Category: Political

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

The urge to surge

To President Bush’s Administration and the plan to send upwards of 20,000 more young men and women to Iraq:

  • It won’t work – it’s too late.
  • It’s a useless waste of more young lives.
  • It’s a waste of our national resources and treasure.
  • It does not protect our country.
  • The Democrats will talk it up, but owing to politics will let the Republicans hang for the error. They will do nothing to stop it. They’re co-dependent.
  • Pray.
  • Speak-up, even though your witness may seem like words into the wind, speak-up.

Let us pray:

Almighty God, by whose grace we look for the day when nation shall not any more lift up sword against nation, and when men shall live without fear in security and peace, grant to us in this time of strife the will to labor for peace even while our sword is drawn to resist the foe. Let not the evil we oppose turn us from our purpose, to achieve unity and concord among the nations of the earth, to Thy honor and glory. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

What’s that smell

As you’ve probably read, parts of New York City and New Jersey were covered by a mysterious odor yesterday. The Gulf News picking up on Reuters reported: Mysterious gas odour causes minor ailments for 19 people

New York: A powerful, mysterious smell of gas wafted through much of Manhattan and parts of New Jersey on Monday.

It forced building evacuations and a temporary suspension of commuter train service before dissipating by mid-afternoon.

Officials were quick to stress that the odour was not dangerous, but at least 19 people went to the hospital with minor ailments and its wide extent provoked jitters in a city that constantly reminded of the September 11 attacks…

Besides the humor in today’s news – people saying the the odor emanated from New Jersey, I’m thinking three possibilities:

  • An accidental release from an industrial site or landfill
  • An intentional release of gas to ascertain the how a gas or other airborne attack would spread. People’s panicked response gave the perpetrators all the data they needed. They can use the 911 database and GIS to map it all out. It could be the government performing such a test, but you never know.
  • An intentional release of gas in preparation for a “Maine” type attack as a pretext for a wider war.

I’m hoping its the first choice, thinking its the second, and praying it’s not the third.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, Political

More on the Wielgus affair

The fallout continues:

Wielgus misled Pope by failure to disclose communist-era links: reports

Ex-Warsaw Archbishop Stanislaw Wielgus in effect misled the pope by his failure to disclose the true nature of his links with the former Polish communist regime, Italian media reports say, as news breaks of the resignation of another high level church official in the late Pope John Paul II’s home diocese of Cracow.

And this is why the whole affair is so unseemly. If a man slated to be Archbishop places himself and his interests so far in front of the R.C. Church and the Pope then he really doesn’t deserve to be in a position of responsibility. This sort of thinking indicates:

  • A lack of faith – confession and forgiveness are nice for the pew sitters, but mean nothing to him
  • A lack of discipline – you can cry Pope, Pope, Pope all you want, but if you yourself don’t believe in the guy, why bother.
  • A failure to abide – rules are great for everyone else. Like celibacy (especially in Poland) is a nice concept, but I’d rather have a woman, lover, and family without being tied down by marriage. Gee bishop, she’s becoming a real pain, can you transfer me to the other side of the diocese.

Cardinal Glemp touched on a piece of the truth in his homily, the part about forgiveness and not believing every last assertion made by the secret police, but ended up flubbing that one as well.

The Cardinal had a great teaching moment thrust in front of him. He could have talked about getting the truth out, how such lies hurt all, how honesty, repentance, and forgiveness is necessary and essential for a Catholic nation. How lustration, at least in the form being practiced by right-wing zealots, will destroy the country, how Poles should come together in truth, repentance, and forgiveness. All solid Catholic teaching. Instead he focused on one man as a good guy who should be given a break. It was R.C. duck and cover (and the Polish and International press are drawing parallels to the same duck and cover that was part of the sex abuse scandals in the U.S. and elsewhere)

A new chapter begins for Voice of the Faithful – VotF – Polska.

Next up: The Rector of Wawel Cathedral has resigned for the very same reason. See: Another Polish Priest Resigns Over Secret Service Charges

The prelate of Wawel Cathedral in Krakow, Janusz Bielanski, offered his resignation to Cardinal Stansilaw Dziwisz and it was accepted immediately, TVN 24 reported…

The body count has just begun. The R.C. Church in Poland needs to do what is right by Catholic/Christian standards, not what is right politically. The Church needs to exert leadership. Otherwise the damage will be deep and more permanent, a society split – something the Nazi Germans and Russian Communists couldn’t achieve.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

We’re coming to America…

Remembering the song from the Jazz Singer. We’re coming to America… Today!

Kind of makes you think of those immigrants coming to the golden shores of America… the land of ideals.

I have a feeling that regaining that status among the world’s poor and disaffected will take a very very long time.

FBI documents reveal details of abuse at Guantanamo

WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (Xinhua) — A number of newly released FBI files give detailed accounts of abuses at the U.S. detention facilities for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, CNN reported Wednesday.

The documents showed that at least 26 FBI employees witnessed aggressive mistreatment of prisoners and harsh interrogation techniques by other government agencies or outside contractors at the prison, according to the report.

“On several occasions witnesses saw detainees in interrogation rooms chained hand and foot in fetal position to floor with no chair/food/water; most urinated or defecated on selves and were left there 18, 24 hours or more,” according to one FBI account.

Today!

One FBI witness saw a detainee “shaking with cold,” while another said a detainee in a sweltering unventilated room was “almost unconscious on a floor with a pile of hair next to him (he had apparently been pulling it out through the night).”

Today!

Another witness saw a detainee “with a full beard whose head was wrapped in duct tape.”

Today!

One file said that an interrogator squatted over the Quran and that a German shepherd dog was ordered to “growl, bark and show his teeth to the prisoner.”

Today!

The documents also said the detainees told FBI agents that they had been beaten and one detainee complained that a female guard had rubbed up against him, fondled him and wiped menstrual blood on his head.

Today!

Agents reported seeing detainees with facial injuries, such as black eyes and cuts, and broken fingers.

Today!

The temperature of detention rooms was also kept either extremely hot or cold and loud music was played to deprive detainees of sleep.

Today!

A few agents said they had seen prisoners wrapped with Israeli flags.

Today!

The FBI said none of its agents were involved in the mistreatment, which it said was carried out by civilian security contractors or military personnel.

You have to ask yourself – does this represent me?

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

Ummm – would the outcome have been different?

From Bloomberg: Manner of Hussein’s Execution Draws U.S., UN Concern

Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. would have carried out the execution of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein “differently” and didn’t play a role in the proceedings, a military spokesman said as two United Nations officials criticized his hanging.

Major General William Caldwell said at a news conference televised from Baghdad that the way Hussein was put to death was “a government of Iraq decision.”

A U.S. military team only transported Hussein to the site of his execution, and the Iraqi government maintained custody of the former leader throughout, Caldwell said. After delivering Hussein to the Iraqi Ministry of Justice’s As-Buratha prison, U.S. personnel “withdrew from the building, back from the whole location,” he added.

The grainy video of Hussein being taunted by chants from those present while about to be executed and the former leader falling to his death on the gallows in mid-prayer has sparked days of demonstrations by fellow Sunni Muslims in Iraq and further inflamed sectarian tensions.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters in Washington today the U.S. raised “questions” with the Iraqi government “related to procedure and timing” of the execution…

I’m getting the feeling that we think we would have handled it so much more professionally, such that the execution wouldn’t have ended up bitter in President Bush’s mouth (as I said it would). I wonder how the general would have done it – firing squad, lethal injection, electric chair… Anything, as long as it wasn’t filmed and we could spin it the way we wanted.

All I could think of was that this general must be truly stupid – hey look everyone, we can kill much more cleanly, especially when we’re dealing with a prisoner.

No, you handed him over to an end that had already been determined. The general is simply playing Pilate – washing his hands of this man and his guilt and doing so on behalf of his Commander in Chief.

Fr. Jim Tucker points to the story of a soldier who actually used his brain and soul in What If They Threw a War and No One Showed Up?. First Lt. Ehren Watada took the time to discern what going along meant, before he went along. He’ll be severely punished for sure, but that’s the price he’s willing to pay for Christian witness.

On the other hand our ‘Christian-in-Chief,’ President Bush (at least according to him) can’t even muster the courage to criticize the brutality of it all:

The Bush administration sent conflicting signals Wednesday about the taunting and baiting that accompanied the execution, with the White House declining to join criticism of the procedure…

I’m sure they are very proud, especially of the outcome – which regardless of the methodology employed is equally deadly. And, yes Mr. Bush, we all agree that Saddam was an evil man and should have been punished for crimes against humanity, including the ones your and your predecessors helped him commit. But that story will die with the additional executions that will take place in the next 24 hours.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

Saddam is dead…

…but is President Bush satisfied? He has avenged his father with his Texas brand of justice, but any joy his blood lust brings him this evening will turn bitter in his mouth.

But judge thy neighbor according to justice. Thou shalt not be a detractor nor a whisperer among the people. Thou shalt not stand against the blood of thy neighbor. I am the Lord. Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart: but reprove him openly, lest thou incur sin through him. Seek not revenge, nor be mindful of the injury of thy citizens. Thou shalt love thy friend as thyself. I am the Lord.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

Saddam – death

I’ve had this rather unwell, sick feeling all day – not because of any illness per-se, but because we, as a country and occupier are going to kill a horrible dictator – and I don’t like it.

Maybe ten years ago I would have said C’est la vie – and good for him. I can’t do that anymore. I cannot witness Christ and stand by and say OK, C’est la vie – and good for him. I can pray and I can say we are wrong. The merchants of death are wrong, and this is not what it means to be a Christian.

Mr. Hussein was not good by any stretch of the imagination. He was murderous, power hungry, and brutal. He was also our tool and vassal for a time. In the end it turns out that he was sick and deluded. But hey, the U.S. specializes in killing the mentally ill and incompetent.

Of course we could teach the civilized manner of dealing with a criminal. We could turn him over to the Hague. Let them kill him in bureaucratic meandering. Let those who seek justice have their chance to speak – and let him speak. But perhaps too much would be laid out in the open.

Must we pile up more bodies, invite more hate, vengeance, and glory in death? Must we pile one more body on the overwhelming stack we have created? Certainly Mr. Bush will rejoice – but you know, the law of unintended consequences hasn’t been all that good to him thus far, maybe he should back-off.

Our country will bury a president. The majority of Iraqis will rejoice in the death of theirs – welcome to demonocracy.

An excerpt from the NY Times: Iraq Prepares to Execute Hussein

BAGHDAD, Dec. 29 —” The close of the final chapter on the brutal reign of Saddam Hussein drew ever closer today, as Iraqi officials prepared the last legal notice necessary before his execution, a red card that will be presented to the former dictator to inform him that his end is near, Iraqi officials said.

—We will do it very soon,— Muneer Haddad, a judge on the Iraqi High Tribunal who will represent that body at the execution, said today. He said the execution would likely be —tonight or tomorrow.—

The pace of events left some of the American legal advisors working on the case stunned, according to one Western official. For all the guidance the Americans provided, in the end the dictator’s demise did not go the way they expected, the officials said.

—It just goes to show that the Iraqis call the shots on something like this,— the official said.

Ah, plausible denial – we didn’t want to kill him this way – those crazy Iraqis did it.

It is still possible that the execution could be delayed, Western and Iraqi officials cautioned. One senior Iraqi official said there may yet be other legal hurdles.

However, Mr. Haddad said that all that remained was the technical legal matter of court officials filling out a —red card,— a formal notice of impending death created during the Saddam era and widely used by his much feared secret police.

—We have almost finished his red card,— Mr. Haddad said.

It was unclear whether the red card has been presented to Mr. Hussein or whether he knows that his death may be imminent.

Iraqi and American officials have kept outsiders, including his legal team, from contacting him, according to Najib al-Nauimi, one of Mr. Hussein’s lawyers who is in Qatar…

Ah, and then a glimpse of the future American legal system – we don’t need to stinkin’ lawyers…

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective, Political

Be careful – what you agree to

Jacob G. Hornberger asks the all important question: Whether or not you would follow a President’s order, based on a contract you signed, to go and kill for no good (or just, or moral, or ethical) reason in Would You ‘Support the Troops’ in Bolivia?

It is a question faithful Christians should always ask. It is a question good and faithful Christians should be prepared to suffer and die for even asking —“ for that may very well happen.

The Young Fogey points to Mr. Hornberger’s article in: The president as a substitute conscience wherein he validly points out that we apply quite a different standard to the war criminals and dictators we don’t like, a standard that doesn’t apply to US.

On the face of it, no other man can assume responsibility for our conscience. It is the one and only thing we have certain and sole responsibility for. We cannot contract our conscience or soul away – regardless of the petty justifications we so readily acquiesce to.

A story on NPR today, Army to Court-Martial Soldier Featured in PTSD Story points to a factor Mr. Hornberger missed when he discussed our troops ‘contract’ with the government.

You see, Sgt. Tyler Jennings signed such a contract and went to serve on the President’s orders. He came back, along with his comrades, unable to cope and quite mentally ill. He sought help, got none. He turned to drugs to cope, and sin of sins he spoke out. Now the army is going to Court Martial this Sergeant.

You see, the contract employer —“ the Army —“ can award you a Purple Heart for your physical injuries, and leave your mental, emotional injuries untreated. The contract doesn’t cover the Army’s or the government’s responsibility toward you. If you no longer meet the requirement for contracted materials they will throw you out as just so much surplus.

Beyond that, they will readily ask you to kill the non-existent enemy and to do so without valid reason, your eternal soul not being a factor therein. As Mr. Hornberger points out:

Indeed, where is the morality in signing a contract that obligates a person to go kill people who haven’t attacked his country?

—But we signed the employment contract thinking that we were defending America,— soldiers say. —We’re just trying to be patriots.—

But everyone knows that presidents don’t use their standing army to defend America. They use it to attack countries that haven’t attacked the United States. After all, how many times has America been invaded by a foreign army in the last 50 years? (Answer: None!) What country in the world today has the military capability of invading the United States? (Answer: None!)

Can you sign a contract that you know, on its face, is a lie, and then follow through and perform on that contract? A question every parent should teach their children to ask. A question everyone who signed has the obligation to ask. Will you be punished for asking – certainly, but I’d rather take that punishment to the kind of punishment Sgt. Jennings will never escape, or the long lasting punishment of eternity – all for no good, moral, just, or ethical reason.

Pray for Sgt. Jennings, the men and women like him – so badly damaged, and for all servicemen and women, and most especially for our country. May we do justice and walk in the way of the Lord.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Political

On Gerald Ford

Portrait of President Ford by Ronald Scherr

Gerald Ford, 38th President of the United States passed onto eternal life this evening.

I remember discussing the pardon of Richard Nixon in grade school. I was in the 7th grade then. The Felician sister who taught us stated in effect: an act of forgiveness and healing should never be criticized and should be encouraged.

I was a news junkie as far back as I can remember. I absorbed events and their implications. The pardon seemed incongruous at first, but after I heard sister’s words I thought ‘how wise, how appropriate.’ That act exemplified simple Christian virtue to me. The reaction to the event exemplified the worldly ‘need’ for vengeance.

The NY Times has an excellent retrospective in Gerald R. Ford, 38th U.S. President, Dies.

Mr. Ford was an Episcopalian. I wonder whether the Presiding Bishop will interject herself. Was Mr. Ford High Church?

Eternal rest grant onto him O Lord.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

Draft and martial law?

Coming to a community near you. From CNN: Bush: ‘We do need to increase our troops’

WASHINGTON (CNN) — President Bush asked his new secretary of defense to draw up plans to increase the overall size of the Army and the Marines, according to an interview with the president published Tuesday in the Washington Post.

“I’m inclined to believe that we do need to increase our troops — the Army, the Marines,” Bush said. “And I talked about this to Secretary Gates and he is going to spend some time talking to the folks in the building, come back with a recommendation to me about how to proceed forward on this idea.”

Hmm, thought I felt a draft there for a moment. I can see the signing ceremony now, the president surrounded by his junta and idiot congressman Charlie Rangel selling the young men of his constituency down the Tigris and Euphrates. His excuse – it’s ok as long as the rich die too.

Here’s an idea, pull the troops out of Iraq, Afghanistan, Kosovo, and South Korea. We’ll be overstaffed then. You’ll have to cut back.

Senior administration officials said the timing of the president’s comments is connected with Washington’s oncoming budget season, and that the president intends for such plans to be part of the fiscal 2008 budget.

But the comments also come amid increasing warnings from officials and experts that the U.S. military is stretched too thin to cope with the stresses of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The draft will be his greatest gift to the American people —“ that along with…

“It is an accurate reflection that this ideological war we’re in is going to last for a while, and that we’re going to need a military that’s capable of being able to sustain our efforts and to help us achieve peace,” Bush told the Post…

Ah yes, the ideological war, the one where the increased troop levels will helpfully assert and sustain the priorities of the Administration during the canceled elections.

Sustaining our efforts? And whose would those be? I’m thinking that the vast majority of Americans now disagree with your ideological war Mr. Bush, you know, the war where you’re silencing critics like Flynt Leverett (also here and here).

As for peace:

Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, do I give unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, nor let it be afraid.