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Posted on Wednesday, Apr 2, 2008, 10:09 AM (UTC -5)
Some of the results of Dick Cheney's
How
American is Dick Cheney, anyway?
As Americans are
bracing for a $4.00 a gallon pice of gas, Exxon Mobile, as well as all other gas
companies, are basking in record profits.
How did our
country find ourselves in this situation? For years the conservative approach to
big business has been that of protectionism, protect the profits of big oil.
This was emphasised most dramatically during the last 7 years of the Bush
Adminstration.
The signs were
obvious from the beginning of this President's term in office. When, two weeks
into Bush's 1st term, Dick Cheney held his "energy task force" meeting in the
white house and refused to tell his employers, the American people, who attended
that meeting or what was discussed at that meeting. We all had a good clue at
that time where all of this was going. Besides the obvious, the price we are paying at the pump,
there is also the pure arragrance of this Vice-president that has given us the
highest prices of gas our country has ever experienced. In order to see the
effect, world wide on gas, I am including a table of the average price of gas
worldwide. You will easily see that China,as well as , Venezuela is getting the
best deal on gas. Citgo, Venezuela's National oil company is making about $3.86
per gallon profit on our citizens while charging their citizens a mere $0.14 per
gallon.
AUSTRALIA SYDNEY
$2.63 CAMBODIA PHNOM PENH $2.57 TAIWAN TAIPEI $2.47 GEORGIA TBILISI $2.31 LAOS
VIENTIANE $1.66 THAILAND BANGKOK $1.60 CHINA TIANJIN $1.54 CHINA SHANGHAI $1.48
RUSSIA MOSCOW $1.45 KAZAKHSTAN ALMATY $1.36 KAZAKHSTAN ATYRAU $1.35 TAJIKISTAN
DUSHANBE $1.32 AZERBAIJAN BAKU $1.15 VENEZUELA CARACAS $0.14
I included a
google search for those who want the truth about policies inacted by this
President that directly lead us to the prices we are paying. For those that want
the truth, you can find in this search, just look for the truth, it's "in
there."
Posted on Monday, Mar 31, 2008, 11:10 AM (UTC -5)
Posted on
Monday, Mar 31, 2008, 06:23 AM (UTC -5)
A President's Disgrace???????
 
OH WOW.... Now I
remember why it's so depressing reading material form the Washington Post.
The story in Sunday, March,30,2008,would have been funny, if it were not so sad.
The brief paragraph below sets the stage.
"By MATTHEW
LEE The Associated Press Sunday, March 30, 2008; 10:59 AM JERUSALEM -- Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice on Sunday branded Zimbabwe's president a "disgrace" to
his people and to Africa, and expressed concerns about verifying whether the
country held free and fair elections."
For Condoleezza Rice to state anything about a
president being a disgrace and not include her two "bosses" in that statement is
indeed a sad, but rather expected comment from one of our country's worst ever
Secretary of State.
Although it may be true that Zimbabwe's
president is a disgrace, Ms. Rice should be concentrating on repairing the
damage done by the most disgraceful administration this country has experienced
in our country's history.
From taking our country to war on a lie, and
continuing that lie with misleading us, start to the finish, on a host of
things, regarding that war, to taking a 3 billion dollar surplus and turning it
into a 9 trillion dollar deficit, Bush's term in office is the most disgraceful our country has ever
experienced.
It's Sad, really sad, what our leaders have done to our fine
country. ... Grittynitty ... Posted
on Sunday, Mar 30, 2008, 11:51 AM (UTC -5)
Are You Moving? Consider Lexington.

A beautiful view of
Beech Lake
www.grittynitty.com
by: Grittynitty
As is true of most
small communities, Lexington has it's share of problems. Old cliques, “political
cronieism”, and budget shortfalls, are not absent in Lexington, nor unique to
it. However, with all the typical problems that most communities have, Lexington
is a wonderful place to live.
Lexington, is a small,"bedroom
community",situated 100 miles from Tennessee's largest two cities and 17 miles
from Jackson,which is one of Tennessee's fastest growing cities. In addition to
being ideally located, only minutes from large metro areas,Lexington is also
located only 10 miles from interstate 40.
If these are not enough reasons to look close
at Lexington as a great location for businesses and residential living, also
within 15 minutes of Lexington's town center lies 7 of Tennessee's most
beautiful recreational lakes. Fishing, hunting and water recreation abounds in
the Lexington area.
Of course the Lexington chamber of
commerce,will be happy to provide anyone interested in Lexington,all of the
demographics you will need to inform regarding education,industry and retail
opportunities in our fine community. Here is a link to their web address.
www.hendersoncountychamber.com 149 Eastern Shores Dr Lexington, TN 38351 (731) 968-2126.
You might also check, for ongoing information: http://www.thelexingtonprogress.com/
Good luck in selecting a new community to
live. If you choose Lexington you will become a proud Lexingtonian, your first
day here. by: grittynitty Posted on Thursday, Mar 27, 2008, 10:23 AM (UTC -5)
This is not the work of a Patriot....
Palm
Island Dubai...(A
REPOST)
I think it rather curious, that the
Sultan of Dubai, can build an Island in the ocean that initially could house
60,000 people, now to house 120,000 people, in two years. This was on very
strict deadlines. Full time shifts of 800 workers worked day and night. They,
finished that island on schedule, with the help of major American financial,
oil investment and contracting companies, financial and engineering might.
Just google, and you'll see, enough thats public, to scare the warts off a frog.
The list of ,"interested parties," reads like a who's who list.
.
Not to be outdone, they then preceeded
to build a second island.This one large enough to house 500,000 people, plus
businesses and entertainment.They finished that, by end of 2004. Strict
deadlines. Now they are finishing the third , man made island, in the ocean,
called the World. You should read of the potential windfalls here. Scheduled
to finish, 2008. And by the way, just in case anyone wants to discount this ,
and say, "oh, that's just some liberal, blowing off about something," JUST, in
case, you are saying that..... I thought I'd make it harder to deny the
truth.... I put a link to the pic below to a great google search, hee hee, just
try,,,, to prove me wrong.... lol.
LINK TO GOOGLE SEARCH
CICK HERE...
Im just an ol'e country
boy,,,, but I understand what happened here,
What? not a word of the growth of Dubai, or the source of it either,, not a
word,,, from Our two little fell'ers at the top... "grittynitty" Posted
on Sunday, Mar 16, 2008, 03:34 PM (UTC -5)
Hi,,,here's my traveling sidewalk store..You can use
your paypal here!
Posted on Sunday, Mar 16,
2008, 02:44 PM (UTC -5)
Gritty's Unique
Gifts
(SITEID: 86451,(owners)................... Hello Folks,,,, I'm Grittynitty, I have a neat little website that allows
for individuals and companies of all sizes to personally customize ,,, with
their own pictures,, a large variety of products from key chains to tee-shirts
and much more, in between. Over 300 quality products are featured for you to
choose from. Take a peak, you will be glad you did. Especially for Christmas,
weddings, birthdays or any special occasion--our quality products satisify the
shopper in all of us. See us at: http://www.grittynitty.com/
Web Ring
Owner Comments: I personally attend to my site, I have google talk available
and provide the best service possible on my site. Versitle ,,, that best
describes my site. It is full and packed, and easy to navigate, NO popups to be
expected on my site.
Posted on Sunday, Mar 16, 2008, 02:42 PM
(UTC -5)
The final Question, Mr. Bush.

January 15, 2007
Dear Mr. Bush,
Reality is a fleeing
visitor in the White House. Is it the pressure of the job? Or is it the pressure
of the unsightful, unpopular, unproductive, unstudied, underfunded,
underdeployed, and under suspection war in Iraq? Whatever the reason, Mr.
President, you need to get a grip.
In November, 1999 you won a
very polarized and dirty battle to aquire the Presidency of the United States.
As it has been in your personal life, from the time you challenged the vote in
Florida to the present, you have been like a white tornado running through the
lives all all that you touched.
While visiting our lives,
what have you left us? Positive leavings? Should I ask this next question in
singular or plural? What positive leaving? What positive leavings? For this old
country boy, I see none.
From the time you took
office to the present, you, your primary source of policy problems, Mr.
Cheney, your staff, your administration, and your policies have stood for little
but confusion and
and division. What have you
left us in the wake of your policy decisions? For a moment, forget your disaster
in Iraq. America needs to know of at least one postive event of your presidency.
What would you like to tell America was your biggest positive influence on us?
Would it be your tax cuts to the wealthest of all Americans? Or,,would it be the
division that this has caused? Or..would it be the prescription drug bill, that
started out at 320 billion, and now is at 560 to 600 billion and counting? Was
that the bill designed to "helllllllllp" our seniors, or to glut the social
security "trust fund?" Or..was it the Terri Shivo fiasico? New Oreleans, maybe?
What has been the "help," that you have provided for our country, and for your
"presidential library?"
The long and exhausting
list of unanswered questions would go on and on! You will never have to answer
these questions. You will never have to take the "credit" for your
"accomplishments." Nor, will you have to reap the consequences for your
"decidn'.
You would only answer these
questions, as you have every other question of your presidency, with no answer.
Or with a scripted statement, crafted by Carl Rove or another of his cronies.
But Mr. Bush, you will have
a question to answer someday. There will be no mother, no daddy, no Dick Cheney,
or no Carl Rove to help you with your answer. You will be on your own to answer
that question, Mr. Bush. We all will. Want to preview your answer? First
visualize the question... It will come to you..too late for most of us, maybe
not for you, Mr. Bush.
Oh, yea, Mr. Bush,,, while answering, don't forget Palm Island , Dubai.
'grittynitty'
Posted on Monday, Jan 15, 2007, 06:21 PM (UTC -6)
A far time and a far place, each time I go
here.........

Father, close beside you I stand.
The rain drenched earth is turned.
The clods have broke away.
The East wind roughs my neck,
And kisses the ripeness of my youth.
I watch with laden ashes,
To view the night dark-clay,
Be broken 'neath your silver head.
From this morbid stance, I see the
past,
The now, the gone, the here.
I see your words, etched , line for
line,
Across the deftness of this moment.
By seeing these bones lay soft,
Within the dingle moss,
That creeps within your blackened
home.
I can taste the flavor of your
faults.
Give these two, most salt stained
eyes
The life to see tomorrow's sun.
The lens to see it set.
But let my eyes lie restless still;
Until I make a valiant shadow
That can cover these bones below,
And cast an image to be your stone,
Cajoling the head of your satin
shroud.
With letters, bright in sunlight
glare
Read the fortune of your life, Then , rest in
peace,
There admid your bones, until the veil shall
move,
And sunlight shall warm the clay to
life,
Bringing again, this golden
man.
I love
you Dad,
grittynitty Posted on Monday, Jan 1, 2007, 11:05 PM (UTC -6)
JANUARY 1, 2007, REFLECTIONS ON MY FIRST NEW
YEARS
HISTORY, IS OUR BIGGEST
TEACHER. SOME LEADERS, KNOW HISTORY, AND USE IT FOR THEIR COUNTRY'S BENEFIT.
SOME DON'T. I'LL LEAVE IT TO YOU TO SAY WHICH OUR LEADER IS, ONE OF USING
HISTORY OR ONE OF LETTING HISTORY USE US.
WHAT
EVER CONCLUSION THAT YOU MIGHT ARRIVE TO, YOU WILL HAVE TO UNDERSTAND HOW
COMPLETELY WE ARE FAILING HISTORY'S LESSON, JUST BY READING THE FOLLOWING
ARTICLE FROM TIME MAGAZINE 1951... my first New Years........gritty
nitty..
1951 Mohammed
Mossadegh FROM THE TIME ARCHIVE Jan. 7, 1952

Once upon a time, in a mountainous land
between Baghdad and the Sea of Caviar, there lived a nobleman.
This nobleman, after a lifetime run, became Chief Minister of the realm. In a
few months he had the whole world of carping at the way the kingdom was
hanginOnce upon a time, in a mountainous land between Baghdad and the Sea of
Caviar, there g on his words and deeds, his jokes, his tears, his tantrums.
Behind his grotesque antics lay great issues of peace or war, progress or
decline, which would affect many lands far beyond his mountains.
His methods of government were peculiar.
For example, when he decided to shift his governors, he dropped into a bowl
slips of paper with the names of provinces; each governor stepped forward and
drew a new province. Like all ministers, the old nobleman was plagued with
friends, men-of-influence, patriots and toadies who came to him with one
proposal or another. His duty bade him say no to these schemes, but he was such
a kindly fellow (in some respects) that he could not bear to speak the word. He
would call in his two-year-old granddaughter and repeat the proposal to her, in
front of the visitor. Since she was a well- brought-up little girl, to all these
propositions she would unhesitatingly say no. "How can I go against her?" the
old gentleman would ask. After a while, the granddaughter, bored with the
routine, began to answer yes occasionally. This saddened the old man, for it
ruined his favorite joke, and might even have made the administration of the
country more inefficient than it was already.
In foreign affairs, the minister pursued a very
active policy—so active that in the chancelleries of nations thousand of miles
away, lamps burned late into the night as other governments tried to find a way
of satisfying his demands without ruining themselves. Not that he ever
threatened war. His weapon was the threat of his own political suicide, as a
willful little boy might say, "If you don't give me what I want I'll hold my
breath until I'm blue in the face. Then you'll be sorry."
In this way, the old nobleman became the most
world-renowned man his ancient race had produced for centuries.
In this way, too, he increased the danger of a
general war among nations, impoverished his country and brought it and some
neighboring lands to the very brink of disaster.
Yet his people loved all that he did, and
cheered him to the echo whenever he appeared in the streets.
The New Menace. In the year of his rise to
power, he was in some ways the most noteworthy figure on the world scene. Not
that he was the best or the worst or the strongest, but because his rapid
advance from obscurity was attended by the greatest stir. The stir was not only
on the surface of events: in his strange way, this strange old man represented
one of the most profound problems of his time. Around this dizzy old wizard
swirled a crisis of human destiny.
He was Mohammed Mossadegh, Premier of Iran in
the year 1951. He was the Man of the Year. He put Scheherazade in the petroleum
business and oiled the wheels of chaos. His acid tears dissolved one of the
remaining pillars of a once great empire. In his plaintive, singsong voice he
gabbled a defiant challenge that sprang out of a hatred and envy almost
incomprehensible to the West.
There were millions inside and outside of Iran
whom Mossadegh symbolized and spike for, and whose fanatical state of mind he
had helped to create. They would rather see their own nations fall apart than
continue their present relations with the West. Communism encouraged this state
of mind, and stood to profit hugely from it. But Communism did not create it.
The split between the West and the non-Communist East was a peril all its own to
world order, quite apart from Communism. Through 1951 the Communist threat to
the world continued; but nothing new was added—and little subtracted. The news
of 1951 was this other danger in the Near and Middle East. In the center of that
spreading web of news was Mohammed Mossadegh.
A Matter of Conscience. The West's military
strength to resist Communism grew in 1951. But Mossadegh's challenge could not
be met by force. For all its power, the West in 1951 failed to cope with a
weeping, fainting leader of a helpless country; the West had not yet developed
the moral muscle to define its own goals and responsibilities in the Middle
East. Until the West did develop that moral muscle, it had no chance with the
millions represented by Mossadegh. In Iran, in Egypt, in a dozen other
countries, when people asked: "Who are you? What are you doing here?" the West's
only answer was an unintelligible mutter. Charles Malik, Lebanon's great
delegate to the U.N., put it tersely: "Do you know why there are problems in the
Near East? Because the West is not sure of itself." The East would be in turmoil
until the West achieved enough moral clarity to construct a just and fruitful
policy toward the East.
In the U.S., the core of the West, the moral
climate was foggy. Scandal chased scandal across the year's headlines. Senator
Estes Kefauver revived the Middle ages morality play, on television. Kefauver's
reluctant mummers were followed by basketball players who rarely threw
games—just points, and West Pointers who were taught a rigid code of honor which
did not seem to apply when the football squad took academic examinations.
None of 1951's scandals indicated thoroughgoing
moral depravity, or even idiocy—just an inability to tell right from wrong if
the question was put (as it usually was) in fine print. This uneducated moral
sense led congressional committees through a sordid trail of mink coats and
other gifts to Government officials. Casuistry reached a high point with the
official whose conscience told him that it was proper to accept a ham under
twelve pounds, but not a bigger one. Democratic Chairman William Boyle resigned
his job under a cumulus cloud of influence peddling, and his successor was
hardly in office before clouds gathered over him too. The public worked up quite
a head of indignant steam over scandals in the Bureau of Internal Revenue, which
was taking more of its money than ever before. This indignation fell like a load
of hay on Harry Truman. Perhaps it would be the understatement of the year to
say that 1951 was not Truman's year.
Other Men of 1951. Nor was it Dean Acheson's
year—except in the sense that he survived it. By his firm and skillful handling
of the Japanese Treaty conference his forepaws out of the public's dog-house,
and proved once again that he would be a masterful Secretary of State if all the
U.S.'s enemies could be disposed of with a gavel. Yet all through 1951,
Acheson's State Department was still caught as tight as Brer Rabbit in Tar Baby.
The useless and impossible effort to justify its past mistakes consumed its
energies. In this year-long waste of time, Senator Joe McCarthy, the poor man's
Torquemada, played Tar Baby.
Credit for the big diplomatic achievement of the
year goes not to the State Department but to a Republican—John Foster Dulles,
who, step by careful step, won nearly all of the free world to accept the
Japanese Peace Treaty, and thereby handed Communism a stunning diplomatic
defeat. But the Japanese Treaty was more a beginning than an end. Whether it
became the keystone of a more successful U.S. policy in the Far East would
depend on how well U.S.-Japanese relations were handled in the future.
Matthew Ridgway and his valiant men in Korea did
all that men could be expected to do—and more. But the Korean war had been in an
uneasy stalemate since May.
France's General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny
turned the tide against the Communist advance in Indo-China. At year's end,
however, De Lattre lay ill in Paris, and the Indo-China war was far from won.
In 1951's first months, it looked as if
Eisenhower would certainly be the Man of the Year. Never in recent history has
Europe experienced such a lifting of heart as it got from Ike's inspiring
presence and his skillful, patient incubation of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization. In December 1950, NATO seemed just another paper plan doomed to
failure. By April 1951 it was a psychological reality: Europeans began to
believe that Europe could and would be defended. By year's end, NATO was a
military reality, with six U.S. and twelve European divisions in the field.
Defeatism faded, neutralism began to fade, because arms came into being; and the
fading of defeatism made more arms possible. Europe, for a change, was moving in
a virtuous circle.
Through no fault of Ike's, the heart-lift and
the arming both slowed down. At year's end, Britain and France were in bad
economic trouble. Headway had been made on the German problem, but the Germans,
with the tragic consistency of their character, were again pushing and shoving
into a bargaining position.
Ike in Europe registered a big net gain,
although Europe was still in no position to beat off a Russian attack. Ike in
the U.S. was a fascinating political riddle, and, to millions, the best hope in
18 years of replacing the New-Fair Deal. On the record, Ike was not the Man of
1951; 1952 might be his year. Or Robert Taft's. Or, in spite of 1951's scandals,
Harry Truman's.
The outstanding comeback of 1951 was Winston
Churchill's. In his first two months of office he moved with the utmost caution,
apparently trying to prove that he could be almost as colorless as a Socialist.
This might be good politics, but it did not make big news.
The Old Soldier. Many thought Douglas MacArthur
the logical choice for Man of the Year. The arguments were impressive: I) he was
winning the Korean war, in so far as he was permitted to win it, when he was
fired; 2) his speech before Congress breathed a sense of high public duty long
absent from U.S. affairs; 3) the Japanese Treaty was a monument to his bold and
generous effort to find a new U.S. relationship with Asian peoples; 4) to
millions of Americans, he remained the No. I U.S. hero, by no means faded away.
However, by year's end MacArthur had abdicated a
position of national leadership to become spokesman for a particular group. Some
passages in his later speeches were ambiguous and inconsistent with his own
basic line of thought and action. These ambiguities, plus the distortion of
MacArthur by his friends of the Hearst and McCormick press, led some to conclude
that MacArthur was an isolationist; others, that he was an imperialist. Both
tags were absurd, yet the figure of MacArthur in U.S. life was neither as clear
nor as large in December as it had been in April.
Nevertheless, his Congress speech still sang in
the nation's conscience. It contained a brilliant passage applicable to 1951's
biggest news—the turmoil in the Middle East. Asian peoples, MacArthur said,
would continue to drive for independence from the West and for material
progress, and this drive "may not be stopped." The U.S. must "orient its
policies in consonance with this basic evolutionary condition, rather than
pursue a course blind to the reality that the colonial era is now past and the
Asian peoples covet the right to shape their own destiny. What they seek now is
friendly guidance, understanding and support, not imperious direction; the
dignity of equality, and not the shame of subjugation."
No George Washington. The U.S. vaguely agreed
with MacArthur's plea: it wanted to feel sympathy toward the aspirations of
Asian peoples. After all, material progress and national independence are both
classic American doctrines, and the U.S. could envision itself as playing
Lafayette to Asian George Washingtons. But in terms of Asian realities, the
Lafayette-Washington picture was sheer sentimentality, and, like all
sentimentality, led to bad morals. MacArthur knew the discouraging facts of
Asian politics. He wanted the U.S. to face the facts and build a policy upon
them. The U.S.—or at least its official leadership—was appalled by the facts.
Just as it had recoiled from Nationalist China, crying "Corruption," so in 1951
the U.S. recoiled from the corruption, hatred, fanaticism and disorganization of
the Middle East.
Mossadegh, by Western standards an appalling
caricature of a statesman, was a fair sample of what the West would have to work
with in the Middle East. To sit back and deplore him was to run away from the
issue. For a long time, relations with the Middle East would mean relations with
men such as Mossadegh, some better, some much worse.
The Iranian George Washington was probably born
in 1879 (he fibs about his age). His mother was a princess of the Kajar dynasty
then ruling Persia; his father was for 30 years Finance Minister of the country.
Mohammed Mossadegh entered politics in 1906. An obstinate oppositionist, he was
usually out of favor and several times exiled. In 1919, horrified by a
colonial-style treaty between Britain and Persia, he hardened his policy into a
simple Persia-for-the-Persians slogan. While the rest of the world went through
Versailles, Manchuria, the Reichstag fire, Spain, Ethiopia and a World War,
Mossadegh kept hammering away at his single note. Nobody in the West heard him.
They heard him in 1951, however. On March 8, the
day after Ali Razmara, Iran's able, pro-Western Premier, was assassinated,
Mossadegh submitted to the Iranian Majilis his proposal to nationalize Iran's
oil. In a few weeks a wave of anti-foreign feeling, assisted by organized
terrorism, swept him into the premiership.
The Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., most of whose stock
is owned by the British government, had been paying Iran much less than the
British Government took from the company in taxes. The U.S. State Department
warned Britain that Iran might explode unless it got a better deal, but the U.S.
did not press the issue firmly enough to make London listen. Mossadegh's
nationalization bill scared the company into concessions that were made too
late. The Premier, whose mind runs in a deep single track, was committed to
nationalization—and much to the surprise of the British, he went through with
it, right down to the expulsion of the British technicians without whom the
Iranians cannot run the Abadan refinery.
Results: I) the West lost the Iranian oil
supply; 2) the Iranian government lost the oil payments; 3) this loss stopped
all hope of economic progress in Iran and disrupted the political life of the
country; 4) in the ensuing confusion, Iran's Tudeh (Communist) Party made great
gains which it hoped to see reflected in the national elections, due to begin
this week.
Tears & Laughter. Mossadegh does not promise
his country a way out of this nearly hopeless situation. He would rather see the
ruin of Iran than give in to the British, who, in his opinion, corrupted and
exploited his country. He is not in any sense pro-Russian, but he intends to
stick to his policies even though he knows they might lead to control of Iran by
the Kremlin.
The suicidal quality of this fanaticism can be
seen in the two men closest to Mosadegh in politics. Ayatulla Kashani is a
zealot of Islam who has spent his life fighting the infidel British in Iraq and
Iran. He controls the Teheran mobs (except those controlled by the Communists),
and his terrorist organization assassinated Razmara. Hussein Makki controls the
oil-rich province of Khuzistan, in which the Abadan refinery lies. When the
British got out, Mossadegh put Makki in charge of the oil installations. Makki's
view on oil: close up the wells, pull down the refinery and forget about it.
Neither Makki, Kashani nor Mossadegh has ever shown any interest in rational
plans for the economic reform and development of their country.
Sometimes the crisis through which Iran is
passing depresses Mossadegh to the point of tears and fainting spells. Just as
often, he seems to regard the state of affairs with a light heart. When he came
to the U.S. to plead his cause, mercurial Mossadegh was so ready with quips,
anecdotes and laughter that Secretary Achseon thought the visitor should be
reminded of the gravity of the situation. At a Blair House luncheon where
Mossadegh was guest of honor, Acheson told a story: a wagon train, crossing the
American West, was attacked by Indians. A rescue party found the wagons burned,
and the corpses of the pioneers lying around them. The only man still alive lay
under a wagon, with an arrow through his back. "Does it hurt?" he was asked. The
dying man whispered: "Only when I laugh." Acheson looked pointedly at
Mossadegh—who just doubled up with appreciative laughter.
Five Grim Conclusions. The fact that Iranians
accept Mossadegh's suicidal policy is a measure of the hatred of the West—and
especially the hatred of Britain—in the Near and Middle East. The Iranian crisis
was still bubbling when Egypt exploded with the announcement that it was
abrogating its 1936 treaty with Britain. The Egyptian government demanded that
British troops get off the soil of Egypt. Since the British were guarding the
Suez Canal, they refused. The Egyptians rioted, perhaps in the belief that the
U.S., which had opposed any use of force in Iran, would take the same line in
Egypt. The U.S., however, backed the British, and the troops stayed. But now
they can only stay in Egypt as an armed occupation of enemy territory.
Throughout the East, that kind of occupation may soon cost more than it is
worth.
Since Mossadegh's rise, U.S. correspondents have
been swarming over the Near and Middle East. Their general consensus is that:
I) The British position in the whole area is
hopeless. They are hated and distrusted almost everywhere. The old colonial
relationship is finished, and no other power can replace Britain.
2) If left to "work out their own destiny"
without help, the countries of the Middle East will disintegrate. The living
standard will drop and political life become even more chaotic. (Half a dozen
important political leaders in the Near and Middle East were assassinated during
1951.)
3) Left to themselves, these countries will
reach the point where they will welcome Communism.
4) The U.S., which will have to make the West's
policy in the Middle East, whether it wants to or not, as yet has no policy
there. The U.S. pants along behind each crisis, tossing a handful of money here,
a political concession there. At the height of the Egyptian crisis (the worst
possible moment), the U.S., Britain, France and Turkey invited Egypt to join a
defense pact. The invitation was promptly rejected.
5) Americans and Britons in the Near and Middle
East spend a large part of their energies fighting each other. No effective
Western policy is possible without Western unity.
The word "American" no longer has a good sound
in that part of the world. To catch the Jewish vote in the U.S., President
Truman in 1946 demanded that the British admit 100,000 Jewish refugees to
Palestine, in violation of British promises to the Arabs. Since then, the Arab
nations surrounding Israel have regarded that state as a U.S. creation, and the
U.S., therefore, as an enemy. The Israeli-Arab war created nearly a million Arab
refugees, who have been huddled for three years in wretched camps. These
refugees, for whom neither the U.S. nor Israel will take the slightest
responsibility, keep alive the hatred of U.S. perfidy.
No enmity for the Arabs, no selfish national
design motivated the clumsy U.S. support of Israel. The American crime was not
to help the Jews, but to help them at the expense of the Arabs. Today, the Arab
world fears and expects a further Israeli expansion. The Arabs are well aware
that Alben Barkley, Vice President of the U.S., tours his country making
speeches for the half-billion-dollar Israeli bond issue, the largest ever
offered to the U.S. public. Nobody, they note bitterly, is raising that kind of
money for them.
The Deep Problem. What is the right answer to
the seething problem of the Middle East? It is much easier to see past U.S.
mistakes, sins of omission and commission, than to plot a wise and firm future
course. The U.S. success in Turkey, gratifying as it is, does not give much
guidance on Western policy in the Arab countries and in Iran. Turkey had passed
through a drastic process of modernization which in most of the Moslem world is
still to come. But the U.S. cannot wait for Kemal Ataturks who are not in sight.
The West's new relationship with the East must
start at a much deeper level than efforts at economic help or military alliance.
Economic and military cooperation will be of little use unless they are part of
a Western approach that involves the whole range of culture—especially religion
and law.
In the current issue of Foreign Affairs,
Lebanon's Malik brilliantly lays the groundwork for such a change in Western
attitude. Malik sums up:
"The disturbing rise of fanaticism in the Near
East in recent years is a reaction to the thoughtlessness and superficiality of
the West...In all this we are really touching on the great present crisis in
Western culture. We are saying when that culture mends its own spiritual fences,
all will be well with the Near East, and not with the Near East alone. The deep
problem of the Near East must await the spiritual recovery of the West. And he
does not know the truth who thinks that the West does not have in its own
tradition the means and the power wherewith it can once again be true to
itself."
In its leadership of the non-Communist world,
the U.S. has some dire responsibilities to shoulder. One of them is to meet the
fundamental moral challenge posed by the strange old wizard who lives in a
mountainous land and who is, sad to relate, the Man of 1951.
NOW THIS GIVES THIS OLE
COUNTRY BOY A PAUSE TO THINK. IN FACT, I'VE BEEN SCRATCHIN' MY HEAD, AND
WONDERING WHAT WERE WE THINKING, WHEN WE GAVE OUR LEADERS A BLANK CHECK TO WAGE
WAR, AND "CLEAN UP THE MIDDLE EAST." MY, MY, MY, HOW COULD WE HAVE BEEN MORE
WRONG? GRITTYNITTY
Posted on Monday, Jan 1, 2007, 08:56 PM (UTC -6)
2006 IN MEMORANDUM, OF OUR TROOPS
2006 HAS
BEEN A DEVASTATING YEAR FOR OUR TROOPS AND FOR THE FAMILIES OF OUR LOST HEROS.
WE GIVE TO EACH OF THEM OUR BLESSINGS, AND OUR COMFORT, AND OUR
RESPECT.
LITTLE IS THAT; TO CALM THE STORM, OF HUMAN
LIFE BEING LOST, DAILY. LITTLE DO OUR PLATATUDES OR LOFTY VISIONS OF FUTURE
INVOLVEMENTS, STEM THE CURRENT THAT IS SWEEPING SO MANY OF OUR YOUNG LIVES
AWAY.
SINCE THE WAR BEGAN, UNTIL THE LAST DAY OF
2006, WE HAVE LOST THE TREASURE OF 2999 BRAVE YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN, HUNDREDS OF
THOUSANDS KILLED, AND HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS MANGLED FOR LIFE.
HOW DO WE SAY WE ARE SORRY? HOW DO WE LEARN
FROM WHAT WE HAVE LOST? WHY IS MAKING A STATEMENT TO THE WORLD, THE
ANSWER TO A POLITICAL PROBLEM? WOULD IT NOT BE EASIER, QUICKER AND MORE
UNDERSTANDABLE IF WE WOULD BRING OUR BOYS HOME, AND ADMIT TO THE ARAB WORLD THAT
WE WERE WRONG TO GO TO IRAQ?
NO! WE WON'T DO THAT. HOW MANY MORE
THOUSANDS WILL HAVE TO DIE BECAUSE OUR LEADERS CAN'T SIMPLY SAY, "WE WERE
WRONG?" AND BECAUSE WE WON'T ADMIT OUR MISTAKES.
BUT, MEANWHILE,
WE HAVE REALITY TO DEAL WITH, SO TO OUR TROOPS AND THEIR FAMILIES WE WISH TO
THEM A BLESSED NEW YEAR. GRITTYNITTY Posted on Sunday, Dec 31, 2006, 04:42 PM (UTC -6)
Steady,, Betty Ford,,,,,steady.
A note of endearment, to you Betty
Ford
I watched you today, tried, hurt,
lonely, and steady.... Good for you Mrs. Gerald Ford; good for you. As you stood anchored to the
wind,,,, in that, misty crisp breeze today, watching your life's love be marched
away.... Steady is what I saw.. Just like your husband Mrs.
Ford, steady...as in all things, in in all ways. President Ford was that:
Steady. So are you Betty Ford. May God be with you always, and ease your
pain....
grittynitty Posted on
Saturday, Dec 30, 2006, 08:57 PM (UTC -6)
SADDAM'S LAST MINUTES
SO KILLING ONE MORE IRAQI, IS
SUPPOSE TO DO WHAT EXACTALLY. I MISSED THE PURPOSE. CAN SOMEONE EXPLAIN TO THIS
OLD COUNTRY BOY, WHAT PURPOSE THIS IS TO ACCOMPLISH?
COULD IT BE SO THAT TEN
THOUSAND MORE IRAQIS NOW HATE US EVEN MORE? IS THAT OUR PURPOSE?
OR IS IT JUST THE UNINTENDED
ONE?
WHY WOULD JUSTICE NOT BE
BETTER WITH THIS MONSTER TO STAY IN HIS CAGE? WHY IS IT MORE IMPORTANT TO MAKE A
STATEMENT, THAN TO DISPOSE JUSTICE?
LOTS OF QUESTIONS, DOES ANYONE
HAVE ANY ANSWERS? REAL ANSWERS? NITTYGRITTY
. Posted on Friday, Dec
29, 2006, 08:44 PM (UTC -6)
John Edwards, A Great Choice for
President!
Congratulations, John Edwards. I am
glad you are running for President. You have done a wonderful, tireless amount
of work since leaving the senate and after the 2004 election. I hope you do
well. There is a lot of talent in the democratic primary. however, you, will be
my choice. I would enthusatically support, Barack or Hillary or Kerry as well.
You, as the other three, would be a tireless, intelligent, and thoughful
President. In short, what we need.
Anyone who, without training, practice,
or experience would climb Mount Everest, and make it , even after having to stop
half way.. You stuck it out anyway, by damn , you hung in there, and climbed
that darn mountain..And stood on top, you did... Good for you, John
Edwards..
I think you would do the same for us. I
don't think you would give up, and I think you will end up standing on the top
of the mountain as
well.........nittygritty Posted on Thursday, Dec 28, 2006, 07:58 PM (UTC -6)
American Thanks you President Ford
Three salutes to you, President
Gerald R. Ford, on a job well done. America thanks you, and so do
I. "grittynitty" Posted on
Wednesday, Dec 27, 2006, 08:36 PM (UTC -6)
Palm Island Dubai
I think it rather curious, that the Sultan of Dubai, can
build an Island in the ocean that initially could house 60,000 people, now to
house 120,000 people, in two years. This was on very strict deadlines. Full time
shifts of 800 workers worked day and night. They, finished that island on
schedule, with the help of major American financial, oil investment and
contracting companies, financial and engineering might. Just google, and
you'll see, enough thats public, to scare the warts off a frog. The list of
,"interested parties," reads like a who's who list.
.
Not to be outdone, they then preceeded to build a second
island.This one large enough to house 500,000 people, plus businesses and
entertainment.They finished that, by end of 2004. Strict deadlines. Now they are
finishing the third , man made island, in the ocean, called the World. You
should read of the potential windfalls here. Scheduled to finish,
2008.
I find it fasinating that Dubai,along
with our contracting,engineering,and investment help, are able to build all this
in the ocean, during Bush's term of Office. All is to be finished before his
departure... Do you wonder why this third world country's Sultan can build his
dream in the ocean,,,, and we can't even build the dams in New Orleans, to a
level 5 hurricane strength... Not to mention, that we didn't even consider,
rebuilding the barrier islands.. The source of the problem. You go figure,,, Im
still scratching my head. Posted
on Wednesday, Dec 27, 2006, 07:20 AM (UTC -6)
site manager
We are looking for any smart, funny, serious, or helpful
entries.. Please tell us your heart, about any current political event.."
grittynitty.'' Posted on Thursday, Nov 9,
2006, 11:24 AM (UTC -6)
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