These are all the Blogs posted today: Friday, 8, 2005.
85 million for Baghdad. Who are they kidding?
1148 recommendation(s).
+Recommend this blog Picture the budget of any big city in America. The 2004 budget for New York City -- not quite twice the size of Baghdad, was $46.9 billion. That's right. Roughly fifty times the size of Baghdad's budget the same year. Is it any wonder they can't get services up and running? Read the article from the NY Times: http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/index.cfm?Page=Article&ID=3951 Read more | 0 comments
Posted By Charles at 5:18 PM
Wanted: An effective response to terrorism
1154 recommendation(s).
+Recommend this blog Riding the metro in to work today, I noticed the same thing that happened after the It says a lot about our lives these days. In What bothers me the most is the futility of it all. After 9/11, a lot of less than thoughtful politicians wanted to strike back at someone -- anyone -- as quickly as possible. But hitting back at just anyone (who happens to be the right color or religious persuasion) not only is wrong, but ineffective. It makes more enemies. It creates new terrorists. I spent about six months living in the old city of The problem is, it hasn't made anyone there any safer. In fact, after spending billions on all this security, and spending more billions and lives responding using the military, they are far more vulnerable to terrorism than ever before. In 1988 and 1989, when I was there, there were a total of just a few hundred violent deaths in the entire country as a result of all causes -- crime, terrorism, etc. Less, in fact, than there were in my hometown, Now, with all this vaunted security, thousands have been killed in the last couple of years. The bottom line is, you can secure things all you want. Tighten airport security, install bomb sniffing equipment, search everyone going to the museum. The nature of terrorism is that they'll always go for the weak spots, and unless you want to make our country a fortress where we give up everything that is good about our country, then there will always be weak spots. This post on DailyKos yesterday clearly illustrates the problem -- since 2001, violent terrorist attacks are up -- way up. More civilians have been killed in terrorist attacks in the last year than ever before, and the problem looks to be getting worse, not better. So, the conclusion I come to is this. While it may be emotionally satisfying, bombing the terrorists doesn't work. Tightening security doesn't work except to divert attacks to different targets. Bombing innocents who happen to live in the same country (or region) as terrorists most definitely doesn't work. Isn't it time we came up with a strategy that does? Read more | 5 comments
Posted By Charles at 12:06 PM
Time To Learn From The Past (or Letting Capitalism Do Its Thing)
1184 recommendation(s).
+Recommend this blog Ivan Eland, a Senior Fellow at The Independent Institute on The U.S. Government Should Stop Meddling in the Oil Market:
Whether one favors the current conflict in Iraq or not, its ultimate basis, and the largest factor in U.S. foreign policy in the region is our dependence on oil. In the end, our involvement in the region has increased hundreds of times over during the last 50 years, while the United Kingdom was slowly pulling itself out of its former colonies. In fact, the primary motivation for most conflicts in the Middle East (religious wars aside) have been based on commerce and access to trade routes, dating back to the silk and spice routes. Given our government's shoddy record of effecting change in the region (think: Shah of Iran, U.S. support for Saddam prior to Gulf War, Beirut), do we really need to begin directing our long history of foreign policy intervention in the marketplace towards "protecting" American oil companies from a natural aspect of capitalism on all fronts? Isn't this sort of activity best left to the industry to sort out for itself, rather than risking a trade war, or worse, military confrontation in direct violation of capitalist market principles? The Administration needs to think long and hard about our own record of military and foreign policies debacles over the last five decades with respect to oil resources in the Middle East before engaging in a risky and unnecessary conflict with the largest nation on the planet on that front. Read more | 2 comments
Posted By James Landrith at 11:00 AM
Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission Process
1141 recommendation(s).
+Recommend this blog On July 7, the Norwich Bulletin published brief biographieson the 2005 commissioners for the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission. I had not yet taken time to familiarize myself with the current Commissioners and their backgrounds. Former Secretary of Veterans' Affairs and Navy Vietnam veteran Anthony J. Principi was selected as Chairman (a good choice). The rest of the Commission will consist of former Representative James Bilbray, Air Force veteran Lloyd W. Newton, retired Air Force General Sue E. Turner, and former Secretary of Transporation Samuel K. Skinner. The United States Marine Corps and United States Army are strikingly lacking in representation on the Commission, while the United States Air Force is clearly over-represented. That's not to say that the Commission will be unfair to Army or Marine Corps installations under consideration or that it will give special consideration to Air Force installations. However, it is relevant to note the composition today, while we watch the process in action. Whenever the topic of base closures come up in conversation there is understandably a mixture of nervousness, angst and anger. People want to know "why my town" or "why my hospital." Having seen the process from the inside out myself while working for the Navy Team on the 1995 round of the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission, I caution people to take the time and educate themselves on the process. First, the Department of Defense issues a suggested list of installations for consideration by the Commission. The Commissioners and staff review the list and may also add installations not suggested by DoD to the list. Hearings are held in communities likely to be affected by the list. At the completion of the hearing process, a final list of recommendations is sent to the Administration for review. The President can either send it back to the Commission with suggested changes or forward it on to Congress who can then either vote "yea" or "nay", but may not attach amendments or alter the list in any way. During this process, use the internet to research and read a wide variety of sources on the topic, not just your local paper which may not necessarily be reporting the whole story with regard to local bases under consideration by the Commission. If local installations are under consideration, make the time to attend the hearings taking place in your community. Talk to your legislators and the Commission directly. Believe it or not, your views are important to the Commission and play a role in the process. Speaking from direct observation, personal letters carry far more weight than mass generated postcards and email form letters. If the issue is important enough for you to sign your name to a form letter, than it ought to be important enough for you to put pen to paper or fingers to keyboard personally. The Commission format for base closures was specifically adopted to minimize political gamesmanship in the process. Remember, Congress can vote "yea" or "nay" on the Commission's recommendation. They cannot attach amendments or in any way, shape or form alter the recommendations. In short, Congress can accept or reject, but not change the list coming out of the Commission. As was commonly stated during the 1995 round of closures, the easy choices were made in previous rounds. Every installation under consideration today is bound to be controversial and few, if any, will be no-brainer closures. Stay tuned, its going to be a long and likely painful process. Read more | 0 comments
Posted By James Landrith at 12:25 AM
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