As a person of very mixed faith I read the following article with sort of a sick feeling in my stomach. Apparently, Rumsfeld (remember him?) used to send daily updates to President Bush that were plastered with quotes from the bible:
One showed US troops trudging through the desert under a passage from Isaiah: “Their arrows are sharp, all their bows are strung; their horses’ hoofs seem like flint, their chariot wheels are like a whirlwind.”
Another showed Saddam delivering a speech to camera with these words from the First Epistle of Peter: “It is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men.”
Draper noted that unlike Bush, Rumsfeld did not wear his faith on his sleeve. And he said the use of the biblical passages was the brainchild of a director for intelligence working under the Pentagon chief.
“Still, the sheer cunning of pairing unsentimental intelligence with religious righteousness bore the signature of one man: Donald Rumsfeld,” Draper’s report said.
“At least one Muslim analyst in the (Pentagon) building had been greatly offended,” it said.
“Others privately worried that if these covers were leaked during a war conducted in an Islamic nation, the fallout — as one Pentagon staffer would later say — ‘would be as bad as Abu Ghraib’.”
Now, really–I don’t think that Rumsfeld technically did anything wrong, at least not compared to the other shit he did (advocating torture, starting wars with little rhyme or reason, etc). But on a purely emotional level, I find this news to be reprehensible. It demonstrates to me on the most base level that the wars the U.S. are in right now were not based on what is best for U.S. citizens–but rather instead were based on and justified on the religious beliefs of a few powerful white men that remain completely disconnected from the people they claim to represent.
Does that sound like anybody else to you?
It does to me.
You can see the images of the folders here at GQ
6:30 pm By la Macha · Uncategorized · 1 Comment
14 May 2009Call me cynical and evil, but I don’t believe Ms. Pelosi–me thinks she does stumble over her way too many protests too much.
Pelosi called for the CIA to release detailed notes from her own September 2002 briefing about interrogation techniques.She said today that, at that 2002 briefing, she was told the CIA was not waterboarding detainees despite later government reports showing that a high value al Qaeda detainee had been subjected to waterboarding 83 times in the weeks leading up to Pelosi’s briefing.
“At every step of the way, the administration was misleading the Congress. And that is the issue,” Pelosi said in a heated news conference, linking the alleged misinformation on waterboarding to now discredited intelligence reports in fall 2002 about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
I think she knew all about the “enhanced” interrogations (AKA TORTURE), as did everybody else, INCLUDING President Obama. How could you not? Were these people just miraculously unaware of all the reports being put out by the ACLU, the lawyers of people being detained, the doctors, the interrogaters, the media that was oh so reluctantly reporting on this shit (CBS was not the first time accusations of prisoner abuse surfaced, it was just the first time pictures were made available!)…I don’t believe any of them. The good thing is that Obama seems to be willing to hold people in the higher up positions accountable–which is making all those involved stumble and growl and send daughters to the media in panic.
We’ll see how this all shakes down as the year progresses…but I’m not holding my breath for a Pelosi exoneration.
1:57 pm By Maegan La Mala · El Salvador| Iraq War · Comments Off
24 Dec 2008
In exactly a week, the last Latin American country with troops in Iraq will withdraw.
According to remarks made yesterday by Salvadoran President Tony Saca, troops will withdraw from the country on December 31st. “Considering the lack of a United Nations resolution, the government of El Salvador decided to end our presence in Iraq,” Saca said.
Other Latin American nations that used to have troops in Iraq were Honduras, Nicaragua, and the Dominican Republic.
The Salvadorian contingent is made up of 200 soldiers. In the five years since the Salvadorian troops have been stationed, five soldiers have been killed.
Via / The Latin Americanist
1:37 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration| Iraq War| Politics · Comments Off
2 Dec 2008
As President Bush prepares to leave office, he’s reflecting on what went wrong and according to him immigration and the war in Iraq went wrong. Well kind of sort of.
Bush said that one of his biggest disappointments was the failure to pass a comprehensive bill on immigration reform.
“I firmly believe that the immigration debate really didn’t show the true nature of America as a welcoming society,” he said. “I fully understand we need to enforce law and enforce borders. But the debate took on a tone that undermined the true greatness of America, which is that we welcome people who want to work hard and support their families.”
2:31 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Iraq War · Comments Off
22 Aug 2008
I often find that major Latin@ organizations like National Council of La Raza have very little relevance in my life, but for once, this time, they got it right.
In explaining his group’s war opposition, Trasvina said that Latinos “are overrepresented in the military; many are immigrants who are fighting for our country before it becomes their country.”
via/McClatchy
12:30 pm By Maegan La Mala · Dominicans| Iraq War · 1 Comment
12 Aug 2008
Every day innocent Iraqi civilians are killed because of the ongoing, U.S. led war there. We don’t hear about those deaths. Instead what we do hear about are the deaths of soldiers, and one of the latest deaths is that of a N.Y Latino.
Sgt. Jose E. Ulloa, 23, died Saturday when his vehicle hit an improvised explosive in Sadr City, the Pentagon said.
Via / Fox News NY, Remolacha
4:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Dominicans| Iraq War| New York City · Comments Off
4 Aug 2008
I can hear the church bells from Our Lady of Sorrows church from my apartment. It is just a block from where I live, in a predominantly immigrant neighborhood of Queens, NYC where Mexican storefronts and Dominican storefronts compete with each other. In this neighborhood and across the United States, the ongoing Iraq war and ending it is a top issue for Latinos because it is our sons, daughters, sisters, brothers and neighbors being sent to the front lines and returning, not as they left, but in boxes.
On Thursday, he came back. The police cars with flashing lights guided Sgt. Alex R. Jimenez’s coffin past the laundry, the travel agency and the minimart to 104-35 37th Drive in Corona. The procession paused in front of the bouquet of yellow and white flowers.
“You’re home, you’re home,” his friends and relatives cried as they surrounded the car holding his coffin, holding each other up for support.
It had been more than a year since Sergeant Jimenez, 25, was reported missing after an ambush on his two-Humvee convoy in an area south of Baghdad known as the triangle of death. He was one of three members of the same Army unit — Company D, Fourth Battalion, 31st Infantry, Second Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, based at Fort Drum in upstate New York — captured in the attack. Four Americans in the same unit and one Iraqi interpreter were killed.
9:59 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Iraq War| Labor| San Francisco · Comments Off
1 May 2008
May Day has it’s roots in the labor movement so it is fitting that labor activists on the West Coast are flexing their muscle today to make a statement about the Iraq War.
On May 1, all 29 ports on the U.S. West Coast are to be shut down by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) in protest against the U.S. war on Afghanistan and Iraq. The Bay Area ILWU local was the first American union to condemn the war. In April 2003, as invading U.S. troops reached Baghdad, six longshoremen were injured and a union official was arrested as police fired on hundreds of antiwar protesters in the port of Oakland.
The Pacific Maritime Association (PMA) notified the union on April 3 that it “doesn’t consent to a stop-work meeting or any other effort to disrupt port operations.” Subsequently the PMA threatened union leaders with court action under Taft-Hartley if they don’t call it all off.
Supporters of the ILWU will meet in San Francisco at Mason and Beach (in Fishersmans’ Wharf) at 10:30 am on May Day. There will then be a march to a 12 noon rally in Justin Herman Plaza.
Via / IMC
7:17 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Iraq War| Puerto Rico · 2 Comments
1 Apr 2008Those are the words of a grieving Puerto Rican mother at her son’s funeral, as she pulls the U.S. flag off her son’s coffin, and replaces it with a Puerto Rican flag. Part of this report includes looking at how the U.S. military targets young island Puerto Ricans for recruitment, despite the fact that they cannot vote for a president who can end this war. Are young people of color the canon fodder for this war?
Shout out to Tato Torres for forwarding this video.
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