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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Monday, January 20, 2014

Peace: We Stand on the Shoulders of Giants

FROM RSN:

Congressman Alan Grayson. (photo: Getty Images)
Congressman Alan Grayson. (photo: Getty Images)

Peace: We Stand on the Shoulders of Giants

By Alan Grayson, Reader Supported News
20 January 14

saac Newton, the great physicist and astronomer, said, "If I have seen farther, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." And so it is with us, and our quest for peace.
 
When I was a child, I was so moved by the dedication, eloquence and integrity of giant leaders like Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy, who stood for peace. Clean Gene and Bobby took a stand against a brutal and deeply immoral war. On the central issue of the day, other elected officials shifted back and forth like weathervanes. But if you are a true leader, like they were, then as Bob Dylan said, "You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows."
 
In 2006 and 2008, long before it was popular, I honored the memories of Gene McCarthy and Bobby Kennedy by running as an antiwar candidate. When reporters ask me when I thought that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan should end, I said, "They should have ended a long time ago." And I said that in a district Republicans had represented that for 34 years in a row. I wasn't reading the polls when I said that. I was reading my heart.
 
I told my constituents that like them, I want America to be #1 in the world. But we don't need to be #1 in the category of "Number of Foreign Countries Occupied."
 
Last year, in the inspirational tradition of Senators McCarthy and Kennedy, we organized and mobilized against war with Syria. We not only found a peaceful solution, but we also established an important principle: In war, it's our blood, and it's our money, so it's our decision. We, The People decide for or against war.
 
But in Afghanistan today, history is repeating itself. We remain embroiled in another brutal war, one that has gone on even longer than the war in Vietnam. At the peak of the surge in Afghanistan, in 2010, we were spending more on war and the military than we ever did during the height of the war in Vietnam. And today, we continue to spend one million dollars each year for every soldier deployed in Afghanistan. Even though the latest polls show that the war in Afghanistan is less popular with the American People than the war in Vietnam ever was.
 
President Obama promised that the war in Afghanistan would end by 2014. We have to make sure that he keeps that promise.
 
This is how I look at it: the war in Iraq is over. One down, one to go.
 
Some of our supporters have been kind enough to refer to me as "America's Congressman." The media often refers to me "Rep. Alan Grayson (D-FL)." I'm proud to represent my neighbors and friends in Central Florida. But if you ever want to refer to me as "Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Peace)," that's OK with me, too. In fact, I would be proud of that. And you can rest assured that in that regard, I represent you, no matter which congressional district you may call "home."
 
The cause of peace is older than history itself. It's up to each generation, including ours, to carry that torch, and pass it on. But in recognition that we don't have to start fresh, one of our supporters has created a variation on the very popular "McCarthy Daisy." This was the evocative symbol of Eugene McCarthy's effort to end the war in Vietnam. It also epitomized the spirit of political involvement in the Sixties. Here is the new daisy:
 

 
You can count on me to continue to fight for justice, equality and peace. Please join me in our crusade to make America again "indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

Courage,
Rep. Alan Grayson

"Well, it's one-two-three, what are we fighting for?
Don't ask me, I don't give a damn.
Next stop is Vietnam."

- Country Joe and the Fish, "The Fixin' to Die Rag" (1967).
 
US Ambassador, Caroline Kennedy "Deeply Concerned" About Japanese Dolphin Hunt
Ruairidh Villar, Reuters
Villar reports: "In an unusual move, U.S. ambassador to Japan Caroline Kennedy has expressed deep concern over the traditional dolphin hunt in western Japan, where local fisherman corral the mammals into a secluded bay before killing many for meat."
READ MORE
Wall Street Group Aggressively Lobbied a Federal Agency to Thwart Eminent Domain Plans
Alexis Goldstein, The Nation
Goldstein reports: "Despite Wall Street's recent gains, the foreclosure crisis that displaced 10 million Americans continues to wreak havoc on communities. One ongoing problem is that 10.7 million homeowners are stuck in underwater homes, in which the mortgage is more than the house is currently worth."
READ MORE
Iran Invited to Attend Syrian Peace Conference
Cara Anna, Associated Press
Anna reports: "Iran has been invited to attend a meeting of foreign ministers in the Swiss city of Montreux on Wednesday ahead of internationally brokered peace talks between Syria's warring factions, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon said Sunday."
READ MORE
Afghanistan Again Demands US Airstrikes End
Mirwais Khan, Patrick Quinn, Associated Press
Khan and Quinn report: "An assault by suicide bombers and gunmen against a NATO base in southern Afghanistan on Monday killed one service member, the coalition said."
READ MORE
Mexico Warns US Not to Execute Mexican National Held in Texas
Al Jazeera America
Excerpt: "Mexico has strongly objected to the scheduled execution in Texas of a Mexican convicted of killing a U.S. police officer, arguing that by executing him, the United States would be in 'clear violation' of international treaties."
READ MORE
 
 
 
Reader Supported News | 20 January 14 AM
It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News

*I DO NOT WANT GOOD JOURNALISM TO DIE: I contribute $10 a month to Reader Supported News for a very simple reason: I don't want good journalism to die. In After a 35-year career in the news business, I have a resume too loaded, and perhaps an age too high, to find a job, so I started a website and social media group called Displaced Journalists. I was overwhelmed at the talented people who follow it. This is serious. We are going to lose a pillar of our democracy if we don't keep fighting to keep the few great operations out there in business. I find Reader Supported News to be the best source of news and commentary. It's the site I always visit first. I don't have a job, but I can still find $10 a month to keep RSN going. If you read RSN, why can't you? Susan Older/Displaced Journalists - RSN Reader-Supporter*
 
 
 

Glenn Greenwald | Who Elected Them?
Glenn Greenwald. (photo: AP)
Glenn Greenwald, UT Documents
Greenwald writes: "Who elected Daniel Ellsberg and The New York Times to take it upon themselves to reveal thousands of pages of the top secret Pentagon Papers to the American public?"
READ MORE
Ralph Nader | Medical Price Gouging and Waste Are Skyrocketing
Ralph Nader, Reader Supported News
Nader writes: "An epidemic of sky-rocketing medical costs has afflicted our country and grown to obscene proportions. Medical bills are bloated with waste, redundancy, profiteering, fraud and outrageous over-billing. Much is wrong with the process of pricing and providing health care."
READ MORE
Judge Strikes Down North Carolina Ultrasound Abortion Law
Lateef Mungin, Joe Sutton, CNN
Mungin and Sutton report: "A North Carolina law that made women who wanted an abortion get an ultrasound, and then have the image described to them, is unconstitutional, a federal judge ruled Friday."
READ MORE
The War on Terror's Insane Abuses Continue
Alex Kane, AlterNet
Kane reports: "Today, the 33-year-old Hashmi remains under solitary confinement at the Administrative Maximum Facility (ADX) near Florence, Colorado, a maximum security federal prison. In total, he's toiled under the harsh confines of solitary confinement for six years, doing untold damage to his mental health."
READ MORE
Alaska Mine Threatens Salmon, Native Cultures
Nicole Mordant, Reuters
Mordan reports: "Large-scale mining in the Bristol Bay watershed poses serious risks to salmon and native cultures in this pristine corner of southwest Alaska, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said in a report released on Wednesday."
READ MORE
Horse Slaughter Blocked by Federal Law (For Now)
Barry Massey, Associated Press
Massey reports: "The resumption of commercial horse slaughter in the U.S. was blocked Friday as President Barack Obama signed a budget measure that withholds money for required federal inspections of the slaughtering process."
READ MORE


FOCUS | A Major Victory for Snowden
Edward Snowden. (artwork: Robert Shetterly)
Ryan Lizza, The New Yorker
Lizza writes: "It's reasonable to suspect that the modifications to the N.S.A.'s telephone-metadata program that Obama announced on Friday are simply cosmetic changes meant to short-circuit the pressure for substantive reform."
READ

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