
Photos courtesy of Gabrielle Phan

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From Reuters:"We had a great day," Sergeant Schrumpf said. "We killed a lot of people." ...
But more than once, Sergeant Schrumpf said, he faced a different choice: one Iraqi soldier standing among two or three civilians. He recalled one such incident, in which he and other men in his unit opened fire. He recalled watching one of the women standing near the Iraqi soldier go down.
"I'm sorry," the sergeant said. "But the chick was in the way."
From the London Times:Two soldiers picked out two figures on a rooftop and quickly lined up their shot. Thankfully, First Sgt. Eric Engram saw them and also saw their target. “No man, that's a kid and a woman. It's a KID and a WOMAN,” he bellowed, and his soldiers lowered their rifles.
"These guys are young and most just want to get their first confirmed kill, so they're too anxious to get off shots. I hate to say ‘bragging rights’ but they want that kill,” Engram said an hour later.
From the Los Angeles Times:A tracked armored vehicle has crushed two men up the road.
"Killed one, ripped the legs off another," Monty said briskly, a cigarette dangling from his lip.
And finally, from the East Bay Express:The vehicle goes silent as the driver, Spc. Joshua Dubois, swerves around asphalt previously uprooted by a blast.
"I'm confused about how I should feel about killing," says Dubois, who has a toddler back home. "The first time I shot someone, it was the most exhilarating thing I'd ever felt."
Dubois turns back to the road. "We talk about killing all the time," he says. "I never used to talk this way. I'm not proud of it, but it's like I can't stop. I'm worried what I will be like when I get home."
Soldiers in the US Military have been conditioned to view Iraqi and Afghani lives as negligible. When negligible lives are destroyed, there is no sense that a heinous act has occurred. Do you view your best friend as negligible? Of course not. Imagine seeing your best friend killed, his spewed entrails spelling out a hateful message. Your reaction is surely different from your reaction to hearing about such an act conducted on an Iraqi. We have set up a distinction between American lives and the lives of others that allows us to ignore brutal slaughter. Of course, it's not just our reactions that matter. It would probably destroy you to see your friend mutilated - imagine what friends, brothers, mothers, sons, fathers see every day in Iraq and Afghanistan. They do not hate us for our freedoms. They hate us for regarding them as so worthless that we have no qualms over murdering them.Six men in beige fatigues, identified as US Marines, laugh and smile for the camera while pointing at a burned, charcoal-black corpse lying at their feet.
The captions that accompany these images, which were apparently written by soldiers who posted them, laugh and gloat over the bodies. The person who posted a picture of a corpse lying in a pool of his own brains and entrails wrote, “What every Iraqi should look like.” The photograph of a corpse whose jaw has apparently rotted away, leaving a gaping set of upper teeth, bears the caption “bad day for this dude.” One person posted three photographs of corpses lying in the street and titled his collection “DIE HAJI DIE.”

On March 23, the Washington Times published an article entitled, “Meat, Dairy Not Tied to Global Warming.” The title is unequivocal – according to this daily broadsheet started by Sung Myung Moon in 1982, the meat and dairy industries do not contribute to global warming. At all. While such a claim is, on its face, ridiculous, it is worth examining this article. Why? Because conservative reporting, exemplified in this Times article, has deliberately misled too many Americans about too many issues, and America’s inability to take political action to address these issues is a manifestation of this effort to mislead.
First, a word about Sung Myung Moon. He believes that he is the second coming of Christ, and has stated, “The Washington Times will become the instrument in spreading the truth about God to the world." Moon, and the Washington Times, are darlings of the conservative establishment, which should make every reader skeptical when reading Times articles addressing a subject as politically charged as climate change. Ad hominem aside, however, the article itself is a blatant work of shitty reporting and deliberate mis-truths.
The article begins by simultaneously backing off its declaratory title and pushing false information. The first sentence describes talking about vegetarianism and cow flatulence as “indecorous,” the second sentence makes an allusion to Climategate (which was completely debunked as a valid conspiracy theory), and the third sentence says that “lower consumption of meat and dairy will not have a major impact in combating global warming.” Decidedly false, but note the equivocation between the dramatic title to the markedly less vitriolic “not have a major impact.” Someone just glancing at the title is impressed with a lie even greater than the mis-truths presented in the text.
The substance of the article, as well as the comments from associate professor of animal science at UC Davis Frank Mitloehner, are not credible refutations of the meat and dairy industries' contribution to climate change. Mitloehner does not even contest that the meat and dairy industries contribute as much to global warming as the United Nations report he demonizes claims. He simply claims that meat and dairy’s relative contribution to greenhouse gas emissions is lower than previously thought because the other sectors of the economy have been undercounted. So according to Frank Mitloehner and the Washington Times, and this Telegraph editorialist, and this Fox News report, meat and dairy production still contribute the same as previously thought to global warming. Which is a lot. A lot! A lot a lot!
Alone, the article is merely a product of substandard reporting, but it is the political message that is transparent in this shitty reporting that is most troubling. Conservatives have a frightening habit of using straight up lies as a political tool. Unfortunately, it all too often works. Their lies about health care reform, about Barack Obama’s citizenship (including from a Congressman, and Sarah Palin), about the “Climategate” controversy, the Bush Administration’s use of torture, and on and on, have been readily gobbled up by both conservative activists and, more worryingly, the mainstream media. Americans believe this nonsense because Authoritative People tell them it’s true, and unfortunately those Authoritative People often tend to be blithering idiots peddling their anti-anything-remotely-liberal-on-principle bullshit.
Because they have been so successful in convincing their listeners and readers, these liars have been incredibly damaging to this country, and to the world. Congress has not addressed climate change for one simple reason: the public will is just not there. It certainly would be if the public understood just how serious climate change is, the pain it is causing, and all the things we are doing to make it worse. More outlets are needed that value truth, not lies, and promote active pursuit of intellectuality and depth of reasoning. That is the arena this blog strives to enter: we are a counterweight to the anti-intellectual movement that has recently claimed so many followers. We will provide analyses with depth, clarity, and a focus to academic and scholarly pursuits. We hope you enjoy!