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By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Feb 6 2008, 05:01 PM
MoveAmericaForward.org
I'd say the Berkeley Chamber of Commerce and the City Council of Berkeley were two-faced. But, two-faced isn't a decent enough description, in my opinion.
Last week, Berkeley's City Council was going ballistic on the Marines, calling them "unwelcome intruders." Now the Council wants the city to withdraw the declaration that upset the nation's right wing. Republican Senator Jim DeMint, of South Carolina, proposed to sever Berkeley's federal funding. Maybe that had a little something to so with the sudden change of heart.
Council members Betty Olds and Laurie Capitelli, on Monday, proposed that Berkeley rescind its letter to the U.S. Marine Corps that stated that the downtown Berkeley recruiting office "is not welcome in our city," and publicly declare that Berkeley is against the war but supports the troops.
The Berkeley City Council will take a vote on Olds' and Capitelli's two proposals at its meeting next Tuesday. "I think we shouldn't be seen across the country as hating the Marines," said Olds, who voted against last week's proposals. "If you make a mistake, like we did, you should admit it and correct it and move on." Read the article from the San Francisco ChronicleIn Berkeley, Push to Rescind Letter to Marines É here
and the original article from InsideBayArea.com
Berkeley Gives Marines the Boot É hereThen, to top that off Berkeley's Chamber of Commerce is making nice with the Recruiting Office by making a photo op on February 5th showing how they support the armed forces and "ALL voices can be heard." The CEO of the Chamber even dropped of a nice "box full of donuts" to the Recruiting Office to show how he is "providing support." How nice of him. Berkeley Chamber Deals Donuts...Duh! É hereAs a reminder, take a look at how the City of Berkeley stood by and allowed Code Pink to illegally stop citizens from entering the Recruiting Office last week. It's unbelievable! But....maybe not for a city full of anti-Troop liberals, like Berkeley.... No Business as Usual in Berkeley É here
A box of donuts sure would make me feel a lot better!
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By Janet Evans
Sunday, Jan 20 2008, 08:35 AM

Military Absentee Voting ‘Primary’ Concern for Federal Voting Assistance ProgramBy John J. Kruzel American Forces Press Service
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| WASHINGTON, Jan. 18, 2008 – For the Federal Voting Assistance Program, getting deployed troops and their families engaged in the current election season is a primary goal.
Ahead of the November general election, FVAP, which fosters voting participation by uniformed and U.S. citizens abroad, is assisting eligible absentee voters who wish to cast ballots in their states’ primary election.
“It’s important that voters participate in the upcoming primary elections,” said Polli Brunelli, the program's chief. “We have over 20 primaries occurring in February, so now is the time, if you’ve received your ballot, to vote and get it back by the state deadlines.”
During an interview yesterday, Brunelli said registering to vote is a simple process. “Absentee voters fill out a federal postcard application form to request a ballot, send it into their local election official where the voter is legally authorized to vote,” she said. The ballot will be sent to the voter, who then votes on the ballot and sends it back to the local election office.
Paper copies of the application form are available at military installations, embassies and consulates and from organizations of overseas citizens. Electronic forms are posted online at the Federal Voting Assistance Program Web site, www.fvap.gov/pubs/onlinefwab.html.
Citizens using this form should vote and submit it immediately using regular mail or, where allowed by state law, by fax or e-mail, to their local election officials. The FVAP’s Integrated Voting Alternative Site at www.fvap.gov/ivas/fvap_state_menu.html shows citizens if fax or e-mail alternatives are permitted in their home state.
Voting assistance officers are stationed at military installations abroad to help FVAP implement its program initiatives. Equipped with state-by-state voting assistance guides, the officers are available to assist servicemembers in navigating the registration process and election procedures, and inform voters of relevant deadlines, Brunelli noted.
FVAP carries out the responsibilities of the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, which protects the voting rights of active-duty military members, Merchant Marines, eligible family members and citizens residing outside the United States.
Members of the U.S. armed forces traditionally represent an active component of overall voting-age Americans. The total voting participation rate among servicemembers was 79 percent in 2004, compared to the 64 percent rate of the general public, according to figures published by FVAP.
In a memorandum to military secretaries and top commanders sent Nov. 26, 2007, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates underscored the importance of extending voting rights to servicemembers at home and abroad.
“With the calendar of primary elections beginning early and stretching through September, 2008,” Gates said, “it is important that the department and the services be prepared to carry out the voting assistance mission to inform and educate U.S. citizens of the right to vote, foster voting participation, and protect the integrity of the electoral process.
“Voting is a both a right and a responsibility of citizens in our country,” Gates continued. “(Leaders of the armed services must) do everything we can to encourage participation and ensure that our servicemembers and families are able to exercise their right to vote and have that vote counted.”
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By Janet Evans
Sunday, Jan 6 2008, 01:00 PM
President Bush's senior national-security advisers are debating whether to expand the authority of the CIA and the military to conduct far more aggressive covert operations in the tribal areas of Pakistan.
Read the article in the Seattle Times
U.S. may boost covert actions inside Pakistan ◄ here
Then take a look at a video from the Real News:

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By Janet Evans
Wednesday, Jan 2 2008, 08:35 AM

Rose Parade Protesters
Dozens of anti-war protesters led by "Peace Mom" Cindy Sheehan staked out spots across from television cameras, hoisting signs reading "Impeachment is Patriotic."
Twenty-three people were arrested by Tuesday afternoon, including one protester, Pasadena Police Department Lt. Keith Jones said. Jones said the protester was "arrested for holding up a sign that blocked other patrons view of the parade."
After the procession's last float inched out to start along the parade's 5 1/2-mile route, a group of more than 100 anti-war protesters marched behind it, including Sheehan. Parade watchers sitting in the grandstand booed and yelled at the protesters.
Read the article from the FresnoBee.com
New Year's Rose Parade, protesters roll through Pasadena { here
 And to top it off, Sheehan posted the following on After Downing Street :
The White Rose and the Rose Parade
By Cindy Sheehan
Since the conquest of Poland three hundred thousand Jews have been murdered in this country in the most bestial way ... The German people slumber on in their dull, stupid sleep and encourage these fascist criminals ... Each man wants to be exonerated of a guilt of this kind, each one continues on his way with the most placid, the calmest conscience. But he cannot be exonerated; he is guilty, guilty, guilty! — From the second leaflet of the White Rose. ”
My first encounter with the White Rose Society (a small group of Munich University Students who were executed for their opposition to Hitler and the Third Reich) came on my way from Dallas to Crawford, Tx on August 6th, 2005.
I rode from the Veteran’s for Peace Convention in Dallas on the “White Rose,” a bus that had a huge ‘IMPEACH’ written on the side of it. On the bus was a picture of Sophie Scholl and her brother Hans and some of the quotes of the series of 5 leaflets that the Society spread denouncing Hitler from June 1942 to February 1943, when they were caught and executed. They were an obviously brave and moral group of wide awake Germans who sacrificed their lives to try and change the horrible direction that their nation was going in.
Gold Star Families for Peace and the Camp Casey Peace Institute has joined a group called the "White Rose Coalition" that will be carrying a large copy of the Constitution at the end of the parade and the Backbone Campaign’s Chain Gang will be following the parade. Many activists will tag along with our “Impeachment” banners, signs and other means of protest to call national attention to the accountability issue.
Being involved in this particular action has engendered the most hate mail for me since I left the Democratic Party! I am “ruining the parade.” I am the “representation of everything that is evil in the world today.” One woman named Carrie, was “sorry” that my son is dead, but he volunteered to “honor” this country with his service and even though Carrie is no “fan” of Bush (yeah sure), I have really “crossed the line” this time.
First of all, we are not protesting the parade at all, except that it is a symbol of corporate excess and it is my opinion it is not really moral to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on parade floats when people are still being killed in Iraq and suicide rates for our Veterans are skyrocketing because the VA system in under-funded and apparently not a priority for BushCo and Congress Inc
I can’t remember a time in my life where anyone protesting at a parade would have upset me at all, but since Casey was killed in Iraq and since I have faced and witnessed so much violence, oppression and hardship in the world, it is absolutely stunning to me that this protest would create so much vileness and venom. There are so many more important things in the world besides parades and football games. I have also tried to imagine an Iraqi happening to catch a glimpse of the Rose Parade on TV somehow and marveling how everything is so happy and beautiful in America when our nation has utterly devastated and destroyed theirs.
Since the “conquest” of Iraq, over one million Iraqis have been slaughtered or have died from the tragic, but unavoidable consequences of invasion and occupation. BushCo have desecrated our Constitution and the almost complete fascist take-over of our media and the blatant stealing of our freedoms here at home have bypassed many Americans while they are slumbering in our dull, stupid sleep.
As long as people like Carrie have their “circuses” to divert them, then they don’t have to bother their “beautiful minds” with the crimes of BushCo---but ignorance is not an excuse for being awash in the blood of nearly 4000 Americans and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis.
I spend every second of every day mourning my son and longing for his future. I am sorry if someone wearing an “Impeach Bush and Cheney” t-shirt will ruin a parade for somebody, but we are trying to prevent many more people from having their entire lives ruined.
We cannot allow this criminal regime to continue as in the words of the first leaflet from the White Rose Society:
It is certain that today every honest German is ashamed of his government. Who among us has any conception of the dimensions of shame that will befall us and our children when one day the veil has fallen from our eyes and the most horrible of crimes ... reach the light of day.
"People before Politics" Support Cindy for Congress!
www.CindyforCongress.org
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Funny....I can't seem to find any offense President Bush has committed that falls under being impeachable....
Cindy Sheehan, you need to go spend some more time with your buddy Hugo Chavez ....
You seem to like it better in his country anyway....
You are anti-American....
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By Janet Evans
Monday, Dec 31 2007, 04:31 PM
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Department Engages Congress for Full 3.5 Percent Troop Pay RaiseBy Gerry J. Gilmore American Forces Press Service
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| WASHINGTON, Dec. 31, 2007 – Military members will receive a 3 percent pay raise effective tomorrow, as President Bush urges Congress to revise some provisions regarding Iraq contained in the fiscal 2008 National Defense Authorization Act.
The president authorized the 3 percent pay raise in an executive order. The act includes authorization for a 0.5 percent additional pay raise for U.S. troops, but the president has, for now, elected not to sign the defense authorization bill in its present form while Congress is adjourned, a practice known as a "pocket veto."
On Dec. 28, President Bush announced his displeasure with some language pertaining to Iraq in the current version of the act, according to White House documents released that day. The president said he won't sign off on the bill until it is revised. Congress is now on its holiday recess.
In a statement, the president urged Congress "to ensure that any provisions affecting servicemember pay and bonuses, as well as provisions extending expiring authorities, are retroactive to January 1, 2008."
"The (Defense) Department will work closely with Congress toward the 3.5 percent pay raise effective Jan. 1, as originally envisioned in the bill," Bill Carr, deputy undersecretary of defense for military personnel policy, said in a statement released today.
"Likewise," Carr's statement continued, "we will work to ensure the final bill features no interruption of bonus authorities."
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By Janet Evans
Monday, Dec 24 2007, 06:10 AM
Republican Presidential candidate Fred Thompson has the following holiday message regarding our Troops:

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By Janet Evans
Sunday, Dec 23 2007, 07:00 AM
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Gates: Coalitions Critical in Afghanistan, Other Security MissionsBy Donna Miles American Forces Press Service
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| WASHINGTON, Dec. 21, 2007 – After visiting some 50 countries during his first year running the Defense Department, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said he’s yet to find one that doesn’t want to work with the United States.
He also spoke of the importance of coalitions in advancing security around the world.
“My view is that the notion that the United States … is terribly unpopular and nobody wants to work with us is just dead wrong,” Gates said during an interview yesterday with American Forces Press Service and the Pentagon Channel.
“I have yet to come to visit a single country, including Russia and China, where there isn’t an interest in cooperating with us and working together on areas of mutual interest,” he said. “So I think this notion that we are in ill odor around the world is certainly not consistent with any of the conversation that I have had anywhere.”
Gates called cooperation and coalition building critical to America’s defense and world security.
A lifelong student of history, the secretary said he heeds the advice of Gen. Fox Connor, a mentor to two prominent military commanders: Gens. George C. Marshall and Dwight D. Eisenhower. “He had several axioms about a democracy fighting a war,” Gates said. “One of those was, ‘Never fight alone.’
“We have to be able to act unilaterally if we must,” the secretary said. “But it is always better to have allies in a conflict, as well as in peacekeeping endeavors.”
Gates pointed to the coalition in Afghanistan, with some 70 nations and organizations playing a part in helping the Afghans build a new democracy and improve their quality of life. “It not only provides a broad array of international support for what you are trying to do,” he said, “but they actually bring concrete skills and capabilities to help.”
As defense secretary, Gates has worked tirelessly to press the world community, particularly NATO, to increase its support for Afghanistan.
The international contribution varies greatly, he said. “The British are there in substantial force. The Australians are there in force. The Canadians are there in force,” he said, noting that Canadian troops have suffered heavy losses proportional to the size of their military and their representation in Afghanistan.
In addition, the Germans have “a very large presence” in northern Afghanistan, and the Dutch recently announced plans to extend their troop commitment for the Afghanistan mission another two years, Gates said.
“On the other hand, there are other allies that have the capacity that are not participating, or they are there and have so many restrictions on the use of their forces that it significantly reduces their contributions,” he said.
Gates emphasized the need for countries to reduce these caveats and increase their commitments during the NATO informal ministerial conference in Noordwijk, Netherlands, in October. Just last week, he delivered the same message to defense leaders from countries that provide troops to NATO’s Regional Command South in Afghanistan at a meeting in Edinburgh, Scotland.
But the secretary’s campaign for stronger coalition efforts expands beyond Afghanistan’s and Iraq’s borders.
Visiting Bahrain earlier this month, he pressed countries throughout the Persian Gulf to expand multilateral cooperation so they can better protect the region against threats from Iran and other destabilizing forces.
Gates told about 200 senior military leaders from 23 countries at the Manama Dialogue that broader security relationships with closer multilateral ties and cooperation are “an absolute necessity” in light of threats the region faces. Such a framework could help pave the way for a regional air and missile defense system that would provide a regional defense umbrella and deter a missile attack, he said.
“They have never done this together,” Gates said during yesterday’s interview. “We’ve done it bilaterally, but it would be much more efficient and much more effective if a group of countries was working together on it.
“So a fair amount of my travel has been, ‘How do we enlist more countries in working with us on this?’” he said.
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Biographies: Robert M. Gates
Related Articles: Gates Reflects on Highlights, Challenges of First Year in Office
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