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View Full Version : Under Siege: The Left's Assault on America's Military



budanski
05-14-2003, 06:51 PM
Burning American flags and shouting anti-American slogans, hundreds of protesters broke through a fence at a Puerto Rico bombing range two weeks ago, smashing military vehicles with sledgehammers. The purpose of these "playful" citizens was to celebrate the U.S. Navy's departure after 60 years of military training. Vieques, Puerto Rico, was the only base where the Atlantic Fleet could fully integrate Marine amphibious landings, Naval gunfire support, and close air support by F-14 Tomcats and FA-18 Hornets from aircraft carriers.


Last year Congressman Bob Filner (D-San Diego), whose district includes the homeport of the Pacific Fleet, wrote President Bush demanding the U.S. Navy unconditionally withdraw from Vieques, citing "environmental reasons." Filner then informed the Commander in Chief, without offering any explanation, that training previously conducted in Puerto Rico "can be satisfied through other sites and means." Apparently, Filner is now a multi-force training ops expert.

Military training across the nation has been similarly hobbled by environmental regulations and lawsuits. Marine amphibious landings are restricted at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, during turtle-nesting season. Navy SEAL training is interrupted in Coronado, California, due to the migratory patterns of a bird called the Snowy Plover. Soldiers at Fort Irwin, California, are ordered to suspend desert training if a tortoise crawls out of its hole.

There is even a push to require "Green Ammo," forcing the military to replace "environmentally unfriendly" lead-based rounds with tungsten. Tungsten bullets are less effective and cost twice as much as standard lead ammo, but animals prefer them. The new ammunition would also make the U.S. military dependant on Communist China, which has the world's largest tungsten deposits.

Filner is also sponsoring a bill called the "Military Environmental Responsibility Act" that seeks to remove the U.S. Armed Forces' "sovereign immunity" from all environmental regulations. Such a law would place our Armed Forces under the thumb of the Environmental Protection Agency. MERA would also subject the Secretary of Defense to a barrage of "citizen lawsuits" under the Endangered Species, Noise Control, Migratory Bird, and Marine Mammal Protection Acts, as well as a host of other environmental regulations.

The military is already spending more than 5 billion dollars a year trying to comply with environmental regulations. At Fort Hood, Texas, only 17 percent of the base's 185,000 acres are free from environmental regulation. In Arizona, bombing practice is halted if antelope stray within five kilometers of a target area. Live fire training in Oahu, Hawaii is stopped on behalf of bats and tree snails.

Only about 1,500 meters of Camp Pendleton's 17 miles of coastline are available to practice amphibious landings, due to species-related restrictions. A lawsuit by a group calling itself the "Natural Resources Defense Council" would bar exercises near "critical habitats" for six species of birds and animals, placing nearly 60 percent of the base off-limits. Simple training such as digging foxholes is already severely restricted. Will Marines have to die in some future conflict for the sake of a gnatcatcher, tidewater goby, or arroyo toad?

Last year, Major General Edward Hanlon, former Commanding General at Camp Pendleton, warned Congress about the dangers of environmental "encroachment" on military training: "We are training a generation of Marines who will have less experience in the intricacies of combat operations." Today's junior leaders may not receive realistic military experience until they are faced with actual combat. Filsner's proposed MERA would have an even more crippling effect on military readiness, but perhaps that is the point.

Why would a United States Representative want to undermine the effectiveness of our military? Simple: Filner is a typical leftist. He has been trying to weaken America's independence and security for years. He routinely votes against military appropriations bills. He voted against the bill authorizing President Bush to use force to disarm Iraq, and co-sponsored legislation to remove that authority. He tried for years to remove the sanctions against Saddam Hussein (without compliance with U.N. mandates), earning him the Capitol Hill nickname "Baghdad Bob."

Filner told students in San Marcos (including the sons and daughters of deployed Marines) that the liberation of Iraq diminishes America's "moral authority" in the world. That view echoes the principles of the Democratic Socialists of America. Finler is a member, of course. According to the DSA website, "the United States is engaged in a long-term policy of imperial overreach" and must be restrained through a massive reduction in U.S. military spending and submission to "new international regulatory bodies" with "multinational armed forces." With Congressmen like Filner, who needs the French?


What is needed instead is immediate action by Congress to exempt, on national security grounds, our bombing ranges, military bases, and other training areas from all external environmental regulation--especially habitat protection. Further, President Bush should declare that Puerto Rico was our last surrender: "There will be no more Vieques'."

On September 11, 2001, foreign terrorists murdered 3,000 of our fellow citizens in the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Since then, we have fought two major military conflicts, overthrowing hostile regimes in Afghanistan and Iraq. Our armed forces have hunted down, killed, or captured hundreds of terrorists around the globe, thwarting their murderous schemes. In these dangerous times, our troops must be allowed to train for battle without socialists obstructing them at every turn. American lives, both civilian and military, are at stake!


(I personally wouldnt mind inserting a thermometer down this guys urethra and cracking it with a baseball bat.) Oops! was I thinking out loud again?

FallenAngel
05-14-2003, 07:10 PM
what part of San Diego elected this guy? That whole city is there because of the military bases. Without the servicemen around...it's deserted! People in San Diego better wise up and elect someone else next time around.

OzMan
05-14-2003, 07:53 PM
This just makes me sick to know that I live in a country where such people are actually in my government.

Personally, this guy deserves to be shot. Many, many times. Shot for treason. Shot for stabbing the American people in the back. I've said it before, just put a GAU-17 in front of him, and a brick wall behind him.

:fork:

FallenAngel
05-14-2003, 09:20 PM
just put a GAU-17 in front of him, and a brick wall behind him.


yes....but that wouldn't be fair to the brick wall now would it? :lol:

OzMan
05-14-2003, 09:36 PM
Oh yeah, that's right. Don't want to hurt any mason's feelings. Crap, better think of something else now. Hmm...Oh, I got it. Let's put him in front of a deer or something, just to piss him off as he goes. :slap:

FallenAngel
05-14-2003, 09:54 PM
or put him and his hippie friends at ground zero of the next MOAB test :D

budanski
05-14-2003, 10:15 PM
on a lighter note:...

May 9, 2003: Bowing to political pressure, the Vieques bombing range in Puerto Rico was closed earlier this month. While there are bombing and artillery ranges all over the United States, this was the first time shutting one down because a popular political cause. Eventually the politicians caved. But it turns out there will be consequences. The nearby Roosevelt Roads naval base serves mainly to support ships using the Vieques bombing range. The base is being closed. The base provided 1200 local civilians with jobs, as well as 700 military personnel. The base put $300 million a year into the local economy. The jobs, and the navy ships and aircraft, are moving north to Florida, where an existing bombing range will be used. The weather conditions are not as placid in Florida as in Puerto Rico, meaning there will be more training delays for bad weather, and the waters off Florida are more crowded, meaning more expense to keep areas clear when the warships and warplanes are exercising. The governor of Puerto Rico complained about the loss of the jobs, but he and his fellow Puerto Rican politicians never got behind the navy with support to keep Vieques open, and apparently missed the fact that Roosevelt Roads would close as a result. Moreover, the activists who wanted Vieques closed thought that the bombing range would be cleaned up (unexploded bombs removed) so the area could be bought by developers and tourist facilities built. But cleaning up the old bombs is too expensive, and the Vieques range is being turned over to the Department of the Interior for use as a wildlife refuge. The fence around the range will warn people to keep out, because of hundreds (no one knows exactly how many) unexploded bombs and shells in there. Agitating to get Congress to appropriate billions to clean up the Vieques site is likely to fail, there being so many other more worthy things to do with the money.

Seems the lefties didnt think this one thoroughly to prevent the backfire. LOL. serves them right.

a. enders
05-14-2003, 11:32 PM
:cantbeli: Dear sweet Jesus.(Hey-zeus)
You realize this is all bus right?There are no eeeeeeeville lefties and no faaaaascist righties.
The American government is full of hypocrites.I will GUARANTEE you that there were both "lefties" against shutting down Vieques and "righties" for it.
Wake up.Quit blaming the eeeeeville "lefties" (or "righties" as you may prefer) for **** that goes through simply because at the very bottom,in tiny letters is a rider that says the congress can raise their pay once more.
I don't know what other people think,but THIS is what I consider partisanship.THIS is why nothing EVER gets accomplished.
Everyone is constantly blaming and bashing.
You act as if the actions of a few hard-line leftists (again,or right...ists...er....) represent the actions of the entire population.The title of this thread is proof enough of that.
I supported the the closing simply because,last I read,there were civillians on the island that were getting hurt.If that was wrong,please correct me,as if there weren't then there was no need.
Granted most leftists have been quasi -anti military.Again,most.Not all.My uncle is one the most hard core democratic types I know,and he believes in the military.
I think my point is (after that long-winded bunch of ranting) that just making a blanket statement about the eeeeeville lefties or the faaascist righties is simply...ignorant.
Make your point without blabbing about how the cosnpiratorial left (or right) is trying to demolish the way of American life.

I apologize if this comes off as a bunch of attitude.It's not supposed to be.I just hear this EVERY damn day,and it's old and tired.As I said,it's a "let's blame the 'opposition' so we can cover up the fact we're doing nothing to stop it" kind of thinking.Rush Limbaugh is the best example of this.The hot air blowing fatty simply points the finger and demonizes ANYONE that disagrees with him.

Please...think fo the children...don't be a hot-air blowing fatty.

Seiyuuki
05-15-2003, 01:00 AM
"Nationally the parties are weak. As organizations that influence the political systems, parties are getting weaker. Voters no longer strongly identify with one of the major parties as they once did. The spread of the direct primary has made it harder for parties to control who is nominated for elective office, thus making it harder for the parties to influence the behavior of these people once elected. Delegate-selection rules, especially in the Democratic party, have helped shift the center of power in the national nominating convention. Because of the changes in rules, power has moved away from officeholders and party regulars and toward the more ideological wings of the parties."

So...in short, that's the reason why we get Congressman like Bob Filner, and a. enders is technically right, party affiliation is no longer as big as it use to be, the right can be as left as the left can be as the right, and so forth...