jump to navigation

General Pace Declares Cultural War March 13, 2007

Posted by Mark in : I'm Not Gay, Politics , 2 comments

In a newspaper interview Monday, chairman of the military Joint Chiefs of Staff Major General Peter Pace called homosexuality immoral and so fired the first shot in his personal cultural war. (Link) At first this really upset me, but the more I pondered it, the less it bothered me. Why? He can’t seem to win the war in Iraq, so how can he win this one?

I do think it is interesting to hear about morality from a man that doesn’t understand how to take care of his own troops. It would be more cogent for him to discuss the situation at Walter Reed Hospital and the other medical facilities that take care of our veterans. Of course his miserable failure to successfully prosecute the war and his dreadful neglect of the heroes returning from overseas is why he made the remarks on Monday.

Its an old magicians trick, misdirection. fish_ico.jpg

A Love Story in 3 Pictures February 8, 2007

Posted by Mark in : Politics , 2 comments

.

fish_ico.jpg

Groundhog Day January 19, 2007

Posted by Mark in : Freedom, Politics , add a comment

This year, both Groundhog Day and the State of the
Union address occur on the same day. As Air America
Radio pointed out, “It is an ironic juxtaposition of
events: one involves a meaningless ritual in which we
look to a creature of little intelligence for
prognostication while the other involves a
groundhog.” fish_ico.jpg

Link: Savage Love for Rick Santorum November 14, 2006

Posted by Mark in : I'm Not Gay, Politics , add a comment

Village Voice: Savage Love Web Extra

And a little something for Ted Haggard too.

Rick Santorum Says Goodbye November 8, 2006

Posted by Mark in : Blogging, Politics , add a comment


The Phony War September 17, 2006

Posted by Mark in : Politics , add a comment

Robert Dreyus has written a great piece about the Bushies and the war on terror, titled The Phony War, in the latest Rolling Stone magazine.

Read it. fish_ico.jpg

Gettysburg September 14, 2006

Posted by Mark in : Freedom, Politics, Rant , add a comment

I thought about posting what I was thinking on and about 9/11 Monday, but I just figured enough was being said, maybe too much. Anyone that was alive and cognizant on that date has some pretty strong feelings about it and what has happened since.

Throughout the day, I kept thinking of Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the two greatest leaders this country has ever had, in my opinion anyway. I thought about FDR because he knew how to lead without using fear (read terror). I thought about Lincoln and his Gettysburg Address too, as I tried to imagine an appropriate memorial to the 9/11 victims.

Most of us know the speech. We’ve heard it a thousand times, probably from our own mouths as we attempted to memorize it for school. Back then it drove me crazy, it was just another chore, a requirement to pass the class, but now I feel differently. Maybe it’s age or maturity that gives me a different perspective on the speech. I really think it’s because, by now in my life, I understand loss. So throughout the day I kept thinking of two sentences from the speech, “But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate—we can not consecrate—we can not hallow—this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract.”

I wondered all day long, what we or our leaders had done, to really give a fitting memorial to the lost souls of 9/11? Of course Lincoln was right, no matter what we do, we can not compensate for the loss. So as the day went along I decided it was just too big for us to understand, and I could not blame a Democrat or a Replubican for this. But then President Bush gave his memorial speech. What a misuse of a great opportunity. What an insult to us as Americans.

What can I say about a man that abuses a solemn day for his own political gain? What can I say about a leader that implies that dissenters, people with reasonable differences of opinion, of basically being traitors? What can you say about the coincidence of his speech being scheduled at 9 PM so that it interrupted ABC’s rant against the Clinton administration’s pre 9/11 policies?

I am disappointed, saddened and very angry. George W. Bush is a little man, unworthy to carry on the traditions of this nation. He is a man of small stature in a position, and in a time, that requires something bigger. His 9/11/06 speech made him seem even smaller to me. I did not think that was possible. In my opinion the War on Terror (read fear) is being lost, because I am more afraid today than I was yesterday. I am afraid not of Al-Qaeda, or Bin Laden and their ilk, but I am afraid of our leaders. The men leading us now are not capable of true leadership. I am afraid of where they are taking us. I am also afraid of our ability to find the right men and women to lead and protect us in the future. Maybe that is what I fear most.

At 8:46 AM, when a man on the radio reminded me of what happened exactly at that moment on 9/11/01, I was standing in line at a Dunkin Donuts. Just as I started to reflect, the woman working behind the counter yelled, “Next,” and the world moved on. I remember exactly where I was at 8:46 AM, 9/11/01. I remember exactly where I was on 11/23/63 when I heard JFK was shot. I can’t remember where I was last year on either of those dates. I won’t forget where I was at 8:46 AM or at 9 PM this year though. fish_sm.jpg

Message from a President September 11, 2006

Posted by Mark in : Freedom, Politics , 1 comment so far

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt