Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Journey...

Image result for poor country
As the special United States envoy for Afghanistan, Mr. James Dobbins was responsible for finding and installing a successor to the Taliban after they were toppled in 2001. During the 1990's, Mr. Dobbins hop-scotched from one trouble spot to another as he served as special envoy to Kosovo, Bosnia, Haiti and Somalia. 

But the Bush administration has such disdain for anything associated with former President Bill Clinton that it largely ignored useful lessons from recent United States peacekeeping operations.  
"Iraq in 2003 looks more like Yugoslavia in 1996 than Germany and Japan in 1945," Mr. Dobbins says. "What they have not done is look to the models worked out in the 1990's for sharing the burden and allowing others to participate in the management of the enterprise."

Bush, to his credit, admits as much in his memoir. 
“The task turned out to be even more daunting than I anticipated,” he writes.  Part of the difficulty lay simply in the massive complexity of the task. 

“Democracy is a journey that requires a nation to build governing institutions such as courts of law, security forces, an education system, a free press, and a vibrant civil society.” 

It is tempting to say that this should not have been a surprise to an Administration whose National Security Advisor had a PhD in Political Science, but the truth is that academics and practitioners have been captivated by a simplistic and naïve notion of how poor, oppressive countries become rich, free ones for decades-from the “modernization theory” of the 1950s to the “Washington Consensus” of the 1990s.
In addition to ignorance, there may also be disdain for poor people's desire.

Happened...


Image result for terrorist in finland

A court in Finland has named the suspect in a stabbing rampage that killed two and wounded eight as 18-year-old Moroccan,... who is being treated in hospital after police shot him in the leg.....
According to court documents released, regional police have requested the detention of the suspect, a Moroccan asylum-seeker, on suspicion of murder, attempted murder, and terrorism crimes.
The regional court in Turku also said that four other Moroccans "are suspected of participation in the murders and attempted murders committed with a terrorist intent."
Police investigators said they are exploring possible links to last week's extremist attacks in Spain, where the main suspect at large is Moroccan, as were most of his known accomplices.

Hostility...

Image result for korean American exercise

The Ulchi Freedom Guardian drills, which will run through Aug. 31, will be the first large-scale military exercise between the allies since North Korea successfully flight-tested two intercontinental ballistic missiles in July and threatened to bracket Guam with intermediate range ballistic missile fire earlier this month.
Despite some calls to postpone or drastically modify drills to ease the hostility on the Korean Peninsula, the long-scheduled exercises will go ahead as planned.
The drills, which began in the 1970s and will involve 17,500 American troops and 50,000 South Korean soldiers this year, consist mainly of computer simulations aimed at honing joint-decision making and planning and improving command operations.
The United States and South Korea also hold larger war games in the spring, called Key Resolve and Foal Eagle, which involve live-fire exercises and training with tanks, aircraft and warships.

Let us plan for Non Hostile exercises.... Just a worthy thought.

Eclipse...

The cartoonist's homepage, clarionledger.com/opinion

Monday, August 21, 2017

Ostentatious...*




The burkini has been banned in a number of cities in Switzerland, France and Austria.
Germany's ruling party introduced a bill to ban women from wearing full-face coverings in public places. 

The German Interior Minister announced that a series of measures are being considered in the wake of terror attacks committed in the country by refugees. Germany may soon ban full face veils worn by some women in certain circumstances.

“We agree that we reject the full body covering, we agree that we want to introduce a legal requirement to show one’s face in places where it is necessary for our society’s coexistence, at the wheel, at public offices, at the registry office, in schools, universities, in the civil service, in court,” he said, according to AFP.

In France, the mayor of Leucate on the southern French coast, which includes a Nude beach resort at Port-Leucate announced a ban on burkinis this week.

It is about respecting the principle of secularism,”   “This is the public domain and (the burkini) is an ostentatious religious sign” ,  that is the naked truth..    Just a thought.

Poverty-Ridden...

Image result for FDR FAMOUS WORDS

Economic Security...

Image result for FDR FAMOUS WORDS

Splitsville...

The cartoonist's homepage, freep.com/opinion/mike-thompson

Sunday, August 20, 2017

SuperFood...

Image result for superfood

We’ve all heard the expression “shop the perimeter of the store.” But if you skip the middle, you’re missing out on a wealth of wholesome, delicious food choices. Your supermarket shelves are filled with hidden treasures that you shouldn’t pass up. Like beans, one of the most neglected and under-valued items.

Beans provide myriad health benefits, and they fit into several different food groups: Although they are rich in complex carbs like breads and starches, as a plant-based food, they feel right at home in the vegetable group, offering an array of vitamins, minerals and antioxidants, like their veggie companions.

They can also hold their own in the protein group, supplying protein aplenty. Unlike some other members of this group, beans provide little to no fat and are cholesterol-free. In fact, beans actually lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels instead of potentially causing them to increase, as some animal proteins have been shown to do.

Though they’ve been around for centuries, beans are a modern-day superfood. Why? Let’s count the ways.