Existential Ennui

~ Searching for Meaning Amid the Chaos

Existential Ennui

Tag Archives: Afghanistan

War, Good God, What is it Good For?

02 Monday Aug 2010

Posted by Sherry in Afghanistan, Editorials, Iraq, Veterans, Vietnam, War/Military, World Wars

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, Iraq, Veterans, Vietnam, War

It may come as a shock to you to know that I am a pacifist. I hold no truck with war. None. I find it an ugly waste of life.

I am not a patriotic person by nature. I don’t understand artificial national lines of demarcation. I figure you farm where food grows, and you manufacture where factories make sense. Anything less makes no logical sense.

War never ends war, never has, and never will. Within every war are the seeds of the next one, and the next, and on and on.

It has been said that these interminable wars we now are engaged in, are real only to the actual soldiers and their families. The rest of us remain largely untouched. That is probably true. But it probably always has been like that. We fail always to see the deeper and more subtle costs that effect us all.

I read many years ago Normal Mailer’s The Naked and the Dead.  He won the Pulitzer for it, and well he should. I never felt the same way about war after that. I learned there is no glory, no adventure, no honorable patriotic pride. There is only blood, sweat, insects, rot, disease, discomfort, pain, mental distress and death. Nothing heroic or noble, just putting one foot interminably in front of the other, marching into the jaws of death.

I think it speaks volumes that most veterans don’t talk about their war. It is too horrific, too vile, too inhuman. The fear they have is, I suspect, the revulsion they might find. My father never spoke of WWII, except to point a time or two, as he gazed at his company yearbook, “This guy got shot in the gut right next to me. He died.” On some beach, somewhere in Italy. Somewhere in some far off land.

I’ve been reading Tim O’Brien’s extraordinary book, The Things They Carried. I found it on a great books list, and thought my husband might need to read it. He cannot stop reading it, re-reading passages again and again. My husband wasn’t a grunt, he flew on helicopters, yet O’Brien’s poignant vignettes of life in the bush of Vietnam ring so true that he finds common ground aplenty.

I’ve read about half, and there are times I want to set it down and not continue. So raw and so frightening are the feelings. Time and again, I cannot relate to the behavior of young men living in such hell. I try, but I fail to understand. I would guess they would act one way, and they don’t. My husband understands, but I do not.

The book is so aptly titled. For he speaks of what they carried common to them all, water canteens, rations, M-16’s, ammo. But he then goes on to speak of the more personal things, the letters, the rabbit’s foot, the pair of pantyhose of a girlfriend, a deck of cards, a bible. And then deeper still, the fears, hopes, dreams, terrors that each carried in varying degrees.

One line I shall never forget.

“They died so as not to die of embarrassment.”

Vietnam was a war of the draft. Boys were called up. Damn few chose to go. Most did about everything they could to avoid it. College was a safe place to be, but grad school was not. The state army reserves was excellent, but the waiting lists were huge. Conscientious objector status was good, but you really had to show a history of such beliefs before being drafted. Boys sometimes pretended insanity, or homosexuality to escape. And then there was Canada.

O’Brien almost ran. He drove to the border, he fought his internal battle for a couple of weeks. In the end, he says, he was not courageous, he was a coward, he went back home, to report for boot camp.

You see, it was the embarrassment. Better to die in a war you did not believe in, wanted no part of, than to face the embarrassment of family, friends, town. Embarrassment that one couldn’t stand up and do the manly thing.

Ironic, that the draft captures the young. The eighteen through twenty-something. Exactly before young men have found themselves, their self-ness. Still so locked into peer pressure, and wanting to life up to expectations of what others desire them to be. It’s an ingenious system that works, most go like lambs to the slaughter because they cannot bear to be different. Thought cowardly.

So they go. And they die. Or they are grievously wounded. Or they see and participate in horrors the likes of which we who have not drunk from this cup, cannot imagine. We would recoil, we would move away. We would relegate such as these to leper colonies, these no longer quite humans.

So they don’t mostly speak. They live among us, with their terrible memories. With guilts and tears unshed, with fears of cowardly acts, of monstrous visions. Of death, of more blood than any animal slaughter house would conceive.

Of the smells, awful rotting human flesh, the charred remains of villages, of once sweet smells now gone rancid because of associations. The sounds, that make fireworks at home on humid July nights intolerable. The same for backfiring cars. The sounds of helicopters rotate through the mind and recall the sinking feeling as one is propelled downward into a free fall crash.

These are lifetime memories. Never to be escaped. And they forever color and mutilate lives, shrinking the scope of opportunity. Forever icing over the heart. Always the need to protect the raw pain that is ever present, though often softened by drugs and alcohol or any other addictive and repetitive behavior that numbs the senses.

And since we, the unchurched in such affairs, don’t understand, we all too readily are willing to defer to the crazy minds who still think that war is an answer. And so we don’t rise up in anger and indignation and demand that this hell stop. We tell ourselves it is unfortunate, but necessary.

And it is not necessary. It is simply humanity stuck in a rut of pain giving and receiving, back and forth like some crazy swing set. And I weep for all, for all who are ground up in this endless meat grinder.

**

The lyrics to Edwin Starr’s War, can be found here.

For a poem about life at Landing Zone Betty in Vietnam, read Gary Jacobson.

Peace

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Why Am I The Only One Who Knows What to Do?

03 Thursday Dec 2009

Posted by Sherry in Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Entertainment, Essays, Humor, Iowa, Life in the Meadow, Presidency, The Contrarian, War/Military

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, celebrities, heroes, life in the meadow, Obama, The Contrarian, Tiger Woods, War

Well, I listened to the President’s speech the other night. It was not what I wanted to hear. I’m a product of Vietnam and a seemingly never ending Middle Eastern crisis. I don’t believe in happy endings when it comes to war torn planet earth.

I support the President’s decision however. No, it’s not the knee jerk, anything goes since he’s one of ours. I continue to disagree with Mr. Obama on a number of issues. I want Gitmo closed and now. I’m tired of the delays.

I want the “don’t ask, don’t tell” ended in the military. I wanted that done like January 21, 2009. I wanted a more supportive stance on gay rights in general.

I am sad that Mr. Obama supports the death penalty, and I wish he didn’t. I want this barbaric practice stopped everywhere.

I want universal health care for everyone, period. Perhaps he agrees with me on this, but he’s clearly ready for more compromise than I am.

The point is, is that I can disagree, while overall still supporting Obama because he is heads and shoulders above any alternative. My proclivity to despise my opponent (Bush and McCain for instance) is known. The Contrarian suggests that if GWB discovered a cure for cancer I would refuse it. That might be true. But it doesn’t stop me from objectively concluding that my choice is not without error in his political decisions some times.

President Obama got stuck with a mess not of his creation. That divine honor goes to Bush/Cheney/Rummy/Karl/ and the rest of the crew of incompetents. Mr. Obama is one of the brightest humans around and surrounds himself with top notch advisers. I have spoke my opposition, but I will wish this enterprise well and deeply hope that he knows a good deal more than me about the options and likely results.

Speaking of Tiger, (well, I segue my way), I’ve said that I don’t care about his personal business and it’s none of mine in the end. Yet the question remains to me, exactly when did we determine that our heroes were somehow above the rest of us in virtue? We seem to have come to that conclusion, but I want to know when.

If we look back to the time of Greece and Rome, there is no question that the ancients of that time regarded their gods and heroes as having “feet of clay.” Their limitations and their foibles were well known and alluded to in literature of the time.

Somewhere all the line, we changed and we imbued our “heroes” whether they be silver screen members or sports stars, with some perfection once reserved only to newborns. Somehow we have placed all our failure to live up to our own expectations on the backs of strangers and tried to live the virtuous life through them I guess.

Tiger Woods appears to be an expert at this. He has courted the celebrity spotlight, becoming probably the highest paid endorser of products, all the while, until now, keeping his private life just that, private. But alas, once the genie is out of the jar, well, the dam burst and the torrent of rumor and innuendo seems endless now. And sadly, it’s all so very predictable.

Predictable to us mere mortals who seem to know instinctively that sooner or later media mega stars are going to get caught if there is anything to be caught about. Too many eyes peering at you Tiger, from the housekeeper in the posh hotel to the guy pumping gas at the local station. They are all watching, and once the talk begins, they add their voices to what becomes a crescendo of accusation.

I guess I wonder when we will learn to pick better role models or not expect what cannot be lived by them. It seems mostly a function of ours and their immaturity.

Speaking of the Contrarian, he’s in rare form these days. I suspect you may not have realized it, but the Contrarian specializes in commercial examination. He has done a considerable study and has pondered the evidence with care. He concludes that the Victoria’s Secret commercials remain the standard by which all other commercials should be judged. They somehow have this amazing ability to never get old, never bore, never objectify, never offend.

I leave that to others to decide. I’m his wife after all, and I tend to think he is always right. Well, at least unless I’m more right. Then he’s wrong. But publicly, we keep a strong unassailable front. 

He figures that all his ogling research into scantily clad women certainly puts him him high on the list for his next interest: namely that he has heard that there is a profession known as “sexual anthropology.”

He would like to inquire into becoming one. He offers that he’s amenable to a work study program. I said I would check out the opportunities for him, via the computer. Yeah, and pigs fly and it’s don’t rain in Indianapolis in the summertime.

Oh, just in case anyone is asking, his strength is returning. After a bout with wild eyebrow hair, he’s recovering nicely. Let me just explain briefly.

“I have these hairs from my eyebrow and they are hanging within view, and I need them cut.”

“Go get the spoon dear.”

Yes, yes, the masculine bohemoth I am married to, needs to cover his eye with a spoon as I approach with manicure scissors to clip a couple of stray hairs. With a dose of OCD that would curl the nose of even Howie Mandel, the Contrarian man’s up to the occasion when he must expose his jugular eyebrow, to the ever aging and shaking hands of his wife, the “Butcher of Troy.”

Within moments as I snip away, he is screaming like a girl, “I heard that, I HEARD that, you hit the spoon with the scissors! Be CAREFUL!” I nod, and shake my head, roll my eyes, and comfort him like a child getting his first cavity filled, “There there now, relax, we’re almost done.” Welcome to my world.

***

No post tomorrow since we are shopping. None yesterday since I was in town on Church stuff all day and evening.

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Dusting Off Our Hands

05 Monday Oct 2009

Posted by Sherry in Afghanistan, Great Britain, History, Iraq, Middle East, War/Military

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, American Exceptionalism, Britian, empire, France, imperialism, Iraq, Middle East, Vietnam, War

iraqWe in America are quite good at forgetting the past. Any past that implicates us as being less than wonderful, that is. I suspect other countries might experience some of the same thing, conveniently dis-remembering their evil acts.

Do the French still recall their contributions to the Vietnamese debacle that captured so much of the 50’s and 60’s? I rather doubt it.

The British, no doubt don’t spend prodigious hours bemoaning that their interference in Middle Eastern affairs in decades past has at least something to do with the current troubles of the region.

We here in America are no different. We tend to gloss over, most of us at least, our horrific treatment of American Indians and our imperialistic behavior toward Mexico and the stealing of their land. No, we “move on.” And in truth, there is something to be said for that too. After all, I had no part in the near genocide of the American Indian in their glorious diversity.

But, of course, that doesn’t mean that I should forget. For in the remembering comes the responsibility to do what can be done to repair the injuries.

We are in danger of forgetting about Iraq. Since some measure of calm has returned (meaning mostly that our war dead numbers have decreased to some “acceptable” level), we have largely stopped talking about it. The news outlets don’t mention it much. Afghanistan has leapt up the charts of public interest as the death toll there, (again in terms of American lives) has started to climb.

But people live in Iraq and their lives have been forever (it seems) altered by our decision to enter their country and upturn it’s civil life. Of course, to a degree, we don’t care about any of that. There is still in this country a contingent that fails to care, as long as  American lives are not the ones lost. Iraqi casualties have always been hard to collect and estimates are wildly veering from one end to the other.

Mostly we see Iraqi’s through the eyes of soldiers who’ve been moved to help out some child or other who touches them personally. That makes good news and allows us the feel good moment where we can tell ourselves that our troops are “doing good.” They are, to be sure, doing their best, but they are sent there to kill, not adopt puppies.

 I  ran across the post today from one living in Iraq. It’s not a big deal, not so important a post. But it speaks eloquently to the day to day  crap that people now endure. This new Iraq that we have created with our bombs. Not a place you or I would like to live in. A fact of life for them.

And we don’t talk about Iraq much any more, and when we finally get completely out, we won’t talk about it at all. Other than to shake our head that it hasn’t become the shining city on the hill we promised it would be. They just don’t want democracy it seems.

Just like the Vietnamese didn’t want it back in the 70’s. Damn stupid people. Too lazy and uneducated to know what freedom means. It had nothing to do with the havoc we wreaked, the lands we destroyed, the villages ruined, the lives distorted and forever changed.

We pulled up and left, and wiped our hands of it all. Not our problem any more.

We’re looking, getting ready, to pull the plug on Afghanistan now. You can hear the remarks, see the looks. We’re starting to emotionally disengage. Our losses matter, and they are getting way too high. Osama bin Ladin is no longer the rallying cry. Screw him, we’re getting  ready to get outa here. We’re tired of dying and losing and feeling impotent and inadequate. We don’t know what is wrong with you, and frankly we no longer care.

Truth is, we are replaying a story that we have played oh so many times, more than these examples. We define lofty goals to cover our own singularly ego driven desires, we enter and shoot up the place. We install puppet governments, almost always comprised of people who have some powerful allies to now professional rape their peoples. They do it well. We can’t understand why they HATE US?????

No indeed we don’t understand, and we will never understand until we face up to the truth. We are no better or worse than any of the other imperial empires. We just aren’t as blatantly bloody obvious about it. We couch our blitzkriegs with flowery “freedom” words and esoteric goals of transforming lands into islands of prosperity. We lie, both to ourselves and to them.

I have no answers. You know better than to ask me for any. I just sigh as I watch this Afghani scenario begin to play out. There is not victory in sight, there is no reason to stay. We have not left the country better, just battered. And we will refocus.

Refocus without learning a thing, and we will soon find ourselves in another place in another time, promising freedom and jobs and equality and justice, and we will emprison, and practice no equality and no justice, and leave another land in smouldering ruins. Our OOPS factor is mighty big here in MeriKa.

They say China will soon overtake us and become the new bigger better best empire. Perhaps. But I don’t expect they will do any better with the crown than we have. There is just something wrong with having that much power. It corrupts. And somebody I believe said that. Absolutely in fact!

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Short Takes on the Day 10/11/08

11 Saturday Oct 2008

Posted by Sherry in Cakes, Desserts, Election 2008, Fruit, Gay Rights, Iraq, John McCain, Presidency, Uncategorized, US Parties-Elections, War/Military

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, cake, Desserts, Election 2008, fruit, gay rights, Iraq, McCain, Presidency, Sarah Palin, War

I’m just pleased as punch to announce that the Connecticut Supreme Court has legalized same-sex marriage. This is so wonderful, and I think presages the failure of Prop 8 in California in a few weeks. I must confess that I am nearly as happy at the thought of the gnashing of teeth that is going on in the wingnuttery land of right wing evangelical discourse. Perhaps you folks might move to Alaska. From what I have seen, you might be right welcome there, or again, perhaps not. I’d not want to lay money on the re-election prospects of the disgraced Sarah Palin.

Well darn, another adage bites the dust. The apple does indeed fall far from the tree. Christopher Buckley, son of the famous conservative, may he rest in peace, William F. Buckley, is endorsing> > > > BARACK OBAMA!!! Slip by Break the Terror and read the details of his statement, which is worth the trip I tell ya.

Epicurious  has a lovely fall dessert. Pumpkin-Apple Streusel Cake.  It sounds heavenly. Just right for those days you spend outside in the clean fall air. A soup and salad and this for dessert would be just about perfect. Take a look and add it to your file.

Garrison Keillor  is a dude I can never get enough of. If you are the same, then link ’em up and move ’em out. He suggests that anyone still undecided today on this election can’t be persuaded by the use of English.  And I suspect he is right. Anybody realize that the mobs that now attend McCain’s mob scenes rallies, are huge turn off to the independents? I mean embarrassing to see walking talking human being calling Obama an Arab and a Muslim. Too bad they don’t have the courage to admit the obvious. I am a Racist would be the correct statement no?

Michael Tomasky  reports that General Petraeus at a recent Heritage Foundation luncheon, said some things that sound an awful lot like what Obama has been saying,  and an awful lot not like what McCain keeps trying to sell. This might play well in the last debate scheduled for next week. We shall see.

A very nice piece at the History News Network   on the Vice Presidency. It is my contention, and certainly that of many experts that an unacceptable VP candidate is more than enough reason to vote against the ticket. There have been way too many VP’s who have gained the main office through the death of the President. We cannot take a chance on a utter neophyte gaining the office. She would be at the total control of people we have not elected, and goodness knows who they might be. Sarah’s past practice has been to elevate unqualified high school classmates to positions of state power in Alaska. Anyone want the civics teacher as the Secretary of State?

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The News Unfit to Print

29 Tuesday Jul 2008

Posted by Sherry in Afghanistan, Bush, Iraq, Uncategorized, War/Military

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, Bush, Iraq, Media

Caution: There are photographs at the end of this post that you may wish to avoid. Read carefully and stop if you do not wish to proceed. The photos are NOT graphic but are not normally seen by Americans. Only the last photo may be difficult to see.

I subscribe to a feed from a blog called Iraq Today. Basically it runs down day by day, the various incidents of the war–both Iraq and Afghanistan. It details killings, deployments, and other war related news of the day. It does so for all sides, reporting the casualties of Americans, Iraqi government troops, and the various insurgents and militia forces. It reports on the civilian casualties. I can’t speak to how fairly it does this.

Americans have been sanitized from this war as much as possible. This has been the concerted and deliberate act of the Administration. Perhaps due to the anti-war movement against the Vietnam war, Bush and his band of thugs have chosen to pretend that people die neatly and without pictures. These pictures are routinely shown in Europe for instance. In America, we are not allowed to see returning coffins, lest the war hit home and we actually see the death as real.

Under a freedom of information suit in 2005, the Pentagon released some 700 pictures of returning dead soldiers. This is how they did it:

Blackouts by the Pentagon
Blackouts by the Pentagon

Is anything more absurd that blacking out faces and units of the honor guard? This is utterly so insulting as to be an outrage. The Administration claims that such photographs are normally banned to “ensure privacy and respect is given to the families who have lost their loved ones. . . .” What utter hogwash. They are done to keep you and me from seeing the real cost of war.

I watch George Stephanopoulos each Sunday. Near the end, he always runs the list of killed in Afghanistan and Iraq. I try desperately in those moments to at least read the names, ages and home of each soldier. It generally scrolls too fast to do it adequately. I figure it is the least I can do, to remember them in this small way. What would be so terrible about stopping and silently showing the caskets of our returned fallen troops?

It has nothing to do with respecting privacy. It has everything to do with keeping the effects of war away from public scrutiny in the hopes that they will not rise in anger at the horrific and criminal policies of an Administration that led us to this point. They are trying only to save their own asses, quite literally.

The heart wrenching photo of a flag draped coffin serves to remind us that we are at war. So far, the Administration has done a pretty good job of hiding that fact to all but the families and friends of those who suffer with wounding and death. Those numbers are indeed not small, as tens of thousands return with mental and well as physical injuries that will stay with them a lifetime. Still, most of us are not directly affected and the refusal to allow us to see the real war further insulates us from that reality.

I deeply understand the difference between coffins and pictures of actual dead soldiers lying in the street. I practiced law, as some of you know, for many years. I had my fair share of murder cases. I saw my fair share of morgue and scene photographs. I did not view them unless there was a bonafide reason for defense purposes. I do not care for blood and gore, I avoid horror movies and many so called “hit” movies because they are too gruesome for my taste.

I think every newspaper or media outlet should be most careful in selecting photographs to post for public viewing. I would not want to see the face of any soldier, recognizing that for the family, this would be entirely too painful. But war is not a private affair. We are all implicated in its pursuit simply by being citizens. If we do not understand the reality of what we are supporting, then we are condemned to pay the price along with the obvious perpetrators.

This girl’s parents were killed by American forces in 2005. This photograph was shown throughout the world. It apparently was not shown here until recently by the NYTimes.

Such photographs were commonplace during the Vietnam war.

Photographers who have operated in both, say that in Iraq and Afghanistan, they are on a dog leash. Those who photograph dead soldiers are denied any further access to the theatre.

The last photograph was taken by Stefan Zaklin. He was immediately removed from theatre and denied further access to all military establishments in country. The military and Administration are determined to sanitize this war. It is not clean. It is dirty, ugly, and men and women die. I don’t wish to be salacious in any way. I want to point out that war is the meanest last resort that humans should engage in to settle differences. We risk forgetting that when we refuse to see it in all its horror.

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The Day McCain Will Never Forget

24 Thursday Jul 2008

Posted by Sherry in Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Election 2008, Essays, Iraq, John McCain

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Afghanistan, Barack Obama, Election 2008, Iraq, John McCain

No doubt McCain will come to regret a number of things in this election. No doubt there is much he regrets in his life for all I know. But I know that some time, in late November as the old codger sits in Arizona nursing a scotch and soda, rocking away in the quiet of his den, he will remember when it all went terribly wrong, the infamous misstep that ended his dreams of being the head honcho.

It all seemed so smarmily right at the time he will muse. It seemed perfect in fact. After all, he was the elder statesman, the warrior who had suffered in war, who knew war, whose family reeked of military and war. How could it go wrong after all? This upstart black kid who had the audacity to challenge the old war horse for the presidency of the United States of America. This kid who had never seen the inside of a barracks, a fighter plane, a prison camp. This kid who presumed to lecture a man nearly twice his age on how war should be conducted.

No, John McCain never for a moment thought that he was making a fatal mistake. He was just going to enjoy slapping down this kid a few notches. He was going to revel in America nodding in agreement as he taunted and ridiculed the youngster for his Utopian notions of the world. John was going to show him a thing or two about the real world. The ugly world John knew so well. The world he had survived, conquered in a fashion and come out the other side to accolades finally.  No he never thought, never questioned the wisdom of what he was about to do.

John McCain started in May? making hay of the fact that Barack Obama had not traveled the world, had not spent time in Iraq, had not seen the realities from the ground. This was, he claimed, essential before anyone could have the audacity to try to claim what we should do. Worse, Kid Obama had never been to Afghanistan. How can he talk about what needs to be done there. The kid is naive, unschooled, a mere freshman. Heck, he never had one hearing on Afghanistan in the past year. (John of course ignores the fact that he hasn’t attended a Senate foreign relations hearing on Afghanistan in 2 years. No that doesn’t matter because like his relationship with lobbyists, the rules don’t apply to him. He’s the Mac after all.)

That of course was his first mistake. He started this silly rhetoric in May. Then he went further, he decided to taunt Obama. Slip to his website and see the ticking clock. How many  years, months, days, minutes, seconds since Obama had traveled to Iraq? Mention it again and again, in the most smug fashion you can. Talk down to him, tell people he’s “misguided”  and “woefully misunderstanding of the situation.” Worse, tell him you’ll go with him, give him a helping hand in understanding it, be the big brother helping to education the little brother about the big bad world. This was his second mistake.

Together, well, they are going to be the thing that locks down that coffin lid for good. Senator Obama and his team had plenty of time to plan this trip, plenty of time to get it perfectly right in every respect. They could make it a broad trip, covering not only Iraq and Afghanistan, but also the Middle East, and then some of Europe. Time to write the speeches, set just the right tone, time for the big media journalists, the evening news folks to make plans to be there. Plenty of time for nothing but wall to wall coverage. Press conferences galore, adoring crowds, everything running smoothly.

Obama and his team must feel like they’ve been given the biggest present imaginable. It must seem like Christmas. Obama is pictured with military leaders and heads of state, visiting important places, having important “presidential” conversations. And back home? McCain is visiting a super market and riding around in a golf-cart with Bush senior who laments they are “envious” of Obama’s press coverage, as McCain, who looks even older than Bush senior, looks on sadly.

Jon Stewart laid it on rather thick last night, McCain riding his stair climber seat to the upper floor of his home, and drinking from a flask as he wandered down a dark street at night. That’s about where it lies. And Johnny did it to himself. Perhaps he was talked into it by staffers, I don’t know. If he did, well than shame on him for his “judgment.” This is what he can only call, “my bad.”

I mentioned this a few days ago, more than once as I recall. This was gonna be the big mistake John made. But I’m not the only one by far. If you want another take on the issue, read Matt Littman’s excellent post at the Huffington Post located here. It says the same stuff, better than me, in fact. Oh John, so sorry, but then, you are a sorry man. You can’t blame this one on George or Karl. It’s on you buddy.

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05 Monday May 2008

Posted by Sherry in American History, Barack Obama, Church/State, Crafts, Crochet, Current Issues, Desserts, Election 2008, Energy, Environment, Ethnic recipes, fundamentalism, Greece, History, Pasta, Poultry, Quilting, Recipes, religion, Rome, science, Sports, Tex-Mex, World History, Zoology

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Afghanistan, American History, Barack Obama, baseball, birds, chicken, crafting, crochet, Desserts, Election 2008, environment, fundamentalism, Iraq, pasta, pie, quilting, religion, science, tex-mex, tolerance, War, weather, world history

I Just got a kick out of this chalk drawing by Vincent van Gogh called “The Carrot Puller.” I wonder if the poor lady was amused by the position or by the appellation. It was done in 1885 and is located at the Institute of Art in Chicago.

On the homefront. We got the Bronco. The Contrarian was very impressed by how nice it was both inside and out. Some rust around the wheel wells and that is about all. It’s a super big engine, with plenty of power. We pulled the truck out slick as a wink when we got home. I’m about 3/5 done cleaning the living room. Got the windows all done today. It’s a big bay with six big panes and got my biggest plant put out for the summer. A bit early, but I really would be surprised if we get any more frost. Let’s get to it, Monday is always a super busy day.

In the news today:

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Today, May 5 is the anniversary of America’s first person in space. Alan Shepard Jr. went on a 15 minute flight. This was back in 1961, and I do remember it. America was a bit shaken because the Russians had beat us, and the Cold War was then in full swing. We really did expect a nuclear war back then. Thanks to American History Blog for the information.

Sally’s Crochet Blog has some ideas about making a small bag or enlarging it to a purse. See her ideas about yarn and get the free pattern. It’s really quite cute I thought, and I think an enlarged one would be perfect as a delicate summer bag. Not the kind you haul everything under the sun in, but for an evening out.

If you would like a look inside the world of John Hagee and fundamentalism, read this excerpt from Matt Taibbi’s new book, “The Great Derangement.” He went to Church “school” in Texas and I promise you, what he discovered is well worth the read. I of course believe that we all need to be aware of what is going on in these bizarre sects. And i can assure you that what you see in public is but the tip of the iceberg as they say.

I don’t know if you caught this, but we are sending more troops into Afghanistan again, mostly due to “shortfalls” from NATO. That is code for, our allies are not supporting the effort like they should and so we have to shore up the forces. Of course, all of this is necessary because we have more or less ignored that war as we got bogged down in the never-ending quagmire that is Iraq. Where these troops are coming from is anyone’s guess, perhaps from the minor draw downs expected in Iraq, which of course is already beginning to heat up again. Sigh….this is like finding the pea in the shell game isn’t it? Read all the sad facts at Blue Girl, Red State.

Britannica Blog has a great look at religious freedom in America. Looking back to our earliest colonial times this post explores what it was like to be a religious minority in America. I’ve learned a lot about this recently, and I must say, it’s a far cry from the pablum that I learned in public school education. It makes it crystal clear just why our founders determined to set up a clear distinction between our political and religious life.

Okay it is Cinco de Mayo after all, so perhaps a Latin inspired dish should be on your radar today, or sometime soon. I thought this recipe was a real winner and perfect for the summer to boot. TryCinco de Mango: Chicken Mango Burritos from Coconut & Lime.

CopyCat Restaurant Recipes has a couple of winners today. One is a delightful pasta recipe, the other a pie which is Derby inspired. Try Chicken Tequila Fettuccine, and while you are at it, try Derby Pie. Both look excellent to me.

Free Sample Forager has a slew of new offers, from magazines to new mom stuff, to fabric softener, to feminine hygiene. Enjoy.

Given that I just spoke of a relationship between Adlai Stevenson and Barack Obama this weekend in my Sunday Editorial, I thought this post at History News Networkmost apropos. We are, as I have argued, a nation that has a strange and antagonistic relationship with the intellectual. Does this pose a problem for Senator Obama? Read the post and see what you think.

If you want to get started on a quilt and haven’t yet, it is best I find to take a trip to Inspired by antique quilts. This lady is both talented and prolific in her production of absolutely stunning quilts. I think I’ve shown this before, but it was at the beginning. Look how far she’s progressed. This is truly inspirational, at least to me.

Live Science has an essay on the great dust bowl of the 30’s. There are not a lot of us alive who remember it still. I was born a good well after it, and I lived in Michigan, so it was not a topic around our table. I’m sure some here in Iowa have family who lived through it. New science has helped to uncover exactly why it was so bad.

Oh Dave Barry has another of his so-funny little posts that just tickle the bejesus out of me. Read it now or you will be sorry! “Bad Driving: It’s just not for Old People.”

The Republicans are at it again. Tax credits on new energy technology are about to expire, and Democrats have had no luck in getting them through, since Big Oil is screaming and Bush is threatening to veto if Big Oil doesn’t get its way. Politics Plus picks up the NYTimes editorial and adds his two cents which are always worth a read. And where was McCain, Mr. Environment? Oh he missed the vote.

Now this may seem silly to you, but it raises some interesting questions I think. None of us can go back in time, at least at this point, but we assume that antiques made of marble and such were the natural colors that we find them in today. Yet there is evidence, which some now use in historical docudramas, that many of our ancient  monuments were painted and quite gaudily painted at that. Yet Hollywood always portrays them in their greenish, whitish hues. Are we getting an accurate picture? Read Rogueclassicism‘s post and see what you think about the new idea of painting up the antiques.

Those of us in the country always suspected it: dozens of beady little eyes following us the minute we stepped from the porch. Gazes that noted every step, every pulling of every weed. Yep, those birds are not always doing “bird” things it seems. They are watching us.

It seems that whenever I think of John McCain these days, I cannot get that picture out of my head. You know the one I mean, the one  featured in the latest Moveon.orgad, the huggy bear photo which can only be described as McCain’s hug of utter adoration of Dubya. I predict that photo will haunt Mav all through the coming months, and he will never divorce himself from that sweaty embrace. But in case you are even a tiny bit unsure of where the Truthless one is coming from, read American Prospect’s article entitled: Does John McCain stand for anything?”

The Artful Crafter has a roundup of crafting sites withdifferent crafts, many with how-to’s. I saw a couple that looked a bit interesting. How to recycle a ketchup bottle for one. Hmmm, perhaps into a bird feeder? I think it has to do with cats though. Take a look around and see if you find anything you might like to make.

If you want to know what my “recipe box” looks like, take a gander at Baking Beauties post today. That is about what mine is like, and I don’t like it one little bit. She has some wonderful ideas for making a nice box one that you can use easily and looks great as well. She’s really collected a lot of links for you as well, so there are tons of ideas. Surely one will grab you and you can create something great, or–use as a gift to a new daughter-in-law perhaps.

I believe that last week I mentioned the NYTimes report that generals were sent off to the networks as “experts” to basically tout the Pentagon’s line. I know that I have seen like zilch on the networks about this, well at least none on ABC,and the Contrarian checksCNN, MSNBC, and Fox fairly frequently. Only PBS has bothered to talk about it. Urantian Sojournhas the story for you, and links so that you can learn more. Seems we have to dig out some of our own news these days. Somebody’s ox is gored you see.

I think I might have mentioned that I don’t care much for baseball. Too slow for me. I’m a football, hockey person. But I thought Russell might appreciate this link so if you would like to learn about Lou Gehrig who ended his “streak” of something on May 2, 1939, just follow the bouncing ball as they say. My thanks to the US History Blog!

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“In politics, absurdity is not a handicap.” Napoleon Bonaparte

“People are, if anything, more touchy about being thought silly than they are about being thought unjust.” E.B.White

“When I was younger, I could remember anything, whether it had happened or not.” Mark Twain

“What if nothing exists and we’re all in somebody’s dream? Or what’s worse, what if only that fat guy in the third row exists?” Woody Allen

“If it weren’t for Philo T. Farnsworth, inventor of television, we’d still be eating frozen radio dinners.”  Johnny Carson

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Oxymorons:

Same Difference

Taped Live

Peace Force

Pretty Ugly

Butt Head

Microsoft works

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According to the latest CNN poll, President Bush’s disapproval rating — 71 percent That’s unbelievable, isn’t it, that 29 percent still approve? Jay Leno

So it’s the 30thbirthday of email spam. Guests at the birthday party will include an Irish sweepstakes winner, a hugely endowed man and a Nigerian prince. Paul Seaburn

Yesterday was the five-year anniversary of President Bush’s speech in front of the “Mission Accomplished” banner. Yeah, to celebrate, today, President Bush gave a speech in front of a banner that said “Economic Recession Over.” NBC latenight

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