The Conservatard

Entries from February 2008

Surge Success or Surge BushShit?

February 26, 2008 · 2 Comments

I’ll write more later, but this is a really great article from RollingStone.com about what bullshit the Bushtard “Surge” in Iraq has been. If you were to take the president and his cronies at their word, you would think that Iraq is the new Disneyland. However, as Rolling Stone reports, it is anything but a success.
surge.jpg

The Myth of the Surge

Hoping to turn enemies into allies, U.S. forces are arming Iraqis who fought with the insurgents. But it’s already starting to backfire. A report from the front lines of the new Iraq

NIR ROSEN

Posted Mar 06, 2008 8:53 AM


It’s a cold, gray day in December, and I’m walking down Sixtieth Street in the Dora district of Baghdad, one of the most violent and fearsome of the city’s no-go zones. Devastated by five years of clashes between American forces, Shiite militias, Sunni resistance groups and Al Qaeda, much of Dora is now a ghost town. This is what “victory” looks like in a once upscale neighborhood of Iraq: Lakes of mud and sewage fill the streets. Mountains of trash stagnate in the pungent liquid. Most of the windows in the sand-colored homes are broken, and the wind blows through them, whistling eerily. House after house is deserted, bullet holes pockmarking their walls, their doors open and unguarded, many emptied of furniture. What few furnishings remain are covered by a thick layer of the fine dust that invades every space in Iraq. Looming over the homes are twelve-foot-high security walls built by the Americans to separate warring factions and confine people to their own neighborhood. Emptied and destroyed by civil war, walled off by President Bush’s much-heralded “surge,” Dora feels more like a desolate, post-apocalyptic maze of concrete tunnels than a living, inhabited neighborhood. Apart from our footsteps, there is complete silence.
My guide, a thirty-one-year-old named Osama who grew up in Dora, points to shops he used to go to, now abandoned or destroyed: a barbershop, a hardware store. Since the U.S. occupation began, Osama has watched civil war turn the streets where he grew up into an ethnic killing field. After the fall of Saddam, the Americans allowed looters and gangs to take over the streets, and Iraqi security forces were stripped of their jobs. The Mahdi Army, the powerful Shiite paramilitary force led by the anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, took advantage of the power shift to retaliate in areas such as Dora, where Shiites had been driven from their homes. Shiite forces tried to cleanse the district of Sunni families like Osama’s, burning or confiscating their homes and torturing or killing those who refused to leave.
“The Mahdi Army was killing people here,” Osama says, pointing to a now-destroyed Shiite mosque that in earlier times had been a cafe and before that an office for Saddam’s Baath Party. Later, driving in the nearby district of Baya, Osama shows me a gas station. “They killed my uncle here. He didn’t accept to leave. Twenty guys came to his house, the women were screaming. He ran to the back, but they caught him, tortured him and killed him.” Under siege by Shiite militias and the U.S. military, who viewed Sunnis as Saddam supporters, and largely cut out of the Shiite-dominated government, many Sunnis joined the resistance. Others turned to Al Qaeda and other jihadists for protection.
Now, in the midst of the surge, the Bush administration has done an about-face. Having lost the civil war, many Sunnis were suddenly desperate to switch sides — and Gen. David Petraeus was eager to oblige. The U.S. has not only added 30,000 more troops in Iraq — it has essentially bribed the opposition, arming the very Sunni militants who only months ago were waging deadly assaults on American forces. To engineer a fragile peace, the U.S. military has created and backed dozens of new Sunni militias, which now operate beyond the control of Iraq’s central government. The Americans call the units by a variety of euphemisms: Iraqi Security Volunteers (ISVs), neighborhood watch groups, Concerned Local Citizens, Critical Infrastructure Security. The militias prefer a simpler and more dramatic name: They call themselves Sahwa, or “the Awakening.”

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Categories: Politics · iraq

Olberman Kicks the Bush out of FISA, Part II.

February 22, 2008 · No Comments

Great follow up from Keith Olberman proving that Bush is a liar, a cheat and a traitor to us all. Go get em’ Keith..

Categories: Constitutional law · Politics · Truth

You Say You Wan’t A Revoluiton? Well, You Know…

February 22, 2008 · No Comments

Mr. C. read in interesting article written by Sara Robinson of ourfuture.org. Ms Robinson’s article called “When Change Is Not Enough: The Seven Steps To Revolution” breaks down the seven conditions that have historically existed in countries that have undergone some sort of revolution in the last 300 years. Some notable examples include Russia, China, France and the United States.You say you want a revolution, Well you know… we all wan

The article is interesting not because it calls for citizens to rise up,revolt against society and stick it to the man. It is interesting because it shows how the last 30 + years of American conservatism have created the ideal conditions for a modern day revolution. The author is not saying a cultural revolution like we had in the 1960’s or an economic revolution like the labor movement created in the 1930’s. No, Ms. Robinson article is saying that the conservatards have created a nation that may turn into a revolution more like the 13 American colonies waged against England.

The seven conditions being the following:

1) Crashing of a soaring economy.

2) Class warfare.

3) Deserted intellectuals.

4) Incompetent government.

5) A gutless ruling class.

6) Fiscal impressionability.

7) Inept and inconsistent use of force.

Does any of this sound familiar? If so, then proceed calmly to the nearest exit and leave the country, and would the last person out kindly turn off the lights? Thank you for flying Conservatard Air!

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Categories: class warfare

Olberman Kicks the “FISA” out of Bush

February 2, 2008 · No Comments

Mr. Conservatard wont even try to compete with Keith Olberman in putting BushCo. to shame.

In the following clip Mr. Olberman basically kicks the Bush regimen’s request of retroactive immunity for the major telecommunication giants to the curb where it belongs.

Too bad the Bustard democrats in congress refuse to understand that retroactive immunity is another word for treason wrapped in a candy coating.

Transcript courtesy of Truthout.org.


Keith Olbermann: Special Comment Regarding FISA
By Keith Olbermann
MSNBC Countdown

Thursday 31 January 2008

Transcript

And finally, as promised, a Special Comment - of FISA and the telecoms.

In a presidency of hypocrisy - an administration of exploitation - a labyrinth of leadership - in which every vital fact is a puzzle inside a riddle wrapped in an enigma hidden under a claim of executive privilege supervised by an idiot - this one… is surprisingly easy.

President Bush has put protecting the telecom giants from the laws… ahead of protecting you from the terrorists.

He has demanded an extension of the FISA law - the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act - but only an extension that includes retroactive immunity for the telecoms who helped him spy on you.

Congress has given him, and he has today signed a fifteen-day extension which simply kicks the time bomb down the field, and has changed nothing of his insipid rhetoric, in which he portrays the Democrats as ’soft on terror’ and getting in the way of his superhuman efforts to protect the nation… when, in fact, and with bitter irony, if anybody is ’soft on terror’ here… it is Mr. Bush. (more…)

Categories: Politics · stranger than fiction · wire tapping