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Fight Bad Policy

Dedicated to steering our nation back to its Constitutional glory by identifying and attacking bad policy.

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Location: Lake Charles, Louisiana, United States

I graduated from Drew University with an MFA in Poetry and from McNeese State University with an MA in English Literature. I also have a Bachelor of General Studies with a minor in Psychology and a BA in Sociology from McNeese. Currently, I'm working on a doctorate in English with a concentration in composition-rhetoric at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Where's the check on corporate and political corruption?

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Pat Robertson, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Glenn Beck are Total Idiots

Saturday, January 03, 2009

My Own Answers to My Own Questions to Rachel Maddow

Michael Smirkonish recently argued on Hardball that it is acceptable to torture someone to prevent an attack if the threat of attack is imminent. The argument, however, is inherently contradictory. That a threat is imminent necessarily implies that one is aware of an oncoming attack; and one can only be sure that a threat is imminent if and only if there is clear and direct evidence that an attack is pending. Hamas launching missiles into Israel on a frequent basis is clear and direct evidence that further attacks from Hamas are not only probably but are likely. Hamas, therefore, poses an imminent threat. On the other hand, North Korea a couple years ago launched a Taepodong II missile that, in theory, was capable of reaching California. There was significant evidence that North Korea fully intended to launch the missile, but there was no clear or direct evidence suggesting that they intended to use it against the U.S. or its allies. What, then, amounts to clear and direct evidence that an attack is imminent? First, if one cannot answer that, one cannot determine precisely under what circumstance it is acceptable to torture another human being. Also, speculating that an attack is possible, or even probable, does not amount to clear and direct evidence that an attack is likely. Speculation or circumstantial evidence, therefore, are not adequate means by which to measure the likelihood of an attack. Finally, that there is evidence that is clear and direct must mean that the agencies whose task it is to gather such evidence already know who is going to attack, what those people intend to do, when they will do it, how they will do it, and why they will do it. Clearly, then, it is an absurd contradiction to say that there is both an imminent threat of attack and a need to torture someone to prevent such an attack, since the need to torture necessarily implies that there is a critical intelligence gap that cannot possibly allow for one to determine that a threat is imminent.

Friday, January 02, 2009

Osama bin Laden's Plan

In this August 24, 2007 article (click on above link), Abdul Bari Atwan, one of the few Western journalists to interview Osama bin Laden, discusses with ABC network television's Tony Jones bin Laden's strategy to lure the United States into war. Bin Laden failed to fight significantly against the United States in Somalia and in Afghanistan, but Donald Rumsfeld and other neo-conservatives in the Bush 43 administration fell for bin Laden's scheme by needlessly invading Iraq.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

So Long, B—43

Send off the lame duck; bid him farewell.
His tragic luck beckons his parting knell.
We lament he graced our sacred house.
We rue his policies that gutted us.
Send off the lame duck; bid him farewell.

The total damage done no one can say.
Let’s bid the parting duck 'chow' anyway.
His churlish mind no time will comprehend.
Thankfully his term has reached its end.
Send off the lame duck; bid him farewell.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Letter to Rachel Maddow on Michael Smirkonish and Torture

Rachel:

I have been thinking about Mr. Smirkonish's argument on Hardball that he would torture a person if there were "a ticking time bomb" and the person to be tortured allegedly knew where the bomb was. Rachel, I would love to see you address that ridiculous argument. Mr. Smirkonish suggests that any action is acceptable to glean information about an imminent threat. However, at what point is a threat imminent and what actions are acceptable to stop an imminent threat? How exactly does one define a ticking time bomb? Also, if one cannot define it exactly, how does one know what is best to diffuse it? How much information and what kind of information proves that a threat is imminent? If one cannot physically identify a threat, how can one determine that a threat is imminent; and if one can identify a threat enough to determine that it is imminent, would not torture be merely a cruel excess? Does circumstantial evidence adequately confirm that a threat is imminent? Short of catching a person placing a bomb, is not all other information circumstantial? Should there not first be adequate protection to keep Americans safe before there ever is a ticking time bomb? If the agencies tasked with protecting Americans are vigilant enough to guard America against attack, why would those agencies ever need to torture anyone? Rachel, I know you have addressed the point recently when your guest was the Special Forces interrogator who used rapport successfully to glean intelligence from prisoners instead of torture. However, I think this is a subject that goes to the heart of who we are as Americans, and I really hope that maybe on your show you can get Mr. Smirkonish to argue the point with experts and perhaps even with people like Senator McCain, who have been tortured. Thank you so much.

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

President Barack Obama

This is our time--perhaps one of the greatest times in our history. God bless the Unites States of America, and God bless the 44th president of the United States, President Barack Obama.