| Wednesday, December 22, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, a left writer  and left outlet take rape seriously, Barack Obama signs into law legislation  that removes Don't Ask, Don't Tell from the books, Iraqi Christians continue to  face threats, and more.     A Command  Sergeant Major told Catherine Jayne West of the Mississippi National Guard,  "There aren't but two places for women -- in the kitchen or in the bedroom.  Women have no place in the military."      She was raped by  fellow soldier Private First Class Kevin Lemeiux, at the sprawling Camp  Anaconda, north of Baghdad. The defense lawyer in court merely wanted to know  why, as a member of the army, she had not fought  back.     The morning  after the rape, an army doctor gave her a thorough examination. The army's  criminal investigation team concluded her story was true. Moreover, Lemeiux had  bragged about the incident to his buddies and they had turned him in. It seemed  like a closed case, but in court the defense claimed that the fact that West had  not fought back during the rape was what incriminated her. In addition, her  commanding officer and 1st Sergeant declared, in court, that she was a  "promiscuous female."     In contrast,  Lemeiux, after the third court hearing of the trial, was promoted to a  Specialist. Meanwhile his lawyer entered a plea of  insanity.     He was later  found guilty of kidnapping but not rape, despite his own admission of the crime.  He was given three years for kidnapping, half of which was knocked  off.      Dahr's exploring the realities of rape. It's a shame others haven't shown  the same interest in the topic.  Instead, they've spent the bulk of the month  shaming, trashing and attacking two women who may have been raped by Julian  Assange of WikiLeaks.  One of the people engaging in harmful attacks -- harmful  to all women -- has been Keith Olbermann and he wonders what happens if Julian  Assange isn't guilty?  Kate Harding breaks it down for him :  A: That wouldn't change anything the majority of us are  saying.   If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that he was accused of  rape.  If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that unprotected consensual sex is perfectly legal  in Sweden.  If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that the allegations are about far more than a broken  condom.  If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that you didn't correct Michael  Moore when he distorted all of the above facts during an interview  with you.  If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that you personally spread ridiculous  misinformation as well.  If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that you boosted the signal on  a patently ludicrous, nakedly sexist article by an unreliable writer.  [UPDATE: Olbermann just said on Twitter  that he "repudiated the linked article weeks back when the author was alleged to  have been a holocaust denier." I have no idea where he did that, but I'll give  him the benefit of the doubt.] [UPDATE 2: On Dec. 7, he tweeted "If the author  of that article is a holocaust denier, I repudiate him and what he wrote, and  apologize for retweeting the link" in an @ reply to user @mcmoynihan -- meaning  it would only show up in feeds of people who follow both Olbermann and Moynihan,  and on Olbermann's main page -- not in his 150K+ followers' feeds. So yes, he  apologized for that before #mooreandme started, but not quite publicly.)  If he's not guilty, it's still a fact that trivializing real rape  allegations contributes to a culture in which victims are hesitant to report  being raped for fear that they won't be  believed.
     I ask that you denounce Naomi Wolf's comments on Assange's rape  charges. I ask that you denounce that "no means no" is all there is to  rape. I ask that you acknowledge that "yes means yes" is now a part of  the feminist lexicon, wherever it might go, however it might evolve from  here. I ask that you acknowledge that "enthusiastic consent" is a theory  highly worth pursuing. I ask you to do this because you have names that people recognize  as part of feminism. So does Naomi Wolf. And now we are all experiencing, en  masse, the old phenomenon: "I know somebody who is a feminist, and they think  this is fine." A big-name feminist has said, publicly, that initiating sex with  a partner who is asleep is not rape. That ripping a woman's clothes off is not a  force, is not a threat, is not violence, has no bearing upon the context of  safety. That political targets are incapable of raping, because there can be no  reason for them to be accused that is not politically motivated. This has given  permission to all those who believe the same to tell us that we are wrong. The  new guard, we know each other's names, but the general public doesn't know us  very well yet. We do not have the weight of years of revolution behind us. When  Naomi Wolf says that sleeping women can be raped legally, this becomes public  knowledge. When we say, "yes means yes," the general public does not hear, and  the general public does not care. They can now point to Naomi Wolf and say, "You  are wrong. You are not feminism. She is. And she says I can do this to you, and  you can't do anything about it." You have names. You have voices. Please give us somebody else to  point to when we are told that we can be raped in the ways Naomi Wolf has  decreed are acceptable. Please let us know that we are not on our own, that we  have not already broken away, and did not hear the crack until Naomi Wolf  "agreed to disagree" about our bodily autonomy, our safety. Please let us know  that, with one arrogant statement, feminists cannot really erase the rapes that  have been experienced by countless survivors. Please let us know that you hear  us, that you believe we are feminism, too. Please do not let Naomi Wolf become  the voice of what is rape, because rapists were listening when she spoke, and  judges, and juries, and future victims who will spend their lives believing it  was their fault, and they are always saying "yes" if they are not shouting  "no."   And Ann noted  her objection to the  insulting remarks Naomi Wolf's been making and boiled it down to, "I was raped.   Naomi wasn't."  Which is one more reason that Naomi should not have been allowed  to represent as the face of this issue.  These are not minor points.  Moving to  the topics of peace and resistance, David Swanson (War Is A Crime)  notes :  You say protests are outmoded because the corporate media ignores  them (unless they're corporate sponsored).  I say the corporate media is  outmoded because it ignores protests.The coming year is going to see intense  resistance to the plutopentagonocracy from volunteer representatives of that  majority of Americans that opposes its agenda.  We are not going to ask for the  media cartel's approval or permission.  We are going to continue developing our  own communications systems, which are already working well.
 If we abandon  the work of protest and resistance, those acts will soon be criminalized.  If we  abandon the work of self-communication we will each come to believe that the  rest of us support that criminalization.  There is another way.
 William T.  Hathaway's new book "Radical Peace: People Refusing War," tells true stories of  people helping U.S. soldiers to desert and hide, chasing military recruiters out of  schools, educating young people as counter-recruitment, caring for veterans,  vandalizing recruiting stations, and burning unguarded tanks and airplanes.   Many people will like some of these stories and not others.  Personally I  thought the Afterword was dumb enough to almost ruin an otherwise remarkable and  wonderful book.  The point is that these are stories that it is up to us to tell  each other.
 As I travel the country on a book tour I hear in about equal  parts from people doing extraordinary things that nobody knows about and from  people complaining that nobody is doing anything.  We do not have an activism  shortage so much as a communications shortage.  People are engaged in civil resistance to the  government, the banks, and the war machine in great numbers and with stunning  creativity.
 
 It's an interesting column that becomes worthless at the end when David  wants to weigh in on Panhandle Media.  Panhandle Media is useless and  David should know that.  One of his best friends semi-publicly called it out --  it was there for all to hear (I heard it, I agreed with the call, I didn't  emphasize it here because I know how petty they are in the Circle Jerk and that  ____ would have been banned from the reigndeer games if the comments were widely  distributed).  Of his list, if she's not focusing on electoral politics, Laura  Flanders is the only one of any value (and I say that as someone with a very  good FSRN friend). In terms of peace and resistance, Laura can do a show on that  (and does) and no one can touch her.  It's a shame she's sullied her image and  name by becoming a Democratic Party cheerleader.  (Although, in fairness, her  program has been co-opted by The Nation  magazine.) And, point of fact,  we don't need to invest in any of these programs.  You're looking for answers  outside of yourself and that's why you're failing.  I'll be damn honest, Elaine , Ava  and I are never giving a damn penny to Panhandle  Media again.  (I can still be guilted into KPFA donations if enough KPFA friends  whine about the station going under.) It's useless, it doesn't focus on the  things that matter (ending wars) but works overtime to whore for the Democratic  Party.  Every program David lists whored for the Democratic Party in 2008  instead of making demands, instead of staying focused on the wars.  That's  reality and we're not tossing money out to that and we're telling everyone else  not to either.  There's no point in it.  We don't need Washington Week   "but for the left!"  We never did.  The left would be smart to realize that most of the money they once had  access to is gone because they whored.  When they did that, they ensured that  those of us who are not going to lie for the Democratic Party will not give  money.  And those who are happy with the whoring?  They'll always put the money  into the Democratic Party first and foremost.  That's reality.   Reality is also that most programs don't need a budget these days and Air  America Radio was a success -- BRIEFLY -- when it was working on the streaming  model.  Those first few months, AAR was a success.  Yes, you will miss people  without computers but considering how the left -- especially the Socialist left  -- has attacked the White poor in this country over and over in the last two  years, that might actually be a plus.   David believes that Big Money's coming.  I don't think so.  I think the  left that wants to build would be smart to look at how they build one-on-one and  grasp that they can do that on a larger scale without needing anyone else.  You  have the answers inside you and the power is within your grasp. Focusing on a  Big Daddy is just a cop out that allows you to justify your own inaction.   (David Swanson is on the road currently and is quite often on the road, I'm  speaking of the left in general.)    But let me make it clear (and Elaine has many times at her site), we gave  to all the left.  Democratic, Socialist, Communist, etc.  We didn't care.  The  point was to end the Iraq War and to get rid of Bush.  (Not to get rid of Bush  and replace him with a repackaged version.) Those days are gone.  That money was  wasted.  Not because the illegal war continues (although it does) but because  people whored. That was especially appalling when it came from Socialist and  Communists whom you would think would have the good sense not to sully  themselves by whoring for a political party they're not a member of. There is no  song-and-dance that will sway me again.  My donations go to children's causes  and issues I believe in such as feminism, LGBT rights and immigration rights.  I  have no use for the so-called 'organized left.'  That's true of a large number  of wealthy, left women today, we're sick of it.  And these attacks on the two  women who may have been raped only ensure that we remain sick of it.  Why the  hell would any self-respecting woman fork over big money to support a system  that repeatedly kicks us and our rights to the curb?  Get real, the money's  gone.  Many men agree with us and the bulk of the men that might give are  engaged in the pissing match with Warren Buffet.   The real answer is for people to use their own power.  That means writing  stories to be widely distributed -- and noting that they can be widely  distributed -- doing the same with photos and with videos. There's no need for  the press -- not even the Beggar Media.  David Swanson participated in last Thursday 's action in DC as did author, activist  and journalist Chris Hedges who reflects on it at Information Clearing  House :  The speeches were over. There was a mournful harmonica rendition of  taps.  The 500 protesters in Lafayette Park in front of the White House fell  silent. One hundred and thirty-one men and women, many of them military veterans  wearing old fatigues, formed a single, silent line.  Under a heavy snowfall and  to the slow beat of a drum, they walked to the White House fence. They stood  there until they were arrested.   The solemnity of that funerary march, the hush, was the hardest and  most moving part of Thursday's protest against the wars in Afghanistan and  Iraq.  It unwound the bitter memories and images of war I keep wrapped in the  thick cotton wool of forgetfulness. I was transported in that short walk to  places I do not like to go. Strange and vivid flashes swept over me -- the young  soldier in El Salvador who had been shot through the back of the head and was,  as I crouched next to him, slowly curling up in a fetal position to die; the  mutilated corpses of Kosovar Albanians in the back of a flatbed truck; the  screams of a woman, her entrails spilling out of her gaping wounds, on the  cobblestones of a Sarajevo street. My experience was not unique.  Veterans  around me were back in the rice paddies and lush undergrowth of Vietnam, the  dusty roads of southern Iraq or the mountain passes of Afghanistan.  Their tears  showed that.  There was no need to talk. We spoke the same wordless language.  The butchery of war defies, for those who know it, articulation. What can I tell you about war? War perverts and destroys you.  It pushes you closer and closer to  your own annihilation -- spiritual, emotional and, finally, physical. It  destroys the continuity of life, tearing apart all systems, economic, social,  environmental and political, that sustain us as human beings. War is  necrophilia.  The essence of war is death. War is a state of almost pure sin  with its goals of hatred and destruction. It is organized sadism.  War fosters  alienation and leads inevitably to nihlism. It is a turning away from the  sanctity of life.                    
 Approximately  75 people braved the freezing temperatures on the afternoon of Thursday, Dec. 16  to rally against the war in Afghanistan. They  gathered on Military Island, the small traffic island housing the Times Square recruiting  station (now laughably tagged the Army Career Center) as a sympathy rally for  the one held in D.C. earlier that day at the White House, during which 135  people were arrested.   
 In Times  Square, 11 stalwarts blocked a stretch of Broadway for about 10 minutes before  they were handcuffed and hauled off by the New York City police to a  nearby jail.    
 The Big Apple  event was populated by many Veterans for Peace and lots of  peace grannies from the Granny Peace Brigade, the  Raging Grannies  and Grandmothers  Against the War. Two of the grandmothers were in their 90's but stood for more  than an hour in the cold throughout the action. There was a contingent of Catholic Workers, War Resister  Leaguers, the Green Party, and other  anti-war groups, also. After the  Raging Grannies sang a few of  their peace songs, names of New York State war dead in Afghanistan were read. Then,  leaders in the peace movement spoke, including Bill Gilson, Vice President of  local chapter 34 of Veterans for Peace; Carmen  Trotta of the Catholic Workers; Barbara Harris, chair of the Counter Recruitment  Committee of the Granny Peace Brigade; Tom Syracuse of the Green Party, and  Alicia Godberg, Executive Director of Peace Action New York  State. 
 And then came  the civil resistance, at exactly 6  p.m. As the Times Square crowds swarmed around, the bright lights sparkled and  flashed, 11 hardy souls fanned out across Broadway at the intersection with 44th  St. and refused to move. The other rally participants shouted "Peace Now," "Stop  the War," "Arrest Bush and Cheney, not these Patriots," as they observed their  comrades loaded into the paddy wagons.  
 The event was organized by one of the arrestees, Bill Steyert, a  Vietnam war vet with the Vets  for Peace, who said: "I think it was a travesty that the war in Afghanistan wasn't even  brought up as an issue during the recent mid-term elections. This tragic war  jeopardizes not only the lives of American troops but directly affects our  economy, which is in such dire shape because money spent on war is urgently  needed to create jobs at home. This rally showed that those of   us who were there have not forgotten what's going on in  Afghanistan in our name."     Turning to Iraq, Liz Sly and Aaron Davis (Washington Post) note, "A special  gathering of the nation's parliament endorsed Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for  a second term in office, with lawmakers then voting one by one for 31 of the  eventual 42 ministers who will be in his cabinet." AFP notes that all but one is a  man, Bushra Hussein Saleh being the sole woman in the Cabinet. And they quote  Kurdish MP Ala Talabani stating, "We congratulate the government, whose birth  required eight months, but at the same time we are very depressed when we see  the number of women chosen to head the ministries. Today, democracy was  decapitated by sexism. The absence of women is a mark of disdain and is contrary  to several articles of the constitution. I suggest to Mr Maliki to even choose a  man for the ministry of women's rights, as you do not have confidence in women."  Ala Talabani is the niece of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani. Imran Ali (Womens Views On News) reminds, "The  new constitution stipulates that a quarter of the members of parliament be women  and prohibits gender discrimination." Apparently concern about representation  doesn't apply to the Cabinet (and, no, Nouri's attempts at offering excuses for  the huge gender imbalance do not fly). John Leland (New York Times) writes about the  reactions of Iraqis and we'll note Anbar Province because the State Dept  thinks/fears it's the new hot spot in Iraq:   For Ikram Rijab Abdullah, 38, the results left a  bitter taste. "Our ambition was to form a government by Allawi and the important  ministries to go to the Iraqiya bloc, because the it's the only bloc that  included patriotic people," Mr. Abdullah said. "But what happened has  disappointed us." The haggling, he said, was pure politics, with most ministries  going to "unqualified people." He added: "We as citizens have done what we were  supposed to do and what is happening nowadays has been imposed by American and  regional interests."His neighbor,  Anmar Saadi Al-A'ani, 34, was even less optimistic about the new government,  which included many members of the previous cabinet. "We were hoping to see new  faces pumping new blood into the heart of the new government and to be national  names." The chosen ministers, he said, did not reflect the country's many  qualified candidates.
   The Christian Science Monitor's editorial board  argues, "The time is now ripe for Washington to prepare for an Iraq -- a  nation that once had little democratic tradition and invaded two of its  neighbors -- that can be a key partner in reshaping the Middle East, much like  the role Germany plays in Europe or Japan in Asia. Americans should expect no  less, after more than 1.5 million US soldiers served in Iraq with a loss of more  than 4,440 American lives and tens of thousands of Iraqis. The two nations are  now inextricably bound by a contentious history born of post-9/11 fears but also  hopes for a Middle East that can be rid of jihadism through contagious  democracy."  Glenn McNatt (Baltimore Sun) offers,  "Prime Minister al-Maliki has expressed confidence that the unity government he  leads reflects the diversity of ethnic, sectarian and political interests in  Iraq, but there are still questions about how meaningful a role the country's  Sunni minority will play. If Iraq is to become the peaceful, prosperous example  of democracy in the Mideast that the U.S. wishes it to be, it's vital that Mr.  al-Maliki make good on his promises to lead a truly representative government  that offers the hope of a better life for all its citizens."  Meanwhile Liz Sly (Washington Post) explores  Nouri:   That Maliki has an authoritarian  streak has been amply demonstrated over the past 4 1/2 years, critics say.  Maliki, originally selected in 2006 as a compromise candidate assumed to be weak  and malleable, has proved to be a tough and ruthless political operator who  cannily subverted parliament to cement his authority over many of the new  democracy's fledgling institutions.In his role as commander in chief of the  armed forces, he replaced divisional army commanders with his appointees,  brought provincial command centers under his control and moved to dominate the  intelligence agencies.
 The widely feared Baghdad Brigade, which answers  directly to Maliki's office, has frequently been used to move against his  political opponents. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have accused  him of operating secret prisons in which Sunni suspects have been  tortured.
 
 Reuters notes an attack on a Baghdad  military checkpoint which claimed the life of 1 Iraqi solider and left three  more injured and a Baghdad sticky bombing whidh injured "a senior official at  the Ministry of Health".   Yesterday came news that Kirkuk would not publicly celebrate Christmas. AP reports   this means no decorations, no "traditional Santa Claus appearance outside one of  the city's churches" and that Mosul has followed Kirkuk's lead as the Islamic  State of Iraq issued a threat yesterday that more Christians would be attacked.  We noted Amnesty's statement yesterday but the US version (we noted the UK)  contains an audio option . The latest wave of attacks on Iraqi  Christians began October 31st with the assault on Our Lady of Salvation Church  in Baghdad. Since then Iraqi Christians in Baghdad and Mosul have been  especially targeted with many fleeing the country or fleeing to the KRG region  of Iraq. The Herald Sun reports , "At Our Lady of  Salvation Church, the bloodied hand prints of murdered members of the  congregation remain on the walls, which are riddled with bullet holes and one  family of victims -- Zuher and Amal, their son Uday and their grandson (by Uday)  Adam and the family is among those considering leaving Baghdad.  Middle East  Online reports : Jerusalem's Latin Patriarch Fuad Twal offered his  solidarity and support to Christians in Iraq after a bloody October  hostage-taking at a Baghdad cathedrak that killed 44 worshippers, two priests  and seven security force personnel. "We were shocked and troubled by the  massacre of Christians in Baghdad in the Church of Perpetual Help," Twal said in  his Jerusalem headquarters. "We condemn this violence. It's a pity to empty  Iraq of its Christian citizens... It's a pity for us, for the Muslims  themselves, for Iraq, for the Christians themselves.Yahya Barzanji and Sameer N. Yacoub (AP)  report Basra and Baghdad have now called off festivities as well and not  only will now allow decorations there will be no "evening Mass" held either. --  in Baghdad, that's mo Christmas Eve Mass and no Christmas Day mass. Deutsche Presse-Agentur observes ,  "Iraq's northern areas are home to some of the oldest Christian sects in the  world."  Mustafa Mahmoud (Reuters) quotes   Kirkuk-based Archbishop Louis Sako stating, "We are still deeply wounded from  what happened in Our Lady of Salvation church. We saw innocent people brutally  killed while praying to God, so how can we celebrate? We will not celebrate this  year.  We will only pray to God asking for peace to prevail in our country."  England's Channel 4 reports on their blog :   In Iraq, people say there were maybe a million Christians in  2003 -- 3 per cent of the population -- but at least half have left and those  remaining now want to go too, as extremist Islamists step up their campaign  against "infidels". Many of those I've met in the last week say there's no  future for Christians in Iraq -- it's over. Yet Christianity was in Mesopotamia -- what we now call Iraq --  several centuries before Islam. The Chaldeans and Syriac Christians of today  speak Aramaic, the language Jesus would have spoken. The reason so much  attention is being lavished on the murder of Christians is not because their  lives are worth more than the lives of Muslims, but because an ancient  civilisation is in danger of being wiped out. On Sunday afternoon, I went to St George's Anglican church where an  English vicar is trying to stem the tide. The indefatigable Canon Andrew White,  who doesn't let the progression of multiple sclerosis hinder him, attracted  several hundred to his Christmas carol service. It was wonderfully,  eccentrically English and Iraqi.   McClatchy Newspapers' Shashank Bengali (McClatchy Newspapers) reports   there were only "three worshippers" present at Our Lady of Salvation Church this  morning: "One was a girl, a tiny brunette of no more than 10 years old, who  walked to the front of the church clutching her school report card. She knelt at  the altar in front of a picture of her cousin, who was inside the church during  evening mass on Oct. 31, when terrorist stormed the building and took the  worshippers hostage before detonating suicide vests. Dozens were killed,  including the girl's cousin." (Bengali's piece also appears -- a bit expanded -- at  the Christian Science Monitor .) Barnabas Aid quotes  their director, Dr. Patrick  Sookhdeo, stating, "In our ongoing efforts to make known the desperate state of  Christians around the world, it often seems that nobody outside the Church  cares. So I greatly welcome these newspaper and television reports which will  publicise the crisis facing Christians in Iraq and other parts of the Middle  East to a wide audience." Carl Davidson writes the editorial board of the  Battle Creek Enquirer and offers , "President Obama properly  condemned Quran-burning but declined a response to the Pope's urgent call to  save Christian Iraqis' innocent lives with the same level of security provided  for U.S.-China oil contractors.  Why this supine abandonment as we celebrate  2010 Christmas? He's visited numerous mosques, but not one Iraqi church in  Chicago."  Independent Catholic News notes  an open  letter to US President Barack Obama which will be handed to National Security  Advisor Tom Donilon ("who has agreed to discuss the letter with the  president"):  As deeply committed legislators and members of parliaments from  around the world, we are writing to express our concern about the ongoing  persecution of religious minorities in Iraq and the wider Middle East.  We do  appreciate additional high-level attention and resources devoted to mitigating  the ongoing and egregious persecution of Christians and other minority religious  communities in Iraq, and wish to convey our pressing interest in assisting with  increased efforts to reverse this devastating trend. Christians are rapidly  becoming extinct in Iraq and other Middle Eastern countries and this development  is not in the interest of peace and stability in this troubled region. As  anyone involved with international security efforts in Iraq well knows, the  severity of the persecution of the Christian community in Iraq , which has for  centuries served an important stabilizing role both in economic and political  terms, threatens not only that ancient community, but the entire foundation of  Iraq 's civil democracy.  Efforts to help establish and protect that democracy  have cost many of our countries dearly, and these sacrifices bear silent witness  to the urgency of our desire to work with you to take our mutual efforts to a  new level.  But it is imperative that the United States takes a leadership role  in this regard.
 A thriving and actively engaged Iraqi Christian community  is vital to assuring the future stability of Iraq, and its presence or absence  will bear heavily on future prospects for stability throughout the Middle East  .  We are convinced that one indispensible measure of the success of years of  grueling effort to help stabilize Iraq, and indeed Iraq's  very survival as a  pluralistic democracy, is the extent to which Christian and other minority  religious communities are able to live and move freely without constant fear of  intimidation and brutal violence. This especially concerns the freedom to  worship and the freedom to express their faith publicly.
 We fully  appreciate all efforts, often undertaken in the midst of arduous circumstances,  which are currently underway to bring relief to hundreds of thousands of  displaced persons and those that continue to flee their homeland at record pace  to find safe refuge from terrorist attacks.  However, we remain gravely  concerned about the vulnerable survivors of numerous and ongoing attacks on  churches, including the most recent assault on Our Lady of Deliverance Church in  Baghdad, and the families devastated in October 2008 when more than 1.5 million  people who were forced to evacuate from Mosul pursuant to attacks on Christians  there.  We are also horrified by gruesome accounts of gunmen who have broken  into Christian homes to kill civilians, as well as reports of elderly Christians  found strangled to death in their own homes.  It is staggering to think that  half of all Iraqi Christians have been forced to flee their country since 2003.  And the exodus continues with thousands of Iraqi Christians fleeing their  country on a weekly basis.
 Given the newly evolving political dynamics  following recent elections and the ongoing transition of security  responsibilities, we are eager to lend our voices and resources to help protect  Iraq's vulnerable minority religious communities during this fragile interim  period.  We are committed to working together to help ensure that our  governments boost the effectiveness of mutual cooperation to defuse the ongoing  crisis on the ground, and urge you and other heads of state to push the Iraqi  government to prioritize and implement a strategy aimed at protecting Iraqi  citizens of all religions and offer them a real future in the country.  We look  forward to working with you to successfully augment existing efforts to  investigate religiously-motivated violence and human rights abuses, deter and  disrupt attacks, protect vulnerable persons and communities, and vigorously  prosecute those responsible for criminal offenses.
 The United States has a  unique leadership role in furthering the cause of religious freedom in Iraq and  the whole of the Middle East.  Please be assured of our commitment to assisting  in any and all appropriate actions to secure immediate, united, transparent, and  lasting relief for Iraq's devastated Christian and other minority religious  communities.
 
   Meanwhile Phil Sands (The National) reports  from  Syria on Iraqi refugees in that country and he focuses on Neysan Jibro Hermes  who had remained in Baghdad through wave after wave of violence; however, the  attack on Our Lady of Salvation Church was the last straw so the 68-year-old man  and his family sought sanctuary in Syria and he has a response to those  politicians in Iraq who insist that Iraqi Christians should remain in Iraq:  "It's easy for them to say that.  They have bodyguards, they have money for a  security team to protect them and their families.  Politicians are rich and they  are safe, we are poor, we walk in the street alone.  It will take one bullet to  kill me."  And to restate our opinion at this site: Any Iraqi who wishes to  remain has a right to feel protected and should.  Staying is a decision only  that person can make.  So is leaving.  If someone feels unsafe, they should be  able to leave and they should be able to find a host country without jumping  through a thousand hoops.   In the United States today, at the White House, US President Barack Obama  had a signing ceremony.  Anna Mulrine (Christian Science Monitor)  reports , "President Obama signed the bill Wednesday to end the 17-year ban  on openly gay troops in the military, declaring at a White House ceremony that  the legislation will 'strengthen our national security and uphold the ideals our  fighting men and women risk their lives to defend'."  We'll note some of Barack's remarks : "And he knew that valor and  sacrifice are no more limited by sexual orientation than they are by race or by  gender or by religion or by creed; that what made it possible for him to survive  the battlefields of Europe is the reason that we are here today. That's the  reason we are here today. So this morning, I am proud to sign a law that will  bring an end to 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.' It is a law -- this law I'm about to  sign will strengthen our national security and uphold the ideals that our  fighting men and women risk their lives to defend. No longer will our country be  denied the service of thousands of patriotic Americans who were forced to leave  the military -– regardless of their skills, no matter their bravery or their  zeal, no matter their years of exemplary performance -– because they happen to  be gay.  No longer will tens of thousands of Americans in uniform be asked to  live a lie, or look over their shoulder, in order to serve the country that they  love.  As Admiral Mike Mullen has said, "Our people sacrifice a lot for their  country, including their lives.  None of them should have to sacrifice their  integrity as well."  It would be great if Congress passed a law that did all of  that.  But that's not what happened.  Saturday, the Senate passed the bill the  House already had.  Ed O'Keefe (Washington  Post ) has a roundup of reactions here . It's a victory  for those serving. A victory for LGBT rights? In the abstract. In the concrete?  Read the bill that  passed : H.R.2965 -- Don't Ask,  Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010 (Engrossed Amendment House - EAH) HR  2965 EAH In the House of Representatives, U. S., December 15,  2010. Resolved, That the House agree to the amendment of the Senate to the  bill (H.R. 2965) entitled 'An Act to amend the Small Business Act with respect  to the Small Business Innovation Research Program and the Small Business  Technology Transfer Program, and for other purposes.', with the  following HOUSE AMENDMENT TO SENATE AMENDMENT: In lieu of the  matter proposed to be inserted by the amendment of the Senate, insert the  following: SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This Act may be cited as  the 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010'. SEC. 2. DEPARTMENT OF  DEFENSE POLICY CONCERNING HOMOSEXUALITY IN THE ARMED FORCES. (a)  Comprehensive Review on the Implementation of a Repeal of 10 U.S.C.  654- (1) IN GENERAL- On March 2, 2010, the Secretary of Defense issued a  memorandum directing the Comprehensive Review on the Implementation of a Repeal  of 10 U.S.C. 654 (section 654 of title 10, United States Code). (2)  OBJECTIVES AND SCOPE OF REVIEW- The Terms of Reference accompanying the  Secretary's memorandum established the following objectives and scope of the  ordered review: (A) Determine any impacts to military readiness, military  effectiveness and unit cohesion, recruiting/retention, and family readiness that  may result from repeal of the law and recommend any actions that should be taken  in light of such impacts. (B) Determine leadership, guidance, and  training on standards of conduct and new policies. (C) Determine  appropriate changes to existing policies and regulations, including but not  limited to issues regarding personnel management, leadership and training,  facilities, investigations, and benefits. (D) Recommend appropriate  changes (if any) to the Uniform Code of Military Justice. (E) Monitor and  evaluate existing legislative proposals to repeal 10 U.S.C. 654 and proposals  that may be introduced in the Congress during the period of the  review. (F) Assure appropriate ways to monitor the workforce climate and  military effectiveness that support successful follow-through on  implementation. (G) Evaluate the issues raised in ongoing litigation  involving 10 U.S.C. 654. (b) Effective Date- The amendments made by  subsection (f) shall take effect 60 days after the date on which the last of the  following occurs: (1) The Secretary of Defense has received the report  required by the memorandum of the Secretary referred to in subsection  (a). (2) The President transmits to the congressional defense committees  a written certification, signed by the President, the Secretary of Defense, and  the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, stating each of the  following: (A) That the President, the Secretary of Defense, and the  Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff have considered the recommendations  contained in the report and the report's proposed plan of action. (B)  That the Department of Defense has prepared the necessary policies and  regulations to exercise the discretion provided by the amendments made by  subsection (f). (C) That the implementation of necessary policies and  regulations pursuant to the discretion provided by the amendments made by  subsection (f) is consistent with the standards of military readiness, military  effectiveness, unit cohesion, and recruiting and retention of the Armed  Forces. (c) No Immediate Effect on Current Policy- Section 654 of title  10, United States Code, shall remain in effect until such time that all of the  requirements and certifications required by subsection (b) are met. If these  requirements and certifications are not met, section 654 of title 10, United  States Code, shall remain in effect. (d) Benefits- Nothing in this  section, or the amendments made by this section, shall be construed to require  the furnishing of benefits in violation of section 7 of title 1, United States  Code (relating to the definitions of `marriage' and `spouse' and referred to as  the 'Defense of Marriage Act'). (e) No Private Cause of Action- Nothing  in this section, or the amendments made by this section, shall be construed to  create a private cause of action. (f) Treatment of 1993  Policy- (1) TITLE 10- Upon the effective date established by subsection  (b), chapter 37 of title 10, United States Code, is amended-- (A) by  striking section 654; and (B) in the table of sections at the beginning  of such chapter, by striking the item relating to section 654. (2)  CONFORMING AMENDMENT- Upon the effective date established by subsection (b),  section 571 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994 (10  U.S.C. 654 note) is amended by striking subsections (b), (c), and  (d). Attest: Clerk. 111th CONGRESS 2d  Session H.R. 2965 HOUSE AMENDMENT TO SENATE  AMENDMENT Don't Ask, Don't Tell is repealed. That's a good  thing. But don't confuse that with the Congress putting some on the books that  prevents discrimination based upon sexual orientation because that didn't  happen. All they did was wipe the books clean. That took us back to 1992 before  Don't Ask, Don't Tell existed. And, under Barack, that may mean gays and  lesbians can serve openly in the military but it's a short-term fix if and when  a Republican gets into office and decides to change it. How can that happen?  After 50 years of gays and lesbians serving openly, it would require a major  witch hunt and/or scare. But two or six years from now? It wouldn't be too hard  to create some 'studies' that 'find' the military was harmed and to get the  talking points in order. I'm not saying that'll happen but I am saying that's  why in cases where we DO NOT want discrimination, we outlaw discrimination. The  Congress didn't outlaw it. All they did was remove Don't Ask, Don't Tell from  the books. (In fact, section 2's subsections "d" and "e" spit on equality, or  are we not supposed to notice that?)  And as Yochi Dreazen (National Journal) noted  earlier this month :  "Not So Fast -- Even if  "don't ask, don't tell" is repealed tomorrow, openly gay troops won't have the  same benefits that straight ones do.  Months, or even years, of  legal and political wrangling could follow before gays and their partners are  fully welcomed into the ranks of the  nation's military. The end of don't ask, don't tell is not the end  of the story."No revolution towards justice ever went backwards. To all the  supporters of equality and Don't Ask Don't Tell's death, I am so grateful. The  road has not been easy. We have learned many important lessons about social  justice, movements, supporting each other, and speaking out against  discrimination. The mission is not finished; it has only just begun. The most  critical mission is supporting and encouraging closeted soldiers to finally  access their full integrity, dignity, and humanity. This mission is in keeping  with the first lessons learned at West Point or basic training. As the  legislation signals a new chapter in our journey, we can be sure that our work  has only begun. I call on all soldiers to gain the courage to come out. First  come out to yourselves, then tell your trusted friends and family. Tell everyone  who you trust and who deserves nothing less than truth. Stop hating yourselves  as your country has signaled for so long. Furthermore, your coming out is not  for you. It is for all those who come after. Military service is not about rank,  pension or paycheck. Climbing the ladder is shameful without true purity of  service and I applaud those who give up the superficial artifacts of career in  favor of complete integrity and justice. I denounce the fear-mongering of John McCain and others who do our  country a grave disservice by their bigotry and calcified retardation. His  outlandish remarks that justice will result in amputations demonstrates the  ridiculousness of his entire argument. His silliness proves the fight for  justice has no real logical debate; you are on one side or the other. John  McCain, you are on the wrong side of history. Your feet wade in the toxic septic  waste of rabid hate-mongers who perpetuate America's injustice. It is your  argument that has been amputated today; your claims have no legs to  stand. President Obama, you are not off the hook. The compromise bill  passed today puts the moral imperative squarely on your desk. Sign an executive  order instituting a full non-discrimination policy throughout the military. If  you do not, if you drag your feet and politicize this with your theoretical  calculations as you have these past two years, you will be guilty of abetting  those who loudly proclaim homophobia from their platforms and pulpits. Provide  them no shelter or safe haven. Institute justice now. Do not compare this to the integration of racial and religious  minorities in the 1940's and 1950's. Integration of gay people has already  happened. This is one inherent difference between our civil rights movement and  that of the past decades. We are integrated, we simply fight for our Integrity.  As each civil rights movement fights for access to a particular resource, it is  clear that the gay rights movement fights for access to dignity and our own  integrity. This struggle only begins. I intend to rejoin the military and serve in any capacity I can be  of best use. I intend to marry and have a family of my own. We are living in a  truly historic moment where we can enjoy the rewards of our efforts. We stand on  the shoulders of many who have come before us, from Air Force Technical Sergeant  Leonard Matlovich to our present day heroes. We owe it to them to continue  fighting. Our loudness does not distract but enhances the fight. Our direct  action puts wind in the sails of lobbyists and political elites who do our  bidding on the inside. We are one team with one goal: Equality in our lifetime.  I do not intend to waver or retreat in pursuit of this new life purpose and  mission, and neither should any American who loves justice. |