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‘A Very Deep Hole’
Obama and Congress Blowing It on Jobs

NEW YORK--I know the president has a lot on his mind, but the No. 1 problem facing the United States continues to fester, and that problem is unemployment. [Read full story]

It’s Up to You, Attorney General
Stand Up on Prison Sexual Abuse Reform Standards

In 2003, Congress acknowledged the serious problem of rape in the nation’s prisons and created a commission to develop a set of national standards for preventing and punishing these crimes. [Read full story] 

College Graduates

In his first commencement speech as president to a Black college, President Barack Obama talked about the importance of education to graduates of Hampton University [Read full story]

From the Editor’s Notebook
Justices Limit Life Sentences for Juveniles

WASHINGTON--The U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled that juveniles who commit crimes in which no one is killed may not be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. [Read full story]

Tea Party Pick Causes Uproar on Civil Rights

Rand Paul, the Tea Party candidate who overcame opposition from the Republican establishment to win the party’s nomination for Senate in Kentucky [Read full story]

Rein in Wall Street
Do It Before History Repeats Itself

With the economy finally starting to rebound, it’s worth pausing for a moment to recall the roots of the financial crisis that cost millions of jobs and spawned untold misery. [Read full story]

An Unnatural Disaster
Lessons We Won’t Learn from Gulf Tragedy

“Where I was wrong,” said President Barack Obama at his press conference on Thursday, “was in my belief that the oil companies had their act together when it came to worst-case scenarios.”[Read full story]

 

Quote Of The Month

Who will tell whether one happy moment of love or the joy of breathing or walking on a bright morning and smelling the fresh air, is not worth all the suffering and effort which life implies.

-Erich Fromm-

Weather

WeatherBug

What's On TV?

Following BP’s Lead

I asked the sheriff of St. Bernard Parish, Jack Stephens, if he was at all optimistic about BP stopping the gusher of oil that is fouling the Gulf of Mexico...[Read full story]

Challenging Health Care Reform
Conservatives Persist in Their Demagoguery

The number of states jointly suing to overturn the new health care reform law on constitutional grounds swelled to 20 last week. [Read full story]

From the Editor’s Notebook
A Victory Lifts Democrats’ Hopes for Fall

WASHINGTON--Congressional Democrats the other day seized on their special election victory in a Pennsylvania House district and other primary results as evidence [Read full story]

Crist’s Change
Putting GOP on Defensive

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.--Charlie Crist returned to his hometown to launch a political campaign [Read full story]

Arizona’s Witch Hunt
State Challenges Federal Authority

WASHINGTON--Though it has been settled law since the Civil War ended that a state cannot secede from the union, Arizona’s extreme action suggests it imagines it can. [Read full story]

Wayne C. Chandler Sr.

Getting a Lot Done and Not Caring About Being Credited [Read full story]

News Worth Noting
For GOP, United Stands Might Net Drawbacks, Too

Passage of the health care legislation challenges the heart of the Republicans’ strategy this year [Read full story]

Civil Rights in Education
Education Secretary Should Follow Through With Promises

In a little over a year in office, Education Secretary Arne Duncan has used his bully pulpit and a burgeoning discretionary budget to focus state governments on school reform as never before. [Read full story]

Turning Our Backs on Heroes
Little Attention Paid to Wounded of Two Wars

While growing up just outside of Chicago, Dennet Oregon dreamed of being an artist. [Read full story]

They Must Be Doing Their Job

The good news from the U.S. House of Representatives is that its new independent Office of Congressional Ethics is doing a strong enough job to prompt outcries from members [Read full story

Editorials

BOB HERBERT
New York Times

The Lunatic’s Manual
World-Class Ineptitude in Iraq and Afghanistan Wars

NEW YORK--The U.S. Army, to its credit, tells the story of a middle-aged lieutenant colonel who had served multiple combat tours and was suffering the agonizing effects of traumatic brain injury and dementia.
He also had difficulty sleeping.
Several medications were prescribed.
On a visit to an emergency room, he was given a 30-tablet refill of Ambien.  He went to his car and killed himself by ingesting the entire prescription with a quantity of rum.
He left a suicide note that said his headaches and other pain were unbearable.
As if there is not enough that has gone tragically wrong in this era of endless warfare, the military is facing an epidemic of suicides.
In the year that ended Sept. 30, 2009, 160 active duty soldiers took their own lives, a record for the army.
The U.S. Marines set their own tragic record in 2009 with 52 suicides.  And this past June, another record was set:  32 military suicides in just one month.
War is a meat grinder for service members and their families.
It grinds people up without mercy, killing them and inflicting the worst kinds of wounds imaginable, physical and psychological.
The Pentagon is trying to cope with the surge in suicides, but it is holding a bad hand:  the desperate shortage of troops has forced military officials to lower the bar for enlistment, thus, letting in people whose drug and alcohol abuse or other behavioral problems would previously have kept them out.
And the multiple deployments (four, five and six tours in the war zones) have jacked up stress levels to the point where many just can’t take it.
The G.I.’s have fought valiantly in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Thousands have died and many, many more have suffered, but the wars have been conducted as if their leaders had been reading from a lunatic’s manual.
This is not Germany or Japan or the old Soviet Union that we’re fighting, but after nearly a decade, neither war has been won and there is no prospect of winning.
Trillions of dollars are being squandered.
George W. (“Mission Accomplished”) Bush took the unprecedented step of cutting taxes while waging the wars, and Barack Obama has set a deadline for withdrawing troops from Afghanistan without having any idea how that war might be going when the deadline arrives.
This is warfare as it might have been waged by Laurel & Hardy.
Absent the bloodshed, it would be hilarious.
I’d give a lot to hear Dwight D. Eisenhower comment on the way these wars have been conducted.
July was the deadliest month yet for American troops in Afghanistan.
Sixty-six were killed, which was six more than the number who died in the previous most deadly month, June.
The nation is paying little or no attention to those deaths, which is shameful.
The president goes to fundraisers and yuks it up on “The View.”  For most ordinary Americans, the war is nothing more than an afterthought.
We’re getting the worst of all worlds in Afghanistan:  We’re not winning, and we’re not cutting our tragic losses.
Most Americans don’t care because they’re not feeling any of the tragic losses.  A tiny, tiny portion of the population is doing the fighting, and those troops are sent into the war zone for tour after tour, as if they’re attached to a nightmarish yo-yo.
Some kind of shared sacrifice is in order, but neither Mr. Bush nor Mr. Obama called on Americans to make any real sacrifices in connection with either of these wars.
The way to fight a war is to mobilize the country--not just the combat troops--behind an integrated wartime effort.
To do that, leaders have to persuade the public that the war is worth fighting, and worth paying for.
What we have in Afghanistan is a war that most Americans believe is not worth fighting….and certainly not worth raising taxes to pay for.
President Obama has not made a compelling case for the war and has set a deadline for the start of withdrawal that seems curiously close to the anticipated start of his 2012 campaign for a second term.
It’s time to bring the curtain down for good on these tragic, farcical wars.
The fantasy of democracy blossoming at the point of a gun in Iraq and spreading blithely throughout the Middle East has been obliterated, and it’s hard to believe that anyone buys the notion that the United States can install a successful society in the medieval madness of Afghanistan.
For those who haven’t noticed, we have a nation that needs rebuilding here at home.  Maybe we could muster some shared sacrifice on that front.
It’s time to bring the troops back, and nurse the wounded, and thank them all for their extraordinary service.
It’s time to come to our senses and put the lunatic’s manual aside.

Herbert

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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