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Week of July 30, 2006 - August 5, 2006

Now Children! Don't Make Me Stop This Car!


Remember Mom and Dad on the long trips saying that? Or, better yet, don't make me come up there! That was the warning which preceded being grounded or, in the politically incorrect "good old days," spanked.

Remember when parents made the rules? Remember "Because I said so?"

Well, it apparently works internationally in "Bushworld." The Puppet King is about to demonstrate all his considerable diplomatic skills. Everyone buckle your seatbelts!

The United States and France agree a draft U.N. Security Council

resolution aimed at ending the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, news

agencies report.

What are the United States and France going to say? "Don't make us come up there?

Fair And Balanced


Did anyone else watch the coverage of Rumsfeld's appearance before the Senate committee yesterday?

Hillary verbally neutered the pit bull at every turn but Fox News coverage managed to spin each exchange by editing in a way that made it look like Rumsfeld at least held his own. Isn't it interesting how leaving out Hillary's responses to his string of lies made Rumsfeld look completely different than reality would show on all the other networks?

We all know that's the M.O. of Fox News. It has been from the beginning.

Political animals always amaze me at their ability to spin like a dog who got into the locoweed and pretend to be so sincere and angry when the cameras are on. Hillary and Ted Kennedy smiled down as they shook the hand of a grinning, apparently thrilled to be there, Rumsfeld. What a joke. Then the action started and they tore him a new one during the hearing.

And the beat goes on.

A Kinder, Gentler Blog


I have decided to soften the rhetoric of my blogs. Even though the majority of comments have always been positive I have been thinking that some of my terminology might have a negative effect on some readers. For instance: "Georgie" and Dick "The Monster" Cheney will not be used in future blogs by me. That doesn't mean I have ANY respect for these two men or any in their administration. I'm just going to change the way I write about these two in the hope that more readers will be compelled to listen to facts instead of hearing the angry screams of extreme rhetoric.

I am a patriotic American. I served in Vietnam and I respect our military for their competence and bravery. That said, the civilian leadership all the way up the chain of command has shown such incompetence and arrogance that it is difficult to believe there are still nearly 30% who approve of our "strategy" in the "war on terror" worldwide.

The Republican talking heads and right wing radio hosts have taken a page from Karl Rove's playbook by always equating disagreement with administration policy with being unpatriotic. What a ridiculous and unjustified assumption. It always makes me angry and I have allowed that anger to show in my words.

The funny thing is, I've always considered myself a moderate Democrat. This administration and their actions throughout their reign of terror has pushed me farther and farther to the left but I still think I'm just left of center. I'm going to try to stay near the center because that's where communication and logic places reasonable citizens. I don't want to become the opposite of Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity or Rush Limbaugh who have broken the fence on the right and pushed that boundary over the cliff of insanity. There is an extreme left and an extreme right. But I think the vast majority of Americans are in the center 1/3. My guess is that the current distribution of voters is about 20% too far right, 20% too far left and 60% in or near the center.

Democrats have done a terrible job of countering the Karl Rove tactics of fear and religious fervor which have brought us to this tragic place in our history. I think there is a 666 birthmark somewhere on Rove's body. (Just had to lose the "softie" image for that one)

From this point forward I will try to use the language necessary to make my points without the quotation marks required to SCREAM about the horror this administration has brought to the world and the damage they have done to our image everywhere else on earth.

Thank you to all my readers who have taken the time to comment on my blogs since I began this journey last year. It has been both humbling and exhilarating to know so many appreciate my work and I've learned a lot from the few who have commented negatively.

Stick with me and together we will continue to make the truth known one blogger and one reader at a time.

Next week's primary in Connecticut will be the first time bloggers have had such an impact on an election. I think and hope the result will make other politicians on the national stage listen a little more to their constituents.

Who knows? Maybe we can get back to the basics: Government of the people, by the people and for the people.

Deja Vu


Naturally, the common people don't want war, but after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag people along whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders, this is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifist for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in every country.

Sound like something Karl Rove or Dick Cheney or George W. Bush might say? The sad truth is it's a quote from another monster:

Herman Goehring, Hitlers Reich Marshal

at the Nuremberg trials after WW 2

An Eye For An Eye


I saw the movie "MUNICH" again recently. It is another Spielberg masterpiece. Even though he is Jewish, he manages to show the terrible reality of the conflict from both sides. Unfortunately there has not and can not be a resolution to the Israeli dilemma until one side stops the "killing for the sake of killing" mentality which has been present in all past dealings between the parties.

When Saddat made an attempt at peace, they killed him. Any Israeli leader who tries to communicate with the other side is demonized. Palestinians teach their children to hate Jews. Jews teach their children to fear and hate Palestinians. And the beat goes on and on and on.

The harsh rhetoric between "Georgie" and Iran or "Georgie" and North Korea and "Georgie and well, you name the country or leader.... This is a very dangerous state of affairs. Our illustrious president wants to convince the people of Iran to overthrow their "elected" leaders. He wants Hamas to overthrow their "elected" leadership because he doesn't agree with the rhetoric they spew. He wants Hezbollah destroyed although they are represented in the Lebanese government because they were "elected." Listen to yourself, "Georgie"... Look in the mirror and see a monster who wants theocracy like they do. The difference between you and them is they were actually elected by a vast majority of their people because they speak for the majority in their countries.

I'm worried that Iran or Syria will be attacked by Israel or the United States which will lead to even worse relations between the Muslim people of the world and us. They are people, "Georgie".. Like us. Most of them want to work and live in peace. The problems of the world will never be solved by war mongers like your administration or theirs. To bad our government isn't what it is advertised to be: "Of, by and for the people." If it were, we, the people, would try communication. You should try it. It's difficult for people to talk when you are blowing their heads off and the "Georgies" in their world are cutting off ours. Great communication. They do evil and you do evil... Evil for evil. An eye for an eye. Great plan, "Georgie".

Al Queda killed 3,000 Americans out of revenge and hatred. We've killed 50,000 civilians in Iraq to teach them not to oppose us. When does it stop? You had the mother of one of our dead heroes arrested because she opposed you. You didn't want people to read her t-shirt while you spread more of your lies.

George W. Bush is the worst president in American history. Nothing can change that now. But bloggers unite and spread the truth. He can't arrest or kill us all.

A Short Story


How about a break from politics and poetry for a day? Here's a short story I wrote. Actually it's taken from a chapter of a novel I'm writing. If anyone would care to comment, I'd appreciate opinions.. Good or bad.

STAMPEDE

The herd was growing very restless as lightning stabbed the darkening clouds to the west. The rumble of distant thunder broke the silence.

Abel Clay was foreman for the Lazy J ranch near the Mexican border in south Texas. He’d been cowboy and foreman for several ranches during the past four years since he’d left the army at the end of the war. He’d led three other drives north. His experience told him this could be a dangerous afternoon. Pulling back on the reins, he took a deep breath and scanned the western sky.

The fluffy white tops of the clouds were climbing skyward. They looked like cotton but the base was an ugly black layer which hovered above the ground. He thought he detected some rotation in the cloudy mass but figured it was just his nervous imagination at work.

He and his eighteen vaqueros had crossed the Brazos earlier in the day driving two thousand head of longhorn cattle to the rail head in Dodge City. The money he’d make from this drive would finally give him the grub stake he needed to start his own ranch. There were thousands of head of stray longhorns running the prairie in south Texas. They’d bred uninhibited during the war and there was nobody to catch and brand them. Herds of horses had multiplied in the Wild Horse Desert. They were free for the taking if a man was willing to put in the labor. It would be brutal work to build a ranch but it was his dream and he intended to make it come true.

Some of the men were on their first drive. All were experienced cowboys and ranch hands but moving a herd this size for such a distance was a new endeavor for most of them. The oppressive late afternoon heat was searing and uncomfortable. The humidity made it difficult to breathe.

A hot wind whispered through the prairie grass. The men leaned into the strong wind and pulled their hats down to secure them from the gusts. Hints of the oncoming storm were in the air. The smell of rain was refreshing but the atmosphere had an eerie feel, an ominous, dangerous foreboding kept the men and cows on edge. Nerves were electric.

An occasional drop of rain turned into a steady drizzle. The massive clouds were moving quickly as thunder crashed and lightning touched the ground in the distance.

Small groups of cattle stirred and moved like waves on a turbulent sea. The ocean of longhorns moved first in one direction then another in their nervous attempts to escape the fear which was building in them. Sounds of the cattle snorting and the occasional click of two of the enormous horns colliding indicated the chaos which was growing.

The ground was turning to a mushy brown gravy which made the footing of the horses and cattle more difficult.

Abel’s big mount had been in storms before but this one felt different and his riding skills were tested each time thunder roared or a muddy misstep caused more stress for the animal. A sudden gust made Abel lean forward on the big gray whose ears twitched as he snorted. Leather creaked as Abel turned to yell at one of the cowboys.

“Try to keep them calm, Carlos,” he said, trying to scream above the noise of the wind and driving rain. “We need to try to get them over toward that box canyon.” He pointed to the east. The canyon was about a half mile wide at the mouth and narrowed at the apex with high walls which would prevent the cows from passing without extreme effort. The muddy slopes would make it a desirable corral if they were running out of control.

Carlos nodded and signaled some of the others to move to the edges of the herd. Everyone sensed the impending danger and worked to head off the inevitable.

The rain grew harder. A steady stream poured from the brim of Abel’s hat. Small hail began to tap the ground around him. His horse shifted and snorted again.

The sky was a strange dark green color against the ominous clouds which were flying across the horizon like Abel had never seen. The hair on the back of his neck was tingling like it did before a fight. His muscles tightened. Every inch of his six foot frame was tense and ready for action.

Hail pounded Abel’s hat and the horse twitched whenever one of the small pieces of ice struck it. The slicker Abel wore didn’t provide much protection but at least it kept his clothes dry.

Wind driven rain pelted the herd. It was a downpour now. Suddenly a bolt of lightning struck the ground about a mile away, then another. The crash of thunder followed almost immediately sending the herd into a panic. The longhorns broke into a run across the muddy prairie.

Abel slapped the gray to a gallop and worked to guide the massive rumbling herd toward the canyon. He wasn’t sure they could steer the rowdy, scared cows but if they didn’t try he knew he’d lose many head not to mention a day or two trying to round up frightened strays. His thoughts raced as he tried to calculate all these factors while working to control his horse and his own fear.

Rain slammed hard against his face. He saw a shadowy rider through the downpour swinging a yellow slicker above his head trying to work the cows and hold them in a group.

The noise was intense. Pounding hoofs, thunder and yelling cowboys trying to manage the frightened herd could barely be heard above the intensity of the driving rain and wind.

Abel heard a sizzling sound as another bolt of lightning slammed the earth behind him. The explosion of the thunder hurt his ears and his horse hesitated for a second then ran harder away from the sound.

Sheets of rain slanted at a forty-five degree angle pelted the earth. The wind made the rain sting Abel’s face. The greenish-gray sky darkened more. It was as if night had fallen. Abel could hear the vaqueros screaming and whistling as they worked to steer the panicked cows.

Their efforts were having the desired effect and the herd began to turn into the canyon. As they reached the wall at the east end, the herd slowed and finally stopped. They were still restless as the storm continued to pound them with the relentless downpour but the uncontrolled panic seemed to be over. They had run themselves to exhaustion and the walls of the canyon seemed to calm the noise of the wind and rain.

As the vaqueros skirted the herd and the storm slowly dissipated, Abel surveyed the area where the animals had run wild. He saw two longhorns down. They’d been trampled by the other stampeding cows. In the distance he saw what he dreaded most. A horse lay on its side trying desperately to get up on a badly broken leg. Beside it, a Mexican boy lay motionless. He was the youngest of the cowboys and had celebrated his nineteenth birthday the day before they’d left.

Abel rode over and dismounted. The boy’s clothing and body were torn by the sharp hoofs and his head had been crushed.

The others gathered around and stood in silence clutching hats against their chests. They knew this kind of thing was a risk they’d all taken but seeing it become a reality was a shock to all of them.

Nobody spoke for a long moment. Abel looked down at the young man and suddenly thought about bodies of all the young men he’d seen on the battlefields during the war. It was never easy to bury a friend but it had to be done.

“Juan,” he said, sadness showing in his eyes. “You and Carlos dig a grave over there under that live oak. We’ll lay him to rest there.”

The two Mexicans nodded and walked toward the chuck wagon to get the shovel.

Abel said some words over the grave. Two of the men made a cross out of a couple of sturdy mesquite limbs and stuck it in the soft, muddy earth.

The storm was over as quickly as it had started. It had turned very cool and the sky was a brilliant blue as the dark clouds disappeared to the east.

Some of the cattle were lying in groups on high ground. The stampede had taken its toll. The night would be calm and the animals rested. Their fear was gone now and it was time to recover from what had seemed like hours but had actually only been a few minutes of furious activity.

The men sat around a campfire silently drinking coffee. The cook had butchered one of the fallen cows and there would be beef along with the beans tonight. Steaks sizzled on the fire for the evening meal.

It was only the second day out and they had faced a dangerous storm and a deadly stampede. They wondered what else lay ahead of them on this long drive.

Vote Them All Out!


Sincerity is the key to political success. Once you learn to fake that, you've got it made.

Vote them ALL out in November. Let's start with a new bunch of prostitutes who will sell their souls to lobbyists. It might take a year or two for them to become completely corrupt. During that time, they might actually get something accomplished.

Why Won't They Call A Spade A Spade?


George W. Bush is a liar. Dick Cheney is a liar. Donald Rumsfeld is a liar. And on and on and on.

Truth is, this administration LIES! Is there anyone who doesn't know that yet? But the politicians in Congress won't say that. The media pundits won't say the word, lie. What are they afraid of?

Here's an article by Ron Reagan:

THEY’RE LIARS!

SUBVERTING THE TRUTH?!?! "Georgie" is an arrogant, incompetent LIAR! In the words of a great news man, Walter Cronkite, who closed his news show with these famous words: And that's the way it is.

It's All Over But The Killing


Tom Friedman, an expert on the middle east, was on Meet The Press this morning. He quoted a pundit of the Democrats who had said about Iraq: It's all over but the killing. That fits the situation in Lebanon perfectly.

Israeli bombs killed 57 civilians, including 34 children, in one of the worst attacks of the 19 day war. Here's the story:

WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN THE PATH OF WAR

Unfortunately nothing good can come of this tragedy. Friedman's quote is a picture of the reality in Iraq and Lebanon.

As I have written before, communication and diplomacy are the answer. Bombs and rockets only create more enemies and make more bombs and rockets inevitable.

No matter which side you take in this conflict, there can be no "winner." Everyone has already lost AND won.

Now is the perfect time for diplomatic efforts. Hezbollah can claim "victory" and say they fought Israel and ran them out of town. Israel has made their "point" by destroying the economic viability of Lebanon for decades showing the world the penalty for, in the words of Cartman, not respecting their "authorita"... For those who don't know, Cartman is a character in the cartoon: South Park. I thought a cartoon reference might be the spark that ignites conversation since a cartoon caused such an uproar a while ago.

Diplomacy now could allow both to save face and negotiate all the things these combatants ALWAYS negotiate after each of these "wars."

If it weren't so sad and tragic, it would almost be comical. There's an old joke about the "idiot" who keeps hitting himself in the head with a hammer because it feels so good when he stops.

We can all hope the "warriors" in this conflict stop hitting themselves with hammers before one of those hammers has a nuclear warhead on it.

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Chuck Keller

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