RANGER AGAINST WAR <

Friday, September 19, 2008

Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue

Somebody Broke Your Wings,
Little Bird -- You Can't Fly.

Somebody Broke Your Wings --

Beat 'Em Down, Beat 'Em Down,

--Broken Wings
, John Mayall

Blackbird singing in the dead of night

Take these broken wings and learn to fly

--Blackbird
, The Beatles

I'm like a bird, I'll only fly away
I don't know where my soul is
I don't know where my home is
--I'm like a Bird, Nelly Furtado

_____________

A story carried in the Portland Press Herald (Maine) a few days ago did not get MSM coverage, but it is tragic and indicative of the insoluble madness that is the current U.S. wars. That some well-meaning people take this as a good thing is also sad. There is nothing good about this story.

Noora Afif Abdulhameed, 6, whose skull was "shattered by a U.S. sniper's bullet" in October 2006, will soon be undergoing gratis neurosurgery in Portland. Her father was also shot in the jaw while the family was driving together in Heet, Iraq.

Ranger was bothered by the story since it is hard to shoot a little girl in the head after lining her up in the crosshairs of a 9 power sniper scope and not notice that it was a little girl.

Democracy is messy, but not so much as a bullet into a little girl's brain housing group. Yes, we must fight them there as we certainly don't want our dear offspring being shot on the street by terrorists here. Forget the fact that this has never occurred. Maybe to be a "terrorist" is defined by what side of the scope you are on.

After Noora's skull was rent by a high-velocity round, she has made it to Portland with the help of the non-profit group No More Victims that brings war-injured Iraqi children to the United States for medical treatment. Treatment that will never return her to normal, and for what?

Group founder Cole Miller said, "It's a sweet moment, huh?" when Noora arrived in July (Noora's Journey). But does anybody really believe this is a feel-good story? Do we expect her family will be grateful for the medical treatment?

In a generous gesture, "Madison Hurley, 5, of Portland gave Noora a bouquet of balloons -- one of which looked like a U.S. flag -- tied with colorful ribbons." Not to utterly dismiss the efforts of these good-minded people, but does anyone see the absurdity here?

Several southern Maine communities held fund-raising events for Noora, and Miller said "such community-based efforts could help combat terrorism by showing the world that ordinary Americans care about what's going on in other countries." Huh? The only terrorism exhibited here is that wrought upon the Iraqi populace by an uninvited occupier.

It is an irresponsible act to place U.S. combat soldiers as traffic cops when the soldiers are improperly trained and temperamentally ill-suited for the mission. Ranger can not blame a scared young man for being trigger-happy, but he can question the occupation of a nation that never aggressed upon our Homeland.

Yes, Noora's head needs to be repaired, and it is fortunate for her that a group of small-town Americans has banded together to sell spaghetti dinners and sell grocery bags to get her here. But the real story every time is the insanity of the war.

People focus on the small things because it is something they can do. But the small things they do, like sending ditty bags to soldiers and knitting quilts, too often ends up being a glorification and a de facto furtherance of the wars. Groups such as No More Victims and Doctors Without Borders do a just work, but their stock in trade is the brutality of war.

That much conviction must be applied to effecting the cessation of the violence, as is applied to treating the victims and the fighters.

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