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thedrifter
10-30-08, 07:17 AM
October 30, 2008
Upset of the Century?
By Jerry A. Kane

It's hard to say what Marine Corps Captain John Murtha thought of the people of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, when he took command of the 34th Special Infantry Company Reserves back in 1959.

The world-weary Cap'n went on to complete a tour in Vietnam, serve a few stints in the state House of Representatives, and run in a special election for Pennsylvania's 12th District. The former Parris Island drill instructor narrowly won the seat to become the first Vietnam veteran to serve in Congress. But that was over thirty-four years ago, and now the 17-term Congressman has openly maligned western Pennsylvanians and his 12th District constituents.
The outpourings of discontent over the Capn's remarks lead him to revise them and to clarify their meaning. What the Cap'n had said was, "There is no question that western Pennsylvania is a racist area," but what he meant to say was, the history of southwestern Pennsylvania is teeming with racism, and "there's still folks that have a problem voting for someone because they are black," as "[t]his whole area, years ago, was really redneck."

Given that some Western Pennsylvania residents and District 12 constituents are still stinging from his revised remarks, it looks as if what we got here is failure to communicate. Perhaps the Capn's detractors are simply a bunch of thin-skinned, back-sassin' hard cases who don't know one boss's ditch from another boss's dirt, but polls are showing that some of his long-suffering supporters are a wee-bit angry for their being made a national laughingstock.

Although the standard rhetoric from the political punditry is that the Cap'n of Pork is invulnerable for his years of bringing home the bacon in the form of government projects to the depressed area, the immigrant melting pot is still boiling over remarks made by Barack Obama during the Democrat primary pronouncing that Pennsylvanians are clinging to their religion and guns on account of failed government policies and poor economic conditions. The usually resigned constituents are beginning to recognize the Capn's and Obama's arrogant, elitist, disconnect as overt prejudice against the hard-nosed, down-to-earth people who live and work in Western Pennsylvania.

In a district heavily gerrymandered specifically for the Cap'n, where Democrats outnumber Republicans two-to-one, Republicans have never gotten more than 42 percent of the popular vote during the Capn's time in office, but his cancellation of the only debate with his Republican opponent, retired Army Lieutenant Colonel Bill Russell, coupled with a recent slide in the polls suggest a chink in Abscam Jack's impenetrable armor.

The latest firestorm is just one more issue added to the list of controversies that is ticking off a lot of constituents in an area that has the highest percentage of veterans per capita of any district in the nation. In 2006, the Cap'n said that a Pentagon investigation would show that Marines murdered "innocent civilians in cold blood" in Haditha, Iraq. However, when 14 of the 15 Marines charged in the killings were cleared, the Cap'n did not apologize for levying false accusations against the innocent soldiers.

Actually, the Cap'n seemed to suggest that his false accusations were beside the point, and his condemnation of the innocent Marines was really helpful because expanded engagement rules were produced whereby American troops are "no longer just breaking down doors" when they engage with Iraqis. Clearly the end justifies the means for the Cap'n even if an acquitted Marine now sues him for slander.

Another problem for the Cap'n has been his unrelenting call, which began in November 2005, for the withdrawal of the troops from Iraq, even though victory now looms large and the troop surge has been working. The Cap'n hasn't backed away from criticizing the war or the surge, but he has admitted that "the war effort is going a bit better." Nevertheless, for the Iraq war to end the way he wants, Obama has to become president.

Even though Pennsylvania's 12th district has the nation's largest coal and natural-gas reserves, the Capn's Kingdom of Pork has not created a solid base for economic growth. In fact, its economy and adult population have steadily been in decline, and his federal handouts have effectively driven small businesses away, having caused them to bear the tax burden for the infrastructure of the multi-million dollar non-profits he brings into the district.

He's waning and even trailing in the polls, but the overarching possibility is that the shameless spreader of unprecedented levels of federal pork, the earmark magnet of Murtha's corner, and one of the most unethical members of Congress will once again grin like a baby.

However, given the Capn's general disregard for his district, his condemnation of the Haditha Marines, and his recent insulting comments, it's possible that the dark-horse Republican might pull off the "the upset of the century."

After all, it's not that the Cap'n likes reminding his constituents of who they are anymore than they like hearing it; but he says it for their own good, at the behest of those who see oppression and racism lurking in every dark shadow. However, come November 4, they just might wish the Cap'n would stop being so good to them.

Ellie

thedrifter
10-30-08, 08:41 AM
Pennsylvania’s M&M Brothers Have Gotta Go!
On Iraq, Murtha and Murphy would rather repeat damaging lies than admit their misjudgments.

By Pete Hegseth


While the Minnesota Twins were unable to make the playoffs this year, the team’s fans nonetheless can look forward to many years of watching two of baseball’s best — Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau. Powerful at the plate, and “good guys” — that rarity in the world of pro sports — the “M&M brothers” are an indispensable part of the Minnesota sports landscape. They play the game with grace and good-natured grit — which helps explain why each year fans across the country punch their names so often on All-Star ballots.

With the World Series winding down, the ninth inning of another contest is just heating up. And with it, another pair of “M&M brothers” are facing judgment by ballot — this one based on their record in Congress, rather than stats on the diamond.

Congressmen John Murtha (Pa.-12) and Patrick Murphy (Pa.-8) — Pennsylvania’s antiwar “M&M brothers” — both face tough races against fellow military veterans, and both are taking their stubborn statements and outdated war-policy positions to voters. The question is: Will voters see the real Murtha and Murphy before they cast their ballots?

John Murtha was fighting valiantly in Vietnam before my father was a teenager, and has served in Congress longer than I’ve been alive. He is a one-man institution on Capitol Hill, delivering more pork to his district than any other in America, and taking license to opine on all military matters.

I genuinely honor Murtha’s service, but I — along with veterans across this country —despise the manner in which he has disparaged the Iraq war. Murtha is not only one of — if not the — chief proponent of immediate and complete withdrawal in Iraq, but he latched on to one violent incident in Iraq and tried to make it emblematic of widespread military misconduct that was being encouraged and enabled by the Bush administration’s failed war policies.

In November 2005, Murtha infamously accused a group of Marines, who were involved in a chaotic and violent attack in Haditha, Iraq, of “cold-blooded murder and war crimes,” publicly making these allegations during an ongoing investigation. In fact, a Marine Corps spokesman said Murtha made his statements a week before he had even been briefed. (Apparently, Murtha gets his briefings from the left-wing blogosphere.)

Worse still, Murtha would continue to accuse the eight Marines of “cold-blooded murder and war crimes” well into the next year, even after the Marine Corps itself said his comments on the matter “could undermine the investigatory and possible legal process.” As a result of the continuing investigation, charges have been dropped against seven of the eight Marines, and the eighth is awaiting his day in court.

Yet John Murtha remains unwilling to withdraw his statements or apologize for his inflammatory remarks. He still says our troops are “too stressed” to make good decisions and has insinuated that Haditha-like incidents have regularly happened elsewhere in Iraq. He has abused his position in Congress and status as a veteran in order to undermine troop morale and public support for success in Iraq.

As my friend David Bellavia, co-founder and vice-chairman of Vets for Freedom always says, “don’t use your valor awards from previous wars to tell me about my war.” This holds true for Murtha, and brings me to Patrick Murphy, a representative of “our war” and the only Iraq war veteran currently serving in Congress.

Murphy has used his status as a former soldier to lead the charge against success on the battlefield, standing at every turn with Nancy Pelosi and other anti-war members of Congress. Clamoring to be our generation’s John Kerry (minus the gravitas), Murphy even co-sponsored the “Iraq War De-Escalation Act of 2007,” which aimed to set a timeline for withdrawal of all American troops from Iraq.

Even after the remarkable success of the surge became apparent, Murphy continued to oppose it, with no desire to understand Iraq as it stands today. Using 2007 talking points, his campaign and congressional websites still claim that we are “bogged down refereeing a religious civil war in Iraq.” With the civil war completely over, and Iraqis stepping forward to lead their own country, Murphy still won’t acknowledge success.

These M&M brothers — both opposed to a war that neither has bothered to understand — represent the triumph of ideological opposition over pragmatic opposition. It’s one thing to oppose a war, it’s quite another to highlight tragedies (Haditha) and propagate fallacies (still a “civil war”) to promote what, for them, has become a cause — rather than a good-faith effort to advance the best policy.

As veterans, they should understand that isolated incidents happen, and that the situation on the ground — especially in wartime — is always changing. Policies that were “failures” in 2004, 2005, and 2006 may no longer be failures in 2007 and 2008. The war that Patrick Murphy witnessed from the Green Zone in 2003 and 2004 looks nothing like the war today, and certainly nothing like the war John Murtha fought in Vietnam.


Unfortunately, neither Murtha nor Murphy has shown a willingness to adjust their positions based on the real facts: they would rather persist in repeating damaging lies than admit their initial poor judgment. Such is the norm of politics today. Thankfully, both face opponents who understand the war, the nature of the fight, and the depth of our soldiers’ sacrifice that we must not fail to honor.

Bill Russell is running against John Murtha — and, thanks to the pro-Obama incumbent’s habit of calling his constituents “racists,” Russell has closed the electoral gap. Lt. Col. Russell is a third-generation soldier who survived the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon and fought in various conflicts during a 28-year career Army, most recently in Iraq.

Tom Manion, who is polling almost even with Patrick Murphy in what was a Republican district until 2006, has run a strong campaign. Tom was a U.S. Marine for over 30 years, retiring with the rank of colonel. Tom is also a Gold Star father who lost his son Travis in Iraq. His candidacy is founded on a commitment to honor Travis’s sacrifice in a just and noble cause.

It’s not enough to merely hope that these two patriots replace Murtha and Murphy. Hope alone won’t make change happen. Vets for Freedom, the largest Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans organization in America — and the group I chair — is running issue TV ads in both Murtha and Murphy’s districts this week, in an effort to persuade them to reconsider their irresponsible positions on the Iraq war.

More importantly, Vets for Freedom PAC is calling on all veterans — and their supporters — to descend on Murtha and Murphy’s districts this weekend. If you would like to join us, send an e-mail to this address and we’ll reply with link-up information so that you can join us in patrolling the neighborhoods of east and west Pennsylvania this weekend.

It’s time for Pennsylvania’s M&M brothers to go . . . and I hope you’ll join us.

— Captain Pete Hegseth, who served in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division from 2005 to 2006, is chairman of Vets for Freedom.

Ellie