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by Jim Hightower
- "HOW THE BUSHITES "SUPPORT"
TROOPS"
Excuse me while I throw
up.
I'm nauseated by the disgusting treatment that the Bushites keep
giving to the troops they publicly profess to love––troops that they are all too
willing to use for their own political purposes. We've learned about the
Pentagon's deadly failure to provide body and vehicle armor for the troops in
Iraq, about the Bushites shameful efforts to keep America's wounded soldiers out
of the public eye and even to deny them health care, about the sickening
stonewalling by the White House and Pentagon brass so the entire blame for
prisoner torture falls on a few lowly grunts––but the scandals just keep
coming.
How about Tourniquet-Gate? Just when you thought your
disgust-O-meter couldn't register any higher, it's now been revealed that troops
in Iraq are being sent into the hell of battle without something so simple and
life-saving as tourniquets to apply when wounded. This small, inexpensive item
is no small thing to our soldiers––the Army estimates that tens of thousands of
U.S. fighters are in combat without tourniquets. Officials now concede that
untold numbers have bled to death from injuries that would not have been fatal
if a tourniquet had been applied.
Apparently, the Pentagon chiefs have
not placed an order for first-aid kits containing tourniquets because––get ready
to barf––they have not yet developed training manuals and a pouch for carrying
the tourniquets!
Here's another one. While hundreds of private companies
and state governments have stepped up to pay the difference between the low
military wages that Reservists and National Guard members are getting in Iraq
and the higher pay they got in civilian life, one big employer has not stepped
up: The federal government. The Bushites have exempted themselves from doing
what's right for these troops on the grounds that it could cost too
much.
Why are the White House and Pentagon so lackadaisical about
providing our soldiers the basic support they need and deserve? Shouldn't
"Support Our Troops" be more than a political phrase on a bumpersticker?
Sources: "Part-Time
Pay for Full-Time Service." The New York Times, March 10, 2005. "Senators:
Why Do Troops Lack Tourniquets?" abcNEWS Internet Ventures, March 8,
2005.
Reprinted with permission.
- PREACHING
DEMOCRACY WHILE DRIFTING TO AUTOCRACY
The
problem for U.S. presidents who jump on their moral high horse and gallop around
the world loudly lecturing other nations' leaders about freedom and democracy –
is that their presidential practices back here in America are often the exact
opposite of what they're preaching to others.
George W, our present
preacher-in-chief, recently went on a highly-publicized moralizing mission to
Russia, where he publicly scolded President Putin for imposing anti-democratic
measures on that country. Fine – Putin's autocratic tendencies are abominable.
But then George got caught up in asserting his own moral purity, declaring: "I'm
perfectly comfortable in telling you our country is one that safeguards human
rights."
Well, yes, Americans certainly have a strong belief in that, and
we've been striving for that ideal for two centuries – until BushCheneyRumsfeld
& Company arrived. They have been energetically pushing America backwards on
human rights, ranging from insisting that the White House has a right to torture
war prisoners to using federal police and the military to shut out and shut up
Americans who protest Bush's policies.
Filled with moral piety, however,
George continued his democracy lecture, saying: "I live in a country where
decisions made by government are wide open." What an absurdly awkward thing for
him to say, since Bush & Company are notorious for pushing a dangerous new
culture of government secrecy in America. They have gone to court again and
again to assert "executive privilege," insisting that they have the autocratic
right to hide all information about their decisions. They also maintain secret
"no fly" lists, they have unilaterally suspended the public's use of our
right-to-know laws in case after case, they've doubled the number of government
documents classified as secret, and they've claimed in several cases that not
even congress or the courts can examine their decisions.
Of course, even
under Bush, America is no where near as bad as Putin's Russia...yet.
Sources: "Access
laws pry open secrets across the world," Austin American-Statesman, February 26,
2005. For the U.S., talk of human rights proves awkward," Austin
American-Statesman, February 27, 2005.
(c)
2005, Copyright - Saddleburr Productions, Inc. Reprinted with
permission.
Updated April
02, 2005
URL:
www.thecitizenfsr.org
SM
2000-2011
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