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Iraq, Washington and sometimes, OZ

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Thursday, May 05, 2005
 

Why I'm Rooting Against the Religious Right.
By Christopher Hitchens / Opinion JournalPermalink

I hope and believe that, by identifying itself with "faith" in general and the Ten Commandments in particular, a runaway element in the Republican leadership has made a career-ending mistake. In support of this, let me quote two authorities:

Read remarks from James Joyner, Ed Cone, Ann Althouse, Roger Ailes, and Dean Esmay. [memeorandum]


8:14:25 PM    comment []

The Christian Complex.
By George F. Will / WaPoPermalink

The state of America's political discourse is such that the president has felt it necessary to declare that unbelievers can be good Americans. In last week's prime-time news conference, he said: "If you choose not to worship, you're equally as patriotic as somebody who does worship."

Update: Discussion on this article has expanded. Read remarks from James Joyner, Tbogg, Sam Rosenfeld, John Cole, Josh Chafetz, Glenn Reynolds, Chris Mooney, and Atrios. [memeorandum]


7:53:56 PM    comment []

Col. David. H. Hackworth, 1930-2005

SFTT Washingt...
.
Col. David. H. Hackworth, 1930-2005

SFTT
Washington, D.C., May 5, 2005 – Col. David H. Hackworth, the United States Army's legendary, highly decorated guerrilla fighter and lifelong champion of the doughboy and dogface, ground-pounder and grunt, died Wednesday in Mexico. He was 74 years old. The cause of death was a form of cancer now appearing with increasing frequency among Vietnam veterans exposed to the defoliants called Agents Orange and Blue.

Col. Hackworth spent more than half a century on the country's hottest battlefields, first as a soldier, then as a writer, war correspondent and sharp-eyed critic of the Military-Industrial Complex and ticket-punching generals he dismissed as "Perfumed Princes."

...With Gen. S.L.A. "Slam" Marshall, he surveyed the war's early mayhem and compiled the Army's experience into The Vietnam Primer, a bible on a style of unconventional counter-guerrilla tactics he called "out gee-ing the G." His finest moment came when he applied these tactics, taking the hopeless 4/39 Infantry Battalion in the Mekong Delta, turning it into the legendary Hardcore Battalion. The men of the demoralized outfit saw him at first as a crazy "lifer" out to get them killed. For a time they even put a price on his head and waited for the first grunt to frag him.

Within 10 weeks, the fiery young combat leader had so transformed the 4/39 that it was routing main force enemy units. He led from the front, at one point getting out on the strut of a helicopter, landing on top of an enemy position and hauling to safety the point elements of a company pinned down and facing certain death. Thirty years later, the grateful enlisted men and young officers of the 4/39, now grown old, are still urging the Pentagon to award him the Medal of Honor for this action. So far, the Army has refused.

By null. [∞Fouroboros]
7:40:17 PM    comment []


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