Archive for August, 2005

Blame Bush (not the blog)

With everything going on about Katrina, I am disgusted with the German Press and many of the German people.

Seems like everything is President Bush’s fault. One day after Katrina hammered the Gulf Coast, German commentators are laying into the US for its stubborn attitude to global warming and Kyoto.

Yep, the German press is saying we deserve this. We some how control the weather and brought this on ourselves.

Hurricane Katrina is big news for German commentators, whatever their ilk. For some, the powerful storm which slammed the Gulf Coast on Monday is a symbol of the sort of environmental terrors awaiting the world thanks to global warming and proof positive that America needs to quickly reverse its policy of playing down climate change. For the more conservative, it is simply another regrettable natural catastrophe.

OK, not 100% of the German people, but the German wacko left are way way out there.
At least Die Welt is thankful that technology helped warn people to get out (why more didn’t leave is a good question).
If you can support Americas relief experts” American Red Cross

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Creep of the Week

John McCain is a lousy republican but I love the fact that the Gay left is also pissed at him.

Largely considered to be a sane and relatively pro-gay Republican, McCain’s endorsement is political pandering at its worst.

According to Advocate.com, not only did McCain meet with the anti-gay group Protect Marriage Arizona to pledge his support, he also signed the petition then and there to put the measure on the ballot.

I don’t know if this makes McCain a little less painful, or the gays more wrong..

Hell who cares….being a faggay is a choice.

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Joint Task Force Katrina

The Pentagon is ordering upwards of 20,000 troops to be deployed to New Orleans and the surrounding areas. I’m sorry about the length of this, but I think it’s important to know this and take some pride in our men and women of the military.

An additional 10,000 National Guard troops from across the country began pouring into the Gulf Coast on Wednesday, adding new soldiers and airmen to shore up security, rescue and relief operations in the region ravaged by Hurricane Katrina.

The new units brought the number of troops dedicated to the effort to more than 28,000, in what may be the largest military response to a natural disaster.

Fully one-third of the 21,000 National Guard troops descending on the Gulf Coast from across the country will be used for security, to prevent looting, enforce curfews and enhance local law and order, said Lt. Gen. Steven Blum, commander of National Guard forces.

In a massive response that was still unfolding Wednesday, the Pentagon was sending a broad contingent of ships, aircraft, trucks, medical support and other personnel to support federal agencies already providing aid to the Gulf Coast states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida.

And Kos and company said we don’t have any troops left in America for this stuff.

The Pentagon has sent in about 60 helicopters, which will be used for search and rescue operations, damage assessment flights, and the distribution of supplies throughout the region.

“Clearly this is the biggest natural disaster to hit the nation in my lifetime,” said Blum, “and it would require the largest national response.”

Late Wednesday, the Air Force was coordinating medical evacuation flights out of New Orleans International Airport, and special operations forces were bringing in battery-powered runway lights so flights could continue through the night. Hundreds of patients — one flight included dozens of expectant mothers — were being flown to hospitals in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Shreveport, La., said Col. Jeff Franklin, who is coordinating the Air Force and Air National Guard and Reserve airlift flights.

“We’re making every effort to carry patients out every time a plane leaves there,” said Franklin, who is based at the Tanker Airlift Control Center at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois.

He said tents will be set up at the airport to house patients until they are flown out.

Little MASH units are being set up. The American military rocks. When they take control, things get done and done fast.

According to the Pentagon, 7,200 active duty military troops, mainly Navy crews on ships that were headed to the Gulf Coast from Virginia, were responding to the disaster. Brig. Gen. Terry Scherling said more could be sent in coming days. Included in that number were several hundred from the Army Corps of Engineers.

Military officials said major goals include getting ports open and clearing roads so that rescue personnel can get to people in need. Truck units from across the country were en route, providing hundreds of vehicles, including five-ton trucks that can move through the deep water. And the Idaho National Guard was sending portable radios to shore up the ragged communications in the region.

The military is also preparing to provide mobile and shipboard hospital beds, including the hospital ship USNS Comfort, which was leaving Baltimore on its way to the Gulf region. In addition, eight water rescue SEAL teams from California were on the way to Lafayette, La., with small, rigid hulled boats that can work in shallow water to pull stranded residents from their flooded homes and neighborhoods. They were expected to arrive Wednesday.

A key priority Wednesday was developing a plan for the massive evacuation of the Superdome in New Orleans, which has become a shelter of last resort for about 20,000 people.

This is a medical concern- that many people located this close together, with no water, no working toilets and no way to keep clean is being considered an emergency. Disease will take root very quickly if this situation isn’t fixed ASAP.

As of mid-afternoon, Coast Guard air and boat crews had rescued 1,259 people across the region and recovery teams were delivering food, water, medical equipment and other supplies, said Lt. Cmdr. Jeff Carter.

Five offshore Louisiana oil rigs were missing and two more adrift in the Gulf of Mexico, Carter said. Another submergible rig was grounded. Additionally, the Coast Guard station in Gulfport, Miss., was destroyed while another in Venice, La., is partially under water. Two other Coast Guard stations — in New Orleans and Grand Isle, La. — have sustained slight or little damage, Carter said.

All Gulf of Mexico ports remained closed, Carter said. He added that four Coast Guard personnel from the Mobile, Ala., area are missing.

The massive military response is being coordinated by a newly created military Joint Task Force Katrina, based at Camp Shelby in Mississippi. The head of the task force, Lt. Gen. Russel Honore, was meeting with other military commanders and FEMA officials and flying over the ravaged New Orleans region Wednesday afternoon to assess the damage.

Every American should be proud of this. I don’t think I have ever heard of such a response from our military; not on this scale. Even during those awful days right after September 11th we didn’t see this. It’s an example of what makes this country so great.

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Semper Gumby

I am in LA for Tuesday and Wednesday, my whole weekly schedule is in the air.
I guess I need to be Semper Gumby today.
The news and comercials are all against bush and very much against John Roberts.

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Send In the Marines

Sometimes the American military is utilized for more than just combat operations. When natural disasters occur it isn’t always the National Guard who comes in to help…Down in the Gulf they called upon the few and the proud.

Marines rescued more than 100 people stranded by the destruction of Hurricane Katrina Monday after tides and high winds pummeled cities along the Gulf of Mexico coast.

Leathernecks with the Reserve’s reinforced 3rd Platoon, Alpha Company, 4th Assault Amphibian Battalion, based in Gulfport, Miss., navigated the debris-filled streets of Biloxi late Aug. 29, plucking dazed citizens from their battered homes.

About 130 people were rescued by the Marines, who drove two AAV7 Amphibious Assault Vehicles through the destruction.

Of all the people I would want to rescue me, the Marines would be at the top of my list. I’m sure it felt like a war zone to the Jarheads too, with the weather being as bad as it was. They are always ready and able to do what it takes to get any job done.

The amtrackers took the flood victims “to a designated drop-off point where they were returned to safety by civilian authorities,” according to a news release from Naval Construction Battalion Center Gulfport. One amtrac in the operation rescued 100 people, making four trips with 25 victims crammed into the crew compartment, a Navy spokeswoman said.

Navy Seabees from Naval Mobile Construction Battalions 1, 7 and 133 — based in Gulfport — are clearing a 10-mile-long stretch of road to the nearby town of Pass Christian so civilian authorities could rescue stranded citizens there, the spokeswoman said.
The Marine amtrackers headed to the Armed Forces Retirement Home in Gulfport today for rescue operations there, but no further details were available.

I know that would make the Vets living in this nursing home proud…I can imagine what thoughts must have been going through their heads as they watched the amtraks come along…
Semper Fi

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What the F….

F-this, F-that, F-you
One more and I get a talking to?

‘Tolerate but not condone’

“Within each lesson the teacher will initially tolerate (although not condone) the use of the f-word (or derivatives) five times and these will be tallied on the board so all students can see the running score,” he wrote in the letter

This is the left distroying Schools. And you thought the left were stupid in the US! This is in the UK.

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Holy CRAP

My Sister is the President of the Ralston Valley PTA
That is so funny. she has changed so much…NOT

Really, this is the sister that …..wait, I can’t tell you what she did when she was younge, sufice it to say, ..
she was BAAAAAD.

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Southern Arizona Protest Warrior Mission

Action: Support our troops show of force (Membership required)
First Date: September 10th
Location: Davis Monthan Air Force Base, Tucson, AZ 85707
Parking: Golf Links and Craycroft, Parking is in the public park located on Craycroft.
What to bring: Bring a sign that shows you support the toops. Be positive. Be creative.
Contact :Sgt alarmman (Go sign up and contact Sgt alarmman) or send me an email and I will forward to Sgt alarmman
Help get the word out!

I will miss September 10th because I will be traveling. I will be on site on Sept 17th.
I will be watching and participating in spirit. Send me pictures and I will post them.
See you on Sept 17, same bat time, same bat location.

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Vietnam: A Soldier’s Diary

Turning on the TV this morning I stopped on the History Channel. It was this

20th Century with Mike Wallace: Vietnam: A Soldier’s Diary

What a piece of shit that fucktard Mike Wallace is re-writing history again. The part of the show that I stopped on was talking about the Tet Offensive. The fucktards we saying that America lost that communist offensive. That Even though the Communists LOST a sound defeat. The Anti-Military History Channel (do they really Hate America?) is even selling this load of shit as facts. This is what some leftist collage kid wrote in order to sell this piece of shit.

Get a real idea of what it was like to fight in Vietnam. See how America’s shifting policy affected soldiers’ attitudes on the war and how that changed their daily lives.

VIETNAM: A SOLDIERS’ DIARY is an intimate portrait of a conflict doomed to failure told by the soldiers who did the fighting. These veterans talk candidly about what it was like day by day and what they did to survive Vietnam. They tell about how it felt to come home not to a hero’s welcome, but to shame, nightmares, and the memories of seeing their friends killed or wounded in the hell that was Vietnam. From the optimistic hopes of a quick victory in 1965 and 1966 to the every-man-for-himself disintegration of discipline and morale of the early ’70s, the course of the war and its aftermath is vividly recounted.

More than any other program, VIETNAM: A SOLDIERS’ DIARY captures the compelling stories of the men who fought in the misguided, mismanaged conflict.

So the History channel is also a leftist bile of shit! Well, I used to like this channel. But now I will only expose the lie that is the left!

The truth about the Tet offensive is that we won.

Yet in fact, Westmoreland was right, subsequent analysts have uniformly concluded. The Communist offensive was decisively repulsed. There was no general uprising in favor of the North. The South Vietnamese army did not buckle, though operating at 50% strength because of imprudent holiday leaves. The indigenous Viet Cong were destroyed, leaving the rest of the war to be conducted by troops recruited in the North.

“To have portrayed such a setback for one side as a defeat for the other–in a major crisis abroad–cannot be counted as a triumph for American journalism,” Peter Braestrup wrote in his book “Big Story.” He was Washington Post Saigon bureau chief during Tet, and his critique didn’t provoke serious controversy even within the press corps.

Tet was a military victory turned into a psychological defeat on the home front. Shall we do it again in Iraq?

Here is a book that really has a good examination of the communists press impact on the War.
Big Story: How the American Press and Television Reported and Interpreted the Crisis of Tet 1968 in Vietnam and Washington [ABRIDGED] (Paperback)

Wikipedia has a lot of factual information on the Tet Offensive

Effect on Communist side

The PLAF’s operational forces were effectively crippled and the offensive failed to achieve its strategic objectives. The decimated cadres of the Viet Cong became largely ineffective for the remaining seven years of the war.

General Giap was removed from total command of the war effort as a result of the tactical and strategic failure of the Offensive.

The left is trying to sell America the lie of America loseing Tet again.(don’t they ever learn). They are doing this in order to try to sell us on Iraq being lost..even when we are winning and Iraqi people are winning.

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Crawford: Why Are They Here?

Buzz reader SEP writes in trying to figure out just exactly what the protesters are fighting against:

I had a thought about the anti-war protests. The WAR, in the sense that one would be opposed to “war”, is long-since over. All of the tanks that are going to roll across the frontier have rolled. All the radar stations that are to be taken out by our strategic bombing campaign have been taken out. All the dictators which are to be overthrown have been overthrown. At this point, our forces are devoted to defending civilians, rebuilding infrastructure and training Iraqi forces to take over the job. What of this, exactly, are the protestors against?

Damn Good question. Hey lefty, What are you against?

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Moderation

“Moderation in the protection of liberty is no virtue; extremism in the defense of freedom is no vice.”

- Senator Barry Goldwater

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For the left that Hate the military

“There are some who’ve forgotten why we have a military. It’s not to promote war; it’s to be prepared for peace.”

Ronald Reagan

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Chickenhawk? Go read this.

Jeff Goldstein posts on the leftists arguments about Chickenhawk.

Is leveling the chickenhawk charge against a bunch of strangers on a “rightwing” website wise? Because here’s “Patton,” doing just that in the comments to this post:

You have to read the whole thing.

Hat Tip: Chap

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How to Apologize

Pat Robertson, who I don’t agree with on lots of issues, at least got this right.

“Is it right to call for assassination? No, and I apologize for that statement. I spoke in frustration that we should accommodate the man who thinks the U.S. is out to kill him.”

He was wrong and he made an apology that focused on the issue of what he said.
After this statement yesterday he lost any respect that he might have had. Today, he gains some of it back.

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Spirit of Flight

Any pilot can describe the mechanics of flying. What it can do for the spirit of man is beyond description.

— Barry M. Goldwater, US senator from Arizona

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