Archive for the 'militarism' Category

winter soldier

b. medusa 14 March 2008 11:15:49 pm

taking a brief pause in my hiatus to let folx know about the ivaw winter soldier proceedings which began mar. 13th & are going on thru the weekend. visit the how to watch page for information on watching the proceedings online (both live & on-demand), via satellite (fstv), or public access. it goes w/o saying this is being ignored by mainstream media & organizations, including most of the so-called progressive left-wing.

for those who don’t know, this is the second winter soldier gathering, the first was held by vvaw during the vietnam war.

a veteran’s day recap

b. medusa 12 November 2007 7:29:54 pm

posted the day after because we vets are so easily forgotten. how many times have you seen “Support Our Vets”?

UPDATE: Military demands return of bonus pay from wounded vets (h/t to pudgyindian)

Wounded Vet Told To Pay Back Bonus
Partially-Blinded In Iraq, GI Billed For Army Signing Bonus; Pentagon Admits Mistake


Veterans more likely to be homeless

WASHINGTON (CNN) — More than 25 percent of the homeless population in the United States are military veterans, although they represent 11 percent of the civilian adult population, according to a new report.

On any given night last year, nearly 196,000 veterans slept on the street, in a shelter or in transitional housing, the study by the Homelessness Research Institute found.

“Veterans make up a disproportionate share of homeless people,” the report said. “This is true despite the fact that veterans are better educated, more likely to be employed and have a lower poverty rate than the general population.”

[...]

Veterans such as Jason Kelley find themselves in a Catch-22, not able to find a job because of the lack of an apartment, and not being able to get an apartment because of not having a job, The Associated Press reported.

“The only training I have is infantry training, and there’s not really a need for that in the civilian world,” the AP quoted Kelley as saying in a phone interview. In addition, he has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, he told the AP. Kelley served in Iraq with the Wisconsin National Guard, the news agency said.

full article (h/t to ABB)


Military Sexual Trauma

Roughly one in seven of America’s active duty military soldiers is a woman, but a NOW investigation found that sexual assault and rape is widespread. One study of National Guard and Reserve forces found that almost one in four women had been assaulted or raped. Last year alone, almost 3,000 soldiers reported sexual assault and rape by other soldiers.

In one of the only national television broadcasts of the issue, NOW features women who speak out for the first time about what happened. One woman recounts her ordeal of rape by her superior officer. Many more don’t report the incidents for fear of how it will affect their careers. The shocking phenomenon has a label: military sexual trauma, or MST. NOW meets women courageously battling to overcome their MST, bringing light to an issue that’s putting the Army in shame.

read the transcript
watch the video


Veteran Dies After VA Refuses Treatment For Days

Since Walter Reed is considered the military’s premier medical facility, many are now questioning the condition of military and veteran facilities around the country.

Today we look at the story of a 58-year-old Vietnam veteran named Willie Dougherty. He died in October after suffering two pelvic fractures. His family says he died because he was refused treatment.

full transcript


Monsanto’s Agent Orange: The Persistent Ghost from the Vietnam War
Meryl Nass, MD

From 1962 to 1970, the US military sprayed 72 million liters of
herbicides, mostly Agent Orange, in Vietnam. Over one million
Vietnamese were exposed to the spraying, as well as over 100,000
Americans and allied troops. Dr. James Clary, a scientist at the
Chemical Weapons Branch, Eglin Air Force Base, who designed the
herbicide spray tank and wrote a 1979 report on Operation Ranch Hand
(the name of the spraying program), told Senator Daschle in 1988,

“When we (military scientists) initiated the herbicide program in the
1960s, we were aware of the potential for damage due to dioxin
contamination in the herbicide. We were even aware that the ‘military’
formulation had a higher dioxin concentration than the ‘civilian’
version due to the lower cost and speed of manufacture. However,
because the material was to be used on the ‘enemy,’ none of us were
overly concerned. We never considered a scenario in which our own
personnel would become contaminated with the herbicide.”

quoted by Admiral Elmo R. Zumwalt, 1990
[...]
By 1983, 9170 veterans had filed claims for disabilities that they
said were caused by Agent Orange. The VA denied compensation to 7709,
saying that a facial rash was the only disease associated with
exposure.

Congress passed the Veterans’ Dioxin and Radiation Exposure
Compensation Standards Act of 1984 in response. It required the VA to
appoint a ‘Veterans’ Advisory Committee on Environmental Hazards’ to
review the literature on dioxin and submit recommendations to the head
of the VA.

According to Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, “The VA.directly contradicted its
own established practice, promulgating instead the more stringent
requirement that compensation depends on establishing a cause and
effect relationship,” improperly denying the bulk of the claims.

full article

fast forward to DU


Military may ease standards for recruits
By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – Faced with higher recruiting goals, the Pentagon is quietly looking for ways to make it easier for people with minor criminal records to join the military, The Associated Press has learned.

The review, in its early stages, comes as the number of Army recruits needing waivers for bad behavior — such as trying drugs, stealing, carrying weapons on school grounds and fighting (hate crimes? – b. medusa 1) — rose from 15 percent in 2006 to 18 percent this year. And it reflects the services’ growing use of criminal, health and other waivers to build their ranks.

Overall, about three in every 10 recruits must get a waiver, according to Pentagon statistics obtained by AP, and about two-thirds of those approved in recent years have been for criminal behavior. Some recruits must get more than one waiver to cover things ranging from any criminal record, to health problems such as asthma or flat feet, to low aptitude scores — and even for some tattoos (spider webs? swastikas? – b. medusa 2).

full article

1, 2Hate Groups Are Infiltrating the Military, Group Asserts

theys

b. medusa 4 November 2007 1:32:39 am

“they always tell you what they’re gonna do before they do it.”

a thought that has been shared more than once by some of my friends & i. not necessarily while we were passing joints either. they being the conspiratorial they. or them, take your pick. sounds delusionally paranoid doesn’t it? but its a thought that runs through my head when i watch or read more or less far-fetched fiction (terminator, matrix, universal soldier, etc). then i console my paranoid ideas with the thought, “nah, even they couldn’t be that
stupid.”

then i see shit like this:

…Leading the field is the USA, of course, with 5,000 robots deployed in Iraq alone, everything from a nine-pound Dragon Runner, a “throwbot” that can be tossed over a wall, out a three-story window or up a flight of stairs, to the Special Weapons Observation Remote Reconnaissance Direct Action System (SWORDS), armed with an M249 rifle. All these systems are still controlled by a human, but that will soon change. Noel Sharkey wrote recently in The Guardian:

[F]ully autonomous robots that make their own decisions about lethality are high on the US military agenda. The US National Research Council advises “aggressively exploiting the considerable warfighting benefits offered by autonomous vehicles.” They are cheap to manufacture, require less personnel and, according to the navy, perform better in complex missions. One battlefield soldier could start a large-scale robot attack in the air and on the ground.

This is dangerous new territory for warfare, yet there are no new ethical codes or guidelines in place. I have worked in artificial intelligence for decades, and the idea of a robot making decisions about human termination is terrifying.

The Pentagon is taking its cue from a 1995 dystopian movie, Screamers, which features a fighting robot called Autonomous Mobile Sword…

Robot Nation by Linh Dinh
Dissident Voice/ November 3rd, 2007

delusionally paranoid, eh?

sightings 9/29

b. medusa 29 September 2007 2:54:38 pm

this link was too important to wait for a collation of other sightings because:

I think it’s so important to put out there, as somebody took a real risk to get it out to the world, you know? – brownfemipower
Violence in Burma (updated since 9/26, w/ additional info in the comments)

additional sightings will be added later.

Later (10/1):

Security Guards’ Confrontation With Students Prompts Protest
Security Guard Acted Violent, Uttered Epithets, Student Says

POSTED: 11:05 pm PDT September 27, 2007
UPDATED: 11:57 am PDT September 28, 2007

PALMDALE, Calif. — Parents and students at Knight High School protested Friday morning because of an incident in which three teenagers and a mother were arrested last Thursday after alercations with security guards, prompting an investigation into the guards’ behavior.

The altercations were videotaped by students at a birthday celebration during the school’s lunch hour. At some point, birthday cake was tossed around and landed on the floor, sparking a series of events.

A female student who is shown on the video being held down by a guard said she had dropped cake and bent down to clean it up. She said when the security guard told her to clean up part of the mess that had been overlooked, a verbal altercation erupted — and quickly turned physical.

The security guard grabbed her by the arm as she headed out, the student said. She said the security guard was overzealous in twisting her arms and, despite her pleas, he broke her wrist, which was later put into a cast.

“He grabbed me by my arm and put my arm behind my back and pulled it up until it hurt,” said student Pleajhai Mervin. “Then, he slammed me on the table.”

The security guard called her a “nappy-head,” Mervin said.

full story @ KNBC site (includes image & video links). Call to Action @ ProfBlackWoman.

Fela Friday

b. medusa 10 August 2007 5:00:27 am

Black President, pt 3

echoes of the past

b. medusa 9 August 2007 10:59:48 am

i’ve alluded to the fact that i’m a disabled veteran, but i generally don’t talk about it much. mostly i just try to put much of my service out of my mind, the good as well as the bad. the last four & a half years have made that hard. but stories like this & this tear holes in my soul.

i joined the army @ the age of 20 in 1979, not long after there stopped being a separate women’s army corp. the phrase sexual harassment didn’t even exist. not long after i reached my first duty assignment, a sista i went through basic training with was gang raped. her immediate supervisor was involved along with several others (i never knew the exact number, she & i never discussed it – the number i heard was somewhere between five & eight). nothing was done to the rapists, not even an article 15 (non-judicial punishment). the victim, on the other hand, was treated like a pariah, like she was crazy, like she was lying (even by other women on post). she was ostracized, & given shit work assignments. she remained under the supervisor who had been involved in her rape. she finally had a nervous breakdown. thankfully, she got transferred early (i think she had to reenlist to pull that off).

given all that, when i was raped by an acquaintance a few months later, i shut the fuck up. i confided in my roomates, but swore them to secrecy. most of them knew about the gang rape incident, all went along w/ my wishes (as far as i know). this was not my only encounter w/ sexual harassment, it is the only one i haven’t blocked successfully. another incident that occurred during a seond tour overseas (where i was one of about 50 women stationed with approximately 400 men) has been trying to push its way out of my subconscious, but i’ve blocked it for so long only tiny fragments come through. one thing that has come through is that in the entire nine & a half years i was on active duty, i received my only article 15 for not going to work the day after it happened. sexual harassment (or whatever actually happened) was no excuse because i didn’t report it. i had even forgotten that.

the incidents i’ve just described i never even brought up during my medical discharge evaluations, but i know they had/have serious implications on my mental state. the army discharged me because i was diagnosed w/ acute depression w/ suicidal tendencies, the va calls it psychosis. today i would just have ptsd. here’s another aspect of the atrocities that happen to women, in this case women in the military. every time (EVERY. FUCKING. TIME.) i hear about a woman in the military being raped or sexually harassed, i relive my own experiences. i know i’m not the only one. ha, i’m actually feeling remorse because i don’t feel this body slam of emotions for every woman. but actually i do, just not so acutely.

we have to fix this shit.

EDIT: please read the posts linked above & follow the links within those posts. Black Amazon, Vox ex Machina & Automatic Preference have also blogged on what is happening in the Cassandra Hernandez case. the more exposure we give to this injustice, the more likely this shit will be put right.

Fela Friday

b. medusa 3 August 2007 5:00:58 am

Black President, pt 2

Fela Friday

b. medusa 27 July 2007 5:00:20 am

Teacher Don’t Teach Me No Nonsense

Fela Friday

b. medusa 20 July 2007 5:00:46 am

Black President, pt. 1

Fela Friday

b. medusa 13 July 2007 5:00:17 am

Music is the Weapon

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