a book review i did for my friend, a gonzo tale, in paper

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jimboloco
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a book review i did for my friend, a gonzo tale, in paper

Post by jimboloco » March 14th, 2006, 4:31 pm

Image

STOP WAR AMERICA is an alternative image

bob is a leftwing marine

his imagery is part of the opposition

energy, vitality, spirit suffuses through the underground stream
the alchemy of spirit bob's been running with big dawgs!
i wonder is this a lamentation or a celebration or both?
the visionary eye makes everything perfectly clear
but seez from the underground stream
feeling the flow

in process......a book review
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Robert McLane, a former activist with Vietnam Veterans against the War, has written a memoir, STOP WAR AMERICA in the style of real time gonzo journalism, dedicated to the memory of Hunter S.Thompson and it is in fact an absorbing journey into the heart of a young man whose patriotism was in touch with essential truth and human value. In other words, he was both a US.Marine and an anti-war protestor, and a survivor, a hearty vagabond whose path took him through the rigors of boot camp and the scorched earth of Vietnam, along the way finding the counter culture and somehow melding the two into a fusion of bravado and compassion.

I knew the guy as a down and out vet, rebuilding my own shattered psyche, doing therapy at a VetCenter, staying awhile in Shreveport, a place where time stood still, save for one of the few places of enlightment there, the weekly evening meditation group at the local UnitarianChurch. He popped in and plopped down, always smiling. It's what gets me the most about this guy, a joy of life. Yet Bob had all the pathos of a man who had seen the atrocity of war without redemption, like me, and who was dealing with the aftermath of that, how to make an enduring meaning out of it all, how to keep living in a strange new world.

We journey back into the Vietnam War, the antiwar veterans' movement, and through this narrative, find a picture of history that is at once difficult yet personifies a path with heart. When Bob finally gets on the freedom bird, we feel his relief. His effort at dialogue and detail throughout is exemplary.

On coming home he writes, "I hitched a ride on a military plane going to Oklahoma. An Air Force general was kind enough to let me have a seat on his personal jet. First I watched his valet bring his luggage on board, including the two sets of golf clubs. Finally the man himself walked aboard and sat down on the solitary bed that was waiting for him. He looked at me with the eye of some jaundicedCaesar while an Air Force staff seargeant loosened his shoestrings and took off his shoes and put them under the bed.He then pulled the curtains to give the general privacy....I remembered the night at the Rockpile when Rail and I tried to make a floor out of boards from some ammo crates while the rain poured down through the leaky ponchos we had snapped together in a vain effort to stay dry."

As it turned out, Vietnam and the Marines had prepared Bob for what was to follow, only there was no war, just hard travelling with interludes of friendship and protest, trials and celebrations.We get to encounter a number of other interesting people from those days, some famous, some infamous, some marginal at best. He is an interesting person. He has heart, more than any other quality and he combines that with a healer's calm and a genuine respect of self and others, except when he's playing Coyote, the trickster. Some might call it an attitude; judge for yourself.

When the Marines stop following dumb orders and demand honorable missions with ethical purpose, Bob's book will have realised its mission as well. Bob has the independent bravado, an alchemy of spirit, still a Marine, a friend of Mexico, and hope for America.
Dig it, man.
Last edited by jimboloco on June 21st, 2006, 8:32 pm, edited 2 times in total.
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by stilltrucking » March 16th, 2006, 10:07 am

Thanks for posting jimboloco. Maybe the Marines have a better class of generals.
This a cut amd paste from the Washington Post about Bush speach


More Rallies, No Sale
Bush Fails to Resolve Public Doubts About War

By David S. Broder
Thursday, March 16, 2006; Page A23


On the third anniversary of the war in Iraq, President Bush once again finds himself trying to rally American public opinion to support that costly venture. The series of speeches that began this week comes against a background of deepening skepticism on the part of voters about the effort that began in March 2003 with a lightning strike against Saddam Hussein's forces.


"We have a comprehensive strategy for victory in Iraq," he said, describing a victory that would enable American troops to leave the country in a position where terrorists no longer threaten and Iraqi forces can provide their own security.



That is a consummation devoutly to be wished for. But, as retired Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, the former head of Central Command, which includes the Middle East, argues, the United States may be greatly mistaken in believing that it can determine the future of Iraq.
In his new book, "The Battle for Peace: A Frontline Vision of America's Power and Purpose," Zinni and co-author Tony Koltz recall the general's testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Feb. 11, 2003, just a few weeks before Bush took the nation to war.

Zinni knew, he says, that many of his military colleagues believed Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld was underestimating the manpower needs for an occupation of Iraq. "And I had heard interpretations of intelligence that many of us with deep experience in the region felt were far off the mark from the true threat."

So when Sen. Norm Coleman, a Republican from Minnesota, asked Zinni if he did not agree that anything would be an improvement on Hussein, the general demurred. Recalling that the ouster of the Soviets from Afghanistan had left that country in the hands of the Taliban, Zinni said, "Anyone who has to live in this region and has to stay there and protect our interests, year in, year out, does not look at this as a start and end, as an exit strategy, as a two-year tenure. As long as you are going to have a U.S. Central Command, you are going to be out there and have to deal with whatever you put down on the ground."

Later in the book, Zinni says that "ignoring this reality, the United States and a handful of its allies forcibly evicted the Saddam Hussein regime, with no plans for a new order to replace it. Today, U.S. military forces in Iraq are mired in an ever-worsening insurgency. Civil war is an ever-growing danger. Disorder and chaos grow ever more entrenched."

This is not latter-day wisdom from the general. In the summer of 2002, seven months before the war began, he told an audience in Florida what would be required if the United States invaded Iraq. "You could inherit the country of Iraq, if you're willing to do it," he said. "If our economy is so great that you're willing to put billions of dollars into reforming Iraq. If you want to put soldiers that are already stretched so thin all around the world and add them into a security force there forever, like we see in places like the Sinai. If you want to fight with other countries in the region to try to keep Iraq together, as Kurds and Shiites try and split off, you're going to have to make a good case for that."

Now it is 2006, and Bush is still trying to make that case.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 02182.html

davidbroder@washpost.com

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Post by jimboloco » March 16th, 2006, 1:34 pm

THANK YOU JIMOB!!!!


I am hoping on amrak in a couple of hours to escort my book to the big Apple, to give my story a chance to run with the big boys. I think she's ready. I want to thank Ernie for believing in my story now time will tell if he was right. Your review Jimbo, gave me the pumped up energy that I needed to take on such a venture.

I hope Hunter enjoyed the read as much as you did. :wink:

Let the journey begin.
a note from Roberto, the author.


Texas trucker, I agree, yet the Marine general, as forthright as he was in his assessment, said nada about the cost in human terms to the Iraqi people and even if he had, he would have been ignored. I surmise that the general was far too polite, and not strong enough in an opposition stance. Where is Zinni today? Surely waiting for some news talk show to call.

You gotta be pissed, man to make your point. Donde estan los cojones?
Nice article, tho. Far too nice, unfortunately.
http://news.yahoo.com/photo/060316/phot ... 72e48fca6f
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by stilltrucking » March 16th, 2006, 8:31 pm

Jim I am sick. I am sick of human beings. I am not as pessimistic as Vonnegut. I do not want to see humans become extinct; I have pity for the children. But I watched the news the other day about the death of Slobodan Milosevic. So many people grieving his death, he was a real hero to so many. I look at the so called Christians who love Bush so much and I see them the same way as I do those crazy Serbs..

I miss the Quakers but I can’t go back to the meeting here. Maybe I can find another meeting in a town near bye.

I know the loss of life is terrible but so is the resources we have squandered. Budget cuts in childcare, cancer research, and student loans. The corrupt, political hacks running the show; I sit and wait for the tables to turn, this darkness has got to pass.

Jim the nice people support Bush, the good hard working people who are concerned for the soul of America, the nice people who know the real issue is family values. Bush is such a moral man. You know he would never get a blow job in the oval office. I am not making much sense here. I am almost beyond despair.

But I am still grooving on breathing, I just can't stand too much good news these days. I mean I get upset with the administration spokesman who tell me how well things are going in Iraq. How sound the economy is, and so forth.

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Post by jimboloco » March 17th, 2006, 12:13 pm

Hey dude, your sense is right on target, so what I am saying is that I am on a survival mission. We have a purpose,man, to somehow endure these times and somehow help light a fire under the asses who voted for Dumbya, waiting for the 1,000,000th monkey, man. Hey, the Quakers are far too tedious for you and me. Dig a local meditation group.
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by stilltrucking » March 17th, 2006, 3:32 pm

I got light a fire under my own ass first jimboloco. The lung cancer scare has opened my eyes. Still not much of a practice going but at least a couple times a day I stop and pay attention to my breathing.


Spring has sprung here and it is exquisite. Every year for the past five or so I have been amazed that I have lived to see another one. They don't last long here. A few weeks of nice weather and then the heat settles in.

I love to watch how Iran drags us around by the ying yang. Nobody mentions how they threw the election to Reagan in 1980. Just how stupid is America?

I have no idea who it will be in 2008, if ever we needed a dark horse it will be then. I can't figure McCain out. Is he the Manchurian Candidate? I miss that old P and P board on litkicks..

Occasionaly someone actualy posted a Poetical Political rant.

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Post by jimboloco » March 19th, 2006, 3:39 am

Meditation group is easy
Iran is not my enemy
nor did they throw the election
Reagan was a shoo-innn
Carter tried a commando operation
acting presidential for sensation
all it got him was a vacation
and a new avocation
making wooden chairs to ease his fears.
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by stilltrucking » March 19th, 2006, 3:35 pm

It will all work out for the best in the long run. When Israel and Iran reach parity with a couple hundrd nukes each. Reagon was shoe in ok. All those earnest kids in their twenties, with their eyes full of dollar signs a rejection of the liberal values of their baby boomer parents. I could not believe how many of the young were reagonites. What did Bork say about people who were not socialists when they were young. Just a coincidence, there was no October suprise. The hostages were not released on Inaugaration Day. Jimmy was probably the worst president we have ever had up until now. I think he was a pretty good christian too.

I was down on my knees with blood running down my legs, praying to Jesus for a nights sleep back in 1974. I have been sleeping pretty good these last thirty years. But I aint no fucking chiristian not no more. I dont want no more warm fuzzy feeling of belonging, no more fellowship of true believers. I came back from Astoria in 1976 with my head staved in and after a night of murderous thoughts. Those gentle kind Quakers took me in. But that was about 15 people in one small group. Yes I needed the fellowship. And I am grateful for their "christian tolerance" I dont know what this shit going down in the name of christ is. You can call it Christian, Bush does, Condosleeza does. I think it is closer to National Socialism myself.

Prine said it all for me.**************

She was a level-headed dancer on the road to alcohol
And I was just a soldier on my way to montreal
Well she pressed her chest against me
About the time the juke box broke
Yeah, she gave me a peck on the back of the neck
And these are the words she spoke

Chorus:
Blow up your t.v. throw away your paper
Go to the country, build you a home
Plant a little garden, eat a lot of peaches
Try an find jesus on your own

Well, I sat there at the table and I acted real naive
For I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve
Well, she danced around the bar room and she did the hoochy-coo
Yeah she sang her song all night long, tellin’ me what to do

Repeat chorus:

Well, I was young and hungry and about to leave that place
When just as I was leavin’, well she looked me in the face
I said you must know the answer.
She said, no but I’ll give it a try.
And to this very day we’ve been livin’ our way
And here is the reason why

We blew up our t.v. threw away our paper
Went to the country, built us a home
Had a lot of children, fed ’em on peaches
They all found jesus on their own

Dont mind me I am grouchy as a bear these days. I ran out of insulin my blood sugar going up like the stock market on bad news.

Rant rant, I love studio eight, I have such kind enemies here.

I dont worry about ruining any bodies day.

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Post by stilltrucking » March 20th, 2006, 4:17 am

I suppose I do believe in accidents and coincidences jim. Just a coincidence that the hostages were released on inaugaration day which was exactly 444 days after theywere taken hostage. I hate conspiracy theories. So many of them involve Jews.

http://www.consortiumnews.com/archive/xfile10.html

I checked out the October Suprise on Wipedia, they say there is no basis in fact. But that place can be a snare and a delusion. Anonymous posts of dis-information sometimes.

Carter is closer to what I would call a Christian than Bush. Even if he was not a very good president. But at least he took more responsibility for his actions.

As JFK said after the Bay of Pigs disaster which he pretty much inherited from Allen Dulles and the Eisenhaurer Regime. But which he took responsibilty for.
Success has many fathers, while failure is an orphan
I dont care about it, I am so got dam cynical these days. Lord have mercy on me. I don't believe anything until I hear the first denial. (Mangled quote from Bismark)

BUT

it just strikes me as a coincidence that Iran wants to help us out in Iraq all of a sudden.

Will that be our exit strategy?

I am trying to get used to the idea of President Rice. She is going to do well between the Christian vote and the women who vote.

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Post by jimboloco » March 21st, 2006, 9:08 am

easy, mate.
i like jimmy too,
time to get stoned.

the john prine song, well,
stuck in urban town
it's ok.
just a space to call my own
let it goooooo.
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by stilltrucking » March 21st, 2006, 9:19 am

No problemo

I get side tracked

off on tangent

This string is about Bob's book

If I get a couple more decent paychecks I am going to buy it.

Just say Hi Jack

peace love and friendship
jt


and away we go>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

I'm going to lay down my sword and shield,
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
I'm going to lay down my sword and shield,
Down by the Riverside!
And I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I'm going to pick up a nice guitar,
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
I'm going to pick up a nice guitar,
Down by the Riverside!
And I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I'm going to sit down and sing a song,
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
I'm going to sit down and sing a song,
Down by the Riverside!
And I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I'm going to shake hands, around the world,
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
I'm going to shake hands, around the world,
Down by the Riverside!
And I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I'm going to find me a way to peace,
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
Down by the Riverside!
I'm going to find me a way to peace,
Down by the Riverside!
And I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!
I ain't gonna study war no more!

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Post by jimboloco » March 21st, 2006, 9:33 am

amen, speedy gonzalez
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by jimboloco » June 21st, 2006, 8:23 pm

well, my book review of Bob's book, Stop War America was printed in the Spring, 2006 edition of the Veteran online, mercy
http://www.vvaw.org/veteran/article/?id=619
Interesting you can see how they edited it, briefly, not bad, amigos. There are a couple of positive and supportive articles on Venezuela that i will lay down fer youse folk rockers. bows.
Last edited by jimboloco on June 21st, 2006, 8:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
[color=darkcyan]i'm on a survival mission
yo ho ho an a bottle of rum om[/color]

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Post by stilltrucking » June 21st, 2006, 8:46 pm

he's still a Marine, and he has hope for America. Dig it, man.
I dig it too.

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