone with your computer.  Setup was easy and I filled what memory was left with about 50 megs of music.  There’s an additional slot for a microSD card (the size of 1/2 a thumbnail) for an additional 256 MB all the way up to 2 GB of storage; or about 1000 songs.

The drawbacks are few but significant.  There’s no speakerphone which is a little odd considering it’s a fairly standard feature with almost any mobile phone today.  Im sure this is a deal-breaker for some and that’s unfortunate for Verizon.  Im anticipating a patch to enable it; I cant see them not.

The other disappointing part was the battery life.  Listening to the MP3 player and fiddling with the phone all day killed the battery in a short 6 hours.  Granted I was using the phone more like a laptop than a phone but I still expected a little longer play time.

Overall I’d give the phone a 9 out 10.  I’ve been waiting for a serious mp3 phone with all the bells and whistles and although there’s room for improvement I think the LG Chocolate is going to be one of hottest phones on the market for a while.

I love you mister

Yesterday, as I was returning from a mission, I walked past an Iraqi man sitting under the shade of a tree. His crutches lay on the ground to either side of him. The ground was burning yesterday, as it does all summer in Baghdad. The unknown Iraqi looked hot and forlorn. He spoke to me in broken English, holding up some tattered papers with Arabic text on them.

In his heavy accent, the cripple explained to me that he needed a wheelchair and that it would cost $100. He wanted my help. I was carrying all my gear, and I was tired and sweaty and thirsty from my mission. I explained to the man that I would be right back. After I dumped my gear, I returned to the crippled Iraqi sitting alone under a tree.

I gave the man a bottle of cold water and the money in my wallet. Not enough to buy a wheelchair, but it was what I happened to have in my pocket yesterday. There are different ways to help people. I am just one man in a harsh country where thuggery has long been the determining factor in who wields the power and who lives well. I didn’t know this man’s life story, nor will I ever. But I gave him what help I could.

As I walked away, he said, "I love you Mister."

Standing guard




Standing guard

Originally uploaded by the.myrmidon.

Today we visited the 6th Brigade, 2nd National Iraqi Police Division headquarters in Baghdad to attend a press conference about the ongoing progress of Operation Together Forward II, which is designed to improve the poor security conditions in the capital.

These joint operations are ongoing and will probably last a few months. Troops are currently sweeping the Al-Doura neighborhood, looking for evidence of terroist and criminal activity, and ensuring residents’ safety.

Island of decency

Michael Coren of the Toronto Star writes recently that Israel is an “island of decency.”

Enough is enough. It is time to be bold.

Israel is an island of decency and moderation in a raging sea of dictatorship, theocratic madness and undiluted political hypocrisy.

The last thing it wanted was a war on its northern border.

More of an extended family than a nation-state, the country moves into spasm each times it loses one of its soldiers.

Losses are counted as individuals rather than units and names are far more important than ranks.

Critics have argued that Israel engineered this war because it wanted to smash Lebanon as a potential economic rival.

Nothing could be further from the truth. A prosperous and pluralistic Lebanon would have delighted Israel, a country that cries out for trading partners in the region.

It’s a good column, and well worth reading. Meanwhile, the war between Israel and Hezbollah continues.

Here’s some video of a rocket attack on Haifa.

Advocating the Fair Tax

by TD of The Right Track

More and more, I am hearing of people advocating for the FairTax in print, speeches, symposia, television, and radio. I’ve gathered a few of the more recent articles and provided links and a summary below each link. I’ve also quoted from several of the articles. Seems like support for the FairTax is pretty diverse!

Economic outlook: Georgia No. 1 in U.S. – July 16, 2006

Georgia’s economic outlook is rosier than that of any other state in the nation, according to a new study by the father of supply-side economics.

Arthur Laffer, an influential adviser to former President Ronald Reagan, put Georgia at the top of his annual comparative ranking of state economies, a seven-category analysis that primarily focuses on tax and fiscal policy. That’s up from fifth place in 2005 and a marked improvement from a No. 24 finish in 2002.


…Laffer suggested the state might want to shift more of the tax burden to sales from property or income, an idea popular among state Republican lawmakers, who are currently examining the possibilities. Even without such a shift, he advocated expanding the sales tax to encompass food and services in exchange for a lower rate.

“You want to tax those factors the most that can escape the least … and in the least damaging fashion,” Laffer said. “The broader the base, the lower the rate, the better the tax.”

Perdue agreed that the state might do well to adopt a more consumption-focused tax system, perhaps after the fashion of the FairTax proposed by U.S. Rep. John Linder, a Republican who represents parts of north metro Atlanta.

GOP debate for Hefley’s post, July 18, 2006
Candidates in Colorado support the FairTax:

“We need to get rid of the IRS,” said candidate Jeff Crank. “We’ve got to allow people in the free market to make choices, choose whether they want to pay taxes.”

Some Republicans also voiced support for the proposed “FairTax” that would replace all income, payroll, capital gains and inheritance taxes with a 23 percent sales tax on new goods. All five Republicans also favored abolishing the inheritance tax.

Tax and Spend, July 27, 2006
Congressional candidates in Arizona were asked about taxes and spending:

Frank Antenori, the former Green Beret now working for Raytheon, says the Bush tax cuts have resulted in “money pouring into the treasury.”

He says establishing an income tax was a big mistake.

“The Founding Fathers knew that imposing an income tax would bring this country down,” he says. “We screwed up with the 16th Amendment when we allowed the federal government the ability to levy taxes on personal income.”

Antenori favors a national sales tax and tariffs, which he says “would be far less regressive than income taxes.”

He likewise says the estate tax should be repealed because “you should only pay taxes while you’re alive.”

Gravel: ‘Let the people decide’, July 27, 2006
2008 Democrat and Presidential hopeful Mike Gravel supports the FairTax:

Another of Mr. Gravel’s major campaign points is the value of implementing the so-called FairTax. Essentially, the FairTax system calls for the abolishment of all federal taxes, including income taxes, with revenue being replaced by a higher sales tax, likely between 20% and 30%.

Mr. Gravel said the prices of most goods would remain fairly constant, since companies, no longer burdened with federal taxes, could set their prices 20% to 30% lower.

“In the end, after a year’s transition, you’re not paying any more in taxes than you were before,” he said. “That’s to keep it revenue-neutral.”

For poor and middle class families, Mr. Gravel supports the idea of the government sending monthly cash-flow checks.

“Then, you go get your paycheck, and there are no federal deductions,” he said. “Now, that’s pretty good.”

“We will turn this country from the largest economic unit in the world to the largest tax haven in the world,” he said. “Money will flow in. Investments will flow in, investments to do things, and that will create jobs.

“You’re talking about leading the entire world on an economic thrust forward,” he added.

Liberal Idealist Gives Fair Tax Big Thumbs Up, July 28, 2006
Ron Deval, a humanist, peace activist, and political agnostic strongly supports the FairTax:

Reliably left on most issues, Deval is nonetheless passionate about a tax revolution whose growing army is populated largely by conservatives and libertarians. Describing himself as an “advocate of things that favor humanity,” Deval is, in short, a Fair Tax maniac.

Encouragingly, the Land O’ Lakes man is not just another guy with an opinion and a couple of Web sites. He can navigate a spread sheet.

After about 20 years designing programs that helped wealthy clients of Northwestern Mutual in Milwaukee and Tampa pass inheritances to their heirs, Deval, 53, became a real estate agent and tax preparer – two professions keenly opposed to seeing the current system, with its designed-in winners and losers, scrapped.

“If all taxpayers knew about the benefits” of the Fair Tax, a proposed national sales tax designed to replace America’s current complicated, cumbersome and anti-competitive tax code, “it would pass in a heartbeat,” Deval says.

Read the entire article, it will be well worth your time.

TD

The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

Neutrality in foreign relations

Adam Ricketson at Freedom Democrats has what I consider a great post discussing neutrality in foreign relations.

Below I have outlined a number of principles describing this foreign policy of “engaged neutrality”:

  1. No allegiance to foreign nations: Our support or opposition of the policies of another nation are based solely on whether those policies promote peaceful relations among people. We will not act to generally strengthen or weaken a foreign nation outside of a state of war.
  2. Respect for the sovereignty of foreign nations: We hold no opinion regarding the system of government of foreign nations, nor the governors of those nations. We will not attack or otherwise attempt to undermine the governing structure of any nation outside of a state of war.
  3. Defensive military deployments: Military units will only be deployed to countries in which they are fully welcomed, and only to act in defense of that territory from external aggression.
  4. Defensive war: Full war will only be declared in response to an attack on American soil, or systematic international aggression. We will not take sides in historical conflicts, border disputes, or internal conflict.
  5. Free trade: During peacetime, we will only restrict trade with a country in response to ongoing theft of labor (slavery), and these restrictions will be lifted on the condition that the benefits of trade go to the workers as either wages or services. The export of weapons and dual-use items to an aggressor country may be prohibited.
  6. Aid to victims of aggression: Economic aid will be provided to the victims of aggression to help them recover from violence and resist aggression. Aid may include “dual use” items that aid in military operations but can be easily converted to civilian use upon the cessation of hostilities.
  7. Discouragement of aggression: We may engage in direct attacks upon military units of an aggressor country that are operating in a foreign country.

I’ll be one of the few military people to say that I think our foreign entanglements and treaties are unsustainable and that we cannot survive indefinitely as the world’s only global police force. Our military is being used in ways that are counterproductive have nothing to do with national defense. It’s hard enough fighting in two countries at once. If a third conflict blows up in our faces now, we’re in trouble.

Respite and reflection

The number of indirect fire attacks has slowed down as the optempo around here has ramped up. New troops are moving into Baghdad, and you can see, hear and feel their presence.

Now that my web site project is (mostly) done, General Casey, our top commander in Iraq, has taken an interest. In fact, he wanted the whole site (2,000 plus pieces of content) translated into Arabic by Friday. I got that news on a Monday. It didn’t happen by the deadline. But it’s being worked on. We had to work out a compromise. With a staff of four people on this side of the pond and a few more on the other end in Washington, D.C. it simply wasn’t realistic, especially since none of us speak more than a few words of Arabic.

The last few days have been much better than the few days that preceded them. It’s hard to think while taking mortar fire. All you think about it where the next one will hit, hoping it isn’t on top of your hooch, building or whatever.

We are in a battle for Baghdad. This battle involves physical force, but also means we need to win the trust of the residents here. One of our generals recently said that Iraqis will need to love their children more than they hate each other for Iraq to have any hope of becoming a decent place to live. That’s a loose paraphrase, but the country is on the brink of change; whether for better or worse is in question. In the movies one of the most popular cliche scenes is a car or truck on the edge of a cliff with the wheels spinning and the occupants desperately rocking the vehicle trying to back up and get away from the edge. Iraq is the vehicle and the occupants are Shia and Sunni. They’re all in the same car, but some of them are fighting instead of trying to help back away from the cliff. And for the last few months, thousands of Iraqis have been dying as the result of this foolishness. Americans and others are dying too, but this is mostly Iraqi on Iraqi violence rooted in generations old grudges and abuses that the Shia suffered under Saddam’s rule.

Will the additional troops be enough? I hope so. The next few months will be a pivotal time for the newborn government, which is the first representative elected government any Iraqi has seen. It’s a messy, messy journey.

Iraqi politicians need to step up to the plate and renounce violence. The power brokers here have always been ruthless men. That has to change for progress to come. As my time in the sandbox grows short, I hope that these men will grow tired of watching Iraqis squabble like children over little pieces of nothing. History shows that when men work together they achieve much more than they could alone. Life is infinitely better when it is peaceful.

Turnover ceremony

The Iraqi Army continues to take over geographical areas of responsiblity; what the military calls battlespace. Yesterday, I covered one such event just north of Baghdad at a place called Camp Taji. Taji is a huge sprawling military complex that is now about 2/3 Iraqi controlled.

[image:340:c]

[image:339:c]

The Iraqis were obviously proud of themselves during the ceremony. I didn’t like the Iraqi military band much. Their martial music is unappealing. Units like the 6th Motor Transport Regiment will be a big factor in whether or not Iraqi evolves or devolves. They’re part of the glue that will hold Iraq together in coming years.

Without reforms, U.S. will go bankrupt: Laurence Kotlikoff

by TD of The Right Track
with special thanks to KnightHawk of Your Two Sense


Laurence J. Kotlikoff has written an article published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review in which he predicted bankruptcy for the United States — unless serious reforms are put in place to raise revenue or cut spending.

While it’s hard to agree with all of Kotlikoff’s conclusions, one in particular is worth examining. According to Kotlikoff, his proposed policies would put America on track to eliminate the nation’s “enormous fiscal gap” and avert bankruptcy.

Here’s a summary of his plan (page 12 of the PDF file linked above):

The three proposals I recommend cover taxes, Social Security, and healthcare and are interconnected and interdependent. In particular, tax reform provides the funding needed to finance Social Security and healthcare reform. It also ensures that the rich and middle class elderly pay their fair share in resolving our fiscal gap.

And what of the proposed tax reform? What form would it take? Apparently, Kotlikoff likes the FairTax:

The plan here is to replace the personal income tax, the corporate income tax, the payroll (FICA) tax, and the estate and gift tax with a federal retail sales tax plus a rebate. The rebate would be paid monthly to households, based on the households demographic composition, and would be equal to the sales taxes paid, on average, by households at the federal poverty line with the same demographics.

The proposed sales tax has three highly progressive elements. First, thanks to the rebate, poor households would pay no sales taxes in net terms. Second, the reform would eliminate the highly regressive FICA tax, which is levied only on the first $90,000 of earnings. Third, the sales tax would effectively tax wealth as well as wages, because when the rich spent their wealth and when workers spent their wages, they would both pay sales taxes.

The single, flat-rate sales tax would pay for all federal expenditures. The tax would be highly transparent and efficient. It would save hundreds of billions of dollars in tax compliance costs. And it would either reduce or significantly reduce effective marginal taxes facing most Americans when they work and save.

The sales tax would also enhance generational equity by asking rich and middle class older Americans to pay taxes when they spend their wealth. The poor elderly, living on Social Security, would end up better off. They would receive the sales tax rebate even though the purchasing power of their Social Security benefits would remain unchanged (thanks to the automatic adjustment to the consumer price index that would raise their Social Security benefits to account for the increase in the retail-price level).

The sales tax would be levied on all final consumption goods and services and would be set at 33 percenthigh enough to cover the costs of this New New Deals Social Security and healthcare reforms as well as meet the governments other spending needs. On a tax-inclusive basis, this is a 25 percent tax rate, which is a lower or much lower marginal rate than most workers pay on their labor supply. The marginal tax on saving under the sales tax would be zero, which is dramatically lower than the effective rate now facing most savers.

While Kotlikoff’s tax-inclusive rate is a couple of percentage points higher than that currently being proposed in the House and Senate Bills, the method is identical.

The arguments for the FairTax just keep coming in. That’s because the FairTax is the best thing for America with regard to serious tax reform.


Just an FYI, KnightHawk also published the results of a ballot initiative on the FairTax from three metropolitan Atlanta counties. The question was only on the Republican ballot (aren’t Dems for the FairTax?), and only in the three Atlanta-area counties, and it was non-binding. It was meant to gauge reaction to the FairTax. The results:

Gwinnett County:
Total Votes: 35,755
Yes – 31,068. 86.9% / No – 4,687 13.1%

Cobb County:
Total votes: 39,458
Yes – 33,598. 85.15% / No – 5,860. 14.85%

Fayette County:
Total votes: 11,517
Yes – 9,828. 85.33% / No – 1,689. 14.67%

An average of 85.79% of the voters in these three counties favor the FairTax! Senators? Representatives? Are you listening? Don’t make us shout!

The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

Hezbollah in America?

I saw an interesting video on Fox News today about Hezbollah sleeper cells in America and the potential for another attack: http://www.foxnews.com/cavuto/   

Congressman Ed Royce, House Terrorism Chairman, describes Hezbollah’s tactics of terrorist agents bribing their way through the Mexican border and into the United States where they set up credit card fraud schemes and launder money back to the middle east.  The Department has arrested hundreds of terrorists in America through monitoring and surveillance.  Hezbollah has threatened to activate sleeper cells if the United States becomes further involved in Lebanon or threatens the security of Iran.

Not good news considering the recent test of nine United States border crossings in Mexico and Canada failed to identify a single fake document: http://www.forbes.com/technology/feeds/ap/2006/08/01/ap2920414.html

The GAO probe follows a similar inquiry in 2003 and 2004 when undercover investigators crossed unhindered into the United States at least 14 times using counterfeit drivers’ licenses and, in one case, an expired, altered U.S. diplomatic passport.

It makes me wonder if I’m right about the hasty evacuation of Beirut; are we putting American’s lives here at home at risk?

BOOOM!!!

This morning I was playing a video game in my hooch (I was awoken early by a boom) when another thunderous BOOOOOOM shook the walls of my trailer. My bed is against the wall so I moved an inch or so with the concussion blast.

A car bomb detonated outside a bank in the Karada district just across the river. At last report, we’re told, 12 Iraqis died and 18 more were seriously wounded. The victims were Iraqi government employees who were waiting to be paid. Of course, civilians just passing by were also killed. The terrorists here make no attempt whatsoever to limit what military mrn term collateral damage.

I immediately suited up in full combat gear (which I would have done anyhow in a few minutes) and headed toward the armored humvee we use to get to work. There was no sense continuing to play my video game because immediately after the bomb detonated I heard the distinct crack of AK-47 fire in the nearby area and the thumping vibration of Apache attack helicopters headed for the scene of the carnage. One never knows what will follow the immediate aftermath of such an explosion. Sometimes there are more explosions. Sometimes there are firefights. Always there is chaos. Chaos and I do not get along. I’d rather be moving when the shit hits the fan than sitting still.
As I walked to my vehicle, more small arms fire from very close by emphasized the violence festering in this place where I have made my home for almost a year. A huge cloud of black smoke drifted across the river towards us from the scene of the blast. The area was swarmed with Blackhawks and Apaches. I’m sure our hospital will be busy today.

I’ve been through so many indirect fire attacks and car bombings now that I’ve completely lost count. My body’s reaction though, has always been the same. I get a huge rush of adrenaline followed by a few minutes of shaky hands and then I feel exultant because it wasn’t me who got blown up. I like being alive. I bet the victims of this morning’s attack liked being alive too. I’m sure they had hopes and dreams. Now those have been extinguished. For what? They were fighting for their country, trying to protect their fellow citizens and make a living. They were trying to make Iraq a decent place to live. They died for it.

Understanding Hezbollah

I’m fairly comfortable labeling Hezbollah as a worhtless cancer that’s destroying the middle east.  It’s a fair label for militant islam in general but in this case we’re talking about Hezbollah specifically.

Below is a translated letter from a Lebanese Shia who describes Hezbollah’s tactics after Israel withdrew from Southern Lebanon:

I lived until 2002 in a small southern village near Mardshajun that is inhabited by a majority of Shias like me. After Israel left Lebanon, it did not take long for Hezbollah to have the say in our town and all other towns. Received as successful resistance fighters, they appeared armed to the teeth and dug rocket depots in bunkers in our town as well. The social work of the Party of God consisted in building a school and a residence over these bunkers! A local sheikh explained to me laughing that the Jews would lose in any event because the rockets would either be fired at them or if they attacked the rocket depots, they would be condemned by world opinion on account of the dead civilians. These people do not care about the Lebanese population, they use them as shields, and, once dead, as propaganda. As long as they continue existing there, there will be no tranquility and peace.

Dr. Mounir Herzallah
Berlin-Wedding

Case and point:  Qana.  As Boortz points out today it was a great day for islamic jihad.  Civilians were tragically killed just like Hezbollah had planned and now the entire world is playing right into their hands.

Steven Green wanted to “kill ’em all”

Steven Green stands accused of horrible crimes. Combat stress can do some terrible things to the human mind, but it seems from reports like this young man went wrong a long time before he arrived in Iraq.

Green clearly faced daily danger. He watched fellow soldiers die in front of him.

He described how after an attack on their traffic checkpoint, he and several others pushed one wounded man into the back seat of a Humvee and put Casica, who had a bullet wound in his throat, on the truck’s hood. Green flung himself across Casica to keep the dying soldier from falling off as they sped back to the base.

“We were going, like, 55 miles an hour and I was hanging on to him. I was like, ‘Sgt. Casica, Sgt. Casica.’ He just moved his eyes a little bit,” Green related with a breezy candor. “I was just laying on top of him, listening to him breathing, telling him he’s okay. I was rubbing his chest. I was looking at the tattoo on his arm. He had his little girl’s name tattooed on his arm.

None of what he experienced excuses the crime he is accused of. The wheels of justice are turning, but there are many unanswered questions, not least of which is – how could a crime like this have been pulled off? Where were the NCOs and officers? What happened to the moral compasses of those involved, assuming they had them to begin with?

Pollster Zogby weighs in with ‘what must be done’ in Lebanon

Arab-American pollster James Zogby has an opinion on what must be done.

It is clear that the current situation is untenable. Hizbullah’s recent reckless actions gave Israel the pretext for a massive and disproportionate assault on Lebanon, killing hundreds of innocent Lebanese and exacting an enormous toll on the country’s economy and infrastructure. As Hizbullah acted without the concurrence of the central government, they were rebuked by the Prime Minister and the majority of his cabinet–before the extent of Israel’s onslaught became clear.

So who is going to build this strong Lebanese central government? Arabs seem to have problems coming together. Syria and Iran have no interest unless they control that government. Israel doesn’t seem interested. The United States is overextended already. The U.N. is completely ineffective. So who is going to fix what’s broken?

Hezbollah’s Evolution

Why Hezbollah Fights reminded me of a similar article i found last week.  Definitely not as in-depth as that article but a close outline of it.

  • Under the leadership of Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah is one of the strongest and best organized bodies in Lebanon.  Nasrallah is both a determined man of religion and a master of psychological warfare. He’s manipulative and knows how to drag people behind him.
  • With 20,000 troops and at least 10,000 rockets trained on northern Israel, Hezbollah remains a potent force in Lebanon — the only remaining private militia after others were disarmed. Its strength also derives from its civilian arm: It runs hospitals, schools, food-distribution centers, orphanages and a television station, partly thanks to about $60 million in annual aid from Iran. 
  • Hezbollah supports the destruction of Israel and cooperates with other militant Islamic organizations, such as Hamas, to promote this goal. Analysts see increased coordination lately among Hamas and Hezbollah.
  • Hezbollah was also believed to be the driving force behind several attacks on Western targets: the April 1983 suicide bombing at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut that killed 63 people; the October 1983 attack on the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut that killed 241 troops; and a simultaneous attack on the French multinational force headquarters that killed 58 French soldiers. In September 1984, seven months after U.S. forces withdrew from Lebanon, Hezbollah supporters staged a second attack on the U.S. Embassy annex in Beirut. Twenty were killed.
  • Hezbollah has ignored U.N. Security Council resolutions ordering that it disarm, feeling that it has political backing from Iran and Syria, and popular support because of its successful guerrilla warfare against Israel.
  • Hezbollah’s motivations

    In the Company of Soldiers has an excellent report from Stratfor that discusses the mindset of Hezbollah. Entirely worth reading. Here is a small excerpt:

    That pedantic lesson complete, we can now locate Hezbollah’s ideology and intentions more carefully. Hezbollah is a Shiite radical group that grew out of the Iranian revolution. However, there is a tension in its views, because it also is close to Syria. As such, it is close to a much more secular partner, more in the Nasserite tradition domestically. But it also is close to a country that views Lebanon, Jordan and Israel as part of greater Syria, the Syria torn apart by the British and French.

    Go read it all. Perspective on the whole Israel/Lebanon/Palestine greater Middle East can be found.

    Rest easy Gonzo

    GonzoOne of the hardest parts of being away from home is that you cannot be for your family members when they are going through a tough event. I’ve mentioned before that my wife rescues dogs – it is her passion to save them from bad owners and give them good lives. I love dogs too, but my wife has a much bigger heart.

    Gonzo came to us about three years ago I think. He was old then. Someone had thrown him away, and he ended up at a kill shelter. The man who actually gassed the dogs at the kill shelter couldn’t find it in his heart to put the little guy down, so he made a phone call. Eventually Gonzo ended up with us, and there he stayed until yesterday, when his life came to its end.

    Gonzo was a little guy with no teeth and a messed up spine. His back legs didn’t work right but he always displayed plenty of spirit. He got along pretty well up until recently even though walking was a tough battle for him due to years of neglect and mistreatment. My wife kept him alive and happy. He doted on her and she on him. Gonzo slept comfortably in a nest of pillows on our bed in his last years.

    Yesterday, he slipped out of the world. His health had been declining, and when I was home on R&R I knew I probably wouldn’t ever see him again. I’m terribly sorry I couldn’t be there with you Barb. I’m sorry I couldn’t be with Gonzo at the end, to give him a final ear rub as he went into the great unknown. I’m sorry I couldn’t be there to give you a hug. I know you are in pain right now. I know your heart hurts.

    Gonzo brought many smiles to your face, and to mine. I’ll always remember him hobbling around outside our house in the mountains, enjoying the bright sunshine and tasting the air with his tongue. He was perfectly content as long as he could see you. You rescued him and gave him a comfortable, loving existence in his last few years. He gave so much back to both of us. I’ll miss him.

    Special promotion board

    I’ve been trying to get promoted since February. The process for a Georgia National Guardsman to be promoted is convoluted to say the least.

    In our unit, the lynchpin to my achieving the rank of Staff Sergeant is one knowledgeable individual I work with who knows the paperwork involved and which people to lean on to speed up the process (assuming you can call a six-month bureaucratic battle speedy).

    This person has been working on my behalf for months now to get a special promotion board convened back in Georgia to consider whether or not I qualify to move up in the rank structure. To say that I get frustrated by the level of incompetence and indifference involved would be a major understatement.

    The people in the rear don’t know me. They don’t know whether I am competent. They have no idea whether I can make sound decisions. They have no stake in my life, nor I in theirs. Every piece of documentation they receive is filtered and rewritten multiple times before it reaches the desks of the people who can sign off on a new rank for me.

    While these strangers allow my paperwork to grow dusty sitting on their desks, my bottom line is directly impacted thousands of miles away in a war zone. My wife and I are both affected financially by the foot dragging and bureaucracy of this process.

    My special board convenes on August 6. I am hopeful that I will be added to the promotion list on that date. Once I make the list my unit can then request my promotion. Perhaps I will leave Iraq a staff sergeant. I’ve met all the requirements and busted my ass for a year now. I’m more than ready. Of all the types of recognition that get doled out by the Army, the only one I crave is rank because rank means financial reward. Awards are great, but they do not pay the bills and they cannot put food on the table for my wife back home.

    Quotas, bureaucrats and abominations

    The Department of Homeland Security is a parasite living on the backs of the American taxpayer.

    Did you know that air marshals are required to fill a monthly quota of entries into their secret “suspicious persons” database. Here’s hoping your name or mine doesn’t end up there just to meet some bureaucratic requirement.

    The power of unchecked government is spooky.

    Hat tip: Bruce Schneier.

    The Daily Radar

    For Dedicated Gamers, a PC With an Unearthly Look

    Alienware Area-51I would love one of these.

    The Alienware Area-51 7500 is the kind of computer that kicks sand in the face of wimpier PC’s. Based on Intel’s latest processor and motherboard — code-named Conroe for those who are keeping track — the 7500 has a processor speed of about 3 gigahertz, which means you’ll be able to play blindingly fast games of Solitaire.

    I would NOT play solitaire on such a wonderful machine. There are so many other more useful things you could do with one of these sweet little rocket machines.

    I’ll likely end up building my own custom again when replacement time rolls around. It’s just fun.

    Kofi Annan accuses Isreal of murder

    From Boortz:

    An Israeli air strike yesterday in Southern Lebanon killed 4 U.N. observers at a post. Immediately, and without hearing Israel’s side of the story, Kofi Annan issued the following statement: “I am shocked and deeply distressed by the apparently deliberate targeting by Israeli Defense Forces of a U.N. Observer post in southern Lebanon.” The accusation is clear: Israel killed the U.N. observers on purpose.

    Israel responded by saying they were shocked by Annan’s statement and that the air strike was an accident. Why wouldn’t it be? What possible motivation would the Israeli Defense Forces have for killing innocent U.N. observers? War is a messy business. Missiles go awry…coordinates get punched in by mistake…miscommunications happen. Remember when the United States blew up China’s embassy in Belgrade? It happens. Southern Lebanon is a war zone. It is a risky place.

    Give your customer service rep a break today

    I’ve complained before about how hard it is to understand some Indian customer service people. However, I’ve recently been privileged to work with an extremely competent Indian programmer. Instapundit relates his recent tech support experience involving a rep from the subcontinent:

    ANOTHER NON-HELLISH CUSTOMER SERVICE EXPERIENCE: Installed a new wireless router, and had some trouble getting it to talk to the modem. BellSouth customer service was nice, but told me it was a Linksys issue. Talked to the Linksys guy — he said his name was “Joe” but he was somewhere in India, I think — and though it took a while we figured it out. He seemed pathetically relieved that I just went through the steps politely and didn’t yell at him.

    I don’t like the outsourced tech support firms that force their employees to pretend they are in the U.S. However, I do think some patience is in order. If you’re having a hard time understanding your rep be patient. You might find out the person you’re dealing with is competent, even if they are somewhat hard to understand.

    Patience is something I have had to practice a lot in the last year of my life. It can pay off sometimes.

    Wall Street Journal on MilBloggers

    Blackfive reports that the Wall Street journal is talking about milbloggers. Article here.

    If you don’t know who JP Borda is you should. Visit milblogging.com right now. A great resource if you’re interested in the view from the ground in Afghanistan or Iraq.

    Rare counting ability induced by temporarily switching off brain region

    Just place a pulsing magnet over the correct area of your brain and become a math genius a la Rain Man. OK, it’s not quite that simple, but it is certainly interesting research. My dad has the ability to do a lot of math in his head, and I’ve often envied him that. Maybe I need the right kind of magnetic helmet so I can show him up at the next family meeting.

    Fair Tax update from the man himself

    We’ll let the man himself, Neal Boortz, write the burst this week. Well, not really. From Neal’s Nuze of 24-Jul-06 at his web site:

    FAIRTAX STATUS REPORT

    The FairTax movement is going strong my friends, stronger than you might imagine. I can assure you that the FairTax is attracting an ever-increasing degree of attention in Washington. I wish I could share the details, but the wonderful world of politics is such that it is much better to let the people involved spill the beans than to jump the gun by disclosing their interest or involvement ahead of time.

    There have been three events in recent months that have really peaked interest among the political class. First was the debut of The FairTax Book on the New York Times Bestseller’s list for paperbacks. We’re still there ranking very high in the business category. Second was the FairTax rally in Atlanta a few months ago. When we packed a room full of 4,500 people, and then turned another 4,000 away, the shockwaves were felt inside the Beltway the very next day. On the morning after the rally Congressman Linder, who had returned to Washington overnight, was buttonholed by a number of colleagues to explain “just what it was you did there in Atlanta last night.”

    Last week’s Georgia primaries in Georgia also opened some eyes. The FairTax was on the Republican primary ballot in three metropolitan Atlanta counties, and in each county the idea of replacing the income tax with the FairTax was approved by over 85% of the voters. When a reform idea as huge as the FairTax receives that type of an approval rating people, especially politicians, take note.

    Another thing happened last week that impressed a number of high-ranking DC political-types. I received about 15 emails from people who told me that they originally had no intention of participating in the primary … UNTIL, that is, they heard me say that the FairTax was on the ballot. Those emails are now in the hands of some of the most powerful people in Washington.

    Simply put — when you have an issue that (1) sends people to the polls who would otherwise not vote, and (2) gets the support of over 85% of the voters, you have an issue that can drive an election. Politicians know it.

    Now … what’s next?

    ORLANDO! THAT’S WHAT!

    This coming Saturday on the steps of the Orlando City Hall we’re going to have a rally in support of the FairTax! Our Orlando affiliate, News Talk 580 WDBO has done a spectacular job of setting this rally up, and Jesse The FairTax Babe has added a pancake breakfast to hungry rally participants!

    Come on, folks. We can do this! We can bring about this massive transfer of power from the government to the people, but only if you’ll get off your keesters and help us out!

    Yesterday afternoon I was talking to a friend in Naples. I told him we were trying to get at least 10,000 people in front of the Orlando City Hall, and asked him if he was going to come to the rally. He told me that if there were going to be that many people there, then it wouldn’t make much difference if he showed up or not!

    That, my friends, is the type of thinking that can lead to a small turnout; and a small turnout takes a lot of steam out of the FairTax movement.

    I can promise you that if we put 10,000 into downtown Orlando for this rally it will be the talk of Washington the next Monday. What happens on Saturday will have a lot to do with whether or not we make any progress toward making the FairTax a prime issue in this Fall’s election.

    WE NEED YOU!

    Yes. It’s a sacrifice. Reform like this doesn’t happen without sacrifice. You can be a part of a revolution here. It can’t be done with you sitting on your hands.

    The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry or Jonathan . You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

    Garbage lawsuits

    Does the United States have a responsibility to evacuate you from a foreign nation if war breaks out while you are there?

    Apparently some spoiled American Arabs think so.

    An Arab-American group sued top Bush administration officials, claiming it bungled the evacuation from Lebanon of US nationals, leaving them vulnerable to the Israeli military offensive.

    In their suit against US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld filed in a Detroit, Michigan federal court, the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) asked the court to order the government to stop shipping weapons to Israel as long as US citizens remain in danger inside Lebanon.

    The U.S. government didn’t force any American citizens to travel to Lebanon. Sure, they should try to get Americans out, but this lawsuit is garbage. The government is not your damn nanny.

    Should Gamblers Pay For Teachers’ Retirement?

    I was snooping around my usual suspects and came across an interesting bill from Senator Thomas Gaffey.I did a double take when I read it; I didn’t believe it was true. Here it is again for your reading pleasure:

    Referred to Committee on Appropriations

    Introduced by:

    SEN. GAFFEY, 13th Dist.

    AN ACT DEDICATING A PORTION OF LOTTERY PROCEEDS TO THE TEACHERS’ RETIREMENT FUND.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened:

    That the general statutes be amended to provide that one-half of the proceeds from the lottery be dedicated to the unfunded liabilities of the Teachers’ Retirement Fund.

    I especially like the “dedicating a portion” part. The State isn’t losing half it’s lottery revenue; heavens no. They’re dedicating it. I’m going to let you figure out the “unfunded liabilities” part.

    Do you know what the Connecticut Lottery made in 2005? 268.5 million dollars.

    So let me get this straight: If this bill is approved half of that goes into the Teachers Retirement Fund in 2006? They get 134 million bucks a year from the state lottery winnings to support retired teachers?

    Must be nice.

    What about the other unions like the police or nurses? What about the other 99% of Connecticut citizens who aren’t in the teacher’s union? Where the hell is my 134 million bucks a year?

    [thumb:336:l:l=x]Considering Connecticut ranks first nation-wide in teachers salary (and I hear the union benefits and pension aren’t too shabby either) I think the teachers are doing just fine. The State has better things to do with that money than fluff union retirement accounts.

    This is Iraq

    Iraqi air force airmen watch a video of themselves taped by U.S. Army Spc. Holly Baker, with the 55th Signal Corps, Fort Meade, Md., at the new Al-Muthanna Air Base located on the runway of Baghdad International Airport, Baghdad, Iraq, July 17, 2006. (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Jonathan F. Doti)

    Springfield Armory XD Sub Compact .40 vs. Smith & Wesson M&P .40

    Author’s Note: In the nearly two years since I wrote this post, I have realized that I should never have compared these two weapons because one is a service model with 4″ barrel and one is a sub-compact with 3″ barrel. I will, in the near future, write a new entry comparing both models in a service revolver.

    I wrote an entry a while back wondering whether people had any positive or negative experiences with the Springfield Armory XD Sub compact .40 S&W pistol. I got lots and lots of positive feedback and nothing negative. I wrote to Springfield Armory asking for some literature on the pistol, but never received a reply. Perhaps the marketing department isn’t interested in pro-gun bloggers…

    Anyhow, I’ve just stumbled across the Smith & Wesson M&P .40. The two weapons appear very similar, and I’m wondering which weapon would be better for my primary carry pistol.

    Let’s start with images of both:

    Springfield Armory vs. Smith and Wesson

    On the left is the Springfield Armory XD 40 and on the right the S&W M&P 40.

    And here’s a handy chart of specs I care about:

    Springfield Armory XD Sub Compact .40 Smith & Wesson
    M&P .40
    Capacity
    9+1
    15+1
    Barrel Length
    3.1″
    4.25″
    Trigger Pull
    5.5-7.7 lbs
    6.5 lbs
    Retail Price
    $536
    $624

    I would like to know my readers’ experiences with these two weapons. How do they stack up against each other, aside from the fact that they are both made of modern polymers and both manufactured by reputable companies? The SA XD 40 is smaller but has less magazine capacity. The M&P 40 weighs more and holds more ammo.

    Which one is more accurate? Which one feels better in your hands? Which one would you rather stake your life on if your life depended on a single trigger pull?

     

    Shriek in the night

    So I’m watching a movie in my room recently. The scene involved a helicopter and a megaphone. Because the walls of my living quarters are thin, I often hear sounds from outside.
    No exception this time. I heard a couple of booms followed by a shrieking whistle. I quickly determined that the whistle wasn’t coming from my TV speakers. That’s never a good sign because it means we have incoming.

    Pop goes my head out the door of my trailer. Another whistling shriek and oh hey look there’s a rocket of some sort zipping by overhead. Other heads have popped out of their respective trailer doors. We quickly form a group and discuss.

    How many? Where are they coming from? Where did they land? Did they explode? Should we be headed for the duck and cover bunkers?

    The big giant voice comes on with a whooping siren sound. Then the announcer announces, unintelligibly. The duck and cover bunkers are crowded – filled with half-dressed people in various states of combat readiness. No sense adding to the crowd.
    Helicopters zip around our perimeter seeking targets they can punish. Muttered comments of "damn insurgents" and other more colorful phrases can be heard. Some people joke and smoke. Some people just stay in bed, sleeping or awake.

    I had been nearly asleep but I finish my movie before drifting off into slumberland. Unwelcome sounds wake me a second time a few hours later. This time the sounds are not rockets but electric shavers and a suitemate banging around in the bathroom located just on the other side of the paper thin wall that seperates us.

    Another day has started. Life goes on in Baghdad. The insurgency continues to have nothing to offer the people of Iraq except senseless death delivered at any hour by cowards and fools who trap themselves and this country in a cycle of sadness and stupidity. Climbing out of the pit of despair they have nurtured and into better days is critical. And so we fight on.

    It all began with a murder

    When I left my home in North Georgia, I had little to no understanding of Islam. I’m still a neophyte when it comes to this complex faith. But it seems to me that many of the problems in Iraq and elsewhere in the Muslim world relate directly back to these events:

    Ali is the central figure at the origin of the Shia / Sunni split which occurred in the decades immediately following the death of the Prophet in 632. Sunnis regard Ali as the fourth and last of the “rightly guided caliphs” (successors to Mohammed (pbuh) as leader of the Muslims) following on from Abu Bakr 632-634, Umar 634-644 and Uthman 644-656. Shias feel that Ali should have been the first caliph and that the caliphate should pass down only to direct descendants of Mohammed (pbuh) via Ali and Fatima, They often refer to themselves as ahl al bayt or “people of the house” [of the prophet].

    When Uthman was murdered while at prayer, Ali finally succeeded to the caliphate. Ali was, however, opposed by Aisha, wife of the Prophet (pbuh) and daughter of Abu Bakr, who accused him of being lax in bringing Uthman’s killers to justice. After Ali’s army defeated Aisha’s forces at the Battle of the Camel in 656, she apologized to Ali and was allowed to return to her home in Madinah where she withdrew from public life.

    However, Ali was not able to overcome the forces of Mu’awiya Ummayad, Uthman’s cousin and governor of Damascus, who also refused to recognize him until Uthman’s killers had been apprehended. At the Battle of Suffin Mu’awiya’s soldiers stuck verses of the Quran onto the ends of their spears with the result that Ali’s pious supporters refused to fight them. Ali was forced to seek a compromise with Mu’awiya, but this so shocked some of his die-hard supporters who regarded it as a betrayal that he was struck down by one of his own men in 661.

    Mu’awiya declared himself caliph. Ali’s elder son Hassan accepted a pension in return for not pursuing his claim to the caliphate. He died within a year, allegedly poisoned. Ali’s younger son Hussein agreed to put his claim to the caliphate on hold until Mu’awiya’s death. However, when Mu’awiya finally died in 680, his son Yazid usurped the caliphate. Hussein led an army against Yazid but, hopelessly outnumbered, he and his men were slaughtered at the Battle of Karbala (in modern day Iraq). Hussein’s infant son, Ali, survived so the line continued. Yazid formed the hereditary Ummayad dynasty. The division between the Shia and what came to be known as the Sunni was set.

    An opportunity for Muslim unity arose in the 750’s CE. In 750 except for a few who managed to flee to Spain, almost the entire Ummayad aristocracy was wiped out following the Battle of Zab in Egypt in a revolt led by Abu Al Abbass al-Saffah and aided by considerable Shia support. It was envisaged that the Shia spiritual leader Jafar As-Siddiq, great-grandson of Hussein be installed as Caliph. But when Abbass died in 754, this arrangement had not yet been finalised and Abbas’ son Al Mansur murdered Jafar, seized the caliphate for himself and founded the Baghdad-based Abbassid dynasty which prevailed until the sack of Baghdad by the Mongols in 1258.

    Islam was born in violence. That legacy continues today, more than 13 centuries later. I wonder when militant Muslims will realize it is time for them to evolve beyond the sort of wanton violence that has kept many Islamic nations trapped more than a millenia in the past?

    What’s the problem here – it’s those pesky militant Muslims again

    Michael Yon has an excellent post on why militant Islamists are the problem and why Jews are not.

    These new Islamic fundamentalists are not interested in transforming a corrupt society into a just one, nor do they care about providing jobs, education, or social benefits to their followers or creating harmony between the various ethnic groups that inhabit many Muslim countries. The new jihadi groups have no economic manifesto, no plan for better governance and the building of political institutions, and no blue-print for creating democratic participation in the decision-making process of the future Islamic states. They depend on a single charismatic leader, an amir, rather than a more democratically constituted organization or party for governance. They believe that the character, piety, and purity of their leader rather than his political abilities, education, or experience will enable him to lead the new society. Thus has emerged the phenomenon of the cults of Mullah Muhammad Omar of the Taliban, Osama bin Laden of Al Qaeda, and Juma Namangani of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

    A world roundup of the face of violent Islam you won’t want to miss.

    We can still talk about it. Something is wrong with Islam; there is a cancer living among its adherents that needs to be rooted out.

    Who is Hezbollah

    Neal Boortz reminds his readers today of Hezbollah’s track record:

    If you’ve been a casual viewer and reader of the mainstream media, you probably know that the conflict currently going on in Lebanon is between Israel and a group called Hezbollah. Do you know Hezbollah? Here’s what some Americans may think — an opinion that could well be garnered from media coverage:

    1. Israel is killing innocent people at random, blowing up civilian targets and murdering peace-loving Muslims by the thousands.
    2. Hezbollah is the name of peaceful political group.

    But what you may not know is that this group Hezbollah…which started the current conflict, by the way, is a terrorist organization. We’ll start our brief history back in 1983. President Reagan sent 241 Marines and other military personnel to Beirut as part of a peacekeeping force. All were killed when a Hezbollah suicide bomber drove his truck into the barracks on October 23, 1983. Other terrorist incidents Hezbollah is believed to be responsible for include:

    • The kidnapping, torturing and killing of Colonel William Higgins and Beirut CIA Station Chief William Buckley.
    • The taking of numerous hostages, including American Terry Anderson.
    • The 1983 Beirut U.S. Embassy bombing that killed 63 people.

    And on and on. Hezbollah is a terrorist organization through and through. They are now supported militarily by Iran. They started the current conflict by kidnapping Israeli soldiers. By not appeasing Islamic terrorism and taking them on squarely, Israel is doing the world a favor. Which would explain why the International media, the United Nations and various European countries are trying to stop them.Yep. Good reminder. The current loss of life going on in Isreal, Palestine and Lebanon is tragic. The catalyst for the last 10 days of hell – Hezbollah.

    New unit arrives

    Our sister unit is a broadcast operations detachment responsible for AFN operations. They produce Freedom Journal Iraq, run a radio station and make sure our press conferences operate smoothly. Their replacement unit is on the ground now, and ramping up to take over.

    It will be our turn to be replaced before too long.

    We’ve had a long hard run – it’s not over yet, but there is light at the end of the tunnel vision I’ve developed.

    I’ve started collecting soccer balls for Iraqi kids. I’d like to send them out just before we leave as a last hurrah; I want to leave here with the same sense of optimism that I arrived with. If you would like to help out with the soccer ball project, just e-mail me. Shane, the batch you sent arrived along with the other goodies. Thanks! Thank your wife too.

    Captain Brad Schwan given green light to resign

    Captain Brad Schwan, the Army officer who was told he couldn’t resign his commission, is finally being allowed to do so.

    He writes:

    I just wanted to send out a quick note to let you know that the Army has reversed its previous decision and accepted my second resignation. In a letter from LTG Jack Stultz, the new Chief of the Army reserve, he said that “based on recent changes [he has] directed concerning the processing of unqualified resignation requests by nonobligated officers, [he is] approving” my resignation and granting me an honorable discharge.
    I am pleased that I received a discharge that I believe should have been granted over a year ago. It is a little bittersweet because the ambiguity in the law still exists for future situations like this to occur and it was inconvenient (to say the least) to get to this point. The good news is that this seems to be a shift in policy—not just an exception for my case—based on the Secretary of the Army’s recent comments and the general’s letter so hopefully this won’t happen to others anytime soon.
    I will have more information on my website in the next week or so. Right now everything is on hold while I finish studying for and take the bar exam next week.

    What remains to be seen is whether this is a sea change in the attitude of senior Army officials or whether they are merely reacting to negative publicity in this case and plan to continue the same modus operandi of refusing to release other officers who have completed their service obligations.

    Previous related posts:

    Taking advantage of being the government
    Captain Brad Schwan responds regarding his lawsuit to leave the service

    Army Captain sues to separate

    Why Bush’s Veto Was A Bad Idea

    Unfortunately President Bush vetoed the stem cell funding bill.   

    Surrounded by babies and toddlers who began life as frozen embryos and were later adopted, Bush declared, “These boys and girls are not spare parts.”

    “They remind us of what is lost when embryos are destroyed in the name of research,” the president said. “They remind us that we all begin our lives as a small collection of cells, and they remind us that in our zeal for new treatments and cures America must never abandon our fundamental morals.”

    It’s not as if withholding the funds for research is going to save anyone’s “life”.  I suspect the opposite; funding stem cell research will save lives.  I think withholding funds from stem cell research is immoral!  Does the President have a sudden affinity for rats?  I completely fail to follow that logic.

    From what little I know stem cells are what makes our existence possible.  I understand stem cells are the foundation from which we build all our other cells.  Sounds like pretty important stuff to me.  I’d like it if we gave some money to people who want to spend their time researching stem cells. 

    Nay-sayers like to conjure horrific images; again like the President for example:

    At the White House, Bush issued his veto in private, without cameras present. He also signed a bill into law to prohibit “fetal farming,” growing fetuses for the sole purpose of harvesting tissue, which is something that scientists say is not happening.

    Horrifying if it were true but is that what funding this research is about?  There’s a difference between testing lab rats and running matrix-like body-part farms and it’s disappointing to think the President doesn’t understand that.

    As he explained his decision in the ornate East Room of the White House, he noted that he was the first president to provide funding for embryonic stem cell research. He pointed out that there is no ban on this research.

    Yeah well it’s too bad he didn’t sign the check.  I dont think anyone doesn’t know anybody who hasn’t benefited from the medical science.   

    Senator Gordon Smith says it much more eloquently than I do:

    “Today’s decision marks an unusually tragic first use of this president’s veto pen,” said Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., who has watched members of his family succumb to Parkinson’s disease. “When it is a matter of improving life for the living, I choose to err on the side of hope, healing and health; and I am disappointed that the president did not do the same.”

    Why I support the Fair Tax

    Do you want to know why I support the FairTax? Check the various issues below and see how the Income Tax, a Flat Tax, and the FairTax would affect each situation.

    16th Amendment
    FairTax – Proposes repeal.
    Federal Income Tax – No change.
    Flat Tax – No change.

    Complexity
    FairTax – Individuals do not file. Businesses need only to deal with sales tax returns.
    Federal Income Tax – Very complex; 20,000 pages of regulations; I.R.S. incorrect over half of the time.
    Flat Tax – Withholding continues. Individuals and businesses must still track income and file income tax forms.

    Home Business
    FairTax – Record all business expenses and is subject to IRS audit? No.
    Federal Income Tax – Record all business expenses and is subject to IRS audit? Yes.
    Flat Tax – Record all business expenses and is subject to IRS audit? Yes.

    Congressional Action
    FairTax – 23% Linder/Peterson FairTax Act of 2001 (H.R. 25). Employees receive 100% of pay. Social Security and Medicare funded from consumption tax revenue, not your paycheck. (H.J.Res45) – Will repeal the 16th Amendment.
    Federal Income Tax – Used by lobbyists and the wealthy for tax-breaks and loopholes. Used by bureaucrats for social engineering.
    Flat Tax – Rep. Armey’s H.R. 1040 has some problems, but is far superior to current law.

    Cost of Filing
    FairTax – No personal forms are filed. Significant cost savings.
    Federal Income Tax – $225 billion in annual compliance costs.
    Flat Tax – Significant simplification ­ costs are somewhat reduced.

    Economy
    FairTax – Un-taxes wages, savings, and investment. Increases productivity. Produces significant economic growth.
    Federal Income Tax – Taxes savings, labor, investment, and productivity multiple times.
    Flat Tax – Imposes a tax burden some of which is still hidden in the price of goods and services.

    Equality
    FairTax – Taxpayers pay the same rate and control their liability. Tax paid depends on lifestyle. All taxes are rebated on spending up to the poverty level.
    Federal Income Tax – The current tax code violates the principle of equality. Special rates for special circumstances violate the original Constitution and are unfair.
    Flat Tax – The flat tax is an improvement over the current income tax, but it is still open to manipulation by special interests.

    Foreign Companies
    FairTax – Foreign companies are forced to compete on even terms with U.S. companies for the first time in over 80 years.
    Federal Income Tax – Current tax code places unfair tax burden on U.S. exports and fails to neutralize tax advantages for imports.
    Flat Tax – A flat tax taxes exported goods and does not tax foreign imports to the U.S., creating unfair competition for U.S. manufacturers and businesses.

    Government Intrusion
    FairTax – As the Founding Fathers intended, the FairTax does not directly tax individuals.
    Federal Income Tax – Current tax code requires massive files, dossiers, audits, and collection activities.
    Flat Tax – A flat tax still requires personal files, dossiers, audits, and collection activities.

    History
    FairTax – 45 states now use a retail sales tax.
    Federal Income Tax – The 1913 income tax has evolved into an antiquated, unenforceable morass, with annual tax returns long enough to circle Earth 28 times.
    Flat Tax – A flat tax just won’t stay flat. Starting out nearly flat in 1913, the income tax grew out of control with top rates over 90% until the Kennedy administration.

    Interest Rates
    FairTax – Reduces rates by an estimated 25-35 percent. Savings and investment increase.
    Federal Income Tax – Pushes rates up. Biased against savings and investment.
    Flat Tax – Reduces rates 25-35 percent. Neutral toward savings and investment.

    Investment
    FairTax – Increases investment by U.S. citizens, attracts foreign investment.
    Federal Income Tax – Biased against savings and investment.
    Flat Tax – Neutral toward savings and investment.

    IRS
    FairTax – Abolished.
    Federal Income Tax – Retained.
    Flat Tax – Retained with reduced role.

    Jobs
    FairTax – Makes U.S. manufacturers more competitive against overseas companies.Escalates creation of jobs by attracting foreign investment and reducing tax bias against savings and investment.
    Federal Income Tax – Hurts U.S. companies and decreases available jobs. Payroll tax a direct tax on labor.
    Flat Tax – Positive impact on jobs. Does not repeal payroll tax on jobs.

    Man-hours required for compliance
    FairTax – Zero hours for individuals. Greatly reduced hours for businesses.
    Federal Income Tax – Over 5.4 billion hours per year.
    Flat Tax – Reduced.

    Non-filers
    FairTax – Reduced tax rates and fewer filers will increase compliance.
    Federal Income Tax – High tax rates, unfairness and high complexity harm compliance.
    Flat Tax – Reduced tax rates and improved simplicity will improve compliance.

    Personal and Corporate Income Taxes
    FairTax – Both are abolished.
    Federal Income Tax – Retained.
    Flat Tax – Retained in a different form.

    Productivity
    FairTax – Increases.
    Federal Income Tax – Inhibits productivity.
    Flat Tax – Increases.

    Savings
    FairTax – Increases savings.
    Federal Income Tax – Decreases savings.
    Flat Tax – Increases savings.

    Visibility
    FairTax – The FairTax is highly visible and easy to understand. No tax is withheld from paychecks.
    Federal Income Tax – The current tax code is hidden, embedded in prices, complex, and incomprehensible. Taxes are withheld from paychecks.
    Flat Tax – The business component of the flat tax and payroll taxes are hidden and would be embedded in prices. Taxes are withheld from paychecks.

    Any questions?

    The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

    Evacuating Lebanese-Americans: Possible Danger At Home?

    I’m not too impressed with latest headlines like U.S. Mideast Evacuation Effort Criticized and Stranded Americans Isolated. Stranded? By who… other Americans? The American government? I dont think so.

    What some people don’t understand is with freedom comes responsibility. Lebanese-Americans (Im just gonna assume that most Americans going to Beruit are Lebanese… call me what you will) are free to come and go as they please.

    They’re free to fly in and out of terrorist-run cities and countries; the government won’t stop them. They just need to take their shoes off at the airport and everything will be fine.

    The flip side is they’re also free to get their own asses out of Beirut. Don’t come crying to the American tax payer for a one-way ticket out of Shitsville because Isreal opened up a can a whoop-ass. It’s been hot-bed of war for decades and the government (tax-payer) doesn’t owe them a trip home anymore than the government owes me a trip to Barbados.

    Onto my point:  Debbie Schlussel suspects evacuating Lebanese-Americans is harmful to America’s health. She argues that Hezbollah supporters are born and raised right here in the United States:

    Of the 25,000 American citizens and green-card holders in Lebanon, at least 7,000 are from Dearborn, Michigan, the heart of Islamic America, and especially Shia Islam America. These 7,000 are mostly Shi’ite Muslims who openly and strongly support Hezbollah. Ditto for many of the rest of the 25,000 that are there.

    Many of the 7,000 plus Detroiters in Lebanon are active in Dearborn’s Bint Jbeil cultural center (the Lebanese American Heritage Club also features mostly Hezbollah fans). Bint Jbeil is a Hezbollah-dominated city in the South of Lebanon, a frequent destination of Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, who is very at home there. Bint Jbeil is a frequent source of shellings on Northern Israel.

    That last paragraph is a little disheartening. I dont know how many “many” constitutes but I know it’s at least some; and to know that some “Americans” frequent organizations natoriously tied to Hezbollah has me wondering if evacuating these rug-sniffersâ„¢ is not only a waste of our tax-payers money but could even have consequences here at home.

    Middle East choices

    Isreal is talking about conditions for a ceasefire.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said Tuesday Israel would be ready to call a ceasefire with Hezbollah if its captured soldiers are returned, the Lebanese army deploys along the countries’ shared border and the future disarmament of Hezbollah can be guaranteed.

    After a week of fighting, Ms. Livni said the time for diplomacy was at hand, though she added that Israel’s military operations would not end until its goals are reached.

    The conditions demanded would be very hard for Lebanon to implement. The country is really split into two sections controlled by two different groups, from what I can tell. I don’t know how realistic it is to think that the Lebanese Army can secure the border with Isreal. Hezbollah has a lot of political power and popular support.

    What do you think? What are the options for both sides in this conflict?

    Rockets in flight, afternoon delight

    Yesterday the embassy came under rocket attack. This has happened a number of times since our arrival last year. I never thought I would say this, but the infrequent rocket and mortar attacks we experience are among the smallest inconveniences we face in trying to carry out our daily missions.

    Technical problems play a much larger role in our lives.

    For instance, our network speed is usually slower than a dial-up connection would be back home. Since my job is to support, maintain, design and update the web site for the entire theater the limited bandwidth and constant network outages are a much greater stressor overall than the somewhat random threat to my existence presented by poorly aimed insurgent attempts to kill a few random people inside the Green Zone.

    Our power situation leaves much to be desired as well. We’re on the Baghdad power grid, from what I’m told. That’s fair enough. Iraqis have to deal with generators and constant power problems, and we do too. Our generators overheat in the swelter of Iraqi summer. This results in our power going out multiple times daily. We don’t have enough battery backups to go around and the network only stays up about 3 minutes once the power goes out. We spend significant amounts of time redoing work in progress.

    The sequence goes like this – power flicker. Exclamations of “oh shit!” Frantic attempt to save work. Power goes out. Exclamations of “damn it” and worse from my trailermates. Then we sit in the dark and wait for the power to come back on. Once it does, we see if our work auto saved or assess what needs to be recreated. Rinse, lather and repeat. End result – hours of lost productivity that occur at least several times a week. All because the most powerful government in the world cannot keep the power on after three years in the country and they’re stingy with network bandwidth. There may be very valid reasons for these inconveniences, but I’m not privy to them. All I know is that they compromise my ability to do my work and get some sleep.

    Meanwhile, some government bureaucrat, in his or her wisdom, just spent what must be a million or more dollars to ensure that our conference room here looks identical to some other conference room somewhere else in the Green Zone or perhaps somewhere in the Pentagon. The conference room was just outfitted about six months ago and I’m sure that cost a pretty penny. From the bottom looking up, it appears that some people’s priorities are out of line.
    Priorities differ depending who you are and how you spend your day, I suppose.
    My problems are tiny and insignificant. A long work day is just that – a long work day. The rockets missed. The mortars haven’t touched me. My chair collapses backwards from time to time, sinking downwards and throwing me violently away from my keyboard towards the wall. The power goes out again. And that’s the universe reminding me I’m alive and that I have it easy compared to many of my brothers in arms.

    Screw You and Your Gratuities

    [thumb:333:l:l=x]I’ve had it up to my eyeballs with clerks and their tip jars.  I see one on almost every counter with a cash register; coffee shop, delicatessen, gas station you name it.  They’re everywhere.   

    I understand being a cash register clerk doesn’t pay well but lets not fool anyone here; it’s one of the easiest jobs in the world.  The service they provide certainly isn’t worthy of my spare change either.

    Clerks dont even need to know how to do math anymore.  If you can point an object a wavy red laser; you’re pretty much qualified.  Counting money is a nice pre-requisite but it’s obviously not a requirement.  When’s the last time you didn’t count your change?  I rest my case.

    [thumb:334:r:l=x]What ever happened to “Give a penny, take a penny”?  Nothing made me feel happier than dumping off my unwanted change.  I knew someone who needed who get to use it; sparing them the embarrassment of not having enough or holding up the line while they looked for more money.

    Now instead of “Give a penny, take a penny” it’s “Your gratuities are always welcome!” or “Tips are appreciated!”.  It’s almost like The Great Clerks Union met and conspired to change “Give a penny, take a penny” to “Tips are always welcome!” 

    Their placement is genius though.  If you pay close attention next time you’ll notice the clerk wont reach out and actually hand you the change; no way.  They make you come in for it.

    The clerks force you to put your hands out over the gigantic, brightly colored index card scotch-taped the front of a giant glass jar that screams: “I’D REALLY APPRECIATE IT IF YOU’D PUT DROP ALL OF YOUR CHANGE IN THIS JAR WITH ALL THE OTHER GENEROUS PEOPLE’S CHANGE!!  THANKS!!” [thumb:335:l:l=x]

    I cant help but feel like a selfish, inhumane scrooge when I jerk the money away and hastily cram it in my pocket as if to I can hide the very act from God himself.

    But when I look up at the 17-year-old with the leather gloves, red hair, a blue-tooth ear-piece and black eye-liner who wants me to give him my spare change from the $5 I just shelled out for a cup of coffee; you know what I think?

    Screw you and your gratuities.  Want more money? Get a harder job.

    Thoughts on freedom

    Freedom is the absence of restraints upon our ability to think and act (except those restraints that are of natural cause).

    I’ve given up a lot of my personal freedom to serve my nation in Iraq. I’ve been engaged in that activity for almost a year now, and I think it is time to ask myself whether giving up a large measure of my own freedom has enhanced anyone else’s.

    I am wondering – are Americans freer than when I started? Are Iraqis freer?

    The answer, I think, at least in the short term, is a resounding no.

    The State of Iraqi Freedom

    Iraqis do have some new freedoms. But those were in place before I arrived here. They are free to use cell phones. They are free to watch satellite television. They are free (in theory) to wear whatever they want, go wherever they want and pursue many new choices in life. In reality, here and now, cosmopolitan Iraqis are trapped in a dangerous world where death lashes out randomly at any moment for any reason you could imagine.

    In Baghdad and other cities, Iraqis find themselves strictly controlled in day to day movement. They have to worry about being kidnapped or murdered for a wide variety of reasons. There is a resurgence of intolerant religious fundamentalism that is responsible for getting people killed. Shias and Sunnis are attacking one another. The power is unreliable. Unemployment is high. Crime is rampant. Iraqis who would like to travel aboard will find they are persona non-grata in many places, including the U.S.

    On the other hand, there is massive investment in infrastructure that wasn’t taking place under Saddam. Schools are being built and rebuilt. Water is being piped into places that used to have to haul it in by truck. The province of Muthanna is fully under Iraqi government control. Rule of law is being taught and reinforced as a concept that Iraq’s civil servants must abide by and adhere to.

    Women are serving in Iraq’s government at high levels. If Iraqis can beat the insurgency and defeat the criminal warlords who live among them, they can flourish and prosper. The environment necessary for freedom to grow and become strong is not yet achieved, but the potential exists down the road. Perhaps in five to ten years.

    Iraq’s freedom quotient depends on establishing an environment where people have access to basic services we all take for granted in the U.S. These service includes water, power, educational choices and basic social freedoms, like being able to choose what to wear or how to style your hair without fear of being killed for the choice you make.

    The State of American Freedom

    America is much freer than Iraq. There is no doubt.

    But I question whether we are moving backwards or forwards. It costs more to accidentally or purposely bare your breast on TV than it did a year ago. In a truly free society, you would just change the channel if something offended you. You wouldn’t rely on a nanny state to filter content on your behalf.

    Americans have come to rely far too heavily on government to provide solutions to all their aches and pains. Look at Katrina for a prime example of where we have gone wrong. We’ve built a society that values instant gratification and puerile pursuits above all. Personal responsibility is dead and groupthink is in vogue. When a group of a million people living below sea level is struck by a natural disaster, we blame the federal government for not doing enough to stop the tragedy and re-elect the idiot mayor who had the primary responsibility for designing and acting on an evacuation plan for that city. FEMA hands out debit cards and they are used for strippers and alcohol.

    Our best students are the ones who come here from overseas. Those of us who are born here tend to wear badges of entitlement and are often undeservedly arrogant and proudly ignorant all at once.

    We talk about freedom while lining up in our airports to be herded like cattle through largely ineffective lines of unarmed bureaucrats who are doing a poor job of looking through our belongings for many items which represent no threat to the public at large. In the battle to trade the appearance of security for once cherished liberties, the illusionists are winning.

    American freedom in 2006 is the freedom to wear a thong that hangs out of your lo-rider jeans as long as you don’t wear any shoes with metal in them (they would set off the metal detector). American freedom in 2006 is the lady with plastic breasts who doesn’t know the name of the capital city of Iraq and couldn’t tell you who her Congressman is if it meant facing a firing squad for giving the wrong answer. American Freedom in 2006 is new legislation from a former prisoner of war to regulate what you can blog about (to protect his own political career.)

    We pay lip service to freedom while enacting new legislation that chips away at the choices you get to make in your own life about your own life and puts those choices into the hands of people who have never seen you and don’t even know your name. And I’m scared for the future.

    I hope things turn out well for the people of Iraq and for my adopted people of America. And I’ll keep serving my nation in whatever ways I think will have the most impact. Whether or not that includes continued military service remains to be seen. I recently read an article where Donald Rumsfeld said the solution to Iraq’s problems isn’t a military one. That statement could be applied to most of the world’s troubled spots. The military cannot change what is in a man’s heart although they can stop a man’s heart from beating. I’d rather change the man’s heart than stop it.

    A different world

    Reasons people kill other people vary greatly. Here in Iraq, it’s for wearing shorts or shaving your head “strangely.”

    Meanwhile, gunmen opened fire on two brothers and killed them as they were on their way to open their barber’s shop in eastern Kirkuk, 250 kilometres north of Baghdad, according to police.

    The brothers had previously received death threats because they shaved their heads in a strange way, police said.

    Such stories sadden me. Being murdered for a hair style? I’m sure this is somehow all the President’s fault (insert sarcasm here).

    My Opus

    The only project I’ve worked on of any note since arriving in country has been the Multi-National Force Iraq web site. I am the webmaster. While I perform other missions, including reporting activities, press escorts, etc. none of them will have any lasting impact.

    Since I took over the web site administration, we have redesigned the product twice. The newest redesign is a dynamic multi-user site that is scalable and I hope professional looking. It should vastly improve our ability to deliver news and feature stories from the perspective of the coalition.

    This project is the one thing I have done that here I’m uneqivocally proud of. It’s my attempt to improve efficiency and accuracy in telling our story. Telling our story is my raison d’etre.

    This current redesign had six or seven people involved at the actual working level and many more involved in the creative process. It took us about five months from concept to inception. I hope it survives the test of time and helps us all tell the world our story better than we were able to before.

    Hezbollah is insane

    I’ve been so busy this week I haven’t had much time to follow what’s happening in nearby Isreal, Palestine and Lebanon, but I know it’s all pretty bad.

    I wish the killing would stop, but that is unlikely until the mentality of “push the Jews into the sea” has been relegated to the trash dump of history’s bad ideas.

    Isreal is the economic and military powerhouse in the region. They have the mailed fist and they are using it. I fail to understand why Hezbollah keeps kicking at the nest of hornets when they have been stung so hard and so often.

    This thing could easily escalate into a massive regional conflict. As in the past, Isreal would likely dominate in any large military action.

    Iran’s role in the current events bears careful watching.

    Uniform policies do not win wars

    Recently received in the ongoing saga of what all of us should be wearing in our current environment:

    Effective today: The STRATEFFS uniform policy has gone into effect. The upgrades from the previous policy are simple. You are not authorized to wear any civilian clothes period! If you are going to the pool, you may wear only your civilian swim trunks to the pool. You must still wear your army pt shirt or Air force equivalent. You may only wear your swim trunks to the pool and back to your hootch. You are not authorized to enter into the DFAC for water or anything else. If you in the Navy and do not have a PT uniform, you may wear appropriate civilian clothing to the gym and back to your hootch. Navy personnel are not authorized to enter the DFAC in civilian clothes period. If any soldier is caught wearing civilian clothes that are not specifically authorized, you will be in violation of MG Caldwell’s policy. If you are caught by someone outside the CPIC, You are your own. We are all adults and I am sure we can manage to follow this simply policy. Police yourselves and your buddy.

    This statement has me putting out a call for barracks lawyers:

    If you are going to the pool, you may wear only your civilian swim trunks to the pool. You must still wear your army pt shirt or Air force equivalent.

    Other than the improper capitalization, I have an issue with being told I have to wear civilian wear mixed with uniform items. In the Marine Corps, that would have been sacrilege. I realize the Army isn’t the Marine Corps and the National Guard has to try harder to be the Army than the Army does, or something.

    I refuse to wear uniform items with civilian gear. The whole uniform policy is silly. I should be able to wear whatever I want when I’m off duty. And that is part of the problem – I’m never off duty, according to my command. That’s simply unhealthy. It’s taken a toll on me over the last nine months, and I know it has taken a toll on fellow members of my unit.

    If a mortar lands on me one day while I’m in the pool, you can rest assured that I will not be wearing an Army PT shirt at the time. Actually, it’s hard to go to the pool when you work as much as I do. I guess this “new and improved” uniform policy won’t be much of a problem for me.

    Senate Approves Major Offshore Drilling Deal

    The Senate has approved an oil and gas leasing deal for the Gulf Coast and not a moment too soon.

    [thumb:332:l:l=x]Under the arrangement, 37.5 percent of revenue from new federal oil and gas drilling leases in certain areas of the gulf would be distributed to coastal states and 12.5 percent would go to the Land and Water Conservation Fund. That same split would be employed for all new leases in the gulf after 2017, according to aides. (thehill.com)

    With the fallout of New Orleans and the aftermath of countless hurricanes from years past the Gulf Coast could use some profit sharing.  I’d rather it come from sludge in the ground than my paycheck.

    The cynic in me cant resist the urge to point out that the only thing holding up the offshore drilling is of course, politics. 

    While some liberals and conservatives have agreed that drilling is necessary nobody can seem to agree on where and by who. 

    If we can get the Senate and House to agree on state and federal boundries we might actually rid ourselves of the insidiously self-imposed fossil-fuel prohibition suicide-pact thats slowing starting to choke our wallets.

    Stretched thin

    A couple of readers e-mailed me privately about The dance inside my head, wondering if I was OK. I’m fine, but very, very tired. If I was facing the decision to re-enlist today, I would have to say no. I’m doing the work of three people at a pace that is unsustainable. Much like the air conditioners here, I am being worked to my limits and will eventually break down without some TLC. It seems to me that we could use about twice as many staffers as we have to get the job done.

    The expectations placed on us here are sometimes appallingly unrealistic. Perhaps this is because of a disconnect between leadership perceptions and the reality of the situation. I don’t kick in doors and I don’t get shot at by snipers. I have air conditioning (most of the time) and I’m not hauling sandbags all day. I can understand why some people would think that means I live on easy street.

    Such is not the case. Sitting in a chair for 12-14 hours a day over the last nine months solving technical problems has exhausted me. Every day I have to battle bureaucracy to get my job done. Most of the fights I am involved in are against my own organization. I need more bandwidth, better computers, battery backups, more staff, less paperwork and so on ad infinitum. These things are hard to fight for when you are a buck sergeant surrounded by field grade and higher officers. My battles are even harder to fight for because I am already so busy that most days getting the bare minimum done is a minor miracle. No one I report to truly understands the technical details of what it is that I do. They see the end result but do not really grasp the steps and resources it took to achieve that result.

    I’m a minor cog in a very large, incredibly complex machine. I don’t mind that role but I wish that I was getting a little more attention from the maintenance men. As a soldier and an NCO, I do the best I can but lately I’ve been feeling fairly jaded. The Army may not be stretched thin but I sure think I am.

    Congressman John Linder on the Fair Tax

    by MsUnderestimated

    Folks, I’m telling you… after I was lucky enough to find out about this article in the Gwinnett (Georgia) Business Journal this week, I was asking myself that very question. Why in the heck doesn’t Congressman John Linder run for President? I listened to the 45-minute interview for the article, and read along with the transcript. You know what amazes me? This is a true common-sense man. It’s no wonder he’s been a shepherd for relieving the United States of the 16th Amendment for the past 10 years. You might not recognize his name, but you will definitely recognize the name of the book he co-wrote, and the legislation he wrote – “The Fair Tax.”

    Not in history that I can I recall has there ever been a book to open at #1 on the New York Times best-seller list and stay there for two weeks in a row, which was about the United States Tax Code. Boring, eh? Well, aparently you haven’t read “The Fair Tax.” John’s gotta give his hat off to Neal Boortz, Libertarian talk-show host here in Atlanta, who wrote most of the book. Neal’s depth of knowledge of the tax code and its history, the abuses and wastes of the system as it stands, and his wry sense of humor make it not only a very easy read, but a pleasurable one, as well.

    As many of my readers know, I attended the first ever Fair Tax Rally , and it was held here in Gwinnett Co., Georgia. I already wrote my review, and I just wish you all could have been there with me to witness the electricity of the event. I wrote in that article that “It’s Possible,” and it is. All you have to do is believe – and be brave enough to want to help affect change.

    If the Fair Tax passes, it will be the single largest transfer of power from the Federal Government back to the people in the history of this country. I feel like I am part of that 1% that affects change, as John Stossel pointed out at the rally. I’m one of those “big potatoes” that Herman Cain spoke of. And you can be, too. Only if you believe.

    John Linder has also taken a strong stance on illegal immigration, and recently proposed that we adopt the exact same immigration laws as Mexico, verbatim, and he truly believes that what is good for the “Fox,” is good for the “Eagle.” I do not disagree with him one iota, and I wrote about it in another post.

    Everything that I’ve heard and read before today made me swell with hope and pride – but after I listened to this latest interview, I’m even more filled with determination and FIRE, and the motivation to do whatever it takes to help this man succeed in whatever endeavors he chooses. I also plan to encourage him to run for President, although I’m not sure of his aspirations. He’s quite successful as a Republican Georgia Congressman. I am going to try to schedule him as a guest on my show on Wide Awakes Radio, so keep your fingers crossed.

    John is right on the money about curtailing government spending, fighting terrorism, true tax reform, securing the borders with no amnesty, and a whole host of other issues. The following is an excerpt from from the full transcript of his interview with Christopher Lancette of the Gwinnett Business Journal:

    Let’s jump right into it – explain exactly what the FairTax is.

    The FairTax is a bill that would repeal all taxes on income – no more corporate income tax, no personal income tax, no payroll taxes, no self employment tax – no gift tax, estate tax, capital gains tax or alternative minimum tax. Any tax that is pegged to income would be gone, as would the IRS. We would replace that with a consumption tax – a tax of retail sales on personal consumption at final purchase of new goods and services.

    Currently, the average taxpayer gives the government 33 cents of every dollar they earn. In our system, they would give the government 23 cents of every dollar they spend. Then we would provide to every household – every household – a cash distribution at the beginning of every month that would totally untax them up to poverty-level spending.

    And what’s the status of the legislation?

    Well, it has 54 co-sponsors, which is the most it has ever had. We’re going to meet very soon with the leadership of the House and Senate, and the Speaker (of the House – Dennis Hastert) has gotten the President of the United States to agree on meeting with me for an hour. And I believe we (Republicans) have to have a big idea to run on.

    You say that all corporate taxes would be repealed. How would that benefit businesses?

    Businesses spend a considerable amount of time complying with the tax code. We paid $265 billion in 2004 just filling out IRS paperwork. We spend another $150 billion calculating the tax impact implications of a business decision. There is not a businessman or woman in America that does not think about the tax implications of any choice they want to make. Under our system, we would effectively give the American people a $400 billion tax cut – letting them keep in their pockets all that money they spent on compliance. Businesses would for the first time be able to consider their employees, their customers and their shareholders – and not worry about the government.

    The estimates we’ve heard are that compliance costs could decrease by as much as 90 percent. Is that accurate?

    That’s very accurate. The only compliance left would be the compliance of the tax collectors – the retailers and the doctors and the dentists who have to collect the tax on personal consumption. Their compliance costs would be about 10 percent of the current compliance costs.

    The event you and WSB radio talk show host Neal Boortz held at the Gwinnett Convention Center filled to capacity. Did the large turnout surprise you?

    Yes it did. I expected to have a good crowd. We looked for different venues and that was the only one available that had 4,500 seats. We think we turned away 4,500 people. We think another several thousand people heard on the radio that the event was closed down, turned their cars around and went home.

    I want to change tracks a little bit … The Republican-controlled White House and Congress have increased federal spending beyond the level of any Democratic administration. Do you think your party has dropped the ball on federal spending?

    Put me in that group of disappointed people. We’ve had a Republican majority for 12 years. We have never had a conservative majority. We have 25 Republicans in the Northeast who’ll side with the Democrats on spending issues every time. We saw that it took us a long time to pass our budget – we passed it by one or two votes this year because our moderates wanted us to increase spending as much as the Senate did. So we have had a really difficult time.

    When you’re in the majority, you have to pass spending bills to keep the government from shutting down, and you have to make those compromises. I spent 16 years voting for people in the minority – 14 years in Georgia and the first two years in Washington. That’s the easiest thing in the world – you just vote no and go home. When you’re in the majority, you’ve got to pass the bills. I’ve cast more miserable votes in the last 13 and a half years that I did in the previous 16.

    You’ve been married to your wife, Lynne, for more than 40 years. How did you meet her?

    That’s a long story. I’d finished playing a county-league softball game on July 16th of 1963. My brother and I were standing on a corner having an ice-cream soda when this car pulls up, asking for directions to Cedarwild Lodge in Minnesota. It was a town of 800 people and it’s hard to get lost and we thought, “That’s kind of cool, let’s go out to the lodge.” So we asked why she was in town and she said she’d just dyed her friend’s hair and it had turned blue, so she was sent to town to get another dye to try to fix the problem. So I said to my brother, “Wouldn’t you like to see the gal with blue hair?” So we drove out to Cedarwild Lodge, said we wanted to see the gal with blue hair and was introduced to my wife who, at the time, was quite angry about her blue hair. And three months later we were married. That was 43 years ago this year.

    What’s the most frustrating part of a congressman’s job?

    Inertia. Alan Greenspan told me that the toughest job is to overcome the inertia in this town. You get set in your ways, just go along step-by-step. My guess is that part of my problem in getting this bill moving is that 90 percent of the Congress has not even looked at it and doesn’t even know it’s there. Just to get them to think, “This is possible, this is do-able, the American people are ready for this,” is very frustrating. We tend to get so occupied in doing what we must do that we don’t have time to do what we should do. And that’s frustrating.

    As you look back not only on your political life but your personal life are there people that stand out in your mind that made a real impact on you?

    One who really moved me was Ronald Reagan. I spent more time with him than with any president. I traveled on his campaign plane in 1976 whenever he was in the Southeast. Every time I’d see him he’d forget who I was. But he knew who he was. I’ll take the guy who doesn’t know me but knows himself any day.

    If every state had congressmen like John Linder, this country would run smooth as glass, and there would be a no-nonsense way in dealing with any obstacle that comes our way. It would be a good idea to not only read this partial transcript in the article, and here, but also leave your feedback because I’m sure it will be passed along to Mr. Linder.

    Again…. why doesn’t this man run for President? I’d definitely vote for him. And, Herman Cain as Vice President! Oh, yeah, and Neal Boortz could be in charge of Homeland Security. Look out U.N., Human Rights Watch, ACLU, and all the other bleeding-heart, international law-loving, peace-at-any-price crowd idiots! You all would be in for quite a surprise. HAHAHA!

    If you don’t want to listen to it on my blog, you can download the full MP3 for podcast. Whichever way you choose, I urge you to listen intently to the entire interview… then you tell ME that John Linder isn’t someone you’d like to have in the White House soon!?!? Talk about flying under the radar! Well, my radar is up, and Linder is on it – I’m going to urge him to fly like the eagle he is!

    Listen to the interview here.

    Gambling is OK; Just Not Online Gambling

    The fundamental problem I have with most politicians (liberal and conservative alike) is that they have no respect for the sanctity of the individual. Bob Goodlatte is one of these people. For more than a decade he’s led a fight to ban online gambling.I know there are people who will gamble irresponsibly, uncontrollably and shatter not only their own lives but many of the lives around them. It’s tragic, I agree. That doesn’t mean I have to forfeit my choice to gamble over the internet.[thumb:331:r:l=x]
    I don’t see the logic behind banning online gambling when there’s a list of other legal forms of gambling: greyhound racing, horse races, State-monopolized lotteries, slot machines, card table games and sports betting; it’s all legal in different states.

    I’m free to travel to other countries and gamble; I can drive to Montreal or fly to Tokyo. I can get on a cruise ship in Florida and sail to Mexico gambling my little heart out from Miami to Cozumel and back. I know; I’ve done it. So why can’t I do it using my computer?

    I can drive to Foxwoods or Mohegan Sun in less than an hour and gamble. I also play online poker regularly (technically not gambling) from my comfort of my own house… so why can’t I play blackjack online? How does that make sense?

    You want to ban something? Ban those god-forsaken scratch tickets at convenience and grocery stores. Nothing is more annoying than standing behind some jerkoff buying scratch tickets.

    The dance inside my head

    I live in a world of information overload. My brain is short circuiting. I direct a daily dance; my job is to choreograph the lives of electrons. The electrons are manipulated to form zeros and ones. The zeros and ones are strung together to form words and images. The words and images are pasted into software that magically transforms them into neatly packaged stories. The stories are conglomerated into a web site and I am its master. My fingers travel rapidly across a keyboard or click a mouse and by doing these things I tell the story of Iraq.

    I absorb the day’s events — good and bad. I regurgitate them. I swim in tales of men with guns, men with bombs, men with souls and men who have abandoned their humanity and become walking demons. I taste acrid evil in the air as the cordite stench of explosions waft across the river into my home behind a secured perimeter which isn’t really secure at all. Security is a state of mind.

    Physically I have been touched little by this war. No shrapnel has found its home in my body. The mortars and rockets have come close on several occasions but never close enough to do more than speed up my heart. Nothing has seriously threatened to stop its beating. I hear guns fired every day, but the trajectory of the bullets represents no threat to me. I am physically much stronger than I was when I arrived. Mentally, I am frayed around the edges.

    Toiling late into the night I smell the stink of Baghdad’s many fires. Soot burns my eyes and irritates my body’s various breathing passages. My throat is always raw here but so is everything else and I find the rawness fitting. People I pass wear their emotions on their sleeves except for the ones who have died inside. Those are just waiting for something to take them away from this place and into another world. Some of them have various plans to accelerate their departure.

    Sometimes the scars of this war are plain to see on people’s bodies – a missing limb here or an eye patch there. Sometimes the scars are hidden behind the eyes and you have to look twice to see them. I am whole and fit compared to most, but I will have my own scars when I walk away from here. You will not see them unless you look deep. Those who had some knowledge of my soul before I came here will know my scars.

    The dead dance inside my head. They are electrons that spark and play and live on for as long as I will continue breathing. The memories of what has passed here in front of my eyes are intimately linked to the hopes and dreams of those who surround me. We work to try and extinguish the darkness that lives in some men’s souls before it can spread like a plague of locusts that eats everything in its path.

    The story of Iraq is a part of me now, and I am a part of it, for better or for worse.

    Is Driving Your Car Your Right? Or Privilege?

    I remember when my best friend got his license. He picked me up with a grin on his face and hands me his still-warm, freshly laminated drivers license.

    "You know what that the women who gave me my license asked to me?" He blurts out.

    "No I dont; what did she say?" I quipped.

    "She asked me if driving was my right or my privilege! I told her it was my right; she told me it was my privilege."

    I used to think it was a right but I’ve been slowly changing my mind.

    I get upset when I read stories about elderly drivers plowing through crowds of people. [thumb:328:r:l=x]

    I get even more upset when I read stories that praise this sort of behavior.

    Slow, decrepit, arthritic people with bad vision, poor hearing and terrible reflexes have no business operating heavy machinery. This includes operating a motor vehicle on public streets and highways.

    Dont get me wrong; I dont like regulation anymore than the next guy. Im not saying all elderly people shouldnt be allowed to drive. I do however think the department of motor vehicles in each state needs to step up and start shortening expiration dates and increase visual and audible testing for those that want to renew their licenses.

    What do you think? Is it the government’s place to regulate elderly drivers or is driving a car a right that’s irrevocable?

    Nice Try Ned

    [thumb:326:l:l=x]The Connecticut Democratic Primary is coming up in August and Ned Lamont is [thumb:327:r:l=x]challenging Joe Lieberman for his seat. There was a live debate this evening on NBC and I took some time to take some notes. Here are the bullet points:

    Lamont wants the President to outline his withdrawl from Iraq. Why I dont know; it seems stupid to share this sort of intel with the enemy. Lieberman agreed with me; he opposes a set timeline.

    When asked about the North Korean missile tests Lieberman said it was time for economic sanctions with NK; Lamont suggested tougher talks. I really dont understand what “tougher talks” means. Do they yell at him? “STOP FIRING MISSILES OR WE’LL GET REALLY ANGRY!” or maybe “YOU’RE A SHORT, UGLY TROLL! STOP FIRING MISSLES!”

    Lieberman supports ANWR; Lamont attacked Americans for driving SUVs. He obviously hasn’t taken a look at what people drive in Connecticut. Any clue as to the #1 selling vehicle in the north-east?

    Lieberman says immigrants should abide by the law, learn English and wait in line like everyone else for their citizenship; Lamont thinks we need to ammend laws, bend rules and hand out citizenship to everyone that’s already here illegally. After all… they can’t vote if they aren’t citizens.

    Lamont also thinks it’s the tax payers responsiblity to pay for immigrant’s college education. That one really made me wanna put my foot through the TV. Call me selfish but they can pay for their own damn education.

    Lieberman has Senate Seniority; Lamont has none. I dont see how Lamont benefits Connecticut there… but then again I don’t know a lot of things.

    What I took away from the debate was that Ned Lamont thinks he’s a qualified US Senator but really he’s just another whiney cheese-eater with millions of dollars and a lack-luster desire to teach high school.

    Army charges lieutenant who wouldn’t go to Iraq

    1st LT WaqtadaI believe that soldiers are morally obligated to obey the Constitution, but it’s really not up to a First Lieutenant to decide whether or not a war is justified. Congress and the President decide those matters. You’re kind of stuck with what they decide after you swear in. I don’t think that Watada is doing his best to “faithfully discharge the duties of his office.”

    I’m not quite sure how I feel about the charges of contempt being brought forward. I’ve expressed frustration with President Bush and other American politicians on several occasions in this blog. Hopefully, Army lawyers aren’t planning on charging me with contempt. I think that military personnel walk a fine line. It’s important that we have the political freedom to speak freely just like any other citizen. However, military personnel should always make clear that their personal feelings are on the back burner while in uniform.

    The Army accused 1st Lt. Ehren Watada of missing his brigade’s troop movement to Iraq, twice speaking contemptuously of the president and three acts unbecoming an officer. The alleged actions are violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

    The charges come about a month after Watada announced his decision not to deploy with the 3rd (Stryker) Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division at a June 7 news conference in Tacoma with opponents of the Iraq war.

    I think there is a difference between being ordered to shoot unarmed civilians lined up against a wall and just plain old refusing to go to war, even though you swore an oath to obey the orders of the President and everyone else above you in the military chain of command. Certainly people are entitled to make their own final decisions about what is moral and what isn’t; even those who are in uniform. But if a military court disagrees, as I suspect it will, then LT Watada will be paying a heavy price for deciding himself that the war in Iraq is unjustifiable.

    You can read the officer and enlisted oaths of office in their entirety below:

    Enlisted “I, _____, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.” (Title 10, US Code; Act of 5 May 1960 replacing the wording first adopted in 1789, with amendment effective 5 October 1962).Officer “I, _____ (SSAN), having been appointed an officer in the Army of the United States, as indicated above in the grade of _____ do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign or domestic, that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservations or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office upon which I am about to enter; So help me God.” (DA Form 71, 1 August 1959, for officers.)

    Independence Day thoughts and thank yous

    Today is America’s celebration of independence. With that in mind I’d like to offer a few quotes on liberty:

    If you want to be free, there is but one way; it is to guarantee an equally full measure of liberty to all your neighbors. There is no other.

    Carl Schurz (1829 – 1906)

    I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. My sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural history, naval architecture, navigation, commerce, and agriculture, in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry, music, architecture, statuary, tapestry, and porcelain.

    John Adams (1735 – 1826)

    He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty, he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself.

    Thomas Paine (1737 – 1809)

    Liberty is rendered even more precious by the recollection of servitude.

    Cicero

    On this Independence Day, I’m thankful for the support of many Americans who have stood by me as I spend a year half a world away trying to ensure continuing liberty for Americans back home while working to make Iraq a place where human beings have choices about how they want to live, what vocation they want to pursue, who they want to marry, how to worship, whether to worship at all and who they want to govern and represent them.

    The process I am involved in is far from perfect. Some would call it fatally flawed. I think they are wrong. Iraq’s rebirth is often painful but I believe better days are ahead.

    Thank you to my wife for supporting me. Thank you to my employer back home for standing by me morally and financially while I am away. Thank you to my readers for challenging me to continue examining the world and myself with a critical eye.

    I hope each of you who reads this blog entry values and understand the high price that others paid for every drop of independence and liberty you enjoy today.

    The people regulating the Internet have no concept how it works

    Senator Ted StevensSince Al Gore invented the Internet, I’m surprised he didn’t take the time to explain how it works to Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska. After all, the man is a member of the Senate Commerce Committee. Stevens recently had this to say in regards to why he voted against Net Neutrality:

    I just the other day got, an internet was sent by my staff at 10 o’clock in the morning on Friday and I just got it yesterday. Why?

    Read the entire rambling, disjointed commentary here. I am not necessarily a fan of using legislation to try and ensure that ISPs don’t play favorites when it comes to delivering your bits and bytes over the wire. One reason is that I’m suspicious of Net Neutrality is that most of “our representatives” in government have zero clue when it comes to understanding what it is they are actually voting for at any given time. Net Neutrality as a concept is great. Net Neutrality as a piece of legislation is dicey. I’m scared for the future.

    That thar Internetchamacallit needs regulatin’ doncha know? Otherwise the tubes might get fouled up, and we all knows that would be real badlike.

    Call of Duty 2 for XBOX 360

    Call Of Duty 2Call of Duty 2 takes place more than half a century in the past during World War II. It is about as close as you can come to being there using today’s commonly available technology. I played on a crappy 19″ color TV provided by the military, so I didn’t get the full experience.

    I plan to play through the single player campaigns again when I get home. The game is that engrossing.

    You start off the single player campaign as a Russian private and you’re thrown into battle almost immediately after a very short shooting and grenade tossing lesson.

    Everything about Call of Duty 2 is scripted. It’s so well scripted though, that I often felt as if the soldiers around me were actually thinking and breathing. Part of this effect is created by the game’s amazing graphics engine; which allows you to see the frost rising as men breathe in and out in the cold Russian winter. The sounds of battle are ultrarealistic as well. The troops around you talk and you hear radio chatter that give you hints about what is going on as well as explicit instructions.

    Back to the scripting though. At one point in the game, I found myself out of the action, because I’d wandered backwards through the scripted sequences into an area where the action was already over. The game’s sense of “aliveness” had completely died. Everything felt static and two-dimensional. As soon as I hit an invisible map line, the chatter and living war environment picked right back up.

    As you play through Call of Duty 2, you’ll find yourself playing the role of sniper, machine gunner, grenade lobber, tank driver and explosives expert in a variety of stunningly rendered environments.

    Overall, the environments and the storyline are superb. From the beginning campaign in the dead of Russian winter to the final climatic scenes storming German fortified positions in France, you’ll die many times and watch those around you dying too. Until we have a Star Trek holodeck to play with, this is about as close as you can get to real war without losing the reset button. Trust me, the reset button in a good thing. War is a sobering experience.
    If you’re a World War II history buff and action shooter junkie, or either one, this game is for you.

    I’ll review multiplayer and update when I get back home from Baghdad.

    To Drill; or Not To Drill: That is the Question.

    Today the House approved the domestic drilling of oil.  [image:325:r:l=x] Unleash the surveying hounds from Oil Hell!  Scour the hemisphere from Maine to Alaska and requisition the biggest, blackest, crudest oil deposits known to man; caribou and birds be damned! 

    While we could never sustain our own demand domestically it still makes sense to help supplement it with our own resources.

    I applaud the House for passing this bill.  It’s definitely a step in the right direction as far as weaning ourselves off the middle-eastern teat and becoming self-sufficient.

    The sad part is that every time the House has approved a bill the Senate shuts it down. 

    “We need to develop energy, here at home. … We can’t say no to everything,” declared Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Calif.

    Tom Daschle was one of them.  He argued that the oil would only sustain the United States demand for 6 months.  He was right; if ANWR became became our only resource for crude oil and gas.  Clearly it wouldn’t and therefore his argument was stupid, illogical and misleading.

    There’s an estimated 5-15 billion barrels of oil in ANWR alone.  In reality the Alaskan Pipeline would take 25 years to move that much oil. Considering the Alaskan Pipeline accounts for almost 20% of our annual oil production it doesn’t seem like such bad idea now does it?

    Man charged after videotaping police

    Since when is it illegal to videotape activity that takes place on your own property? Hmm?

    Michael Gannon, 49, of 26 Morgan St., was arrested Tuesday night, after he brought a video to the police station to try to file a complaint against Detective Andrew Karlis, according to Gannon’s wife, Janet Gannon, and police reports filed in Nashua District Court.

    Police instead arrested Gannon, charging him with two felony counts of violating state eavesdropping and wiretap law by using an electronic device to record Karlis without the detective’s consent.

    This is going to turn into a massive black eye for the Nashua police. New Hampshire is supposed to be one of freest places left to live in the United States. It is the home of the Free State Project. I’m sure this story will have members in an uproar.

    Stolen VA laptop turned in

    AFIS is reporting that the stolen laptop containing the personal records of millions of U.S. veterans has been returned. Apparently, someone was feeling the heat, or had a conscience when it came to screwing American veterans over.

    Reports indicate that the FBI has made a preliminary determination that data contained on the computer and hard drive has not been accessed.

    I’d like to say all’s well that ends well, but I just can’t bring myself to do that in this instance. The immediate threat may be over, but I want to see long-term security policy and implementation improvements.

    Washington Post: Veteran’s data loss should not be a surprise
    Veterans Sue VA over Data Loss
    More on the Veteran’s Affairs data loss scandal
    VA to offer free credit monitoring 

    American ‘poverty’

    Americans who are defined by our government as living in poverty enjoy material wealth that, if they had been born in many other nations, would put them solidly in the middle class.

    • Forty-six percent of all poor households actually own their own homes. The average home owned by persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage, and a porch or patio.
    • Seventy-six percent of poor households have air conditioning. By contrast, 30 years ago, only 36 percent of the entire U.S. population enjoyed air conditioning.
    • Only 6 percent of poor households are overcrowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.
    • The average poor American has more living space than the average individual living in Paris, London, Vienna, Athens, and other cities throughout Europe. (These comparisons are to the average citizens in foreign countries, not to those classified as poor.)
    • Nearly three-quarters of poor households own a car; 30 percent own two or more cars.
    • Ninety-seven percent of poor households have a color television; over half own two or more color televisions.
    • Seventy-eight percent have a VCR or DVD player; 62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception.
    • Seventy-three percent own microwave ovens, more than half have a stereo, and a third have an automatic dishwasher.

    Source: Understanding Poverty in America

    What sort of moral obligation, if any, do American taxpayers have to financially support people who have shelter, food, and access to medical care and many of whom have a number of the luxury items in the list above?

    Most of those individuals defined as poor are neither physically or mentally handicapped. What do I, as a productive citizen, owe them? What am I getting back in return for my tax dollar “investment.”

    In my opinion, the real poverty crisis in America is not nutritional or financial. America’s real problem with poverty centers on the minds of Americans. What are we teaching our children in America’s public school system? Do we teach them appropriate moral values? I don’t think so. Do we teach them sound personal financial management principles? I haven’t seen it. Do we teach them basic economics? Not really, from what I can tell. Do we teach them to be responsible, civically minded citizens? I am dubious.

    What we do seem to be teaching our children is that they live in a culture where individual responsibility is dead and the culture of entitlement is their birthright. We’re inculcuating the idea of the state as nanny, caregiver and overlord. We’re pursuing mantras of materialism, hedonism and the herd mentality.

    People used to say “God helps those who help themselves.” Today, we think in terms of government cheese. Americans who work hard, start a business or achieve anything tangible are punished by government agencies who interfere, regulate, tax and attempt to micromanage their activities.

    Got a problem? The taxpayers will fix it for you, with a little help from your nearest powermongering corrupt politician and a few dollars taken from the most productive members of society. It’s no wonder that American achievers increasingly hide their money offshore or develop elaborate schemes to hide their true wealth.

    America has more than enough food to feed itself, as evidenced by the obesity epidemic. Yet our nation is neatly mentally bankrupt. Americans are increasingly lazy, ignorant and apathetic. 34% of us are overweight. We’ve been at war for three years now, and two-thirds of young American adults still do not know where Iraq is on the map. As a nation, we are financially irresponsible in the extreme.

    The poverty I worry most about is mental poverty. Without a rich mind, a human being will not prosper, unless propped up by others. We are failing to demand from our citizens that they use their minds. Instead, we are telling them that the government (read productive taxpayers) will take care of them from birth to death. That’s a recipe for disaster.

    Go read John Stossel’s Stupid in America. Start worrying. Dont’ forget to thank a government bureaucrat near you for fostering the culture of dependence we live in. Thank your neighbor who continually re-elects the politicians who promise the biggest income redistribution schemes. Thank the Republicans for paying lip service to ideas about smaller government while they grow it larger. Thank the Democrats for insisting that government is the solution to every problem no matter how big or small it may be.

    Howard Dean, Minimum Wage and Mumbo Jumbo

    I don’t like Howard Dean. He’s one of the more dangerous members of the Moonbat Brigade despite his self-destructive nature.[image:323:l:l=x]

    I found some disturbing comments in a Washington Times article: Raising minimum wage will not hurt jobs, Dean says

    “This is a moral nation, so the first thing we must do is convince people that poverty is a moral problem,” Mr. Dean said. “It is a moral principle to raise the minimum wage. It is nothing but economist mumbo jumbo to say raising it will hurt jobs.”

    Nothing is more immoral than abusing the power of government to re-distribute personal wealth in exchange for votes if you ask me. I like how he dismisses economists as “mumbo jumbo” too. What a moron.

    Christian Weller, senior economist at the Center for American Progress, said that a minimum wage increase from $5.15 to $7.25 would increase minimum wage earners’ share of the nation’s overall wealth. “Profits are at their highest levels, but the purchasing power of the minimum wage is at its lowest since the 1950s. I think it is only fair to take a bit from the top and give it to the bottom,” Mr. Weller said.

    Mr Weller thinks it’s only fair? I don’t think punishing people who have succeeded and rewarding those that have not is fair at all.

    Many union and government pay scales slide with minimum wage increases; so now the union and government job wages will have to go up. That never helps anyone but the unions and government employees and ultimately hurts the tax payer. How is that moral? How the hell is that fair?

    I don’t think legislating payrolls is the government’s job. Call me old-fashioned and hard-headed but people never got anywhere in life because of a minimum wage increase and politicians who try to tell you that are idiots. You think Howard Dean got to where he is on measly 40-hour work week?

    There are some fascinating patterns shared among successful people that revolves around education, hard work and the drive to succeed. I’m convinced this is the fastest, easiest way out of poverty. Politicians, legislation and “moral” obligation have little to do with it.

    You can’t legislate the “will to exist” and that is what makes Howard Dean dangerous. He thinks he can get away with some of your money and wants more government power in order to facilitate his plans.

    Abu Ghraib mission – mass release

    I couldn’t blog yesterday – no time. I had a mission to cover a mass release at Abu Ghraib.

    We boarded a Rhino Runner early in the morning and departed down Route Irish headed for the "detainment facility." Officially, we are not allowed to call Abu Ghraib a prison. Personally, I think that is ill advised and possibly even stupid. Detainees are people who are imprisoned. Are they being brutalized? No. Are they being held in a confinement facility that most reasonable human beings would characterize as a prison? Absolutely. I’ll try to keep from getting distracted, however, since what we call the Abu Ghraib is only corollary to this tale.

    The journey was singularly uneventful. We saw many Iraqis going about their business and we also saw many Iraqis waiting in long lines to be searched for explosives and so on. Thank you, Al-Qaeda. Thank you Sunni insurgents. That’s what I would be thinking if I were Iraqi. We saw quite a number of Iraqi patrols, as well as American patrols. They were going about their business, looking very professional. I was heartened to see American and Iraqi patrols waving to one another as they passed in opposite directions. I also saw many jointly manned checkpoints, with Iraqi and American warriors working side by side.

    [image:321:c:l=g]

    The day’s event – the release of 450 men who had been deemed low-risk in regards the safety and security of Iraq. The men had all agreed to renounce terrorism and violence and none had been found guilty of any serious crimes. The overall atmosphere was fairly relaxed, considering the environment. A few of Iraqis inside the wire were playing soccer while they waited.

    When we arrived the men were clustered in a large group behind metal mesh and concertina wire. I could feel their anticipation. I’m sure if I were in their shoes, I would be feeling a wide range of emotions. I could sense varied thoughts going on behind the eyes of individuals in the crowd. The Iraqi National Security Advisor, Muwafaq al-Rubai, was on hand to speak to the crowd. I have no idea what he said since the speech was in Arabic and I was busy taking photos. I do know there was spontaneous clapping as he talked.

    When the gates opened and individuals started being released in small groups, I thought fights might break out and men argued loudly about who should be allowed out first (I assume that is what they were loudly debating.) Eventually, the men all made it out without anyone getting hurt, but I worried a little bit. Iraqis tend to have a different sense of personal space and public etiquette than we do.

    Many of the men had personal items including suitcases and computers, which surprised me a little bit. I don’t know why it did. Obviously, it is important that personal belongings seized during an arrest be given back to their owners. As the men filed out to board waiting buses, some of them were so excited they ran. One man said "thank you" in English as I took his picture. He smiled genuinely at me. Others were more reserved. I’m sure some of them probably resent the uniform I wear. I cannot blame them, but if I spoke fluent Arabic, I would remind them that there are two ways to approach any problem – constructively and otherwise. Terrorism is not a constructive way to solve problems and I live in the same imperfect world they find themselves stuck in.

    [image:320:c:l=g]

    I hope the newly freed men find themselves able to be productive and happy in their changing nation. Some of them will. Others will probably end up back at Abu Ghraib or a similar facility.

    On the way home, a young boy herding a cow across the road stuck his tongue out at us. That was the highlight of my day yesterday.

    The release I attended is part of a larger release this month of more than 2,500 Iraqis who have been detained for various reasons. You can read a mainstream media report on the releases here. It’s just full of hope and unbiased reporting, or not. You decide what’s what. I’m busy doing my job.

    Fair Tax: What do we have to lose?

    by TD of The Right Track

    With any proposal, sooner or later the naysayers start their doom-and-gloom predictions. The FairTax proposal is no exception. There are those out there whining and crying about how “it won’t really work that way”, despite the fact that the current income tax system isn’t working the way it’s supposed to work. I suppose their fear is exchanging the devil they know for the devil they don’t know. In this article, I’ll highlight some of their worries and attempt to dispel them.

    A national sales tax will create a huge black market.

    Among all the arguments to be made against the FairTax, perhaps this one holds the least water. Arguments are made that this “black market” will spring up, with people “illegally trading DVDs, cigarettes, canned foods” yada yada yada. OK, illegally trading? What’s illegal today about trading those items? Nothing! So what’s the problem?

    “They’ll be avoiding the tax!”

    And that’s bad, why? My wife buys romance novels at a used book store now. She’d be avoiding the tax, too. She’s also reading books that everyone else read weeks or months ago. I say, “Come on, black market!” Only the market won’t be black. It can be right in a store front, advertising used books, consignment shops for clothes, furniture, camping equipment, you name it! A whole new type of business will emerge! That will be great for the economy, right? Right!

    The national sales tax will give government another reason to make cash purchases illegal.

    Those making this argument claim that paying with cash will make it easier to avoid paying the tax. This is simply ridiculous. Number one, most businesses are run by honest, dependable people. It’s not the business owner that’s being taxed, remember, it’s the purchaser of goods and services. With penalties for those who attempt to cheat the system, the onus is on the business to be open and above-board in collecting and paying the tax. The businesses will keep a small percentage of what they collect in order to offset their expenses in collecting and reporting the tax! While the consumer might hope for a break from the tax, it would be the rare businessman who would collude with the consumer in his scheme to avoid the tax!

    The tax will be used to track your entire financial life.

    Coming so closely after the previous argument, you have to laugh. First folks are going to pay with cash to avoid the tax, then the tax will be used to track your entire financial life. Unbelievable. How so? You’re not filing a return, are you? To do this, the government would have to:

    1. Obtain records of your purchases from retail or service center outlets
    2. Obtain records of your purchases from your financial institution
    3. Collate the records in order to see what went where
    4. Have a really good reason to waste their time doing this

    But remember, the tax applies to new goods and services only. Don’t want the government to know you bought that new Humvee? Get last year’s model from a used car dealer. Want a couple of evening gowns? Hit the new consignment shop that just opened up a few blocks from your work. But do you know why the government won’t track your entire financial life? Simply put, you’re not that big a deal. Sorry to deflate your ego, but why would the government care to delve into your personal finances? They don’t care what you spend money on, as long as they get their cut!

    Simply put, any tax scheme can run rampant over the American people without diligent and unceasing attention on the part of the American taxpayer. It is up to you and I to keep our government on a short leash. We must realize that there are no free rides. When the government gives you something, they have to take something away from you first in order to do so.

    As author Edward Abbey said, “A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against its government.”

    TD

    The FairTax Blogburst is jointly produced by Terry of The Right Track Blog and Jonathan of Publius Rendezvous. If you would like to host the weekly postings on your blog, please e-mail Terry. You will be added to our mailing list and blogroll.

    Georgia’s Little Jihadist Part II: The Cracker Story

    [thumb:319:l] So our favorite black supremacist Cynthia Mckinney is back in the headlines again.  Apparently the spokeswoman for equal rights and civil liberties doesn’t have a problem with people using racial slurs on her campaign site.  Oxymoron?            

    Here’s a transcript:

     

    The good ol’ boy cracker-crats of the Republican party are having themselves a regular hootenanny over allegations that congresswoman Cynthia McKinney landed a punch on a security guard at the Capitol.

    I find it ironic that Mrs. Civil Liberty herself would allow such derogatory statements on her campaign site.  Is she not perpetuating the very thing she vowes to destroy? 

    She’s quoted later in the article referring to former democrat Denise Majette (also from Georgia) as an Oreo black candidate. I honestly dont even know what that hell that means… but given her background racial slur is a safe assumption. What’s a few racial epithets between congressmen anyways?

    Im taking bets on how fast a white congressman would get accused of a hate crime if they were to ever refer to Cynthia Mckinney as the Big N Word.

    Three-to-One odds… any takers?

    AT&T changes privacy policy to benefit – shocker – AT&T

    The Modern Identity Changer: How to Create a New Identity for Privacy and Personal FreedomBruce Schneier reports that AT&T is maneuvering to ensure that AT&T and not the customer owns the customer’s data. Think about that for a moment.

    There are three ways to play this:

    1. Do nothing – the majority will choose this approach
    2. Provide AT&T with fake information when you sign up – possible legal ramifications for customers who do this
    3. Find another company to do business with

    In light of today’s nanny state environment, options two and three look attractive to me. In fact, I’ve long been toying with the idea of changing my identity, not because I have something to hide, but because I consider privacy an innate right. We’ll see.

    VA to offer free credit monitoring

    Below is a VA press release regarding damage controls measures relating to the theft of veterans’ personal data that resulted from failure to enact and enforce appropriate security standards relating to the handling of electronic records.

    As part of the continuing efforts by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to protect and assist those potentially affected by the recent data theft that occurred at an employee’s Maryland home, Secretary of Veterans Affairs R. James Nicholson today announced that VA will provide one year of free credit monitoring to people whose sensitive personal information may have been stolen in the incident.

    “VA continues to take aggressive steps to protect and assist people who may be potentially affected by this data theft,” said Nicholson.  “VA has conducted extensive market research on available credit monitoring solutions, and has been working diligently to determine how VA can best serve those whose information was stolen.  Free credit monitoring will help safeguard those who may be affected, and will provide them with the peace of mind they deserve,” he added.

    The Secretary said VA has no reason to believe the perpetrators who committed this burglary were targeting the data, and Federal investigators believe that it is unlikely that identity theft has resulted from the data theft.

    This week, VA will solicit bids from qualified companies to provide a comprehensive credit monitoring solution.  VA will ask these companies to provide expedited proposals and to be prepared to implement them rapidly once they are under contract.

    After VA hires a credit monitoring company, the Department will send a detailed letter to people whose sensitive personal information may have been included in the stolen data.  This letter will explain credit monitoring and how eligible people can enroll or “opt-in” for the services.  The Department expects to have the services in place and the letters mailed by mid-August.

    Secretary Nicholson also announced VA is soliciting bids to hire a company that provides data-breach analysis, which will look for possible misuse of the stolen VA data.  The analysis would help measure the risk of the data loss, identify suspicious misuse of identity information and expedite full assistance to affected people.

    As part of VA’s efforts to prevent such an incident from happening again, Secretary Nicholson previously announced:

    • a series of personnel changes in the Office of Policy and Planning, where the breach occurred;
    • the hiring of former Maricopa County (Ariz.) prosecutor Richard Romley as a Special Advisor for Information Security;
    • the expedited completion of Cyber Security Awareness Training and Privacy Awareness Training for all VA employees;
    • that an inventory be taken of all positions requiring access to sensitive VA data by June 30, 2006, to ensure that only those employees who need such access to do their jobs have it;
    • that every laptop in VA undergo a security review to ensure that all security and virus software is current, including the immediate removal of any unauthorized information or software;
    • and that VA facilities across the country – every hospital, Community-Based Outpatient Clinic (CBOC), regional office, national cemetery, field office and VA’s Central Office – observe Security Awareness Week beginning June 26.

    People who believe they may be affected by the data theft can go to www.firstgov.gov for more information.  VA also continues to operate a call center that people can contact to get information about this incident and learn more about consumer-identity protections.  The toll free number is 1-800-FED INFO (1-800-333-4636).  The call center is operating from 8:00 am to 9:00 pm (EDT), Monday-Saturday as long as it is needed.

    Previous related posts:

    More on the Veteran’s Affairs data loss scandal

    Veterans Sue VA over Data Loss

    Washington Post: Veteran’s data loss should not be a surprise

    Bureaucracy and double standards

    The military can be a very dehumanizing place, from my perspective. One of the reasons I left the Marine Corps in 1996 centered on the level of weariness I had built up over anyone who outranked me being able to screw with me anytime they wanted. I don’t have a problem working as part of a team, but I do have a problem with petty bureaucrats. The military is infested with this particular type of vermin.

    Anyhow to make a long story short – I get very irritated by people who make up rules that don’t make sense to me.
    One of the petty bureaucratic rules here at MNF-I (Multi-National Force Iraq) is that our section must wear official Army physical training gear if we go to they gym. On a normal Army post, this would be expected. But we are at the U.S. Embassy, mixed in with lots of civilians. They wear normal. comfortable gym clothes. So do my bosses, who are in the military. The difference between them and I is apparently that rank hath its privileges. In my opinion, letting us wear civvies to the gym is a nice way of letting us relax and be human for a little while. Wearing civilian clothes when you are not on duty doesn’t degrade military discipline in the slighest. Of course, some folks like to remind us all the time that we are on duty 24/7 and the government “owns” us. Two words. Counter productive. Only dumb people want to be reminded that they voluntarily signed up for a term as indentured servants to anyone who happens to outrank them.

    Allow me to continue my tedious tale of personal irritation. When we arrived here in November of last year, I noticed that there is no across the board standard for military personnel wearing their issued PT gear to the gym. Some units and sections wear what they want and some are strictly regulated. Others have commanders who have decided that the officially issued PT gear isn’t necessary to maintain good unit discipline. I followed the example of the officer in charge of my section, who wears civilian clothes to the gym. Several weeks later I was told I could not wear civilian clothes to the gym by someone below that person in the chain of command. When I pointed out that the man in charge of our entire area of operations wears civilian clothes and I was just following his example, I was told that he IS NOT in my chain of command. Despite the fact that this angered me because it seems like a double standard, I started wearing my PT gear again. I can follow orders – I am an NCO and I have a sense of professionalism, even if I disagree with the logic or lack thereof when given a direct order.

    A few weeks after being told to wear the ill-fitting, scratchy issued nylon shorts and cotton t-shirt, we had a change of command. The new boss of us all, Major General William Caldwell IV, in his first meeting with his new command, stated that we could wear civilian clothes to the gym. So I started wearing them again. I prefer civvies because they fit better, look better and do a better job of wicking sweat away from my body. I bought several sets of microfiber workout gear after the general told us we could wear it. I was happy. Simple things make me happy. Little, dumb things can be a great source of joy when you are surrounded by a war day in and day out for a long period of time.

    Fast forward a month. From some invisible source comes a new memo – now we are NO LONGER ALLOWED to wear civilian gear to the gym. So the policy has changed back and forth four times in less than a year at my last count. I just saw my commanding general in the gym two days ago. He was working out in civilian gym clothes.

    I don’t mind following policies when they make sense. In my current environment the policies don’t make sense. They are not applied consistently, and they demotivate me. It’s the little things that drive a man to insanity. I’ll suck it up but I doubt I’ll re-enlist when the time comes to make a decision. I don’t mind fighting a war, but I do mind the overabundance of middle management and the plethora of silly policies. I am getting too old and cranky for this shit.