Rafael Noboa Rivera
ad astra, per aspera

Archive for the 'War' Category

Another Anti-War March…yawn…

April 29, 2006

So, apparently, there's another anti-war march today in NYC. I'm growing more and more disenchanted with the movement, since marching is the only thing most folks seem to want to do.
Back in 2004, playwright Tony Kushner, of Angels in America fame, said this in an interview. It's stuck with me, since it was such a [...]

Three Years Too Long; Our Voices Too Silent

March 20, 2006

It was this date, three years ago, that our war against Iraq entered a new and deadly phase. By launching missiles at a smattering of targets, we hoped to bring the war to an end, even as it began.
Of course, that gambit failed. Saddam mocked us from a hidden bunker, deep within the bowels of [...]

Four More Dead in Iraq

February 23, 2006

Not that anybody seems to care anymore, but in the midst of all the carnage and destruction that signals an expanding civil war in Iraq, we lost four more soldiers yesterday. That brings the total of dead soldiers in this war to 2,284. Think about it–we’ve lost more soldiers in this war than we lost [...]

Complicity

December 17, 2005

By now you’ve heard that the President authorized the NSA to perform domestic surveillance in order to nab suspected terrorists. If you’ve read some of the other blogs–for example, Political Animal and the Agonist–then you’re aware that the President’s secret order violated the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and was well-nigh unconstitutional, to boot (it violated [...]

The Mighty Pen

May 13, 2004

It’s been said that the pen is mightier than the sword. While I don’t know how true that is, here’s a chance to do something truly worthwhile. Courtesy of the mighty Atrios:As many of you know, I am currently in the apolitical position of Army public affairs specialist in Afghanistan. I only recently arrived, after [...]

Toy Hammer

April 12, 2004

You know, I admire a lot of what Ralph Peters has done and written about. Frankly, I think the man’s brilliant–his article, “Seven Signs of Non-Competitive States” is a classic. And I like the novels he’s written–Red Army because it allowed for the possibility that the USSR could win a conventional WWIII in Europe, and [...]