Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Last day on Fob Grizzly (or Fob Red Bull) - DON'T FEED THE GRIZZLIES!!

Today is my final day on this Fob. Yes I know - I am not supposed to "tell" anyone that. Fob Grizzly is not on any map - no one really knows where it is or who our predecessors where. I do.
The Fob I am on was at one time called Fob Red Lion, then Fob Spartan, and now Fob Grizzly.
I have called it Fob Red Bull these last few weeks a the 34th ID engineer company made this FOB, my company is 34th ID, and our replacement is the 34th ID. Therefore Red Bulls made this Fob and have been deployed on it longer than anyone - yet get no credit. Whatever - it is not even on the map. So WHO CARES what its 11 month name is?!?
But since it is FOB Grizzly I have been telling my comrades and officers " DON'T FEED THE GRIZZLIES!" And at least they understand. Our new MP Battalion is kinda new at.....being deployed and is clueless. Oh well. Hope they have fun. I am no longer concerned - I am going home!

Anyone reading this from the FOB or has been there - leave a comment and post a link to your site!
~Kevin

Friday, November 18, 2005

World's Ugliest Dog dies this day


Sam, crowned the 'World's Ugliest Dog' for three years in a row at the Sonoma-Marin Fair, is shown in Santa Barbara, Calif., on June 28, 2005. The pooch with the hairless body, crooked teeth and sparse tuft of hair atop his knobby head died Friday, Nov. 18, 2005, just short of his 15th birthday, according to his owner, Susie Lockheed. (AP Photo/Santa Barbara News-Press, Rafael Maldonado, File)

Monday, November 14, 2005

Political Platform vs. My beliefs



I think this rather interesting. I support Greens first - then Repubs, then Dems. Suppose thas why I vote for them then - huh? But it all depends on the candidate really. Not all candidates follow their party platform or are strong enough leaders.
~Kevin


To find out their platforms go here:

Green Party

Democrats

Republicans

Libertarian Party

I am very little Libertarian at all, as they seem to dislike all government. They would rather gripe about the government than allow citizens to actually govern themselves. If you disagree try meeting them.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Peak oil artice in the SW Journal


( those in photo from left to right: ME , Tamara Kachelmeier, Brandon Helm, Gary Hoover, Ken Avidor, Ben Portwood and Don Portwood)
When I was on leave in Minnesota, I had a photo taken and a short interview pertaining my activism in the peak oil community. The Southwest Journal decided to publish the story now. Probably because prices have not gone below the pre-Katrina peak. I have my own perspective - seeing prices steadily rise as demand outpaces supply - then the peak will hit and the average Joe will have no choice but to conserve.

So one thing I do is assist in putting these red stickers on "STOP" signs in Minneapolis that encourage drivers to "STOP DRIVING." I am sure it surprises quite a few people - and the stickers only stay an average of 6-9 months. Then they change the signs ( because these stickesr are not easily removeable.)

One interesting thing about the article is that they included that I do not think that the Iraqi war is mainly about oil. I think the harm a rogue nation with immense wealth can do to the World is a global security issue. Obviously we want a stable Iraq to continue selling oil - but we want a stable Middle East as well. The only problem is that Iran is still in existence and Iraq/Afghanistan could fall apart at any point without our support.

Obviously I am not as concerned with the conspiracy theories as the reality that is before us now. And preparing for peak oil is a reality that must sink into the average American.

Here's the article:

By Michael Metzger
Southwest ‘Peak oil' activists have long insisted that Minneapolis plan for an age of scarce petroleum; amid recent price hikes, the rest of us might finally pay attention

At one time in America, it was indeed possible to unexpectedly strike it rich in oil. The stuff literally poured out of the ground in Pennsylvania - where the first oil strike occurred - and in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and elsewhere. It seemed as if the supply would never end.

But in the 1950s, when gasoline sold for less than 50 cents a gallon, a Shell Oil geologist named M. King Hubbert was working on a theory that would undo forever the notion of infinite oil.

In 1956, Hubbert told a hostile audience at a meeting of the American Petroleum Institute that United States oil production would peak in 1970. Fourteen years later, he was proven to be right, as production of American oil hit a high in 1970 and began a slow descent that continues today. The bell curve that describes the ascent, peak and decline of oil production became known as “Hubbert's peak” - better known today as “peak oil.”

The concern these days isn't about American oil production - the oil industry long ago acknowledged that Hubbert was right about U.S. crude production - but whether Hubbert's peak theory can be applied to the planet as a whole.

In Southwest, peak oil-theory advocates meet every month at the vegan restaurant Ecopolitan, 2409 Lyndale Ave. S., to talk about the coming end of the age of oil. Each of these handful of people is convinced that oil production worldwide has peaked, or soon will, and that the planet is about to be thrust into a difficult post-peak era involving economic crises caused by dramatically higher oil prices, resulting in drastic changes to the American dream and way of life.

At one time, they might have been dismissed with a laugh as Chicken Littles with too much time on their hands. But many of their ideas are in the mainstream, as Americans pump $3 gasoline into post-chic SUVs and speculate about our government's motives for attacking and occupying oil-rich Iraq. Suddenly, it's not quite as funny or far-fetched to think of worldwide oil production peaking and declining.

Kevin Chavis of Whittier has a bigger stake than most in peak oil.

The 23-year-old was understandably reluctant to spend a lot of time discussing peak oil theory when he was contacted for this article. A sergeant in the Minnesota National Guard, he was headed back to his communications post north of Baghdad the next morning. But he took a few minutes away from the little time he had left to spend with his girlfriend to talk about the opportunities he says peak oil will present when it arrives.

“I see the opportunity to transition to a different way of life,” he said. “Simpler, more localized, probably more cooperation. That's the only way things are going to work out, is if everyone works together instead of competing for resources.”

He thinks peak oil hasn't arrived yet - it's still a decade or so away, he says - but that when it does hit, oil prices will rise beyond the reach of a lot of Americans.

“As prices slowly increase, our lives have to change. Some people will embrace an alternative.”

Like many peak oil advocates, Chavis welcomes the changes he sees coming.

“I stopped driving after I learned about peak oil. I'd already been using the bus and everything, just as a way of saving money. And I thought about it, I could not own a car and put the extra money toward my 401K or for savings and so forth. And at the same time, not increase my CO2 levels, and save gasoline for others for the future, instead of us,” he said. “I thought it's better to conserve [oil] and change my lifestyle while I can. And so I did.”

Pedaling a theory

Gary Hoover of Lynnhurst is a peak oil advocate you might have seen pedaling around Southwest on one of his colorful, peace-sign-decorated tricycles.

Hoover said that it's not easy to say if the world has achieved peak oil yet. “We will only know afterwards,” he said.

That's because to observe the peak of production, you have to be able to look back at when production reached a high, plateaued and then began its decline.

Said Hoover, “Peak oil is hard for many people to accept because it challenges the rather naïve assumption that is fitting for the robber barons of the 19th century. That is, the earth is an infinite source of free resources and is also an infinite sink for toxic waste.”

Peak oil is “going to change our urban landscape and change the way we live dramatically. I'm not sure people are ready to hear that yet.”

None of the Southwest peak oil advocates at the Ecopolitan is an expert in oil production, but they all spend inordinate amounts of time reading books on the subject, as well as scouring the many Web sites devoted to the topic for any new bits of information confirming their suspicions that the age of oil is coming to an end.

Robert Holt, professor emeritus of political science at the University of Minnesota, dismisses peak oil theory and refers derisively to Hubbert's peak as “Hubbert's pimple.”

“It's irrelevant,” the Kenwood resident said of the theory. “If we have an oil shortage, it's not going to be because we're running out of oil, it's going to be because of political turmoil in [the Middle East], where all the oil is.”

He said that it's true oil production will eventually peak and then decline (his estimate is that it will take place in 30 to 40 years), but by then we'll have developed economically viable alternatives such as biodiesel, nuclear power and better coal-burning technology to replace much of the oil used today.

Holt said that society has shifted from one crucial technology to another in the past and will do so again.

“There was a time when you made all of your iron out of charcoal and pretty soon and all the trees were gone, by golly, and people said you're going to run out of iron because you have no charcoal. And they figured out a way to make coal work,” he said.

Hallelujah chorus

Don Portwood, pastor of CARAG's Lyndale United Church of Christ, 810 W. 31st St., is a recent addition to the peak oil meet-ups. He recently delivered a sermon to his congregation on peak oil titled “$2.69 a gallon and rising. Hallelujah?”

“It's scary stuff. I was trying to make them [in the congregation] aware of it,” Portwood said. “Make them aware that they're probably not going to read about it in the newspaper or see it on TV.”

Portwood said he quoted Woody Allen in the sermon: “More than any other time in history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other to total extinction,” Allen said. “Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly.”

“I said I didn't feel as bad as Woody Allen,” Portwood recalled with a laugh.

He said he talked about putting faith over fear. “Faith over fear means not hearing about peak oil issues and hearing that there may be an economic collapse and going, ‘Oh, hell, there's nothing I can do about that.' This is a time for us to trust God and then work on the issue rather than burying our heads in the sand.”

He said that right now, he's trying to help raise awareness of the issue “so that there will be a tipping point that will lead the government to start joining us in trying to find a solution rather than being part of the problem.”

He said he hasn't urged his congregation to take any specific steps to stave off peak oil, but he did urge them to look “at our unsustainable lifestyle.”

One person who doesn't need persuading by Portwood is his 26-year-old son, Ben Portwood. Ben is moving to Switzerland later this year to be with his Swiss girlfriend and to get out of a country he sees heading toward economic collapse as post-peak oil becomes economically unviable.

“If there's anywhere you want to be when peak oil happens, it's not going to be in any city or any suburb or even in the United States of America,” he said.

“It seems like it's not going to be a pretty place to be. I'd rather be in a society where everyone gets along a little better and where the land is potentially able to support the population.”

Said Hoover, “Peak oil will either be a blessing or a curse. We are either going to grow up and look at this as an opportunity to learn how we really relate to the Earth, or we're going to decide that we're entitled to continue this pretense that we can just draw what we want and dump what we want. If we decide to continue the pretense, we're going to become more violent. It's going to require more violence [abroad] and at home to keep people in line.”

He said he thinks the invasion and occupation of Iraq is part of an increasingly bloody picture of the present and future.

“I think oil is the primary reason for us being in Iraq. Oil is the prize.”

According to the Department of Energy, the United States gulps about 21 million barrels of oil a day. Of this, 58 percent is imported. Proven oil reserves in this country have dropped 17 percent since 1990, so our imports figure to grow faster in coming years.

Chavis, who joined the Minnesota National Guard back in 2000, isn't sure that the United States invaded Iraq mainly to secure a supply of oil.

“I think that if anything were to happen in the Middle East, though, we are in Iraq and we can actively pursue any interests in the Middle East through our bases in Iraq. It's more of a long-term thing than a short-term thing.”

The future

Like Chavis, Cindy Gray of Kenwood sees the coming of peak oil as an opportunity to create a society in which people are more cooperative and less competitive than they are today.

Still, she's hedging her bets. She doesn't envision an immediate future filled with smiling, helpful neighbors bartering vegetables and solar power over their back fences. Things might well get ugly, she said, if our oil-fueled economy takes a serious turn for the worse.

“I sold my townhome last summer because of my feelings about what I think is going to happen. I don't want to be tied down to a mortgage; I might need to be mobile.”

She said she is tempted to move from Southwest to a planned post-peak sustainable community in Wisconsin, but because she enjoys her life here, she wants to help create a sense of community in the city.

“If I am going to stay here, I need to start looking at what I can do in my community for sure.”

She said she wants to get involved in the formation of an outpost, as described on www.postcarbon.org. There, feel-good plans are laid out for outposts in metropolitan areas where people bring “together a range of skills, ideas and resources,” “a focus for debate and the opportunity to consult with the wider community” and provide “the opportunity for local authorities and other organizations to involve and engage the views of local people.”

Hoover, who bikes or rides buses nearly everywhere he goes, wonders where he and his two kids and wife should be when peak oil hits.

“There is not going to be any place is safe or any place that is superior as peak oil progresses,” he said.

It'll be hard for people who move to rural areas to recreate the amenities of urban life such as medical facilities. And it will difficult for people in the city to grow enough food on their small plots of land to become a sustainable community.

“The Minneapolis I envision is one where we basically have an edible landscape where we have gardens in every yard and on every boulevard. We have fruit trees. Neighbors are out in their yards and gardens, raising food and exchanging ideas about the best compost and about how to can food and various things. And people will probably have solar panels on roofs and set their thermostats down to about 50 degrees in the winter, unless they can invent some really cool way of getting heat some other way,” he said.

“I see the positive, too. I have these trikes that I ride, and my vision is that we'll have hundreds or even thousands of those in the next three or four years in Minneapolis.

“And that in itself would be the biggest single contribution to solving the problem of peak oil in our lives.”

Friday, November 11, 2005

Fight to the Last Spartan!


This is the day that the Spartans's left Ashraf ( AKA Fob Grizzly, Fob Red Bull ) . Basically - I used to salute their officers with the saying " Fight to the Last Spartan" referring to the Battle of Thermopylae. Of course, this was also the saying of the Battalion Commander. I still found it humorous, as in the battle, the Spartans did not make it. But they fought valiantly.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

I hate KBR and AT & T - profit is their only aim




There is a lot of misleading information about businesses that supposedly "Support the Troops." They do so solely to make the bottom line. Case in point: AT&T. While in Kuwait I paid 30 cents a MINUTE to call the United States. If I used a payphone in the USA I would lose out on 17 minutes of call time - per call even if I only reached voice-mail.

In Iraq using Segovia I pay 4 cents a minute. If I go to an AT&T Call Center in Anaconda I will pay 45 cents a minute. Hmm... where am I going to make my calls from? But AT&T likes to make "deals" with FOBs. They will give them computers, etcetera and build and man the phone centers themselves IF you switch to their service. Get a few toys, screw the soldiers - make the bottom line.

KBR does the same thing. They provide us food - manufactured, bland and barely nutritious. Many of my comrades have suffered from diarrhea this year - according to the medics this is due to lack of fiber in our foods. Most KBR grains are highly refined white-bread and consist of very little whole grains. I get most of my whole grains through General Mills cereals - only because this Minnesotan corporation has a sense of culinary morals AND a military contract.

Most our foods are also fried in transfats known as hydrogenated oils. Most of our breads are made with these ingredients to - which cause skinny people like myself to find their veins filled with the hardened grease. I limit my intake - which means eating few carbs and more fruits/veggies - which taste frozen if they have much taste at all.

I know America has many things on its mind than such issues, but we truly do need to value nutrition more. Nasty products like trans-fats are not food, but manufactured material sold as food.

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Marines shift on FOB is - 6 hrs a day - every other day OFF


The Marines arrived on my FOB in September. From that point on it became very annoying to sign into the internet center as the lines were VERY long from that day on. It was understandable as our battalion ( 793 MP BN ) did not seem to have a clear plan as to what to do with them. Therefore until things were figured out they sat around.

The 793 MP BN was relieved today by the 49th MP BN - and a plan for the Marines is now "set in stone." They work 6 hour shifts and get every other day off - or more. So our internet center is even MORE clogged up with Marines than usual. In fact, every time I step into the waiting room I see one or two ARMY soldiers and the REST are ALL MARINES! This to me seems a bit ridiculous.

So I have lost respect for the Marine Corps. They are no better than ARMY soldiers - they just "think" they are better. They do not believe in support units - AKA their own mechanics, their own supply , etc. They do have a cook and a couple communications guys - but they are really lacking in most the other essential support services. Instead they mooch off of the ARMY and Air Force and anyone else they can get things from. They use up vehicles and supplies like they are rentals! Many are in essence "motardivated" - motivated to the point of retardation.

And so I am rather GLAD that I cannot even purchase the Marine Coin. All 600,000 of them SOLD OUT before I even had a chance to purchase one. Every Fall I buy my silver proof sets, regular proof sets, silver proof liberty dollar, and other silver commemorative proof coins from the USA, Canada, and British Mints. The only two coins that I tried to buy but could not due to being sold out were the Marine Corps coin and the colored 40th Anniversary of the Canadian Flag. I bought the non-colored 40th Anniversary of the Canadian Flag coin and have not shed a tear.

Actually, I am a bit upset I couldn't get these. Because they are a part of history...

Honestly, the Marines should ONLY be used to fight during the start of a war - or in strategic battles. Tell them what to shoot and who to attack and they will do just fine. Tell them to fight an insurgency and defend a FOB for months on end - and they will lose their minds! They are of short-term value in wars - not long-term. They simply kill "enemies" as much as they can - concepts such as maintenance and understanding the enemy are foreign concepts. But they are great at firing bullets. But then again, maybe I am incorrect about their value in the region. Maybe they are using are FOB for the short-term and will transfer elsewhere. We will see...or not because I leave in December.

Friday, November 04, 2005

Fun With Hedgehogs



There are SO MANY hedgehogs in Iraq! I love them! They are like little creatures that eat insects - well actually - THEY ARE!
But let us not forget that we cannot take these lovable creatures back to the United States. Therefore we must have as much fun with them while in Iraq as possible! We cuddle with them, take them home and feed them the flies we catch! We make them our mascot and name our squads after them!

Yes, hedgehogs are amazing creatures! They are like hamsters with spikes!!

I think we need them in the United States ! A creatures unafraid to prance around human beings and yet still be "Wild!" Viva la hedgehogs!

Sunday, October 30, 2005

The Wrapping of Specialist Houck





This is what we did the day before Halloween. We taped SPC Houck to SGT Monnier. It was quite interesting watching them walk around all .... attached. Then after SGT Monnier was detached we taped up Houck some more. Yes, we are a lil crazy! :D

Friday, October 28, 2005

Re-enlistment Bonus? What bonus?


It is quite ironic that the $15,000 bonus for National Guard re-enlistment is being ended - because it never existed! Those who have already signed up for the phantom bonus may or may NOT get them. It is up in the air whether or not that will happen - but I will remain optimistic that the Guard will re-allocate some of their own money or risk demoralizing its already overdeployed soldiers.

In Minnesota it is guaranteed that one will get $1,000 a year for each of re-enlistment up to 5 years - and I believe triple that if you are nearing retirement.

It seems odd that this is the reason:
" It turns out that the troops were ineligible for the bonuses because paying activated National Guard troops a selective reserve bonus violates Office of the Secretary of Defense policy, said National Guard Bureau spokesman Jack Harrison."

Go figure?

So I am glad AGAIN that I have decided to get out. All of this red tape and being asked to kill people for the Homeland - not my cup of tea. I cannot wait until I have other options - but until then I will be in Iraq and other places. :)

I do think the moral of the National Guard bonus dilemna is that you should NEVER join the military solely for monetary purposes. That is just silliness. Join it for the glory or killing Arabs or something - then find out what it is like once you get in. (You honestly can't just kill people in the ARMY but it is the whole perception that you can anytime you feel like it that gets some people to join - makes you wonder huh?) :)

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

180 Days left in the Guard - 30 days left on FOB Spartan


I have been asked several times in the last 2 weeks about re-enlisting in the Minnesota National Guard. "But you will get a bonus" and " But you will get stuck in the IRR and get redeployed." So be it.

I originally signed up for the Minnesota National Guard in 2000. I was knowingly joining a violent organization that uses the tactics of killing other human beings to further a political cause. I no longer can condone that. I want to move beyond that.

The intention of war is to further a nation's goals through violent means. I cannot end a person's life on this planet of my own will. I will fulfill my initial contract, and after it is done with I will work towards helping mankind through nonviolent methods.

Politics is the nonviolent form of furthering ones goals - and is not performed solely by elected officials. Every act in ones life can be seen as political. When you buy from Wal-mart or Target you are making a political statement - and not making another one.

Every time you divert money that could be spent on a Playstation game to preventing and treating malaria in poor nations - you are making a political impact. You could buy the PS2 game and make a different sort of political impact - one that ignores these people so you can spend 2 hours a night beating Final Fantasy XXX.

I am NOT saying videogames are "evil." Entertaining oneself is not an evil thing. But we are not living in a world where people balance their needs with the needs of others. Deciding to buy fewer games - but SHARING them with others , therefore spending less money - could free up a few dollars to help the world's poorest.

Consider this information ( source is UN Foundation) :


"In Africa, mosquitoes can kill. Every 30 seconds an African child dies from a malaria infection transmitted by a mosquito bite. Every day 25 million pregnant African women risk severe illness and harm to their unborn children from a malaria infection. Malaria can be prevented through a simple, inexpensive measure: sleeping each night under a net treated with insecticides that kill mosquitoes or stop them from biting. An insecticide-treated net that remains effective at least four years costs just US$4 to $6, but most Africans cannot afford them.

The UN Foundation is working with the World Health Organization, the Roll Back Malaria Partnership, African governments and individuals to help protect African women and children from this deadly but preventable scourge.

Help make insecticide-treated mosquito nets available to all African women and children."

Is it that HARD to donate $6 a YEAR for such a cause? I would think so.
I tend to donate more money to local causes, but I do donate to Global causes such as this one because it can help so many.

I will probably be harassed to rejoin the military several more times between now and next May. But I was not allowed to live this far and again on this world only to kill other people for the benefit of others. If anyone reading this disagrees with me - please JOIN the ARMY. They need people who wish to kill others more than I do.

Will I think myself better than you? Will I think myself above those who do such a thing? No - you have your own life purpose. This is what I need to do. If you think war is the solution to peace then commit yourself to that cause. I will strive to support a different path.

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Jobs for Minneapolis Residents


I have lived in Minneapolis since 2002. I have seen a re-emergence as far as those wanting to live in this very fine city. Yes, it is not perfect - what regional city has been?

I just read a census for the city of Minneapolis(and based on Y2K data). It states that:

-382,618 live in the city
-299,427 jobs are in Minneapolis
-203,951 of those living in Minneapolis that also have jobs
-478,094 is the daytime population of Minneapolis
-95,476 is the increase of the city size during the daytime or 25%
-107,905 of those who live in Minneapolis also work in the city or 52.9% of total city population

What I dislike is that 52.9% of those who have jobs and live in Minneapolis do NOT have jobs there. That is as bad as cities like Detroit,MI and Newark,NJ. But it does make sense in that the people who live in the suburbs and outstate Minnesota perceive Minneapolis as being as bad as these low-class cities. Only those who live or work in Minneapolis would consider the city to be more like New York City.

The perception of Minneapolis is changing, and that is why so many condominiums are being built. Those who work in Minneapolis are deciding it wouldn't be a bad place to live in. In fact, I am quite sure that this ratio has improved since 2000 as it is prior to the "condo boom." If more who worked in Minneapolis lived here, we would have a vastly more sustainable city. Also if more jobs were created in the city, there would be less need for local residents to seek jobs outside of it.

When I return to Minneapolis, I plan to buy a home. I also will look at getting a very part-time job. Maybe a weekend or two a month for a few hours. Someplace in Minneapolis that will allow me to benefit and meet those in the community more.

Brandy is going to college for business management. So I hope she can also have a local job and allow myself to move on from sustaining myself on suburbanites. I do not mind my casino job - but would probably like it more if it were based at the Mall of America. If nothing else, she and I will start some sort of business. But I am in Iraq - not going to brainstorm things up here in the sandstorms!

Congress fighting over FBCB2s?


Okay, this is rather humorous, so I am placing article in entirety here(commentary at the end):

Congress, DOD at odds over added electronics for Humvees

By Lisa Burgess, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Friday, October 21, 2005



ARLINGTON, Va. — House Armed Services Committee members blasted the Army’s plan to outfit 824 brand-new up-armored Humvees with extra electronics before shipping them to Iraq, saying the 45- to 50-day cycle is slowing down a fielding process that has already been achingly slow.

Forty-five to 50 days is “a long time to own those vehicles [and not use them] when we’re under a policy to get every [up-armored] vehicle we can find, not just in the U.S., but in the world,” to Iraq, Committee Chairman Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., told Army Secretary Francis Harvey at a Thursday hearing.

Instead of diverting the new Humvees to Fort Hood, Texas, for the electronic retrofit, Hunter suggested, the vehicles should be shipped as quickly as possible straight to the Middle East.

That way, soldiers can take advantage of the upgraded armor, even without the additional electronics, which mechanics can add in-theater, Hunter said.

But the Army has deemed the new electronics “necessary for the additional survivability and command and control” of Iraq-bound up-armored Humvees, Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Richard Cody told HASC committee members during Thursday’s hearing.

True, “armor provides a certain level of protection,” Cody said. But, he added, even the Army’s heaviest tank can be vulnerable to certain explosives.

Meanwhile, the “situational awareness” provided by the high- tech electronics “gives the soldier the knowledge to avoid an IED,” or improvised explosive device — not endure the blast, Cody said.

The system under debate is dubbed “Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below,” or FBCB2.

FBCB2 may be an awkward moniker — Cody stumbled over it repeatedly — but it is one of the modernization linchpins for both the Army and the Marine Corps.

The system fuses computer hardware and software, digital maps and displays, and wireless and satellite radio to help U.S. troops tell friend from foe. Its digital displays automatically updating every “subscriber” unit with the latest picture of the battlefield, with information on enemy forces and specific targets.

Both the Army and the Marine Corps plan to outfit most of their aircraft and field vehicles with the system over the next several years, and a number of platforms, including the Army’s new Stryker wheeled combat vehicle, already have FBCB2 installed.

In July, the Army decided to divert 824 armored Humvees coming off the assembly line in Detroit to Fort Hood, where technicians would take about 14 days to install each FBCB2, Harvey said.

Two weeks is “the least amount of time” to install the gear, compared with two months in Kuwait, Harvey said.

“Why does it take four times as long” in Kuwait? Hunter asked.

Neither Cody nor Harvey had an answer.

“Clearly when all is said and done, you have demonstrated [that] you want to have this [electronic] equipment,” Hunter said. “Now my recommendation is that you try to come up with some kind of a plan that could get you utilizing these [Humvees] in-theater as quickly as possible … protecting people who are deployed right now.”
--------------------------


Okay, I install FBCB2s. In fact, they are part of an ARMY wide plan to gain TONS of information from the "battlefield." In reality, they allow for TOO MUCH information to be sent that will doom us in a future war. But the ARMY seems to think overwhelming itself with information is good, so let them have it.

Now the article states something about 14 days to install an FBCB2. I install them and it would take less than a day. Now if you are talking about 500 some humvees - yes I would need a lot of help and more than 14 days. But the real issue is that at Fort Hood the company that MAKES FBCB2s wants to make money. They have employees in Iraq that could do that job also - if soldiers like myself do not. BUT it COSTS money to ship all the parts over to Iraq - and it is a much easier way to profit when you have your products and services centrally located.

The FBCB2 system costs much more than I will ever make in my "military career" - so imagine what they charge for installation and how much easier it is to turn a profit for them.

When the ARMY is spending $750 for a single lousy speaker ( 2 per vehicle - one per radio) - anyone greedy will try to take advantage of you. At least congressment (for once) have started to catch on - and yet the Pentagon still defends their war-profiteering "friends." Being deployed to Iraq, I have been appalled to know the true price of the taxpayers are paying for what we use. Oh well, I won't worry about that now - twill continue drinking my $2.50 Red Bulls. ;)

Saturday, October 22, 2005

PX never seems open


One thing rather annoying on our FOB is how little our PX is open. But it has been closed on this Friday/Saturday - which it wasn't scheduled to be. Basically it was closed 4 days open 3. When I went their last night ( Saturday) at 1930 they were closed - with a sign stating they were at the firing range. Funny, since I knew they had been back on the FOB since 1700.

I wasn't the only one annoyed. On the printed notice there was an angry scribbling proclaiming " LIES, LIES, ALL SCANDALOUS LIES!" Underneath the store hours was written in different handwriting one word: "NEVER"

It is tough enough living on an ARMY FOB as a vegetarian. Our KBR DFAC is rather pathetic in serving nutritious foods. Meat consumption comprises 75% of all served dishes. White bread and other refined/manufactured foods represent 20% and nearly ripe vegetables/fruits/legumes about 15%. They veggies tend to have bits of meat mixed like the collard greens and baked beans.

But I only have about a month left. So all is good as long as I do not starve. :)

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Bongos and Hescoes (part 2)




Today I will discuss bongo trucks. They are quite popular all over the world - except for Europe and the United States. They are cheap and can haul many things. In the Diyala Province of Iraq - they like to haul watermelons. Iraq has many industries but specializes in Oil and growing watermelons.

During the summers, it is quite humorous to watch the highway and see many bongo trucks overfilled with watermelons heading to Baghdad. The ones heading north are empty. Baghdadians L<3VE them some watermelons!

I happen to enjoy them myself! I have also had fresh grapes grown right off the Tigris River. Yummilicious! They are just fine non-refrigerated!

Well I have this plan that deals with Hescos and bongos. I plan to buy them both for when I get home. Then I will put the Hesco in the back of my bongo. I will grow a big unspecified Weed plant and smoke some herb just dried from my special plant. I think that is about as sustainable as you can get!

Okay, mayhaps not - but I can imagine someone doing it at some point! Thas the image I came up with after only being in Iraq for one month - too bad I am not artist with Adobe Photoshop. Otherwise I'd make it myself somehow - or I'd make an interesting artistic impression.

Any other thoughts on Hescos and Bongos? ;)
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Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Hescos and bongos (Part 1)



I have been asked " Can you tell me about Iraq?" and so I tell them "Hescos and Bongos" And you say - what?

Well, we surround things with them as a defensive measure.

To the left are some British troops filling them up. Looks like fun right? Not really - but we all pretend it is. And pretending is half the battle.

I always joke about "Watering the Hescos" but our FOB Defense NCO and Officer do not find it very funny. They think that if plants were to grow in them their roots would destroy them. As if - we need green camoflauge! We are in the desert but guess what? Our new uniforms have GREEN in them - so should the Hescos.


The ARMY has this to say:
Concertainer® from HESCO is acknowledged as the most significant development in field fortifications since WWII. It has been a key component in providing force protection since the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Typical applications include perimeter security and defence walls, equipment revetments, ammunition compounds, personnel and material bunkers, observation points, defensive firing positions, guard posts, explosives and contraband search areas, highway checkpoints, border crossing checkpoints, and protecting existing structures
~~~~~~

Whatever - they are just Hescos. I have this HUGE PLAN for them - but I will talk about that later.

I also think that the ARMY should use them like Time Capsules. But no one wants to toss their PS2 or other significant items into them. They also think it is silly. But I disagree. Thus far I have donated 7 donuts, 16 books by Stephen King, 7 cans of Red Bull, 10 random letters people have written me, 6 random DVDs that I was bored of anyways, 4 stars and stripes newspapers, a pocketknife, and one expired credit card. I think I will show the future what things were like here! Either that or the Hescos will get cleaned up by some future military organization - be it US or Iraqi.

Any other thoughts on what to do with Hescos before I go into my spiel about them later?

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Metric tastes better



I know - you are thinking " How is that even possible?" - well it is. I am in Iraq and I have put two cans side by side of various different colas. It has been 12 ounce versus 330 milileters since January 9th.

So when I am gulping down a 7-up, Sprite, or Pepsi - I make sure I have one of each can. Then I decide which one tasted better. I have found that 85% of all metric cans taste slightly better than the American Standard ones. I say American Standard because even the British have given up as well as everyone else (yp that small country in Africa too!). So it can be officially re-dubbed "Americanan."

But now I am starting to feel it is some conspiracy. That the entire thing is a set-up so that we Americans are unable to experience the same things as the rest of the world. That we are deliberately setting ourselves against the world - for some final giant war.

I hope I do not scare anyone. But what if it is all true? The solution??
Contact your local Pepsi and Coke dealer and let them know you won't buy ANYTHING BUT METRIC. That's right. Avert a world war over such trivialities now - and things can only get better! No more pounds! Hello kilograms! ( I weight 61.4 - sounds pretty low huh?)

Ohh....and stop COLLECTING crazy non-metric stuff too!

Saturday, October 15, 2005

Buddhism with an attitude


I just finished reading Buddhism with an Attitude by B. Alan Wallace. The book is subtitled "The Tibetan Seven-Point Mind Training" and rigorous spiritual training it is!

Contained within are many Buddhist fundamentals - but solutions that seem quite effective. I took several pages of notes and now feel better prepared in my spiritual journey. Overcoming the eight mundane concerns will be difficult but I will put effort in doing so.

Upon returning home to Minneapolis I will find a spiritual mentor. To be a solitary practitioner of any faith makes it harder to develop ones skills. But if you consider yourself a spiritual apprentice of one with wisdome and experience - you can attain mastery from a mentor faster.

It is also quite true that independence is an illusion. In America we like to think we can live free and independent lives. But we very much depend on others for all that we cannot do ourself. And sometimes we cannot even sustain our needs - and others step in to help( hopefully ).

Friday, October 14, 2005

Pot grows brain cells?


My pothead friends might find this story interesting. ;)
It is ironic that in High School I hung out with the druggies and the Christians(Jesus freaks is what they prefer to be called) - oh and the nerds! And yet here I am - normal me. Not that I am much of any of those - just interesting people is who I hang out with. :D

Anywho, the fact that scientists FINALLY figured out that brain cells can re-grow makes me feel better. I always thought it rather odd that they stated we "couldn't" that at age 25 or something our brains stopped growing cells. That is just not true. Our minds stabilize at 25 years usually - but we can always re-shape our minds.

This is something that has been a part of Buddhist practice. To re-shape how the mind works so that it is not as dysfunctional as it normally is. It would be silly to try to do something if the mind could not create new neurons that would stabilize it.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Snakes should not eat alligators




I do not think there is much else to say.

.....

but I will say more!

Snakes are extremely immoral creatures. They allowed the Satanic forces of Anti-God to inhabit their bodies in the early writings of Jesus and the Literal Texts of Christianity ( + Judaism ) - also known as the Holy Roman Bible. The EVIL snake convinced Eve to eat a horrible tasting Red Delicious apple. This marked the downward spiral for human humanity ever since - according to the writings previously stated (ignoring all Human achievements and this is true ).

So NOW snakes are destroying the sanctity of nature itself! This is not new - but look - they are eating alligators! How are people going to say "See you later alligator" if the gators are all eaten by the evil snakes? This is downright immoral, selfish, and destructive of snakes. I say we eliminate them all like on that Simpson's episode. It is the just thing to do with this Un-Godly creature who lost his feet because of evil deeds. ( just for the record there ARE no snakes with feet - the book previously stated proves that without a doubt. They lost them due to their immoral nature. )