Dawood Khan

Archive for May, 2008|Monthly archive page

Lessons in Blue

In UK Basketball on May 19, 2008 at 1:32 am

Coach Gillispie’s first year at Kentucky

For the new occupant of one of college basketball coaching’s most prestigious seats, it was turning into the honeymoon from hell.

As he went down the bus steps, Todd reached over to give the coach a “hang-in-there” pat on the knee.

As the UK president recalls it, Gillispie raised his head and said, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry.” The new coach looked, Todd says, “like a whipped kid.”

Rumors galore

At the news conference in which he was introduced as Tubby Smith’s successor, Gillispie publicly acknowledged that he had had a pair of alcohol-related traffic arrests in the seven years before his hiring at UK (one was pleaded down to a lesser charge, and the other was dismissed for lack of evidence).

The 48-year-old coach is divorced.

Those two factors seemed to make speculating on the new coach’s personal life a statewide obsession. A Herald-Leader article about Gillispie’s purchase of a $1.45 million, six-bedroom home in Jessamine County was the most viewed story on Kentucky.com in 2007.

Gillispie had not been on the job two weeks when the first rumor about him Ð that former Kentucky basketball player Derrick Hord had felt compelled to take the keys away from the coach at a UK-sponsored meet-and-greet Ð made its way around town.

By December, when Gillispie’s first UK team was struggling mightily and the mood surrounding the program was surly, rumors about the coach were rampant. Callers to Lexington sports talk radio shows were mentioning them without challenge. The talk was pervasive all around the state.

All of which is unfortunate, since there appears to be no evidence that any of the most widely circulated rumors were true.

Hord, the 1980s-era Kentucky forward, says he never attended a UK reception with Gillispie, much less one where he asked for the coach’s keys. He laughed when asked about the story.

By late last summer, it was being frequently rumored that Gillispie was behaving raucously at Sal’s Chophouse and Malone’s.

Bruce Drake, one of the owners of both establishments, says those stories “aren’t true. I’ve heard tons of rumors about Coach and our places, and none of them were true, not one of them.”

Drake notes that his restaurants subsequently started using Gillispie in TV ads, “and we obviously would not have done that if he’d been behaving badly in our place.”

Last autumn, the hot Gillispie rumor was that the coach had been involved in a verbal confrontation with former Lexington police chief Anthany Beatty in the bar at the downtown Lexington eatery DeSha’s.

There was even dialogue associated with that tale, with Gillispie supposedly asking Beatty if he knew who he was, and the police chief replying, “Do you know who I am?”

It was all complete fiction.

Misty Carlisle, general manager at DeSha’s, says, “I can promise you that story is absolutely untrue. Yet I have customers come in here arguing with me, that they know it’s true. Coach has only been here two or three times, and he’s never had a drink in his hand and never been in any confrontation.”

Beatty Ð who now works for UK Ð says he never had any interaction at all with Gillispie until meeting him at a memorial service for UK equipment manager Bill Keightley in April.

Another rumor that was widely spread was that university officials had ordered their coach to hire a driver. Both Gillispie and UK officials, however, say the coach does not have a driver.

Perhaps the most widely circulated Gillispie tale involved rumors that the coach had gone swimming with a pair of waitresses (in some versions of the story, the pair were topless) in a pool at The Merrick Inn, a restaurant that is part of a Lexington apartment complex.

Libby Murray, owner of The Merrick Inn restaurant, says “Good Lord, no, Coach has never been in the swimming pool here. It is absolutely beyond me how all that got going. It was all just conversation. Never happened.”

When asked about the Merrick Inn story, Gillispie laughs. “Anybody can say anything about you that they want,” he says.

UK Athletics Director Mitch Barnhart says that, early on, the university was hearing the same talk about its new coach as everyone else and was “concerned.” But no one ever provided the university with any credible report that Gillispie had actually behaved poorly in public, Barnhart said.

Says Todd: “One thing Mitch said to me when some of this discussion was going on, with everyone walking around with a cell phone with a camera in their pocket, if this stuff was going on, it would be on YouTube or whatever. And it never was.”

One has to think that coming into a new job in a new community where one isn’t well known and being the subject of so much gossip would be hurtful.

“You can control your character,” Gillispie said. “What you can’t control is what anyone might say about you. I did hear some things that were brought to me, but it’s not something I do worry about at all. I’m very proud of the way things have gone for me here.”

Gillispie says his close friend, Kansas Coach Bill Self, often repeats a story to illustrate what life is like in an Internet age in the fishbowl of big-time college coaching.

“Coach Self said if you were driving down the road and you were talking on your cell phone and you made a mistake and pulled in front of somebody and you cut them off a little bit, then it is probably going to be reported that you have a bad problem with road rage,” said Gillispie.

Luther Deaton, the Lexington banker who has become a Gillispie friend, says he sees some signs that the rumor-mongering has made the coach a little cautious in his public dealings with people.

“Sometimes when people approach him for pictures, I see him sort of hesitate,” Deaton says. “I think that comes from having to think, ‘How will this be used?’”

Nicholas DiFonzo, a professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology and a rumor expert, says Gillispie’s two prior alcohol-related arrests “likely served as a ‘plausibility threshold’ that helped these rumors spread, in the same way that the fact that Barack Obama’s middle name is Hussein made the [false] rumors that he is a Muslim plausible.”

In explaining the wide spread of rumors that appear to be untrue, “it’s possible that they might be traced back to a faction that opposes Billy Gillispie,” DiFonzo said, “or it may have just been really entertaining stories involving someone of great public interest in Kentucky.”

By the first week of March, when UK had turned Gillispie’s first season around on the court by going 12-4 in the SEC, the off-court chatter about the coach had died down dramatically.

“I hope it didn’t calm down just because we started winning ballgames,” says Todd. “But there seemed to be a correlation there.”

The Lexington Herald leader finally takes a time out from their negativity marathon. This article sets out to debunk myths, humanize Gillispie. It portrays him as a very like-able figure. I was certain such was the case all along.

The rumors were unfortunate to say the least. No doubt in my mind who was responsible for the rumors. Any time things became heated on the internet, the primary culprit was some die hard Tubby Smith fan. The Tubby click. They know who they are. People who loved Tubby Smith. People who started to hate UK fans who they believe ran their beloved Tubby off.  These folks are more fan of Smith than they are fans of the program. Sick folks who would spread rumors in such a manner.  Attempting to destroy a man.  Where is the class in that.  I’m sure Smith was proud of them.  Their finest hour to be sure.  They’re still there.  Waiting.   Anytime something happens, they’ll be there to trump up any challenge to the program into catastrophic disaster. You see them on websites such as WildCatNation, KSR and A Sea of Blue. Always defending Tubby against all slights percieved and imagined.

At any rate, we can tell that this piece was not written by Jerry Tipton. That moron couldn’t write a positive column about Jesus Christ, Gandhi and the Buddha achieving World Peace. He’d find some negative spin on it.

Kudos to the Herald Leader for finally acting like a home town newspaper.

Ahmad Shah Massoud

In Afghanistan on May 18, 2008 at 7:25 am

I was looking for some video of Ahmad Shah Massood. The Lion of Panshjir. When I came across this one, I thought it was pretty funny. I took it to work with me to show the guys. My Afghani crew. They freaked out. At first a couple of them were pretty offended. Their Afghan Pride pricked. The namoos [honor] of the Great Lion of Panshjir stained by such a video. But they loosened up a bit and started to laugh.

After the shock wore off, they told me that it was ok but, “DO NOT SHOW THIS TO YOUR STUDENTS!” They would probably try to strangle me on the spot. Somehow, I don’t doubt it. Massood is the National Hero. Death afforded him that. Had he lived. Politics probably would have destroyed the man. The Russians couldn’t touch him. The Taliban couldn’t defeat him. Al Qaeda took the cowards way out and murdered him through a charade to fool him into letting down his guard.

The man was bigger than life. He was said to have been a brave and brilliant leader and fighter. The stories about him are epic. He is said to have lived modestly. He gave his money to his people. He was a fighter. A strategist. A leader. Some of the Afghans say that he would not have been too keen on American bases in Afghanistan.

I wonder. Would he have considered us an invading force? Would he have fought us? How would history record him in that instance. Many Afghans with whom I have spoken on the subject do not think that Massood would have been so welcoming to us. Some think that he would have turned and made a peace with the Taliban. I’m not so certain. I don’t think he would have done this. But I don’t know. I like to think that he would have become President of a more united Afghanistan.

At any rate. He is the great man in Afghanistan’s modern history. He overshadows all others. Karzai. Dostum. Rabbani. Hekmetyar. None of these men measure up to Massoud to the Afghan people. Drive down any street in Afghanistan. In almost any house and you will see his photo. His photo is on at least 2/3rds of the vehicles that you’ll see driving down the streets of Kabul. He is everywhere. He is a modern day Afghan Odysseus.

Is Obama a Crackhead?

In Politics on May 17, 2008 at 11:46 am

Is Obama somehow involved with this strange man? Why has this story not been picked up by the mainstream media? Obama admits to doing cocaine in his college years? If true, why has the press not picked up on this. Cocaine is addictive. Couple that with this bit of oddity and…?

George Bush admitted to wild early years. The press wouldn’t let it go. Now Obama gets a free pass. Why?

Red State Update

In Politics on May 17, 2008 at 4:35 am

I received this video in an email. It is absolutely hilarious. These two guys are obviously from somewhere in Red State Tennessee. They were gearing up for the Obama/Hillary showdown, I assume.

“Hurry up and nominate someone, so’s I can know who I’m votin’ against!”

Classic!

19

In culture, Music, Vietnam on May 17, 2008 at 1:02 am

Flashback to the late 80s. This is a Paul Hardcastle video about Vietnam.

Nu Nu Nu Nu Nineteen! Nineteen!

Phantoms

In culture, Travel, Vietnam on May 15, 2008 at 8:01 pm

I haven’t seen my Dad for a while. It’s an odd relationship that I have with my father. If we are together, we can lapse into conversation as if we’d just seen each other yesterday. If I’m not there with him, it’s as if I don’t exist. It’s a bit odd. But I’ve come to accept it. I have always felt like I know my father well. Even when I couldn’t quite figure out how I should react to him. If I see him when I’m home. I see him. If not. It’s just the way it is.It’s just his way. He lives in the present. He deals in the here and now. If you’re not in the moment with him, you don’t exist. It’s a coping mechanism, I believe. It was a long road to come to the realization that it wasn’t personal.

Early in my life, I reacted harshly to my memories of my father and his mistakes.

Resentment. Anger. Hate.

Ultimately, I turned away from those and decided to walk a different path.

Acceptance. Love. Fate.

He is what he is. I have no desire to change the man. And the effort would drive a man insane. An email every now and again would be nice, though. lol

One thing that I remember clearly about my father from childhood is that he had a fascination with the F4 Phantom. Pops was a Jarhead. A Devil Dawg. He served a tour in ‘Nam. Up near Da Nang on China Beach at the foot of Marble Mountain. I’m sure that an F4 or two probably covered his platoon out on patrol. The Huey UH1. The Patton Tank. Things I remember distinctly from childhood. Visiting Fort Knox and Patton Museum. I still smile when I pass the Patton Museum.

I was doing research for a post for my blog. A new post on Vietnam that I’ll put up at a later date. Vietnam always brings my father to mind. So I googled F4 Phantom and found the video below. The Phantoms are all but retired. They’ve been put to rest so to speak. The wars are over. I hope that the same can be said for my father. The name of the F4 is somewhat symbolic of my father. He is a bit of a phantom as well. He has been a shadow in the lives of his children. Existing on the peripheral of our vision. Rarely daring to venture closer. It’s fitting. It’s also a perfect video as the aircraft is taking off. (Lest someone think I’m angry, I’m not. I laughed when I typed that. lol)

In 2006, I visited Da Nang. I went there to go where my father had been during the war. I walked around Marble Mountain. Explored the fields around it. Explored it’s caves and sanctuaries. I sat and marvelled that I was fortunate enough to make such a journey. Fortunate enough to see Vietnam in peace. As it was meant to be. I sat and wondered what it was like for a young man to land on China Beach. Full combat load. Ready to fight. What is it like to move in to the country and attack ancient cities like Hue.

China Beach is a beautiful stretch of white sand. Da Nang is a modern city of 3 Million. Da Nang. It’s a peaceful place now. The Marble Mountain is a tourist attraction. It juts into the sky on the outskirts of Da Nang. A few hundred meters from China Beach and the sea. The top of Marble Mountain was knocked off during the war. Even so, it’s a beautiful place to visit. Tranquil. Perfect for reflection on the miracles, fortune and wonder of my life. Yet, like Vietnam and the Veterans who served there, it is scarred.

I met a couple of Vietnam War vets while I was in Vietnam. One guy probably served with my Dad. He was with the 1st MARDIV in 68-69. Perhaps, he ran into my Pops and they had a beer together. A very possible happenstance.

I found beauty and peace on my trip to Vietnam. The Vietnamese people were extremely welcoming. Nice folks. Especially out in the rural areas. I hope my Dad has found as much beauty. As much peace.

It is when you give of yourself that you truly give.

Kahlil Gibran

Petition to Change Arlington National Cemetery Burial Honors

In culture, Military on May 11, 2008 at 6:25 am

Earlier, I blogged about the disparity and inequality of burial honors at Arlington National Cemetery. The enlisted vs officer–standard vs full honor funerals.

Below is a link to a petition which requests that this policy be changed to a more honorable treatment of all veterans.

Sign Petition here, please.

Also, my Uncle has taken this issue to Congressman Yarmuke of Kentucky. He expressed interest in bringing this matter to the attention of the House.

Thanks to all of you for your support in this matter.

Dave

Nelly Furtado — In God’s Hands

In Music on May 9, 2008 at 4:40 am

I looked at your face I saw that all the love had died
I saw that we had forgotten to take the time
I, I saw that you couldn’t care less about what you do
Couldn’t care less about the lies
You couldn’t find the time to cry

We forgot about love
We forgot about faith
We forgot about trust
We forgot about us

Now our love’s floating out the window
Our love’s floating out the back door
Our love’s floating up in the sky in heaven
Where it began back in God’s hands

You said that you had said all that you had to say
You said baby it’s the end of the day
And we gave a lot but it wasn’t enough
We got so tired that we just gave up

Now our love’s floating out the window
Our love’s floating out the back door
Our love’s floating up in the sky in heaven
Where it began back in God’s hands
Back in God’s hands

We didn’t respect it
We went and neglected it
We didn’t deserve it
But I never expected this

Our love floated out the window
Our love floated out the back door
Our love floated up in the sky to heaven
It’s part of a plan
It’s back in God’s hands
Back in God’s hands

Oh it didn’t last
It’s a thing of the past
No we didn’t understand
Of just what we had
Oh I want it back
Just what we had
Oh I want it back

Nothing profound. I just like this song…

Jon Hood commits to the Big Blue

In Sports, UK Basketball on May 8, 2008 at 12:57 pm

The 6’6″ 180lb prospect commits to play for Billy Gillispie and the University of Kentucky. Now that’s what I’m talkin’ about. I can’t remember the last time that a Kentucky Kid committed to the Home State University this early.

Yes! It’s a new day. Kentucky is returning to being Kentucky. Instate talent no longer has to ponder whether being yoked by Tubby will hurt their career or NBA potential. I think that Hopson will be the last of the big time Kentucky and Regional talent to snub Kentucky.

Congrats to both Coach Gillispie and Jon Hood on a bright future together.

Scout page

Rivals page

Billy G’s Recruits 2008 to 2012

2008-2009

Kevin Galloway-x G/F 6-7 200 Sacramento, Calif. Sacramento

Darius Miller SG 6-6 215 Maysville Mason County

DeAndre Liggins PG 6-5 190 Chicago Washington

Josh Harrellson-y F 6-9 260 St. Charles, Mo. St. Charles

2009-10

Jon Hood G/F 6-7 185 Madisonville Madisonville

G.J. Vilarino PG 6-0 160 McKinney, Texas McKinney

2010-11

Dakotah Euton F 6-8 215 Ashland Rose Hill Christian

Dominique Ferguson F 6-9 200 Indianapolis Lawrence North

K.C. Ross-Miller PG 6-0 170 Irving, Texas God’s Academy

2011-12

Vinny Zollo F 6-8 215 Greenfield, Ohio McClain

2012-13

Michael Avery G 6-4 175 Lake Sherwood, Calif. TBA

Newt Gingrich — Nine Acts of Real Change That Could Restore the GOP Brand

In Politics on May 8, 2008 at 12:19 pm

Here are nine acts of real change that would begin to rebuild the American people’s confidence that Republicans share their values, understand their worries, and are prepared to act instead of just talk. The Republicans in Congress could get a start on all nine this week if they had the will to do so.

  1. Repeal the gas tax for the summer, and pay for the repeal by cutting domestic discretionary spending so that the transportation infrastructure trust fund would not be hurt. At a time when, according to The Hill newspaper, Senator Clinton is asking for $2.3billion in earmarks, it should be possible for Republicans to establish a “government spending versus your pocketbook” fight over cutting the gas tax that would resonate with most Americans. Lower taxes and less government spending should be a battle cry most taxpayers and all conservatives could rally behind.
  2. Redirect the oil being put into the national petroleum reserve onto the open market. That oil would lower the price of gasoline an extra 5 to 6 cents per gallon, and its sale would lower the deficit.
  3. Introduce a “more energy at lower cost with less environmental damage and greater national security bill” as a replacement for the Warner-Lieberman “tax and trade” bill which is coming to the floor of the Senate in the next few weeks (see my newsletter next week for an outline of a solid pro-economy, pro-national security, pro-environment energy bill). When the American people realize how much the current energy prices are actually a “politicians’ energy crisis” they will demand real change in our policies.
  4. Establish an earmark moratorium for one year and pledge to uphold the presidential veto of bills with earmarks through the end of 2009. The American people are fed up with politicians spending their money. They currently believe both parties are equally bad. This is a real opportunity to show the difference.
  5. Overhaul the census and cut its budget radically. The recent announcement that the Census Bureau could not build an effective hand-held computer for $1.3 billion and is turning instead to 600,000 temporary workers to do a paper and pencil census in 2010 is an opportunity to slash its budget, shrink its bureaucracy, and turn to entrepreneurial internet-based companies to build an information-age census. This is an absurdity that cries out for bold, decisive reform (see my YouTube video “FedEx versus federal bureaucracy” for an example of what I mean).
  6. Implement a space-based, GPS-style air traffic control system. The problems of the Federal Aviation Administration are symptoms of a union-dominated bureaucracy resisting change. If we implemented a space-based GPS-style air traffic system we would get 40% more air travel with one-half the bureaucrats. The union has stopped 200,000,000 passengers from enjoying more reliable air travel to protect 7,000 obsolete jobs. This real change would allow the millions of frustrated travelers to have champions in congress trying to help them get places better, safer, faster.
  7. Declare English the official language of government. This real change is supported by 87% of the American people including a majority of Democrats, Republicans, Independents, and Latinos. It is an issue of national unity that brings Americans together in a red, white, and blue majority.
  8. Protect the workers’ right to a secret ballot. The vast majority (around 81%) of Americans believe that American workers have a right to have a secret ballot election before they are forced to join a union. Last year the House Democrats passed a bill that would strip American workers of the secret ballot. A new bill should be introduced reaffirming that right, and it should be brought up again and again until marginal Democrats are forced to vote with the American people against the union power structure.
  9. Remind Americans that judges matter. Senate Republicans should mount an ongoing fight (including a filibuster of other activities if necessary) to get the American people to realize that liberals want to block all current judicial appointments in order to maximize the number of left wing radical judges they can appoint if they win the White House. This issue has three advantages. It reminds people that judges matter and that a leftwing radical Supreme Court would be bad for the values of most (70 to 90 percent, depending on the issue) Americans. It shows the Democrats are not engaged in fair play. It arouses the activism of those who have been disappointed by Republicans and have forgotten how bad a liberal Democratic Presidency would be.

Excerpt from My Plea to Republicans: It’s Time for Real Change to Avoid Real Disaster by Newt Gingrich

This is something that I can get behind. America, please open your eyes. Please do not make the mistake of voting for Obama or Bill’s estranged wife.

Talking

In Literature, Middle East on May 7, 2008 at 4:44 pm

And then a scholar said, “Speak of Talking.”

And he answered, saying:

You talk when you cease to be at peace with your thoughts;

And when you can no longer dwell in the solitude of your heart you live in your lips, and sound is a diversion and a pastime.

And in much of your talking, thinking is half murdered.

For thought is a bird of space, that in a cage of words many indeed unfold its wings but cannot fly.

There are those among you who seek the talkative through fear of being alone.

The silence of aloneness reveals to their eyes their naked selves and they would escape.

And there are those who talk, and without knowledge or forethought reveal a truth which they themselves do not understand.

And there are those who have the truth within them, but they tell it not in words.

In the bosom of such as these the spirit dwells in rhythmic silence.

When you meet your friend on the roadside or in the market place, let the spirit in you move your lips and direct your tongue.

Let the voice within your voice speak to the ear of his ear;

For his soul will keep the truth of your heart as the taste of the wine is remembered

When the color is forgotten and the vessel is no more.

from The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran

Dick Vitale is an emotional tampon

In Sports on May 7, 2008 at 4:18 pm

Below are excerpts from a Dick Vitale article which laments the firing of Avery Johnson. It would seem that Vitale thinks that Basketball coaches should be retained no matter what happens. Teams or Team owners should be satisfied with a coach no matter why he was hired and no matter how much money these coaches demand in compensation and benefits. The Coach is always right. Even if they’re wrong. And should never be fired.

In the NBA, it is all about what happens today. If you don’t do well, just pack your bags because you’re gone. Go ask Avery Johnson, formerly the head coach of the Dallas Mavericks. All he did in less than four full seasons was put up an impressive 194-70 regular-season mark.

When you are brought in to take a team to the next level and you fail to do so…

The problem is, his playoff record was 23-24. Dallas was on the verge of winning an NBA title, which would have made Johnson a hero. But after going up 2-0 against the Heat a few years back, the Mavericks won just three of their next 15 postseason games, ultimately leading to Mark Cuban’s decision to say bye-bye to his coach.

Exactly, no play off success…no big pay day. It’s not that difficult to figure out.

Johnson handled his firing with real class. He said there was no animosity between himself and the Mavericks, even believing that a change could be beneficial to everyone. Johnson did a phenomenal job in Dallas; his personality is so infectious. I feel his knowledge of the game is certainly special. He got the most out of his ability and did the same with his talent.

Unfortunately, life in the NBA can be unfair. It takes just a couple of poor performances in the playoffs to lead to the hook. Last year’s loss to the eighth-seeded Warriors was painful for the Mavs. Then following that up with a loss to New Orleans led directly to the dismissal.

Same as with the Tubby situation. Huge amounts of cash were being transferred to Avery Johnson’s bank account for one reason and one reason only.

WINNING CHAMPIONSHIPS!!!

He wasn’t being paid to have class. That’s something you do to make your mother proud. It’s not something for which one is paid.

Again. Johnson was being paid HUGE dollar amounts to WIN CHAMPIONSHIPS. What about that is difficult to understand.

Dallas could not handle the unbelievable play of Chris Paul. So a man who won 60, 67 and 51 games over the last three seasons found himself unemployed. My friends, he will not be out of a job for long as several teams have openings.

Johnson will survive and he will not be kept down. He has spirit, energy and enthusiasm. Johnson has knowledge and knows how to communicate.

Who is trying to keep him down? Who is threatening Johnsons survival?

Again, he was being paid HUGE SUMS of money to take Dallas to the next level. He couldn’t quite do it. And over the past few years, he was heading in the opposite direction.

Again, I ask. Who is trying to keep him down? Who is threatening Johnson’s survival?

It is all about winning the gold trophy. If you don’t accomplish that lofty task, it is tough to survive. You can be Coach of the Year one season and then out of work the next. With the mega-dollars being thrown around, the owners certainly have a right to make changes when they desire.

Life in the big time is like a rollercoaster. Johnson has gone through a few bumpy playoff rides, but trust me … he will land on his feet and do just fine.

I’m glad that he’ll land on his feet. I just wonder why Dookie Vitale needed to pull off this puff piece. He dogs the owners out. Then excuses the failings of the coach.

If you take that big money, you take the risk of being fired. These coaches are well compensated. At both levels. College and Pro. It would serve Vitale well to remember that.

Dick Vitale coached the Pistons and the University of Detroit before broadcasting ESPN’s first college basketball game in December 1979. Send him a question for possible use on ESPNEWS.

There is a reason that Dick Vitale is no longer a College or Pro Coach. He wasn’t very good at it.

Avery Johnson is a victim of nothing. It’s laughable to state such a thing. He was well compensated. He had a good run. In the end, he fell short of the goals set forth by Mark Cuban and the Dallas Mavericks. Like Avery himself stated, it was time for new leadership. Time for a change.

Dick Vitale is an emotional tampon. This opinion/puff piece was as worthless as most of the trash that he cruelly thrusts upon the unsuspecting world wide web.

Comments. Questions? Smart remarks…

College Basketball Recruiting

In Sports, UK Basketball on May 7, 2008 at 3:49 pm

The trend of players choosing a college before a high school

You’re joking.

Howard Avery uttered those two words into his phone last Monday after Kentucky basketball coach Billy Gillispie offered Avery’s son, Michael, a scholarship. Avery had called to follow up on an encounter with Gillispie at a LeBron James-sponsored tournament in Akron, Ohio, the previous weekend. NCAA rules forbade Gillispie from discussing Michael’s play with Avery at the tournament site.

Gillispie could, however, field Avery’s call two days later, after the family had returned home to Lake Sherwood, Calif., Gillispie told the proud papa that after watching Michael, a 6-foot-4 combo guard with a sweet shooting stroke, play in a pair of games with the Indiana Elite travel team, he had seen all he needed to see. Gillispie wanted Avery’s son to come to Lexington. The brevity of the evaluation didn’t cause the elder Avery to question Gillispie’s tone, though. Neither did the fact that such a momentous occasion was taking place during a phone call instead of during a campus visit.

Avery simply couldn’t believe the University of Kentucky head coach had just offered a scholarship to an eighth grader who had never set foot on campus and who still had yet to decide where he would attend high school. By now you know Michael Avery accepted that scholarship offer. When the news hit the Web shortly after Avery committed last Thursday, criticism rained on Gillispie and Avery.

The questions were pointed but predictable:

1. How could Kentucky — college basketball royalty — stoop to offering a scholarship to an eighth grader?

2. How could that child’s parents allow him to accept a scholarship offer 40 months before he can sign a Letter of Intent?

3. Will this turn into college basketball’s version of the subprime mortgage crisis with coaches (banks) trying in four or five years to excavate themselves from the wreckage of a series of bad offers (loans)?

Here are the answers:

1. Gillispie offered because he was worried someone else would beat him to the punch. In this case, “someone else” translates loosely to USC coach Tim Floyd, who accepted commitments in consecutive years from players who had yet to suit up for a high school team.

2. After three days of deliberation and discussion, Avery’s parents were quite comfortable with their son’s choice. Howard Avery — who said he wasn’t comfortable allowing his son to be interviewed for this story — will explain further in a few paragraphs.

3. Possibly, depending on how well coaches can project 13- and 14-year-olds. For the time being, get used to the early offers. “These aren’t aberrations,” Rivals.com national recruiting analyst Jerry Meyer said Monday night, minutes before he called Greenfield, Ohio, ninth-grader Vinny Zollo for a story about Zollo’s commitment to Kentucky. “It’s like an arms race,” Meyer said. “You’ve got to offer first.”

Sometimes early commitments pan out. Sometimes they don’t. Huntington Beach, Calif., forward Taylor King committed to UCLA prior to his freshman year at Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Calif.). Two years later, he told the Los Angeles Times, “I made my decision way too early. It was too early to know what I wanted.” King eventually signed with Duke. After spending much of 2007-08 on the bench, King announced last month he would transfer to Villanova.

This guy hits it pretty much exactly as I see it.

And you’ll notice that Gillispie wasn’t the first to do this and 8th Grade is not the youngest recruiting commitment out there. But Dick Vitale and the other talking heads often open their mouths before they know all of the facts.

In sports, there is not much investigative journalism. There are a mass of pinheads who are paid to shout at the top of their lungs of the greatnress of Coach K or Duke or UNC or insert any ACC school. Sports “journalism” is a collective of arrogant loud mouthed hooligans who get paid to shout the company line and to react to scandal.

Dookie Vitale and the rest are charlatans, BABY!

Finally, one guy at CNNSI spends a little time and effort and uncovers the real story behind this rising recruiting trend.

Dick Vitale in his usual reactionary, superficial manner tells us that this was nothing more than “headline grabbing” and that it is unhealthy. Vitale is one of the worst columnists in the biz. The guy is as deep as a mustard stain on Michael Moore’s favorite t-shirt.

Dick Vitale and the rest of his cronies should learn the facts before they wail and lament the downfall of civilization or college basketball as we know it.

See also Dick Vitale is an emotional tampon.

Comments. Question? Smart remarks.

An Afghan Wedding

In Afghanistan, culture on May 7, 2008 at 8:30 am

Wahid is one of the terps who works with me here in Herat. He’s a pretty laid back guy. We’ve developed a pretty good friendship over the course of the past year. I didn’t always think that such would be the case. So it’s kind of funny to be making that statement. He moonlights at night in Herat as an English teacher. What you see below is the product of 6 months study (and a bit of an attitude…lol) on the part of one of his students. Nether I nor Wahid made correction or edited the piece. This is straight from a 16 year old Afghani male English student.

An Afghan Wedding

In our country Afghanistan, the youths mostly get married in the early ages. And the marriage process has its own traditions and customaries which sometimes make difficulties for the both sides. Comparing to the other countries Afghan people have kept their culture even though it sucks.

Initially the groom’s family propos to the bride’s family through a traditional gathering. They usually do it several times to get the agreement from the bride’s side and in order to become more familiar with them. During the proposing process, the bride’s family investigate to find out more about the reputation of the groom; for example they will check if the groom is a nice guy, he has a good job, he is able to look after his future wife and in the other words if he is healthy and not addicted to the drugs like opium or hashish… At the end if they find out that the groom fits into their family, they will choose him as their future son in law. Then the both sides will be taking care of the wedding traditions. That’s just the beginning of the misery. This misery is definitely pleasant for bride’s side because they get paid really good but poor groom is going to live hand to mouth for the rest of his life.

I read it out loud in our office and everyone burst out laughing. It’s hilarious. And it contains a lot of truth. Reading that passage will give you a good idea of the typical conversation around the office. You kinda have to translate their English along the way. But we have a good time.

We spend a lot of time talking about the cultural differences of our countries. Fawad is another terp in our office. When he first came to work with us, one of the first conversations I had with him was about weddings. He asked me how much it cost to get married in America. I started talking about Weddings and such. But what he was asking about was the dowry. How much for the bride price. In Afghanistan, you have to pay the brides family to marry her. They have a traditional sit meeting called the Nikah where they haggle over the bride price. I’m told that the average is around $5,000.

Another guy who works in my office named Farhad told me that he couldn’t marry the girl that he wanted because his mother refused to participate in the “barbaric practice.” His mother’s words. Not mine. So regardless of Farhad or the girls feelings, they had to break it off. Later, he told me that she was to be married to a guy from Kabul. He was pretty heart broken. But, the girl threatened to kill herself if she was forced to marry. So the wedding was called off.

I’m told that this is common in Afghanistan and Pakistan. A girl being forced to marry someone that she doesn’t want to marry will threaten to commit suicide. Sometimes the wedding is called off. Other times, the father forces the marriage. Sometimes with fatal results.

This is a funny video about attending Afghan weddings.

Here are a few links that give you insight to Afghan Weddings. Good and bad.

Afghan girl in Britain is taken to Afghanistan and Pakistan to find a suitable husband whom she is forced to marry.

Observations from an American (?) Girl at an Afghan Wedding.

Modern Afghan Wedding.

Recruiting and Kentucky Basketball

In Sports, UK Basketball on May 6, 2008 at 10:45 pm

Personally, I don’t get it. Perhaps there are ulterior motives. Maybe we just have a few self righteous hypocrits who miss inept Tubby recruiting.

Smith couldn’t recruit well enough. Billy Gillispie is recruiting too much, too fast, too soon. Huh!?!

Everyone complained that UK under Smith was not getting the recruits. UK wasn’t on the radar of the Elite Recruits. Smith seemed to wait each year to the end to start his recruiting. Either he cherry picked de-commits from other schools or he was recruiting left overs in the Spring. The guys never seemed to get caught up on recruiting. I don’t know if he even tried.

His best class in his tenure was a group of guys who seemed to choose UK in spite of Smith. Rondo wanted to go to UL but Pitino chose to go after Telfair instead. Morris chose UK because it was easier than Georgia Tech. Crawford chose UK then tried to leave. Ramel Bradley was the third Guard in a class that needed a Forward. That year saw Corey Brewer go to UF because according to Smith “Brewer wasn’t big enough to play in the SEC.”  Chris Lofton chose UT that year because no one in the State of Kentucky believed that Chris could make it at the D1 level. Not the finest moment in talent evaluation for either Smith or Pitino.

Smith and his projects. Smith and his spring recruiting of Tyrone Nash and clones. Smith and his sons.

Kentucky fans complained and complained.

“Spring” forward to the present.

Billy Gillispie has UK in the mouth of top recruits all over the Nation. He’s got talented kids committing .
Patterson committed to Gillispie. Not to Smith. Darius Smith was close to committing to Illinois. Another Kentucky kid going out of State because of the ineptness of Smith and his merry band of incompetents. Gillispie and his merry band of magicians reeled Darius back in and received the commit. Liggins, if he qualifies is a serious talent. He’s brought in two highly regarded JUCOs who I’m betting are going to help in ways that no JUCO ever helped a Smith team.  Smith trolled the JUCO ranks and struck out each time.

I’d love to see Antoine Barbour under a hard working, dedicated coach like Gillispie.

Dominique Ferguson is the #8 overall Prospect from the Class of 2010. K.C. Ross Miller is a Top 25 talent. Euton is a highly regarded talent.

Vinny Zollo and Michael Avery are two talented kids who have committed to the program early. Some say too early.

This is one year of recruiting under Gillispie.

I’m sure the lack of a surprise element each Spring is going to hurt some of the recruiting blogs. So I can see their concern. Slower site. Fewer hits. That’s gonna hurt the bottom line. But I think it will eventually even out. People are going to want to follow these kids. See how their panning out. Follow their development.

Not all early recruits are going to level off talent wise or regress as in the cases of J.P. Blevins and Adam Williams. Both Avery and Zollo are taller and more talented than those two were in their Senior years of High School. I’m thinking that Zollo and Avery both could come in right now and start over either of those guys.

The recruiting landscape is changing. It’s been changing. Williams, K, Self and others have been adapting to this change all along. Smith was behind the power curve. Gillispie is bringing UK back up to speed. He’s making UK a major threat on the recruiting trail once more.

I say it’s about damn time. Before fans of any other programs start throwing stones, you might want to look at the walls of your house. Lots of glass out there.

Personally, I don’t need surprise recruiting sagas from hell…

I don’t care so much about recruiting. As long as Gillispie keeps it legal, I’m for letting him do his job. I’d rather know who is coming. I’d rather coach have the time to develop a plan of action on how to incorporate those players into his system. Recruiting is a tool to get there. It’s a means to an end, not the end itself. That is unless you are a blog or website dedicated to recruiting. Gillispie is recruiting to win Championships. It’s a take no prisoners endeavor.

Winning Championships is what should fuel BG. Bring on Number 8.

Comments, Questions, smart remarks?

Billy grabs his first for the class of 2011 — Vinny Zollo

In UK Basketball on May 6, 2008 at 7:48 am

Gillispie gets another one.

It’s being reported over at the Catspause by Jeff Drummond and Crew that Vinny Zollo has committed to play for Billy Gillispie at the University.

Zollo is a 6′ 7″ 215lb Power Forward out of Ohio. He’s expected to grow to 7″. But he’s no Giant Project in the Tubby Smith recruiting mold. This kid is highly regarded and has a reputation as an extremely hard worker.

According to KSR, he’s a huge Tyler Hanborough fan. That’s fine by me. Psycho T is a great college basketball player.

Good Job Coach G. Keep ‘em coming.

Welcome aboard the Big Blue Train Vinny! Looking forward to watching you win that Championship.

Vinny Zollo Interview with Marc Maggard

Interesting commentary on “forward recruiting” from A Sea of Blue

WCN recruting Vinny Zollo page

Opinions, comments, smart remarks?

Vinny Zollo -- the next Dirk Nowitzki?

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles

In culture on May 5, 2008 at 7:17 am

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles

The Sarah Connor Chronicles.

Headey as Sarah Connor in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.

In November 2005, 20th Century Fox announced that it would produce a television series called Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles featuring the adventures of the title character and her son in the years after Terminator 2: Judgment Day.[2] This was followed by a November 2006 announcement that Lena Headey had been chosen to play Sarah Connor.[3] The choice to cast Headey has been criticized by some fans and critics, notably those who feel only an athletic, muscular woman should fill the role established by Hamilton, who transformed her body into that of a muscled warrior for Terminator 2.[4] The controversy has been covered by the Los Angeles Times,[4] The Boston Herald,[5] and The Guardian,[5] as well as in online forums.[5]

The television series intentionally ignores the continuity of the third film, and it is essentially a sequel to the first two movies and is a “new” version of T3. The series opens in 1999, a few years after the events of T2. Sarah and John Connor seem to be living a peaceful life. Living undercover after being blamed for the murder of Miles Dyson, Sarah is even engaged, to paramedic Charley Dixon. However, Sarah, fearing discovery, and perhaps, as John suggests, the certainty of a stable life, forces the two of them to flee again. On his first day in his new school, John is attacked by a T-888 Terminator posting as a substitute teacher called Cromartie. He only escapes with the help of Cameron, a teenaged girl Terminator sent back to protect him. Sarah hears of the shooting on TV and rushes to the school, but is captured by Cromartie, who uses her to lure John into a trap. Again with the help of Cameron they escape, fleeing to a bank where resistance members have hidden the parts of a time machine. As Cromartie attacks them, the trio disappear. When they reappear, it is the year 2007.

Cameron suggests to Sarah that their purpose in this time is to stop Skynet, which she claims will go on line in 2011. Sarah argues that time traveling was a wrong move and that if she had been allowed to stay in 1999 she would have had longer to prepare John and to prepare to destroy Skynet. It is at this point that Cameron informs her that she would have died in the intervening years of cancer. Traveling to the future has given Sarah the time she needs to destroy Skynet in its infancy. As the three of them attempt to evade discovery, and track down the origins of Skynet, Sarah is burdened with the extra knowledge that her own body might betray her. The third episode of the series shows Sarah at a doctor’s appointment where she is informed that she is completely healthy. Nevertheless, she seeks preventative measures from the doctor, hoping to avoid cancer altogether. Later episodes show her more intensively training her body, and she also is seen taking a handful of vitamins and medications.

Sarah’s relationship with Cameron has been repeatedly antagonistic and mutual distrust, as she attempts to teach her the value of a human life, however Cameron also argues the importance of their mission to thwart Skynet’s creation even if killing is necessary. During battle, Sarah and Cameron would find themselves working together.

In the episode “Queen’s Gambit“, she discovers that her deceased lover, Kyle Reese, has a brother named Derek, who’s also a time-travelling Resistance agent, after the authorities arrested him for the murder of Andrew Goode, who was a friend of Sarah. Derek claims that he didn’t murder Andy to Sarah in the prison’s interrogation room. Tormented by the memory of being unable to save Kyle, she hopes to save Derek from a similar fate after he is badly wounded by another cyborg; a T-888 Terminator. After she revealed his true identity to John, he seeks the aid of her former fiancé, Charley Dixon, to save his uncle from dying. In the episode “Dungeons & Dragons“, it is revealed that despite her knowledge that he’s Kyle’s brother, Sarah continues to harbor distrust of the man, possibly because she doesn’t believe that he didn’t commit the murder. On the episode, “Vick’s Chip,” her suspicion of it has been confirmed. Despite their mutual distrust, there are some attractions between them.

In the episode “The Demon Hand“, a secret was revealed that Sarah kept from John; that she signed off her parental rights during her stay in the mental institution.

[from Wikipedia]

Excellent Show. Fox has done a great job of bringing this story to the TV.

Great actors. I even like the ex-90210 dude. lol Absolutely love Summer Glau as Cameron.

But one observation.

If Sarah and John are successful, John is never born.

Highly entertaining show, though.

Three Cups of Tea

In Afghanistan, Central Asia, culture, Literature, Middle East, Politics, Travel on May 3, 2008 at 7:22 am

The first time you share tea with a Balti, you are a stranger.
The second time you take tea, you are an honored guest.
The third time you share a cup of tea, you become family.

In 1993, Greg Mortenson attempted to climb K2. The second highest mountain in the world. He failed.

On his way back down, he lost his way and nearly perished. He was saved by the people of Korphe. A Balti village of Northern Pakistan. The village rescued him. Nourished him. Cared for him. Allowed him to rest and recuperate. They opened their homes to him. Then they sent out word that they had a foreigner who had been lost on the mountain. The experience and kindness of the people of Korphe left a mark on Greg that would change his life forever.

While staying amongst the people of Korphe, he noted that they had no schoolhouse for their children. The Korphe school was a field above the village with one part time teacher who was rarely paid by the Pakistan government. The children only attended school in the summer weeks as the rest of the year it is too cold to sit outside. Aside from having no full time teaching staff, they had no supplies or desks. Nothing to facilitate learning. Children were left to scratch out their mathematics equations on the bare earth of Korphe.

As a way of repaying their kindness to him, Greg vowed to return to Balti and build a school for their children.

Three Cups of Tea is the story of Greg’s journey and the challenges that led Greg to a new life purpose. He dedicates himself now to the education of the people of the Pakistani Northern Frontier. Greg’s journey leads to the founding of the Pennies for Peace organization and the Central Asia Institute. These organization are dedicated to education and combating illiteracy, poverty and the the extremism that victimizes the peoples of Pakistan’s neglected border regions. Greg has built schools for both boys and girls in the region. One of the girls from the first school went on to go to University. There are more and more success stories like hers.

14 years later, Greg Mortenson translated his failure to reach K2 into a grand achievement. He and the Central Asia Institute have built some 50 plus schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In the regions that are neglected by those governments. The ignorance and illiteracy left by the governmental void makes these areas fertile ground for the extremism and fundamentalism that produces terrorists and taliban fighters. The US should start pushing more of the funds that are spent on the War on Terror to organizations such as the Central Asia Institute. The future is in the education of the worlds children. Keep them out of the hands of the extremists by providing for their education. This will go a long way towards solving the terrorism problem in the future. Moreover, Greg has empowered women. Girls in these villages are being educated alongside their brothers and cousins. Some of these women are going on to higher education and coming back and serving their communities in ways that were improbable a mere decade ago.

“Three Cups of Tea is one of the most remarkable adventure stories of our time. Greg Mortenson’s dangerous and difficult quest to build schools in the wildest parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan is not only a thrilling read, it’s proof that one ordinary person, with the right combination of character and determination, really can change the world.” -Tom Brokaw

“A stunningly simple story of how to make peace” -Bloomsbury Review

“Fascinating…one only hopes U.S. policymakers read Mortenson’s book” -Philadelphia Inquirer

“Astonishing tale of compassion – and of promise kept” -Time Magazine Asia Book of the Year

“Laced with drama, danger, romance, and good deeds” -Christian Science Monitor

This is a synopsis of the book Three Cups of Tea

Bamiyan Buddha Afghan Commemerative Stamps

In Afghanistan, culture, Travel on May 2, 2008 at 10:04 pm

When I was a kid, I collected stamps. So when I came across this little gem, I had to pick it up. These stamps are from the time before the Soviet invasion. The time of King Zahir Shah. The last King of Afghanistan. They’re a link to a time when Afghanistan was at peace with itself. When it’s peoples were mostly just neighbors to one another. Before bin Laden and Mullah Omar. A time before sucide bombers and taliban and ruined cities and foreign occupations. This was a time when Afghans looked on their Western visitors as merely strange figures on whom they visited warm hospitality. It was a time when visitors were considered guests and were treated as such. ‘The pushtoon code meant something and the mehmet was indeed a welcomed and honoured guest whether they were Muslim, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist or Jew. Westerners weren’t peace keepers. We weren’t soldiers or policemen or civlian contractors for America or ISAF or NATO soldiers. Westerners were merely visitors with strange behaviors. Strangers who seemed to have an even stranger affinity for opium and hashish. Merchants from the West in search of carpets and tapestries, emeralds and rubies and lapis to sell in their homelands.

Back then, the hippy trail ran through Iran to Herat and on to Kabul. Lone travelers came and left unmolested. The Mustafa Hotel in Kabul gave some respite and a chance to shake off the dust of the road. It still stands and the occasional brave traveler stops there for a night or two until he moves on into Pakistan, Tibet, Nepal and India. I have read that some of the hippy communities still exist in Goa. I’m sure that there are others. Guys who dropped out of the West and traveled to Asia in search of peace or freedom or a final escape.

Afghanistan actually knew peace back in those days. Before the communists came and ruined everything. The King was attempting to make reforms. Give women rights. Construct a constitution. Educate his people and move them into the 20th Century.

What might have been.

So this is a “peace” of that time. A memento as the Afghans like to say. A small reminder that Afghanistan was not always as it finds itself now.

Interesting PDF on the Bamian Buddha Destruction

Arlington National Cemetery Burial Honors (Enlisted vs. Officer)

In culture, Politics on May 2, 2008 at 4:31 am

SFC Durbin is currently serving a tour of duty in Iraq. He makes a few excellent points about the rendering of honors for our fallen soldiers at our Nations most prestigious National Military Cemetery.

While serving in The Army Honor Guard (The Old Guard) as a Full Honor Casket Team Squad Leader, I was responsible for carrying the Remains of deceased Army Officers on a regular basis, which included Former President Ronald Reagan. While there, I wondered why only Officers received Full Honor Funerals in Arlington National Cemetery (ANC), regardless of what they did or didn’t do in their careers. The difference between a Full and Standard Honor Funeral is dramatic. However, if one has not served in the Old Guard , one would never know the difference. In fact, the only way an Enlisted Service Member can receive a Full Honor Funeral is to be a Medal of Honor Recipient. The Medal of Honor is more often than not awarded posthumously. Well after burial.   Therefore, an Enlisted Medal of Honor Recipient would not receive Full Honors at time of burial.

Basically, a Full Honors at Arlington consists of the following:

  • Horse Drawn Caisson
  • Transfer from Chapel to gravesite
  • 8 pallbearers
  • Army Band
  • 1-2 escort marching Platoons
  • Cannon Salutes for General Officers
  • “Cap” Rider-less Horse(0-6 and above)
  • Firing Party
  • Bugler
  • Chaplain

A Standard Honors Funeral consists of the following:

  • Hearse Transfer
  • 6 Pallbearers
  • Firing Party
  • Bugler
  • Chaplain

Another common misconception is that CSM/SGMs receive Full Honors. In fact, they do not. In addition to the Standard Honors rendered above, a CSM/SGM is authorized a Caisson, 1 escort marching platoon and a drummer to keep escort platoon in-step while marching.

I would add that the above Special Officer Honors rendered at Arlington National Cemetery are not offered at any other National Cemetery in the United States. Why the discrimination. Is it simply a coincidence that Arlington National Cemetery is across the street from the Pentagon? Honors at Arlington should mirror those of our other National Cemeteries.

For the past year, I have been addressing this issue with various Veterans Organizations of which I am a member. As well, I have addressed them with Army Offices in Washington D.C. I have received little or no response. I’m currently addressing this with my Congressman’s Military Liaison. The ANC Superintendent sent me a response stating that he agreed with my position. However, he believed changes would be difficult to implement. I have talked to numerous Senior Officers and Senior Non-Commissioned Officers as well who support this and are addressing this in ways which they feel appropriate for them.

The bottom line is that a 2nd Lieutenant can die in a car accident 2 days after graduating Officer Candidate School. He will receive a Full Honor Funeral. Conversely, a Senior Enlisted member of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines or Coast Guard with 22 years of Service can die in Combat in Afghanistan or Iraq and be awarded a Silver Star for Valor. He or she receives a Standard Honor Funeral. In the most hallowed ground on American soil. A place which commands the respect of our nation. The burial ground of several Presidents. Audie Murphy. SGT York. Oliver Wendell Holmes, JR.

This issue deserves our attention. Honors rendered should be equal. Action based rather than rank. A panel should decide official criteria for Honors rendered based upon career, circumstances of death, combat record and the like. Not Rank. Funerals should be reminiscent of the Tombstones in Arlington. All the same.

At a minimum, all Service Members killed in Combat should receive a Full Honor Funeral. All other Service Members should have a simple funeral matching the eloquent simplicity of the white tombstones of Arlington National Cemetery themselves.

[This is from an email from SFC Durbin. I paraphrased and re-organized the email a bit before I posted it here.]

I served in The Old Guard from 1994-1997. I was in Alpha Company “CinC Guard” on Fort McNair. I understand what SFC Durbin is saying here. I have always felt that it is disgraceful the manner in which the US Military treats it’s Enlisted soldiers. Not only in death but in retirement as well as on active duty. Enlisted Retirees and Vets are discarded as if they are but so much waste in a dumpster. Such is my opinion.

I agree wholeheartedly with the above. Full Honors should be given to all of the Nations soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines who fall in combat. These men and women have laid down their lives in the greatest sacrifice that our Nation could ask of anyone. They should be honored as if such were the case. What does rank matter at such a time. It should not.

Anyone who wishes to assist, can contact SFC Durbin at allen.durbin@us.army.mil or contact your Congressman or Senator.

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