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bigtree

bigtree's Journal
bigtree's Journal
April 22, 2021

A well pumped-up red rubber ball

...there used to be a mean game of dodgeball in my elementary school days, every afternoon at the end of classes.

We used a well pumped-up red rubber ball that would maim and otherwise injure the hapless lessers who dared join in the game. I was, in fact, that very hapless lesser for almost every bout of that punishing competition which just seemed to spontaneously evolve one Spring into the greatest thing ever.

Two teams would spread out on the court, dangerously close and opposite each other, and the goal was to avoid being struck by the glowering maniac with the ball, who would invariably aim for your shorted legs to keep you from catching the ball which would eject them and cause the entire team on the other side to retreat in either a futile panic of getting hit and ejected, or an anticipatory crouch, ready to catch a halfhearted throw from someone as inept but determined as myself.

There was that tall and lanky Cahill girl in the cutoffs and the sleeves of her t-shirt rolled up for effect who could absolutely make you cry from the sting of that red-rubber ball delivered like lightening to any part of your body she would aim for with a side-armed throw and a toothy grin as you attempted to turn and run.

That's what I remember about the smell of the chill Spring air that's wafting through my door this evening. Running through the neighborhood afterward, late for home, through the field and up the hill...

Thing is, I really, really want a red-rubber ball. It's just 8 o'clock or so, and I could go buy one right now, but I really have no use at all for a red-rubber ball these days.

There was a time, though, when it was everything.

April 15, 2021

Got my first Moderna shot today

...my wife has had hers, and my two sons get theirs today. We're all in the same house, and my sons have been masking around us for a year now.

I just realized what a milestone this is for us, for me. I just recalled the day I decided not to panic or despair, but rather prepare my family for battle. I was still working grocery retail and finally got to retire last November. My wife and sons, however, kept working throughout, wife in grocery retail, one son working a UPS store, and the other working handyman jobs all over town. It's been terrifying.

I made us early maskers by bringing home material and asking my wife to make masks for us all. I was the first in my department to come to work masked-up, and an early, insistent advocate of masking with my co-workers and anyone close enough to listen.

I credit that decision with keeping the family safe. It was our most reassuring defense, that and my ever-present reminders and virus updates. We were all true warriors in this fight, prepared for battle each and every time we left home, and with some luck, I'm sure, it looks like we made it through. Scared out of our minds, but the family is almost in safe territory today.

Wanted to shout-out to the volunteers and others at the vaccination site. It was a very smooth process and everyone was extremely friendly and helpful. We're blessed with good people on this planet and I think we should recognize that wherever we find them.

What a crazy year. I don't think we'll ever be the same as before all of this. Maybe that's for the better, but all I can feel when I think about it is sadness. My state's numbers are still hovering in an unacceptably high range, after flirting for months with more hopeful percentages, hospitalizations, and deaths.

My hope and wish is that we all remain vigilant about our saftey, and the safety of others around us, as well. We can win this fight, but the virus is still doing what it does best, taking advantage of our own negligence, indifference, or ignorance. That's going to be my next battle.

April 15, 2021

My penny thoughts on Afghanistan

...I'm thrilled Pres. Biden has decided to make good on his objections as VP to keeping troops in Afghanistan. He reportedly opposed then-President Obama's 'surge' of forces to defend Kabul, so his decision to withdrawal troops from there is a natural extension of those earlier sentiments.

I wrote extensively on Iraq and Afghanistan during the Bush years, and continued writing a bit about Pres. Obama's continuation of those deployments across sovereign borders. For whatever it's worth, here's a look back on one comprehensive essay I wrote at the time of the surge of forces into the country to defend the Afghan capital and it's beleagured president (Jan-02-09).

What's largely forgotten is that more troops lost their lives in Afghanistan during the Democratic administration, mostly as a result of the surge of forces, than during Bush's terms in office.

I don't make much of a fuss about these things these days, but if I did, it would be uncompromisingly similar to this earlier article. Hope it's an interesting read for folks here, not really meant to be as confrontational as it was for me way back when. Just a looking back post for my journal...


Tweaking the Occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan

In the bloodiest year yet for the U.S. and NATO in Afghanistan, 155 American troops and 138 NATO troops were killed in 2008. Those deaths were casualties of the policies of the U.S. dominated NATO which has our troops engaged in missions there ranging from aid and reconstruction; defense of outposts in cities and the border region near Pakistan; patrolling and protecting supply routes; and intercepting and destroying weapons and the combatants who use them in resistance to NATO's nation-building occupation.

The drift of the mission of our forces in Afghanistan, as in Iraq, has been to the desperate defense of the Afghan regime which was installed behind the 'shock and awe' of our invasion following the 9-11 attacks. Like the privileged regime in Iraq which was enabled into influence and authority with votes cast in a dubious election by a minority of citizens under the heavy-hand of their country's invaders, the regime in Kabul relies on their own 'Green Zone' of defense of our military forces as their seat of power to lord over the impoverished country.

It's that opportunistic area of concern surrounding the Afghan regime that the Pentagon has recently designated to receive the bulk of forces which are to be reduced from the Iraqi theater. Some 20,000 to 50,000 troops are to be sent from Iraq to Afghanistan to escalate the occupation of the cities and towns surrounding the Afghan capital and to aid in the desperate defense of the government against the myriads of separate factions which have evolved out of NATO's cynical attempt to dominate the millions of Afghans with their puny, destructive forces.

Some of the forces reduced from the Iraq occupation will undoubtedly be sent to help defend remote outposts which have served as a wavering front-line of defense against invading forces from growing ranks of the disaffected among the exports from the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan who enjoy safe-haven across the border into Pakistan and who have identified themselves with and been inspired by the freedom and impunity of the original 9-11 fugitives who were allowed to escape there.

When the next administration in Washington and Foggy Bottom begin to direct their new assault on whatever they decide is vital to defend in Afghanistan and Iraq, they will be threatening to unleash every instigation of resistance to the presence and activity of the U.S. military on Muslim soil which originated as motivation behind the first bombings the US embassy Africa in 1998 and the USS Cole bombing in Aden in 2000, in addition to the 9-11 attacks.

When those terrorist attacks were perpetrated, there was only isolated resistance and violence directed against U.S. interests and allies in the region. In the bloody aftermath of the Bush administration's provocative invasion of Iraq, terrorist acts of violence have increased and expanded across the globe.

As early as May of 2003, the Brookings Institute found that the invasion of Iraq had "increased the risk of attacks in the United States and Europe by increasing the level of Islamist and anti-American rhetoric, by diverting the attention of political leaders from the central issue of the war on terrorism, and by encouraging the view among the public that the war on terrorism is nearly won."

A Brookings study found that, "The rate of fatal terrorist attacks around the world by jihadist groups, and the number of people killed in those attacks, increased dramatically after the invasion of Iraq. Globally there was a 607 percent rise in the average yearly incidence of attacks (28.3 attacks per year before and 199.8 after) and a 237 percent rise in the fatality rate (from 501 to 1,689 deaths per year). A large part of this rise occurred in Iraq, the scene of almost half the global total of jihadist terrorist attacks. But even excluding Iraq and Afghanistan—the other current jihadist hot spot—there has been a 35 percent rise in the number of attacks, with a 12 percent rise in fatalities. "

Now, at the apex of the results and effects of that resistance to the increased and proliferating U.S. military presence and activity in the region over the years since the Iraq invasion, the Pentagon is poised to stage some sort of sustaining defense in Afghanistan of their own representation of 'democracy' in Kabul against whoever would resist the codifying of Bush's swaggering advance on their territory. The Arab resistance to that advance by NATO forces threatens to be withering and devastating to those U.S.-dominated troops that have been directed to oppose the myriads of factions defending their own piece of their occupied country.

The only lesson that our military invasions have imposed on the region is the one which the authors of the deployments purport to oppose; that of the efficacy of military force and violence as an ultimate avenue to power and authority. In Iraq and Afghanistan, those who support the U.S. military-enabled regimes and seek protection behind our dominating forces are considered 'democratic' and legitimate -- while those who choose to be or find themselves outside of that imposed influence are to be opposed as 'insurgent' or 'radical' in their opposition and defense of their chosen territory against NATO's selfish advance.

In fact, the next opportunity for Afghans to 'vote' on the composition of their imposed authority in Kabul is on the horizon for 2009. The increased occupation is also designed to facilitate that election and to provide the same sort of 'with us or against us' choice that our invading and occupying forces in Iraq offered the citizens there.

The plot which is emerging in this Potemkin defense of democracy in Kabul is one which is already well-know to Afghans. Opposition communities will be occupied and intimidated by our forces while supportive communities will be protected and enabled in the run-up to the balloting. The outcome of the vote will likely resemble whatever minority composition of the Afghan population feels unencumbered by the regime's heavy-hand to cast their ballot in their favor.

The result, however, may well bolster whatever legitimacy the West wants to place on their enabled rule in Kabul, but the effect of the increased military activity will have a predictable effect of aligning the myriads of Afghans who are now being led to oppose one another, to band together in resistance against their country's foreign invaders. That will not serve the strategy that the Pentagon has voiced in the past months of recruiting the tribes in their campaign against those Taliban factions along the Pak-Afghan border which threaten U.S. interests and harbor the original 9-11 suspects.

Whatever the goals of the next administration are in their deployments in Afghanistan and Iraq, they have already been corrupted by a mindset which assumes that our ability to seize and hold territory will impress more than it will repel. The next strategy appears to be an attempt to thread the needle of resistance to the U.S. advance on Afghan territory with a promise of 'stability' of their installed regime.

The counter to that bunk is that nothing at all has been done to address the original complaint of Muslims and Arabs in the way of our nation's swaggering advance across their sovereign borders; that the very presence of our military on their soil is an intolerable aggravation to their religion, values and their wishes - as well as a threat to a great deal of their own safety and security.

The devastating effect of our military intervention in the region, which has cost so many lives caught up in the way of the Bush administration's nation-building folly so far, will only deepen with every tweak and correction that intends to 'win' some sort of 'victory' outside of the pursuit of the original 9-11 suspects. No one expected our forces to prop up anti-democratic, corrupt regimes to counter the attacks on our nation and there isn't any great mass of support in America for investing lives and treasure continuing that pursuit.

I hope the next administration remembers the lessons of our interventions so far as they 'write letters to the families of the troops' who lose their lives for their strategies and schemes they've planned in the region for the future.


https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/1382488847318188041

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