4/23/2010

surprisingly nostalgic

There was somethin' funny in the water tonight. It's not like I haven't been around campus since graduation; I'm one of the weirdoes that likes their college so much they continue living near it long after graduating.

But tonight there was a bit of a twinge of something or other. My girlfriend's out of town, my roommate's out of town, finished up a couple projects at work, haven't seen a couple of my friends around here in a while...and wandering across campus this evening just felt kinda odd.

And then I get home, and of course the cat's not even excited to see me!

4/14/2010

I don't get the Iraq shooting video

(P) I had been debating whether I wanted to see the video posted at Wikileaks of the shooting of some Iraqis a few years ago from Apache helicopters. There was so much hype around it, I really wasn't sure what might be on it.

But I went and watched it last night, and I don't get it. The soldiers in the video were quite professional. They maintained aerial surveillance of the ground, stayed in contact with each other, sought permission from their commanders before taking action, used short controlled bursts of rounds, and were otherwise quite calm and focused. I was particularly impressed by their restraint after one of them thought he saw an RPG. I'm sorry, but if I'm in a helicopter in a war zone, and my colleague is saying there's an RPG, I just might pull that trigger and ask permission to engage later. After wetting my pants, of course.

This. Is. War.

What the bleeping bleepity bleep bleep did you think was going on over there? We're handing out flowers? Baking cookies? Singing Kum ba yah?

If Iraqis (and Afghans and Iranians and Saudis and Pakistanis and everybody else) are our enemies, then we should celebrate the efficient, professional conduct captured in this engagement. If those people aren't our enemies, well, get the heck out of there. Until the President, Secretary of Defense, and Centcom commanders give the orders to leave, this is precisely what will continue in our name.

The story of this video is that there's no story. That's why the government fought Reuters' FOIA request. The Reuters employees, and the other Iraqis too, are dead because of the choice to occupy the country. These events are expected consequences of sending military troops to patrol foreign places.

4/12/2010