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Name: Mike Silverman
Location: Milford, MA
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BLOOD ON THE PRESIDENT'S HANDS

It was bound to happen sooner or later that President Obama's natural liberal hatered and loathing for all things military slipped out for all to see in a highly palpable and deadly way. Now all this attempt to denigrate General McChrystal is out there. The General has only made what might be considered an indirect appeal for his plan to be implemented. People should keep in mind that a Bush white House and an Obama White House are different creatures when it comes to attitude toward the military. Obama, Clinton, Pelosi, Reid, Frank, the usual liberal suspects.. have exhibited contempt, flagrant contempt..., for our military men and women attempting to achieve success in war during the Bush administration, and it was pure... politics. The military rank and file and the commanders know very well the disdain that liberal polticians hold for the military. It is clear, to everyone, that Obama is following personal political considerations in his choice of how to permit the war in Afghanistan to be waged. He has forced General McChrystal to make a public appeal because a private appeal only falls on deaf ears. If I was in his place , knowing that the lives of the men in women under my command are being lost daily due to... what is clearly a political tactic ..., of delaying what is needed to wage the war adequately, of rules of engagement that are handcuffing his troops. I would be outraged. As a citizen I "am" outraged over all of this, as are many in our nation.
 
There should be no Democrat party political motivations involved if Obama is interested in doing what is right to protect the country, if he has to take a hit politically, then so be it, he should be ready and able to take it.  Bush was slammed like hell by the press , the Democrats and even  moderates in his own party almost EVERY DAY that he committed to the war in Iraq.
 
Every time we get caught up in arguing about whether McChrystal leaked some of the info in his report, or made an indirect appeal for his stratregy, we are losing focus on the real engagement of the war, and getting caught in the minutia. There is far..., far too much time being spent on hand wringing and groaning over what McChrystal is doing to get his plan implemented and not enough outrage that Obama is putting the war, the country, and our reputation of military excellence in jeapordy every moment he delays in doing the right thing.  The villian is not McChrystal, and not Obama... it's the enemy we are trying to kill. BUT...we've got a weak, liberal socialist egotist for a President and a General who desperately wants to be able to make things happen without needing to have that liberal leftist's approval, and that just isn't going to happen.  Personally I'm torn, because it seems the only way McChrystal is going to get Obama to consider his plan at any level is for him to put on the Presidential kneepads and ..., well you get the idea.  And the thought sickens me. Our President is failing in his most important role, defense of the country.  On the other hand, we have to win this battle.  the consequences of losing are far too devastating. And pulling out... is losing. McChrystal is put in an impossible situation.   He has to try to complete the mission goal without employing the strategy he has developed to do that.  Obama is sticking his thumb in McChrystal's eye and treating him like a second stringer.  If I was a fighting man in Afghanistan in the Marines or Army or whatever branch, I would be wondering how much more of our own military's spilt blood the President needs to see on his hands before he does the right thing.

It's obvious that Obama lied heartily and thoroughly during his campaign when asked about his strategy on fighting terrorism.
 
Below are actual quotes of Barack Obama when asked about the war on terror during his campaign....;
 
* "The Afghan government needs to do more. But we have to understand that the situation is precarious and urgent here in Afghanistan. And I believe this has to be our central focus, the central front, on our battle against terrorism," ....
 
* "I think one of the biggest mistakes we've made strategically after 9/11 was to fail to finish the job here, focus our attention here. We got distracted by Iraq," he said.
"...troop levels must increase in Afghanistan."
* "For at least a year now, I have called for two additional brigades, perhaps three," ( he told CBS.) "I think it's very important that we unify command more effectively to coordinate our military activities."

Here is a source you can check for yourself for the above three quotes made by Obama... 
 
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/07/20/obama.afghanistan/
 

- Mike Silverman

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HATING RUSH LIMBAUGH

Is there a place for civil discourse in blogs?  Or are we merely punching blindly into the darkness as if boxing an invisible opponent? I call my blog Crawling Out Of The Dark because that's what a blog is, a blog lives in relative darkness and only makes itself known through the declarations of its sole occupant, which in many cases ( not all cases, but many..)  takes the form of screams and shouts and savage slashing. One of the caveats of discourse on the internet is that you rarely know anything about the people you are engaging, and from that shelter of darkness anyone can pretend to be anything. That makes a blog a prime piece of real estate from which to launch a no-holds-barred assault.  A blog is both liberating, and debilitating.  There is no doubt at all that a major percentage of the diatribes leveled from blogs would never take place in real face-to-face conversation with the actual target of that vitriol. Simply because the blogger would not have the nerve to do it. This makes blogging as a form of communication more open to charges of being less than courageous, and of being underhanded. So what does all of this mean? It's leading up to my discourse on recent attacks against radio talk show personality Rush Limbaugh.  At the White House Correspondants Dinner the other night , which President Obama attended and spoke at, we were all treated to the disgusting comments of commedienne Wanda Sykes. She joked about Rush Limbaugh, saying he was the 20th hijacker during the attacks on the trade center and Pentagon on 9/11/2001, and in reponse to Rush Limbaugh's commentary where he stated wanting President Obama to fail in his agenda to advance socialism, Sykes retorted "I hope his kidneys fail", as a way of counterpoint to Rush Limbaugh wanting Obama to fail. And we were treated to images of President Obama chuckling and grinning at both comments. Now, it's plain to most thinking citizens that her comments about Rush Limbaugh were not funny, so it basically goes without need of comment that she blew it in a big way. We have a constitution in our country that protects commentary and speech such as Sykes made that night. She has the freedom to say what she wants, even to the point of joking about kidney failure. But she has no protected right to an audience. She has no right requiring others to listen to, or laugh at, anything she says. Our freedom to speak does not include a protected right to be heard. So she only has fame and power if other people grant her an audience. And that night, no less than the most powerful politican in the world granted her that fame and power by giving her an audience and chuckling and grinning  freely at jokes that were not jokes, let's face it, they were her personal hatered for Limbaugh on disply sheltered by a thin sheathe of a comedy routine. Given the progression of that scenario it would have been in character at that point for her to then make jokes about the killing fields in Cambodia or the ovens used to burn bodies at Auschwitz. This all begs comparison to how President Bush might have handled such a moment if it had been him at that dinner and he had heard those comments from Sykes.  Let's just say , instead of Rush Limbaugh she made comments about a Bush opponent, Barney Frank. So lets pretend she says "Barney Frank... I hope his kidneys fail!".  I don't think anyone can envision President Bush, or President Reagan, laughing or even smiling at all at such comments. But President Obama is no Reagan, and no Bush for that matter. Obama campagined on a platform of bipartisanship, of bringing the country together, in a new day of hope and change for a better future.  Is laughing at jokes about a decent hard working private US citizen, as being in collusion with the terroists who attacked the country on 9/11, who is actually guilty of nothing more than presenting his political analysis and an occassional football analogy on the radio, a way of bringing us closer together as a nation and ending the partisan bickering? Is that Hope and Change you can believe in? Rush Limbaugh, like you, and like me, and like a lot of people wants what is best for the country. But unlike  me, and unlike a lot of people, Rush does not have to work, does not need to be on the radio every day in order to pay the bills, and could retire any time he wants and live in luxury for the rest of his life, and avoid all the hate and all the savage attacks on his character and God only knows what else that we never hear about that he has to put up with. Rush Limbaugh asked a question on his radio show today.  He asked everyone who was listening "Why is Dick Cheney doing what he is doing..., exposing himself to the attacks and hate and vitriol of the press and the liberal bloggers and the left wing militant groups?" He asked this because, Dick Cheney ( former Vice President in the Bush Administration ) has a great amount of personal wealth, he's not in great physical health and probably has been advised to take it easy these days,  and doesn't need to do the media circus, he's not selling any books, he's not promoting anything. So why is Dick Cheney going on the air and talking to the media so frequently lately about things like the success of methods used to interrogate some of the terrorists at the Guantanamo military prison in Cuba? Because he is a patriot, and is worried about the safety of our country and is very concerned about the direction that Obama has been taking the nation. In this way, both Rush Limbaugh and Dick Cheney are alike. Neither one has a need to expose themselves daily to the vicious personal attacks they get as they strive to make thier voices heard, they do so because to men like these it's worth the struggle.  President Obama has apologized lately around the world to allies and enemies for what he called United States greed and arrogance and talked about how terrible we are because of slavery and unfairness to the American Indian and so on. His so called "apology" tour. With all the apologizing Obama has been doing for percieved trangressions of our country, one has to wonder if he will also apologize to the world, or at least to Rush Limbaugh for laughing and smiling at Sykes as she joked about wanting Rush Limbaugh's kidneys to fail. Somehow I doubt we'll be hearing that apology from him anytime soon.


- Mike Silverman 

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SO IT'S TORTURE.... IT'S TIME TO GET REAL

President Obama, a man who loves to make his own country look as bad as he can, has approved of the release of documents detailing interrogation methods used on terror suspects. There are many good, decent, honest citizens living in our country with great respect for our land and the law.  Personally, I do respect the law, and strive never to break it, the worst I've ever broken the law is when I got a ticket for going through a red light, and I will admit to speeding anywhere from 5 to 10 miles an hour above posted limits.  While I always do my best to abide by the law..., if it comes down to having to make a choice ..., I would say that I love and respect the freedom and life of my fellow countrymen more than I love and respect the exact letter of the law of the land, and so my view is in that regard when it comes to interrogation of captured terrorists or suspects. For the sake of moving past the surface debate, I will concede the point of view of those who wish to call interrogation methods like waterboarding torture.  For me, it's irrelevent in that matter. For me, if it comes down to being the only remaining option then I don't care if our CIA or military have to skin the captured "combatants"  alive to get them to cough up information. And if they don't... and they die while being "tortured" ... then that's one less vile beast out roaming the wilderness who will try sinking its fangs into my neighbors and family or blow up one or more of our courageous soldiers on the battlefield. Should the law be changed to allow torture of captured terrorists if other methods of interrogation fail?  Absolutley. The sooner the better. Should torture be an option now to potentially be used on captured terrorists and terror suspects, while the law technically forbids it?  Absolutely, if that's what it takes. But those who do so while it is illegal, should be prepared to take the potential risk of being tried and imprisoned for breaking the law.  And I am certain the list of volunteers willing to take that chance would be long enough to encircle the globe. For his part, Obama at least did the right thing in saying there would be no prosecution of those who already engaged "torture" interrogations. Obama calls it a "dark and painful chapter in our history" while ignoring how it saved lives and that is was never the first option.   I have seen enough unclassified material on the results of intelligence gained through "torture" to feel confident it has worked enough times successfully, not in every case, but then we have experts in the field of interrogation who should be able to determine the candidate on whom it would work best and , of course,  it should only be used as a last resort.  When all other methods of gaining intelligence have failed, and only when there is substantive reason to believe the individual facing it has covert knowledge that can save our lives. And just to be very clear, this is in regard to captured "combatants" at Guantanamo prison who, in my humble opinion, do not, and should not,  fall under the protection of the US Constitution or the Geneva Convention. 
 

- Mike Silverman

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WHAT DO WE HAVE TO BE THANKFUL FOR?

 There are many reasons to give thanks every day. When I think of all who have sacrificed thier own lives in fighting for our freedom, life itself is something to be thankful for. When I remember to consider the things I'm thankful for many things come to mind. My family members, especially my mother and my brothers, my niece and the grandparents I was fortunate enough to have known before they passed away. But I wanted to remember in a marked way, an event that many people may have forgotten about in recent years. It happened on an airline flight, on September 11th, 2001. It was United Airlines flight 93, hijacked by terrorists who were bent on flying it to our nation's capital to make a missile out of it. A man named Todd Beamer, 33 years old, an account manager at the Oracle Corporation, a man who might not otherwise have stood out from the crowd attempted to make an in flight call during the hijacking to warn others and let someone know what was happening. He managed to provide some information to a telephone operator about conditions on the plane, and then mentioned that he and some other passengers had formed a plan to strike back at the terrorists and try to regain control of the plane. His last known words were.. "Are you guys ready? Let's roll." The plane subsequently was brought down in a field over Pennsylvania killing all the passengers and the terrorists averting the terrorist's goal of striking a target in DC. It's believed that along with Todd Beamer, Mark Bingham, Tom Burnett and Jeremy Glick formed the team of passengers who made the assault on the cockpit. We should always be thankful for citizen heroes who step up to do what needs to be done in times of crisis regardless of the consequences to themselves. So I will close this commentary with a simple phrase of tribute to all of the uncommon, everyday heroes of our country, without whom we would not be the strongest and greatest nation on earth..., "Are you guys ready? Let's roll."
 
- Mike Silverman
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