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Sunday, November 9, 2008
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I WAS BORN IN A LAND FAR FAR AWAY IN A MUCH DIFFERENT DAY AND AGE. I WAS TRANSPLANTED HERE ON EARTH JULY 9 1944. I BELIEVE IN GOD AND COUNTRY AND FAMILY. DUTY AND RESPONSIBILITY. DUTY TO THE LAWS OF GOD AND THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. RESPONSIBILITY TOWARDS FAMILY, FRIENDS AND THOSE LESS FORTUNATE THAN I. CONSERVATIVE IN SOME RESPECTS AND LIBERAL (IN AN OLD FASHIONED WAY) IN OTHERS.


It has been shown time and time again that the mainstream media are dominated by liberals and left-leaning reporters. Despite claims that they can put this bias aside, we all know that is not the case. Now that the left has embraced Barack Obama as their savior, the bias is only getting worse. A new survey by pollster Scott Rasmussen shows an increase in the number of people who believe the media are trying to help Barack Obama win the presidential election.
What are those people going to think now? It's not like we have a shortage of examples of media bias against conservative positions and Republicans, but the New York Times has provided us with a fresh dose of their lack of journalistic ethics. They gladly ran an op-ed from Obama regarding his plans for Iraq, but when John McCain submitted an op-ed on the same topic, the NY Times said, "No thanks."
| New Forum Threads Illegal alien MS-13 gang member suspect In triple murder In Sanctuary San Francisco Why Can't McCain Court Reagan Democrats Instead Of La Raza? Cars On Lawns, Unkempt Homes Fuel Loudoun Immigration Debate 'What Is Our Government Hiding In The Prosecution of Border Patrol Agents Ramos and Compean?' PA: State Police Round Up 6 More Illegal Aliens on I-80 Wachovia loses $8.9B, cuts 6,350 workers, dividend |
Foreign Policy: Is Obama a Puppet? (Updated)
July 18, 2008
After reading the article on Barack Obama's foreign policy team in the New York Times this morning, I didn't know if I should laugh or cry. 300 foreign policy advisors? More
Judge Rejects Gitmo Trial Delay
July 18, 2008
It appears that Osama Bin Laden's driver and bodyguard, Salim Ahmed Hamdan, will go on trial as scheduled on Monday. More
A recipe for starvation
July 18, 2008
Foolish foodies want to politicize food production. Their efforts include a program to boycott food not grown locally. More
Leader of the 9 Percenters calls Bush 'A total failure'
July 18, 2008
Say WHAT? More
Some German venue suggestions for Obama
July 18, 2008
While it seems that his preposterously narcissistic notion of a speech before the Brandenburg Gate has been scotched by German authorities, no alternate venue has been named. More
The inconvenient truth about Gore
July 18, 2008
And now let's take an inconvenient truth tour of the home Al Gore returns to after a long, hard day on the do as I say not what I do lecture/media circuit More
Congressional Democrats bullying lobbyists and businesses
July 18, 2008
In a series of recent stories that has gotten virtually no mainstream media coverage, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and his fellow Democrats in both the Senate and the House discuss pressuring lobbyists who donate to the GOP. More
'Who Does he think he is?'
July 18, 2008
Charles Krauthammer has an excellent column on Barack Obama today in which he exposes the candidate's extraordinary narcissism. More
Lebanese terrorist praises Zionists
July 18, 2008
If even he notices, why doesn't the entire world? More
'Obama' girl at the 'Netroots Nation'
July 18, 2008
Amber Lee Ettinger, better known as the Obama girl, attended the left wing convention Netroots Nation meeting in
If a Network Anchor falls in the forest and no one hears him, is he still biased?
July 18, 2008
Obama's coronotion tour through the
· Despite Barack
Obama’s pledge
not to accept money
from lobbyists,
turning to an elite network of lobbyists to help raise more than $40 million for the convention that will nominate him for president.
· Randi Weingarten, who is rising to become president of the American Federation of Teachers, wants public schools to become community centers that offer after-school and evening recreational activities, child care, dental, medical and counseling clinics.
· The Green Party has nominated ex-Rep. Cynthia
· California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said in an interview aired Sunday that he would be open to the idea of serving as energy czar in an Obama administration.
· The push for more domestic energy production is gaining traction in Congress, but big political hurdles remain.
LAPD sued over alleged religious discrimination![]() Christian Post An LAPD sergeant says that he was punished with disciplinary action and denied numerous pay raises and promotions because of his religious objections to homosexuality, according to a lawsuit recently filed against the city of Los Angeles. Sgt. Eric Holyfield, who is a pastor during his off-duty hours, was quoted as saying that homosexuality was a "sin" and an "abomination" while presiding over a 2006 eulogy for a friend and fellow police officer . . . [Click for more] |
| 173rd Soldier receives Silver Star | | | |
| Written by Pfc. Christina Sinders CJTF-101 Public Affairs | |
| Sunday, 13 July 2008 | |
| BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan (July 12, 2008) — A 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team Soldier earned a Silver Star for combat operations and was presented the medal in a ceremony here, today. Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Schloesser, Combined Joint Task Force 101 commander, presented Capt. William G. Cromie with a Silver Star, the third highest military decoration and praised him for his valor. Cromie was recognized for his actions during an ambush on Nov. 16, 2007, while acting as platoon leader for 3rd Platoon, Alpha Company during a route-clearance operation along the Korengal Road in Konar province. The Platoon was called out to perform route clearance on a portion of the Korengal Road after receiving a tip that an IED may have been placed there. “While travelling down the road, our first vehicle struck an IED,” said Cromie. “Immediately, we were ambushed on three sides by heavily-armed militants.” Two Soldiers managed to advance to an over-watch position to help cover the platoon, but were soon pinned down and running low on ammunition. Cromie personally moved more ammunition to the two Soldiers while running through the small-arms cross fire. Finally, after receiving close-air support, the platoon was able to mount a counter-attack and pushed the militants back to a house. The platoon then cleared the house, killing the militants. “I really would like to thank the squad leaders, they really acted professionally even under a stressful situation like that, and the guys in 3rd Platoon for their bravery,” said Cromie. |
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Is Kerry the Right Guy To Paint McCain as a Flip-Flopper?
National Review Online - New York,NY,USA
I'm glad that USA Today notes that John Kerry, now slamming John McCain for being wrong about everything, wanted to make the Arizona Senator his running ...
See all stories on this topic
Pakistan, Not Iraq, Next President's Big Task
U.S. News & World Report - Washington,DC,USA
John Kerry (D) said that Sen. John McCain lacks the judgment to be president and that he "has proven that he has been wrong about every judgment he's made ...
See all stories on this topic
GOP's suburban advantage fading with time?
Boston Globe - United States
Not only did Senator John F. Kerry win central cities, he also won older suburban areas such as Oakland County (close to Detroit) and DeKalb County (next to ...
See all stories on this topic
Kerry questions McCain’s judgment, media screws up another story
The Carpetbagger Report -
John Kerry appeared on CBS’s “Face the Nation” yesterday, and did a fine job as an Obama campaign surrogate. In fact, I’d go so far as to say he was pretty ...
See all stories on this topic
Sen. John Kerry visits Merrimack Valley
Boston Herald -
By AP BOSTON - Senator John Kerry is visiting the
See all stories on this topic
Kerry criticizes McCain on support for Iraq
NECN - Newton,MA,USA
On Sunday's CBS Face the Nation, Massachusetts Senator John Kerry criticized John McCain's continued support of the war in Iraq. ...
See all stories on this topic
McCain is not Kerry
MiamiHerald.com -
The swiftboat veterans served with John Kerry and have legitimate questions about his service. Kerry came back after the Vietnam War and made outrageous ...
See all stories on this topic
Today on the presidential campaign trail
The Associated Press -
___ Kerry says McCain lacks judgment to be president WASHINGTON (AP) — John Kerry says Republican John McCain doesn't have the judgment to be president. ...
See all stories on this topic
McCain lacks judgment, Kerry says
Boston Globe - United States
Senator John F. Kerry said yesterday that John McCain doesn't have the judgment to be president. If that is the case, then it's probably a good thing McCain ...
See all stories on this topic
Kerry Says McCain Is Not the Right Man
ToTheCenter.com -
Former presidential hopeful John Kerry said that John McCain does not have that judgment to be the next
See all stories on this topic
Police In Wales Called To Investigate UFO - Discover It Was The Moon
Information is temporarily unavailable.
In The UK, Booties To Be Issued to Police Sniffer Dogs That Enter Muslim Homes
Popular Articles
By: Alan Caruba
published: June 25, 2008
Foreign Spies Infiltrating US Businesses
By: Jim Kouri
published: June 27, 2008
Obama Afraid of Muslims Because of New 'Red Scare'
By: Warner Todd Huston
published: June 30, 2008
Pro-Terrorist New York Times Leaks Top Secret US Info again
By: Sher Zieve
published: June 30, 2008
Obama and The Religious Left: God's Immutable Word
By: Marie Jon
published: July 01, 2008
Section Page | News | PhotosThe Manifold Dangers of a Liberal Supreme Court
(Family Security Matters)
Attorneys File Response to Attack on Marriage Amendment
(Alliance Defense Fund)
Al-Arian Trial Set for August
(Family Security Matters)
Heller`s Kitchen
(National Rifle Association)
Arizona Clean Elections Looks Constitutionally Questionable
(Goldwater Institute)
R.I. Court Repudiates Use of Public Nuisance Legal Theory
(Institute for Legal Reform)
Arizona Scholarships for Disabled and Foster Care Students
(Institute for Justice)
ADF Atty on Trial of Arrested Christians
(Alliance Defense Fund)
Court: Religious Expression OK for Okla. City Gov
(Alliance Defense Fund)
Trouble Averted for Church in Paradise
(Alliance Defense Fund)
'Family Video' Chain in Court for X-Rated Titles
(AgapePress)
Idaho A.G. Correct on ?Domestic Partner? Benefits
(Alliance Defense Fund)
Guilt and Innocence in Oklahoma
(The Sam Adams Alliance)
Lawsuit Over Disenfranchised Petition Signers
(Alliance Defense Fund)
Former IAP Pres. Indicted For Naturalization Fraud
(Family Security Matters)
Ed Snell's Assailant Goes to Trial
(American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family & Property)
WA Sup Court Hears Property Rights Case
(Institute for Justice)
ADF Attys Appeal Censorship of Students
(Alliance Defense Fund)
Sup. Court Rulings to Fuel Presidential Campaigns
(National Rifle Association)
Pending U.S. Supreme Court Case over Arms
(National Rifle Association)
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| » | Tim Russert to Pope John Paul II: 'I am YOUR GUY. Don’t forget this face' |
| » | Obama's dollar dilemma … A tour of 'Straight Talk' … Biden for Obama veep? |
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> Conservative Must Reads
Wake up America |
Amendment 'Protects An Individual Right'
Posted: 26 Jun 2008 10:02 AM CDT

“Putting all of these textual elements together, we find that they guarantee the individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation.”
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
Today’s decision is a landmark victory for Second Amendment freedom in the United States. For this first time in the history of our Republic, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms was and is an individual right as intended by our Founding Fathers. I applaud this decision as well as the overturning of the District of Columbia’s ban on handguns and limitations on the ability to use firearms for self-defense.[Update #5] Page 60 to 61, the court specifically addresses handguns by stating:
“Unlike Senator Obama, who refused to join me in signing a bipartisan amicus brief, I was pleased to express my support and call for the ruling issued today. Today’s ruling in District of Columbia v. Heller makes clear that other municipalities like Chicago that have banned handguns have infringed on the constitutional rights of Americans. Unlike the elitist view that believes Americans cling to guns out of bitterness, today’s ruling recognizes that gun ownership is a fundamental right -- sacred, just as the right to free speech and assembly.
This ruling does not mark the end of our struggle against those who seek to limit the rights of law-abiding citizens. We must always remain vigilant in defense of our freedoms. But today, the Supreme Court ended forever the specious argument that the Second Amendment did not confer an individual right to keep and bear arms.
It is enough to note, as we have observed, that the American people have considered the handgun to be the quintessential self-defense weapon. There are many reasons that a citizen may prefer a handgun for home defense: It is easier to store in a location that is readily accessible in an emergency; It cannot easily be redirected or wrestled away by an attacker; it is easier to use for those without the upperbody strength to lift and aim a long gun; it can be pointed at a burglar with one hand while the other hand dials the police. Whatever the reason, handguns are the most popular weapon chosen by Americans for self-defense in the home, and a complete prohibition of their use is invalid.
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Reid Wants Democratic K Street | ||
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Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., along with several prominent Democrats, met with a number of key lobbyists Wednesday in an attempt to change the political culture on K Street, Washington, D.C.�s major thoroughfare known for its numerous think tanks and advocacy groups that exercise influence in the nation�s capital.
According to a report in the Capitol Hill newspaper �Roll Call,� Reid, Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., House Ways and Means Chairman Charlie Rangel, D-N.Y., Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., are pushing K Street to abandon its allegiance to the GOP and are pressing major lobbying organizations and trade groups to accept the new majority.
Reid and his Senate and House colleagues have spent the last year-and-a-half reaching out to lobbyists and the business community on K Street in a push to get more Democrats hired in top positions.
They claim the bulk of Democratic new-hire positions with lobbying firms, trade associations and individual companies in recent months are mostly low- and mid-level, leaving Republicans entrenched at the top of most prominent firms.
Reid and the other members of his party say that even with the hiring of a few token Democrats, much of the business community continues to take its lobbying, advertising spending, and policy research cues from the GOP.
In an effort to assuage the adversity on Capitol Hill created by a Democratic-controlled House and Republican dominance on K Street, Reid and his party�s leadership are throwing their weight behind a new bill designed to offer a package of tax extenders that would favor many business and manufacturing interests.
Reid and other members of the majority party expect companies and trade associations with an interest in the bill to make a concerted push for it similar to one they made for Republican initiatives during the GOP�s reign.
�I think they haven�t come to terms with what happened two Novembers ago,� says Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., who says that while Democrats are willing to meet with Republican lobbyists, the lack of a common philosophical and policy background makes it hard to communicate and build consensus.
�There still has not been much of a sea change,� one Democratic lobbyist agrees, noting that Republicans continue to hold the leading spots at the Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, and major industries that include banking, telecommunications, health care, aviation and automotive.
Menendez and others warn the business community on K Street to proactively work with Democrats to move legislation. He says businesses that don�t move quickly to alter the political composition of their lobbying shops will find an increasingly inhospitable environment on Capitol Hill.
�Sometimes old habits are hard to change,� says Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D. �Some organizations are so accustomed to being an adjunct of the Republican majority agenda, it�s hard [for them] to break those habits.�
Dorgan says, �To me, it�s not about how many Democrats are hired. It�s about how they [the lobbyists and business community on K Street] weigh in on issues that are important for the country. The fact is control of the country has changed, and I hope they would start to work with us.�
© 2008 Newsmax. All rights reserved. | ||

THE BATTLE FOR WHITECLAY Film Premiere Please visit the Nebraskans for Peace web site for news and updates on the situation in Whiteclay, Nebraska. Mark Vasina was recently interviewed about the film. A LITTLE HISTORY: The State of Nebraska's refusal to halt alcohol sales to the dry Pine Ridge Indian Reservation from its border town of Whiteclay gets an in-depth look in this new documentary about a century-old problem. Four off-sale beer stores in this 14-person hamlet sell over 11,000 cans of beer a day to an Indian clientele with virtually no legal place to drink it. Struggling with crippling poverty and epidemic alcohol abuse that afflicts 4 out of 5 families, the Oglala Sioux Tribe has for decades banned the sale and possession of alcohol on their reservation. The Battle for Whiteclay follows Indian activists Frank LaMere, Duane Martin Sr. and Russell Means through the streets of Whiteclay to the halls of Nebraska's State Capitol in their efforts to end alcohol sales in the place many have dubbed "skid row on the prairie." Here is an inside look at an important contemporary conflict pitting American Indian rights against state and local governments in the United States. |
| FULL SITE COMING SOON |
By CHRISTOPHER CAILLAVET | Posted Tuesday, February 20, 2007 4:30 PM PT
American servicemen are fighting for our freedom every day in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some have gone beyond the call of duty. IBD highlights their courage in this recurring series.
The skies glowed red over the Iraqi city of Fallujah.
For weeks in the fall of 2004, coalition airstrikes had bombarded targets in the Sunni stronghold, and now the bombing showered the desert air with sparks.

Mitchell, who retired from the Marines as a sergeant, was a corporal when his unit felt the heat of Iraq's Hell House in action that led to his Navy Cross.
"It was the best fireworks display I've ever seen," said Robert Mitchell Jr., at the time a 24-year-old Marine corporal.
His Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, was part of an invasion force sent to recapture Fallujah, which had become a symbol of Iraqi resistance after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein's regime.
For Mitchell, the risky mission bore little resemblance to his first tour in Iraq. That's when the Nebraska native and his unit crossed over from Kuwait in March 2003.
In June 2004, with the situation on the ground deteriorating, Cpl. Mitchell went to Iraq for a second tour. From their station in the restive Anbar province west of Baghdad, the Marines of Kilo Company provided security for Iraqi soldiers and did humanitarian work.
The situation was tense from the start. Enemy fire hit the coalition outpost on Mitchell's first day, and a month later he was hit by a mortar round. The injury would earn him the first of four Purple Hearts for his service in Iraq.
Wounded Marines were constantly being evacuated from the camp. Mitchell sensed a change in the mood of the Iraqis this time around; they were less open and more hostile to U.S. troops than before.
Sunni Heat
Nowhere was this resentment as thick on the ground than in Fallujah — a seething Sunni city of 350,000 on the Euphrates River, 40 miles west of Baghdad.
In his book "Night Draws Near: Iraq's People in the Shadow of America's War," Washington Post reporter Anthony Shadid called Fallujah "a fiercely conservative, traditional place," whose residents zealously guarded its Islamic character.
Nicknamed "the City of Mosques" by locals, Fallujah and other Sunni Triangle sites had formed the power base of Saddam's fallen regime. Now their inhabitants led the intensifying insurgency.
Coalition troops who had first captured Fallujah were scarcely tolerated and made to leave town in April 2004. In March, four U.S. contractors had been killed by a mob of angry Fallujans, their burned bodies left hanging from the Euphrates River bridge. Foreign jihadists were infiltrating the city.
Fallujah had become a disaster, and it was for Cpl. Robert Mitchell and his comrades to solve.
On Nov. 8, 2004, the ground invasion — code-named Operation Phantom Fury — began in earnest. Mitchell's 12-man squad entered Fallujah and began clearing neighborhoods block by block, house by house.
The enemy fought back with ferocity, and the first day's fighting claimed the life of a Mitchell friend, shot between his body armor plates.
As the days wore on, casualties mounted. Enemy fighters employed the tactics of classic guerrilla warfare, firing on the Marines from positions on rooftops, popping out of closets without warning. Despite taking a bullet wound to the arm, Mitchell pressed on with his squad.
The performance of the enemy combatants — especially the terrorists from other countries — was shocking, and Mitchell admits to a grudging admiration for their brand of warfare.
"They were very proficient with weapons like RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades), hand grenades and mines," he told IBD. "The foreign fighters were more fierce by tenfold than the Iraqi insurgents."
By Mitchell's reckoning, Fallujah and other battle zones have been used to train terrorists — in real-world, live-fire exercises.
Rumors swirled of ominous discoveries: caches of cocaine, vials of pure adrenaline and syringes. Mitchell personally attests to an injured terrorist bounding over an 8-foot wall to escape.
On Nov. 12, the fifth day of the operation, Mitchell found himself in a desperate situation. His squad charged a terrorist-filled residence that came to be known as the Hell House, and a bloodbath ensued.
Two fellow Marines, 1st Sgt. Brad Kasal and Pfc. Alex Nicoll, took rifle fire and shrapnel from a grenade. Bleeding profusely, they holed up in a bathroom in the house.
Mitchell, with shrapnel tearing into his own legs, ran through the house under heavy fire, reaching the bathroom. He applied tourniquets to stanch the bleeding of his two friends and administered first aid until backup arrived.
Running back into the living area to aid other wounded, Mitchell killed one of the enemy with his knife, according to his citation.
Terrorists took positions on the roof and fired down on the Marines from the top of a staircase. Mitchell and others helped carry the rest of the wounded out of the house.
Once outside, they detonated the structure with C4 explosive, killing the remaining terrorists.
Because of his injuries, Mitchell had to leave the combat zone before the mission was completed. He retired from the Marine Corps in March 2005 as a sergeant.
For his actions during Operation Phantom Fury, Mitchell was awarded the Navy Cross, one of the nation's highest honors for battlefield heroism.
Presenting Mitchell's award at a Camp Pendleton, Calif., ceremony in 2006, Marine Lt. Gen. John Sattler said: "He did not go forward in a crazed moment or on an impulse. He thought things through, and he did what needed to be done."
That can-do spirit was instilled in Mitchell from a young age. He grew up in what he calls a patriotic and pro-military family. His parents set him on the right path, and the Marine Corps was his finishing school.
Mitchell credits the example set by his leaders in the enlisted ranks, particularly his pal Brad Kasal, who survived his Hell House wounds. "After boot camp and infantry training, he was the first Marine I met," Mitchell said of Kasal. "He was a Marine in every sense of the word."
That meant the occasional dose of tough love for Mitchell and his mates. He remembers a training hike that finished with Kasal inspecting his Marines' packs — and discovering some were cheating on their load.
So Kasal, as punishment, made the men turn around and make the hike again. He joined them on their run.
That was the example Kasal set, Mitchell said: "He wouldn't have asked us to do it if he couldn't do it. He did it right there with us."
Taking On Terror
That sense of loyalty and duty shaped Mitchell's thoughts on 9/11.
Upon learning of the terrorist attacks, "I was excited," he recalled. "It was a tragedy, but we all knew we'd be going to do our job real shortly. We were young Marines. We were pumped up."
Today, Mitchell lives in the Phoenix area with his wife, Sara, and 13-month-old son, R.J. He works as a motorcycle mechanic for Harley-Davidson and remains close with Alex Nicoll, who took seven rounds below his knee in the Hell House and later had his leg amputated.
Nicoll speaks fondly of Mitchell and their bond forged in the heat of combat. "He's everything," Nicoll told the Marine Corps Times in 2006. "I mean, he's the only reason I'm here; I know that."
By ALAN R. ELLIOTT | Posted Wednesday, January 31, 2007
American servicemen are fighting for our freedom every day in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some have gone beyond the call of duty. IBD highlights their courage in this recurring series.
When Matthew Cousins crossed the northern border into the Iraqi desert in March 2003, he was clearly a long way from placid, squeaky-clean Eagle Mountain, Utah.
The U.S. military invasion was two weeks old. Iraq's army was surrendering en masse. People in the streets were, Cousins says, essentially in shock: Saddam Hussein's prophecies had failed, and U.S. soldiers, at least for the time being, controlled their land.

Army 1st Lt. Cousins poses near a mosque in Baghdad amid his deployment of 2003-04 during which the since-promoted captain earned the Bronze Star.
Cousins, an Army National Guard soldier since 1990, is the son of a naval officer. His older brother served six years, also in the Navy. Service to country came naturally; leaving his wife of 13 years and three children in Eagle Mountain to fend for themselves did not. Still, the father and officer — a 36-year-old first lieutenant when he was in Iraq and now a captain — was ready to roll.
"You always fear the unknown," Cousins told IBD. "But as far as confidence in myself and willingness to serve, I was ready for it."
By 2004, Cousins had discovered mass graves, shooed playing children off a rocket embedded in the desert sand, and by dumb luck sidestepped a buried improvised explosive device, or IED.
Award Winner
For his heroic dedication to duty, Cousins earned a Bronze Star, one of the military's highest meritorious service awards.
Cousins' success did not stem from the usual horror of war. He never fired his weapon during his tour of duty, other than at the firing range. He earned his medal for his skill at avoiding hostilities. His story is, in fact, one of managing to return home without any shrapnel-strewn war stories to tell.
Cousins worked as part of a tactical team organizing missions for the Iraq Survey Group, the multinational, multiagency task force charged with searching for chemical and biological weapons.
He designed, managed and escorted 70 such missions. He conducted the forays across much of the Iraqi desert, successfully guiding nonmilitary specialists to inspection sites without a single incident or injury.
The challenge was deceptively complex. Each convoy faced the threat of IEDs, ground attacks, rocket-propelled grenades and mortar fire. Early on, the threat of attack was comparatively small, Cousins says, but the tension grew as the months dragged on.
"We were taking mortar rounds inside the compound after a couple months," said Army Reserve Col. George Waldroup, who oversaw the Iraq Survey Group tactical team.
Cousins planned in great detail in order to choose the most secure routes. The process included poring over maps and nightly briefings on areas prone to hostile fire. The soldiers would continually vary the times of their missions to remain as unpredictable as possible.
Cousins and his team would even visit a site first to assure they were properly prepared. The first lieutenant also delegated, relying heavily on his staff of noncommissioned officers to research the details.
"As a leader, he kept the stupid stuff — like guard duty — off our backs and let us do the job," said 1st Sgt. David Fillmore, also a Utah National Guard soldier, who worked closely with Cousins in 2003.
Cousins' knack for keeping his troops and charges out of harm's way left some of the younger recruits itching for a workout.
"In a way, you wanted a little bit of action — that's what you had trained for," Fillmore said.
Fillmore recounts the time a soldier asked Cousins why the group never saw action. Cousins, a devout Mormon, patiently said it was because he prayed morning and night that he could deliver his troops back to their mothers unharmed.
"Do you want me to stop praying?" the officer asked.
The young GI simply said, "No."
Iraq didn't represent the first time Cousins had stepped into the unknown. Just out of high school, he spent two years as a Mormon missionary in Hermosillo, Mexico. He learned Spanish, laying the groundwork for his career as a linguist for the National Guard. He also learned to tread foreign turf, knock on doors and deal fairly and patiently with those he met. "It builds confidence in yourself and your ability to interact with people of all kinds," he said.
One of those he met, Veronica, would eventually move to the U.S. and become his wife. Cousins, the fourth of six children, had graduated from high school in Concord, Calif. After his Mexico experience he moved to Utah in 1988 and entered Brigham Young University.
There, a professor who also was a National Guard chaplain got Cousins excited about jumping out of airplanes. The student had assumed he would join the military; the professor's pitch — a combination of duty, adrenaline and religion — clinched Cousins' desire to serve.
"He was a chaplain, so he was able to lead through a spiritual sense, which I enjoyed," Cousins said.
Matt and Veronica were married after his first semester at BYU. Soon after, he joined the National Guard with the 19th Special Forces group. He first worked in medical support, then in military intelligence.
Although Cousins spent 12 years in the National Guard before his tour in Iraq, he attributes most of his leadership ability to his father. Jack Cousins, 70, served two tours in Vietnam, primarily on aircraft carriers.
He raised his children to be responsible for their actions, Matt Cousins says. The father's work ethic was demanding: Stick with it until the job's done. "When I committed to something, that's what I would do — I wouldn't let people down," Cousins said. "That's how my father was."
Lifesaving Crash
Cousins' closest call in Iraq hinged on a crashed computer. Riding shotgun as navigator leading a survey team convoy, his Global Positioning System equipment broke down.
After a missed turn, the convoy circled back, then stopped to get its bearings. During that pause, an Iraqi told the soldiers an IED was planted in the road just where they were slated to make their turn.
"So it was a good thing that my computer went out, or we would have run right over it," Cousins said.
Today, Capt. Cousins, 39, is a team chief in charge of 17 linguists who primarily translate classified documents. He says few members of the Utah National Guard have served more than one tour in Iraq, unless they volunteered.
Col. Waldroup says the Utah National Guard played a big part in the ISG's secure mission. That effort led him to recommend six Bronze Stars for 2003. Those soldiers, said Waldroup, "were nothing less than outstanding. . . . In over a year I (oversaw) hundreds of missions and only lost two people. That will tell you the level and excellence of planning that took place."

June 16, 2008
Liberal Media’s "Magic Moment" | Objective But "Excited" | Grueling Interview | A Ticket George Dreams About
| Saying "What We All Believe" | No Doubting Their Agenda | McClellan’s Original Book Idea | McCain’s "Fealty" to Right... | ...vs. Not Ideological Obama | Hillary Died for Our Sins? | So Much for "No Blood for Oil" | Bush’s Economy Is Killing Us | Suffering on Burgers | Dissent Within MSNBC | Plea to "Fix" America | A Promise? Let’s Hope So
June 2, 2008
Obama Is “Something Special” | Following Her Liberal Heart | Beware GOP Vote Thieves | Democratic Racists vs. Obama | “Grotesque” and a “Sucker Punch” | NBC Scolds the President | No Mention He’s a Psycho | Missed Chance to Loathe America | Obama Gets a Freebie from ABC | “Shut the Hell Up!” | No More Food & Medicine | Jeremiah Wright, Media Victim | Do As I Say, Not As I Do | Quick, Get Them an Atlas
May 19, 2008
GOP Peddles "Hate" and "Slime" | Brace for GOP Nastiness | Smearing Democratic Patriots | Holding Obama’s Feet to the Fire | Obama, Victim of "Nasty" Race | Real Culprit: Racist Whites | Limbaugh’s Shameful Mischief | Republicans vs. "Scientific Fact" | Tornadoes: The Earth Fights Back | Sean Hannity = "Junkyard Dog" | Either "Smart" or "Conservative" | We’re as Awful as China’s Despots | America’s Army of Illiterates | BBC’s Ludicrous Caricature
May 05, 2008
Must Ignore Wright Debacle | Obama Merely Wright’s “Victim” | Jeremiah Wright: Patriotic Sage | Feeling Barack Obama’s Pain | Seething Over ABC’s Approach | Not Really a “Secret” Weapon | Evil GOP Will “Swift Boat” You | Scolding “Nasty” Republicans | NBC: Tax Cuts “Don’t Add Up” | Iraqis: Nicer than the U.S. Army | Ruing “Very Conservative” Pope | Spluttering Over Rush’s “Chaos” | “Evil” 18th Century “Neanderthal” | Brian Envies Swedish “Whip” | We’re “Behind” China’s Dictators |
April 21, 2008
Welcome, Pope "Rottweiler" | "Pay Up and Be Grateful!" | "Bitter" Townies = Terrorists? | Racist Whites Will Sink Obama | Scolding the "Heartless" McCain | The "Infamous" Charlton Heston | Free Markets Are a "False Idol" | Tough Enough for Right Wing? | Impugning "Racist" Director | Rebuking Anti-Roe McCain | The "Bear Stearns of Pedophilia"
April 7, 2008
Obama Wins the Media | Speech: "Daring" Act of "Honor" | "Defining Moment" for America | Feared He’d Let Barack Down | Distressed by Democrats’ Disarray | No Men Need Apply | Land of the Poor and Destitute | No (D) for Scandalous Democrats | "Hater" Hannity vs. Great Barack | Ode to the Passionate Prophet | Harry Boasts He’s "Al Gore, Jr." | SUVs Will Lead to Cannibalism... | ...And Iraq Insurgents = "Patriots"
March 24, 2008
Guess He Liked It | Wright’s Rant a Bogus Issue? | Lauding Obama’s "Act of Honor" | Conservatives "More Offensive"|"Good Luck, Barry!" | No (D) For Scandalous Spitzer | "American Dream Slipping Away" | No Progress In 43 Years | Jack’s Latest Conspiracy Theory | Rush, the "Pervert" of Democracy | Barack Obama = Mark Twain? | Harry Hits GOP’s "Low Road" | Katie’s Feminist Defense | America: War-Mongering Rapist
March 10, 2008
Guzzling Obama’s Kool-Aid | Barack "Springsteen" Obama | Hillary Is Super-Duper, Too | Ooh, They’re Both So Wonderful | Slamming "Nasty and Vicious" GOP | "Swift Boating" of Barack Obama | McCain Guilty, Even if Innocent | Dan Gives His Stamp of Approval | Exposing Evil Limbaugh-NYT Plot | So Obama Is Really a "Centrist"? | Don’t Skip Commie Talking Points | Al Outsmarted by "Shrewd" Fidel | Limbaugh’s "Savage" Nativism | Exploiting Buckley to Slam Rush
February 25, 2008
Chris Gets His Thrill On | CBS’s Valentine for Obama | Can’t Wait to Impugn Republicans | McCain vs. "Far Right" "Crazies" | Just Toddlers Having a Tantrum | Just a Matter of Time | Vieira’s Liberal Circle of Friends | Start Packing | Run, Al, Run | "Dashing" "Rock Star" Castro | News You Can Use | Some Fine Objective Reporting | Americans "Suffering" Due to Bush | Frothing Over Bush the "Fascist" | Wishing Rush Had "Croaked"
February 11, 2008
Gushing Over "Son of Camelot" | Future Victim of Evil Right Wing? | Big Media’s "Dream Ticket" | Obama Campaign Commercial? | Utterly Unbiased Debate Review | In Awe of "Brilliant" Bill | Saluting Edwards’ Liberalism | Sounds Good to Cynthia | NY Times Attacks, Anchors Jump | McCain Opponents Simply Petty |Bush the Medicare "Slasher" | Time for a "Sensible" Tax Hike | CNN’s Toobin: The Commander-in-Chief of Stupid Analysis | Blame Reagan for Iraq "Heist"
January 28, 2008
The Democrats’ Mr. Cool | Journalists Hooked on Obama | Thrilled by "Hillary Unplugged" | AP’s Ode to "Authentic" McCain | Mitt Romney’s "Dangerous Place" |
Uniquely Repelled by Romney | Don’t Blame McCain’s Liberal Views | No "Truly Liberal" Choices | Hillary: America’s Iron Lady | Tired of Conservative "Crap" | Please, No Tax Cuts for Rich! | Conservatives Want "Berlin Wall" | Is Bin Laden a Hero or Villain? | The Sunni vs. Shiite Primary | Giuliani the Disastrous "Dictator" | GOP Rigged Election for Hillary?
January 14, 2008
Rare Moment of Truth | Victim of Sexist Double-Standard | Real Hillary Is Lovable Fuzzball | Beware Voters’ "Inherent Racism" | The Cure for "Despised" America | Putting Their Objectivity Aside | Swept Up by the Dream Machine | Huckabee vs. "Hateful" Pro-Lifers | Only GOP Voters Are Extremists | Castigating Romney’s "Ignorance" | Gore’s "Moral Obligation" to Run | Chicken Little Journalism | Toss ’Em Over a Big Wall | Still Beating Impeachment Drum
“Sometimes, I swear, when I see what our tax dollars get us in Congress, I feel like asking for my money back. But, other times, I find myself thinking that the laughs those clowns provide us nearly, but not quite, make up for their incompetence, hypocrisy and mendacity... Recently, I got my year’s quota of laughs when Congress decided to grill oil company executives because, I guess, the price of gas was higher than it had been in 1958. There’s nothing that rich, pampered politicians like better than putting rich, pampered business executives on the hot seat... at least until they have to go, hat in hand, to grovel for campaign contributions. I actually found myself sympathizing with the executives because they pretty much had to sit there and take it. God forbid they opened their yaps and pointed out that we’d not only have cheaper gas, but not have to toady to the Arabs, the Russians and Hugo Chavez, if these same politicians would quit caving in to the environmental fascists and allowed American oil companies to drill in Anwar, in the Dakotas and in the deep blue sea. It would also be a good idea if we finally began using nuclear power in a big way. Heck, if France can do it without turning Paris into Chernobyl, it can’t be that hard. In the meantime, thanks to these buffoons, I’m stuck paying $4.15-a-gallon for regular.” —Burt Prelutsky
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“Media Reform” Activists Cheer Obama
June 8, 2008
Stealing the Election From Obama?
June 6, 2008
Warm and Fuzzy Global Regulation
June 4, 2008
“Media Reform” Targets Conservatives
June 3, 2008
The Network Behind the Bush-bashing Book
May 29, 2008
Visit the complete AIM Column archives.
Be not ashamed to say you loved them, though you may or may not have always. Take what they have taught you with their dying and keep it with your own.
And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane, take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind.
Major Michael Davis O'Donnell
1 January 1970
Dak To, Vietnam
Listed as KIA February 7, 1978
“The problem on the Left is, now that Karl Marx has forsaken them, they have no philosophy. Thank goodness. Think what evil creeps liberals would be if their plans to enfeeble the individual, exhaust the economy, impede the rule of law, and cripple national defense were guided by a coherent ideology instead of smug ignorance. As for our side, conservatism is a gut reaction for most of us, and a done deal for the rest. The moral philosophy of American politics can be explained briefly and clearly, and, the Constitution being written, it has been. Where is there a philosopher in Washington?” —P.J. O’Rourke
“The truth about black poverty today, as Kay Hymowitz of the Manhattan Institute has aptly put it, is that it is ‘intricately intertwined with the collapse of the nuclear family in the inner city.’ Consider that black households that are headed by married couples have median incomes almost 90 percent that of white households headed by married couples. The problem in the black community is that far too few black households are headed by married couples... It is not simply a moral claim, but a well-documented empirical one, that family and education are the keys to success in our free country. Black children don’t need politicians of any color who claim to hold the keys to their future. They need parents who know their names. Two of them.” —Star ParkerI am really not sure who Star Parker but I heartily agree. My white immigrant great-grandparents never relied on anyone outside of their immediate family and friends. Stop waiting for a paternalistic government to bail things out for you. Get up and start doing it yourselfs
The Hollow Men
A penny for the Old Guy
I
We are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men
Leaning together
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!
Our dried voices, when
We whisper together
Are quiet and meaningless
As wind in dry grass
Or rats' feet over broken glass
In our dry cellar
Shape without form, shade without colour,
Paralysed force, gesture without motion;
Those who have crossed
With direct eyes, to death's other Kingdom
Remember us--if at all--not as lost
Violent souls, but only
As the hollow men
The stuffed men.
II
Eyes I dare not meet in dreams
In death's dream kingdom
These do not appear:
There, the eyes are
Sunlight on a broken column
There, is a tree swinging
And voices are
In the wind's singing
More distant and more solemn
Than a fading star.
Let me be no nearer
In death's dream kingdom
Let me also wear
Such deliberate disguises
Rat's coat, crowskin, crossed staves
In a field
Behaving as the wind behaves
No nearer--
Not that final meeting
In the twilight kingdom
III
This is the dead land
This is cactus land
Here the stone images
Are raised, here they receive
The supplication of a dead man's hand
Under the twinkle of a fading star.
Is it like this
In death's other kingdom
Waking alone
At the hour when we are
Trembling with tenderness
Lips that would kiss
Form prayers to broken stone.
IV
The eyes are not here
There are no eyes here
In this valley of dying stars
In this hollow valley
This broken jaw of our lost kingdoms
In this last of meeting places
We grope together
And avoid speech
Gathered on this beach of the tumid river
Sightless, unless
The eyes reappear
As the perpetual star
Multifoliate rose
Of death's twilight kingdom
The hope only
Of empty men.
V
Here we go round the prickly pear
Prickly pear prickly pear
Here we go round the prickly pear
At five o'clock in the morning.
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
For Thine is the Kingdom
Between the conception
And the creation
Between the emotion
And the response
Falls the Shadow
Life is very long
Between the desire
And the spasm
Between the potency
And the existence
Between the essence
And the descent
Falls the Shadow
For Thine is the Kingdom
For Thine is
Life is
For Thine is the
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.
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