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    <title>Posts in the category Peace &amp; Social Justice</title>
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            <title>Lessons from a Quagmire</title>
            <description> Vietnam was my war, my senior trip.&amp;nbsp; 58,000 dead, 304,000 wounded, most by small arms fire, up close, personal and such an adrenalin rush that many Vietnam veterans are hooked to this day.&amp;nbsp; Our fuses are short and our mood swings are legend, it takes a lot of VA prescription drugs&amp;nbsp;to manage the madness.&amp;nbsp; No one tells a story like Bill Moyers, it&amp;nbsp;is&amp;nbsp;in his Baptist minister DNA, in&amp;nbsp;the days of Jesus they called him teacher/master/rabbi,&amp;nbsp;enjoy this lesson in history.&amp;nbsp; BTW,&amp;nbsp;LBJ was not as dumb as he looked or sounded.&amp;nbsp; The real villains in this story are the Petraeus/Tommy Franks/McChrystal&#039;s of yesteryear. MC   Watch and Listen   November 20, 2009 BILL MOYERS: Welcome to the Journal.   Our country wonders this weekend what is on President Obama&#039;s mind. He is apparently, about to bring months of deliberation to a close and answer General Stanley McChrystal&#039;s request for more troops in Afghanistan. When he finally announces how many, why, and at what cost, he will most likely have defined his presidency, for the consequences will be far-reaching and unpredictable. As I read and listen and wait with all of you for answers, I have been thinking about the mind of another president, Lyndon B. Johnson.   I was 30 years old, a White House Assistant, working on politics and domestic policy. I watched and listened as LBJ made his fateful decisions about Vietnam. He had been thrust into office by the murder of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963-- 46 years ago this weekend. And within hours of taking the oath of office was told that the situation in South Vietnam was far worse than he knew.   Less than four weeks before Kennedy&#039;s death, the South Vietnamese president had himself been assassinated in a coup by his generals, a coup the Kennedy Administration had encouraged.   South Vietnam was in chaos, and even as President Johnson tried to calm our own grieving country, in those first weeks in office, he received one briefing after another about the deteriorating situation in Southeast Asia.   Lyndon Johnson secretly recorded many of the phone calls and conversations he had in the White House. In this broadcast, you&#039;re going to hear excerpts that reveal how he wrestled over what to do in Vietnam. There are hours of tapes and the audio quality is not the best, but I&#039;ve chosen a few to give you an insight into the mind of one president facing the choice of whether or not to send more and more American soldiers to fight in a far-away and strange place.   Granted, Barack Obama is not Lyndon Johnson, Afghanistan is not Vietnam and this is now, not then. But listen and you will hear echoes and refrains that resonate today..............................................................  BILL MOYERS:  &amp;quot;Now in a different world, at a different time, and with a different president, we face the prospect of enlarging a different war. But once again we&#039;re fighting in remote provinces against an enemy who can bleed us slowly and wait us out, because he will still be there when we are gone.   Once again, we are caught between warring factions in a country where other foreign powers fail before us. Once again, every setback brings a call for more troops, although no one can say how long they will be there or what it means to win. Once again, the government we are trying to help is hopelessly corrupt and incompetent.   And once again, a President pushing for critical change at home is being pressured to stop dithering, be tough, show he&#039;s got the guts, by sending young people seven thousand miles from home to fight and die, while their own country is coming apart.   And once again, the loudest case for enlarging the war is being made by those who will not have to fight it, who will be safely in their beds while the war grinds on. And once again, a small circle of advisers debates the course of action, but one man will make the decision.   We will never know what would have happened if Lyndon Johnson had said no to more war. We know what happened because he said yes.&amp;quot; </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZhj</link>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 21 Nov 2009 02:25:22 EST</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Mike Collins</db:author_name>
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            <title>A battlefield in the courtroom</title>
            <description>I noticed some of the right wing pundits are shouting that a civil trial is &quot;too good&quot; for Khalid Sheik Mohammed.  I am mindful that five of the first ten amendments relate to civil rights pertaining to the accused.  We deny those rights to anyone at our own peril.  The fifth amendment mentions &quot;except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; &quot;  After the &quot;Patriot Act&quot; I am not sure what we are left with.  Timothy McVeigh was convicted by a civil trial.  I affirm that a civil trial is our best chance of stating OUR case against terrorism and OUR belief in the rule of law.  However, we have violated international law on so many levels for such a long time that our supposed belief in the Constitution and the rule of law is but a joke to the international community.  Conservative estimates show that up to 88,585 Iraqi civilians have been killed since 2003, compared to 2,976 victims and the 19 hijackers died in the attacks.  2,700,000 Japans civilians and military killed for the deaths of 2,040 American civilian and military deaths at Pearl Harbor.  Nothing like a &quot;sneak&quot; attack to bring the devil out in us, kill them all, let God sort them out..  Regardless of who killed whom, we were responsible for Iraq security as soon as we set foot in Baghdad and yes they had nothing to do with 9/11, nor did they possess anything that would create a &quot;mushroom cloud.&quot; unless you count napalm.  Something Powell said seems to fallen on deaf ears, &quot;We break it we own it&quot;    MC   
 
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            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZhM</link>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2009 18:23:15 EST</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Mike Collins</db:author_name>
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            <title>Toddler teacher convicted for DUI on 0.00 breathalyzer and negative drug test - Adams County Justice</title>
            <description>This letter is in regards to a grave injustice done by Adams County Colorado prosecutors, Adams County Sheriffs officers, a lab department manager of the Colorado Department of Health and Environment, who falsely presented drug test results that were negative as positive, to convict a 53 year old toddler teacher, pizza delivery driver of driving under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs with a breathalyzer reading of 0.00.  Diane Branthoover, the victim of this false arrest, trial and conviction has never been arrested prior to this incident. This is all documented testimony sworn under oath 
Mrs. Branthoover was a victim of snow covered roads, hypertension blood pressure of 202/108, and a county sheriff angry and determined to make an arrest, regardless of the cost.  This is fully documented by drug test results that per federal laboratory mandates were to be reported as negative, perjured testimony under oath of arresting officer and State witness, more. Diane was also the victim of legal counsel that she hired that failed to present any defense what-so-ever during trial.  
The test results of Diane were never presented in court, just lab tech manager Cynthia Silva-BurBach testifying that she failed.  When Diane received the actual lab results, researched the lab requirements to urine testing, she found that per federal law, they were to be reported as negative.  The same test results could be presented to Department of Transportation for a commercial driver&amp;#8217;s license. 
The same lab tech testified that the negative test results caused &amp;#8220;uncontrollable eye and leg tremors&amp;#8221; in Diane, as well as other unbelievable allegations.  During the same trial, Adams County Sheriff Jason Gallegos testified that Diane crashed into concrete median and stop sign Highway 224 and York.  There is not a stop sign or concrete median at that corner, it&amp;#8217;s a traffic signaled intersection, as well as other perjured testimony as to Diane&amp;#8217;s conduct.  The same officer changed his testimony from an earlier hearing on the same incident.  Her paid attorney Joe Lusk based his only defense on a label on the urine sample after Diane had given him everything he needed to get the case dismissed.  He left her after trial crying uncontrollably, wondering what had happened.  The same test results could be found by taking Advil, Nuprin, Motrin, Excedrin IB etc. 
Diane lost her job and reputation as a toddler teacher and delivery driver, lost the respect of her peers, her license, her vehicle, more.  They charged her at the same time with careless driving or which she was also convicted causing 16 points on her driving record, and was refused a &amp;#8220;red license&amp;#8221; because she refused to admit alcohol use.  Her husband lost his business because of this, and they have assumed a debt of over $11,000 &amp;#8211; not including the home mortgage debt of over $220k. 
This is on appeal now before Adams County District court filed &amp;#8220;pro se&amp;#8221;, again all of this is documented and before the court awaiting decision.  In the State&amp;#8217;s response, they do not dispute the allegations describe here, except to say that the witnesses are beyond reproach.  Because this is filed pro se, without attorney, she believes it will be brushed under the rug.  Diane can provide all transcripts, drugs tests, pictures, etc., by contacting her or her husband at dyanfb@gmail.com  or timthemechanic@gmail.com ; or by phone at 720 275-6985 or 720 338-7848.  
Sincerely, 
Tim and Diane Branthoover</description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/timothybranthoover/CZhC</link>
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            <pubDate>Sun, 15 Nov 2009 16:52:38 EST</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>User from Denver, CO</dc:creator>
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            <title>Got Defense?</title>
            <description>I will say it again, we are so bad at national defense that we had our pants down around our ankles for 52 minutes from the first strike on the WTC to the third strike on the Pentagon.&amp;nbsp; At a speed of 17,000 MPH an ICBM can travel the distance of 4,800 miles from Russia to the USA in about 17 minutes (Barely enough time to kiss&amp;nbsp;your ass&amp;nbsp;goodbye).&amp;nbsp; At 1500 MPH an F-16 can travel the distance fromWashington DC (204 miles) to New York City in 8 minutes, the time air traffic controllers suspected Flight 11 was hijacked and notification of NORAD, 20 minutes later.&amp;nbsp; Flight 11 hit the WTC 6 minutes later.&amp;nbsp; 17 minutes later Flight 175 hits the second tower of the WTC.&amp;nbsp; 35 minutes later Flight 77 crashes into the Pentagon proving that it takes a general over an hour and 15 minutes to get his pants back on.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;So why are we spending $1,688 every year&amp;nbsp;on defense&amp;nbsp;for every man, woman and child (all 305 million of us)?&amp;nbsp; So we can fight  them  over there?&amp;nbsp; So we can exploit the resources of third world countries?&amp;nbsp; Is an M-1 Abrams tank a defensive weapon?&amp;nbsp; A B-1 bomber?&amp;nbsp; An Apache attack helicopter?&amp;nbsp; An A-10 Wart Hog?&amp;nbsp; A Stealth fighter?&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;MCNY TimesNovember 15, 2009Op-Ed ColumnistThe Missing Link From Killeen to Kabul By  FRANK RICH  THE dead at Fort Hood had not even been laid to rest when their massacre became yet another political battle cry for the self-proclaimed patriots of the American right.  Their verdict was unambiguous: Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, an American-born psychiatrist of Palestinian parentage who  sent e-mail  to a radical imam, was a terrorist. And he did not act alone. His co-conspirators included our military brass, the Defense Department, the F.B.I., the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the Joint Terrorism Task Force and, of course, the liberal media and the Obama administration. All these institutions had failed to heed the warning signs raised by Hasan&amp;rsquo;s behavior and activities because they are blinded by political correctness toward Muslims, too eager to portray criminals as sympathetic victims of social injustice, and too cowardly to call out evil when it  strikes 42 innocents in cold blood .     </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZhB</link>
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            <pubDate>Sun, 15 Nov 2009 11:41:32 EST</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Mike Collins</db:author_name>
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            <title>Vincent Carroll: No Anti-Muslim backlash</title>
            <description> Today on DenverPost.com, Vincent Carroll  wrote : &amp;quot;Shouldn&#039;t this country&#039;s experience after 9/11 reassure those who fear a backlash against Muslims?... The most recent data, from 2007...: Of 1,477 offenses motivated by religious bias, only 9 percent were directed at Muslims.&amp;quot;  Peter Boyles was echoing the &amp;quot;there has been no Anti-Muslim backlash&amp;quot; mantra.&amp;nbsp; They&amp;nbsp;seems to be ignoring the rest of the FBI Religious  Hate Crimes data :    Year  -  % of Religious Hate Crimes that were Anti-Islamic     1995 - 2.3%    1996 - 1.9% &amp;nbsp;(page 11)   1997 - 2.0% &amp;nbsp;(page 10)   1998 - 1.5% &amp;nbsp;(page 10)   1999 - 2.3% &amp;nbsp;(page 9)   2000 - 1.9% &amp;nbsp;(page 11)    2001 - 26%   &amp;nbsp; &amp;lt;-- I&#039;d call this a &amp;quot;backlash&amp;quot;    2002 - 10.8% &amp;nbsp;(page 13)   2003 - 11% &amp;nbsp;(page&amp;nbsp;9)   2004 -&amp;nbsp;13%    2005 - 11.1%    2006 - 12%    2007 - 9.0% &amp;nbsp;(last year available)  Muslims in America were  0.5%  of total U.S. population in 2001 (Jewish was  1.4% ).&amp;nbsp; In 2007, Muslims made up  0.6%  of total U.S. population (Jewish was  1.7% ).  &amp;nbsp; </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/nowmds/CZRs</link>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 11 Nov 2009 14:47:03 EST</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>NoWMDs</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>NoWMDs</db:author_name>
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            <title>War Music for Veteran&#039;s Day</title>
            <description> A bit of war music for Veteran&#039;s Day, the dead cry, &#039;Remember me&#039;&amp;nbsp; the mothers cry, &#039;I can&#039;t&amp;nbsp;forget&#039;&amp;nbsp; the nation cries, &#039;I know not war or sacrifice&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;we will forget&#039;&amp;nbsp; MC    Music from &amp;quot;Mansions of the Lord &amp;quot;  The song was sung by the&amp;nbsp; West Point Glee Club &amp;nbsp;at the end of the movie &amp;quot;We Were Soldiers&amp;quot;   &amp;quot;The Mansions of the Lord&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp;  To fallen soldiers let us sing&amp;nbsp; where no rockets fly nor bullets wing&amp;nbsp; Our broken brothers let us bring&amp;nbsp; to the mansions of the Lord&amp;nbsp;  No more bleeding no more fight&amp;nbsp; No prayers pleading through the night&amp;nbsp; just divine embrace, eternal light&amp;nbsp; in the mansions of the Lord&amp;nbsp;  Where no mothers cry and no children weep&amp;nbsp; We will stand and guard tho the angels sleep&amp;nbsp; All through the ages safely keep the mansions of the Lord&amp;nbsp;   Words by Randall Wallace </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZRP</link>
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            <pubDate>Tue, 10 Nov 2009 12:34:25 EST</pubDate>
            <guid>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZRP</guid>
            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Mike Collins</db:author_name>
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            <title>We Suck at Nation Building</title>
            <description>&amp;quot;If the only tool you have is a hammer, it is tempting to treat every problem as a nail&amp;quot;Don&#039;t think we suck at nation building?&amp;quot;The record of past U.S. experience in democratic nation building is daunting. The low rate of success is a sobering reminder that these are among the most difficult foreign policy ventures for the United States. Of the sixteen such efforts during the past century, democracy was sustained in only four cases ten years after the departure of U.S. forces. Two of these followed the total defeat and surrender of Japan and Germany after World War II, and two were tiny Grenada and Panama.&amp;quot;  Source NY TimesOctober 29, 2009Op-Ed ColumnistMore Schools, Not Troops By  NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF  Dispatching more troops to Afghanistan would be a monumental bet and probably a bad one, most likely a waste of lives and resources that might simply empower the Taliban. In particular, one of the most compelling arguments against more troops rests on this stunning trade-off: For the cost of a single additional soldier stationed in Afghanistan for one year, we could build roughly 20 schools there.  It&amp;rsquo;s hard to do the calculation precisely, but for the cost of 40,000 troops over a few years &amp;mdash; well, we could just about turn every Afghan into a Ph.D.  The hawks respond: It&amp;rsquo;s na&amp;iuml;ve to think that you can sprinkle a bit of education on a war-torn society. It&amp;rsquo;s impossible to build schools now because the Taliban will blow them up.   In fact, it&amp;rsquo;s still quite possible to operate schools in Afghanistan &amp;mdash; particularly when there&amp;rsquo;s a strong &amp;ldquo;buy-in&amp;rdquo; from the local community.  Greg Mortenson, author of &amp;ldquo;Three Cups of Tea,&amp;rdquo;  has now built  39 schools in Afghanistan and 92 in Pakistan &amp;mdash; and not one has been burned down or closed. The aid organization  CARE  has 295 schools educating 50,000 girls in Afghanistan, and not a single one has been closed or burned by the Taliban. The  Afghan Institute of Learning , another aid group, has 32 schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan, with none closed by the Taliban (although local communities have temporarily suspended three for security reasons).   In short, there is still vast scope for greater investment in education, health and agriculture in Afghanistan. These are extraordinarily cheap and have a better record at stabilizing societies than military solutions, which, in fact, have a pretty dismal record.  In Afghanistan, for example, we have already increased our troop presence by 40,000 troops since the beginning of last year, yet the result has not been the promised stability but only more casualties and a strengthened insurgency. If the last surge of 40,000 troops didn&amp;rsquo;t help, why will the next one be so different?   Matthew P. Hoh, an American military veteran who was the top civilian officer in Zabul Province,  resigned over Afghan policy , as The Washington Post reported this week.  Mr. Hoh argues  that our military presence is feeding the insurgency, not quelling it.  Already our troops have created a backlash with Kabul University students this week burning President Obama in effigy until police dispersed them with gunshots. The heavier our military footprint, the more resentment &amp;mdash; and perhaps the more legitimacy for the Taliban.  Schools are not a quick fix or silver bullet any more than troops are. But we have abundant evidence that they can, over time, transform countries, and in the area near Afghanistan there&amp;rsquo;s a nice natural experiment in the comparative power of educational versus military tools.  Since 9/11, the United States has spent  $15 billion in Pakistan , mostly on military support, and today Pakistan is more unstable than ever. In contrast, Bangladesh, which until 1971 was a part of Pakistan, has focused on education in a way that Pakistan never did. Bangladesh now has more girls in high school than boys. (In contrast,  only 3 percent  of Pakistani women in the tribal areas are literate.)  Those educated Bangladeshi women joined the labor force, laying the foundation for a garment industry and working in civil society groups like  BRAC  and  Grameen Bank . That led to a virtuous spiral of development, jobs, lower birth rates, education and stability. That&amp;rsquo;s one reason Al Qaeda is holed up in Pakistan, not in Bangladesh, and it&amp;rsquo;s a reminder that education can transform societies.  When I travel in Pakistan, I see evidence that one group &amp;mdash; Islamic extremists &amp;mdash; believes in the transformative power of education. They pay for madrassas that provide free schooling and often free meals for students. They then offer scholarships for the best pupils to study abroad in Wahhabi madrassas before returning to become leaders of their communities. What I don&amp;rsquo;t see on my trips is similar numbers of American-backed schools. It breaks my heart that we don&amp;rsquo;t invest in schools as much as medieval, misogynist extremists.  For roughly the same cost as stationing 40,000 troops in Afghanistan for one year, we could educate the great majority of the 75 million children worldwide who, according to Unicef, are not getting even a primary education. We won&amp;rsquo;t turn them into graduate students, but we can help them achieve literacy. Such a vast global education campaign would reduce poverty, cut birth rates, improve America&amp;rsquo;s image in the world, promote stability and chip away at extremism.   Education isn&amp;rsquo;t a panacea, and no policy in Afghanistan is a sure bet. But all in all, the evidence suggests that education can help foster a virtuous cycle that promotes stability and moderation. So instead of sending 40,000 troops more to Afghanistan, how about opening 40,000 schools?   NY Times  </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZRl</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 29 Oct 2009 19:49:35 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Tow First, Ask Questions Later</title>
            <description>    If  Initiative 300 in Denver  passes, and you forget your wallet and get pulled over, police officers will be forced to impound your car leaving you stranded.  Which is why we&#039;re asking for your help. We need you to vote&amp;nbsp; No  on Initiative 300 if you live in Denver County.  It&#039;s deceptive. It&#039;s scary. It&#039;s expensive. And it&#039;s unnecessary.  Police officers already have the ability to impound vehicles if they are concerned about public safety. The  Denver Post , Mayor Hickenlooper, ten members of the Denver City Council, House Speaker Terrence Carroll, and  a long list of Denver community organizations and individuals oppose Initiative 300 . And the proponents of this nightmare are counting on low turnout in an off-year election to sneak this one past us. What can you do?   Send an e-mail to 5 friends  in Denver and ask them to vote no.  Talk to your friends, neighbors, and co-workers in person about how important it is for them to return their ballots, and ask them to vote no on Initiative 300.   Sign up to volunteer .   As for voting, the 2009 Election will be Mail-In Ballot only. Voting couldn&#039;t be easier-- it just takes 2 stamps to return, or you can drop it off to the Denver Election Commission in person. So please  Vote NO on Initiative 300  and help spread the word.  If you live in Denver, you should have received your ballot in the mail. To check on your voter registration and on the status of your ballot, click here to look it up at the Secretary of State:   http://www.sos.state.co.us/Voter   If you believe you are registered to vote and you have not received your ballot,  call 311 today . </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelditto/CZnR</link>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 24 Oct 2009 15:34:37 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Michael Ditto</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Michael Ditto</db:author_name>
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            <title>Rich: Two Wrongs Make Another Fiasco</title>
            <description>Lets see, McChrystal wants 40,000 troops and his boss, Petraeus, is keeping his mouth shut. What&#039;s up with that?  MC   &amp;quot;&amp;mdash; Gen. Stanley McChrystal&amp;rsquo;s reported recommendation of 40,000 additional troops &amp;mdash; is itself counterinsurgency light. In his definitive recent field manual on the subject, Gen. David Petraeus stipulates that real counterinsurgency requires 20 to 25 troops for each thousand residents. That comes out, conservatively, to 640,000 troops for Afghanistan (population, 32 million). Some 535,000 American troops couldn&amp;rsquo;t achieve a successful counterinsurgency in South Vietnam, which had half Afghanistan&amp;rsquo;s population and just over a quarter of its land area.&amp;quot;  &amp;nbsp; </description>
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            <pubDate>Sun, 11 Oct 2009 22:27:51 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Pay Me Now or Pay Me Later</title>
            <description> Could $292,000 pay for a college or trade school education, room and board? &amp;nbsp;Subsidize a young person until they could land a good job? &amp;nbsp;With the change left over, could it pay to make high school more hospitable to the poor? For public works projects? For more teachers? Research and development? &amp;nbsp;We ignore the needs of young people at a terrible cost. And yes, it does take a village. &amp;nbsp;What are the economic effects of 1.2 million high school dropouts per year? &amp;nbsp;At $7,300 per student, that amounts to $8.76 billion a year, year two adds another 1.2 million students and becomes $17.52 billion, ad infinitum. Can we solve the problem? &amp;nbsp;Can we afford not to? What can you buy with $8.76 billion? &amp;nbsp;How about 175,200 teachers at $50 K a pop, that&#039;s one teacher for every 7 dropouts.&amp;nbsp; MC   &amp;quot;The report puts the collective cost to the nation over the working life of each high school dropout at $292,000. Mr. Sum said that figure took into account lost tax revenues, since dropouts earn less and therefore pay less in taxes than high school graduates. It also includes the costs of providing food stamps and other aid to dropouts and of incarcerating those who turn to crime.&amp;quot;    October 9, 2009   Study Finds High Rate of Imprisonment Among Dropouts   By SAM DILLON  On any given day, about one in every 10 young male high school dropouts is in jail or juvenile detention, compared with one in 35 young male high school graduates, according to a new study of the effects of dropping out of school in an America where demand for low-skill workers is plunging.  The picture is even bleaker for African-Americans, with nearly one in four young black male dropouts incarcerated or otherwise institutionalized on an average day, the study said. That compares with about one in 14 young, male, white, Asian or Hispanic dropouts.  Researchers at Northeastern University used census and other government data to carry out the study, which tracks the employment, workplace, parenting and criminal justice experiences of young high school dropouts.  &amp;quot;We&amp;rsquo;re trying to show what it means to be a dropout in the 21st century United States,&amp;quot; said Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern, who headed a team of researchers that prepared the report. &amp;quot;It&amp;rsquo;s one of the country&amp;rsquo;s costliest problems. The unemployment, the incarceration rates &amp;mdash; it&amp;rsquo;s scary.&amp;quot;  A coalition of civil rights and public education advocacy groups and a network of alternative schools in Chicago commissioned the report as part of a push for new educational opportunities for the nation&amp;rsquo;s 6.2 million high school dropouts.  &amp;quot;The dropout rate is driving the nation&amp;rsquo;s increasing prison population, and it&amp;rsquo;s a drag on America&amp;rsquo;s economic competitiveness,&amp;quot; said Marc H. Morial, the former New Orleans mayor who is president of the National Urban League, one of the groups in the coalition that commissioned the report. &amp;quot;This report makes it clear that every American pays a cost when a young person leaves school without a diploma.&amp;quot;  The report puts the collective cost to the nation over the working life of each high school dropout at $292,000. Mr. Sum said that figure took into account lost tax revenues, since dropouts earn less and therefore pay less in taxes than high school graduates. It also includes the costs of providing food stamps and other aid to dropouts and of incarcerating those who turn to crime.    Continued at the:  NY Times  </description>
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            <pubDate>Sun, 11 Oct 2009 11:25:13 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Igniting the Future</title>
            <description> From the Bob Herbert op/ed, &amp;quot;Igniting the Growth of Jobs&amp;quot;   NY Times    &#039;40,000 teachers  lost their jobs in the last year. &amp;nbsp;16 to 29 year olds, worst unemployment  ever  since national records have been kept. &amp;nbsp; One in four black men  in Illinois between the ages of 20 and 24  has  a job.&#039;  One of the regents of the University of Colorado, Michael Carrigan, told me that Colorado had a return on investment of 40 to 1 for each dollar invested in higher ed. The only figures I could find for Colorado was a 15.07 percent return. &amp;nbsp;New Jersey leads the nation with 42.32 percent, followed by Massachusetts 39.16, New York 37.82, California 36.53 percent. &amp;nbsp;All in all a substantial return on investment. &amp;nbsp;The lowest in the nation, predictably, was Mississippi at 6.49 percent.&amp;nbsp; Most surprisingly, Indiana is second from the bottom at 7.22 percent   Higher Ed Return on Investment for States   Most significantly, Herbert says this:    &amp;quot;&amp;quot;The past,&amp;quot; as William Faulkner told us, &amp;quot;is not dead.  It&amp;rsquo;s not even past .&amp;quot; The lessons of the Works Progress Administration and the Civilian Conservation Corps of the 1930s are right in front of us, ready to be studied, analyzed, updated and applied to the present-day needs of the country.&amp;quot;    I hate to say this, but we are a country of nepotism, in our unions, our military, in corporations, in government. &amp;nbsp;Because of this &amp;quot;inbreeding&amp;quot; and counterproductive behavior, we must import the brightest minds/strongest work ethics from around the world to carry our water and be used as if indentured servants. &amp;nbsp;It is all a vast pyramid scheme where the unqualified extinguish the flames of the most gifted and reap the rewards off the backs of the timid. &amp;nbsp;Their only qualification? &amp;nbsp;Being members of the lucky sperm club. &amp;nbsp;Here&#039;s something the &amp;quot;conservative revision&amp;quot; Bible will surely leave out, &amp;quot;As you have done to the least of these.......&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; The least very much includes the youthful poor, who have no say in the conditions they find themselves in and obviously don&#039;t have the attention of those that have the most.&amp;nbsp; While we argue about war, healthcare, social justice, gay rights, Obama&#039;s Nobel Prize, etc., no one considers our most precious asset nor&amp;nbsp;what should be our greatest legacy to them, &amp;quot;Liberty and Justice&amp;nbsp;for  all ..&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; This is what is great about the  idea  of America, eloquently&amp;nbsp;pronounced in the Preamble of the Constitution, not just to ourselves but to our  Posterity,  &amp;nbsp;the word was capitalized unlike the word  &amp;quot;ourselves&amp;quot;:  </description>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 10 Oct 2009 19:30:58 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Kristoff: Perspective on Health Care</title>
            <description>Early on Kristoff suggests that Congress eliminate insurance for 15% of their members and let that 15% take their children to an emergency room for care.  NOT going to happen, however he will incur apoplectic reaction from the jingoists for &quot;demeaning&quot; the holiness of 9/11.  Forever waving the bloody flag of 9/11, never stopping to consider those responsible for allowing it to happen, the unconscionable attack of Iraq, our unlawful and horrific violations of human decency, the civilian casualties (&quot;We don&#039;t do body counts&quot;).  The most cowardly concept that &quot;fighting them over there..........&quot; by recruiting our economically disadvantaged citizens and green card immigrants was somehow noble and justified defilement of the Constitution, death and disfigurement to innocents. A most arrogant display to the rest of the world of what we are actually capable of.  For a country that spends $600 Billion on &quot;defense&quot; allowing a 58 minute attack on three different targets was absurdly incompetent.  The absurdity of what we spend is a whole other can of worms. 
 
 &amp;quot;............We accept that life is unfair, that some people will live in cramped apartments and others in sprawling mansions. But our existing insurance system is not simply inequitable but also lethal:  a very recent, peer-reviewed article  in the American Journal of Public Health finds that nearly 45,000 uninsured people die annually as a consequence of not having insurance. That&amp;rsquo;s one needless death every 12 minutes.  When nearly 3,000 people were killed on 9/11, we began wars and were willing to devote more than  $1 trillion  in additional expenses. Yet about the same number of Americans die from our failed insurance system every three weeks.  The obstacle isn&amp;rsquo;t so much money as priorities. America made it a priority to provide tax breaks, largely to the wealthy, in the Bush years, at  a 10-year cost  including interest of  $2.4 trillion.  Allocating less than half that much to assure equal access to health care isn&amp;rsquo;t deemed an equal priority.............&amp;quot;   Complete Op/Ed at The NY Times  </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZnM</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 08 Oct 2009 12:50:51 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Romanoff Raises $200 K in 21 Days</title>
            <description> &amp;quot;Don&#039;t look back, they may be gaining on you.&amp;quot; :-))  denver and the west    Romanoff&#039;s Senate campaign raises more than $200,000    By The Denver Post  The campaign for U.S. Senate candidate-come-lately Andrew Romanoff said Tuesday that it had raised more than $200,000 in the 21 days he was eligible to collect donations in the third quarter.   Romanoff needed a big start to show he&#039;s viable, though he will have to keep up the pace to compete with the fundraising juggernaut of Sen. Michael Bennet, who has taken in $2.5 million and counting since his appointment in January, analysts say.   Romanoff fundraisers collected cash from more than 1,500 individuals, said spokeswoman Joelle Martinez, using that figure to bolster Romanoff&#039;s image as the race&#039;s grassroots candidate.    Continued at the Denver Post  </description>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 12:24:38 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Wanat and Kadesh Indefensible</title>
            <description>I have been researching the two most costly battles in Afghanistan, the most recent at  Kadesh  and the previous one at  Wanat .&amp;nbsp; Both American outposts were located at the base of the mountains rather than on top.&amp;nbsp; This link will take you to a detailed topographical Google map:  Topo Map &amp;nbsp;of Wanat, AfghanistanAnother image showing the elevations surrounding the base  here &amp;nbsp; Not sure who was responsible for the locations of these two bases,&amp;nbsp; but you can bet your ass a general would never admit responsibility and they will probably charge the battalion commander who would have little control over the general location&amp;nbsp;of base, but should at the least control the strategic location.&amp;nbsp; As was the case in Vietnam, there&amp;nbsp;are many incompetent officers, generals on down.&amp;nbsp; Some come from desk jobs at the Pentagon with the purpose of getting their ticket punched with a combat command.&amp;nbsp; The most capable officers in the military don&#039;t have the political skill necessary to make it past full bird&amp;nbsp;Colonel and have too much pride to wear knee pads.&amp;nbsp; Considering that the two attacks were about a year apart and had many of the same problems, I would tend to hold General McChrystal responsible for not properly advising those in his command about the dangers of locating a base in a valley.&amp;nbsp; Then again, there is his commander, good old  CENTCOM Commander, David Petraeus .&amp;nbsp;In the case of both Kadesh and Wanat, civilians had been killed by accident and inflamed the locals.&amp;nbsp; In my humble opinion, &amp;nbsp;we can not succeed in Afghanistan because of a failure&amp;nbsp;in  military leadership , a very deadly prognosis for the boots on the ground. </description>
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            <pubDate>Tue, 06 Oct 2009 18:27:08 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>The &quot;Right Wing&quot; of the Democrat Party</title>
            <description>I&#039;ve been a little depressed lately, the Michael Moore movie seems to have intensified the despair.  Much has been said to marginalize the so called &quot;left wing&quot; of the Democrat Party.  In reality, the left wing is the &quot;right&quot; wing, meaning that it is the segment of the party that is mostly correct in it&#039;s philosophies and promotes academic, logical introspection and solutions.  Most of all they are somewhat unselfishly devoted to truth, justice and the idea that America is duty-bound to strive for a more perfect union.  That liberty and justice for all applies to our law and most certainly to economic equity.  I am afraid that conservative/blue dog Democrat thought implies no room for improvement or reflection and a preference for a balance that is in their favor. 
  
The Right Wing of the Democrat Party seems the most &quot;Christian&quot; in its opinions and deeds.  However, they are less likely to belong to an organized religion, they carry within them the only law that matters when dealing with most human, animal and earthly interaction.  The Golden Rule is at once logical and effortless, what else could qualify as &quot;self-evident&quot; if not the Golden Rule.  Where are we as a nation?  From the Declaration of Independence comes a profound clue,  an indication that we are in fact sheep,  the status quo is undemanding of social responsibility or activism: 
  
&quot;accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.&quot; 
  
The Declaration of Independence 
&quot;When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bonds which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature&#039;s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.  
 
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.............................&quot;  
 
In the words of Ann Richards in answer to, &quot;What must Democrats do in order to win&quot; she answered, &quot;You (All of us) must find the courage to talk to the people you don&#039;t know and tell them things they may not want to hear.&quot; 
  
Michael Moore has that kind of courage.  I wish I had asked Governor Richards if there was a cure for complacency.  MC 
  
CONFORMITY 
We are discreet sheep; we wait to see how the drove is going, and then go with the drove. 
- Mark Twain&#039;s Autobiography 
 
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to reform (or pause and reflect). 
Mark Twain- Notebook, 1904 
 
Conformity-the natural instinct to passively yield to that vague something recognized as authority. 
Mark Twain- &quot;Corn Pone Opinions&quot; 
 
TREACHERY 
Gratitude and treachery are merely the two extremities of the same procession. You have seen all of it that is worth staying for when the band and the gaudy officials have gone by. 
Mark Twain- Pudd&#039;nhead Wilson 
  
TRADITION 
...scrap heap of unverifiable odds and ends which we call tradition. 
Mark Twain- Speech, 5/25/1908 
 
JUSTICE 
The rain ...falls upon the just and the unjust alike; a thing which would not happen if I were superintending the rain&#039;s affairs. No, I would rain softly and sweetly on the just, but if I caught a sample of the unjust outdoors I would drown him. 
- Mark Twain, a Biography  
 
TRUTH 
  
Familiarity breeds contempt. How accurate that is. The reason we hold truth in such respect is because we have so little opportunity to get familiar with it. 
Mark Twain- Notebook, 1898</description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZSY</link>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 03 Oct 2009 14:58:31 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>What &quot;Capitalism&quot; Is Not</title>
            <description> Great writing and video clips   What &amp;quot;Capitalism&amp;quot; Is Not  By Terrance Heath Created 10/02/2009 - 11:26am   If I were to summarize message Michael Moore&#039;s new movie, Capitalism: A Love Story in one sentence, it would be this: Capitalism is not a form of government. That&#039;s the answer to the question posed at the beginning of the movie, via 1950s educational/propaganda films.   Capitalism is not a form of government. It is a tool we&#039;ve allowed to be used as a weapon. We threw out the instructions and rules for its usage, and it became a weapon &amp;mdash; much like a hammer can be used to build a house or smash a skull, depending on whether it&#039;s wielded by a carpenter or a psychopath.   Moore spends the rest of the movie showing us how we not only tossed out the rules, but junked every other tool in our collective toolbox, and left ourselves with the hammer. But everything is not a nail, and the hammer isn&#039;t suited to every aspect of the task in front of us. Moore gives us until the end of the movie to figure out what that seemingly abandoned task might be.   Capitalism is populated by people whose names we know and people whose names we don&#039;t &amp;mdash; all characters in what Michael Moore has subtitled &amp;quot;a love story.&amp;quot; We know the speeches of the former, and the stories of the latter, because we&#039;ve watched those same stories unfold in our own communities in the last couple of years. The speeches were intended to arouse our passions, by retelling part the most recent chapter in the story of how we got here &amp;mdash; the part that happened on Wall Street and in Washington.   Continued   Campaign for America&#039;s Future  </description>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 02 Oct 2009 22:02:16 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Moore&#039;s Movie a Religious Experience</title>
            <description>I saw the movie tonight at a special showing at Chez Artiste.  Mr. Moore has done it again, he has taken pure, unadulterated truth and made it an art form.  Moore expressed a desire to be a priest in his early days, I think he became one for all intents and purposes.  Bravo, Mr. Moore, you are a priest in every sense of the word.</description>
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            <pubDate>Fri, 02 Oct 2009 01:08:48 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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            <title>Huttner &amp; Salzman @ Boulder Bookstore Tonight!</title>
            <description>I want to urge folks to go out and buy Huttner &amp; Salzman&#039;s book, 50 Ways.... Not only is it a little gem, but buying it is now a political statement. Be Heard! They&#039;re doing a book signing tonight at the Boulder Bookstore. Show them your support and be there!</description>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 30 Sep 2009 19:16:15 EDT</pubDate>
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            <dc:creator>Lucia</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Lucia</db:author_name>
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            <title>McGeorge Bundy: &#039;The doves were right&#039;</title>
            <description> &amp;quot;It&#039;s Deja Vu all over again&amp;quot; Yogi Berra  Unfortunately, we still refuse to have a national discussion about Vietnam and not just about our casualties- US Armed Forces 58,202 Killed In Action 304,704 Wounded In Action, 1,948 Missing in Action (Nov.7, 2001). The most tragic omission? We never bothered to own up to what actually happened TO Vietnam, Armed Forces of South Vietnam 233,748 Killed In Action 1,169,763 Wounded In Action. One million North Vietnamese Army and Vietcong killed, three million Vietnamese civilians killed. Who are we that we can ignore our responsibility for such chaos? And what are the consequences of such belligerence? Such ignorance? The question is staring at us again in Afghanistan and Iraq. Where do Islamic radicals get their weapons and ammunition? Does a country ever secure the blessings of liberty by the actions of foreigners? Can centuries of isolation, theocracy and tradition be supplanted by military might or intrigue? In ten years? 30? 50? Ever? Indeed the doves ARE right.   November 30, 2008   &#039;The Doves Were Right&#039; By RICHARD HOLBROOKE   LESSONS IN DISASTER   McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam   By Gordon M. Goldstein   300 pp. Times Books/ Henry Holt &amp;amp; Company. $25   In 1961, John Fitzgerald Kennedy brought to Washington a new generation of pragmatic young activists who came to be known as the New Frontiersmen. When the journalist Theodore White later wrote a memorable photo essay about them for Life magazine, he called them the &amp;quot;action-intellectuals.&amp;quot;   The most celebrated were Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and McGeorge Bundy, whose title - modest by today&#039;s standards - was special assistant to the president for national security affairs, but whose importance was great (today the position has a more grandiose title - national security adviser). Mc&amp;shy;Namara, of course, became one of the most controversial public servants in modern times, while Bundy got less attention, except for Kai Bird&#039;s excellent 1998 dual biography of him and his &amp;shy;brother William (who had served as assistant secretary of state for East Asia).  &amp;nbsp;But in &amp;quot;Lessons in Disaster,&amp;quot; Gordon Goldstein&#039;s highly unusual book, Bundy emerges as the most interesting figure in the Vietnam tragedy - less for his unfortunate part in prosecuting the war than for his agonized search 30 years later to understand himself.   Bundy was the quintessential Eastern Establishment Republican, a member of a family that traced its Boston roots back to 1639. His ties to Groton (where he graduated first in his class), Yale and then Harvard were deep. At the age of 27, he wrote, to national acclaim, the &#039;memoirs&amp;quot; of former Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson. In 1953, Bundy became dean of the faculty at Harvard - an astonishing responsibility for someone still only 34. Even David Halberstam, who would play so important a role in the public demolition of Bundy&#039;s reputation in his classic, &amp;quot;The Best and the Brightest,&amp;quot; admitted that &amp;quot;Bundy was a magnificent dean&amp;quot; who played with the faculty &amp;quot;like a cat with mice.&amp;quot;   Continued: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/30/books/review/Holbrooke-t.html </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZSd</link>
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            <pubDate>Sun, 27 Sep 2009 11:25:40 EDT</pubDate>
            <guid>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZSd</guid>
            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Mike Collins</db:author_name>
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                    <item>
            <title>Frank Rich: Obama at the Precipice</title>
            <description>This is a good &#039;un, &amp;nbsp;a must read regarding Afghanistan.&amp;nbsp; Just hope Obama finds time to read&amp;nbsp;this along with &amp;quot;Lessons in Disaster&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; MCNY TimesSeptember 27, 2009Op-Ed ColumnistObama at the Precipice By  FRANK RICH  THE most intriguing, and possibly most fateful, news of last week could not be found in the health care horse-trading in Congress, or in the international zoo at the United Nations, or in the  Iran slapdown in Pittsburgh . It was an item tucked into a blog at  ABCNews.com .  George Stephanopoulos reported  that the new &amp;ldquo;must-read book&amp;rdquo; for President Obama&amp;rsquo;s war team is &amp;ldquo;Lessons in Disaster&amp;rdquo; by Gordon M. Goldstein, a foreign-policy scholar who had collaborated with McGeorge Bundy, the Kennedy-Johnson national security adviser, on writing a Robert McNamara-style mea culpa about his role as an architect of the Vietnam War.   Bundy left his memoir unfinished at  his death in 1996 . Goldstein&amp;rsquo;s book, drawn from Bundy&amp;rsquo;s ruminations and deep new research, is full of fresh information on how the best and the brightest led America into the fiasco. &amp;ldquo;Lessons in Disaster&amp;rdquo; caused only a modest stir when published in November, but  The Times Book Review cheered it  as &amp;ldquo;an extraordinary cautionary tale for all Americans.&amp;rdquo; The reviewer was, of all people, the diplomat Richard Holbrooke, whose career began in Vietnam and who  would later be charged with the Afghanistan-Pakistan crisis  by the new Obama administration.  Holbrooke&amp;rsquo;s verdict on &amp;ldquo;Lessons in Disaster&amp;rdquo; was not only correct but more prescient than even he could have imagined. This book&amp;rsquo;s intimate account of White House decision-making is almost literally being replayed in Washington (with Holbrooke himself as a principal actor) as the new president sets a course for the war in Afghanistan. The time for all Americans to catch up with this extraordinary cautionary tale is now.   Analogies between Vietnam and Afghanistan are the rage these days. Some are wrong, inexact or speculative. We don&amp;rsquo;t know whether Afghanistan would be a quagmire, let alone that it could remotely bulk up to the war in Vietnam, which, at its peak, involved 535,000 American troops. But what happened after L.B.J. Americanized the war in 1965 is Vietnam&amp;rsquo;s apocalyptic climax. What&amp;rsquo;s most relevant to our moment is the war&amp;rsquo;s and Goldstein&amp;rsquo;s first chapter, set in 1961. That&amp;rsquo;s where we see the hawkish young President Kennedy wrestling with Vietnam during his first months in office.  &amp;nbsp; </description>
            <link>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZSl</link>
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            <pubDate>Sat, 26 Sep 2009 23:02:28 EDT</pubDate>
            <guid>http://www.progressnowcolorado.org/page/community/post/michaelcollins/CZSl</guid>
            <dc:creator>Mike Collins</dc:creator>
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                <db:author_name>Mike Collins</db:author_name>
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