Comment of the Day: Memorial Day special

Supporting the troops. Ur doing it wrong

Mikey on Memorial Day in the context of the War On Iraq:

We got memorial day. A day where we could look at our fighting men through the misty lens of history and honor their sacrifice, all the while understanding their secret complicity. But maybe, just maybe, on balance, there was enough good to offset the brutality and domination.

Now we got Iraq. Coming, as it does, on the generational heels of vietnam. How are we to approach this thing? What honor have we earned? How can we thump our chests and weep for our fallen, when they died for a meaningless crime, when the wounded and the damaged and the broken still walk our streets, still struggle in our communities without support, when the families are shattered and broken?

Somebody needs to tell me how to do this Memorial day. I don’t think LOLVets works. Frankly, it pisses me off. But I’m just me. But I don’t want to worship our “heroes” either.

Sure. They did the best they could. This criminal idiocy wasn’t their idea, and it was set on their shoulders to accomplish an unspecified goal in an unspecified amount of time for an unspecified reason. They fought for their honor, they fought for their colleagues, they fought ’cause it was their job.

And now they have to come home, with the memories of the dead civilians, the ruined country, the crimes and the pointlessness in their heads. And home is a place where people lament the cost of filling the SUV, of taking that Disneyland vacation, of trying to get that promotion at the bank.

Hypocrisy is A Smiley Face Telling A Fairytale

Banging head

Sometimes I just want to bang my head on the wall with the sheer jaw-dropping, mind-numbing hypocrisy of it all.

The Guardian’s Jackie Ashley writes this morning about the New York Times April ‘expose’ of Rumsfeld’s paid media sockpuupets, already exposed by many, many progressive bloggers; and in the light of the Times own trumpeting of the White House line and Judith Regan’s fake reports, it’s frankly a bit of a joke.

Ashley purports to be horrified at what the NYT reveals about the revolving door between the media, defence industry, government, military and lobbyists and about US media figures’ personal complicity in building a false case for an illegal war.

So what are the darker messages for us from this American scandal? I was struck by the way in which the deal between the analysts, the TV bosses, the Pentagon and – behind them all – the military contractors, never needed to be explicit. The Pentagon didn’t need to offer cash, or lean on anyone. The TV networks did not ask too much about their experts’ sources of information, or their outside interests.

That this comes as a surprise to her makes me wonder where this woman, who’s paid well to be plugged into politics and world affairs, has been for the past few years. Has she not met the internet? The central narrative of progressive blogs since 2000 has been the complicity of mainstream journalists in pushing the right-wing, pro-Israel, militarist neoliberal line and parroting the White House’s fake war rhetoric.

It;s not as though she’s shown herself unaware of the Murdoch press’ in particular’s role in making the case for war; this is what she said in 2003 during the David Kelly/BBC/Gilligan affair:

Those papers have been intertwined with New Labour ever since it became clear that Blair would be in Downing Street. Blair wooed them, and from the first Murdoch, sensing a winner, responded.

Sun and Times journalists were courted and favoured with leaks, which they could promote as scoops; Murdoch editors were treated as visiting royalty when they were entertained at No 10 and Chequers. It is shameless, unabashed, and was driven both by Blair and by that high-minded socialist and critic of journalistic standards, Alastair Campbell.

Why do they do it? Because the deal is frank, and even on its own terms, honest. Murdoch wants media power and Blair wants reliable media support. So long as nobody takes journalistic principle or the public interest too seriously, then there is a deal to be done. One day, if Murdoch gets his way, he will be in a position of terrifying influence over any future government. So this is a dangerous time for the BBC. In some ways it has been here before. In the wake of the Falklands war, when Alasdair Milne was director general, Margaret Thatcher berated him about BBC funding and journalism in terms almost identical to those we hear from Labour now. John Birt had his rows too

Yet this is the woman who professes to be horrified at the way the system in which she works works.

It was all nods and winks. Does this begin to sound familiar? It wasn’t cash for peerages. It was propaganda for access. But isn’t the underlying structure – you do me a favour, I’ll see you right, while neither of us says a word – just the same?

Why yes, it is just the same.

Has it never, ever occurred to Ashley – New Labour’s cheerleader-in-chief this past decade at New Labour’s favourite newspaper – that she’s had privileged access to the PM and cabinet ministers and their aides because, funnily enough, she repeated their lies, supported the party and no matter what her disclaimers, as a result was objectively in favour of the Iraq war ?

Apparently she thinks all that access and tips and cosy invitations and the like came because they like her. Nothing to do with the fact her partner is also a chief political bigwig for the BBC either, oh no. It was all for the sake of her beaux yeux.

Surely no well-educated, observant opinion writer for a major modern newspaper could be either so naive – or so disingenuous – as to truly think that the British punditerati are less compromised than those in the US, could they?

We see the cost of not having an honest, open argument, whether about Pentagon strategy or about how the banking system really works, and the media feel embarrassed: “How did we miss that?” In Washington, and elsewhere, the answers are often the same. It comes down to unspoken deals between powerful people, and smiling faces telling fairytales.

“How did we miss that”? I’ll tell her how she missed that; you never see the dirt you’re sitting in.

Comment of the Day: embryos are more important than Iraqis

The kiddie fiddling Catholic Church in Scotland has had its bishopic tights in a knot this week over government proposals to allow the creation of socalled human-animal embryo hybrids, demanding Catholic Labour MPs vote against it. And indeed a great many of those now feel moral qualms they’ve never encountered before. Says Chicken Yoghurt:

Look at some of the Catholic MPs and cabinet ministers getting in a lather about the little itty-bitty potential-babies. Des Browne: voted very strongly for the Iraq war. Ruth Kelly: voted very strongly for the Iraq war. Paul Murphy: voted very strongly for the Iraq war. Geraldine Smith: voted very strongly for the Iraq war.

Paul Goggins: voted very strongly for the Iraq war. Tommy McAvoy: voted very strongly for the Iraq war. Frank Roy: voted very strongly for the Iraq war. Tony Cunningham: voted very strongly for the Iraq war.

‘Nuff said.

Bonus video clip: Mitch Benn

A question to you, the Proggold reader

kitten in a basket

Sorry for the lack of posts these past couple of days: Palau had to take a leave of absence to take care of some personal shit, which left me to feed and entertain three and a half cats all by myself. the half cat is the one which supposedly belongs to our next door neigbour but one, but who spents a lot of time being fed and watered by us. And one of those cats, pictured above is very demanding and very clever, gets bored easily and would’ve attempted to conquer the world already if it were not for the lack of opposable thumbs. she recently discovered the little people who live in the telly so now we can’t watch anything anymore without her trying to kill them.

What I would like to try today, and which may end in total embarassement, is to ask all you fine people who read this blog what they think happened back in 2003 that made the war on Iraq happen despite a majority of people worldwide being opposed to it. What should we have done differently, or was there nothing we could’ve done to stop it. If the latter, would it at least have been possible to stop the UK from participating, or was that never possible with Blair as prime minister?

Andy Newham of the Socialist Unity blog believes the war could’ve been stopped if the anti-war movement had concentrated on the day of the parliamentary vote as the trigger for direct action and on pressuring the MPs. He has a point, but what do you think?

Hell No, They Won’t Go

Deputies: Calif. Soldier Had Friend Shoot Him To Avoid Redeployment

POSTED: 12:09 pm PST February 26, 2008

APPLE VALLEY, Calif. — A soldier trying to avoid redeployment to Iraq had a friend shoot him in the leg and then claimed he had been wounded in a holdup, authorities said.

The 20-year-old old man from of Apple Valley limped into a minimart about 9:30 p.m. Sunday and reported he had been walking on a golf course when a gunman stole his wallet and military identification and shot him in the right thigh, authorities said.

[…]

“We were out looking for the suspect, and things just weren’t adding up,” sheriff’s spokeswoman Trish Hill said.

The man was questioned and finally told investigators that a friend shot him with a .32-caliber revolver so that he could avoid returning to Iraq, Newton said.

[…]

The man was questioned and finally told investigators that a friend shot him with a .32-caliber revolver so that he could avoid returning to Iraq, Newton said.

The friend also confessed that they had staged the shooting, Newton said.

“I don’t think he realized how serious this situation was. I think he thought he was just helping out a friend,” Newton said. “He realized it wasn’t a real good idea when the deputies showed up at his home.”

Full story…