Bush for A Nobel Prize? I Think Not!!!!

Someone wants to nominate Bush for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Excuse me while I vomit.

Their reasoning: terrorism dropped 44% between 2001 and 2002, to the lowest level since 1969.

Uh huh. They’re also probably forgetting that the U.S.A. is not the only country on this planet (which I find a lot of Bush lovers forget) and they probably don’t read a lot of international news to know that OTHER COUNTRIES SUFFER TERRORIST ACTS TOO. Why don’t you ask someone in the Kashmir region of India about their life in 2002, especially after Jerry Falwell’s remarks caused the deaths of a number of people there? Oh yes… there’s also the Abu Sayyaf rebels in the Phillipines who kidnapped the Burnhams. We’re not even starting to get into what has happened in Africa and Latin America in 2002 — all of which the U.S. did *NOTHING* about.

I’m sure this person and their minions also neglected to read the commentary on Carter getting the prize: Carter’s awarding of the prize was the Nobel people thumbing their nose at Bush. Clinton (whose morals shall not come into play in this entry) did more for peace than Bush did. He helped broker the peace deal between Israel and PLO in 1993 and he did quite a bit for the cause in Northern Ireland. Bush declared war on a 3rd World country in violation of the U.N. charter to look for weapons of mass destruction that *STILL* haven’t been found. And people want to give him a frickin’ prize????

Terrorism dropped in the U.S. between 2001 and 2002 — well… DUH! ANY year other than 1941 and 1995 was more safe for the U.S. I mean, you have a major terrorist attack on American soil — you think the government *isn’t* going to be more vigilant from then on???

*retreats off to read some Barbara Kingsolver and work on a Canadian citizenship application*

Oh yes…

“To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
– Theodore Roosevelt, 1918

(Thanks Brian. Now get off the computer and do something else!)

Jen Weighs in On Various Things

It’s cold, grey, and yucky outside today, so I’m just going to blog on some stuff that I’ve had sitting in my chest for a few days…

Bad Attitudes
I was at a social gathering last week and someone made this remark: “9/11 was caused because we let too many foreigners into this country.” OK… this raised some red flags in me and though I was tempted to dopeslap him (and it literally took all my restraint not to), I managed to respond calmly. My response: “Actually, 9/11 was caused because of our attitudes toward other countries and the way our interaction with them has been negative at times.” Thankfully, someone then *quickly* changed the subject.

This happened over a week ago but it gets to me because there’s a bigoted, ignorant attitude in *some* (not all) of the people around here and I have to interact with enough of them in public to make me really cynical about the amount of nationalistic propaganda that we’re fed to make us think that the world actually likes us. Read Barbara Kingsolver people. Canada has much less strict immigration policies than we do and nobody hates them. They’re a free country and nobody has tried to blow up the CN Tower in Toronto. (If anyone says “they hate us because we’re free”, there will be much dopeslapping. Capeche?) I mean, when some troops were passing an Iraqi man, he called out, “Democracy! Whiskey! Sexy!” Do we *really* want to have the image in the world of being a place of vices? People had to be told *not* to send pr0n to U.S. troops (along with pork and propaganda) — what kind of image does that conjure in a culture (like Iraq) that is more reserved than ours?

I also come from a large city in California where quite a few of my classmates were… foreigners. There were times (especially in my honors and AP classes) where I was a very definite minority. I cannot imagine growing up in any other environment and know that I am blessed to have had Muslim, Buddhist, and Jewish friends while growing up. Having Persian food for Nawruz, Chinese food for the New Year, latkes on Channukah, and adoboh on various occasions gave me a love for different kind of ethnic foods and I lament the fact that there is no good Lebanese food around here. having people from different countries was indeed a blessing and was not the cause of 9/11.

The Fuss over Samaritan Purse’s Aid Involvement
I respect what Franklin Graham’s organization does — I’ve participated in “Operation Christmas Child” and my neighbor’s daughter has gone to Africa to give relief to some missionary doctors. However… I get leery when I hear them offering “spiritual aid” to the people of Iraq in addition to the much needed things like food, water, clothing, medical supplies, and other things. I would love if the nation of Iraq was to convert and follow Jesus — I mean, the Gospel needs to be spread. However… is this really the time to go in and actively tell people “you need Jesus”? Before I came to Christ as a 14 year old, it *REALLY* irritated me when people would come up to me and tell me that out of the blue. I mean, do those people (who would come up to me) really care about anything else other than the spiritual brownie points for “winning souls to Jesus”? Do they actually care about me as a person??? (Soul winning, by definition, is wrong because it implies that we have the power to change hearts. Last I checked, only God had that power.) There are other ways of witnessing that do not involve words. Friends of mine who came over to the U.S. as refugees became Christians because the doctors that healed them were Christians. Others saw missionaries handing out aid to people and saw God’s love in that. Those missionaries loved those people… and waited until an opportune time to witness.

There’s also the matter of Graham’s track record on speaking about Islam. Would you really trust someone who has called Islam “an evil and wicked religion that ferments violence” to go into a 97% Muslim country? His words really make the U.S. campaign in Iraq seem like a war against Islam, instead of a war against Saddam. It’s been commented upon that if he goes in, he needs to not do anything to make life difficult for the 600,000 Christians already there. There are plenty of *other* relief organizations that don’t have the reputation that Samaritan’s Purse has gained because of their leader’s words and could go in inconspicuously and witness while providing aid. (To be fair, I’ve read what Ken Isaacs, SP’s international director has to say and I can deal with *him* going in, just not the thought of Graham doing it.)

The Candy Bomber
A former Air Force pilot wants to drop a load of candy on Baghdad when the war ends. This would be good if it could be ensured that the chocolate was hallal (is there any chocolate that isn’t?) and it would definitely make the kids less scared of planes flying overhead.

Students Suspended for Confederate Garb
“I had no idea that anyone would be offended by this.” — Brook Armstrong. Chica, are you forgetting that the flag you are so proudly sporting was flown during a war that decided if a race of people was human? Are you an African-American woman? Can you understand the pain of the African-American community when seeing that flag and what it represents? Perhaps you might want to ask some of the African-American students at your high school why they are so offended. That flag is used today by Aryan Nation people and connotes a time of persecution. It’s great that you want to take pride in your Southern heritage. Might I suggest finding a more creative way of doing it?

War and Jen’s First Controversial Political Post of April

I saw this story on CNN when it broke last night at 1:30 when I was trying to fall asleep to war coverage. (I know… I’m a freak.) It’s pretty amazing and I hope Pfc Jessica Lynch can meet this man when the war ends.

I also saw a pretty interesting thing on the “Today” show yesterday. A Marine was standing on a tank leading street songs with Iraqi children. It was definitely the lighter side of things although it was disturbing to see the children repeating his “Bring it on down! W00T! W00T!”

On politics, the Estrada filibuster is holding firm. I’ve written my senators and yelled at them for trying to end the filibuster. According to CNN, “Republicans have accused Democrats of treating Estrada unfairly because he is a conservative Hispanic.” Ummm…. no? I’m conservative and I’d love to see a Hispanic sitting in a high judicial position as much as anyone in the Latino community would — I’d like to see all branches of the government reflect the actual ethnic make-up of the USA. However, he is refusing to answer questions about where he stands on a lot of issues that are important to me, and I can’t support the nomination of someone to a position like that if I don’t know that my rights as a woman are going to be respected. (Oh yes… anyone calling me a “rabid feminist” had better be female, because I will dopeslap the first male who says that to me. Capeche?) I’d like to know that Estrada isn’t going to side with logging companies to clearcut forests and I’d like to know that Estrada isn’t going to shoot down any abortion cases that go in front of him. (For those who want to call me a butcher because I happen to believe that it is MY body and MY right, I supported the Indiana legislation to have a waiting period between counselling before the abortion and the procedure itself.) I mean, I would not support nominations to the courts by any president who will not compel their nominees to answer questions about where they stand whether it was Bush or Clinton.

Jen’s Daily Fisking

Some Thoughts on Democrats and Liberals and the War Protesting Going On

My response:
Re: your first paragraph: What we’re doing is also against the charter of the U.N., which governs disputes between nations. I see no reason why we shouldn’t be at war if all diplomatic efforts had been exhausted. However… they hadn’t. I have yet to see the Iraqis meet with *anyone* on this issue in talks. There’s also the fact that *none* of our tips to the weapons inspectors paid off, so unless Bush wants to argue human rights (which he really hasn’t mentioned in depth yet and this scares me because it *is* compelling — he just hasn’t looked at it yet), we have no legitimate reason for being over there.

Re: your comment that protestors are a bunch of psychos: Rush Limbaugh isn’t the best source to quote because he has an agenda. (Stick to news sites, not talking heads whose bark is bigger than their bite.) I’m protesting this war and I don’t support Saddam in the least. This ain’t a black and white issue.

Re; Rachel Corrie: Israel has committed quite a few human rights atrocities and it irritates me how people automatically assume that all Palestinians are Muslim fundamentalists when quite a few are Christians. (Tears down that “us” and “them” argument real fast, doesn’t it?) I applaud Rachel for standing up for what she believes in because she believed that the Israelis were wrong. *I* believe that the Israelis were wrong — I had classes on this conflict alone as a Religious Studies major in college. I’ve looked at both sides of the issue and both sides have made some big mistakes.

And for the record, I am a Democrat and a “liberal” (though back home I’m a “conservative” — interesting how labels shift depending on the company one keeps). I am morally certain, I don’t hate conservatism, I think capitalism has problems but we can work with them, I don’t hate people who have a clear idea of right and wrong, and I trust people who are confident in their faith and opinions… because I am one. I do, however, dislike those who generalize about others based on the rantings of people like Limbaugh, O’Reilly, Hannity, and their leftist equivalents.

So… I think I’ll echo Drina: quite a bit of unnecessary hostility going on here against Democrats and liberals. And you complain that I’m a little hostile toward Bush?

At least he didn’t say “they hate us because we’re free”.

Various Thoughts on the War

Here are some people who have sentiments that I share on this issue:

Ron Silliman:
No message for today. I??m too sick at heart at the impending onset of the war. It really is the end of a United States that was conceived on the basis of some very grand ideas not so far from here 227 years ago, replaced by a thug state committed only to bullying the world into submission. Such an endeavor cannot long endure.

Krissy:
[Quote from CNN]: “At the White House, officials said that just before Bush addressed the nation, he pumped his fist, winked, and said ‘I feel good.’ He then delivered his address, which lasted four minutes.”

[Krissy]: I worry that his reasons for fighting this war aren’t the same ones he told us. I think he may be fighting this war for war’s sake, especially after reading that comment. How can you feel good about this kind of thing?

I just cannot feel good about this war. I will pray for the soldiers over there and I will pray for peace. I just really feel like Bush is telling us it’s to rid Iraq of Hussein because he has the weapons of mass destruction but I feel also like Bush wants a war to bring glory to himself. I mean… there’s another obvious reason for this war that he hasn’t mentioned: the human rights abuses by Iraq. Mike of This Classical Life actually *tells* about this here. [Warning, it is graphic and I chose not to post it on this site for that reason. Well… that and I really didn’t want to be seeing it every time I had to do archives.]

Kyrie eleison. Christe eleison. Dona nobis pacem. Amen.

The Food War

I posted a link to someone’s comments on the whole “freedom fries” thing in my Livejournal. It’s a bit too crass to post in this journal but I still think it’s an interesting commentary on the subject.

France has joined in the food war. Go to Bretzel for Bush and donate pretzels (or “bretzels” — the root word of our English word) to send to Bush. It’s liturgically appropriate as they *are* Lenten food.

Canada has just announced that unless we get a U.N. Resolution to turn Baghdad into a glass parking lot, they’re not going to help us. I’m wondering this… are they going to re-name Canadian bacon something else…. like “ham”? They better not recall all their Tim Hortons from here! (We have two in Newark alone.)