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

April 27, 2004

Convention Program II

Filed under: Politics — Bunker @ 10:42 am

kg left this for me in the comments for my Democratic Convention Program post:

OFFICIAL 2004 REPUBLICAN NATION CONVENTION PROGRAM

6:00 pm Opening Cross Burning Ceremony (Hoods optional).
6:30 pm Prayer by the flag pole.
6:40 pm N.R.A. pigeon shoot.
7:00 pm Prayer led by Charlton Heston
7:10 pm W.M.D. scavenger hunt.
7:20 pm Prayer led by Pat Robertson. 700 club donation drive.
7:25 pm (Men only) Army of God rally. (Women only) Dishwasher Demo.
7:45 pm Prayer led by Jerry Falwell and Tinky-Winky burning.
8:00 pm Fred Phelps Gay bashing rally by the barbed wire fence.
8:25 pm Prayer led by Fred Phelps
8:30 pm Workshops: (Men only) ?WHITE POWER? (Women only)?Home schooling your Children?
9:00 pm NRA?s history of the KKK led by Trent Lott in memory of Strohm Thurman
9:30 pm Intermission
10:00 pm Cross burning ceremony no. 2 (Hoods a Must!)
10:15 pm George Bush lands in a fighter jet. (only men under 5?5? on flight deck please).
10:30 pm George Bush speech ?dow der der helldo my people, yeah well, I can hear ya?ll?!!!!!!!
10:40 pm Prayer led by Dick
10:50 pm Pledge of allegiance to Saudi Arabia led by Halliburton
11:00 pm Collect offerings for future attacks on abortion clinics
11:20 pm George Bush presents W.M.D. in France (Backup: France is better off without Chirac)
11:30 pm Enron rally led by Halliburton
11:45 pm Workshop: ?Maximizing a Police State? led By John Ashcroft
11:59 pm Prayer led by Bush
12:00 am Nomination of the Republican candidate

How soon people forget that the KKK was always a Democratic organization, and that Enron executives stayed in the Clinton White House, not Bush’s. You’d think with all the leftist comics out of work, someone would have come up with something a little funnier.

Diversity in Education

Filed under: Education — Bunker @ 10:36 am

Anthony B. Bradley is a research associate at the Acton Institute. In an essay for the Institute, he pretty much destroys the myths of diversity as a necessity for academic achievement.

The belief that racial diversity is a key to academic success has no empirical basis. If this myth were true, then it would be difficult to explain racial success in more mono-racial societies such as Japan, Germany, and the Netherlands.

I would really love to see someone like Jesse Jackson offer legitimate counter-arguments. It just isn?t possible.

Thanks to John Ray for the link.

April 26, 2004

Need to Vomit II

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 1:29 pm

People think the Pentagon directs all military action for US Forces around the world. They don’t. What they do is make decisions to buy things like this:

bluebdu (29K)

When I first entered the Air Force, our utility uniform was olive drab fatigues with blue and silver stripes, blue nametags with white lettering, and colored unit patches. Someone decided we weren’t tactical enough and decided all insignia needed to be “subdued.” We got stripes which were dark blue on olive drab, and patches with all kinds of muted colors.

AF Special Ops decided we should wear the same kind of uniform as our Army team members, so we went to woodland BDUs. Everyone in the Air Force eventually got BDUs.

The camo wasn’t to help us blend in with our surroundings. It was to help us blend in with other units. But now, both the Navy and Air Force are considering what you see above.

What in the world drove that decision? If Air Force personnel need camo, why make it blue? Doesn’t that defeat the purpose unless they’re going to low-crawl through bluebonnets in the Texas spring? Will all the aircraft now get a similar paint job? And the support equipment? On top of that, it has the Eastern European look to it.

If blue is important, they would be better off returning to the original fatigue design. Missile crews wore blue utilities, and we all thought they looked pretty nice. Certainly nicer than this. And far more functional.

They got a second lieutenant to model for the photo because all the NCOs told them to shove it!

Fallujah

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 10:50 am

Bob Bevelaqua was on Fox News this morning. I missed it, but I heard about it. As I’ve mentioned before, he is the military analyst I trust most. If he and Mansoor Ijaz agree on any issue, you can bet it is the correct assessment.

Bob is irate that the efforts in Iraq have bogged down due to a unilateral cease fire. He’s not quite at the level of “Kill ’em all and let God sort ’em out,” but he’s getting close. I expected the Marines to surround Fallujah, and pick at the city forcing insurgents to respond. Instead, we’ve surrounded the city and waited, afraid we might hurt civilians. The insurgents are doing the picking at their leisure.

In Najaf, we’re playing the waiting game with Shia insurgents aligned with a punk cleric. We are afraid to act because action might result in a broader fight.

One word is common: afraid.

Now, that is certainly not the correct word to describe what our leadership, both military and civilian, are feeling. But that is irrelevant. It is the word the enemy would use to describe it. When they sense fear, their power grows. We need to put an end to this whole situation.

The people of Fallujah will never support us. There is no way to win their hearts and minds. They never had either, they only had Saddam.

The Shia would like to run Iraq for a change (The UN still would prefer to see Sunni leadership). I don’t believe the majority of Iraqis want an Islamic government. But the concern is that if we take Sadr, more Shia will join his supporters. They won’t if we threaten them with a division of the country into Arab and Kurdish nations. That as an implication up front might settle it all down without the need for fighting.

What we cannot do is let this fester.

Golf Tip

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 8:11 am

This is a sign posted at a golf club in Lake City, Florida:

1. Back straight, knees bent, feet shoulder width apart.
2. Form a loose grip.
3. Keep your head down.
4. Avoid a quick back swing.
5. Stay out of the water.
6. Try not to hit anyone.
7. If you are taking too long, please let others go ahead of you.
8. Don’t stand directly in front of others.
9. Quiet please… while others are preparing to go.
10. Don’t take extra strokes.

Well done!
Now flush the urinal, go outside, and tee off!

Professionals

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 7:57 am

Sometimes I wonder why I bother to listen to NPR on the way to work. I enjoy Bob Edwards and his early-morning manner, but this is his last week. I’m not sure I’ll continue listening when he leaves.

Today, a report on the military and individual support of the war in Iraq. The reporter spoke with several soldiers, including some wounded in action. All were supportive. He said you must dig deep to find someone who isn’t. He then made a comment about the split being along the lines of “professionals” being the ones against it. The term, when spoken in that way, always makes me think someone really means “intelligent and educated”. He interviewed an Army dentist who was against the war because “Bush wasn’t elected by the majority in this country, and it’s all about oil.”

Now tell me again, who’s intelligent and educated?

The reporter also made the point that a very rigorous and well-developed training program in the military produces soldiers who want to go fight because that’s what their comrades are doing.

In the military, officers and NCOs attend various levels of Professional Military Education, PME. At each point, they are challenged to develop their thinking abilities with problem-solving exercises, and learn more history and philosophy of military service. These courses are in addition to job-specific training courses. When I was enlisted, I had standard basic training, but I also attended NCO Leadership School, and introductory course focused on junior NCO issues. I was scheduled to attend the NCO Academy several times, but job requirements kept me from going. Once the workload relaxed, I was on my way to school for my commission. As the Senior Enlisted Advisor told me when I said I now had time to go, “We don’t want any officers knowing this stuff!” He said it with a grin.

Had I continued, I would have eventually gone to Senior NCO Academy.

The officer corps had a similar, though more intense progression. After commissioning, which itself devoted a lot of time to similar issues, officers would attend Squadron Officer School (9 weeks), Air Command and Staff College (6 months), and Air War College (1 year) if selected. Most took correspondence versions prior to being selected. All services have equivalent schools, and people can cross over to attend those from another service if selected. This is common at the Intermediate and Senior courses.

The definition of professionalism is discussed at every level. And what it comes down to is a combination of education, training, and conformity to a code of ethics. Respect among the general population is also a common theme. Debate on whether the military is a profession can sometimes get heated. Personally, I believe it is. A typical officer will have a college degree, and eventually get at least a masters. He will attend numerous professional development courses lasting from a week to a month throughout his career. He will also attend the PME schools, and/or complete them through seminars on post. This is all in addition to job-specific training which goes on continually. The education level of officers in the military is higher than that of lawyers and most doctors. Many enlisted men and women also have college degrees. Some get graduate degrees. The military values education.

They also live by a code of ethics which holds them responsible in their private, as well as professional lives. No other group of professionals except the clergy has that burden. If a doctor crosses the line, his profession may scorn him. If a military professional does the same, he gets a federal conviction and possible jail time.

The military is nowhere near as autocratic as civilians believe. Soldiers don’t jump just because someone tells them to. They jump because they have come to trust the judgement of the person in charge. That comes with time. And it comes from interaction where everyone shares thoughts and opinions openly. It comes from leaders who expect subordinates to make decisions. Arguments occur all the time, but not in a time-critical situation. At that time, everyone knows who the boss is, and what he wants done. Period.

That is the well-developed training program the reporter didn’t understand. And it’s one the dentist has never been through. Medical officers are exempt from all this. Most are civilians in uniform. And most understand and accept that. Some actually volunteer to go through some of the training. They earn the respect of fellow soldiers that others don’t.

The NPR reporter thought this opinion split was odd. I know it to be inherent. But if you want to divide opinions along between professionals and non-professionals, I know which group better deserves the title.

April 25, 2004

Need to Vomit?

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 9:47 am

Then you simply have to read Dumb Jock Killed in Afghanistan over at IndyMedia.

I hesitated putting this link on here. We are at the point in our country where people with absolutely no imagination, integrity, or intelligence relish an event like this. Make no mistake about it, the people who post things like this want to govern the rest of us, and may eventually do it.

The bilge being spewed by the left (and not just the far left) should make every American sick. They cannot reason, yet believe only they have the answers.

Truth means nothing to them. If you don’t believe me, it will take only reading a few of their comments to convince you.

Oxygen thieves.

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