• The Pentagon has ordered Stars and Stripes to shut down for no good rea

    From slider@1:229/2 to All on Friday, September 04, 2020 21:42:22
    From: slider@anashram.com

    Even for those of us who are all too wearily familiar with President
    Donald Trump’s disdain for journalists, his administration’s latest attack on the free press is a bit of a jaw-dropper.

    https://eu.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/09/04/trump-and-stars-and-stripes-attacking-american-icon-column/5706859002/

    In a heretofore unpublicized recent memo, the Pentagon delivered an order
    to shutter Stars and Stripes, a newspaper that has been a lifeline and a
    voice for American troops since the Civil War. The memo orders the
    publisher of the news organization (which now publishes online as well as
    in print) to present a plan that “dissolves the Stars and Stripes” by
    Sept. 15 including "specific timeline for vacating government
    owned/leased space worldwide.”

    “The last newspaper publication (in all forms) will be September 30,
    2020,” writes Col. Paul Haverstick Jr., the memo’s author.

    Stars and Stripes' long history

    The first Stars and Stripes rolled off presses Nov. 9, 1861 in Bloomfield, Missouri when forces headed by Ulysses Grant overran the tiny town on the
    way to Cape Girardeau. A group of Grant’s troops who had been pressmen
    before the war set up shop at a local newspaper office abandoned by its Confederate sympathizer publisher. Since then Stars and Stripes has
    launched the careers of famous journalists such as cartoonist Bill Mauldin
    and TV commentator Andy Rooney. And its independence from the Pentagon
    brass has been guaranteed by such distinguished military leaders at Gens.
    John G. Pershing, George Marshall and Dwight Eisenhower. Eisenhower once reprimanded Gen. George Patton for trying to censor Mauldin cartoons he didn’t like.

    Today Stars and Stripes is printed at sites around the world and delivered daily to troops — even those on the front lines, where the internet is spotty or inaccessible. As the “local paper” for the military, it provides intensive and critical coverage of issues that are important to members of
    the nation’s armed services and “cuts through political and military brass BS talking points,” Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., a Marine veteran, told Military.com.

    It’s also arguably one of the most powerful weapons our soldiers have
    carried into battle with them. As a publication that’s underwritten by the military but not answerable to the brass, Stars and Stripes embodies that
    most American of values: the right to speak truth to power.

    As if an attack on the free press were not enough, the Trump
    administration’s rush to shutter Stars and Stripes also raises
    constitutional questions.

    The memo ordering the publication’s dissolution claims the administration
    has the authority to make this move under the president’s fiscal year 2021 defense department budget request. It zeroed out the $15.5 million annual subsidy for Stars and Stripes. But Congress, which under the Constitution
    has the power to make decisions about how the public’s money is spent, has not yet approved the president’s request.

    In fact, the version the House approved earlier this summer explicitly overruled the decision to pull the plug on Stars and Stripes, restoring
    funding for the paper.

    Pushing back to keep Stars and Stripes

    So far, the Senate hasn’t acted. But in a letter released earlier this
    week, 15 members of the chamber, including combat veteran Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., and four Republicans, called on Defense Secretary Mark Esper to
    “take steps to preserve the funding prerogatives of Congress before
    allowing any such disruption to take place.”

    In a separate letter, Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican and Trump ally, makes a similar request. “As a veteran who has served
    overseas, I know the value Stars and Stripes brings to its readers,” he wrote, telling Esper that shutting down the paper before the Senate acts
    would be “premature.”

    It also seems unusual. Normally, when Congress has failed to approve a
    budget for an agency at the end of a fiscal year (an all-too-common occurrence), a “continuing resolution,” maintains funding at the past year’s levels until the lawmakers act. But the Pentagon memo to Stars and Stripes demands a plan for dissolution anyway and says “the last date of
    the paper will be determined” once the continuing resolution expires.

    The eagerness to kill Stars and Stripes is hard to fathom. As the senators
    note in their letter to Esper, the $15.5 million saved by eliminating the newspaper’s subsidy would have a “negligible impact” on the Pentagon’s $700 billion budget.

    But it would have an enormously negative impact on the paper’s more than
    1.3 million readers. It would eliminate a symbol of the U.S. commitment to press freedom, flout the judgment of generations of military leaders and
    usurp the authority that the Constitution gives Congress to make decisions about how the government spends money.

    The Stars and Stripes was born in the midst of a war to decide what
    America stood for. Now it looks like another such battle will decide its
    fate.

    ### - and so it begins? a dismantling of the freedom of the press now??

    this is no doubt in retaliation for the military not wanting to be politicised...

    plus whose next for the gag-order i wonder: cnn? nbc? twitter for removing
    his tweets?? or just anyone who dares criticise him??? the press will have
    a field-day over this!

    bad-mouthing the armed forces by calling them losers & suckers for serving
    in the forces + even 'dying for their country' being a step too-far even
    for him no? (way to go to lose even more votes trumpy!)

    but is good in a way coz if he orders them to start a war with say china
    or russia (or even just against his own people at home) they may then just totally ignore him haha... whew!

    so are people finally waking up to him yet i wonder?

    a landslide LOSS would surely let him clearly know all about it huh...

    and because 4 more years of 'that' would be MORE than scary!

    fingers crossed then peeps ain't as stupid as he thinks and they all vote accordingly ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From luckyrat@1:229/2 to All on Friday, September 04, 2020 16:45:22
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    when i was in the Army, overseas in Thailand, this is about
    we had in the way of 'media'. Reading this rag was about the same
    as reading USA Today. Heavy slant for the military, wow.
    No TV, no newspapers, no American women, son of a bitch, what
    a drag. Get me out of there. Thank god we had a record player.
    Playing Blind Faith and the Doors albums, smoking weed and counting
    the day when i would get out. You know those sayings "one day the
    axe just fell" and "when the bottom dropped out"? That's what
    it is like to be drafted into a shitty war. thanx LBJ.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Saturday, September 05, 2020 01:27:00
    From: slider@anashram.com

    Thank god we had a record player.
    Playing Blind Faith and the Doors albums,smoking weed and counting the
    day wheni would get out.

    ### - nice bit of poetry that heh, could even be the lyrics to a song?

    plus at least ya made it back all in one piece huh...

    i guess some peeps is just born lucky! (punk?) lol

    that's cool ;)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)