My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
8
91011
12
1314
15
16
1718
19
2021
222324
25
26
27
28
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Who pays the price? Boxer versus Rice

posted Sunday, 14 January 2007

Boxer and Rice again


This is not the first time that Barbara Boxer a Democratic Senator from California has had pugilistic exchanges with Condoleezza Rice the US Secretary of State, when Rice was being confirmed the fiery exchange ended on a curt note, but sometimes the gloves do have to come off to know when you have been hit hard.


As we know with any political exchange that lifts the veneer of niceness to reveal the deep truth, people would fall on either side of the battlefront in America it become the ground for conservatives and liberals to castigate, denigrate, condemn and fulminate against each other.


Let us take sides


In the blue corner is Barbara Boxer and the red corner Condoleezza Rice – no low punches, no holding each other, fight fair – may the best girl win.


The latest exchange between Boxer and Rice can be read in all sort of ways from a straight lunge for an understanding that people who have no personal family in the Iraqi debacle may not fully understand the price of the sacrifices being demanded; through the backward leap for women’s rights if a single unmarried woman has her judgement impaired which leaves her unqualified to serve her nation; to an inconsiderate and despicable personal attack highlighting another woman’s childlessness.


I remember during the Israeli-Lebanon skirmish, Rice talked about witnessing the birth-pangs of a new Middle East, this is from a woman who just like me, a male, has no inkling about what the pain of birth can be. The Boxer exchange is not out of place.


People have taken their sides already, I feel there is a bit of all in the matter, but it takes away from where in all objectivity the inquisitor intended, what the respondent understood and how people want to see it.


Ring-side I see an upper cut


This is the statement that started the furore, make in the context of the escalation and troops surge that Dr Rice redefined as an augmentation – really, an unfortunate choice of words – however, this is the upper-cut – “Who pays the price? I'm not going to pay a personal price. My kids are too old and my grandchild is too young,” Boxer said. “You're not going to pay a particular price, as I understand it, with an immediate family. So who pays the price? The American military and their families.”


Well, it does look like a upper cut from where I was viewing the match, however, there is a possibility that some judge might see a punch below the belt, hey, judging a boxing match can be subjective and three subjective judges does not an objective result create – rather it is one of aligned perception.


Facts as they lie


Fact 1: Neither Boxer nor Rice have immediate family in the Iraqi war.


Situation 1: Only two congressmen have had their children deployed to Iraq, these kids are currently back in less volatile assignments, it is valid to ask if any politician or influential person is suffering the anxiety, fear, uncertainty and potential loss by having blood relations running the gauntlet of a merciless insurgency in a foreign land.


Fact 2: There is a price being paid for this war in Iraq and since the day war started on March the 20th 2003, it is a daily average of the death of just over two American soldiers and $2 billion.


Situation 2: Besides the seemingly demigod-like reverence that the President of the United States sometimes commands that people can see him do no wrong, are people really aware of the cost of this war in terms of lives and resources and if that has been justifiably accounted for?


Situation 3: It is clear that no one even the most optimistic of the President’s men can certify that the new plan would be successful and what additional cost would be borne. The concern is that the sacrifice being asked for is to get the President out of a rut rather than solve the problem that grew out of American belligerence.


Fact 3: One patriotic minority of the American People who definitely need the support and back of the populace at large is paying a disproportionately high price in the Iraqi war and something it is not clear if they are sure the freedom they are fighting for is the freedom they should be fighting for.


Fact 4: Neither Boxer nor Rice can send their kids to Iraq, a fact that Boxer acknowledged – Boxer will not offer to bear that sacrifice and Rice cannot bear that sacrifice – the devil however, is the detail of whoever wants to explore the reasons why neither can send their children.


Twisting the facts


With all guns and vitriol blasting out the conservative press like some mega-volcano, the emotion of the moment that highlighted singleness and childlessness rather than the underlying hard questions that need real answers.


The care for those affected by war has to move beyond sympathy and the occasional opportunistic chat to family and relations of those fallen or wounded at war.


Both Barbara Boxer and Condoleezza Rice are seriously smart women, but when it is comes to the politics where decisions send men to war, the gloves do have to come off sometimes sailing very close to the wind and someone has to take it to the limit.


Barbara Boxer has never shied from addressing issues in matter-of-fact words that everyday man can understand, it is a duty to be expected of legislature in which they have grossly underperformed until now.


If the Republican controlled congress had asked tough questions then, it is unlikely that we would be ending up with almost indecent questions now.


Sentiments aside – who really pays the price?


Obviously, conservative commentary is apoplectic with rage about what is termed an intemperate slap on a childless woman, rivers of almost pity might want to flow from many to Dr Rice and that is the prerogative of the many that have “feelings”.


But the question at the end is the most important question at all, given all said and done, given the grand schemes and ideologies that pus h them, given the goals after extensive deliberation that discounts the advise of many for some narrow perspective that probably would take the day, for all those who are in power and have the power to call men to arms and send them to victory, détente, defeat, incapacity, pain or even the ultimate – Death.


Boxer said. “I know you feel terrible about it. That's not the point. I was making the case as to who pays the price for your decisions.”


Exactly, who really pays the price for all the mistakes in Iraq that the President has taken responsibility for in word but does not seem to sacrifice anything for apart from the musical chairs of personnel that report to him?


Who pays the price?


References


Dems burn ‘kidless’ Rice – New York Post


Sec. Rice Attacked by Sen. Boxer Over Childlessness – Mens News Daily


White House Spokesman Blasts Sen. Boxer's Exchange With Secretary Rice – Fox News


Senator’s utterance to Rice sets off uproar – The Kansas City Star


Exchange Turns Into Political Flashpoint – The New York Times


[Most of the guns have been firing on the conservative wires and hardly any on the liberal ones.]

tags:          

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Tag Related Posts

Shinseki: Embracing change to remain relevant

Sunday, 7 December 2008
The tapping of General Eric Shinseki for the post Secretary of Veteran Affairs in President Obama's cabinet is quite significant for the person and the thinking of the person appointed than the position itself.

Paulson Bailout: Don't buy that rope

Monday, 22 September 2008
Methinks this bank bailout business is bad rope attached to even more menacing cows - don't buy the rope and if you have been given rope give it a good tug and find out what is attached to it.

This is no $700 billion bailout, it could well be twice

Nigeria: A desire for equality before the law

Wednesday, 21 May 2008
Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello is remanded in police custody but turns the police station into her little fiefdom.

Along with the respect for the rule of law we need to know that everyone is equal before the law regardless of status and means.

Nigeria: Splitting hairs on Senate funding

Tuesday, 20 May 2008
The clear intent of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation in his directive to the ministries was to ban the funding of National Assembly activities by organs of the executive.

The Senate should abide by that intention.

Nigeria: Beyond Due Process

Thursday, 1 May 2008
We should get off the the issue of due process and view the matters that makes any deal above board, transparent and devoid of any conflicts of interest.

This is about the character of people not the letter of law.

Nigeria: Senator frogjumps her back wall

Friday, 18 April 2008
The more Senator Iyabo Obasanjo-Bello garners newsprint inches the more embarrassing her case becomes, it is an utter disgrace to say the least.

Nigeria: Senate safety from blame not guns

Monday, 14 April 2008
The Senate clears a senator from blame about receiving money for a junket but that did not stop a policemen from blowing his head off where the Senate President was partying for being made the custodian of guns.

Nigeria: We must make the case at the Supreme Court

Wednesday, 27 February 2008
With the dismissal of the election petitions yesterday, we have the opportunity to review the judgement and make a better case before the Supreme Court of Nigeria.

Nigeria: Cut the cake society

Monday, 25 February 2008
Just another snapshot of what I would term a Nigerian malaise or maybe I am just reading too much into a Nigerian norm.

Boats, Threats & Videotape

Friday, 11 January 2008
The boats, the threats and the videotapes from both the United States and Iran about a confrontation in the Strait of Hormuz show that someone is up to no good - but who?

America: Maniac with razor blades

Friday, 26 October 2007
Sanctions complicate issues and makes negotiations very difficult. America's position is now seen as one of a maniac with razor blades threatening a nuclear crisis which parallels the Cuba Nuclear Crisis of the 1960s.

Religion saves cow for consumption

Wednesday, 18 July 2007
Two ways in in which religion can try to skew civil society.

A Closer Look at the Failed States Index - Sudan is really worse than Iraq

Wednesday, 20 June 2007
The Failed States Index really has to be studied in detail before any of its assertions are debunked outright. I am of the veiw that this study is competently and thoroughly done.

Ghana makes Nigeria a truly failed state

Tuesday, 19 June 2007
The list of Failed States in 2007 leaves Nigeria rising up the ranks of failure and concern about how others might be doing a lot better like Ghana.

Preparing for a one-party state

Monday, 23 April 2007
The numbers released as results of the elections in Nigeria are the kind of numbers that gave birth to one-party states and ineffectual opposition parties in Africa. I doubt if there would multi-party elections in 2011

Selling their discretion, dignity and honour

Sunday, 8 April 2007
Now the naval personnel have been given permission to sell their stories to newspapers. I despair.

Numbers on lifts and people

Sunday, 1 April 2007
Number 13 missing in my hotel lift and numbers written on the back-hands of women and necks of men in Iraq. The danger of numbering is evident.

Four years of shock and awe

Tuesday, 20 March 2007
The story of Iraq tells itself without the need for analysis or excessive commentary.

Obama is one quick wit - Howard trumped

Monday, 12 February 2007
Barack Obama's response to John Howard's criticism of pulling American troops out of Iraq would have the old man scratching his head and ruing why he did not keep his peace.

Weapons of Mock Translation from Iran

Sunday, 11 February 2007
Are these weapons really from Iran or is this a premise for a new war front?

These are no men of peace

Thursday, 18 January 2007
If indeed the US Government rejected a peace deal with Iran which could have helped limit the bloodbath that we now have in Iraq, who are the men we have in power and why are they there?

Dummies Guide to Hanging

Monday, 15 January 2007
Even the hanging of Saddam's aides seems to have missed out on a professional touch that one got decapitated in the process. There are dynamics of hanging that prevent that, but that man's family would end up with 2 pieces of him. How gruesome!

Who pays the price? Boxer versus Rice

Sunday, 14 January 2007
The exchange between Barbara Boxer and Condoleezza Rice last week in the Senate has the conservative wires in apoplectic rage. The real question however has not been answered, who really pays the price for the continuing debacle in Iraq?

The year of Armageddon upon us

Saturday, 13 January 2007
There is a possibility that the Middle-East might in view of radical American policies see the ignition of the tinder box of Armageddon - US, Iraq, Iran, Israel and Syria filling the rivers of Mesopotamia to Jordan with blood.

Diplomacy is dead, long live diplomacy

Thursday, 11 January 2007
One case study that the Bush administration would offer for posterity is how to engage your allies by disparaging them especially when they are critical to your wellbeing and success. I am speechless.

War on terror - Where suspects have no recourse

Tuesday, 9 January 2007
The use of alleged, presumed and suspected in gaining the impetus to go after probable terrorists when after the skirmish, the dead are found to be anything but terrorists, is of great concern and needs to be addressed.

Is there a ‘Nam brewing in Mess-O-potamia?

Monday, 8 January 2007
The comparisons of Iraq with Vietnam would never end as history forms around the events of our times. I have just visited an old blog and pulled out a tome to the demented.

Can Bush be a great man?

Monday, 8 January 2007
If Bush changed his tone in the process of changing hois strategy, would he gain more success in Iraq?

The Iraqi Travesty - Saddam escapes justice

Monday, 8 January 2007
All charges against Saddam Hussein have now been dropped and rightly so. However, I do remember that we were assured that all the charges would be tried even if he was killed, smart people knew the rush to kill him was behind that false promise.

Enlisting the dead for Iraq

Saturday, 6 January 2007
Computers would get blamed for this crass stupidity of sending letters to the dead of Iraq to reenlist in the army, I am taking none of it.

Spare and pardon the Saddam video guard

Thursday, 4 January 2007
As the net closes in on the person who recorded the execution of Saddam, the fact of the matter is that the government lied to us when something different was happening. They should face up to their mistakes and learn to speak the truth.

3,000 memorials to what?

Monday, 1 January 2007
The death toll of US soldiers now reaches 3,000, what have they died for and for what would they be remembered in posterity? Who now has innocent blood on their hands?

Saddam was innocent of 9/11

Saturday, 30 December 2006
Now that Saddam Hussein has been killed we can move on from that distraction and focus on the real perpetrators of 9/11 who run wild and free giving inspiration and killing American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Where is Bin Laden amd Mullah Omar?

Like having a Hard Rock thrown at you

Monday, 11 December 2006
So much has happened and the dog ate my blog.

Left with the bread crumbs of Middle East diplomacy

Thursday, 30 November 2006
There is a kind of self-determination going on in Israel, Palestine, Iraq, Iran, Syria and Lebanon, all without the influence of America - probably a few lessons for America too.

Bush finally takes the draft - Vietnam

Friday, 17 November 2006
The President is in Vietnam cavorting with faraway Communists, maybe it is time to visit Havana too.

A straight flush - Democrats win all

Thursday, 9 November 2006
Such glee I have at seeing the predictions I heard on the Fox News Channel come to naught - The Democrats now have both the Senate and the House of Representative - that poker hand would win on any table.

Kerry not plenty smart on the truth about cannon fodder

Monday, 6 November 2006
Even as a botched joke, John Kerry's delivery is a truth on its own, if we examine the facts behind Army recruitment.

Saddam's death - No open and shut case

Sunday, 5 November 2006
The execution of Saddam Hussein would do nothing to change Iraqi for the better, we can expect worse before things begin to change after the US November elections.

Need a good joke to bury - give it to John Kerry

Wednesday, 1 November 2006
John Kerry botches a good delivery and brings all hell down on his own head, but it looks like he might just repair the damage with some hard truths and lethal barbs - let's watch it all unfold.

Many U-turns Required - II

Monday, 23 October 2006
In response to anonymous comments made to an earlier blog.

Many U-turns required

Saturday, 21 October 2006
On Iraq, on Iran, on North Korea, on Syria, on Hezbollah, on Hamas and on many other issues, the Bush administration is in need a radical rethink if not a complete overhaul of his team which should include Rumsfeld, Rice and Gonzales.

An opportunity to make friends - with Syria

Wednesday, 13 September 2006
Syria foiled a terrorist attack on the US Embassy building and the Iraqi Prime Minister visits Iran - looks like talking does yield some benefits and actions should be seen as opportunities.

All warfare is based on deception

Sunday, 10 September 2006
As far as the war in Iraq is concerned, we were deceived into going to war to create a playground for terrorists to concentrate their efforts on Americans and Iraqis in Iraq than they running loose to plan another attack on American soil.

Condi knows nothing about birth pangs

Saturday, 29 July 2006
Bombs and hostilities continue as birth pangs of a new Middle-East as the midwife returns to the woman in travail and extended labour to probably deliver the baby still-born. No new Middle-East can emerge with this belligerence.

Keeping moral convictions out of the US Constitution

Wednesday, 19 July 2006
Yesterday, the Senate voted to allow stem cell research with human embryos and the House voted to reject a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. Karl Rove must be in overdrive on how to rescue this situation for the November 2006 Election.

A crusading psychopath is in a war near you

Sunday, 16 July 2006
The shortage of army manpower in America lead to relaxing the rules of recruitment, Steven Green benefited and now has a rap sheet of rape and murder committed in Iraq. They created a monster of a pussy-cat criminal and dumped back in society.

Spooky Brother Act as Spook goes to Court

Friday, 14 July 2006
Polish twin brothers as heads of government depending on who you are looking at and the spy throws a pie in the face of the White House - when you uncover a spy - well ...

We've lost intelligence

Thursday, 15 June 2006
The mind boggles as we read of a marine's song about the death of a young girl in Iraq - insensivity in the marines takes its roots from elsewhere. Meanwhile, we are told, it is all inappropriate.

Stealthily from Camp David to Camp Al-Nasr

Tuesday, 13 June 2006
I am beginning to wonder if news stories are used as decoys to announce the president is in one place whilst on his way to some troubled zone like Iraq,

Old-age Rum's field day

Friday, 5 May 2006
A hapless septuagenarian was heckled during an important speech to his supporters, then accused of lying. How rotten! This is in empathetic concern and commiseration. Why badger a poor old man?

The Coalition of the Unviable

Tuesday, 2 May 2006
The release of the Failed States Index of 2006 has the United States squarely in the centre of the trouble in 3 of the 10 Top though they come in at 128. More could be read to the figures with another thorough analysis.

Iraq is far away from a Gettysburg Address

Monday, 17 April 2006
I begin a series of examining what democracy means and why the ideals of the Gettysburg Address are beginning to look impossible to attain.

The Barbarian Ruling Class

Friday, 14 April 2006
Politicians and leaders in the military seem to be missing an essential component in their education; an appreciation of history, culture, heritage and values. Babylon is plundered and the Colonel in charge fails to grasp the error.

Eureka! is Farsi for Enrichment

Wednesday, 12 April 2006
Iran is enriched with the ability to enrich uranium, have we forgotten they just tested a supercavitation missile last week? Oil, gold, war, markets - what else is being knocked out of stability?

All before noon and not after

Saturday, 1 April 2006
The strangest events in our world occured before noon. By the time we found out, the reality had been lost in April the first when those amazing things happen just before noon.

Innocent red blood spun as roses in their bloom

Friday, 17 March 2006
Operation Swarmer has us sniggering with utter cynicism as the President's ratings seeks a fillip off an Iraqi-Coalition offensive in the town of the destroyed shrine. Impressed, I am not.

Death derails war crime justice

Monday, 13 March 2006
Justice is frustrated by the death of Slobodan Milosevic, but there is more to this; the cases are flawed, the defendants are frail and time is too much of the luxury to waste. The Hague and Iraqi tribunals need a second look.

Sphincter melody - seriously parental advisory

Wednesday, 8 March 2006
A good friend thinks this film strip is a good run for a Grammy and an Oscar. The lyrics are Parental advisory.

Hello Hamid, it's George - see you in 5 minutes

Thursday, 2 March 2006
The Americans have not created a safe haven in Afghanistan; so when George popped up in Kabul yesterday on his way to India, they probably did not have enough time to get out the silver.

Less than 0.05% but still measurable

Monday, 20 February 2006
The UK Minister of Defence uses statistics to defend the indefensible, even if it is just one soldier abusing Iraqis the perception is always greater than the action itself.

Hitler on a spit-roast

Sunday, 5 February 2006
Certain characteristics of Adolf Hitler have been called to play in the name-calling that should sometimes be beneath contempt, however, the comparisons do make interesting reading.