Showing posts with label National/World News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National/World News. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Heads Up: Raise Your Arms



Most days at school, doodling on your body is viewed as an act of boredom. We've all been there... The teacher keeps droning on and you're all out of paper, but hey, your hands, arms, and sometimes face are open canvas. But what if your body could be used to spread a message? Something more meaningful than 'Look at how productive I was in Calculus'?

Readers may recall a day last year when LOVE was written on the wrists of students. Perhaps you tossed it off as another random doodle, after all, that word is tossed around an awful lot these days... But was this the supposed deeper meaning body art deserves?



Indeed. To Write Love on Her Arms is a non-profit organization bent on educating about and preventing depression, addiction, self-injury, and suicide. Next Friday, November 12th, is the next scheduled To Write Love on Her Arms Day (via Facebook). If you feel like spreading the message that we were all "created to love and be loved", then bust out those Sharpies and spread the word.

Sometimes just reaching out can save a life. Some people go through life believing they aren't worth anything. But every life matters, and living your life to its full potential is definitely worth something.

TWLOHA donates profits from merchandise and donations on the website to helping those with self-hate seek help. They have many speakers who go and present to schools. Their website is full of many statistics, phone numbers, and ways to help those in trouble.

So, if your arms are otherwise available from long sleeves/extensive bracelets, be sure to join in and help the cause. It only takes four letters, and awareness is a step towards recovery. Get out there, grab a marker, and do some good.



This has been Danielle Hernandez for School News. What are your feelings about To Write Love on Her Arms? To learn more about the cause please visit their website.

Monday, September 13, 2010

When The Eagle Cried

We all remember the day, when the eagle cried. Better known as 911. Here is a summary of all the events that happend that day and what HCHS remembers about it.



When The Eagle Cried from Chad Bruns on Vimeo.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

We WiII Remember You

W-e WiII Remember You from Chad Bruns on Vimeo.



Kelsey and Danielle present a memorial video to all of the WWII veterans of Shelby County in honor of the upcoming 65th anniversary of V-E (Victory in Europe) Day on May 8th. This video includes two very special interviews with Don Norgaard and Russ Adams.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Day of Silence by Tara Benner

On April 16, 2010, thousands of students across the globe participated in The National Day of Silence.
“What is the Day of Silence?” You may ask. Well, the Day of Silence is a day when the lesbian, gay, and bi community, along with their friends and supporters, take up a vow of silence to bring attention to anti-Lesbian/Gay/Bi name-calling, bullying and harassment in their schools. The participating students wore red to symbolize they were taking part in the activity.
The Day Of Silence Program is not to make a spectacle of one’s self. It is to raise awareness of all the slurs and bullying there are against the gay community. Whether you just say “That’s so gay,” or “You’re such a fag,” you are meaning it to be insulting and rude. Being gay isn’t a negative thing.
Many students have been bullied so harshly about their true or alleged sexuality; they have been driven to suicide. One of these students was 11 year old Carl Walker-Hoover of Massachusetts. Carl had endured slurs and taunts about his alleged sexuality, despite his mother’s pleas for the school to address this problem. Carl hanged himself in the afternoon of April 9th, 2009, just 8 days before his 12th birthday and the National Day of Silence.
According to From Teasing to Torment: School Climate in America, two of the top three reasons peers were most often bullied at school were actual or supposed sexual orientation and gender expression. The top reason was physical appearance.
"As was the case with Carl, you do not have to identify as gay to be attacked with anti-LGBT language," Gay Lesbian Straight Education Network (GLSEN) Executive Director Eliza Byard said. "From their earliest years on the school playground, students learn to use anti-LGBT language as the ultimate weapon to degrade their peers. In many cases, schools and teachers either ignore the behavior or don’t know how to intervene."
Unfortunately, Carl’s death was not the first, nor the last to be the result of anti-gay bullying. About a year earlier, eighth-grader Lawrence King was shot and killed by a fellow student in a California classroom, allegedly because he was gay.
Discrimination leads to elimination, as the above examples prove. The Day of Silence is a way you can express your concern for those who are tormented everyday for being someone they are, or aren’t. Next year’s Day of Silence lands on April 15th, 2011.
If you are interested in learning more, visit http://www.dayofsilence.org/index.cfm.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The Potential of My Generation by Chris Schaben

Now that I am only a few weeks away from graduating high school, I must begin to think about the future. But thinking about things that haven’t happened yet kind of scares me. Who knows what will happen in the future? I’m just beginning to realize that once I walk out those doors with a diploma in my hand, every choice I make will be my own. I can no longer continue to be dependent on my parents and teachers. They have prepared me for the future up until now, but from here on, I must face it independently.

I know I’m not the only one who feels this way about what’s coming next. The entire future of America rests on the shoulders of my generation! No pressure, right? In a few decades from now, we will be in charge of leading and supporting this country. Look around! All these teenagers you see have the potential to have an impact on the lives of others. Who knows where all of us will be? One of us could be in the military, fighting to keep freedom in this country. One of us could be a doctor, saving the lives of critically injured people every day. And one of us could even be one of the next presidents of the United States, leading the country through the good times and the bad. All of these people are still just in high school right now, but think of the potential waiting for them when they enter the working world!

I think my generation will do great things in the future. With inspiration from past generations, we can continue to grow in knowledge and will not make the same mistakes others might have made in the past. Our generation will be able to achieve things that no others could. Take technology, for instance. When my parents were in school, they barely knew how to type on the computer! But in our modern society, people of our generation are exposed to computers every day. With our knowledge of using these and other machines, the career possibilities are nearly endless. With the new innovative technologies ahead, we will be able to find new ways of doing things.

Our modern society is also much different than that of other eras. Can you think of any other time where people were more equal in rights no matter what gender, race, religion, or sexuality they are? We weren’t alive to see the long term effects of harsh segregation or discrimination, and we’ve always been conscious of minorities and people that are different. This is a key element to our success in the future. Because of the acceptance of all kinds of people, we will be more likely to work together and build a strong future. All of our accomplishments will form a chain reaction that continues to develop through later generations. The choices we make right now will impact the future of America. So, what do you say? Does our generation have what it takes to continue the excellence and success of this country?

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

67th Annual Golden Globe Awards -Alex


The 67th Annual Golden Globe Awards were held at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills last Sunday night, the 17th, and were televised on NBC.

The Golden Globe Awards were first held in 1944 at the 20th Century Fox Studios and has been held in various locations ever since. The Awards are presented annually to recognize the stupendous achievements in both motion pictures and television. The Golden Globes are said to be a major part of the film industry’s award season, along with the Academy Awards.

This year, many of the winners and presenters at the Golden Globes sported red and yellow ribbons to show their support for the disaster in Haiti, which in my opinion is a very modest and considerate action.

There were many movies, television shows, and actors and actresses that I was extremely excited to see win awards this year. One motion picture that won two awards was the 3D blockbuster Avatar. I personally haven’t seen this film, but I’ve heard from various friends that it was AWESOME. The awards that Avatar received were ‘Best Movie Drama’ and the director, James Cameron, took home ‘Best Director’.

The 2009 comedy ‘The Hangover’ received the award for ‘Best Motion Picture Comedy/Musical’. I was thrilled to see this movie win because I thought it was hilarious. Another movie I was excited to see receive an award was Disney-Pixar’s ‘Up’, which received ‘Best Animated Movie’. You don’t even need to be a kid to enjoy this animated movie, it was a spectacular combination of humor and seriousness, and it even got a couple tears from some people!

My favorite award winner of the night was Sandra Bullock, without a doubt. She received ‘Best Actress Movie Drama’ for her 2009 hit movie, ‘The Blindside’. (If you want to learn more about ‘The Blindside’, feel free to check out my previous story on it by clicking the tag 'alex and joe' on the left side of the page) I was excited to see Bullock win this award because she did a phenomenal job of playing her part in the movie, and also because of the comeback she's made back into the movie industry. She herself stated, "I'm in the best spot of my career." The movie was spectacular; funny and inspirational, and just an all-around feel-good movie.

All in all, I was very impressed with the presentation of most of the awards. The only thing that I didn’t like about the Awards was the host, comedian Ricky Gervais. Many people thought he was hilarious, but for an awards show that is supposed to be elegant and classy, I found his humor to be very crude and a tad bit disturbing. Don’t get me wrong, I think a few jokes to break the ice are acceptable, but some of the things he referred to were just disgusting.

Other than that one little thing, I though the Golden Globes were definitely a success. If anyone has any opinions on the recipients of the awards, or anything else, feel free to leave a comment!

For complete coverage of the Golden Globe Awards:
-http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/TV/01/17/golden.globes/index.html
-http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2010/01/17/monique-takes-home-golden-globe-award-precious/

Sunday, December 13, 2009

The Blindside - Alex Gettys

Do any of you know of someone in your life who you think deep down is a good person, but he/she just needs some help to find where that good is? Well, I certainly know someone like this, and I’m sure all of you do as well. The 2009 hit movie The Blindside definitely illustrates the power of one ordinary person stepping out of their way to help reach the good in one lost person.

The Blindside tells the story of a boy by the name of Michael Oher. Before I get into the movie, I’ll talk a little bit about his background story. Michael was born to a woman of the name Denise Oher, who was a crack cocaine addict. Because of her addiction, Michael received very little attention. In elementary school, he repeated both first and second grade, and in his first nine years of education, Michael attended around 11 different schools. Michael also spent time in foster homes throughout his early life.

Now that you know Michael’s background story, I’ll get into the movie. The Blindside starts off with Michael just being a lost soul that lives on the streets, but after he is luckily accepted into Briarcrest Christian School because of his big size and the football coach’s fascination with him, his life takes a turn for the better.

Walking through the freezing cold streets of Memphis one night, Michael runs into an acquaintance of four known as the Tuohy Family. The Tuohy Family consists of Leigh Anne and Sean, along with their son and daughter. Because of the freezing cold weather, the Tuohy’s were nice enough to let Michael stay at their home for one night.

What was originally supposed to be one night ended up turning into a permanent arrangement for Michael and the Tuohy’s. The Tuohy family fell in love with Michael’s unique personality and continued to care for him. Leigh Anne eventually talked Michael into going out for football because of his size, and at first Michael didn’t do much good for the team. Through a lot of hard work with Sean and Leigh Anne’s son, SJ, being his “coach”, Michael improves his strength and agility immensely.

In The Blindside, I really love when Leigh Anne talks to Michael about improving his blocking in the game. Michael’s position is right tackle on offense, and his job is to protect the quarterback, running back, etc. Leigh Anne tells Michael that he needs to protect his team mates like they’re his family, and that he has to do whatever he can to make sure they’re safe. I love this part because it really emphasizes how superb Michael’s protective instincts are and it shows how much love and compassion he has for his new family.

After a successful season, Michael faces the tough decision of deciding where to attend college. Everyone wants him because he’s so good at what he does, but he has trouble keeping his grades up and has to work hard to do so. Michael eventually decides to become a Rebel and play for the University of Mississippi, where his new “father”, Sean played basketball.

After college, Michael was a first round pick in the NFL draft and became a new member of the Baltimore Ravens. Michael still plays today for the Ravens and is still extremely good at what he does. Another really cool thing is that Harlan native, Billy Cundiff, also plays for the Ravens. How cool would that be?! Playing with Michael Oher!


To me, the movie The Blindside displays how one person’s love and compassion can save another person’s life, and bring out the greatness that is deep down inside them. Michael Oher is definitely a role-model in my life now; because of the factors in his life he had to overcome to be successful. He did this through hard work and determination, which are two qualities I think are the most important to possess.

Now that you know what I think about the movie The Blindside, here’s what some other people said about the movie: Sarah Konz, sophomore, said, “It’s the best movie I’ve ever seen in my life!” And freshman Minden Brix stated, “I loved it. It was great. SJ was my favorite character.” Now, what does everyone else think? Leave a comment!

Sunday, November 29, 2009

New Moon Madness

New Moon Madness! from Chad Bruns on Vimeo.



Tara nd RJ show you all the madness and hype behind the popular "Twilight" series. We interview a Hot Topic employee about the hype, ask several HCHS students and teachers if they are "Team Jacob" or "Team Edward", and show you all the "New Moon" merchandise out there.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Open Door Mission

In November of 2009, Harlan’s First Baptist Church Youth Group went to the Open Door Mission in Omaha, NE. The Open Door mission is located on 2828 North 23rd Street East and helps families and singles in need of financial or housing assistance. The Open Door Mission has a Lydia House, which is for families consisting of at least one parent and at least one parent. It also includes a housing development for single men, which can fit up to 180 men sleeping on mats each night. A housing development for single women is also included.


Plaque on the new Lydia House that is currently under construction.

Every night, the Open Door Mission assists over 320 men, women, and children who are in need safe, sheltered beds. They prepare 1,500 hot, nutritious meals daily to those who need it. The Open Door Mission also provides financial support and other means of security to more than 250 families living in poverty.

The Open Door Mission is always welcoming and in need of volunteers. On November 7, 2009, the FBC Youth Group and other youth groups in the Omaha area helped the Open Door Mission with many tasks helping them prepare for Thanksgiving and Veterans Day. The girls helped make Hand Turkey Placemats for the guests to enjoy during their holiday meal. At the same time, the boys washed laundry and helped sort and hang up clothes. Everyone pitched in together afterwards to sort through blankets, tablecloths, sheets, clothes, knick-knacks, stuffed animals, toys, and baby toys to decide which ones were proper to keep on the shelves for needy people to purchase. Other youth groups helped pack turkey and fixings boxes for needy families to serve at Thanksgiving.



Food collection at Hy- Vee

The Open Door Mission provides more opportunities to volunteer during the holiday season. The Shepherd’s Lights Event takes place on November 27 through December 31 and gives you the opportunity to view the “Parable of the Lost Sheep” from the comfort of your own car. The $5 entry fee will be donated to the Open Door Mission. Another opportunity available is to donate your processed deer meat to Van Fleet Meats and the purchase of it will go to the Open Door Mission. If you have any used Cell Phones, PDAs, Palm Pilots, digital cameras, or iPods, donate them to Recycling for Charities to help out the Open Door Mission. A good opportunity for coffee lovers is to buy Mission Bean Coffee at Hy-Vee food stores in Omaha and the money will go to Open Door Mission. On the Third Saturday of each month through December, there will be an Open Door Mission truck located two blocks south of Industrial Road on 149th Street. Bring your used clothing, furniture and other household goods and put it in the truck to donate to the Open Door Mission.

For more information on the Open Door Mission and for how you can get involved, visit http://www.opendoormission.org/. Or visit their Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/OpenDoorMission?v=wall#/OpenDoorMission.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Respect Your Elders


Sometimes, the easiest option is denial-- denial that one is aging, denial that one cannot do it alone, denial that death is inevitable. Modern Americans, who market anti-aging creams and other fountain-of-youth beauty products which are supposed to reverse the process of aging rather than make aging a more secure and graceful process, are especially guilty of this denial. However, the consequence is an increasing struggle to survive comfortably. In a country where the elderly population grows dramatically bigger each year, the need for assistance swells as well. Unfortunately, the number of geriatrics, women and men who specialize in “long-term care for chronic conditions or helping seniors to manage their day-to-day life,” is plummeting in supply. Geriatricians must be given more respect and pay for their work in order to increase the lacking number of graduates in the field.

“Throughout most of human history, a society’s population formed a sort of pyramid: young children represented the largest portion… and each successively older cohort represented a smaller and smaller group.” (‘The Way We Age Now’) But because of rapid advances in medical knowledge, a growing wisdom of cures and drugs, what used to be the point of the pyramid, the smallest contributor to the population, is now even with the bottom level. “The result has been called the ‘rectangularization’ of survival. People 65 years or older numbered 36.8 million in 2005 and represented 12.4 percent of the population. By 2030, this number will almost double to 71.5 million and represent… 20 percent of the population.”
With all of these older people, who, as one well knows, have commonly deteriorating health, there is a high demand of intelligence for an elder’s special needs-- geriatricians. But “since 2000, the number of geriatricians in the U.S. has fallen by a whopping 22 percent to a mere 7,100.… by 2030, there will be just 8,000 geriatricians, despite the fact that the U.S. will need about 36,000 to cover the workload” (Karvounis).
The cause of this problem is poor care for our older generation of men and women. “Too many seniors are overmedicated…. Too many receive high-tech care that they don’t really want,” notes one doctor. Too many end up declining early and precipitately, with an old age of enfeeblement and dependence, sustained primarily by nursing homes and hospitals. “What many need is not more operations, but counseling, patience, and compassion,” the kind of help that a trained geriatrician is willing to provide.
But why is there such a remarkable deprivation of help? According to Karvounis, “both our health care system and our medical schools devalue the kind of care that geriatricians provide.” This is evident when one looks at a geriatrician’s pay, which is at the bottom of the medical income ladder, averaging $150,000 a year. “It is low compensation of important, exhausting work…. It’s stuff that takes a lot of time, that is frequently off hours, at nights and on weekends.”And in the medical field, which is abundant with students who hold high importance on both respected social standing and pay, “the perception that geriatrics isn’t ‘real’ medicine because it’s not super-technical and procedure-based… is a dangerous bias,” say the pros. Who would want to be in a business that is looked down upon by his super- specialty colleagues?
Because of this popular attitude, support for geriatrics is more and more limited. “Congress recently eliminated funding for a number of geriatric educational programs, geriatric research funding is declining, clinical reimbursement is flat or declining,” Karvounis, one blogger on the subject, reports. In addition, scores of medical centers across the country have shrunk or closed their geriatric units. Several no longer advertise their geriatric training for fear that they’ll get too many elderly patients. People have not insisted on a change in priorities.
In order to repair damages that will be even more harshly seen in a few years, the whole country will need a little change of attitude, says Meyers. “The most obvious solution is adjusting reimbursement rates so that geriatric care can get a little financial respect…. Physicians must see that this work is valued not only by the patients but also by society. Schools must work to publicize and encourage those considering a career in geriatrics. They need to get serious about securing funding, professional connections, mentorship programs,” says a Meyers, a specialist in the field. Schools could provide incoming students with scholarship opportunities and required classes in geriatrics (there are none currently.) Schools can also offer loan forgiveness to students who specialize in geriatrics in order to encourage broader recruitment.
The future of our senior citizens does not have to look so dim. By giving those who care for the elderly the respect and financial assistance that they deserve, by embracing change and age rather than denying it, the country in medical care can begin to reverse the hurt that has been done. It is time to not only respect our elders, but to give a higher respect to those who care for them.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Global Warming PSA - Plant A Tree, Yo.



Just plant a tree! It does a lot of good, we promise. Video by Danielle2, Amber2, Dusten2, and Pape2.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Outsourcing



Outsourcing means to purchase goods or subcontract services from an outside supplier or source. The United States and the U.K. outsource mainly to India,and Japan outsources to China. The companies that outsource are numerous and include: FirstData,Frito Lay, General Motors, Google, Apple, Bank of America, Caterpillar, Toys "R" Us, and Orbitz.
Why do these companies outsource?
Companies outsource because they can hire three people in another country for as much as they pay one person in the U.S., and the three people that they hired usually would be more educated and able to speak more than one language.


Mario2 and Lawrence2 interviewing older brother John.

1)Do you know what outsourcing is?
Yes, it is the purchasing of goods or services from outside of your country.

2)Are you upset that your job will be sent to India in less than a year?
Of course, but i will have another job by than.

3)Do you think that outsourcing is good for the U.S. economy?
No, because that means that we have less jobs in America and that there is less money being collected by the government.

4)Why do you think that companies outsource?
Companies outsource to save money and also because they are able to hire more educated employees for a lower salary.

5)Do you think that all of the outsourcing that is going on is going to make Americans work harder for there jobs?
No, because a lot of Americans don't even realize that their jobs are at risk of being outsourced, and they won't try to do anything until it is too late to save their job.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Global Warming-Fact or Myth?

BubbleShare: Share photos - Halloween contest


What do you think global warming is? Well, according to the dictionary, the definition is the increase in average temperature of the earth's near surface air and oceans in recent decades and it's projected continuation. Now, I don't know about you but I believe that this is happening to our Earth. Some people say it's not true and that all of what is happening is just a natural process and that the ice caps are supposed to be melting and the water levels are supposed to rise. I don't think so.

Scientists agree that the global average temperature is about 0.6 degrees Celcius(just over 1 degree Farenheit) than it was a century ago and in the past 200 years the CO2 levels have risen by about 30%. Do you think we should be worried? I do. You might ask what the cause of the warming is. The human contribution to global warming is adding large amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide accummulate in the atmosphere and trap heat that normally would exit into outer space. When we use electricity from coal-fired plants, heat our home with oil or gas, or drive cars, we are adding to the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Another source of greenhouse gases is deforestation. Deforstation is a significant source of greenhouse gases, because fewer trees means less carbon dioxide turning into oxygen.

The long term consequences of global warming include ocean warming and sea-levels rising, coastal flooding, heat waves, glaciers melting,and arctic and antarctic warming. The impacts that the long-term effects will have on our Earth are diseases spreading, early spring arrival, plant and animal range shifts and population changes, downpours and heavy snowfalls, flooding, drouts, fires, and coral reef bleaching.
In a recent article I read, the great lakes have been getting lower and lower water levels and more and more cattails and plant life taking over. Could this be the plant range shifting? Is this a sign of what is happening? Now, do you beleive in global warming? I do. This has been Gabby7 for HCHS Newsblog.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Bin Laden's Back

Hi, this is Evans2 reporting with HCHS News. On Friday, the United States received a video tape with Bin Laden on it. After looking at the tape, U.S officials said that it is Bin Laden on the tape. This is the latest contact with Bin Laden we have had since 2004. In the video, he talks about global warming. He says that the emissions from large companies cause a danger to mankind. Also, Bin Laden says the war is not right and blames many of the problems on capitalism.
President Bush, in Australia for the Asia-Pacific-Economic Cooperation summit, said that it was interesting that Bin Laden mentioned Iraq and Afghanistan. He said that al Qaeda wants a safe haven in Iraq and Afghanistan. To prevent this, Bush said that we need to work hard to deny any safe havens and support upcoming democracies.
United States officials say that the timing of the tape shows that al Qaeda is still targeting the United States. The White House's homeland security adviser Fran Townsend stated that when ever people hear the tapes they should keep in mind that it is propaganda and it is meant to scare them. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said that it was not unusual for al Qaeda to send tapes on the anniversary of 9/11.
Unfortunately, there have been no leads to where Bin Laden may be hiding. Officials say that he is hiding in the mountainous areas of Afghanistan or Pakistan. A military official said that there has not been a good lead for about 2 years.
I have an interview with my dad, Mike, who presently serves in the U.S. Air Force

Q: What do you think of the latest tape from Bin Laden?

Mike: I think he will be a threat as long as he is alive. The most recent video reaffirms the United States' need to remain a stabilizing factor in the gulf region.

Q: What is your stand point on the war?

Mike: We are doing far more good than the news portrays and that Congress and the people are forgetting what happened to us on 9/11.

Q: What do you think General Petraous will say on his report?

Mike: That we are making progress and that we can't change a country in six months.

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

The Need for Pharmicist



This is a video of me interviewing my aunt from pittsburg about her job as a pharmicist. She has work on a pill that works with cancer. She also tells why pharmicist are on demand for you seniors out there, and other stuff that pharmics do. This has been a News Blog by Collin Schmidt

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Opinions about pulling out of Iraq

Withdrawing troops from Iraq, is it a dream to think that it might happen? Not for Great Britain. On Wednesday, February 22nd, British Prime Minister Tony Blair aannounced he was beginning the withdrawal of his troops from Iraq. In the coming months he will have 1,600 troops withdrawn and hopes to make more cuts to the other 7,100 troops by this summer. Blair’s reason for this decision, British troops have achieved many tangible successes in Iraq and the time has come to let Iraqi troops take over. Denmark also announced it will be withdrawing its 460 troops. These announcements come at a time when the U.S. is implementing an increase of 21,000 more troops.

I had the privilege of speaking to a Viet Nam veteran, Tom, about the war in Iraq and what his thoughts were concerning the withdrawal of troops.

Q. Earlier this year some congressmen said that the Iraqi war was was a bigger mistake than Viet Nam. What do you think about that statement?

A. In the beginning we seemed to have a better reason for going to Iraq which was the thought that they had weapons of mass destruction that eventually could impact the U.S. The U.S.’s involvement in Viet Nam had to do with the spread of communism and started out in an advisory capacity. As the war started to build the U.S. got involved more and more until we were fighting. There was really no danger that communism would have spread to the U.S. Now we know that there were no weapons of mass destruction so both wars were fought for reasons that may not have had an impact on the U.S. When you’re in the military doing your job, it is difficult to think of it as a mistake.

Q. Do you believe the U.S. will accomplish its objective?

A. I think it is nearly impossible for them to accomplish their objective. I don’t know that the Iraqis will be able to handle their own affairs or that their military will be able to stand on its own. The different religious factions continue to fight and kill one another and I don’t think that will ever end. Therefore, there will never be a satisfactory person or party in control of their government because the people of Iraq don’t get along based on their religious beliefs. I have a hard time hearing that more and more of our men and women are being killed when there doesn’t seem to be a solution to this fighting that has gone on amongst their people and the original reason for our being there no longer exists.

Q. Do you think we should follow Great Britain and Denmark and start withdrawing our troops?

A. Iraqis have to start to stand on their own and as long as we are there we are a crutch for them to lean on. Rather than sending more troops to Iraq, we need to start a gradual withdrawal. The problem is that whether we are there or not I believe the fighting will continue among the people. When you enter the military you know the possible dangers of your job but we are losing our soldiers in what seems to be a losing battle. We need to bring them home.

Thanks for talking to me today Tom.

Thank you Ryan.

This is Ryan signing off.

Ryan 3rd hour