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Hunger and Anger in Afghanistan
The Obama administration has announced the imminent release of a December Review which will evaluate the U.S. troop presence in Afghanistan. The military has yet to disclose what the specific categories for evaluation will be. Yet many people in Afghanistan might wish that hunger along with their anger over attacks against civilians could top the list.
In Afghanistan, a nation where 850 children die every day, about a quarter of the population goes hungry. The UN says that 7.4 million Afghans live with hunger and fear of starvation, while millions more rely on food help, and one in five children die before the age of five.
"Do you think we like to live this way?" an Afghan man asked me, last October, as he led us toward a primitive tent encampment on the outskirts of Kabul. "Do you see how we live? The cold and the rain are coming. How will we protect our children?" He flicked his forefinger on a weather-beaten blanket covering a tent. The blanket immediately ripped.
Standing next to him was a man who quietly handed me three crumpled photos, never lifting his eyes from the ground. The spokesperson identified the man as his cousin. The first picture showed his cousin's ruined home. A U.S. aerial bombardment had destroyed the dwelling. The next pictures were of two bloodied children. "All of his children were killed," the spokesperson said. "All his family, his wife, his five children, by an attack from the air." He went on to explain that they had been goat herders in the San Gin province of Afghanistan. They were happy with their lives, selling yoghurt and fattening their animals. A Taliban fighter had come to their village at night. The U.S. apparently wanted to kill this fighter, but instead they destroyed his cousin's family. "We couldn't stay there," the spokesperson said, pointing to a picture of the debris that was once his cousin's home. "We were afraid we might be hit again, so all of us left. We are four families."
Inside one of the tents, a young mother welcomed me to sit down on the only available cushion. It appeared that they slept on the ground. The families share one pot over a fire pit, and a few utensils. They also have access to a water pump. Near their area is a tent where they join for prayers, and also one that is used for classes. One man begged us to tell the authorities that they have no medicines in the camp and that many of the children are ill.
Days earlier, in far more comfortable setting, students at the Bamiyan University, located in the central, mountainous province of Bamiyan, had prodded us to comprehend their anger. In a straw poll, several dozen were unanimous in stating that they want the U.S. to leave their country. Several insisted that most U.S. people don't understand or care about the impact of U.S. warfare in Afghanistan. An engineering student held up a copy of the Time Magazine cover which showed a young Afghan woman whose nose was horribly mutilated, allegedly as punishment for defying men in her family. Time Magazine's accompanying headline announced that the story would explain why U.S. troops must remain in Afghanistan. "Do Americans care more about noses than fingers?" the student asked. "Who will cover the stories about fingers that are cut off?!" I felt embarrassed not to know what he was talking about. Several weeks later, I read a New York Times article about a trial taking place at an army base in Washington State. The article shed light on the student's question. A U.S. Staff Sergeant from the 5th Stryker Combat Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division was charged with leading a conspiracy to randomly target and kill unarmed Afghan civilians. He and four other soldiers faced murder charges. The staff sergeant is alleged to have planted evidence to cover up the murders and to have carved fingers off corpses which he kept as war souvenirs.
Although the U.S. military forbids soldiers to mutilate corpses and go on killing sprees that target civilians, the U.S. occupying forces in Afghanistan have bragged, in recent weeks, about increased capacities to kill with ever more invulnerable weapons. A company of 16 Abrams tanks was recently delivered to Afghanistan. "We've taken the gloves off," said an unnamed U.S. military official, "and it has had huge impact." (Washington Post, November 19, 2010) The 68 ton tanks fire high explosive, white phosphorus and anti-personnel shells that can destroy a house a mile away. Each tank costs 4.3 million dollars and uses 3 gallons of jet fuel per mile.
The Pentagon is also sending 12,500 XM25 Individual Air Burst Weapons to Afghanistan, one to each infantry squad and Special Forces team in Afghanistan. The XM25 gun can fire a projectile that will travel the length of eight football fields. "When fired, the projectile is designed to explode directly above a target," says the Army Times, "raining shrapnel down on an enemy crouched behind cover."
In a report to the November 2010 NATO conference held in Lisbon, 29 aid groups working in Afghanistan warned that the increases in air attacks, the use of night raids, and the destruction of civilian property contributes to "rapidly deteriorating" security for most Afghans and a rise in civilian casualties. People who flee from U.S. attacks face food insecurity, loss of income, lack of health care, and homelessness. The aid groups' report is entitled "Nowhere to Turn." Increasingly, Afghans living in war zones have nowhere to hide.
Commenting on impoverishment and displacement caused by military offensives, a Pakistani op-ed recently compared hunger and anger to two live wires. When the wires touch, they create an incandescent and uncontrollable flash.
It's hard to imagine the extent of explosive popular rage that would result if the shoe were on the other foot, if U.S. people were subject to aerial bombing, night raids, destruction of civilian homes, displacement and starvation. In reality, the live wires of hunger and anger could exist in our lives too; we could be angry, very angry, about this war, angry enough to make it a political issue. But if our hunger were for an end to the war, if our hunger even signaled a desire to rethink and repent our murderous policies, if we honestly sought forgiveness from Afghan civilians who've borne the brunt of our war of choice, then perhaps an uncontrollable and incandescent flash of fairness and peace could govern our future.
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26 Comments so far
Show AllKathy, Thank you for being.
(It seems pointless to thank you for doing, when it flows out of your being.)
Jesus loves the little children,
All the children of Iraq
Afghanistan and Palestine
They're all precious in his mind
Jesus loves the little children of the world.
I give this little tune to you, Kathy, and anyone else who can propagate it.
Amazing another sympathetic article about the suffering of the Afghan people without explaining the root cause of the violence.
The sooner the average American understands the occupation of Afghanistan is a corporate imperial war over Central Asian energy resources, the more likely it is that public opinion will turn into political currency.
The occupation of Afghanistan is part of a larger plan for a U.S. military presence in Central Asia to support American energy corporations seeking to profit from the exploitation of Central Asian oil and natural gas. And there are also $Trillions in mineral resources in Afghanistan.
Chevron and ExxonMobil and others are already in Central Asia where there are huge proven reserves of oil and natural gas. But they need pipeline routes to bring that oil and gas to Asian markets. These plans have nothing to do with our domestic energy needs. This is all about future globalization plans dreamed up by Big Oil to expand their global markets and profits.
But of course our corrupt corporate sock puppets in Congress expect the American taxpayer to foot the bill for Big Oil's future profits by waging bloody energy wars. The corporate energy wars are costing American taxpayers trillions of dollars and draining an economy that is already in trouble. Iraq is in the vicinity of $4 Trillion and Afghanistan $1Trillion. And it appears these will be endless occupations to protect corporate interests.
One part of the global corporate schemes is the plan to pipeline natural gas from Turkmenistan to Pakistan and India. Anyone who is curious about this only needs to Google, TAPI and Pipelineistan, and enjoy a lot of reading revealing the "war on terror" is actually a corporate imperial energy war for hegemony over global markets.
Interesting news is that Turkmenistan's reserves of natural gas are larger than previously thought. And India with a huge population and growing economy has a huge appetite for natural gas.
And how strange, our energy markets are in decline but India's markets are expanding with a population of over a Billion people comprising 17% of the world's population. That is a lot of energy consumers.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/ieo/nat_gas.ht…
"The largest increases in reported natural gas reserves in 2010 were for Turkmenistan and Australia. In Turkmenistan, natural gas reserves are now estimated at 265 trillion cubic feet, an increase of 171 trillion cubic feet (182 percent) over its 2009 proved reserves, following reappraisals of the giant South Yolotan-Osman gas field [56]. The reserves in the South Yolotan-Osman field are now estimated at between 141 and 494 trillion cubic feet, making it the fifth-largest natural gas field in the world [57]."
This makes the TAPI (trans-Afghan pipeline from Turmenistan to India) pipeline proposal a huge source of potential earnings for Big Oil. This would provide corporations like ExxonMobil and Chevron with endless 21st century profits. This pipeline was first proposed in the 90's when Karzai was a "consultant" for UNOCAL.
They could also market oil through such a pipeline route. Oil consumption in India is also on the rise.
Another alternative pipeline route is to not go through the heart of Pashtun (Taliban) country or Pakistan, but down to the Arabia Sea and then via ships to markets. They could also ship liquid natural gas by ship all over Asia.
A curious irony is that in addition to the Wall Street/Bankster induced recession slowing our economy and energy consumption, American oil consumption is down due in part to an economy drained by deficit spending on corporate imperial energy wars.
War and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan have little to do with our domestic energy needs or "terrorist" threats, but are bankrupting our Federal budget and economy. This is public debt for private profit, which also includes military industrial complex profits for wars without end.
One might say the energy corporations are like a cancer cell requiring perpetual growth. Big Oil is seeking hegemony over various global markets via war and occupation in order to feed their growth. But the cancer is slowly destroying the host.
We've already read and heard all of that stuff. You are going over what folks here already know. The author assumes an informed readership. You might do the same.
Kelly is trying to inspire the flash to action.
How about it?
As a nation we are lost. If we are lucky, a few of us will end up as pillars of salt.
gonzonews: With the exception of your first paragraph, your excellent post was very informative from a critical analysis point of view. Thank you.
I was though put off by your beginning paragraph: "Amazing another sympathetic article about the suffering of the Afghan people without explaining the root cause of the violence."
Shame on you gonzzonews! What you have done was put down the activism of Kathy Kelly. She is one of the very few personal witnesses to the ravages of war perpetrated on innocent civilians by the U.S. military. Her role fills a huge void that the mainstream media deliberately ignores. She is a living saint who lives and breaths the pains of humanity. She has been nominated for two Noble Peace Prizes.
Kathy Kelly's gift is compassion and devoted witness. But I'll tell you gonzonews, seeing and hearing Kathy Kelly speak, she also has the gift of critical analysis that might even impress you. Gonzonews, you were too quick to judge. You are a smart and well informed person, but try to be a bit more humble. Kathy Kelly deserves an apology!
And yet the poor an uneducated fools keep joining up for these wars. Or sociopaths. I have no sympathy when ours or NATO troops are killed. As Kelly said, how would we react to this invasion? We would fight with everything we had. Just like they do.
And when these soldiers are killed they are treated like heroes. Or when they are maimed they are forgotten. They I have a little sympathy for their pain.
The US and Isreal and of course SA are the terrorists.
Won't be long til people rise up and see the might of the military unleashed on them. Stupid people
I'm sorry you can't share it.
Stephan:
Thanks for your thoughts. Kelly appears to be that you say.
But I stand by my first paragraph. There is plenty of room for improvement with her presentation of the issues and more effective ways to reach the American public and begin real political change.
I seem to recall Kelly being on PBS and never once mentioning the pipeline agenda that has been in place for over a decade. She has missed a huge opportunity or perhaps she would not get any coverage at all if she told the whole truth.
Corporate policy driving Washington to wage war is the source of the suffering.
Having lived through the Vietnam era and other horrible acts of Washington and corporate America, I do not think the average American cares about suffering in the developing world, especially during this Great Recession. Emotional and humanitarian approaches are not the way to reach people right now, however meaningful and true.
But, no one likes to have their $pocket$ picked, neither "conservatives" or "liberals". And the number one issue with voters now is the economy, yet hardly anyone speaks of the corporate war machine draining the economy!
HUGE MISTAKE and only prolonging the suffering.
gonzonews: I still say you need to ease up a bit rather than standing on your first paragraph. But again, your analysis was excellent, an essay I have saved in my files.
I guess what bothers me is that too many posters on CD are too quick to criticize those writers on CommonDreams who are doing their own part to heal this broken world. We are not all perfect. It is not a perfect world.
Gonzonews: Another thought, with your own particular knowledge, maybe you could partner in some way with Kathy Kelly. I feel sure Kathy Kelly will value your commnets.
>>
Standing next to him was a man who quietly handed me three crumpled photos, never lifting his eyes from the ground. The spokesperson identified the man as his cousin. The first picture showed his cousin's ruined home. A U.S. aerial bombardment had destroyed the dwelling. The next pictures were of two bloodied children. "All of his children were killed," the spokesperson said. "All his family, his wife, his five children, by an attack from the air." He went on to explain that they had been goat herders in the San Gin province of Afghanistan. They were happy with their lives, selling yoghurt and fattening their animals. A Taliban fighter had come to their village at night. The U.S. apparently wanted to kill this fighter, but instead they destroyed his cousin's family. "We couldn't stay there," the spokesperson said, pointing to a picture of the debris that was once his cousin's home. "We were afraid we might be hit again, so all of us left. We are four families."
<<
God damn the United States of America
Bull Shit.
dkshaw, It seems more and more that the United States is in the process of damnation, and it's just a matter of time now.
Grief is what I feel for the loss of what once was a shining promise that actually ended in the 1960's when our best hopes and dreams were trashed and killed -- those days when the music died.
/ckl
Stephan:
I hear you. And to a degree I was rocking the boat to create a wider view of the situation. But I remain convinced that every writer covering Afghanistan must at least mention on the resource issues and American corporate imperialism or they are not doing their job.
I am more interested in results than taking the moral high ground. And very few "progressive" writers approaching the Afghan dilemma ever mention the root cause of the illegal invasion and occupation. Most Americans are still clueless on the pipeline and resources issues driving the war machine.
The unfortunate truth is that the "peace movement" that has developed since 2001 has been based almost entirely on idealistic principles and has been a failure, although I agree with such ideals and was once very devoted to the life and teachings of Gandhi and lived with the Tibetans in India for awhile.
In reality, not many Americans hold such beliefs as a basis for global change and justice. Many of us back in the 60's thought the best of that era would grow and become mainstream. But, it never happened, and in many ways I think the nation has gone backwards. There was much more genuine concern and outrage about Vietnam than there has been about Iraq and Afghanistan.
If fact, I was once a Vietnam era peace activist subjected to the brutality of "law enforcement", or rather the "pigs", complete with their four foot unbreakable batons and tear gas.
But, having once been a successful environmental activist, I found that a much wider group of people could be reached by explaining to the uninformed that many types of environmental degradation end up creating a economic burden for society in the long run. Everyone except the polluters could rally around that truth. Preach animism and green Buddhism and very few people will get on board. You would be dismissed as a "tree-hugger" and accomplish nothing.
And I have a great deal of respect the Afghan people after visiting prior to the Russian invasion. They deserve all the help they can get, but there are no easy answers at this point. It may be that their warrior culture will eventually turn the tide and Afghanistan will be one of the graveyards of the American empire. We left Vietnam because were were defeated and our government bankrupt.
Thanks for the thought of me working with someone like Kathy Kelly, but I am living a private and retired life these days.
With respect to the Time Magazine cover, the girl was mutilated WHILE American troops were in Afghanistan. Their presence did nothing to protect her from the Taliban.
Thank you to Kathy Kelly for letting us see what is at stake when we promote a war just in case Al Qaida which used to be there might want to attack us. Gonzonews mentioned that the outrage over the Vietnam War has not been matched by outrage over this war. I believe that part of this is due to skewed media coverage.
But where is the outrage here over the people that did it to her? Where are those that protest feminine abuse, child labor, gay bashing, religious murder andf intolerance? These are not all nice peaceful folks over there.
(You are correct, we cannot protect this girl from the Taliban or others from midevil fundamenta religious fanatics))
All I see here is hatred for kids that are doing their duty while the men that sent them there get a pass. Just like before. Cowards condemn them but can't be bothered to really do something about it (not talking about you).
And you are correct, the media of today are for the most part beneath contempt. They spend more time discussing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" than getting our tropops home or the death and destruction there. They are all upset that the bad folks are not interested in granting Amnesty to illegals, but not two paragraphsd about the abandonment of our maimed people and theirs.
Frankly, looking at the posts here and whhat the media concerns itself with as "important" I begin to feel threre are no adults left in the world.
I am simply not going to allow your comment to go unchallenged. You become quite indignant because, according to you, "All I see here is hatred for kids that are doing their duty..." while never stating what that duty is. Their duty should not consist of willfully going along with the program. Rather, it should mean challenging and questioning the orders that they are given especially given the fact that the UCMJ actually gives them the right to do so when they feel that the orders that they are given happen to be illegal [such as 809.ART.90 [20], 891.ART.91 [2], 892.ART.92 [1], 892.ART.92 (2)]. Like so many Americans your vocabulary seems to be totally devoid of the word empathy. Or at least empathy for those people who do not happen to be American.
Here is a question which I wish to pose to you. Let us see if you will actually answer it. If there were foreign soldiers occupying this country, would you then support those troops? I know that I sure as hell would not. But it appears that because it is the Americans who are the occupiers then that makes it perfectly acceptable to support them despite the fact, as a soldier pointed out in the searing documentary Sir! No Sir!, that they belong to an organization that is illegally and immorally occupying another country which in that case was Vietnam.
I would not be surprised to see another one of your one word responses but my sympathies lie totally with the Afghan and the Pakistani and the Iraqi people and not with the soldiers who are most wrongfully occupying their countries which, as Ms. Kelly points out, means brutalizing and harassing and intimidating and raping and murdering its citizens.
What this military and this country needs are more people like Green Beret Staff Sergeant Donald Duncan who wisely noted in Sir! No Sir! that:
"I was doing it right but I wasn't doing right."
The time has come for Americans to stand up and call our government and our troops what they are -- mass murderers of innocent people, in particular children. In other words, Baby Killers. (Although Ms. Kelly's figure of 865 children dying per day is incorrect -- I believe the more accurate figure is 3 per day and around 1000 a year. That still makes around 10,000 since we started).
Another point -- never call "war" "war". It is a word without any meaning. Instead, say things like "the mass murder of innocent children." Example -- do you support the mass murder of innocent children? No, of course not. Do you support the war in Afghanistan? Of course, I support the troops and the American Way against the evil brown terrorists (that is our disconnect). No one supports killing innocent children, but that is the essence of war.
Bull shit.
A most excellent article by Ms. Kelly. And yet one will come across so many Americans, both in real life and on the Internet, who will deny most vociferously that Americans could ever possibly be killing civilians in under developed countries. They will always proclaim that America's intentions as well as their deeds are always pure and just.
Perhaps the only justifiable [albeit an emotional] response to those flag waving claims is to recall the response of Mr. mightmmite from above which may so succinctly describe in his pithy word their belief in American Exceptionalism.
Here is a lady showing what an illegal occupation does to the people of Afghanistan, Bernie Saunders is trying to show what the occupying government is doing at home and J. Assange is in jail for shining some light into the dark rooms and corners of these same occupyers. There is not enough words to use on this US of
A hubris. Tony
On Sept.3, 2001 an editorial was published asking" Where The Need Is, Which Nation Provides The Most Aid To Rogue State Afghanistan?" If you guessed the U.S. you would be right. As many as one-quarter of Afghanistan's children die before the age of 5. The editorial listed many horrors about the Taliban rule and many humanitarian reasons to give them aid.
When I wrote a letter to the editor explaining that American interest was more about a pipe line for oil than helping the poor, it was not published.
gonzonews:"Kelly missed a huge opportunity or perhaps she would not get coverage if she told the whole truth." I am sure she would not get coverage. Kathy is brilliant and courageous. She would point out the truth about the pipe line if possible.
typo...we were defeated
Been thinking about this thread all day and managed to open up dark but enlightening memories of the Nam era. I lost friends to both combat deaths and PTSD.
And for anyone with the least bit of compassion, the suffering of the Vietnamese was incomprehensible.
The only genuine leader at that time with a national voice who told the truth about the illegal invasion of Vietnam was Dr. King.
And for that he was criticized from all sectors of our society, including his fellow so-called Christians. His anti-war position may have been a factor in his assassination.
Excerpts from the Riverside Church speech:
"A true revolution of values will soon cause us to question the fairness and justice of many of our past and present policies. n the one hand we are called to play the good Samaritan on life's roadside; but that will be only an initial act. One day we must come to see that the whole Jericho road must be transformed so that men and women will not be constantly beaten and robbed as they make their journey on life's highway. True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not haphazard and superficial. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring. A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: "This is not just." It will look at our alliance with the landed gentry of Latin America and say: "This is not just." The Western arrogance of feeling that it has everything to teach others and nothing to learn from them is not just. A true revolution of values will lay hands on the world order and say of war: "This way of settling differences is not just." This business of burning human beings with napalm, of filling our nation's homes with orphans and widows, of injecting poisonous drugs of hate into veins of people normally humane, of sending men home from dark and bloody battlefields physically handicapped and psychologically deranged, cannot be reconciled with wisdom, justice and love. A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death."
"And as I ponder the madness of Vietnam and search within myself for ways to understand and respond to compassion my mind goes constantly to the people of that peninsula. I speak now not of the soldiers of each side, not of the junta in Saigon, but simply of the people who have been living under the curse of war for almost three continuous decades now. I think of them too because it is clear to me that there will be no meaningful solution there until some attempt is made to know them and hear their broken cries."
"The greatest purveyor of violence in the world today -- my own government.”
But, we no longer have such a voice.
The war crimes continue.
Thanks, gonzonews, for posting the Riverside Church excerpts from Dr. King's speech!
In April, 2003, shortly after "shock and awe' rained down on Iraq, I attended a rally at Riverside that began with Dr. King's 1967 Vietnam speech -- a recording. The Church was packed, and Pete Seeger led us in song, and countless people spoke. Nora York performed her version of Dylan's "Masters of War," and needless to say, the event had a powerful impact upon those of us who were lucky enough to attend.
At the time, I was still hoping beyond hope that someone would rise out of all of the actions we took -- the countless rallies and protests I attended, the writing I did, the letters I wrote to my congress people, the panel discussions and lectures I attended, etc. -- to speak out with a voice similar to King, but no one appeared, and we were dismissed as irrelevant, by the Republicans, which wasn't surprising, but also by Democrats, who voted to support the illegal invasions and illegal wars. People like Bob Graham, who voted against the invasion the invasion of Iraq, and made it very clear that he saw the evidence, and there was NONE, were all marginalized. Who can forget the eloquent speeches by Senator Robert Byrd? Of course, the media marginalized all anti-war and peace voices. Phil Donahue was fired from MSNBC -- a voice out of the wilderness -- who brought us the other side, and had the highest ratings on the network. Sometimes, dollars and ratings don't count. The dollars that support MIC and the various defense industries, and the energy/resource industries are even bigger than the media dollars, and therefore, they rule the U.S.A. of Empire.
The words of Dr. King in 1967, are still true today. However, today, those of us who care about human life -- not only here in the United States, but around the world -- are even further marginalized, and deemed voiceless. The deregulation of the media has proven deadly beyond a shadow of a doubt.
As for Kathy Kelly, I admire her strength and determination. I'm sure she knows that resources, etc., are at the bottom of the invasion and the wars. She receives no M$M coverage. I still remember seeing the photograph of her in a field that was surrounded by barbed wire, a field that was owned by MIC, and soldiers were pointing guns at her head. She, Kathy, was holding a flower. I think the photo might have been taken in Missouri, but unfortunately, I can't find the information to confirm that. At least twice, for her peaceful actions, she has served time in prison. Her bravery moves far beyond anything I have done. And, my heart goes out to the people of Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, and everywhere the MIC inhabits with their so-called "exceptional" right to occupy and kill anyone who gets in the way of the Empire.
Someone on CD, and I wish I could recall who that person was, named the Empire -- U.S.E. -- the United Sates of Empire.
Are Afghans human?
On Oct. 29, 2007 I read where President Bush may soon have a reason to avoid left leaning Vermont:The town Brattleboro is petitioning to put an item on a town meeting agenda in March. The agenda would make Bush and Cheney subject to arrest and indictment if they visit the Southeastern Vermont community.President Bush has visited every state except Vermont as of that time.
It was about that time that Bush described the war in Afghanistan a "romantic adventure" and he envied the troops. Bush should have been arrested to be evaluated for a serious mental impairment.
On Jan. 24, 2008 a local paper reported: that hundreds of children under five die every day from preventable diseases in military ruled Myanmar, the second-worst mortality rate for children in Asia after Afghanistan". I responded to this report: When hundreds of thousands of people went out on the streets to protest Myanmar's rulers, Bush praised them and urged their rulers to listen to the people but when hundreds of thousands of Americans went out on the streets to oppose the wars Bush planned he said:" people on the street do not influence his government policies." While George W. Bush gleefully danced with dictators in Saudi Arabia during a weapons deal visit, told jokes about missing weapons of mass destruction not being under his desk, tap danced on the steps while waiting for McCain, sings songs about outing a CIA agent,and envies the troops their romantic adventure in Afghanistan Little children die and who dares to ask why? Needless to say this letter of mine was not published either.
Whenever a "terrorist" kills an American "hero," a blow has been struck for freedom.