According to the official records of the Department of the Navy, I’m a deserter. Or possibly a drug addict. I learned this several years ago when I applied to get my final two months of my G.I. Bill benefits, and received a letter saying that I could not have them because I was discharged by the Marines under “other than honorable” conditions.
That came as quite a shock, because not only was I not discharged that way, I’ve never been discharged at all — I’ve been in the Marine Reserve continuously for 13 years (as of today, come to think of it!) But somewhere in the administrative bowels of the military, there is a record in a database saying that I was “administratively separated” from the Marines in 1997. That’s the kind of discharge they give you when you commit an infraction and they don’t want to bother with the expense of a trial. It’s most often used if you don’t show up for training, or if you test positive for illegal drugs. I’ve tried several times to correct this, because it bothers me that some computer is questioning my character.
I have also had an unusual training history, according to the Marine Corps’ online information system. It says that I went to boot camp in 1994, but that I attended basic infantry school and radio school in 1991. It’s unusual to be in the Marine Corps for three years before learning to be a Marine, but according to this Web site, that’s what happened to me.
So when I hear corpulent gasbag Michael Moore talk about President Bush being a “deserter” because there is no record of him showing up for training in 1972-73, I take it with a grain of salt. Moore’s assumption is that military records are never wrong, which is laughable to anyone who has actually been in the military.
Funny how Moore’s crowd thinks of military men as murderous buffoons when it comes to warfare, but they think the same people keep meticulous, impeccable records of routine matters. They’ve got it exactly backwards: our Department of Defense is superb at fighting. It’s the administrative part that never works quite like it ought.
Category: Politics
Katholics for Dean Pipe Dream
Katholics for Dean — the “K” stands for “Kennedy” in case anyone wondered — has responded to one of my earlier blog entries. Amidst the usual leftist accusations of “hateful language”, KfD continues to misinform the public vis-a-vis President Bush and Howard Dean’s respective records when it comes to pro-life issues other than abortion. (As an aside to those who have been around the right-to-life movement for some time, unlike our innocent brothers and sisters in the womb, Howard’s scream coming out of Iowa wasn’t silent.) Anyway, John Betts does a fine job calling out KfD on the primary right-to-life issue. Meanwhile, I’ve blogged a little comparison between the President and the Governor on secondary and tertiary right-to-life issues. Not surprisingly, even if we set aside abortion, the GOP comes out way ahead of the Abortion Democratic Party on most right-to-life issues.
Dean: Prolifers and Taliban
Yesterday, Howard Dean made an interesting comment in which he compared pro-lifers to the Taliban. In a nutshell, this incident summarizes why Catholics no longer have a home in the DNC. Here’s an unofficial transcript from [sic.] Catholics for Dean: “And the implication that the government has the right to tell a woman when she can and cannot bear a child is different, but has the same philosophical root as the implications of the Taliban telling women how they’re to behave and how they’re to act.”
Aside From the Issue of Abortion…
Why the Dems Still Don’t Get It..
Pete Vere
Kathy Shaidle, a fellow Catholic blogger, recently forwarded me her response to an interesting email she received. It came from a Howard Dean supporter named Tim Huegerich. Having performed a small internet search on Mr. Huegerich, he seems like a sincere pro-life Catholic. Which is why his attempt to recruit Catholics into Howard Deans campaign makes absolutely no sense.
Aside from the issue of abortion… Tim writes, Howard Dean in line with Catholic Social Teaching across the board, far surpassing the other candidates. He opposed the Iraq war, stands for workers and fair trade, has delivered health insurance for all children in Vermont, and has begun a revolutionary change in politics by attracting thousands of disenchanted non-voters and financing his campaign with contributions from ordinary people averaging less than $100.
Kathy’s response to the concept of Catholics for Dean is rather appropriate. This is so embarrassing… she writes. While there is no question I would be a Democrat if every issue held equal weight, the truth is that some issues are more important than others. Abortion is one such issue. As a practicing Catholic, the right to life is non-negotiable. Period.
Hence the problem with every presidential candidate running within the Democrat primaries: 1) The Democratic nominees don’t get the abortion issue; 2) The Democratic party doesnt want to get the abortion issue; and 3) No Democratic presidential candidate even wishes to try and understand how practicing Catholics approach the abortion issue and why we think the way we do. Thus I am likely wasting my time in stating the obvious.
To a practicing Catholic, what lay in a womans womb is not just some anonymous blob of cancerous tissue. Rather, it is a human life. Abortion ends that human life. Therefore a Catholic is no more open to negotiating the abortion issue than an African American is open to debate over slavery. Catholics believe that abortion is murder, and when the state permits abortion, Catholics believe that abortion is state sanctioned murder. Regardless of whatever stance a candidate puts forward when it comes to other issues, abortion trumps them all. As practicing Catholics we believe in freedom of choice within the abortion debate only insofar as a well-formed Catholic conscience always chooses a pro-life candidate over one who is pro-abortion. We simply have a hard time voting for politicians who campaign on the killing rather than the kissing of babies.
When I mentioned this uncomfortable fact (at least from the perspective of a pro-life Deaniac) to Mr. Huegerich, he replied: You underestimate the gravity of these other issues. 24,000 people die every day around the world from hunger […] there are also 42 million uninsured Americans enduring untold suffering. These are indeed legitimate issues that concern the Churchs social teaching. Yet like her system of governance, the Churchs social teaching is of a hierarchical nature. Catholic social justice begins with the right to life, from which all other social rights and obligations flow. The states duty is to protect this fundamental right. Common sense dictates that a butchered baby laying in a Planned Barrenhood dumpster has no need of socialized healthcare.
There once was an exception to the Democrats well-deserved reputation as the Abortion Party. His name was Bob Casey. He was the Governor of Pennsylvania. Back when we lived in Scranton, our family had the good fortune of moving into the Governors neighborhood. In fact, we often stopped to converse whenever we met on the sidewalk. Governor Casey was a principled Catholic, a principled politician and a principled Democrat. If he were still living, I would support his presidential campaign over that of any Republican candidate.
Throughout the Governors political career, the right to life was non-negotiable. He put his faith first and his political aspirations second. Yet when the DNC silenced Governor Casey at the 1992 convention, it became clear that there was no longer any room left in the Democratic Party for practicing Catholics an observation since confirmed by the Senate Democrats fillibustering of any pro-life judicial nominee. The DNC silenced the debate over abortion and sent practicing Catholics packing for the GOP and various third parties. The Republicans did not use abortion as a wedge issue, rather the DNC handed us over to the GOP. And if pro-life Catholics are now wary about engaging in bona fide dialogue in the Democratic Party over abortion, as Mr. Huegerich alleges, it is because the Democrats shut down the dialogue and showed their lack of good faith when they silenced Governor Casey.
Whatever other faults one may find with Dubya and the Republican Party and the Republican pro-life record is far from perfect there is still room under the Republican tent to argue the pro-life case. This is not the case with the Democrats who, in the interest of short-term political expediency, chose to abort their traditional Catholic constituency. Having subsequently lost the White House, the Senate, the House of Representatives and several key Governors mansions, their post-electoral-abortion syndrome is the consequence of this decision.
[Permission to reproduce in whole is granted by the author, provided that credit is give to CatholicLight.StBlogs.org ]
Deaniacs ‘N Roses
Is Howard Dean the missing member of Guns N Roses? I just stopped by DeanGoesNuts.com where Dean’s recent primal scream is set to a number of different songs. Most of them aren’t bad, but check out the one where Dean’s naming of the states is set to GNR’s Welcome to the Jungle. The timing between the two is so accurate, it’s spooky.