Semi Truths A highly irregular weblog dedicated to Truth, Justice, and American Cheese…!

February 1, 2003

COLUMBIA: a countdown frozen in time

Filed under: Space Shuttle Columbia — semi @ 12:53 pm

At a certain point, when there is no more news and the full weight of the tragedy begins to settle in, it is wise to turn off the TV and radio and just talk. I tried calling my brother in Texas, but had to leave a message. There is no new news, just opportunities to comfort.

On the web, most of the major news sites simply repeat what we already know, or point to continuing coverage in other media. Perhaps the most poignant examination of this breaking tragedy can be found at SPACE.COM. Below headlines with updating news directly from NASA is the mission clock, counting down to the expected landing. That counter is now blank.

COLUMBIA: Bless the children

Filed under: Space Shuttle Columbia — semi @ 10:35 am

Children, bless them, take things in stride. They were sad to hear the news, and worried about the families, but were soon distracted when they discovered a box of Captain Crunch. I envy their innocence.

NASA has already brought up the T-word, assuring the world that it is extremely unlikely that this is a terrorist event. Nevertheless, it is sadly ironic to note that the space shuttle with the first Israeli astronaut has impacted near a small Texas town named Palestine.

THE SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA

Filed under: Space Shuttle Columbia — semi @ 9:51 am

I am watching the reports on TV from NASA and Texas. It seems clear that we have lost another space shuttle, and seven fine world citizens. The kids are busy downstairs, watching their cartoons. Nickelodeon, thankfully, is not interrupting children’s programming. Their Sunday School class has been talking about the Israeli astronaut. I’ll figure out what to say to them in a little while, if I can do so without bursting into tears. Right now, I feel just numb.

January 31, 2003

A LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Filed under: Politics,War and Peace — semi @ 8:37 pm

A group called MoveOn (“Democracy in Action”) is encouraging citizens to write letters to the editors of their local paper advocating continued U.N. inspections in Iraq. They are collecting the letters on their website. Unlike conservative push groups, they are not providing boilerplate text, they merely ask that the letters address these key points:

  • A war with Iraq will make America less safe and less secure.
  • The inspections are working.
  • The President simply has not made the case for war.

I think it’s a great movement and I encourage everyone to participate. Here is the letter I am sending to my local papers:

Article II, Section 3 of the US Constitution requires that: “The President shall from time to time give to Congress information of the State of the Union and recommend to their Consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient.”I watched this year’s State of the Union address with an open mind and mixed emotions. I want to give this president every chance, I want my country to regain the moral leadership that it evinced after WWII, and I want to raise my children in a land that is safe and secure. The message I drew from the speech, however, is the same message that we have been hearing from this administration for months: we are going to war with Iraq, and no force on earth will stop us.

From the beginning, this administration has been clear about it’s true intention: “regime change”. Unfortunately for them, that has not been a strong enough incentive to convince our allies, so the publicly stated goal has become disarmament, and the means to accomplish that is the U.N. inspections.

It is clear to any one paying attention, however, that the inspections are a mere shell game to this administration, providing simply a pretext for invasion, a distraction to be played out while we build up our forces in preparation.

Ironically, magnificently, the very presence of U.N. inspectors in Iraq is curtailing any efforts the Iraqis might otherwise be making toward further developing the president’s feared “weapons of mass destruction”. This administration’s efforts to argue that Iraq is developing a nuclear capability – thereby significantly altering the balance of power in the Gulf region and threatening the United States – have since been challenged by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Mohamed ElBaradei reported to the United Nations Security Council that his agency “has found no evidence that Iraq has revived its nuclear weapon program since the elimination of the program in the 1990’s”.

The safest course for this country, indeed, for all countries, is to let the inspections continue.

An additional argument that this administration strives to use to justify war with Iraq is its attempt to link that ‘Axis of Evil�’ nation with the 911 terrorists. “Imagine those 19 hijackers with other weapons and other plans,” said the president in his speech, “this time armed by Saddam Hussein.” That is a frightening picture, to be sure, but to use Bush’s own words, it is also imaginary.

Saddam Hussein is a bad guy, we get that, but he is not an Osama bin Laden whose goal is to combat Western culture through terrorist acts. He is a tyrannical despot, a cruel dictator who sees it as his own destiny to control the world’s vital energy supplies. Sadly, this view cuts perilously close to what the United States has experienced since the Bush administration took over the White House through judicial fiat. It also explains George Bush’s manic obsession with Saddam Hussein: they are business rivals, vying for the same goal, and this country will not be truly secure until we bring about our own “regime change” through honest democratic elections.

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