Saturday, June 30, 2007

The Cucking Stool beats up MDE

Spotty came out with a nice post about Mr Brodkorb with Minnesota Democrats Exposed.
Michael Brodkorb is a foppish Republican dandy, the saloon keeper at Minnesota
Democrats Exposed, a site dedicated to the extrusion of an effluvium of rumor,
gossip, and innuendo, like a dotty Play-Doh Fun Factory, loaded with
excreta, run amok.

Spotty owes me a new keyboard for that one. Note to self...never drink coffee while reading the Cucking Stool...

He ends equally as strong!
Anyway, the Korb registered shock and dismay that Jeff Fecke, writing at Minneosta Matters, would pick up the story and write that the Manchurian Candidate seemed
to be the governor's apparent choice. Why, he didn't source it properly! (Spot is not making this up, boys and girls.) Based on what he knows, boys and girls, Jeff's inference is a reasonable one; Brokorb's complaint is like Elmer Gantry, railing against sin while boinking the help.


Great work once again Spotty!

Brodkorb wrote on my site a few days ago as well, stating that he did not believe I had any sources. I really don't care what Brodkorb does or doesn't believe. I have 3 very solid sources on the issue. And he has nothing...

Friday, June 29, 2007

More local musings

In my notable absence fighting neo-conservative political operatives, this story flew under my radar.

Thank goodness for great minds like Chris Truscott and Dave Mindeman at mnpACT!.

Rep Ron Shimanski takes pride in his first year at the capitol as an obstructionist.

House members held the line against over $5 billion in new, job-killing tax
increases. In cooperation with the governor, who made very clear from the
beginning that there were some initiatives that would be "poison pills" - making
an entire bill unsignable - House members promoted the values that Minnesotans
hold dear.

It's the same rant he sent out in his constituent email as well.

Thankfully, Dave was around to set Shimanski straight.

$5 billion...wow..sounds like a lot. But, a lot of that money was offset by property tax relief. New taxes on the wealthy to give a break to property owners already hit by a slumping housing market. That particular bill had a net increase in taxes of zero.

And one of the poison pills alluded to by Rep. Shimanski is an effort to take inflation into account for state budgeting. Most of you understand inflation... you know... the thing that made the Crosstown Project cost an additional 30% during a 3 year delay in execution. The thing consumers are noticing in the produce aisles. The increases the state takes into account on the revenue side of things but pretends doesn't exist for spending purposes.
In his hometown of Silver Lake, the top issue people talked to me about last year was property taxes. Shimanski failed his constituents and his hometown.

Another issue Shimanski failed to address deals with the Koch Industry / MinnCan pipeline debacle. Shimanski, a small farmer himself, failed to act to protect farmers near Lester Prairie and Plato, as pipeline representatives used coercive tactics in order to obtain permission to run the pipeline through their property.

The SC Times published a story today about the pipeline problems as well.
The owners of about 85 percent of those parcels have signed agreements giving Minnesota Pipe Line an easement across their property in exchange for a payment, company spokeswoman Patty Dunn said.

The owners of the remaining 15 percent haven't signed either because they haven't reached a financial agreement or because of objections to the project. The company filed petitions in 13 counties this week seeking condemnation of the easement tracts, Dunn said.


A blatant assault of property owners rights. Where are the conservatives on this? Tom Emmer? Ron Shimanski? Dean Urdahl? Why are you not protecting the private property rights of Minnesota's farmers?

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Avidor with an excellent post on Helliergate

Good work!

It provides some history into Governor Pawlenty dissing college students in the past as well.

More from the Cucking Stool

Spot comments on the apology.


Let's just be sure Spot has this straight: if Hal is a former student, it's okay to savage him and compare him to Gomer Pyle, If he's a student, however, he gets the kid glove treatment. Banaian's invective—especially on his website—was full of information about Hal Kimball's time as a student, a student activist, at that. How do you think that your remarks bore the imprimatur of Saint Cloud State any less if Hal was merely a former student, Professor?

Banaian wants to be sure that we know that he's never likely to cross paths with Hal Kimball at school; Hal is going to be studying social responsibility. Boy, your right, Prof, little risk there.


It's no wonder why the Cucking Stool is the best liberal blog in the Twin Cities.



I have accepted Dr Banaian's apology, although his email apology differed dramatically from his SCSU Scholars apology. Seems like he wanted to save some face publicly, after he bloodied mine publicly.

An astute reader tipped me off to another bit of irony from Saturday's eruption of Mt. St. Banaian.

The hour beforehand, Gary Gross from Let Freedom Ring, was on the air with MDE and Dr Banaian discussing campaign tactics.


During the first hour, Michael said that his perspective on campaigns was to
“never bring a knife to a gun fight”, a position that I wholeheartedly subscribe
to. In fact, when I called, I said that “We can be sure that the DFL is bringing
‘a gun’ to the campaign so let’s adopt this slogan: ‘It’s time to break out the
double-barrels’”.


Recall that MDE defends his actions in bringing forth match.com info on Independent Dean Barkley's possible 2008 campaign for Congress in the 6th.

And exposing Luke Hellier for the unqualified political operative he is crosses a line? In fact, it shows the hypocrisy of the right.

The MnSCU system roughly has 70,000 students in the 4 year system. If Governor Pawlenty selects Hellier to represent us in St Paul, the message is clear.

He doesn't care. He'd put a student with no experience as a public college student in a postion to advocate for them.

Furthermore, he couldn't find a conservative student amongst those that have served in College Republican, Student Association and other 4 year campus leadership positions.

That's why conservative students in Mankato and St Cloud continue to send me info on Hellier on a daily basis.

Will the Governor actually appoint this student on the July 1 deadline? I suspect that if Weigold or Kazee is appointed, he'll do so early. If it's Hellier, he'll wait for it to cool off a bit to do so.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Ambush

Dr Banaian sent an apology yesterday for his SCSU Scholars post this past weekend's fit of rage and his verbal assault of a student.

In a previous post, Dr Banaian labeled me as "political actor". Those listening to AM 1280 last weekend witnessed the true political actor in the group. He prepped for the show last Saturday knowing he was going to blow his fuse on me. It was political acting at its finest.

Which makes me ponder the issues of accountability behind this case.

Had Hal identified himself as a returning student before our Saturday broadcast,
I would have hesitated on running the story and would certainly have been more
tempered in my discussion of his role;

First off, I am a current student, not a returning student.

Also, recall that I was out of town this past weekend. The statement above indicates that Dr. Banaian was prepped beforehand to erupt on air.

Why was it my responsibility to inform Dr Banaian beforehand, before he acted like a fool on air, that I was a current student? As Michael at MDE put it, "we just want you to come for a discussion about the Board of Trustee's issue".

I've been around awhile...it truly was an ambush waiting to happen.

Michael Brodkorb posts that neither myself or Jeff Fecke cannot provide a source.

Let's be clear, I have 3 rock solid sources on the case, each tie this story together in a pretty neat bow.

I can provide Brodkorb with sources, I simply won't.

And this is the presumptuous nature of the conservative bloggers.

I was supposed to notify Dr Banaian of my enrollment status before he harassed me on air?

I am supposed to provide a political operative with the rock solid sources I have on the Trustee Story?

I know I was gone for 5 days, but who died an put Brodkorb in charge of the internet, the blogosphere?

The truth is, conservative bloggers are still scrambling to find where this has come from...and a week later, they are no closer to solving the puzzle.

Incidently, Larry Schumacher at the SC Times has posted about it as well.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

More Army of Dude

Back to some regular programming...

Army of Dude has a great new post up. For those new to AoD, he is an Infantryman in Iraq, serving in a Stryker unit.

The military is obsessed with taking something and renaming it with a
totally different term. A jumping jack is a side straddle hop, and any Islamic
terrorist not affiliated with Al Qaeda is a concerned local. When a mission is
complete, there is a rollup of killed enemies and found weapons. A rollup is
another term for a summary. So I present my own summary (er, rollup) for the
time my company has spent between June 2006 and June 2007:

525,600 Minutes Passed
Countless Enemies Killed and Captured
3 Destroyed Strykers
Dozens of Rifles, RPGS and Mines Found and Destroyed
2 Fatherless Baby Girls
Thousands of Rounds of Ammunition Found and Destroyed
9 Figure Severance Paycheck to Dick Cheney, Courtesy of Halliburton
3 Cleared Cities
2 Dead Friends
100,000 Contractors Making Five Times My Pay for Doing Laundry and Serving Food
Thousands of Cleared Houses
1 Quagmire


A year later and this is what we have to show for it.

A year later and we care about the survival of each other more than a fledgling
democracy in the Middle East. To officers and officials influencing policy, our
goal is to stimulate the economy and prop up competent Iraqi Security Forces. To
the unwashed enlisted in the muck, we’re just trying not to get blown to fucking
bits. A year later and we have realized finally: we’re biding time until the
next unit comes to replace us. That’s it. Rotate in, rotate out. A year’s worth
of sore backs, twisted ankles, near death experiences, shootouts, blown up
buildings, fires, mangled corpses, dead kids, dead soldiers, cold desert nights,
hot desert days, shit covered boots, trash filled streets, unfulfilled dreams,
stagnant aspirations and murdered futures.


A year well spent.




Keep up the great work Alex! Well said. When you get a chance, you should read this book. I read it this past weekend...it's amazing!

More coverage and commentary on Hellier

The Cucking Stool has a hilarious post about Dr. Banaian's fit on Saturday.

Twin Cities Daily Planet picked up the story.

I Don't Hate America is covering it.

Truth Surfer comments.

Lloydletta has a compiled list as well.

Firedoglake has it as well.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Banaian wrong again...

Dr Banaian posts on his site.

Mr. Kimball is not a student at SCSU at this time. Having left the university,
he is not subject to any special consideration from me as a faculty member. I
checked this before agreeing to do the story on the show by establishing he no
longer had an email account at the university. He has never been in one of my
classes and his resume indicates he left the university in 2006.

Shoot me an email at kiha0201@stcloudstate.edu, see if my email address works, since I am not a student and all...

The resume was from 2006 indicating that I am still in school, I never said Graduate.

Once again, Dr Banaian has failed to do some proper documentation and has misconstrued the facts.

A national post on the Hellier issue

Free Exchange on Campus has a post up about the Hellier/Pawlenty mess.

To be clear, it's not Mr. Hellier's political affiliation that's the problem - it's his lack of experience. Elected officials have every right to appoint officials who share their political and ideological views, however much we might disagree with those views. But the public expects these appointments to be issued on the basis of the nominees' experiences and abilities.

Governor Pawlenty has been presented with two nominees who have demonstrated a commitment to student government and who are highly qualified to serve as trustees, one of whom is a conservative. Fast-tracking a nominee based solely on his or her partisan loyalties does a great disservice to the students at Minnesota's public colleges and universities and is the worst kind of cronyism.



Well put!

Golf Weekend!

Wow, I can't leave for a few days without the riff raff heh?

Those that know me, know my love for the great outdoors. Normally, the summer consists of a week long trek into the Boundary Waters. This year, the boys created a weeklong extravaganza of Boundary Waters and Golf Weekend!

Brilliant!

I ended up bailing on the Boundary Waters side of the trip, too much going on with the family and work to pull away for 10 whole days, but I did make the Golf Weekend trip.

We have a pretty interesting group, a bunch of classmates and friends from Annandale High School and their college friends. A fun group of guys, with a wide range of political views. It's nice though, we may disagree on politics, but we have a lot of fun together and I cherish the time I get to spend with this group.

Wednesday was a travel and get organized sort of day. Left the Twin Cities somewhat early and made our way up to the Grand Rapids area. After a several hour trek with numerous pit stops for assorted needs and goodies, we hit Amen Lake, about 25 minutes north of Grand Rapids.

The rustic cabin is up against the Chippewa National Forest. No power, no running water. Just charcoal, propane and an outhouse!

In fact, there are no roads on the cabin side of the lake. We parked and had to take a pontoon across the lake to get to the cabin.

Thursday we had a great breakfast in town, a little place called Dotties. We made our way out to Sugarbrooke for 18 holes of fun. I was able to golf with both Junior and Senior, which was pretty nice. Both are very good golfers and were able to provide me with some good feedback. The 18th hole at Sugarbrooke is a stunning hole! A slightly elevated tee box provides you a great look at a relatively open green and an even better view of the lake.

I hit a 106 on Thursday with a pretty strong finish!

Friday brought us to Wendigo, where I was teamed up with Senior again, as well as Manea and Bernie. Wendigo is the toughest course I have ever played. It's a pretty tight front 9, which I proved by losing 5 balls.

I hit a 108 on Friday, taking a 9 on 17 and an 8 on 18. I almost drove the green on 18, but chipped into a deep bunker in front of the green. It was not a pretty sight!

Saturday took us to Pokegama. I teamed up with Schmidty, Bernie and Manea for this fun filled round of 18.

We got a little bit of a later start with the golf as busloads of soldiers returning from Iraq made their way with an escort through Grand Rapids. As an old Infantryman, it was a moving experience seeing these warriors make their way home. While it was an impromptu stop, it was an important one for this Vet.

My putting game started to come around on Saturday and I was able to card a 105, with a pretty strong performance on the back 9.

Saturday night also brought some bad weather in the area. We were all lounging in the water after a long day in the hot sun when we saw the front move in. Within 15 minutes, we were struck by some severe straight line winds, marble sized hail, and a lot of rain. It swept through in about an hour, but it was a pretty exciting storm to watch come in.

Sunday is the annual Golf Weekend scramble. I paired up with Mehr for this final round. We're the Gilligan and Skipper of the group. Mehr, about 6-2 nearly 300 lbs, was an offensive lineman for Moorhead State back in the day. Imagine Mehr and I in the same canoe together for a week! It's a fun sight.

At the turn, Mehr and I were in last place, carding a 46 on the front 9. We pulled it together on the back 9 carding a 40 and taking 2nd in the scramble. Losing to Schmidty and Manea by 2 strokes.

Limited cell coverage and a lack of a charger hindered by ability to remain connected to the "real world" the entire weekend, which was fine by me. 5 days and 4 nights with this crew was exactly what I needed. We didn't worry about much over this time. Lots of laughs and shenanigans!

I guess King Banion doesn't like me...

I hear he savaged me on the 5,000 watt flamethrower, AM 1280 this weekend. In fact, he called me a coward for not calling into the show. He also called for my mom to dial the phone for me.

For the record, the only cowardly thing I did this weekend was to not go for the green on 8 at Wendigo.

Stay classy King Banion...

Good stuff really. He had a typical conservative meltdown and completely misses the point on the controversy surrounding Luke Hellier's MnSCU Board of Trustee nomination.

Poor old Luke Hellier. He works the crowd at parades and partisan functions, videotaping those that oppose his candidate. He writes about his desire to ensure keep "liberal professors and students on the defensive". He has no background at all in public college student advocacy.

If I were attacking conservatives, I would have hit Adam Weigold and Michael Boulton pretty hard as well. However, they have strong track records for supporting students, unlike Hellier.

But King and his merry men simply do not want to understand that.

Progressive bloggers hit a jackpot here, and the conservative bloggers are in damage control mode now.

When I left on Wednesday, I had worried about this story dying.

Seriously, I did.

Thanks to King Banion and MDE, they kept this thing on the radar for at least another week.

BTW, anyone else feel the irony of King Banion, a professor at St Cloud State, savaging a student from St Cloud State on the 5,000 watt flamethrower they call AM 1280?

If a liberal professor had said those things about a conservative student, righty bloggers and the academic freedom folk would be calling for that professor's resignation...

Thanks again for keeping the controversy going guys!

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Questions for Luke Hellier...

Questions students, faculty, and the Office of Higher Education ought to be asking Luke Hellier as he moves his way through the vetting process to be the next MnSCU Board of Trustee member for 4 year public college students.

1. Who recruited you for the MnSCU Board of Trustee position? Was it someone in the Governor's office or someone else?

2. How does a background in partisan politics and private college life qualify you for service to public college students on the highest collegiate governing board in the State of Minnesota?

3. Your resume read that you would be going to Mankato to pursue a Master's in Public Administration. It then said "Bloomington" in the line below that reference. Are you participating in a distance learning program? Will you ever set foot on the Mankato campus? As a part time student, how many credits are you going to take per semester?

4. A speaker you brought to St Johns, David Horowitz, said this about "liberal" programs on our campuses. "Peace studies programs are probably the leading example of campus support for terrorism." Do you support that sentiment?

5. As a trustee, you will be the voice of all 4 year public students, regardless of their political perspective. You wrote at the Young America Foundation "putting the liberal students and professors on the defensive and introducing our classmates to conservative ideas!" Will you continue to put professors and students who do not agree with your ideological views on the defensive?

6. Your history indicates work against Statewide Student Associations, such as the Minnesota Association of Private College Students. Will you work with the students you would represent at the Minnesota State University Student Association (MSUSA) and their coalition partner, the Minnesota State College Student Association (MSCSA)? Or will you continue to fight to degrade their efforts?

7. With student debt continuing to climb and putting the cost of affordable higher education beyond the reach of more and more students, do you still support cuts in aid programs that took $7.8 billion from student loan and aid programs?

8. Is discriminatory language commonplace in your life? Did you say those harsh words about the LGBT community at the Johnnie Hockey game? At first you said you didn't, then you said you may have. Which is it?

9. Being a student in Mankato, and if you are not distance learning from Bloomington, are you being put in place in the 1st CD to assist Dick Day in a race against Congressman Walz? You have experience on other Congressional campaigns...it's plausible.

10. Will you be able to hold Congresswoman Bachmann accountable for her lackluster higher education views? As a Board member, you will have the opportunity to travel to Washington to lobby elected officials on the MnSCU system objectives. Are you able to be non-partisan enough to persuade a member of Congress to support the MnSCU mission and the lives of public college students. Can you support that?

11. Describe how you envision your working relationship would be with MnSCU partners like the Inter Faculty Organization, MSCF, MAPE, AFSCME and other union partners. Will you continue to work against unions? Will you be a "union buster"?

We'll post more questions later...back to the phones and more research!

The story grows

The Luke Hellier MnSCU Board of Trustee story is spreading.

The cucking stool has a great post up about the Hellier mess, titled "The Manchurian Candidate".

Minnesota Campaign Report carries the story as well.

Dump Bachmann picked it up!

Most of these sites also feed into LeftyBlogs as well.

The disappearing pages of Luke Hellier

As you know, after the story broke yesterday that a homophobic, extremely right wing, private college student was in the running for the prestigious position as a 4 year public college student trustee at MnSCU, info on Luke Hellier began to disappear.

He took his resume off his blog yesterday, in a blatant attempt to hide his lack of experience on education issues.



His candidate page is still up for now though and looks a lot like the verbiage from his resume.
Luke Hellier is a junior at St. John’s University and has been involved in
College Republicans since his freshman year. Before attending St. John’s, Luke
interned for Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life and Rep. Mary Liz Holberg.
During the 2004 election, Luke volunteered for the Bush and Kennedy campaigns as
well as serving as a member of the 72 hour team.

As a CR at St. John’s he served as President of Students Fostering
Conservative Thought, bringing David Horowitz, Deena Burnett, and Dinesh D'Souza
to campus. In the spring of 2005, Luke gained national recognition, being named
one of the Top 20 Conservative Activists by the Young America’s
Foundation Club 100.

Luke is currently ranked 7th in the nation for 2006. In the summer of 2005,
Luke served as a research assistant for the Young America's Foundation. During
the 2005 election, Luke was involved with Kleis for Mayor and the special
elections in St. Cloud.

Luke recently returned from a 1200 mile journey through Northwestern
Minnesota to meet with CRs at six different schools as they gear up for the 2006
election. He currently serves on the state board as Deputy Executive Director
and on the Bachmann for Congress committee.
A top 10 ranked Conservative Activist on the MnSCU Board of Trustee's?
The exposure of the Hellier files continues...

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Luke Hellier changes his blog

This morning Mr Hellier had a post up that listed his resume, from March 2007. Within the last few hours someone (Mr Hellier?) has removed his resume from his own blog.

What is he trying to hide? A lack of experience for higher education advocacy? A track record that is extreme to the right?

Governor Pawlenty: Taking the trust out of trustee

Sadly enough, most college students across the state do not understand what the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities System really is. I remember conversations I have had with random students at campus fairs all across the state. Despite a lacking notoriety in the eyes of students, the system is vital to the success of our students across the state.

To ensure that the voice of the students are heard, the MnSCU Board of Trustee's has three student positions. By statute, a student must be appointed to represent students at two year community colleges, two year technical colleges, and the 4 year state universities. These positions are amongst the most prestigious positions a student can receive during their collegiate career. The responsibility for advocating for 70,000 4 year students or 110,000 2 year college students is an enormous task.

The selection of these students is a serious matter for both the Minnesota State University Student Association (MSUSA) and the Minnesota State College Student Association (MSCSA). Typically, the process to select new trustee's begins more than 6 months from the statute imposed deadline of April 15th.

Students go through a detailed process, being vetted by their own respective governing board and oftentimes a spirited group of delegates. I went through this process back in 2004 for MSUSA. Myself and another student from Bemidji State were recommended by our Board for appointment by the Governor.

This past year MSUSA has engaged in the process of selecting member(s) for appointment to the MnSCU Board as their seat is being vacated on June 30th by Michael Boulton. I have known Michael for a few years now, having served on the MSUSA Board with him and having worked with him on the MnSCU Board as well. He has been a strong advocate for our students and his service to 4 year students is deeply appreciated.

Two students have been recommended by the student association and I know both of these individuals well. Ezra Kazee is a student at Winona State University. He has served in a myriad of positions at both the statewide student association and at Winona. I would argue that this man knows more about MnSCU policy than any other student in the state, having served for many years now on a student disability services panel at MnSCU. Ezra is highly qualified for a position on the board and I have a great deal of respect for him.

The other student is Adam Weigold. Adam is a current student at Metropolitan State University in St Paul and has been active in both the statewide student association and at Mankato and Metropolitan. Adam has been equally as busy in student organizations as well, working with the MSU-Mankato College Republicans and student media outlets. I may not always agree with Mr. Weigold's stances on various issues, I do know that he is a student oriented leader and would serve our students well.

Both are highly qualified to serve on the MnSCU Board.

Recent discussions I have had with colleagues in St Cloud and Mankato have produced a third candidate for the Board, a candidate who has been supposedly recruited by someone in Governor Pawlenty's office, in a blatant attempt to thwart the work of 4 year students across the state.

Luke Hellier's name has emerged as a candidate for the MnSCU Board of Trustee's, as the 4 year student representative.

A quick search produces a blog posting for Luke Hellier that publishes his resume.

The first eye catching tidbit is that Mr. Hellier is a graduate of the College of St Johns, a private college just north of St Cloud.

A private college student advocating for 4 year public college students in one of the most prestigious positions a student receive?

He must have some deep higher education qualifications then, right?

Mr. Hellier's resume indicates he will attend school in Mankato in the Master's in Public Administration program, and will attend on a part time basis.

His resume then becomes a virtual who's who of conservative politics in Minnesota. He served as the political director for Congresswoman Michele Bachmann's campaign. Which would explain my run in's with him in the past, which I will elaborate on later.

The resume continues with work as a research assistant for Young America’s Foundation, an intern for Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life and as a House of Representatives Intern.

Other items of note on the resume note that Mr Hellier was the President of Students Fostering Conservative Thought, Vice Chair of the Minnesota College Republican's in 2006, and a member for the Center for Public Policy. To be fair, Mr Hellier would also appear to have given some significant time to some great organizations in the local area as well, including being a Big Brother to the Boys and Girls Club.

The work at Students Fostering Conservative Thought really caught my eye.
SFCT is a non partisan campus organization at the College of St. Benedict
and St. John's University. SFCT's goal is to spark conversation about
conservative issues on our campus and across the state of Minnesota.
A "non partisan" campus group working to spark conservative issues? That's a partisan group!

This "non-partisan" group worked to bring controversial speakers to the St John's and St Ben's community.

Mr Hellier worked to bring conservative writer David Horowitz to the beautiful confines of the College of St Johns.

Some students were not impressed by the presentation.
St. Ben's senior Kirsten Flaten was not as pleased."He said a lot that wasn't
backed up. Some of his comments were intentionally offensive," she said.St.
John's senior Devin O'Brien also had qualms."Who's going to disagree with
freedom in the classroom?" O'Brien said. "He cites three examples and throws in
a few conservative one-liners to get the audience riled up."
Hellier remained supportive of Horowitz, even after Horowitz asserted that "peace studies programs are probably the leading example of campus support for terrorism."

If Hellier is appointed to the MnSCU Board, he will be dealing with numerous student and faculty policies alike.

Mr Hellier's work at the Young America's Foundation also caught my eye.

The conference highlighted conservative speakers like Governor Pawlenty, Katherine Kersten, Jason Lewis, John Ashcroft and Mr Heiller as well.
Luke Hellier, an activist from St. John’s University, encouraged students to
start several conservative groups on campus, echoing a tactic used by the Left.
Hellier also wrote a piece in the Young America's Foundation publication Libertas, check out page 11.
Thanks to Young America's Foundation, our event was a success, putting the
liberal students and professors on the defensive and introducing our classmates
to conservative ideas!
I find it very ironic that on page 10, they thank Ben Stein for coming to a campus to speak and for YAF arranging for Stein to speak. Stein recently donated to Al Franken's Senate campaign!

There is no mention of any work with student associations, public or private, or work on a student senate on his campus. However, a quick search produces numerous bits of info from when Hellier served on the St Johns Senate. Is he running from his St John's Senate record?

As a Student Senator, Hellier went after the Private College version of MSUSA and MSCSA, the Minnesota Association of Private College Students, in a story dated in March of 2005.
Luke Hellier, a St. John's senator and MAPCS representative said the SJS has
begun to, "reexamine our role in MAPCS, see if it's an organization we want to
be a part of." At issue, is the manner with which MAPCS handles its budget.MAPCS
receives funds through the dues that its member institutions pay; institutions
are required to pay dues to retain their status as a voting member. Hellier
said, the SJS is considering withholding future dues in protest unless MAPCS
makes changes in its fiscal policy.

No one stands for fiscal irresponsibility. Hellier cited expenses above budget for a banner and travel for executive officers. March of 2005 began a ramp up in discussions over the Federal Budget Reconciliation Act, furthermore, a greater lobby effort to Minnesota Representatives that had a history of failing to support college students, namely Mark Kennedy and Gil Gutenecht.

Hellier defended Congressman Kennedy's vote against college students when Kennedy voted for the Budget Reconciliation Act, a bill that cut $14.3 billion from the federal student loan programs, $7.8 billion taken from students through new charges and fees.

"Personally I don't have a problem with it," said Luke Hellier of the College Republicans. "We have to figure out a way to pay for the damage Katrina
caused. We had to do it some way."
Years later, Katrina relief is still needed. The Budget Reconciliation Act may go down as one of the most fiscally irresponsible pieces of legislation from the 109th Congress.

By the way, Hellier was co-director for Students for Kennedy and started a facebook group for Students for Bachmann.



A representative of students must be able to respond to the diverse nature of the MnSCU system. A community on-line publication at St. John's/St. Bens tells the story of a sad altercation a Senator from St Johns had at a Johnnie hockey game.
I, apparently, made the mistake of sitting a few rows behind what I refer to as
“the rowdy boy section”. While this group is fun to sit near, as they often will
start many a rousing chant of “Let's Go Johnnies”, I was disappointed in their
behavior at this particular game. A SJS Senator and his friends began yelling at
the Tommies such phrases as: “You're a fag, #24!”, “You still suck dick!”, “I'm
going to stab you in the heart!”, and “I'm going to kill your family!” This is
appalling to me, as was it to the people sitting around me. There were at least
two known members of the GLBT community within earshot of this Senator who were disappointed with his comments, especially his homophobic remarks.

Note that the letter writer did not name any specific names


Response from the Senator I refered to in my piece:
Lisa, I think we both deserve the opportunity to clear the air about Saturday's game.
I read your letter to the editor and was surprised about some of the remarks. At no time do I recall that myself or any other Senator made any homophobic remarks. I agree that language is completely unacceptable. I understand of the negativity language such as that is uncalled for and should never be used. Those comments could have been made, but never were directed towards anyone in the GLBT community. In the heat of the moment things are said and possibly the homophobic remarks came from them, I would hope that would never happen again. Again, I want to apologize to you or anyone else that might have been offended by any of the
remarks at the game. Please let me know if there is anything else on your mind.
Luke Hellier

The kicker: he's the Community Relations Chair.

Wow.

Community Relations Chair? Really?

At one point Hellier states "At no time do I recall that myself or any other Senator made any homophobic remarks." Two sentences seperate his contradiction. "Those comments could have been made, but never were directed towards anyone in the GLBT community. In the heat of the moment things are said and possibly the homophobic remarks came from them, I would hope that would never happen again."

I have been to my share of Johnnie/Tommie games, as well as Gopher/Husky and Gopher/North Dakota games. Heat of the moment? I have not heard those phrases uttered at these games before.

This conduct is not befitting of any sentient being, much less a student leader on the MnSCU Board of Trustee's.
Which leads me to my run in with Mr Hellier. I worked a few parades this summer above and beyond my own, walking for Amy Klobuchar and Patty Wetterling.
I believe we were in Monticello for a parade, having a great time when I confronted a Mr Hellier as his group, including himself was walking through the Wetterling group on a parade route putting Bachmann stickers on Wetterling signs and the 8 foot banner.

Hellier, holding a video camera, filmed me "asking him" what he was doing and that what he was doing had crossed a line and that they needed to stop. It was an interesting confrontation to say the least.

Governor Pawlenty has a choice to make soon. He campaigned on higher education issues and working with the powerful student associations in choosing who represents them would be a great start. History is against the students though. Governor Pawlenty is the only Governor to ever appoint a student who did not recieve the support of the student associations. While the statute provides the Governor with that choice, Pawlenty has made these appointments political in nature, at times putting the concerns of college students on the back burner for political gain.

It could be happening again.

Minnesota Statutes are clear as to the higher education goals for the MnSCU system.
(1) to ensure quality - to provide a level of excellence that is competitive on a national and international level, through high quality teaching, scholarship, and learning in a broad range of arts and sciences, technical education, and professional fields;
(2) to foster student success - to enable and encourage students to choose
institutions and programs that are best suited for their talents and abilities, and to provide an educational climate that supports students in pursuing their goals and aspirations;
(3) to promote democratic values - to enhance Minnesota's quality of life by developing understanding and appreciation of a free and diverse society;
(4) to maintain access - to provide an opportunity for all Minnesotans, regardless of personal circumstances, to participate in higher education; and
(5) to enhance the economy - to assist the state in being competitive in the world market, and to prepare a highly skilled and adaptable workforce that meets Minnesota's opportunities and needs.

History of the three candidates indicates that Weigold and Kazee can remain consistent with those objectives as laid out in statute. Either would serve the system extremely well.

Hellier's history shows his desire for political gain and advancing a conservative agenda.
Unfortunately, it also shows that he was willing to sacrifice the good of students to achieve that agenda, which makes him a bad choice for the MnSCU Board of Trustees. Beyond the blatant political agenda, is the fact that Hellier has very limited experience on issues of student governance and the intricacies of a complicated system that provides high quality and affordable education in 46 communities across the State of Minnesota.

With national aspirations surrounding Governor Pawlenty, I wonder if he is viewing this appointment as yet another opportunity to show his handlers the conservative nature of his appointments, and his time as Governor.
He is following the trend of the issues behind the US Attorney scandal, Wolofwitz paying his girlfriend at the World Bank more than what the work was worth. Tenets of the neo-conservative ideology are putting their unqualified people in places of political importance, sacrificing democracy.
Hellier is just another example of the neo-conservative methods for organizing. He could be at the forefront for destroying public higher education in the State of Minnesota.
If this happens, look for a big fight in the legislature next Winter...

Wanted!

Have you seen this man?



He is wanted for impersonating a public college student.

More to follow...

Monday, June 18, 2007

Rampant sexual abuse at Abu Ghraib

Deadissue and Raw Story have the scoop!
“From the moment a soldier enlists, we inculcate loyalty, duty, honor,
integrity, and selfless service,” Taguba said. “And yet when we get to the
senior-officer level we forget those values. I know that my peers in the Army
will be mad at me for speaking out, but the fact is that we violated the laws of
land warfare in Abu Ghraib. We violated the tenets of the Geneva Convention. We
violated our own principles and we violated the core of our military values. The
stress of combat is not an excuse, and I believe, even today, that those
civilian and military leaders responsible should be held accountable.”

A powerful statement from a retired General. With more and more Generals coming out and exposing the right wing lies and rhetoric of this war, confidence in Neo-conservative Republican leadership is declining as well.

Hersch describes the conditions and the rampant abuse that took place at Abu Ghraib, the circumstances which were well known throughout the Whitehouse and military leadership circles.
"It's when they learned how serious it was. They were told in memos what the
photographs showed... They showed other, more sexual abuse than we knew, sodomy of women prisons by American soldiers, a father and his son forced to do acts together. There was more stuff [than] was made public. You didn't need a
photograph if you had a verbal description of it. "It's quite implicit," he added. "They knew very quickly this was bad."

Forcing a father and son to engage in a sexual act? Years after the scandal broke, American's are just getting this vision of what occurred as our nation "liberated" Iraq.

Forced sodomy by "liberators"? Wow.

Dehumanization is the tactic used by Drill Instructors to break soldiers down from being a civilian and build them back up as a soldier.

When we fought the Germans they were "Krauts".
The Japanese were "Japs" and "Slant eyes".
The Vietnamese were "Gook", "Cong", and "Yellow people".
The Iraqi's were "Towel heads", "Camel jockey's", and even more disgusting references.

Soldiers are trained to view those that we fight in these dehumanizing terms. We loudly and proudly sung cadences as we ran and marched that utilized many of these derogatory terms, we did it for years on end.

Most may have a very difficult time understanding how something like incidents at Abu Ghraib or My Lai occur. Why do we train our soldiers using such frightening methods.

It works. It's not human nature for one man to want to kill another man. A study I have read indicates that less than 20% of soldiers during World War II fired their weapon when ordered to be superiors. The study indicated that soldiers also fired deliberately high, low, left and right, deliberately missing targets.

The military then changed their marksmanship training. Instead of a paper target at a close range, to determine marksmanship, the military installed known distance ranges with pop-up targets, from 25 to over 300 meters. Soldiers were trained to shoot at targets that popped up in front of them.

Firing a weapon and killing became a conditioned response. Kind of like that duck hunt game. See the duck fly across the screen, shoot it!

In Vietnam, more than 75% of soldiers fired their weapons when ordered. In following conflicts, the rate is in the high 90's.

Using hatred of a dehumanized enemy, our forces respond to orders to kill at a remarkable rate.

The psychology of dehumanization extends beyond the killing. When we see people as inferior to ourselves, especially in a far away deployed place, bad things are bound to happen.

It's not an excuse. There is no excuse for the widespread abuse of prisoners of war and others detained by our forces. But knowing the psychology of killing and the psychology of dehumanization allows us to understand why these things happen.

It's also why greater comprehensive mental health services should be available to returning soldiers and Veterans alike. Post Vietnam, its estimated that more than 250,000 Vietnam Veterans have committed suicide.

Gulf War Veterans are committing suicide in very high numbers as well. Helping soldiers deal with what they witnessed and what they have experienced while deployed needs to be a top priority.

Cases like Abu Ghraib will be more common as more and more leaders come forward and discuss the atrocities of war...I will never excuse these actions, but can understand the psychological issues surrounding why these atrocities happen.

Schumacher on the Barkley candidacy

Larry Schumacher at the SC Times had a blog post up about a possible Barkley v. Bachmann race.

Larry seems as skeptical as I am about a successful Barkley race in 2008.

Barkley does defend his possible candidacy though.
"The Sixth District is tailor-made for independents," Barkley told me. "We got
close to 50 percent of the vote there in 1998."

Yeah, close to 50% against Norm Coleman and Buck Humphrey. Ventura rode a wave of voter dissatisfaction. Combined with a great marketing campaign and candidates that took an Independent challenge lightly, an upset occurred.

Sadly, I doubt lighting will strike twice for Independents in Minnesota.

It's doubtful Barkley will run as a Democrat. Bob Hill is in the race thus far and has a very positive and forward thinking message that could resonate with rural voters. Nancy Schumacher, 6th DFL Chair says more could be added to the endorsement run.
"We already have Bob Hill as a candidate and there's at least one more
person who's considering it," she said. "We'll have an endorsed DFLer in the
race."


Hmmm, at least one more person heh? I wonder if its a certain woman I know who has some deep Central Minnesota ties as well as connections deep within the party.

And I'm not talking Tarryl Clark either...

It's been an interesting month since we broke the story a month ago! I agree with Larry's assessment though, the current electorate is not moving in this direction and his race would hurt any serious challenge of Michele Bachmann.

The hidden racists of St Cloud

Dr Roy Saigo has recently retired at the President at SCSU. I cannot say enough about his time at SCSU, the University took a major step forward under his reign at SCSU.

The SC Times had an excellent editorial yesterday that highlighted some of Dr Saigo's accomplishments.

Unfortunately, the closet racists in the area have littered Story Chat with comments.

AAAL from St. Joe Comment
Posted: 6/17/2007 2:21:30 AM
Siago = endorsment of male queens


Discrimination never rests in St Cloud, 2:30 in the morning and the attacks begin.
count from countyline
Comment Posted: 6/17/2007 10:21:12 AM
I think the " homecoming queen
fiasco" was caused by a typo.
When typing --QUEEN---- on the ballots,
the person typing hit "R" ibstead of "N". ( that would explain it)


Going on three years now and some are still bitching about the Homecoming elections. For the record, Dr Saigo had nothing to do with students across the campus voting and electing a gay Hmong man Homecoming Queen.

Those still bitching about this...

1. Have way too much time on their hands.
2. Probably could not have voted for or against a candidate in that election as they were not students.
3. Give the St Cloud area a black eye for their persistent and covert racism. I say covert because no one knows who AAAL is, whereas you can pretty much figure out who in the hell Blueman is. I'm not covert at all...

Saigo defended students publicaly when the local nutjobs started calling in death threats to the Student Government offices and to the homes of some of those involved. I have not agreed with all of Dr Saigo's decisions and we have had some lengthy discussions about that. However, he is quite simply the most student oriented leader I have met and I have a great amount of respect for him. I have learned a lot from him and wish him the best of luck in his retirement. Perhaps he'll spend some time on a local lake catching a few Walleye...but I bet he heads out to Oregon to catch the big ones!

What people don't know is that people like Dan Severson and Bud Heidgerken called for Dr Saigo to resign after the 2004 Homecoming.

They told us in lobby meetings that they were going to have a hard to advocating money for SCSU in light of the 2004 Homecoming.

Seriously! Rep Severson came and testified at a few Student Government meetings...it was a zoo to say the least!

All this over Homecoming.

The SC Times got it right though. There is a lot to celebrate as Dr Saigo retires. He has left a legacy at SCSU.

A modern collegiate library, the Miller Center.

A state of the art small college multi-purpose stadium, domed in the winter for more activities.

A parking ramp going up, (disagreed adamantly about where it was going).

Future PhD programs on campus.

Greater counseling services in a central location.

I could go on and on...

Dr Saigo is a good man and both himself and his wife Barb will be missed by the community, despite what the racists post at Story Chat.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Minnesota National Guard shortchanged logistically

The SC Times has the story.
National Guard units in 31 states say that after four years of deployment
in Iraq and Afghanistan, they have 60 percent or less of their authorized
equipment, a USA Today review has found.

Eighteen of those 31 states, including Minnesota, report having half or
fewer of the vehicles, aircraft, radios, weapons and other items they are
authorized to have for home-front uses, the 50-state review found.


Less than half of their standard equipment. It's quite disturbing actually. Floods, tornadoes and other natural disasters often require the support of the National Guard to assist in the recovery operations.

It also has a negative impact on training when these soldiers are back during their recovery time. Reports out of the 3rd Infantry Division (Active Duty) at Fort Stewart indicate that many soldiers are unable to train on equipment they will actually use in Iraq, because of shortages and needed repairs to deployed equipment.

It stands to be an issue decades after the quagmire in Iraq ends. The cost of conducting a full re-fit of our entire military will ensure that the military industrial complex continues to profit heavily while the American taxpayer suffers.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

A must read

I'll comment more on it later this weekend. Great work once again by Army of Dude!

The Pony Express passes Walter Reed

Whether you are in the field, deployed, or at a Temporary Duty Station the biggest morale booster is always mail call. In basic training, mail call signaled the end of a long and stressful day, and was our only contact with the outside world. The same holds true for deployments and other military duties.

Getting mail from loved ones is always a morale boost.

The Strib has a story today that is disturbing on many levels.

Soldiers at Walter Reed were not receiving their mail.
The Army said Friday that it has opened an investigation into the recent discovery of 4,500 letters and parcels -- some dating to May 2006 -- at Walter Reed that were never delivered to soldiers.

And it fired the contract employee who ran the mailroom.

Recall that it was Donald Rumsfeld who had a fetish to privatize most activities at Walter Reed.

I would hope that the investigation includes whether or not outgoing mail was impacted as well.

Finding out that these problems were because of a privatized mail room are even more disturbing. My old Bradley Driver, Matt Maley, ended up in the mail room while we were in Germany, because of an injury and surgery. I remember the vetting process to get him in there as well as the intimidating stature of those in charge of the mail room.

Accountability was there.

In the Bush Whitehouse, accountability is a 20 point word in Scrabble. Hence, problems with US Attorney's, no-bid contracts, access to Veterans care when VA members are getting $30,000 bonuses...and on and on and on.

2006 marked the time when Americans were sick of political leaders marching carte blanche across the Bill of Rights and our Constitution. Scandals like Walter Reed and the US Attorney dealings may not have come to light without the 2006 Democrat victories and a resurgence of democracy.

2008 looks to be a continuance of the 2006 trends towards holding out elected leaders accountable.

I sure hope Congress doesn't mail subpoena's over to Walter Reed...

Friday, June 15, 2007

Around the District

A smattering of stories across the District!

Spin on the Transportation veto continues. Dille and Urdahl report in the Annandale Advocate.
"We've got to do something to fund transportation," Urdahl said of the
bonding bill that was vetoed by the governor and then nearly overturned in the
House."We're $1.7 billion behind where we need to be. We've got to find a way to
fund this," Urdahl said. Local units of government are the big losers. "We need
to find ways to get money to counties, cities and townships."

Both Urdahl and Dille voted for the transportation bill, which had strong
support in the House and Senate. Urdahl didn't vote to override Pawlenty's veto.
"It needed 90 votes and it only got 83."There's a better way to address the
problem than a meaningless override vote," Urdahl said.


The override vote was not a meaningless vote. Real leaders show courage in situations such as this. Some, even work across party lines to do what is best for their constituents.

Urdahl tried to explain his vote in a previous op ed piece in the Annandale paper as well.
My recent vote to support the transportation conference committee report was
cast to make a point to the governor.
Talk about a meaningless vote.

Property taxes will continue to increase due to failures of Republican House Caucus obstructionists, as noted in the West Central Tribune yesterday.

Senator Dille had his op ed piece supporting the Transportation Bill in the Annandale Advocate, Dassel Cokato Enterprise Dispatch, and the McLeod County Chronicle.

He lays out the argument to support the bill the Governor vetoed, and does a great job in doing do I might add.
Experts estimate we need an extra $1.8 billion per year for 10 years to catch up on our transportation needs. The bill provided 44 percent of this amount or $800 million per year on average for 10 years. Although less than what is needed, the bill was a step in the right direction. The so-called "lights on" transportation bill that later was passed and signed by the governor provided no new money.

The bill included a 5-cent gas tax increase which would help fund county, city and township roads and bridges. This helps prevent local property tax increases.

The bill increased transportation revenue in a way that would have made Minnesota potentially eligible for hundreds of millions of additional federal matching dollars (20 percent state dollars matches 80 percent federal dollars). Without the increase, this money goes to other states. Minnesota already ranks almost dead last (49th) in the amount of federal money it gets back for all purposes.

The bill was also actively supported by county and city leaders from my district, including Meeker, McLeod and Wright counties, and the cities of Glencoe, Hutchinson, Silver Lake, Watkins and others.

Go to the papers to see the full context of the op ed.

The Stewart mayor stepped down at the most recent City Council meeting.

A firearm incident near Dassel. Probably the reason I heard a helicopter when I came home last Friday night.

The Enterprise Dispatch had a great opinion piece by Bill Ward, Dassel Lakeside Home Administrator.

"What the heck just happened here?" Those in long term care made a great case to the Minnesota Legislature for a 7% increase. The legislature passed a 1.87% increase and mandated that the money go towards new costs.

Providers will continue to be shorted $35 a day, a 22% shortage.

So while property taxes will go up...again, roads are in a continued degraded condition in Greater Minnesota, the disparity between rural and urban school funding widens, and our seniors are being short changed, at least we fell out of the Top 10 in taxation!

We're going to feel the price of this "wonderful" accomplishment.


More VA issues

Problems at 3 Seattle area hospitals described as "an immediate threat to life".

It appears as though during routine inspections to the psychiatric wards, inspectors found items that could allow a patient to harm themselves or others.

Another story grabbing headlines at the Startribune informs us that the Army is increasing its mental health professionals by 25%.
"As the war has gone on, PTSD and other psychological effects of war have
increased,'' said Col. Elspeth Ritchie, psychiatry consultant to the Army
surgeon general.

"The number of (mental health workers) that was adequate for a
peacetime military is not adequate for a nation that's been at war,'' she said
in an interview.

I strong disagree with the notion that the the DOD and VA have had enough mental health counselors before this war. I have too many friends that have struggled to cope and gain access for the system to be adequately staffed.

One last story at Stars and Stripes provides us with greater insight on low disability compensation for our nations Veterans.
a 25-year-old veteran who returned from war 100 percent disabled from physical
wounds and was rated as unemployable by the VA began receiving $28,352 a year in disability compensation using 2005 rates. That amount was more than $11,000
short of the $39,447 needed annually to stay even with nondisabled peers, the
study found.

Although, it's tough for me to fathom the concept of "overcompensation" for a Veteran.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Norm Coleman...the hippie!

Check this photo out! Wow...I thought the photo of his grill, pre and post Dental work was bad...


Greater Minnesota Transportation woes continue

Several local media outlets are covering the spin post legislative session, with the majority of spin coming from Republicans justifying their failure to support strong transportation legislation.

Dean Urdahl is at the forefront of the spin, offering excuse after excuse in the Annandale Advocate.

I'll comment more later on the Urdahl flop and his Bachmann like attempts at changing his story with regards to the Transportation veto.

The West Central Tribune had a story today that really caught my eye and raised my dander a bit.

Recall that both the Transportation Bill and Tax Bill got vetoed. These bills would have provided much needed property tax relief and transportation funding in Greater Minnesota.

The Willmar paper paints a disturbing picture regarding the impact of these veto's in Greater Minnesota.
If Kandiyohi County is going to complete just the minimum maintenance on its
roads during the next five years, property taxes will need to increase 8 percent
each of those years.

Minimum maintenance! It gets better!
Never mind reconstructing roads that are too narrow, don’t have shoulders or can’t bear the weight of farm and commercial trucks. Most of those roads have been taken off the county’s five-year reconstruction plan. At best, they’ll get an overlay to buy time until more money is available.

Raise your hand if you have ever travelled down one of these narrow county or township roads.

It can literally be a precarious jaunt.

Needless to say, County Commissioners across Greater Minnesota are not pleased with their Republican legislators.

We also recall no need to account for inflation in the budget process as well...
Inflation and the high cost of asphalt is part of the reason for need to budget $2 million each year, Danielson said. The lack of new state transportation funding means that if county roads are going to be kept in shape, local taxpayers will have to pay more.

While I was disappointed at how the session ended, the reality of what obstructionists like Dean Urdahl have caused are starting to come to light. If it's bad in Kandiyohi County, it's going to be bad in Wright and Meeker Counties as well.

I wonder what people like Wally Strand and Amy Wilde think of the mess Urdahl helped create. I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall for those conversations!

2008 cannot come soon enough. Holding Dean Urdahl and others accountable is my top priority.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Pat Tillman story

Alternet writer Michael Shapiro has an excellent story about Pat Tillman and the lies and spin of the Bush Administrations support of our troops.



Even before his death, Tillman was considered a model of self - sacrifice,
integrity and decency, not just for his commitment to his country, but for his
intellect, forthrightness, and enthusiasm. Which makes what the U.S. military
told Tillman's family about Pat's death that much more appalling.

Tillman was the poster child for the Bushies. I remember hearing about Tillman leaving the NFL to become an Army Ranger and I instantly had a great deal of respect for him. Ranger School is no joke. Living the life of an Army Ranger is not easy either, it's a significant commitment and in reality, the polar opposite of the life of a professional athlete.

Many see military life as a high risk and low reward venture. If you purely look at it from a compensation perspective, that would be true. But the reward of serving one's nation in such a selfless and integrity filled way provides a reward no one can put a price on. Tillman gave up the low risk high reward lifestyle for something I loved for more than a decade.

He is a hero.

Heroes deserve more than lies and spin.

Pat's brother Kevin testified recently before Congress.



"This story inspired countless Americans, as intended," but "there was one
small problem with the narrative," Tillman told the Congressional Oversight
panel. "It was utter fiction."

"A terrible tragedy that might have further undermined support for the war
in Iraq," Kevin Tillman said, "was transformed into an inspirational message
that served instead to support the ... wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."

Brave actions of our fighting men and women became soundbites and PR spin for GOP leadership.

The same Congressional Committee heard testimony from Jessica Lynch as well.



At the April 24 Congressional Oversight hearing, Jessica Lynch, portrayed
in spring 2003 as the "little girl Rambo from the hills of West Virginia who
went down fighting," testified that the story the military told about her was a
blatant lie. Lynch never fired a shot when her caravan was ambushed. After being
severely wounded she was kept alive by Iraqi doctors and nurses.

Most shocking: according to sworn testimony during the Oversight
Committee's hearing, Lynch's "rescue" from the Iraqi hospital was delayed by a
day so that the Army could bring in camera crews. After stating Lynch was being
held by hostile forces, the military waited 24 hours to rescue her so they could
make a propaganda film.

Think about that for a moment.

The military delayed a rescue attempt for Jessica Lynch so that it could be staged and videotaped?

Insanity! Sheer insanity! Imagine staging photo ops on Hambuger Hill or in the Ia Drang Valley in Vietnam, at the Battle of Inchon in the Korean War, or the Battle of Normandy. Waiting 24 hours to rescue US wounded so that a group of political ideologues can obtain sufficient footage to perpetuate their war.

That's what's happening in Iraq today.



Peter Phillips, the director of Project Censored at Sonoma State University, says the Pentagon has spent $1 billion on public relations firms to create stories that protect or enhance the image of the military. PR firms "will lie for their clients; that's what they do," Phillips says. "The news coming out of Iraq is very much packaged by PR firms and embedded reporters."

How much did Matt Sanchez get?

$1 billion spent...and they are still losing in the PR dept.

As we all know now, Tillman's death was covered up by the military.


Tillman's father, Patrick Tillman believes senior Army officers told "outright lies" about his son's death. In 2005 he told the Washington Post: "All the people in positions of authority went out of their way to script this. They purposely interfered with the investigation, they covered it up. I think they thought they could control it, and they realized that their recruiting efforts were going to go to hell in a handbasket if the truth about his death got out," the elder Tillman said.


Lies and spin...that's how our GOP leadership treats our nations fighting men and women and their families.

Tillman's mother speaks out!

"Pat's death is just a microcosm of what's happening in this country: the lies, the spinning." Mary Tillman said. "This exemplifies the way the [Bush] Administration handles everything. They're incompetent yet no one is held accountable. The documents were falsified -- but who are these people? What are you going to do about it?"

Mary Tillman, a registered Republican, said "the personalities in office now are dangerous." She believes former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, a micromanager, had to know before Pat's memorial that her son was killed by friendly fire. Rumsfeld had written a short letter to her son and was well aware of Pat's celebrity. "He was probably the most high-profile individual in the military at the time," she said. "The fact that he would be killed by friendly fire and no one would tell Rumsfeld is ludicrous."


We still may be fighting World War II if the Bush Administration was in charge. We have no Patton's, Bradley's and MacArthur's and Eisenhower's! Bush simply fires any General who does not abide by the neo-con way of running a war.

Don't believe me? Ask General Shinseki!

And when you don't agree with the neo-con methods...they attack the family of the deceased soldier. While the Pentagon labels the Tillman's as "the family from hell", Lt. Col. Ralph Kauzlarich, who directed the first official inquiry into Tillman's death states
"These people have a hard time letting it go. It may be because of their religious beliefs." Noting that Kevin Tillman declined to have a chaplain say prayers over Pat's body, Kauzlarich said: "When you die, there is supposedly a better life, right? Well, if you are an atheist and you don't believe in anything, if you die, what is there to go to? Nothing. You are worm dirt."


Wow.

While Tillman was the "poster child", other families have been deceived as well.

Karen Meredith lost her only child, Lt. Ken Ballard, on May 30, 2004, just days after the military admitted that Tillman had died from friendly fire. Speaking at Ballard's memorial service, an officer said Ballard's heroics saved the lives of 60 men. Ballard was awarded the Bronze Star.

"The officer said how Ken fought and fought to cover for two platoons so they could get back to base," Meredith said. "Given his heroism I questioned why Ken was not given the Silver Star (a higher honor than the bronze star). He said the Silver Star was very rare. I didn't trust them but I was still grieving and thought I'd have time to think about that later. I vowed that Ken would get every award he deserved so I started asking for the incident report."

Fifteen months after her son died and after repeated inquiries by Meredith, Lt. Col. John O'Brien, the head of the Army casualty division, visited her at her home. O'Brien told her that Ballard was killed by an accidental discharge of the unmanned M-240 machine gun on his tank.


The lies around this war never stop. Despite the lies, deceit, and deliberate political spin, we can't put an end to this clusterfuck we call Iraq.

2008 can't come soon enough...and probably 5,000 soldiers too late.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

A pothole on every road

Pawlenty's promise as the VP candidate in 2008.

The SC Times has a story up about the degraded condition of our state's roadways.
the percentage of lower-volume roads in “poor” condition is at its highest level
on record

We didn't need that 5 cent gas tax increase Dean Urdahl. I'm sure glad you voted for it before you voted against it!

Why the outrage with a 5 cent increase and yet lessor outrage and no changes in driving habits when gas increases randomly, recently as high as 36 cents in one day?

Would you wait years to paint your house, allow it to become mold ridden before making an investment? Or just sell it and build a new one after 10 years?

Most responsible individuals would keep their home in good condition, make repairs before they become pricey, dangerous, and burdensome.

Too bad our transportation policy cannot embrace a similar standard.

Veterans more likely to commit suicide

Captain obvious has reared his ugly head again. A recently released study confirms what Veterans groups have been telling us for decades.

Veterans are more than twice as likely to commit suicide.
Of the veterans, about 29 percent served in the Vietnam War, 28 percent in World
War Two, 16 percent in the Korean War and the rest in other conflicts up through
the 1991 Gulf War.

That's 27% between Grenada, Panama, and the First Gulf War.

I've read estimates that more than 250,000 Vietnam Veterans have committed suicide, or nearly 5 times the names etched in stone at the Vietnam Memorial in Washington.

Using the numbers of this study with the number of Veterans from Vietnam that figure could be significantly higher. With 8.74 million Americans having served in Vietnam, 29% rounds to just over 2.4 million.

The study was not designed to look at the causes of the higher suicide rate, but veterans, particularly those who saw combat, are at higher risk for mental conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder as well as battle wounds that can cause disabilities.

Kaplan said because of improvements in medicine since earlier wars, some troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan have survived wounds that may have been fatal in previous conflicts, but have serious physical and mental disabilities that may put them at higher suicide risk.

"I don't see anything out there that really bodes well for a decline in the risk for suicide. I think that this will persist," Kaplan said.

Those who committed suicide were more likely to have been white, better educated and older than the other men, the researchers found. The most acute risk was among veterans with some sort of a health problem that made them unable to participate fully in home, work or leisure activities.

The researchers said unlike some previous studies on suicides among U.S. military veterans, theirs did not focus on Vietnam War-era veterans or veterans who get health care through the Department of Veterans Affairs system. They said three-quarters of veterans do not receive health care through VA facilities.


That last stat really caught my eye.

3/4 of Veterans do not receive health care through VA facilities! And they are still tremendously overburdened.

It's a very difficult statistic to comprehend.

Another view from Iraq

Alex at Army of Dude posted on anniversary of D-Day.

Alex describes living conditions that have regressed as his tour has evolved.
A good deal of those around me are in their second tour, which was from
2003-2004. They deployed eight months after the beginning of the war. I hear it
often: their living conditions improved as time went on. From tents they moved
into squad rooms, and finally two man shipping containers with AC. In 2007, we
have de-evolved. From containers in Mosul we moved into a bay that housed the
platoon in Baghdad. NCOs shared rooms with each other in a separate area. Now in
Baqubah, the whole platoon shares one tent.

It may seem to be a little thing to worry about, but you try and live for 15 months in a GP Medium!

The "Surge" evidently is creating problems elsewhere as well.
I didn’t recognize the two dead. Instead I recognized the body bag being
unfolded next to the corkscrewed Stryker that lay on its side. I recognized the
school ablaze next to it with dead and dying kids. I recognized that we were so
strained by the fight that we had no time to mourn the fallen. It came back to
routine. Everywhere we were beforehand, there was a rotation in place so you
could rest at some point. Two companies holding a city does not allow that. This
is how serious the situation is: Al Qaeda moved their headquarters to this city,
to this province. It’s their Alamo. In response, not even a whole battalion was
sent to put out the fire. Out of twelve dead in the deployment, ten have been
killed in Baqubah since March 14. We can never match the days in with the days
out. We just returned from eight days in the city, battling the heat, bugs and
insurgents. If we are lucky, we will finish out three days back in the rear, to
rest and recuperate. Soon, the shortsightedness of sending two companies here
will be corrected by the arrival of reinforcements.

Hundreds of thousands of troops, and we've got two infantry companies attempting to hold an entire city?

So, on the heels of yesterday's Daily Kos and deadissue story and the ensuing debate with Matt Sanchez, AoD provides us with another story consistent with other non-mainstream sources reporting from Iraq.

I end this post with what can best be described as the frustrations of an enlisted man who struggles with why we are still in Iraq, it's a sentiment that is more common than not, regardless of what the pundits tell us.

I’m just a lowly enlisted dude, so I don’t have the privilege of reading reports from generals and colonels saying how we’re sticking it to the enemy, or of how many schools we’ve built in the last year, or anything of the sort. But from what I can see, the only progress that is absolute it the progression of time, moving like a glacier to that day when we fulfill our obligation and make our way back home.

Nice work Alex! Stay safe...

Monday, June 11, 2007

News from a spouse in Iraq

Al at deadissue have found a gem again!

The author also has a page at Daily Kos.

The author's wife serves in Iraq as an officer and his perspective is one that scarcely makes the mainstream media. In my opinion, it's even more insightful as the author's wife is serving in Iraq and his reflections break down stereotypes of military spouses and their loved one's service to the nation.
I am frazzled, I am tired and I am disgusted. My wife has a personal blog and
posts from Iraq. She is often deleting my posts telling me I'm offending some
who may be reading. She also warns me I am referring to her boss...you know
who...the idiot Redneck who used to be our Governor when she and I met in Texas
during the Clinton era. The military was actually enjoyable back then.

His description is powerful. Unless you have served, you cannot fathom the day to day responsibilities of military family life. I was single my entire military career, but I know that my service did strike fear in some family members.

15 months away, carrying a weapon virtually everywhere you go. Worrying about yourself and a platoon of 32 soldiers and your family thousands of miles away.

It's a tremendous burden.
I live in fear every day. I look down the street hoping not to see any cars coming. The dreaded government vehicle pulling into the driveway is my greatest
fear. I become sick when I allow myself to imagine how I will react to that
terrible news so many of us have endured. That being said, I do have to plan for
my wife's death. What a terrible thing to write. I have to plan for her death
because that is the responsible thing to do as the at-home parent for our kids.
Arrangments have to be discussed. Burial plots, family, insurance, inheritance,
etc. The only thing harder in life for me to deal with as a military spouse is
the sight of those Government cars.

The tears and the crying and the goodbyes are very difficult, but sitting here
day after day waiting for any communication is enough to make me want to
take a long nap. A 15 month nap to be exact. That is how long my wife will
be gone. Watching my wife say goodbye to her kids with tears running down
her face and the kids crying is enough to make me want to completely lose it. I
cried watching her cry saying both "goodbye for now" and "please never forget
me" to our kids. She was saying she'll see them soon and saying goodbye forever in a fragile and motherly way. It is a terrible thing to load onto children. It is a difficult thing to do for a mom who will be at war for months on end. I haven't cried so hard, (in private) with full voice, and clenched fists, and red-faced with pain, and with tears running off my nose and chin in years. I am no longer a God-fearing agnostic, just in case. I have been praying a lot lately and my wife, who grew up in Catholic schools, taught the kids to pray nightly.

Imagine this situation occurring half a million times over...

It's sad, but the story depicted above never sees the light of day in the mainstream media. Thanks to the Daily Kos and great military bloggers like Al at deadissue, these stories see the light of day.

He posts a few emails from his wife, who unlike Matt Sanchez, is truly embedded in Iraq.
Victory is the camp that most of the politicians come and visit. It has palaces,
what used to be nice buildings and even a man-made lake. To me, it is a shame
what we have done to this city. I look around and I could see how everything was
destroyed. We drove through what used to be a zoo and now it is just a field
with over grown grass and trash.

Of course the politicians go to the nice camps! I'm sure glad Congressman Kennedy predicted we'd be able to vacation in Iraq, just like California, in 5 years!
My wife wants to run for office one day. She wants to become a US Senator and
maybe President. She is certainly qualified.

She can count on me for a contribution, that's for sure! I know a few Washington guys as well, we can hook something up!

The other email's are equally as powerful and moving, and despite it being reality for those that have served, if more people felt this pain perhaps our nation would not be on the verge of losing its military power.

Other than the death and destruction in Iraq, the destruction of our military by Bush is what bothers me the most. For 11 years, I provided blood, sweat and tears to a great organization, only to see Bush work to destroy 200 years of military history.

Our soldiers are coming back to a broken VA and healthcare system.

Our equipment is in such great disrepair that stateside units rarely get to train on equipment they will use in Iraq, because it's needed there!

Regardless of my rant, this stuff I came across today is amazing! Thank you for getting this story out there.

Rural voters no longer leaning Republican?

NPR has a story up along with some corresponding commentary at Daily Kos.
Forty-one percent named the war in Iraq among their two top issues for the
president and Congress. Half agreed with the statement that "the current course
[in Iraq] cannot bring stability, and we need to start reducing the number of
troops." Half also agreed with congressional attempts to reduce troop levels in
Iraq. Less than half, 45 percent, affirmed the Bush administration's "stay the
course" strategy; and 42 percent want their members of Congress to oppose
"measures that could undermine the president's policies in Iraq."

Those numbers look promising!

However issues surrounding family values still dominate discourse amongst rural voters.
But 56 percent said that personal character and a commitment to core family
values are more important in a presidential candidate than a commitment to
changing Iraq war policy.

Family values will always be a consistent theme in most rural communities. You simply cannot evade the issue in Greater Minnesota. We must frame the discussion on family values in a different light.

As long as the right gets to frame family values along the lines of choice and same sex marriage, we will lose rural communities. We must frame the family values discussion to include access to health care, care for our seniors, and the war in Iraq, which has taken over 3,500 servicemen and women.

Hillary Clinton needs to do better in rural areas!
They were evenly split between warm and cool feelings for all the candidates,
Democratic and Republican. Democrat Hillary Clinton rated as unpopular as
illegal immigrants.

This is what concerns me about her candidacy. The GOP machine will have 9 months from the caucuses and primaries until the election to derail Hillary, should she receive the nomination.

With more and more Republicans moving away from the President, it will be tough to be the front runner for nearly 2 years.

In addition to framing the debate, we need to really show rural America that these elections have consequences. The actions post election carry even more consequences. As progressive Democrats, we need to do a better job of helping people see these consequences.

Lack of access to affordable and quality health care.

Rural schools that are underfunded, collapsing and creating co-ops with other communities. When these schools combine, communities begin to lose their strong community identity.

Our kids are fighting and dying in a quagmire in Iraq.

Rural economies are suffering in Greater Minnesota and all over the US. With rural voters trending blue, perhaps the issues that concern the majority of working and middle class Americans will hit the spotlight.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Otto responds to the Governor: SC Times LTE

I was not going to blog today, but since Bluewoman is working at the course, I'll take a few minutes to post this.

I support accounting for inflation on both the revenue and expense sides of a budget forecast. Inflation is real and any fiscally responsible person, much less an elected official, should account for it while budgeting.

We all know Governor Pawlenty vetoed the tax bill because of clauses accounting for inflation in budget forecasts.

State Auditor, Rebecca Otto has now written an opinion that is circulating through papers across the state.
Minnesota has performed very well over the years because we lived by a
guiding principle regardless of which party was in control. That principle was
that we allowed fiscal experts to create a budget forecast that gave a
straightforward, honest picture of our state finances. This gave us as a
baseline snapshot of where we were headed if nothing changed.

Then the governor, the House and the Senate would each craft their own
budgets using that snapshot as the starting point. These budgets reflected their
particular priorities. For example, some areas might get inflationary increases,
while others were cut back or eliminated. The beauty of this system was that it
allowed the fiscal experts to give Minnesotans, lawmakers and the media an
honest assessment of our financial picture.


Exactly, leave it to the forecasting experts to provide our lawmakers with an honest financial picture. Unfortunately, we all know the GOPers like to "cook the books".

Otto responds to claims that this practice, which occurs in 48 other states, puts government on "auto-pilot".
The claim that this puts government on automatic pilot spending is false.
Because elected officials always retain the final say over spending priorities,
no budget is ever automatic. Informed budget decisions must be made every year,
and those decisions should always be based on accurate baseline forecasts.

I cannot comment on the LTE without some criticism though.
I feel it’s my responsibility to weigh in on the debate about whether to
include inflation in the state budget forecast, which the governor cited as the
cause of his veto of the tax bill.

Did this LTE come out before the end of the session? I think it would have been a more powerful statement had this been made while the decision makers were still making the decision, instead of the Monday Morning QB mentality. I agree with Rebecca Otto wholeheartedly.

I just wish this had gotten out earlier!

Friday, June 08, 2007

Paris Hilton and the GOP Presidential field

Paris Hilton is going back in the hole and FOX News is going ballistic right now. It's insane!

They have a split screen of the OJ like procession to the court and the underground entrance to the courthouse. A quick flip through the channels shows that no other network is covering this spectacle.

Fox is showing a guy with a sign and a t-shirt with an image of Paris performing a certain sexual act. Absolutely insane!

I wonder if they will try to embed Matt Sanchez?

No wonder Democrats don't wanna debate on Fox, these people are absolutely insane!