Welcome to Medary.com Friday, March 29 2024 @ 07:13 AM CST

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Minneapolis bridge collapse

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No, I'm not ignoring it.  I just don't have much to say, except my prayers go out to all of the victims and their families.  We do need to do a better job of maintaining our infrastructure.  That means more money.  Materials science and physics don't work on the cheap.

Iraq: The ultimate X-Game

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One thing that has puzzled me is why almost every (credible) report I read from Iraq that mentions the morale of our troops says that it remains good, despite the unremitting torrent of depressing failure that we at home live through every time we turn on the television?  (Credible defined largely as "actually quoting someone who is there, is going there, or has been there."  Soldiers gripe, and some of them do actually oppose what we're doing in Iraq, but most of them are generally much more positive than is the American public.)

Reading Dean Barnett's article in the Weekly Standard, I finally figured it out.
Colonel Schlichter talks about the soldiers he commands with unvarnished admiration. He has 20-year-olds serving under him who have earned combat badges. As to why these young men are willingly and eagerly putting themselves in harm's way, Schlichter flatly declares, "The direction comes from themselves. They like to be challenged."
These "kids" (I'm going to have my 48th birthday in less than a month, so yeah, a 20-year-old is a "kid" now) aren't intimidated, whether they're doing incomprehensible and dangerous things with skateboards, surfboards, skis, or hunting IED's in Iraq.  They crave the challenge, and yet they have more discipline than many of us older people give them credit for, more guts, more bravery, more . . . nobility.

More from Barnett's article:

Regardless of their backgrounds, the soldiers I spoke with had a similar matter-of-fact style. Not only did all of them bristle at the notion of being labeled victims, they bristled at the idea of being labeled heroes. To a man, they were doing what they saw as their duty. Their self-assessments lacked the sense of superiority that politicians of a certain age who once served in the military often display. The soldiers I spoke with also refused to make disparaging comparisons between themselves and their generational cohorts who have taken a different path.

But that doesn't mean the soldiers were unaware of the importance of their undertaking. About a month ago, I attended the commissioning of a lieutenant in the Marine Corps. The day before his commissioning, he had graduated from Harvard. He didn't come from a military family, and it wasn't financial hardship that drove him into the Armed Forces. Don't tell John Kerry, but he studied hard in college. After his commissioning, this freshly minted United States Marine returned to his Harvard dorm room to clean it out.

As he entered the dorm in his full dress uniform, some of his classmates gave him a spontaneous round of applause. A campus police officer took him aside to shake his hand. His father observed, "It was like something out of a movie."

Who knows, some day, some enterprising movie producer will actually make an honest movie about what we, the American People tried to do in Iraq.  I hope it has a happy ending--for us and for the Iraqis.

The sounds of silence?

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Item 1:  A member of the FreeRepublic site, posting from Baghdad, notes that "Come to think of it, I haven't heard any explosions in the last couple of days..."

Item 2:  Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit passes along an e-mail from Michael Yon who is also "in-country":  "Wow. There was zero combat reported in Baqubah yesterday. Hard to believe. But I am right here, and that's the way it was."

The contrast with the increasingly shrill political environment here Stateside is offered for your evening's meditation.

Where did I leave that rocket launcher?

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When you're out playing Jihadis and Infidels, please, please, please don't leave your toys in the nice Jersey lady's yard

We note with amusement that it was only an "inoperable military training device."

It should be great comfort to the careless owner of said "inoperable military training device" that if he or she is reported to the authorities for playing with an "inoperable military training device"  underneath the approach pattern of the Newark International Airport, he or she may (courtesy the Democrats in the U.S. Congress) safely sue the homeowner or anyone else foolish enough to think that this behavior was out of the norm.

Hey, maybe it was just someone who's had enough of sewage running down the aisle of Continental Airlines airplanes.  I know I have.  (CO has a major hub at Newark. I know, if you have to explain a joke, it probably wasn't funny.)

Hat tips:  Gateway Pundit; Tigerhawk.

Our minds are made up, don't confuse us with the facts

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Yahoo News/Reuters:  U.S. Iraq envoy warns skeptical Senators on pullout:
The U.S. ambassador to Iraq warned skeptical senators on Thursday against an unconditional withdrawal of American troops but was told, in the words of one influential Democrat, "We ain't staying."
. . .
Sen. George Voinovich of Ohio, a Republican who has distanced himself from Bush's Iraq policy, bluntly told Crocker: "We have to disengage. It's inevitable."

Sen. Joseph Biden, a 2008 Democratic presidential hopeful from Delaware who chairs the committee, chimed in: "Listen to the Republicans. We ain't staying. We're not staying. We're not staying. Not much time."