Harmless Ranting

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Location: Raleigh, NC

Welcome to my little corner of the web. I'm a single dad of two from North Carolina, and sometimes I have something to say.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Back Update

Since I decided to talk about this, I figured I'll keep posting on it.


After writing about my back this morning, I decided to go see the doctor again before coming to work.After another examination, he still has no idea what is causing it. So he added a couple more drugs to my growing pile. The first is a steroid called Medrol, and the other is a pain medication called Ultracet. He also asked me to leave another urine sample, and then scheduled me for an MRI as well as referred me to an Orthopedic Surgeon. Both of those will occur sometime in the next couple of weeks. So that's my update, and now it's back to work!

My Earliest Morning Post Yet

I'm tired of not being able to sleep


It figures. This is the second time I've written this post. Just as I was about to post it the first time my browser crashed and I lost everything. So now you are going to get the cliff-notes version...


It's now almost 6:30am and I've been awake for the past hour and a half just staring at the ceiling watching the fan go around in circles. Never mind the fact that I didn't fall asleep until after 2am, and this has been happening every night for the past month. And it's all because my back is killing me. I've got this constant ache in the kidney area that has gotten progressively worse over the past four weeks. It's grown to the point where it's wrapped around to the front and makes my stomach feel like I've gotten some acid in there. And as a result I can't lay on my back because it amplifies the discomfort in the kidney region, and I can't lay on my stomach because the acid feeling gets worse. Laying on the side is the best of the bad choices because while I still feel both sides, they aren't quite so acute. But it doesn't help me sleep.


I really haven't told anyone about this because what are they going to do? The one person I thought would always have my back turned hers on me over two years ago. The guys I hang out with would say something like "rub some Ben-gay on it, it'll be fine," and my co-workers would tell me to take a couple of aspirin before my next meeting. So why bother? Instead when people ask how I'm doing, the automatic response is "Good", and when they ask what's wrong, the answer is "Nothing". It's just easier this way.


And before you say it, I have been to the doctor. He doesn't know what it is either. We were hoping it was just a pulled muscle, but the pain is constant and doesn't get better or worse when I twist positions. Still, he put me on some strong pain meds and muscle relaxers, but they haven't done anything to help. He's run some blood tests and urine tests that came back negative for whatever he was looking for. I've had an EKG done and chest x-rays taken and they haven't shown anything either. So he doesn't have any explanation for why my back is so bad, which doesn't really help me as I stare at this spinning fan. I just want to get some sleep, not that it matters now since I have to be up in 15 minutes to get ready for work anyway...

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

A Real Life Denny Deckchair

Man flies 193 miles in his lawn chair!



For more pictures and the full story, click here.

There's nothing like a nice pair of boobies...

Monday, July 09, 2007

More for your reading enjoyment

Read all about Brendan & Taylor's summer in San Francisco


For those of you who didn't know, my kids will be spending the next 5+ weeks living with their mom in San Francisco. And as part of them staying in touch, they've decided to share a blog of their own. I don't know how much they'll be updating it, but feel free to check it out...

The Road Home

An excellent NY Times Editorial...


This is long, but it's worth the read. I couldn't have said any of this better myself...

It is time for the United States to leave Iraq, without any more delay than the Pentagon needs to organize an orderly exit.

Like many Americans, we have put off that conclusion, waiting for a sign that President Bush was seriously trying to dig the United States out of the disaster he created by invading Iraq without sufficient cause, in the face of global opposition, and without a plan to stabilize the country afterward.

At first, we believed that after destroying Iraq’s government, army, police and economic structures, the United States was obliged to try to accomplish some of the goals Mr. Bush claimed to be pursuing, chiefly building a stable, unified Iraq. When it became clear that the president had neither the vision nor the means to do that, we argued against setting a withdrawal date while there was still some chance to mitigate the chaos that would most likely follow.

While Mr. Bush scorns deadlines, he kept promising breakthroughs — after elections, after a constitution, after sending in thousands more troops. But those milestones came and went without any progress toward a stable, democratic Iraq or a path for withdrawal. It is frighteningly clear that Mr. Bush’s plan is to stay the course as long as he is president and dump the mess on his successor. Whatever his cause was, it is lost.

The political leaders Washington has backed are incapable of putting national interests ahead of sectarian score settling. The security forces Washington has trained behave more like partisan militias. Additional military forces poured into the Baghdad region have failed to change anything.

Continuing to sacrifice the lives and limbs of American soldiers is wrong. The war is sapping the strength of the nation’s alliances and its military forces. It is a dangerous diversion from the life-and-death struggle against terrorists. It is an increasing burden on American taxpayers, and it is a betrayal of a world that needs the wise application of American power and principles.

A majority of Americans reached these conclusions months ago. Even in politically polarized Washington, positions on the war no longer divide entirely on party lines. When Congress returns this week, extricating American troops from the war should be at the top of its agenda.

That conversation must be candid and focused. Americans must be clear that Iraq, and the region around it, could be even bloodier and more chaotic after Americans leave. There could be reprisals against those who worked with American forces, further ethnic cleansing, even genocide. Potentially destabilizing refugee flows could hit Jordan and Syria. Iran and Turkey could be tempted to make power grabs. Perhaps most important, the invasion has created a new stronghold from which terrorist activity could proliferate.

The administration, the Democratic-controlled Congress, the United Nations and America’s allies must try to mitigate those outcomes — and they may fail. But Americans must be equally honest about the fact that keeping troops in Iraq will only make things worse. The nation needs a serious discussion, now, about how to accomplish a withdrawal and meet some of the big challenges that will arise.

The Mechanics of Withdrawal

The United States has about 160,000 troops and millions of tons of military gear inside Iraq. Getting that force out safely will be a formidable challenge. The main road south to Kuwait is notoriously vulnerable to roadside bomb attacks. Soldiers, weapons and vehicles will need to be deployed to secure bases while airlift and sealift operations are organized. Withdrawal routes will have to be guarded. The exit must be everything the invasion was not: based on reality and backed by adequate resources.

The United States should explore using Kurdish territory in the north of Iraq as a secure staging area. Being able to use bases and ports in Turkey would also make withdrawal faster and safer. Turkey has been an inconsistent ally in this war, but like other nations, it should realize that shouldering part of the burden of the aftermath is in its own interest.

Accomplishing all of this in less than six months is probably unrealistic. The political decision should be made, and the target date set, now.

The Fight Against Terrorists

Despite President Bush’s repeated claims, Al Qaeda had no significant foothold in Iraq before the invasion, which gave it new base camps, new recruits and new prestige.

This war diverted Pentagon resources from Afghanistan, where the military had a real chance to hunt down Al Qaeda’s leaders. It alienated essential allies in the war against terrorism. It drained the strength and readiness of American troops.

And it created a new front where the United States will have to continue to battle terrorist forces and enlist local allies who reject the idea of an Iraq hijacked by international terrorists. The military will need resources and bases to stanch this self- inflicted wound for the foreseeable future.

The Question of Bases

The United States could strike an agreement with the Kurds to create those bases in northeastern Iraq. Or, the Pentagon could use its bases in countries like Kuwait and Qatar, and its large naval presence in the Persian Gulf, as staging points.

There are arguments for, and against, both options. Leaving troops in Iraq might make it too easy — and too tempting — to get drawn back into the civil war and confirm suspicions that Washington’s real goal was to secure permanent bases in Iraq. Mounting attacks from other countries could endanger those nations’ governments.

The White House should make this choice after consultation with Congress and the other countries in the region, whose opinions the Bush administration has essentially ignored. The bottom line: the Pentagon needs enough force to stage effective raids and airstrikes against terrorist forces in Iraq, but not enough to resume large-scale combat.

The Civil War

One of Mr. Bush’s arguments against withdrawal is that it would lead to civil war. That war is raging, right now, and it may take years to burn out. Iraq may fragment into separate Kurdish, Sunni and Shiite republics, and American troops are not going to stop that from happening.

It is possible, we suppose, that announcing a firm withdrawal date might finally focus Iraq’s political leaders and neighboring governments on reality. Ideally, it could spur Iraqi politicians to take the steps toward national reconciliation that they have endlessly discussed but refused to act on.

But it is foolish to count on that, as some Democratic proponents of withdrawal have done. The administration should use whatever leverage it gains from withdrawing to press its allies and Iraq’s neighbors to help achieve a negotiated solution.

Iraq’s leaders — knowing that they can no longer rely on the Americans to guarantee their survival — might be more open to compromise, perhaps to a Bosnian-style partition, with economic resources fairly shared but with millions of Iraqis forced to relocate. That would be better than the slow-motion ethnic and religious cleansing that has contributed to driving one in seven Iraqis from their homes.

The United States military cannot solve the problem. Congress and the White House must lead an international attempt at a negotiated outcome. To start, Washington must turn to the United Nations, which Mr. Bush spurned and ridiculed as a preface to war.

The Human Crisis

There are already nearly two million Iraqi refugees, mostly in Syria and Jordan, and nearly two million more Iraqis who have been displaced within their country. Without the active cooperation of all six countries bordering Iraq — Turkey, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syria — and the help of other nations, this disaster could get worse. Beyond the suffering, massive flows of refugees — some with ethnic and political resentments — could spread Iraq’s conflict far beyond Iraq’s borders.

Kuwait and Saudi Arabia must share the burden of hosting refugees. Jordan and Syria, now nearly overwhelmed with refugees, need more international help. That, of course, means money. The nations of Europe and Asia have a stake and should contribute. The United States will have to pay a large share of the costs, but should also lead international efforts, perhaps a donors’ conference, to raise money for the refugee crisis.

Washington also has to mend fences with allies. There are new governments in Britain, France and Germany that did not participate in the fight over starting this war and are eager to get beyond it. But that will still require a measure of humility and a commitment to multilateral action that this administration has never shown. And, however angry they were with President Bush for creating this mess, those nations should see that they cannot walk away from the consequences. To put it baldly, terrorism and oil make it impossible to ignore.

The United States has the greatest responsibilities, including the admission of many more refugees for permanent resettlement. The most compelling obligation is to the tens of thousands of Iraqis of courage and good will — translators, embassy employees, reconstruction workers — whose lives will be in danger because they believed the promises and cooperated with the Americans.

The Neighbors

One of the trickiest tasks will be avoiding excessive meddling in Iraq by its neighbors — America’s friends as well as its adversaries.

Just as Iran should come under international pressure to allow Shiites in southern Iraq to develop their own independent future, Washington must help persuade Sunni powers like Syria not to intervene on behalf of Sunni Iraqis. Turkey must be kept from sending troops into Kurdish territories.

For this effort to have any remote chance, Mr. Bush must drop his resistance to talking with both Iran and Syria. Britain, France, Russia, China and other nations with influence have a responsibility to help. Civil war in Iraq is a threat to everyone, especially if it spills across Iraq’s borders.

President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney have used demagoguery and fear to quell Americans’ demands for an end to this war. They say withdrawing will create bloodshed and chaos and encourage terrorists. Actually, all of that has already happened — the result of this unnecessary invasion and the incompetent management of this war.

This country faces a choice. We can go on allowing Mr. Bush to drag out this war without end or purpose. Or we can insist that American troops are withdrawn as quickly and safely as we can manage — with as much effort as possible to stop the chaos from spreading.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Boomshine

Try this addictive little game from Bored.com...




Thursday, July 05, 2007

"All My Life"

How did I miss this?


Billy Joel releasednew music earlier this year and this is the first I'm hearing it? What's up with that???


Why men love Post-It notes...

Meet Victor Rita

Comparing Lewis Libby and Victor Rita


Among the more fascinating aspects of Lewis Libby's commuted sentence is that this case mirrors the case of Victor Rita, the defendant whose 33-month (within-guideline) sentence is currently under review by the US Supreme Court.


First of all, there is a clear parallel nature of the crimes. Like Libby, Victor Rita got caught up in a criminal investigation and ultimately was indicted on five felony counts based on allegations that he lied under oath as part of the investigation. And, like Libby, Victor Rita asserted his innocence and exercised his right to a jury trial. Secondly, we should also look at their parallel personal histories. Like Libby, Victor Rita was an atypical federal defendant because of his career in government service. Rita served 24 years in the Marine Corps, had tours of duty in Vietnam and the first Gulf war, and received over 35 military medals and awards. Libby's pre-conviction resume is just impressive. Furthermore, the federal guidelines do not provide any formal breaks for government service or prior good works.


To that regard, Rita's 33-month sentence should have been the perfect benchmark for Libby's sentence. And it was according to the judge who sentenced him. But then Bush stepped in and commuted Libby's jail time because he thought it was excessive. Yet when it came to Rita's case, the Bush Administration and the Justice Department filed as a party before the Supreme Court, stating they thought Rita's sentence was 'reasonable.'


How can we not wonder why President Bush viewed Scooter Libby's (within-guidelines) prison sentence to be excessive while the Justice Department argued so forcefully that Victor Rita's (within-guidelines and longer) sentence is reasonable?


Joe Biden is the first of the Presidential hopefuls to also pick up on this:


"Tony Snow said that President Bush decided to commute Scooter Libby's two and a half year-prison sentence for perjury and obstruction of justice, because it was 'excessive.' Yet last year the Bush Administration filed a 'friend-of-the-court brief' with the Supreme Court, in an attempt to uphold a lower court's ruling that a 33-month prison sentence for Victor Rita, who was convicted of the same exact charges, perjury and obstruction of justice, was 'reasonable' The questions we should all be asking ourselves today are: Why is the President flip-flopping on these criminal justice decisions? Why is Scooter Libby getting special treatment?"


I think we all know the answer...

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Six Weeks of Freedom

What to do with myself...


Well, the kids left with Sharon for San Francisco on Sunday. After reflecting on this for a little while, it dawned on me that this will be the longest period of time that I've ever lived on my own. I've gone from living at home as a kid, to a dorm in college, to a Fraternity house, to several apartments with friends, to getting married, and finally to the end of the marriage where I've had my kids every other week. Never before have I had this much time alone.


So now I need to come up with things to entertain myself since I think I'm going to be bored until the kids come back in Mid-August. Anyone have any Ideas? *grin*

Compassionate Conservatism?

A systemic assault on American rule of law by the Bush administration


Apparently I'm quite slow on the uptake since it's taken me seven years to fully understand what the Right Wing means when they call Bush a "compassionate conservative". But now I get it. The man may have happily consigned 155 prisoners to death when he was governor of Texas, including a refusal to commute the sentence of a 33-year-old mentally retarded black man with an IQ of around 60 and the functional skills of a 7-year-old boy. He may have sent more than 3600 US soldiers (and counting) to their death in Iraq without ever making clear why he sent them in the first place, especially since four years ago he baited the Iraqi insurgents to attack our soldiers by taunting them with "Bring 'em on!" -- possibly the most irresponsible statement any president has ever uttered. He may have widened the income gap, deepened the budget deficit, slashed funding for social programs, eroded American freedoms in the name of security, and whipped up a global storm of anti-American hatred. But he clearly couldn't stomach the idea of Scooter Libby spending even a single day behind bars. So Bush did something about it and commuted his sentence before it even began. Now that's what I call compassion...


Bush believed Scooter Libby's sentence was "excessive." In other words, two-and-a-half years in jail for perjury is just way over the line in a case which involved the undermining of our national security; exposing a CIA agent's cover; and potentially damaging this agent's covert operation to track unaccounted-for nuclear material (loose nukes) -- all orchestrated by the vice president to get even with Ambassador Joe Wilson. The truth is that commuting Libby's prison term had nothing to do with any sudden outbreak of sympathy or humanity. The president's decision had everything to do with a likely deal between the vice president and Libby's attorneys in which Libby promised to keep the focus away from Cheney in exchange for the VP promising to see what he could do about the sentence. That's it.


So the president all but pardoned Libby by commuting his prison sentence. The outrage isn't the pardon, it's that this is the final piece of evidence that Bush has written off the American people. Despite overwhelming polls that showed the American people did not want the president to free Scooter Libby, he commuted his sentence. The President is operating like a dictator. He said recently that history will judge him -- that he won't be judged until after he's dead. In effect he's saying he's accepted that this generation of Americans have rejected him. And he's telling the American people he won't listen -- we can't judge him because he won't let us.


In conclusion, for Bush to say "I respect the jury's verdict, but I have concluded that the prison sentence given to Mr. Libby is excessive. Therefore, I am commuting the portion of Mr. Libby's sentence that required him to spend thirty months in prison." is pure hypocrisy. First of all, Bush "wrote" (laugh!) in his autobiography, A Charge To Keep, "I don't believe my role is to replace the verdict of a jury with my own." (Let that sink in for a second…) Furthermore, Bush is currently calling upon Congress to make every federal crime subject to a mandatory minimum sentence in his proposed Sentencing Reform Act, (Word for Word from that act: "...Restore the binding nature of the guidelines by making the bottom of the guideline range for each offense a minimum sentence that must be imposed when the elements of the offense are proven...") thereby preventing judges from imposing an individually tailored sentence based on their view of the offender's character and mitigating factors. Yet Bush has no qualms making an exception for a single member of his Administration.


I am also not the only one who thinks this way...


Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald:

"It is fundamental to the rule of law that all citizens stand before the bar of justice as equals."

 

Melanie Sloan, legal counsel to Joe and Valerie Wilson:

“First, President Bush said any person who leaked would no longer work in his administration. Nonetheless, Scooter Libby didn’t leave office until he was indicted and Karl Rove works in the White House even today. More recently, the vice president ignored an executive order protecting classified information, claiming he isn’t really part of the executive branch. Clearly, this is anadministration that believes leaking classified information for political ends is justified and that the law is what applies to other people.”

 

Sen. Barack Obama:

“This decision to commute the sentence of a man who compromised our national security cements the legacy of an Administration characterized by a politics of cynicism and division, one that has consistently placed itself and its ideology above the law. This is exactly the kind of politics we must change so we can begin restoring the American people’s faith in a government that puts the country’s progress ahead of the bitter partisanship of recent years.”

 

Sen. Charles Schumer:

“As Independence Day nears, we are reminded that one of the principles our forefathers fought for was equal justice under the law. This commutation completely tramples on that principle.”

 

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid:

“The President’s decision to commute Mr. Libby’s sentence is disgraceful. Libby’s conviction was the one faint glimmer of accountability for White House efforts to manipulate intelligence and silence critics of the Iraq War. Now, even that small bit of justice has been undone. Judge Walton correctly determined that Libby deserved to be imprisoned for lying about a matter ofnational security. The Constitution gives President Bush the power to commute sentences, but history will judge him harshly for using that power to benefit his own Vice President’s Chief of Staff who was convicted of such a serious violation of law.”

 

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi:

“The President’s commutation of Scooter Libby’s prison sentence does not serve justice, condones criminal conduct, and is a betrayal of trust of the American people. The President said he would hold accountable anyone involved in the Valerie Plame leak case. By his action today, the President shows his word is not to be believed. He has abandoned all sense of fairness when it comes to justice, he has failed to uphold the rule of law, and he has failed to hold his Administration accountable.”

 

Sen. Joe Biden:

“Last week Vice President Cheney asserted that he was beyond the reach of the law. Today, President Bush demonstrated the lengths he would go to, ensuring that even aides to Dick Cheney are beyond the judgment of the law. It is time for the American people to be heard. I call for all Americans to flood the White House with phone calls tomorrow expressing their outrage over this blatant disregard for the rule of law.”

 

John Edwards:

“Only a president clinically incapable of understanding that mistakes have consequences could take the action he did today. President Bush has just sent exactly the wrong signal to the country and the world. In George Bush’s America, it is apparently okay to misuse intelligence for political gain, mislead prosecutors and lie to the FBI. George Bush and his cronies think they are above the law and the rest of us live with the consequences. The cause of equal justice in America took a serious blow today.”

 

Gov. Bill Richardson:

“It’s a sad day when the President commutes the sentence of a public official who deliberately and blatantly betrayed the public trust and obstructed an important federal investigation. This administration clearly believes its officials are above the law, from ignoring FISA laws when eavesdropping on US citizens, to the abuse of classified material, to ignoring the Geneva Conventions and international law with secret prisons and torturing prisoners. There is a reason we have laws and why we expect our Presidents to obey them. Institutions have a collective wisdom greater than that of any one individual. The arrogance of this administration’s disdain for the law and its belief it operates with impunity are breathtaking. Will the President also commute the sentences of others who obstructed justice and lied to grand juries, or only those who act to protect President Bush and Vice President Cheney?”

 

Sen. Dick Durbin:

"When it comes to the law, there should not be two sets of rules -- one for President Bush and Vice President Cheney and another for the rest of America. Even Paris Hilton had to go to jail. No one in this administration should be above the law."

 

Sen. Chris Dodd:

"By commuting Scooter Libby's sentence, the president continues to abdicate responsibility for the actions of his administration. The only ones paying the price for this administration's actions are the American people."

 

Rep. Tom Lantos:

"This decision sends the wrong message about the rule of law in the United States, just as the president is meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. How can we hold the line against injustices in other countries when our own executive branch deliberately sets out to smear its critics, lies about it and then wriggles away without having to pay the price in prison?"

Monday, July 02, 2007

Europeans see U.S. as biggest world threat

Not that this is a surprise


A new Financial Times poll finds “that 32 percent of respondents in five European countries regard the US as a bigger threat than any other state,” followed up by China, Iran, Iraq, and North Korea:


ftpoll.jpg

Also, “the youngest US respondents share the Europeans’ view that theirs is the biggest threat, with 35 per cent of American 16- to 24-year-olds identifying it as the chief danger to stability.”