The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
- This of course is well known because of the movie, no less true though.
The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
Vick treated his dogs very cruelly; there is no question about that. But I see one important difference between these more socially acceptable mistreatment and the anger focused on Vick: Vick is black, and most of the folks in charge of the other activities are white.
In the last 50 years, however, they have become the domain mostly of blacks, Latinos and poor whites — and were ruled illegal. Now, while white middle and upper classes continue to watch horses run to the point of exhaustion and risk breaking their legs, they regard dogfighting as something that only low-class "thugs and drug dealers" find entertaining. Indeed, a reading of many of the Vick news stories indicts him and his friends as much for being involved in hip-hop subculture as for fighting dogs....
I am not saying dogfighting is acceptable, but rather that Vick should be publicly criticized for that activity, not his participation in hip-hop subculture. Whether or not dogs are fought more by minorities than white people is actually unknown, but the media representations of the last several weeks make it appear that black culture and dogfighting are inextricably intertwined. We need to find ways to condemn dogfighting without denigrating black culture with it.
If we want to build a better world for animals, the animal rights movement must examine its own racial politics and figure out ways to put minority concerns on its agenda.
We go to class with racist classmates, we go to gym with people who are racists… It’s part of the experience.
"The defendant pointed the vibrator in the bag at Mr Vakani and warned him to back off."Here is a surprise, Jex is a known drug addict with many previous convictions.
He was DRTBefore I could ask the meaning...
Dead, Right There
And it is not possible that the good people of Iraq are not noticing, and that in some way down the road the sum of these acts will not come to have some special meaning, some special weight of its own. The actor Gary Sinise helps run Operation Iraqi Children, which delivers school supplies with the help of U.S. forces. When he visits Baghdad grade schools, the kids yell, "Lieutenant Dan!"--his role in "Forrest Gump," the story of another good man.
I believe that the decision to invade Iraq and the post-invasion management of that country were among the largest foreign-policy mistakes in the history of our nation. I voted against them, and I still think they were the right votes," Baird said in a telephone interview from Washington, D.C.and
But we're on the ground now. We have a responsibility to the Iraqi people and a strategic interest in making this work.
One, I think we're making real progress.This from a man who voted against the the invasion of Iraq. Elected to Congress in 1998 and was chosen as President of his Freshman Democratic Class. Serves on the Democratic Steering Committee and as a Senior Democratic Whip. Brian Baird currently serves on the House Transportation and Infrastructure, Science, and Budget Committees.
Secondly, I think the consequences of pulling back precipitously would be potentially catastrophic for the Iraqi people themselves, to whom we have a tremendous responsibility … and in the long run chaotic for the region as a whole and for our own security.
In nearly all public works, whether it be levees, bridges or steam failures, the bureaucracy's mode of operation is "run to failure". New money always flows to the new projects. Based on my engineering experience, RTF leads to inefficient use of resources and capital. The only investment that politicians believe in is vote buying. The head of the House Transportation Committee is from Minnesota, I would bet money that there were no earmarks set up for bridge upgrades.A 40-year-old bridge collapses into the Mississippi in Minneapolis. Levees give way in New Orleans at the foot of the Mississippi. An 83-year-old steam pipe produces an eruption that terrorizes Manhattan. As our infrastructure literally crumbles beneath our feet, America is building the largest embassy compound in the world in Iraq - an area larger than the Pentagon - to manage a war now estimated to cost $1 trillion.
What happened at both ends of the Mississippi and is happening in cities across the country are tragedies, but they aren't random accidents. They are the direct price of the right-wing in power. Scornful of government, intent on cutting taxes and slashing spending, they systematically have shorted public investment in our basic infrastructure - in bridges and roads, in rail lines and air systems, in parks and schools.
Hunted for historical information on this day and found:
On August 7, 1957 Norvell Hardy, comedy actor died from a cerebral thrombosis. A member of the comedic team Laurel and Hardy. Norvell Hardy was born in the farm town of Harlem, Georgia on January 18, 1892. Around 1910, he started using the name Oliver Norvell Hardy, and became manager of the first movie house in Milledgeville, Georgia, called the Electric Theater. This is where Hardy caught the acting bug. Norvell Hardy appeared in 270 films without Stan Laurel, one of these being the 1925 version "The Wizard of OZ" in which he was the farmhand and tin woodsman in producer Larry Semon's film failure.
Mr. Hardy first teamed up with Stan Laurel in 1921 for the movie "Luck Dog". Laurel and Hardy's last film, "Atoll K", was made in France in in 1951. Laurel and Hardy appeared together in 106 films, retiring in 1951.
On this day 100 years ago, August 1, 1907, the U.S. Army Signal Corps was established an aeronautical division in charge of "all matters pertaining to military ballooning, air machines and all kindred subjects." The U.S. Army Signal Corps became the U.S. Air Force.