Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

March 30, 2005

Back to Afghanistan

Filed under: Golf,Military — Bunker @ 11:15 am

Yesterday I took some time off. Birdie and I went to the golf course. The wind was still howling pretty good, but we enjoyed ourselves regardless. I shot 80 with no birdies and nothing bigger than a bogey. Birdie shot…. well, let’s leave it at that. It was his first time on a course in some time.

We got some time to talk about his deployment. He is really pleased with his new company commander. They spent ten days in the field recently and trained for the worst case scenario. Other companies were playing around with best case situations. Birdie is concerned that some will get complacent. Afghanistan is still a dangerous place. He will keep his soldiers on their toes.

He talked about how this trip to Afghanistan will be more of a training mission for the Afghan forces, and doing the same things he did with Iraqi soldiers. The Iraqis thought being in uniform gave them license to steal, and Birdie’s soldiers had to break them of bad habits. The Iraqi Platoon Sergeant was a good man, and good soldier, but was having trouble controlling his charges. So they “arrested” him and told the rest of the soldiers the same would happen to them. They whined about being abused, and demanded to speak with their lieutenant.

“We arrested him, too. Squad leaders are next if you don’t straighten up.”

All of a sudden they discovered religion. With that settled, the platoon sergeant came back and had no trouble turning them into a dependable force.

The things we take for granted with our military has to be instilled in others. With ours, we spend several weeks in training them intensely, or several years at our academies. And that is with young men and women who’ve been raised to think of things like stealing as wrong.

This will be a more demanding task for Birdie and the others than simply going in to fight. But they have to be constantly ready to do that, too.

March 29, 2005

Music

Filed under: General — Bunker @ 5:11 pm

And while I’m at it I must brag on my son-in-law, Bogey. He’s on mandolin.

Sons

Filed under: General — Bunker @ 12:57 pm

They sure make you proud once they grow up!

I received the group photo of my sons that I mentioned once before. It is much clearer now. My Cop, Paratrooper, and Marine. Slice said they put Birdie up front because he has all the medals.

Saving bandwidth:
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Mort Kondrake

Filed under: Media,Politics — Bunker @ 10:25 am

I am a fan of his, and pay close attention to his analysis of political issues. His article today, which touches on his personal life, speaks volumes:

What’s dismaying is the knee-jerk tendency among liberals and conservatives to rush so passionately to one side or the other in this case. It has more to do with winning the culture war than helping Terri Schiavo, whose fate should rest on medical fact, not political posturing.

Mort lived through this with his own wife. And I would beg each of you to read what he has to say about Terri and ask yourself the tough questions he does.

Dog Sitting

Filed under: General — Bunker @ 9:53 am

Kev teaches us how to care for an ADH terrier.

March 28, 2005

Dave Barry

Filed under: General — Bunker @ 7:12 pm

While Dave is on hiatus, all we get are reprints. In this case, it is a good one, and echos my own thoughts:

It is inhumane, in my opinion, to force people who have a genuine medical need for coffee to wait in line behind people who apparently view it as some kind of recreational activity.

Laws of the World

Filed under: General — Bunker @ 5:57 pm

One of my senators, and Wallace’s flag football buddy, John Cornyn, has a good article in National Review Online today.

This is — to put it lightly — not how our legal system is supposed to work. To the contrary, our Founding Fathers fought the Revolutionary War precisely in order to stop foreign governments from telling us what our laws say. The Declaration of Independence specifically complains that the American Revolution was justified because King George “has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws.” It was “We the People of the United States” who ordained and established a Constitution of the United States, one that includes a mechanism by which only “We the People of the United States” can change it if necessary. And of course, every federal judge and justice swears an oath to “faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent upon me…under the Constitution and laws of the United States.”

He has introduced a resolution admonishing the Court to follow American–and in this case, Texan–law, and not that of Europeans whom we do not elect.

Adjudication without representation.

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